10.3 Establishing a Brand-new Internet Account


If you'd like to sign up for Microsoft's Internet service, called MSN (and by the way, Microsoft would love you to sign up for MSN), or a traditional ISP, you're ready for the New Connection Wizard.

  1. Choose Start All Programs Accessories Communications New Connection Wizard.

    If you managed to mouse across that labyrinth of menus , the New Connection Wizard appears (Figure 10-1).

    Figure 10-1. You can use this same New Connection Wizard to set up a small office network, a corporate network, and so on, but for now, you want the Connect to the Internet option. To sign up for a standard Internet account, just keep clicking the first choice on each wizard screen. At the last step, you'll have to choose between signing up for Microsoft's own Internet service, called MSN, or an independent one like EarthLink or AT&T. In the end, these services are essentially identical, and let you use precisely the same features. The deciding factors should be the price of the service and the presence of a local phone number that your modem can use to dial in.
    figs/10fig01.gif
  2. Click Next. On the next screen, click Connect to the Internet, and then click the Next button.

    Now you reach an important juncture: the Getting Ready screen (third from top in Figure 10-1).

  3. Click "Choose from a list of Internet service providers (ISPs)," and then click Next.

    Here's where you tell the wizard whether you want to sign up for the pricier, but sanitized, world of MSN, or a standard Internet service provider.

  4. Click either "Get online with MSN" or "Select from a list of other ISPs," and then click Finish.

    If you choose MSN, the graphic design scheme of the wizard changes ”suddenly you're in pastel land. This, of course, is the MSN Signup Wizard. Over the next few minutes, you'll be guided through the process of signing up for a new account. You'll be asked for your name , address, birthday, occupation , credit card number, and so on. You'll also be offered the chance to preserve your existing Microsoft-service email address (anything ending with @hotmail.com or @msn.com ). (During the process, the computer will dial a toll-free number to connect with MSN.)

    If you choose "Select from a list of other ISPs," the wizard disappears, and Windows deposits you into a folder window containing two shortcuts: "Get online with MSN" (which opens the same wizard described in the previous paragraph) and "Refer me to more Internet Service Providers." Use the latter shortcut to sign up for traditional Internet accounts, as shown in Figure 10-2.

    Figure 10-2. In the U.S., the ISP Signup Wizard starts by calling a toll-free number to retrieve a list of Internet service providers that have deals with Microsoft in "your area" (in general, this means "in your country"). Click one, and then read the details of its deal in the scrolling right-side window. After settling on one, click the Next button to begin the signup process (providing your name, address, credit card number, and so on). Along the way, you'll probably be asked to select a local telephone number (that your modem will call to get online) from an existing list.
    figs/10fig02.gif

Whether you choose MSN or a more traditional ISP, however, both signup wizards share a few things in common:

  • Along the way, the wizard dials a second time. This time, it's contacting the Internet company you've selected. The details of the service plan now appear on your screen. If you agree with the ISP's rules, click the Accept button, and then click Next.

  • You'll also be asked to invent an email address for yourself. The ending part of the address is determined by your choice of ISP ” @earthlink.net, for example, or @msn.com. The first part is up to you, but keep in mind that names like Bob and Seinfeld were snapped up some time in the Reagan era. Therefore, if the email name you type in isn't unique, you'll be asked to try a different one.

  • When you're shown a list of phone numbers, choose one that's local. If there are no local numbers listed, and you'd rather not pay long distance charges every time you connect to the Internet, consider canceling this entire signup operation and spending some time researching smaller, regional ISPs.

10.3.1 The Connection Icon

When it's all over, Windows XP stores your ISP information, your name, your password, and so on, into a single icon called a connection. To see the one you've just created, choose Start All Programs Accessories Communications Network Connections, as shown in Figure 10-3. There are dozens of ways to get online, and one way is to double-click this special icon.

Figure 10-3. Right: This particularly well-endowed individual has four different ways to get to the Internet. The New Connection Wizard created two of them ”the ones represented by the MSN Explorer and EarthLink icons. One of the many ways to go online is to double-click this icon. Left: Double-clicking one of these icons produces this dialog box, where you can click Dial to go online. (Turning on "Save password" eliminates the need to type your password each time ”in general, a great idea.)
figs/10fig03.gif

Doing so produces the dialog box shown in Figure 10-3 at right. This box will soon become extremely familiar, since it appears every time your computer attempts to access the Internet for any reason.

Once you've set up your connection, skip ahead to Section 10.5. You're now ready to explore the Net.



Windows XP Pro. The Missing Manual
Windows XP Pro: The Missing Manual
ISBN: 0596008988
EAN: 2147483647
Year: 2003
Pages: 230

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