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Windows NT 4.0 Registry: A Professional Reference

Windows NT 4.0 Registry: A Professional Reference
By Steven B. Thomas

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Product Description

An in-depth guide to the structureNand to the careful, studied, optimal restructureNof the complex Windows NT Registry. Here's the information Microsoft refuses to reveal: how to manipulate and manage the Registry; make prudent additions that optimize configuration; master the wide-ranging BackOffice suite; and even pierce the Top Ten "most well-kept Registry secrets." CD-ROM provides invaluable Registry add-ons and work-arounds. Based on the author's two-year database compilation on the Registry.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #2303516 in Books
  • Published on: 1997-12-17
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 736 pages

Editorial Reviews

From the Back Cover
This book and CD-ROM give you what Microsoft never will: a comprehensive guide to Registry management in Windows NT. It's your step-by-step reference to the NT Registry's inner workings, packed with discrete details and solutions that are difficult or impossible to find elsewhere. If you've ever said, ``I wish Microsoft would just publish all of the Registry entries, where to add them, why to add them, and include a little hand-holding along the way,'' this package answers your prayers. Because it delivers even more: Insights into the Registry's highly complex hierarchical structure: Proven guidance on how to directly edit and manipulate the Registry; Tested methods for indirectly adding to the Registry; A real-world look at third-party management utilities; A clear understanding of all Registry topics relating to NT and the entire Backoffice suite; The ``Top Ten Registry Secrets'' revealed; CD-ROM full of add-ons, work-arounds, and previously undocumented fixes to help you optimize your NT setup. Based on the author's legendary Registry database and training expertise, Windows NT 4.0 Registry is the answer to endless book-and Internet-searching for Registry-specific help. It will bail you out when one NT program overwrites another--when other common Registry problems start to rain down--even if you're faced with the Windows NT Kernel-Mode Crash, better known as the Blue Screen of Death.

About the Author
Steven B. Thomas is a Microsoft Certified Trainer and NT Product Specialist with Gate City Consulting, Inc., in Jamestown, North Carolina. He also does technical training for the American Research Group, working with both corporate and third-party Windows NT clients. This book/CD-ROM is the result of his two-year database compilation on the Registry. Thomas holds B.A. and M.Ed. degrees from the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, and is a musician as well as a computer consultant.


Customer Reviews

Not Perfect but compared to the others - THE BEST5
I decided to review all of the registry books, after I had worked with them by my side for several months. I bought this books along with Tim Daniel's Book and Rob Tidrows. While this books was excessive at points with many "tedious unecessary" entries, the mere fact that it is so comprehensive allows it to stand out as the premier reference on the registry. I am extremely impressed with the exception that a books of this nature deserves a better index.

WOW!!!5
This book has almost too many references but it is good. Only 1 weakness. Hard to follow the organization in some places. But overall this is remarkable!!!

Excellant Book! A must reference for NT users4
I've reviewed nearly every book on the Win32 registry and my biggest complaint has been a lack of a good reference to the registry. Finally, a book comes along to answer my needs as both a network admin and a programmer. And best of all, the complete database from the book is available on the CDROM in a searchable format.

I have only one complaint. It doesn't include Windows 95 or 98. Most of the registry entries apply to Win95/98 equally as they do NT, but many others do not. The book doesn't tell you which do or don't. And it doesn't include anything which is Win95/98 specific. Of course, to do so, they'd have to add another 300 pages which is impractical. Perhaps a volume two?