BKCAINUH.RVW 990123 "1999 Canadian Internet New User's Handbook", Jim Carroll/Rick Broadhead, 1998, 0-13-974957-8, C$16.95 %A Jim Carroll jcarroll@jimcarroll.com www.jimcarroll.com %A Rick Broadhead rickb@sympatico.ca www.rickbroadhead.com %C Scarborough, Ontario %D 1998 %G 0-13-974957-8 %I Prentice Hall Canada %O C$16.95 800-576-3800 416-293-3621 www.phcanada.com %P 246 p. %T "1999 Canadian Internet New User's Handbook" As rabidly and chauvinistically patriotic as I am, I find it difficult to recommend this book. Chapter one is basically a sales pitch for the net, although, at the same time, it suggests that media hype has distorted perceptions of the Internet. The material does not address specific deceptions but does mention a few minor examples of how the net can be used. The obligatory list of Web sites is given in chapter two. Rather oddly, the specific URLs (Uniform Resource Locators) are not given in the individual writeups (and, in one case, seem to have been deliberately expunged from screen shots) although they are collected at the end of the chapter. Some items that *do* have their URLs included are the tips, but a number of those in this chapter are not Canadian. Despite the promise of the title, there is no real explanation of the net in chapter three, which simply contains a few more examples of things you can do (if you know how) as a kind of addition to chapter one. Chapter four seems to make the same commitment, but the most telling statement is the first of the "Understanding the Internet in 10 Easy Steps" at the end: "You do not need to know how the Internet works behind the scenes in order to use it." There is a minor exposition on the hierarchical naming convention of the Domain Name Service (DNS), but that is about it. Chapter five talks about getting connected to the net, but only really says to buy the right (unspecified) hardware and the right (unspecified) service. The actual connection is left as an exercise to the reader. (There is a list of Web sites of national service providers that can be very helpful--if you are already on the net and don't need it.) The Web, email, and news are introduced in chapter six--but only barely. I am glad to see that the issue of etiquette gets some space in regard to email and news, although the points are brief and relatively simple, and mailing list etiquette is not dealt with at all. Searching the Web is generally covered very badly in most books: Carroll and Broadhead at least note the difference between directories and search engines in chapter seven. Building a Web site is a serious undertaking, and chapter eight's coverage only scratches the surface. Chapter nine concludes with a quick precis of the book, and yet another iteration of chapter one (a few more things you can do on the net). Even as a quick starting guide to the net, this book does not have anywhere near the basic information of, say, "Zen and the Art of the Internet" (cf. BKZENINT.RVW), let alone the depth of understanding that the slightly longer "Internet Book" (cf. BKINTBOK.RVW) is able to provide. As for Canadian material, while there are a number of Canadian sites listed by way of example, the CRTC might have difficulty in allowing this as CanCon. I did not want to mention the self-promotional tone of the book, since to do so is to sail dangerously close to making an ad hominem attack. However, the fact that the book opens with eight pages of advertising for the authors, and closes with seven more, is one of the lesser examples. The stream of overinflated quotes of congratulatory hype (with no apparent relation to the topic at hand) and claims to specialist expertise seemingly solely on the basis that one is famous is extremely annoying, and, well, not very Canadian. copyright Robert M. Slade, 1999 BKCAINUH.RVW 990123