Amazon.com Customer Reviews
Chatty Dialog Makes Difficult Reading - Review written on August 19, 2007
Rating: 1 out of 5
16 customers found this review helpful, 4 did not.
I bought the book as the reviews were pretty good and I wanted a quick way to learn features in OS X that were not obvious for a computer-savvy chap like myself.
I recommend that you go to the nearest bookstore and try reading a few pages or a chapter before deciding to purchase this book instead of an alternative.
The author takes 822 pages to communicate what could likely be presented in less than 300 pages. The dialog is overly "chatty" and the author worked to stretch the text to 822 pages.
Here are a few excerpts.
"Apple has a name for the animation you see when you minimize, open, or close a window: the genie effect, because it so closely resembles the way Barbara Eden, Robin Williams, and other TV and move genies entered and exited their magic lamps and bottles."
"Here and there--in System Preferences, TextEdit, Microsoft Office, and many other programs--Mac OS X offers you the opportunity to choose a color for some element: for your desktop, background, a window, and so on."
"Address Book is Mac OS X's little-black-book-program--an electronic Rolodex where you can stash the names, job titles, addresses, phone numbers, email addresses, and Internet chat screen names of all the people in your life..."
That's 822 pages of long run-on sentences with happy, cute, and chatty dialog to describe everything. That's every single screen, feature, option, mouse click, everything in Mac OS X. The examples cited above were randomly picked by opening three arbitrary pages.
If your preference is for concise communication of howto's and features this is not the book for you.
best how-to book - Review written on July 10, 2007
Rating: 5 out of 5
This is the best how-to book for Mac OS X. It is simple enough for beginners (although they may be intimidated by the amount of information presented) but is full of useful information for users at any level of expertise. It focuses on information that will be useful every day, and does not get into the less frequently used topics. For example, its treatment of Unix is brief, and there's not much Macintosh troubleshooting or configuration information. For a good treatment of this more esoteric information see Ted Landau's Mac OS X Help Line, Tiger Edition.
Pogue covers all the free programs included with the OS as well as the OS itself. Even if you know these programs well you will be surprised at some of their hidden features that are revealed here. This book is a great source for shortcut key combinations (there's even a master list in an appendix).
Tiger (Mac OS X 10.4) is not drastically different from Panther (10.3), and their Missing Manuals are not that different either. The main innovations in Tiger are Automator, Spotlight, and Dashboard, and this book has extensive coverage of all. O'Reilly makes minor updates to their books in new printings. This one was published in 2005, but I'm reviewing the eighth printing (December 2006) which has some information on Intel Macs that did not exist in 2005.
The Missing Manual series has a very clever innovation, namely the "Missing CD-ROM". There's no CD-ROM bound with the book (they claim this saves you $5 off the cover price), but each book has a page on the publisher's web site with all the freeware you would normally find on a CD-ROM. The publisher page has links to other pages where the software is available (usually it refers you to Version Tracker), so the publisher doesn't have to license the software for distribution or even pay for the server space to store the software.
The writing in this book is much livelier than in the average computer book, probably because the author is not the average computer author. David Pogue is a self-described music/theatre geek and has a bachelor's degree in Music from Yale. He wrote the Desktop Critic column for Macworld magazine from 1988 to 2000 and has gone on to bigger and better things as the Technology columnist for the New York Times.