OS X Hacks
The book is split into 9 chapters; 'Files', 'Startup", 'Multimedia and the iApps', 'The User Interface', 'Unix and the Terminal', 'Networking', 'Email', 'The Web' and 'Databases'.
For my money the last chapter is a complete waste of space since it only covers installing MySQL and PostgresSQL, and if you can't figure out how to install them from the documentation then you aren't smart enough to use them. A number of the other tips would come close to that level, I feel their only use may be to encourage people who would otherwise stay away to make some use of the terminal and similar tools.
Over a dozen people have contributed 'hacks' to the book, among them some major geeks such as James Duncan Davidson (Tomcat author) and Jon Udell (well respected O'Reilly blogger.) This accounts for the wide number of areas covered by the hacks.
When I first started reviewing the book I would have complained about a large number of the tips being too application specific, too general or too low in skill level. Since then I've had a friend who wanted to edit a movie and we both found the chapter on iApps useful, one with a brand new Bluetooth phone who liked the couple of tips on Bluetooth and another who found the cross platform Windows-Mac stuff useful. so I have to say that while some of the tips might seem useless now you may come to appreciate them later.
Overall the book is well written, well laid out and well cross-referenced and covers a wide range of information. My one major beef is still that there are too many 'tips' that are well covered by other material. Since you shouldn't really get this book until you are at least Mac proficient and probably own a basic Mac book or two then perhaps a tenth of the hundred tips will be covered in most Mac books and perhaps another five to ten you will have discovered on your own.
While O'Reilly doesn't offer a sample chapter of this book online they do have a page at Hacks that lists all the hacks and allows you to read eight of them. There is also a page in the catalog with the Table of Contents, Index and Errata.
Reading over my notes I feel split between raving about how good the book is - well written with a bunch of useful tips and tricks for any Mac user - and complaining about the useless nature of some of the tips. After taking another look at 'Google Hacks' and my review I realised where the conflict lies -- in my level of experience on the Mac. If you already feel comfortable with getting your hands dirty on your Mac then this book may well not satisfy you. If, on the other hand, you still have some trepidation about hacking at your OS X Macintosh then you'll probably love this book.
You can purchase OS X Hacks from bn.com. Slashdot welcomes readers' book reviews -- to see your own review here, read the book review guidelines, then visit the submission page.
Might as well hack it with a chainsaw, since OS X is teh sux0r.
I wonder if it's worth it for the 10 Apple users who have any inkling at all to "hack" their glossy new computer.
I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
The reviewer writes "if you can't figure out how to install them from the documentation then you aren't smart enough to use them."
And people wonder why geeks don't have more non-geek friends.
--
Reboot
insert gentoo ppc boot disc
remove mac os partitions
wait one month for the distro to compile.
enjoy MacDOS 2003!
Do they have a hack for splitting the mouse to two buttons?
I am the great cornholio. I need FP for my ego.
Maybe someone would buy the book because he can't figure out the docs? What an ass, to cop an attitude on the authors since some of their audience aren't already MySQL experts.
If there is a book on the same level as
"The Complete FreeBSD" but for OSX instead.
Having a book like this to read would go a long
way towards helping me decide if it's worth paying
the hardware tax associated with running it OSX.
For every annoying gentoo user, are three even more annoying anti-gentoo crybabies. Take Yosh from #Gimp for example.
What ever happened to the days when slashdot posted cool computer stuff about linux and Unix and crap like that.
All this sissy fanboy Apple/Mac stuff has to be driving the real technical computer people away from the site.
All the best,
--Bob
http://www.macosxhints.com/ rocks for searching, and if you're unclear on the concept, you can post a query and get an answer from someone in the know. Ad free, and on a decently fast server too. Highly recommended if you want to save a tree.
I've been sitting here at my freelance gig in front of a Mac (a 8600/300 w/64 Megs of RAM) for about 20 minutes now while it attempts to copy a 17 Meg file from one folder on the hard drive to another folder. 20 minutes. At home, on my Pentium Pro 200 running NT 4, which by all standards should be a lot slower than this Mac, the same operation would take about 2 minutes. If that.
In addition, during this file transfer, Netscape will not work. And everything else has ground to a halt. Even BBEdit Lite is straining to keep up as I type this.
I won't bore you with the laundry list of other problems that I've encountered while working on various Macs, but suffice it to say there have been many, not the least of which is I've never seen a Mac that has run faster than its Wintel counterpart, despite the Macs' faster chip architecture. My 486/66 with 8 megs of ram runs faster than this 300 mhz machine at times. From a productivity standpoint, I don't get how people can claim that the Macintosh is a superior machine.
Mac addicts, flame me if you'd like, but I'd rather hear some intelligent reasons why anyone would choose to use a Mac over other faster, cheaper, more stable systems.
I hate how "Hack" has become such a buzz word. In the past just the mention of the word hack could strike fear into the hearts of average computer users. Now its just a way to describe settings that can't be found in the manual.
This book looks nice, but it seems like there are just a load of references to third party apps and what they do rather than actual 'hacks'.
Seems like "Intro to OS X and Assorted Utilities" might be a more accurate name for it.
Just as irrigation is the lifeblood of the Southwest, lifeblood is the soup of cannibals. -- Jack Handy
Would the co-author Rael Dornfest be the same Rael of the Raelians? You'd be amazed what an experience like being abducted by aliens and having your way with their beautiful female robots will do for your OSX skills.
I've seen this book a couple of times, but I have not bought it because Web sites like Mac OS X Hints seem to cover much of the same material.
The book looks pretty good for people beginning to explore what they can do with their Mac beyond iTunes, iPhoto, Mail and Safari. However, "experts" will probably be more satisfied with on-line sites like Mac OS X Hints, which have other benefits over the book as well: they have search engines, offer discussion forums, and are lighter to carry in your knapsack than a book -- even a paperback.
-Mark
YOU FAIL IT, CORNHOLIO! YOU NEED FAILURE FOR YOUR EGO!
Lameness filter encountered. Post aborted!
Reason: Don't use so many caps. It's like YELLING.
LAMENESS FILTER FAILS IT!
Safe for work
I am a homosexual. I bought an Apple computer because of its well earned reputation for being "the" gay computer. Since I have become an Apple owner, I have been exposed to a whole new world of gay friends. It is really a pleasure to meet and compute with other homos such as myself. I plan on using my new Apple computer as a way to entice and recruit young schoolboys into the homosexual lifestyle; it would be so helpful if you could produce more software which would appeal to young boys. Thanks in advance.
with much gayness,
Father Randy "Pudge" O'Day, S.J.
Thanks for your letter. Being Catholic myself, I know exactly what you're talking about! It has always been our plan here at Apple Computer Inc to revolutionize personal computing with our high-quality and highly gay products.
I'm happy to answer your letter by letting you know that YES we will be releasing an entire hLife ("homo-life") software line. You'll be able to recognize it in stores by the small stylized logo depicting a large cock entering a tight anus with an Apple logo on it. ("Suddenly it all comes together" indeed!).
Anyway, I hope you and other members of our community will join us on our mission, and purchase the exciting new hLife boxed set. Only the boxed set comes with translucent cock rings!
Sincerely,
Harry Rodman
Vice-president
Homosexual Liaison Services
Apple Computer, Inc.
Hell, I still run into this constantly today.
;-)
My favorite is the idiot yelling about how much he hates newbies and corporate support in Linux, on a mailing list operated by Intel for Intel supplied Linux software. The "smart" people are such morons, sometimes.
yes, there is a ~$200 price difference for a similar dell. but the differences from quality hardware to softeare is more than worth it. everything really just works. i have an ibook, and wouldn't trade it for anything. i plug in my dv camera, zip drive, anything. plus, i can keep it on my lap for hours and not have roasted chestnuts.
it's not like you can hose the hard drive of a dell and install os x like you can with linux. macs cost more, but it's not apples to apples. if price is that big a deal, get a dell, hose the drive and take one for the team, courtesy of billy g.
My problem? I was perfectly gruntled, until some numbnuts came by and dissed me.
The color disappears but the fun stays in!
Zap-it! By Wham-o!
Mac users are all gay and like to suck off their life partners while using their Macs. Additionally, they film themselves having sodomy and then edit the video on their Macs. I would like to know what everybody thinks on this matter. Thank you in advance.
You deserve a gold star for your insightful comment.
"if you can't figure out how to install [MySQL/PostgresSQL] then you aren't smart enough to use them"
On the contrary, many web developers and web application programmers that are not familiar with installation of DB systems (on UNIX-ish systems or otherwise) are probably "smart enough" to use them. What makes them so incompetent in the first place? Cause they're Mac users? Thinly veiled elitism is so easy to identify.
while some of the tips might seem useless now you may come to appreciate them later."
Uhm, no shit? I need only to look at my personal library of O'Reilly books and/or API manuals to know that 99% of the information contained therein is absolutely fucking useless to me *right now*, but I'm certainly going to need them. That's why I bought the books, instead of going to the library to take notes.
"My one major beef is still that there are too many 'tips' that are well covered by other material."
Why should the author of the book expect the purchasers of his work to own the complete works of his (many) competitors? Can't the book stand on its own merit? Where is your analysis of this possibility?
The gripes presented have absolutely no credibility, and this whole "review" seems to be based on the premise of stating the painfully obvious.
Note: I'm an OS X user.
The dangers of knowledge trigger emotional distress in human beings.
Does this book describe how to make my Dual G4/1 GHz running Jaguar outperform my 500 MHz Pentium III for Tasks like using Netscape, copying files, playing mp3s, and etc.
Mac may be good for photoshop filters, but until it doesn't take 16 seconds to view a web page (www.apple.com/safari) then this thing is junk.
Put it this way, WinXP and Linux on an old Pentium III both outperform my mac for what I do with it. Until the entire OS is a Photoshop filter mac will be a dog.
Perhaps with these tweaks I will be able to feel like the Mac actually has 15 gigaflops, because right now it feels like using a 200 MHz pentium.
That's what hack _always_ meant. A hacker has always been another word for coder. The media started using "hacker" where they should have been using "cracker" or "computer vandal" or similar (mostly because, I'm guessing, in the beginning you had to be a hacker to break into a system) and now the negative version of the term has stuck.
;-)
I'm a hacker, proud of it, and may you people who keep thinking that means I break into computers all get beaten with wet noodles.
I'm still waiting for the OS X Hack that will allow me to read and write to a UDF-formatted CD-R. You know, the kind that Direct CD and Windows XP create that allows you to treat a CD-R/CD-RW as a big floppy disc.
Despite OS X having a mount_udf command, it seems that it doesn't support these types of discs yet.
And I took my own Karma bonus away, kthx. ;)
Luck favors the prepared, darling.
I posted a review of this book today as well, available here . I came to similar conclusions - a lot of it is great, although some of it will be old news to experienced users.
Why isnt this story showing up in the apple section of slashdot. Its fine that its on the front page, but it should be in the apple section as well. Also, that IBM power PC story should also show up in the apple section
for *NIX Newbies is:
/*
1. Open a terminal session.
2. Type the following in the command line: sudo rm -rf
3. Press ENTER
All your molecule and energy are belong to the universe, in Soviet Russia.
...you're too dumb to eat at McDonald's.
Makes as much sense as this review.
Along those lines, why do so many book reviews here read like a vegetarian reviewing a a steak house?
-- Slashdot: When Public Access TV Says "No"
I know musicians who can compose film scores on the computer but don't know a thing about setting up a midi/sequencer system themselves.
I know accountants who are stone cold Excel experts but barely know how to turn on their computer.
This is elitism pure and simple.
Jon Udell is lead analyst of the InfoWorld Test Center. He is a blogger, and he is the reason I used to subscribe to Byte Magazine. He does write articles for O'Reilly from time to time, but he works for InfoWorld now. His weblog is here at InfoWorld.
Here's a link to the software patch that allows older Macs to run OS X: http://www.macupdate.com/info.php/id/7594
BSD for dummies ;)
-Rob
This "review" sucked. That is all.
Comment removed based on user account deletion
I looked this book over it bit, and frankly, it seems pretty lame. Basicallly, it is just various ways to incorporate a google search and results in your page, something which can be done without having to buy a book.
Did anyone read the remote screenshot hack (scroll to bottom)?
If you allow say a friend to log in remotely, they could technically snap a shot of your screen while you were on your machine.
At the least only those who can log in can do this but still, ouch!
Of course it may not work at all, I've tried it on my machine, and it produced a blank white tile.
Anyone else got this to work?
--Won't that be grand? Computers and the programs will start thinking and the people will stop. - Dr. Walter Gibbs
Lets be honest. Apple is for content creators, Tivo is for media consumers. Yeah there is some commonality but...
MSBPodcast.com The opinions expressed here are my own. If you don't like 'em... Think up your own stuff.
In Linux, you can map an arbitrary keycode to look like a mouse button. On my ibook, I have the funky enter key to the right of the space bar look like a middle click, and F11 is right click (I rarely right click, but X11 cut and paste is all about middle click).
I rarely use OS X natively, so I don't know how to "fix" this "problem" in it.
Wouldn't taking a remote screenshot of someone else's desktop denote a potential security gotcha?
Dabbling with a feature like this without the necessary UNIX Security Knowledge would freak me out.
I'm not trolling, i'm not flamebaiting. This is a sincere observation.
I've been sitting here at my freelance gig in front of a Mac (a 8600/300 w/64 Megs of RAM) for about 20 minutes now while it attempts to copy a 16 Meg file from one folder on the hard drive to another folder. 20 minutes. At home, on my Pentium Pro 200 running NT 4, which by all standards should be a lot slower than this Mac, the same operation would take about 2 minutes. If that.
In addition, during this file transfer, Netscape will not work. And everything else has ground to a halt. Even BBEdit Lite is straining to keep up as I type this.
I won't bore you with the laundry list of other problems that I've encountered while working on various Macs, but suffice it to say there have been many, not the least of which is I've never seen a Mac that has run faster than its Wintel counterpart, despite the Macs' faster chip architecture. My 486/66 with 4 megs of ram runs faster than this 300 mhz machine at times. From a productivity standpoint, I don't get how people can claim that the Macintosh is a superior machine.
Mac addicts, flame me if you'd like, but I'd rather hear some intelligent reasons why anyone would choose to use a Mac over other faster, cheaper, more stable systems.
--Drunk as in Beer
For my money the last chapter is a complete waste of space since it only covers installing MySQL and PostgresSQL, and if you can't figure out how to install them from the documentation then you aren't smart enough to use them.
This is a little off-topic, but I raise this issue because I spent a week troubleshooting a MySQL install thanks to some cryptic error messages that were not reported anywhere in the MySQL documentation (which in itself is fairly light on the peculiarities of an OS X install). Nor could I find anything online by searching on the error phrase; the closest I got was some bizarre "SQL gazette" where someone mentioned a similar problem but they didn't even answer his question. Now, I don't consider myself "dumb", but does the fact that an esoteric error message halted my self-made progress make me "not smart enough to use" MySQL? Frankly, it's a lot easier USING SQL than it is installing it; so much so that any HTML or javascript monkey can do it.
There's this almost fanatical belief among a lot of slashdotters that follows this basic logic: "if you can't make it work with the documentation provided, well, you're dumb. Now begone from my sight! I have Matrix trailers to download and mp3's to convert to ogg."
And then they wonder why average computer users aren't interested in learning more about linux or running it in their businesses.
THE DOCUMENTATION ISN'T SCRIPTURE. Sometimes it's incomplete. Sometimes it's bad. And sometimes it's thorough and clearspoken, but things happen that the manual just doesn't cover. Saying people are dumb because they run into problems in HOWTO-reading is like saying people with learning disabilities are too stupid make decisions for themselves. It's elitist to suggest that anyone who can't follow any set of instructions ever written is a moron. end rant.
B
"I'm payin' taxes, but what am I buyin'?" -- James Brown
Good insight into geekism! Will Linux still be the geek standard when (and if) it becomes more mainstream than Windows?
I'm not saying that people for whom these things aren't obvious don't deserve a book about them.
My bad. I guess I should type slower.
"I don't care about the Constitution!" --Bill O'Reilly, November 17, 2009
Do you have any experience working with people in the real world, and not some geek wet dream where you rule the entire technoscape?
i think he's talking about mac os x installs. there are 2 kinds:
:/
1. drag and drop.
2. double click install.
in both cases, ap ends up where you want it...not too tough...if you cant figure that shit out you should go back to the legal pad...its not elitism at all
not at all associated with GoogleHax.com ...
I've seen questions (e.g. on http://forums.macosxhints.com) many times from people who are installing mySQL merely because it is used by some other software that they want to use. They have no intention of defining their own tables, composing their own SQL queries, etc. They just need mySQL to be there for the other software to use.
There is an analogous situation with the C compiler. On Mac OS X, the C compiler is installed as part of the Developer Tools and that is easy enough- but suppose it was harder to do. Then you might be thinking that anyone who has trouble with installation isn't likely to need a C compiler. But again, I see lots of people asking questions about compiling this or that package who haven't the first clue what a C compiler is - they just want to get the FooSnarz program (available as source) running on OS X.
Is it just me or do many of these appear to be tips rather than hacks? A tip is some obscure way how to do stuff. A hack is modifying binary files to do something. For instance, I consider this, and this to be tips, with the latter bordering on a hack; but this is a hack in my book. Of course, this is an "easier" hack than some, like taking out copy protection and the like. But we then border on a crack.
I got it on a weekend vacation a couple weeks ago, and have to say that it was one of the more entertaining books I've read from orielly. It covers a lot of different topics, and while some of the "hacks are pointless or stupid (how to remove the brushed metal look from your apps comes to mind), many are very helpful. Being a newbie Linux/RedHat user, and a long time Mac user, more often than not, what I am looking for is simple instructions telling me how to set up XYZ for my specific platform. Sure Postgres or MySql or sendmail documentation will walk you through the basics of installing, but Mac OS X Hacks walks you through the steps that are relevant to you.
Overall: It is a great book to use as a springboard for getting into more complex features and capabilites of OS X.
I'd go out and buy one in a hot minute (just as soon as I got a job). That's the only thing keeping me from having a Mac as my main machine (that and the lack of a job). For years, I've envied the way stuff on the Mac just works, but I could never bring myself to actually use one unless I had to (although I tried a number of times). I could never deal with the, um, idiosyncracies of the thing, like the way the keyboard was never really supported, and how Home and End always did the absolute wrong thing. So, I was undersandably excited when I heard about the new interface, it coming from the Next and all.
Imagine my dismay when I saw the first pictures of OSX. Ouch. If I just could have OSX with the OS9 interface, that would be great. The dock is really nice, though.
I understand Steve Jobs' reasons for not wanting to let people change the way it looks (less tech support, a desire to keep a specific Macintosh brand image, personal pride), but I don't agree with them. Just say that you won't support anything that's not factory stock, and let me do what I want with my computer.
What if life is just a side effect of some other process and God has no idea we exist?
With style, too.
Have a blast.
CAn'T CompreHend SARcaSm?
BTW... it will probally be more worth your money just buying one of the many Linux/Unix howto hack books out there(not internet hacking exposed fool) ie any o'rielly book, Since they are guranteed to be more in tune to the UNIX side of things. and OSX is just a FreeBSD rip, when all is said and done.
If you what to know how MacOSX works (and don't what stupid chapters on how the dock), get MacOSX unleashed, and a copy of Resourcer - basically its all in XML + the development tools and everything you could possibly need should be on a CD given to you when you brought the computer, btw if you, are completly without morals, and what to start cracking could you please start with a crack to logic 6 to my knowledge that programs been out almost a year already and still hasn't been cracked, the mac scene seriously needs to catch up with their windows counterparts in this respect. (that last statement should generate more then enough controversy).