Google: The Missing Manual 223
Google: The Missing Manual | |
author | Sarah Milstein, Rael Dornfest |
pages | 224 |
publisher | O'Reilly |
rating | 7 |
reviewer | Alex Moskalyuk |
ISBN | 0596006136 |
summary | Everything there's to know about Google |
Looking at the table of contents (for some reason PDF only), I figured out the book might be useful for someone relatively new to the Internet with intrinsic fear of doing something wrong (which pretty much describes my parents as well as their friends within the same age group). Chapters 8 and 9 on Web-mastering with Google might be useful, as it talks about buying AdWords for ad campaigns and serving AdSense for making money off the Web site. Still, I was interested to see what the book had to offer and started reading from Chapter 1, only to find this useful tip on page 24:
A lot of people probably knew this, but Google allows you to do a phrase search even if you don't have an idea of what the complete phrase looks like. Wildcard search allows one to use an asterisk for any word that's missing. Google will fill it in automatically. Pretty useful for finding the lyrics for that song you heard on the radio, but couldn't figure out the last word.
But this is not a Google tutorial: it turned out to be surprisingly useful even for me, someone who uses Google probably about a hundred times a day. Google features have that feeling of serendipity, where you can use the engine just fine without knowing anything advanced, but once you discover a few shortcuts, there's truly no replacement. For example, the book tells you what kind of numbers can be usefully entered into the Google search window: you can search for area codes, ISBN numbers, UPC numbers, flight numbers, Fedex/UPS/USPS tracking numbers as well as vehicle ID numbers (btw, the car is for sale).
Chapter 4 is very informative for Google's less frequently used services - Groups and Answers. While Google Groups and the Usenet search are probably bookmarked by any geek out there, not many people know that Google runs a paid service that can help you if you're just stuck with no results. Moreover, once the answer is posted and someone has paid for it, Google allows all the visitors to browse it for free, and some advice, for example, in small business section, can save a trip to the lawyer or paid consultant. The book takes the reader through the process of setting up an Answers account (which is actually the same account as the one for Groups) and asking informative questions requiring additional research.
Google: The Missing Manual is a pleasant book to read. Lots of screenshots (although all black-and-white), detailed information on the services and quite useful tips for newbies as well as professionals, clearly marked chapters, notes and tips spread throughout the book all make for a good reading experience. It's interesting URLs like this one that show that the authors really put time and effort into creating a book that's fun as well as informative.
Will the book be useful for an average Slashdot reader? Unlikely, since most of the information is already out there and most of the people here don't need a hand-holding walk-through into Google services. Will it be useful for Webmasters? Most of the tips I've read in the last two chapters were pretty much something I knew before. It's not something you need when you've had your own Web site for a few years, but the book is pretty good if you've just started up building Web pages. Also, since so many features have been only recently introduced, the book doesn't cover things like graphic ads in AdSense or Gmail accounts.
For someone quite unexperienced with the Internet or those seeking to gain expertise in Google services and broaden their research skills, though, it is a useful, fun-to-read title. It's not expensive either, so while I think for most of the geeks it's redundant, it would be a good gift for those in the family who keep calling and asking questions that begin with "Where do I find...?"
You can purchase Google: The Missing Manual from bn.com. Slashdot welcomes readers' book reviews. To see your own review here, carefully read the book review guidelines, then visit the submission page.
ID10T (Score:4, Funny)
Re:ID10T (Score:2, Funny)
Otherwise they ban you:
Due to excessive bad posting from this IP or Subnet, comment posting has temporarily been disabled. If it's you, consider this a chance to sit in the timeout corner . If it's someone else, this is a chance to hunt them down. If you think this is unfair, please email moderation@slashdot.org with your MD5'd IPID and SubnetID, which are
I"M SORRY! I love the colors, really!
Re:ID10T (Score:2)
Maybe someone from your subnet was dicking around? Happened to me, but I got it back... and renewed my subscription so I could yell at them if it happened again ("As a paid subscriber...").
Re:ID10T (Score:2)
Yeah. But obviously if this shows up, I've finally been welcomed back. Hooray.
And honestly, I don't really mind the colors at all.
Re:ID10T (Score:5, Funny)
You just know someone wrote in; "I ate the whole goddamned tube and for all the good it did me I may as well have shoved it up my ass!!!"
Someone needs to loose their job.... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Someone needs to loose their job.... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Someone needs to loose their job.... (Score:2)
Re:Someone needs to loose their job.... (Score:2)
I'm trying to semi-humourously point out the real problem is cost-cutting.
Now that we've beaten these jokes into the ground, how about this crazy weather, eh?
Re:Someone needs to loose their job.... (Score:2)
For the first time I wish I was a subscriber; I remember enough about my favorite ignored post ever to find it, but I can't see my full history and it was months ago.
Re:Someone needs to loose their job.... (Score:2)
Re:Someone needs to loose their job.... (Score:2)
Step by Step walkthough (Score:5, Funny)
Step Two: Hit Enter
Re:Step by Step walkthough (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Step by Step walkthough (Score:2)
Step Three: Set arbitrary stock price for IPO absurdly high, causing several market analysts to go WTF?
Step Four: Cross fingers
Step Five: ???
Step Six: Profit.
Re:Step by Step walkthough (Score:5, Funny)
Actually, this entire book review was just a way for this guy to advertise his car on slashdot.
Re:Step by Step walkthough (Score:3, Informative)
The Google API [google.com]
The Google Filesystem [rochester.edu]
The Google Homeland Security Database [google-watch.org]
The Google Censorship Features [google-watch.org]
Re:Step by Step walkthough (Score:2)
h
Re:Step by Step walkthough (Score:2)
Step Two: Hit Enter
You'd be amazed to know that more than one person has asked me for help because they didn't know they had to do step two.
If it weren't true it'd be so funny :-(
Re:Step by Step walkthough (Score:2)
We are suing you for stealing our book and posting the entire contents on the web.
224 pages (Score:5, Interesting)
224 pages! My god, the style guide and word processing manual here at work, toegther, don't even come to 224 pages.
What in the name of the Eversmiling Buddha could possibly fill those pages? "You may type 'AND' between search terms. To type the word 'AND', do not use the apostrophes. Find your keyboard. Locate the 'A' key..."?
Re:224 pages (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:224 pages (Score:2, Funny)
Writer: "I couldn't come up with much, I apologize."
Editor: "Don't worry, we'll just use a 14 point font."
Re:224 pages (Score:3, Insightful)
I feel lucky... (Score:3, Interesting)
Z
There is a need (Score:4, Insightful)
Cheers,
Erick
as long as it's Dummies series (Score:2)
What Next (Score:5, Funny)
Re:What Next (Score:2, Informative)
Re:What Next (Score:5, Funny)
You laugh, but Slashdot is complicated and changing all the time (usually by whim, I suspect.) Such enlightening topics which may be covered:
Personal Journal: You personal crap which wouldn't stand a snowball's chance in Hell of getting approved as a story.
Trolls: How to spot one (e.g. Only an idiot would read this chapter)
Microsoft: Once a day the happy way (except in MA,CA,NY and any other state law requires more frequent bad news about the company.)
Stories: Stuff that may or may not be interesting, though the best stuff often dies until a truly bad submission is made, also Dupes.
Moderation: Whyizzit? (e.g. Why did my doctoral dissertation get a Score:5, Funny)
Metamoderation: Your big chance to work for free.
Polls: What they reveal about that little dark spot on your soul (actually it was a smudge on the auragraph)
Offtopic posts: Today's tech and how it relates to your personal beef with G. W. Bush, Kerry, Tea in China, The Jelly Baby tariff in Portugal or that worrying voice coming from under the bed at night.
Slow page loads (Hey, the Tandy 1200 is overclocked, buster!)
Etc. Beowulf clusters, Soviet Russia, CowboyNealism
Re:What Next (Score:5, Informative)
Re:What Next (Score:2)
Re:What Next (Score:2)
Re:What Next (Score:2)
Atleast mine will have a section entitled: "How to get mod points in just 7 days!" :)
Apologies in advance (Score:2)
Can I write the appendix covering hot grits, Natalie Portman, and pants?
(If you haven't been here several years, you are not expected to get the joke.)
That'll beat (Score:2)
Reminds me of a DNA quote... (Score:2)
No (Score:5, Interesting)
One of my favourites is the define option...
type into google define:whatever and it will come back will a list of defintions, can be very handy sometimes.
Re:No (Score:2, Informative)
Yes! Furlongs per Fortnight (Score:5, Informative)
451 furlongs/fortnight in km/hr and you get back:
451 (furlongs / fortnight) = 0.270020143 km / hr
or type: 387 btu/hr in watts
and get: 387 (btu / hr) = 113.418504 Watts
Re:Yes! Furlongs per Fortnight (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Yes! Furlongs per Fortnight (Score:3)
Re:Yes! Furlongs per Fortnight (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:No (Score:2, Informative)
And, it is even faster than http://www.webster.com/ [webster.com] at least for those of us still on dial-up.
PACKAGE TRACKING!!! (Score:4, Informative)
Re:No (Score:3, Interesting)
A while ago, I'm sure someone on Slashdot showed me a way to search Google for *AN EXACT PHRASE*. No, I don't mean using speech marks, I mean whatever goddamn ASCII characters I enter are searched for. I have never found out how to do this again. So, say I wanted to search for the *string*:
#irchelp efnet
or:
2^4^8
? Obviously Google would filter out characters like '#' usually and also ignore such characters in between words (Google d
Re:No (Score:2)
Re:No (Score:2)
"blah blah blah"
Re:No (Score:3, Informative)
This would be a nice idea for a new google meta-utility: Enter any phrase with a wildcar
Re:No (Score:2)
Re:No (Score:2, Informative)
Re:No (Score:2)
Definitions of Automobile on the Web:
, n. A transportation device hailed as the solution to the problem of providing transit without creating the pollution generated by a horse.
Yep, that works
Re:No (Score:2)
-Billy
Another one? (Score:2)
Here's [dmiessler.com] a brief summary of a few of my favorites that I use to remind myself of them.
The Incorrect Assumption (Score:3, Insightful)
"You're Stupid" (Score:3, Interesting)
for the /. crowd (Score:5, Interesting)
Also, the book reviewed is available on Amazon [amazon.com] for four dollars less. Don't pay the /. tax.
Re:for the /. crowd (Score:2)
Re:for the /. crowd (Score:2)
They lost their value (Score:5, Insightful)
The last manual I've read in a long long time was the Gentoo handbook. That was an example of the old style one level fits all, but they just happened to do a very good job and it worked. They combined good explainations along with technical information. For something like windows, you're dealing with system admins and complete idiots. There is no way Microsoft could make a manual to satisfy the needs of 90% of their customers, so they don't bother. Many other companies obviously do the same.
If you don't believe me that novices have difficulty with one level fits all technical manuals, print out some man pages and see how many people can understand them.
Re:They lost their value (Score:2)
Here is the real missing manual (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.googleguide.com/ [googleguide.com]
I used it a few times to teach some classes on how to search the internet.
You'd be surprised (Score:5, Interesting)
We are all geeks here, so yeah it's ridiculous to us. But I see this as being an awesome book, and required reading for people getting into computers with the will to learn
See, if you go out looking for something obscure, you'll find it perfectly in 15 minutes or fewer. But I have friends who work as researchers for Harvard Univeristy and are considered the bomb and a bag of Fritos basically because of this ability. It's not second nature to most people to start using quoted phrases, alternative spellings, excluded matches, and cached pages with their handy highlights. Most folks have never clicked "I'm feeling lucky," or even know what it does. And good luck explaining to someone when you should use the directory, what pagerank is (and isn't) good for, how to find GIS results, or foreign language results. Yes the product is simple, but it is huge
Also, most people don't understand formal logic. Best Google-foo artist I know: a philosophy major. Try explaining even a concept so seemingly basic as implication to a random non math non geek. It's like the Mr. Wizard with the apple and pear slices. "So, if X implies Y, and I have Y, what can I infer?" They'll say "X" every time. Toss in a little logic, a little set theory, and I'm guessing that book could be even bigger than it is. And that's not counting Froogle or the toolbar or Gmail or anything.
I'd buy it. I probably will. And I'll make my LSAT students read it.
It's terrible (Score:2, Insightful)
I have a version of "The Microsoft Office" in a large grey box, that has alot of massive manuals still sitting around here somewhere. I don't know why they won't print them anymore.
Linux is just as bad about this as anything. Sure there's typing 'man' or using the howto's, but it's not like using an AS/400 or other server that actually has a whole bookshelf
Re:It's terrible (Score:2)
Next Up... (Score:2, Funny)
Bad example (Score:5, Funny)
Wildcard search allows one to use an asterisk for any word that's missing. Google will fill it in automatically. Pretty useful for finding the lyrics for that song you heard on the radio, but couldn't figure out the last word.
If you were missing the last word, you could just type in the part you remember ( the first X words ) and it would do the exact same thing as the wildcard!
Wildcard is usefull when you have a phrase you want to search for that can include generalities. For example, "The crooks at SCO are a bunch of * *" could match:
Re:Bad example (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Bad example (Score:2)
Re:Bad example (Score:2)
Waitaminute. (Score:3, Insightful)
It's not about a manual for "type word here then press return." That's the part everybody knows about.
It's the different things that Google can do from the very same line that the general populous doesn't know about. Sure, Google is great for searches. But it can also convert currency, forward & reverse phone number lookups, unit conversion, mapping, spell checking, and (now that I've read some of the prior comments) defining words.
There's probably even more functionality that I don't even know about yet deep within that Mostly Harmless Google frontpage.
Re:Waitaminute. (Score:2)
Don't bash the book! (Score:2, Insightful)
My Fave Google Trick (Score:5, Informative)
-qqqqqqqq site:slashdot.org
Placing something impossible (like 8 Qs) in the "without the words" field on the Advanced Search [google.com] page combined with entering a site in the "Domain" field will get you a listing of ALL of the pages on that website!
Well, unless the robots.txt file blocks certain pages/directories... but most sites don't do this. I don't know how many times I've used this trick to find more pr0... err, I mean, information on a website.
For example: Remember that Slashdot story about tired.com [tired.com]? It bugged me that there was only one page on the site... so I pulled out my google trick and found these [google.com]. Nothing amazing, but fun.
Re:My Fave Google Trick (Score:5, Informative)
Re:My Fave Google Trick (Score:2)
Re:My Fave Google Trick (Score:2)
Re:My Fave Google Trick (Score:2)
But increasing with every reply to this thread...
Re:My Fave Google Trick (Score:2)
Nice write-up (Score:2)
Re:Nice write-up (Score:2)
Soople.com (Score:5, Informative)
It can work pretty well for those proverbial parents/grandparents who don't quite "get" it.
Re:Soople.com (Score:2)
Enjoy it while you can... once the IPO goes through, Google's lawyers [slashdot.org] will be suing any site that meets the pattern string *oo*le.com.
(My head itches... I think my tinfoil hat is on too tight again...)
Re:Soople.com (Score:2)
"The Telephone, the Missing Manual" (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:"The Telephone, the Missing Manual" (Score:2, Informative)
Re:"The Telephone, the Missing Manual" (Score:2)
paper manual allows margin notes and post-its (Score:2)
It is a lot harder to put post-it flags to mark the bits you refer to often, pencil in margin notes to clarify bits you had to work through, or cross reference to other sources of help.
there are manuals for sexual technique ... (Score:2)
There's more to Google... (Score:2)
These /. Book reviews are utter crap. (Score:2)
better way to get "site:xyz.com" (Score:2)
Placing something impossible (like 8 Qs) in the "without the words" field will get you a listing of ALL of the pages on that website!"
do this instead:
site:slashdot.org inurl:org
Re:And then again, useless tip (Score:4, Informative)
"Netcraft confirms: * is dying"
and
"Netcraft confirms: is dying"
and
Netcraft confirms is dying
Are wholly different.
Sounds like you need this book!
Re:And then again, useless tip (Score:2)
Then again "is my favorite word" works too, so this isn't the best example. But it's still funny
Re:And then again, useless tip (Score:2, Informative)
Re:What is needed is.. (Score:3, Funny)
Re:What is needed is.. (Score:2)
Some people shouldn't write comedy on an empty stomach.
Anything that follows F1 - (Score:3, Funny)
Surely they meant "anything that follows Ctrl-Alt-F1".
"F1" does nothing here.
And Ctrl-Alt-F1 isn't even that scary unless you're on a distro like knoppix, that has that screen already logged in to someone with password-less sudo ability.
(or did I not understand what they were trying to say)
Re:My heard bleeds for them. (Score:2)
Freely available and convenient are two completely different things. For example, the departement of motor vehicles offers a walk-in counter to register your car, open Monday-Friday 8 to 5. It is freely available to all, but it isn't very convenient to folks who work during that time. Those people are "left out in the cold" because
You were right (Score:2)