Our focus is on user applications, however, not on system or network administration. While we give you a basic understanding of these deeper levels and what's available, specific installation details and detailed configuration information for system and network administrators are largely beyond the scope of the book. There are also settings that depend on decisions made by your network administrator or Internet Service Provider (ISP), especially with networks systems. Whenever possible, we give you the information you need, but there are times when all we can tell you is where to go for additional information.
We have tried to speak universal truths about Windows XP, but sometimes we are forced to make assumptions about your settings or installed options. Microsoft gives so many configuration options that the truth is, for better or worse, that each user's machine represents a slightly different installation of Windows XP. Of all the code and data Microsoft ships on the Windows XP CD-ROM, only about half is used in any particular user's configuration. What we say about Windows XP may or may not be quite true about Windows XP as it's installed on your system.
For example, there's a setting in Control Panel
Consider another oddity in Windows XP: categories in Control Panel.
This new addition in Windows XP (discussed further in Chapter 2) splits the components of the Control Panel
into distinct categories, rather than simply listing them
alphabetically, as in previous versions of Windows.
What's more, the Control Panel can be accessed in
any of three different ways (as a menu in the Start menu, as a
standalone folder window, or as an entry in the folder tree in
Windows Explorer), and the category interface (which can be disabled
completely, if desired) is used only in some cases. This means that
it's difficult (and laborious) to predict when
you'll need to open the "Appearance
and Themes" category before you can get to the
Display Properties dialog. We've compensated for
this ambivalence by enclosing the category name in
"maybe" brackets, like this:
Control Panel
Also, for all the statements (from Microsoft and others) that Windows XP is "integrated" and "seamless," the fact is that the system is actually amazingly modular, customizable, and "seamy." This is a good thing. This book shows a lot of different ways to modify Windows XP to suit your needs, a theme that is expanded further in the
Windows XP Annoyances for Geeks (O'Reilly), also by David A. Karp. This almost infinite customizability and modularity of Windows XP means that many of our statements about the productsuch as saying that the My Computer window has an icon for Control Panel, or that the Desktop corresponds to the \Documents and Settings\Administrator\Desktop folder, or that Windows XP is faster than Windows Memay, strictly speaking, be false, or at least serious oversimplifications.
Basically, Windows XP is a platform and set of capabilities, not a single stable product with a fixed set of features. In this book, we give you the information you need to tap into all of Windows XP's capabilities, not just those that are showcased on Microsoft's web site or the Windows Desktop.