Covering version 4 of Internet Explorer this book should be useful for Windows users with no Internet experience whatsoever. The hardest part of getting onto the Net is understanding how to set-up,... This description may be from another edition of this product.
It takes one of the big network providers---such as America Online, AT & T WorldNet Service, CompuServe, or Microsoft---to get Internet Explorer 3 going. Then a crawler, spider or worm updated Web server directory or search tools---such as AltaVista, AT & T WorldNet Search, Excite, InfoSeek, Lycos, Magellan, Microsoft, or Yahoo!---to help find addresses for downloading document, media or program files. And a WinZip decompression program to open anything Zip-compressed for faster copying. And a WebEdit Home Page Wizard to create a DIY Web page or to edit from a pre-fab template, for storing in the same folder with picture files from clip art downloads, drawing or paint programs, or scanned images and photos; publishing in the Internet Service Provider Web server space; and listing with the major search tool directories. And all the while a Content Advisor can censor Explorer access to objectionable parts of the Internet, but not for such Explorer companion products as Comic Chat, Internet Mail, Internet News, and Microsoft NetMeeting conferencing and telephoning. And until practice makes perfect, Ned Snell's DUMMIES 101: INTERNET EXPLORER 3 FOR WINDOWS 95 (which unfortunately now has to be special ordered) has user-friendly logically ordered chapters with helpful quizzes and regular summaries, which make the book a prerequisite for the out of stock MICROSOFT INTERNET EXPLORER 3.0 STEP BY STEP and for Joe Kraynak's THE COMPLETE IDIOT'S GUIDE TO INTERNET EXPLORER 3 (which also needs to be special ordered).
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