Preface
PC Hardware in a Nutshell. An oxymoron, as it
turns out. When Robert began work on the first edition of this book
in late 1998, he planned to write a 300-page book in five months.
Barbara joined the project early, at first as the researcher and
later as the full co-author. After more than 18 months of working
seven days a week, including last-minute rewrites to make everything
as current as possible, we finally completed the first edition.
Robert decided to write the first edition because he
couldn't find a good answer to what seemed to be a
simple question. Robert, who has extensive PC experience, wanted to
buy his first CD burner but didn't know much about
them. He needed information about how to choose, install, configure,
and use a CD burner. It would have been easy to check articles about
CD burners in hardware-oriented magazines and enthusiast web sites,
but Robert didn't trust them to provide accurate and
unbiased information.
He next checked the shelf of PC hardware books he owns. What he found
in those books was lots of interesting
information, but a surprising dearth of useful
information. For example, one very popular title devoted fewer than
five of its 1500+ pages to CD-R and CD-RW, and most of those few
pages described the history and low-level functioning of these
devices. Advice on how to choose a CD burner? Advice on how to
install it, configure it, use it, or troubleshoot it? Next to none.
That same book devoted nearly 70 pages to a list of
vendors—information easily accessible on the Web—so the
shortage of information couldn't have been a result
of page count constraints.
We were determined to write a book filled with useful information.
You won't find tables of drive parameters for
hundreds of obsolete disk drives, instructions on how to change the
interleave by low-level formatting an XT hard drive, charts of
keyboard scan codes, and so on. As interesting as those things might
be, they fail the useful test. Pruning stuff
that was merely interesting was painful, because we like to read
interesting stuff as much as the next person. But we quickly found
out why there's so much interesting information and
so relatively little useful information in most PC hardware books.
Interesting is quick and easy to write.
Useful is slow and hard, because you actually
have to do all the stuff.
We found numerous errors repeated nearly verbatim in more than one
book—things that were clearly wrong, but that an author had
simply repeated without verifying it rather than taking the time to
check for himself. We're guilty of that at times,
too. When we list the pinouts for a gameport, for example, we get
that information from published sources. But surprisingly often, we
found that these sources disagreed, and so were forced to check for
ourselves.
And, boy, did we expend an incredible amount of time and effort
checking things for ourselves. Rather than simply repeating what
others have said about CD burners, for example, we decided to find
out for ourselves. Doing that required building four
computers—two IDE and two SCSI, one each with Windows 98 and
Windows NT—and testing each configuration with different drive
models by burning numerous CDs with each. About ten 14-hour days and
400 CD blanks later, we finally had a handle on CD burners. All that
work turned into just a few pages and some specific product
recommendations. But all that work was necessary if we wanted to
write something more than just a me-too book.
Our efforts were rewarded. The first edition of PC Hardware
in a Nutshell sold well, and was widely acclaimed by
readers and reviewers alike. For example, Barnes & Noble had this
to say:
Here's one PC hardware book that pulls no punches.
It even recommends specific brands and models, and tells you
why—so you can evaluate whatever's on sale
when you're ready to buy. The authors speak to you
as if you're planning to build your own computer
from scratch. That's the "big
kahuna" PC maintenance project, so the
book's easily up to any
"smaller" challenges—like
adding a CD burner, or maybe replacing your motherboard. And
it's all new—not padded with obsolete data and
techniques. Specific, comprehensive, and relentlessly
useful—superb!
Given the success of the first edition, we considered doing just a
quick update, but we decided that our readers deserved better. So we
spent nearly a year building this second edition. Once again,
we've done all the hard work so that you
don't have to. We spent weeks on end doing detailed
testing and comparisons of numerous products, the results of which
often boil down to a couple of paragraphs of advice or a single
product recommendation. We greatly expanded both the breadth of
topics covered and the level of detail presented. This edition is, in
every respect, twice the book that the first edition was.
We wouldn't have started this project unless we
thought we could write the best PC hardware book available. We think
this second edition of PC Hardware in a Nutshell
meets that goal, and we hope you will think so too.
|