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Mastering Mac OS X (2nd Ed.)

honestpuck writes "I've seen a fair number of books for OS X and they range in target audience from the raw beginner such as Mac OS X for Dummies and Robin William's Mac OS X Book through to those for technical readers such as Mac OS X In A Nutshell (IAN)." Read on for honestpucks' review of the new edition of Todd Stauffer's Mastering OS X. Mastering Mac OS X (2nd Ed.) author Todd Stauffer pages 804 publisher Sybex rating 7 reviewer Tony Williams ISBN 0782141188 summary Good guide to OS X for intermediate beginners to intermediate users

Mastering Mac OS X falls firmly in the middle. Unlike IAN it spends a fair amount of time on the GUI and a major section is devoted to QuickTime and the iApps. Unlike Robin William's volume it covers high end topics such as AppleScript and the terminal and has a good section on troubleshooting. One thing lacking that I applaud is that it does not have IAN's large chapter summing up Unix commands.

The Good

The book is well structured, divided into 7 sections, 5 of increasing complexity, 'The Mac OS X Basics', 'On The Internet', 'Multimedia: Images Sound, Video', 'Networking, Coonectivity and Portables' and 'Advanced Mac OS X topics' - which covers AppleScript, the Terminal, and various servers including QuickTime, Samba and Sendmail. These are followed by a hardware and troubleshooting section and finally the appendices. The index is good and it has the by now traditional two level table of contents, the first listing just the chapter heads and the second listing all the sub sections as well.

Given that structure, the book touches all the bases and covers all the required topics well.

The writing is not bad, I think a stronger hand with the editing would have done wonders as it tends to the wordy.

The Bad

Once again a certain amount of the early stuff is either below the needs of the target audience or not really required. Oh, and Sybex do have a page for the book which includes a Table of Contents, sample chapter, index and errata but get a load of that URL and the author has a web page for the book but he hasn't touched it in over a year, since before this second edition was published.

Conclusion

It should be said that among all the books in this genre none are badly written, or badly structured. Personally I don't like the style of the 'Dummies' books and so I put it at the bottom of my list but others may not have the same feeling. That said, how do you choose among them? The choice boils down to two things, how close you are to the target audience for a particular book and how well it addresses the target audience. Mastering Mac OS X is targeted at "intermediate beginners (those who have some experience with a graphical operating system) and solidly intermediate to advanced users" according to the Introduction. I think that it covers the needs of the first group well but will probably fall short if you are already an "advanced user." For these people I'd recommend Mac OS X In A Nutshell. If you are a total newbie, then I'd recommend Robin William's Mac OS X Book.

You can purchase Mastering OS X from bn.com. Slashdot welcomes readers' book reviews -- to see your own review here, read the book review guidelines, then visit the submission page.

124 comments

  1. I doubt by ike6116 · · Score: 3, Informative

    anyone in the slashdot audiance would need this kind of book. OS X is intuitive enough, most would benefit from Mac OS X for Unix Geeks (which even then is a very quick skim).

    --

    Are you secure enough in your masculinity to run 'man touch'?
    1. Re:I doubt by Cheetahfeathers · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Yeah... except that OS X doesn't behave like other UNIX. Want to set up NFS? You're looking at editing some funky database to do it. Want to know which options to use in netinfo for more than a really basic setup? Good luck finding a manpage on that in OS X. The man pages in that OS seriously lack. Just one example of many. Passwords, groups, hosts? Yeah... intuitive.

    2. Re:I doubt by ike6116 · · Score: 1

      ok, so NetInfo is different, RTFM. And it does behave like another unix (lower caps for unix-like), NeXT ;)
      It's begining to look like NetInfo is out and LDAP is in (maybe in panther). So don't get too attached.

      --

      Are you secure enough in your masculinity to run 'man touch'?
    3. Re:I doubt by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I sure hope not, migrating from a lab of machines that already use the netinfo services to converting everything over to LDAP would be hell. Apple made thier choice now they just better stick with it, if other Admins don't wanna RTFM then they should purchase OS X server and let that do it for them. Again here's hoping that NetInfo lives on.

    4. Re:I doubt by Cheetahfeathers · · Score: 1

      I did RTFM.

      man -k netinfo...
      read every single one of them.

      nireport, for instace... examples, less than useless. I still can't get it to do more than
      spit back '#NoValue' to anything.

      niutil -list / /exports
      I don't see the full tree there... no options or anything returned.

      It never properly defines domain or anything. Man pages for these things rather suck.

  2. Shouldn't this review be posted under 'Unix'? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    I thought SCO owned MacOS...

    1. Re:Shouldn't this review be posted under 'Unix'? by fussman · · Score: 4, Funny

      SCO owns everything. Deal with it.

      --
      Support Israeli punk bands. Man Alive.
  3. Where's the review? by Drakonian · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Other than talking about the the titles of the chapters, where was the review of the content? Was this it: "Given that structure, the book touches all the bases and covers all the required topics well." ?

    --
    Random is the New Order.
    1. Re:Where's the review? by Horny+Smurf · · Score: 0
      you must have slashdot confused with a "news" site. Would a reputable "news" site offer a "review" that featured an affiliate link to buy the book?

    2. Re:Where's the review? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you don't understand. here on slashdot, book and movie reviews thats wouldn't get a passing grade in a 6th grade class is passed off as slashdot's excellent original content.

      so quit pointing out that timothy has the writing skills of a 6 year old.

  4. Er...? by rleyton · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Did I miss the review? Didn't learn anything that a swift glance at the back cover in a bookshop wouldn't have told me.

    C- - Must do better.

    --
    ooooooh! What does this button do? - DeeDee, Dexters Lab.
    1. Re:Er...? by Jonny+Ringo · · Score: 2, Funny

      Yeah, will your not in a book shop are ya? See that's the power of the internet :)

  5. Or get two ORA books instead... by Dub+Kat · · Score: 5, Informative

    David Pouge's Mac OS X: The Missing Manual is a well-respected book for showing both converts from OS 9 and the Unix/Windows world how things are done in OS X.

    To get into the gritty Unix stuff, you can also pick up Mac OS X for Unix Geeks.

    The combination of these two books might better server you rather than one "everything and the kitchen sink" Mac OS X book.

    Colocated Linux Servers - From $60/mo

    1. Re:Or get two ORA books instead... by nettdata · · Score: 2, Interesting

      To get into the gritty Unix stuff, you can also pick up Mac OS X for Unix Geeks.

      This is an AWESOME book. Having been a Solaris/Linux admin for many years, this was the book that provided the real *click*, "so THAT'S how that works in OSX!" that made me feel like "root" again. ;)

      --



      $0.02 (CDN)
    2. Re:Or get two ORA books instead... by MacGod · · Score: 2, Funny
      The combination of these two books might better server you

      It might server me? Wow, now there's a Freudien Slip

      Def'n: Freudian slip: Wen you say one thing, and you mean your mother

      --
      "Reality is merely an illusion, albeit a very persistent one " -Albert Einstein
  6. book by grub · · Score: 5, Funny

    Contents:

    Unpacking your Macintosh

    Turning on Your Macintosh OSX Computer

    Changing Your Work Environment

    What is this "Unix" under the hood?

    Using the Console

    The Root User

    r00tly c0n50l3 usage

    0wnx0r1ng j00r fr13nd'5 05X b0x0r5!

    --
    Trolling is a art,
    1. Re:book by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Informative

      why is it so, grub, that all you do is past lame crap in an attempt to get +5, Funny? Take a look at his user page. it's the truth. it's all you do

    2. Re:book by grub · · Score: 1

      There's some insightful, some informative, some trolls in my history. I tend to burn karma on Fridays, so what?

      Take a pill AC, it's only slashdot not real life.
      Now this is the most informative post I've done all month.

      --
      Trolling is a art,
  7. Decent review, however... by numbski · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I'm still looking for h4xx0ring OSX: The guide to 0wnz0ring your mac...and everyone else's. :)

    Serious, I've been a FreeBSD admin for quite some time now, and I use OSX on all my desktops, and have deployed 2 xserves in the last year. There is quite simply a LARGE void in server documentation for this OS, along with configuration how-tos.

    I still can't get ndc (name daemon control, bind) to work on OSX, though named runs just fine. I had to write up docs myself (posted at macosxhints.com) on how to partition out the system and have Apple's updates work nicely and how to get SpamAssassin Milter working with a custom rebuild of sendmail.

    Much much much documents need to be written for the rest of us....those who know what we're doing, but don't want to spend weeks researching in order to do it, which is what I'm STILL doing. :P

    --

    Karma: Chameleon (mostly due to the fact that you come and go).

    1. Re:Decent review, however... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Ha. I tried mac os x once on a 15 inch laptop. it's sweet

      I'm still looking for h4xx0ring OSX: The guide to 0wnz0ring your mac...and everyone else's. :)

      Serious, I've been a FreeBSD admin for quite some time now, and I use OSX on all my desktops, and have deployed 2 xserves in the last year. There is quite simply a LARGE void in server documentation for this OS, along with configuration how-tos.

      I still can't get ndc (name daemon control, bind) to work on OSX, though named runs just fine. I had to write up docs myself (posted at macosxhints.com) on how to partition out the system and have Apple's updates work nicely and how to get SpamAssassin Milter working with a custom rebuild of sendmail.

      Much much much documents need to be written for the rest of us....those who know what we're doing, but don't want to spend weeks researching in order to do it, which is what I'm STILL doing. :P

    2. Re:Decent review, however... by Master+Bait · · Score: 1
      I've been running into issues that I used to be able to do easily in NeXTStep. Showing evil invisibles, for instance. I want to see my .files, especially my .. directory so I can get to the higher directory quickly by double-clicking on it. I prefer the icon view under OSX finder, so I want to see the invisibles and naughty directories, such as /etc and /usr.

      --
      "Only in their dreams can men truly be free 'twas always thus, and always thus will be."
      --Tom Schulman
    3. Re:Decent review, however... by numbski · · Score: 1

      Look over at version tracker, there's an app that enables those functions...I forget the name now. It's a preference pane add-on. I think Tinker Tool.

      --

      Karma: Chameleon (mostly due to the fact that you come and go).

    4. Re:Decent review, however... by b17bmbr · · Score: 1

      here's what you do:

      open a terminal. in the root directory, there is a file called .hidden. (real tricky). delete all directories you want to see in finder.

      --
      My problem? I was perfectly gruntled, until some numbnuts came by and dissed me.
    5. Re:Decent review, however... by Bingo+Foo · · Score: 1

      Funny... I don't see ".." in there.

      --
      taken! (by Davidleeroth) Thanks Bingo Foo!
    6. Re:Decent review, however... by Ilan+Volow · · Score: 1

      I still can't get ndc (name daemon control, bind) to work on OSX, though named runs just fine.

      In other words, due to a lack of control you can't be master of your domain.

      Don't worry. Happens to most guys.

      --
      Ergonomica Auctorita Illico!
  8. Re:There is no way this isn't a troll; by Dot.Com.CEO · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    You know there are other "sites" on the "Internet", don't you?

    --
    Mother is the best bet and don't let Satan draw you too fast.
  9. Is this needed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    These books always end up being stupid. They only tell you something you will be able to learn in 5 mins just by going through the OS. The only thing I would recommend is look at the pictures, and skim through it. These books are never helpful.

    I'd recommend this book to MS people who only play solitaire on there top of the line computer.

    1. Re:Is this needed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hey hey. woah. solitaire is cool

  10. To paraphrase by Timesprout · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Book has good points and bad points. Reviewer prefers other books.

    --
    Do not try to read the dupe, thats impossible. Instead, only try to realize the truth
    What truth?
    There is no dupe
  11. too lite by ross_winn · · Score: 1

    this was too lite to be called a review (in my opinion). Personally I felt that Mac OS X: The Missing Manual was a good entry to mid-level book. my two cents.

    --
    Ross Winn "not just another ugly face..."
    1. Re:too lite by snuffdiddy23 · · Score: 1

      one thing to bear in mind (at least what i discovered after the missing manual and unix geeks books on mac os x) is that despite people getting modded for saying that os x books are mostly fluff, there is not much to say about them.

      i knew very little about actually running the console if it was not an ms-dos prompt prior to the release of os x and have found that learning how to use it is a battle fought with man pages, documentation from other linux documentation and distributions help, but not for you to learn in a book. it is 2003 and os x has been since 2001, one would not expect good documentation yet. if i read another book on how to configure iChat i think i may have to "Switch" again.

  12. Re:There is no way this isn't a troll; by notque · · Score: 0

    There are only 3 sites that intrest me. Espn, CNN, Slashdot.

    Aside from that, I end up reading my online ebooks, but that takes just a bit too much attention.

    Any suggestions?

    --
    http://use.perl.org
  13. BTW, skilled OSX admins out there... by numbski · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I'm currently working on getting chrooted ssh shell sessions set up for my users. I've looked at doing scponly http://www.sublimation.org/scponly/ But that only works for those not wanting 'real' shell accounts.

    Anyone with experience on the topic I'd like to talk to so I can document it and submit it back to the community for searchability and useability. Kthx! :)

    --

    Karma: Chameleon (mostly due to the fact that you come and go).

  14. All 1000 page computer books are fluff by Znonymous+Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The real why to master Mac OS X is to use macosxhints.com and google.com

    --

    Karma: The shiznight, mostly because I am the Drizzle.

    1. Re:All 1000 page computer books are fluff by Znonymous+Coward · · Score: 1

      PS...

      ~s/why/way/

      --

      Karma: The shiznight, mostly because I am the Drizzle.

    2. Re:All 1000 page computer books are fluff by nettdata · · Score: 2, Funny

      how very Zen of you. ;)

      --



      $0.02 (CDN)
    3. Re:All 1000 page computer books are fluff by hmccabe · · Score: 1

      but first you must realize, there is no book.

  15. Re:There is no way this isn't a troll; by notque · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Isn't Fark a bit racy?

    I had always gotten that impression. Getting fired isn't really ever a goal.

    --
    http://use.perl.org
  16. Re:There is no way this isn't a troll; by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Enough already! You've spelled the word interest incorrectly too many times. Get a damn dictionary!

  17. Didn't need books... by Ballresin · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I learned MacOS X by first having a general knowledge of OS 9. Now, OS X is very different from OS 9, but i had some idea of how things should work.

    I went on to learn some Unix/Linux commands in late highschool when my teacher/LAN Administrator told the school he was switching the whole school to Linux to help the budget, and because M$ was bothing him. So I began learning the basic commands there.

    I furthered my study of the command line and the kernel (That sounded like the title to a book, or should be.) by tinkering around with my Dad's gift to me, a NeXT Turbo Color station. It had been fried by a lightning storm, and so was useless. My Dad, however, just told me that he couldn't get it to run, and I could try if I like. I had been tinkering with rebuilding PCs as early as 11 years old, and so had a vague idea of how to open it. I decided, that as it IS kinda rare, I'd let it rest in peace for a few years.

    When I turned 15 I moved in with my mom, who lives in Iowa (BORING). I found motivation in my lack of ability to be entertained by those mundane corn fields, so I began tinkering with the NeXT for the first time. I completely dissasembled it and reassembled it. It worked...for some reason. So it booted into a very strange command line (for someone who had only seen command lines in the movies) and i had to figure it out.

    Make a long ass story a little bit shorter, I some how figured out how to get it to boot off its SCSI drive and i got some action. A lesson in FTP and PING and TELNET were just around the corner (I told my computer teacher that I had a NeXT, and he didn't believe me. He dared me to bring it to school, and we got it on the net.) and I learned there that the internet was more than just www.blahblahblah.com.

    Sorry to make this post so long...but those two factors (Former knowledge of OS 9 and Unix commands and NeXT interface design)...ok...3 factors helped me to weed my way through OS X.

    Done

    --
    I got nothin'.
    1. Re:Didn't need books... by HazMathew · · Score: 1

      Well aren't you special. This is a discussion about the book, not a forum to boast your small achievements.

    2. Re:Didn't need books... by easter1916 · · Score: 1

      You are an idiot, aren't you?

    3. Re:Didn't need books... by Ballresin · · Score: 1

      No, not really. If you don't like it, don't read it.

      --
      I got nothin'.
    4. Re:Didn't need books... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Everything you just said sounds like total B.S.

  18. Re:My Recent Experience with the McIntosh :(( by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Now that sir is a quality troll! I applaud you.

  19. Re:There is no way this isn't a troll; by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well not really. Anything that's 'not safe for work' is marked NSFW and right at the moment the guy who runs it is having some trouble with being rated as a website with Adult content so all the Boobies links are gone.

    Its actually much tamer than reading /. at -1 or even 0.

  20. Re:My Recent Experience with the McIntosh :(( by mr_luc · · Score: 1

    Agreed. That was a work of trolling ART. Is it original?

    Very, very funny. Let's mod this to -5, Troll, in honor of the creativity behind the post.

  21. Re:There is no way this isn't a troll; by notque · · Score: 1

    A dictionary? That will help me define interest, but I doubt I would be able to find it.

    --
    http://use.perl.org
  22. Re:My Recent Experience with the McIntosh :(( by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    my ass it's a quality troll. it's just some fag who pastes it, although pasting is very necessary. there is no originality, however. go to hell, you moron.

  23. Re:There is no way this isn't a troll; by snuffdiddy23 · · Score: 0, Troll

    that is so weird!!! fox news is the same way for me. i will be watching and stories that i have absolutely no interest in will show up again and again, all with promising headlines. it is so decieving.
    as a mac user i notice that slashdot spends an awful lot of time talking about things that aren't mac related, especially games. everyone knows games don't work on the mac.

  24. Re:There is no way this isn't a troll; by PetWolverine · · Score: 0

    Some of my favorites:

    explodingdog
    Homestar Runner
    Nationstates

    I have them all categorized as "Silly" in my Safari button bar.

    --
    I found the meaning of life the other day, but I had write-only access.
  25. Re:My Recent Experience with the McIntosh :(( by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    and yet again... another moron

    my ass it's a quality troll. it's just some fag who pastes it, although pasting is very necessary. there is no originality, however. go to hell, you moron. COCK FACE

  26. Re:My Recent Experience with the McIntosh :(( by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    my ass it's a quality troll. it's just some fag who pastes it...

    Just because its copy and pasted doesn't make it any less of a quality troll.

    ...however. go to hell...

    I'm sitting here replying to your crap; i'm already in hell.

    ...you moron...

    I know you are I said you are, but what am I?

  27. badonkadonk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i'd rather just buy a powerbook and bring that wheever i g0

  28. Re:There is no way this isn't a troll; by notque · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    I'm sure you hadn't noticed, but the url on my name (my website) has an explodingdog picture.

    Thank you.

    --
    http://use.perl.org
  29. Calling Orson by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny
    I've seen a fair number of books for OS X and they range in target audience from the raw beginner such as Mac OS X for Dummies and Robin William's Mac OS X Book through to those for technical readers such as Mac OS X In A Nutshell (IAN)."
    every time i see the name Robin Williams, i have to think, what the hell does Mork know about computers?
    1. Re:Calling Orson by zygote · · Score: 1

      He's an space alien! THEY have all the best computers. Shoot, OS X is probably like Palm OS to him.

      --
      the future is here, it is just not evenly distributed - w. gibson
    2. Re:Calling Orson by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      no way, man... he did everything with his finger...

  30. ORA Books? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You mean the Cult Of Oran's Rugged Ass has got books now? Amazon, here I come!

  31. What about the Reviewer? by Sean80 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Does anybody else here worry about the fact that we don't know the first thing about the author of this review? Is he/she an employee of Sybex? Of Apple? Does he/she stand to gain financially from the type of exposure which only Slashdot can give to technical books?

    I dunno about you, but there are a suspiciously large number of highly-rated reviews here on Slashdot. I think we're all being taken for a ride sometimes.

    1. Re:What about the Reviewer? by Billly+Gates · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Until recently most book reviews have been done with a hyperlink to the publisher with the reviewer getting a percentage of the profit. Cmd Taco no longer acccepts these for obvious reasons. Go read the past book reviews and read the flamming comments. One guy admitted to it and he stated that he made enough money to buy a car.

      You can easily make tens of thousands of dollars in profit just by signing up for the "Tell a friend" service at bn.com and then posting on slashdot with a full hyperlink to the book. Pretty sleezy. Slashdot has an estimation of over half a million readers!

  32. MacOSX From Scratch by axxackall · · Score: 3, Interesting
    The book title is misleading. I thought it's really about mastering, something like Building MacOSX From Scratch. But In fact what the book is trying to do is to compensate the lack of user guide docs for MacOSX.

    I don't see any mastering in the book. Do I miss anything?

    --

    Less is more !
    1. Re:MacOSX From Scratch by Creepy · · Score: 1

      you can't really build macosx from scratch... unless you want to completely re-write compatible code open-source for us... :)

      On the other hand, you can build Darwin, and there are tutorials on how to do this online. I wouldn't recommend trying to build all of Darwin and then put the GUI back on top, as I suspect you'll need to rebuild the GUI and can't (for instance, the gcc that looks like it will be used for the next macosx is 3.3, which isn't binary compatible with the current one being used - 3.1, so you'll likely have failures there). I've built pieces of darwin using the 3.1 compiler (and earlier on older releases) and the latest sources successfully and used them, so it's not a complete bust.

  33. Robin William's Mac OS X ?? by MeanE · · Score: 0, Redundant

    And here I thought he was only a comedian/actor...

    I know I know *groan*

  34. Doesn't a book defeat the purpose of a mac? by jeeves99 · · Score: 5, Funny

    Half the fun of owning a mac is maintaining a defeatist attitude b/c no one makes enough software ports and all the features/bugs in the platform are undocumented easter-eggs. That software problem has been mostly stamped out. Now, if someone filled the documentation void, what would I do with all my angst????

    1. Re:Doesn't a book defeat the purpose of a mac? by Pope · · Score: 2, Funny
      Now, if someone filled the documentation void, what would I do with all my angst????

      Work in retail?

      --
      It doesn't mean much now, it's built for the future.
  35. Now we have proof by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I can master OS X in 804 pages but it takes 1200 pages to master XP. XP better get a whole lot less complicated or switch to a smaller font quickly.

  36. inadequate review by uncadonna · · Score: 3, Informative
    I go along with those who think this review showed almost no insight or even attention and should not have passed muster for posting. I also think that discussing other members of this class of book without mentioning the hardly obscure OSX: The Missing Manual is practically negligent.

    TMM plus OSX for Unix Geeks, both from O'Reilly, have served me well.

    --
    mt
  37. No realtionship with Sybex that I can find. by tdyson · · Score: 1

    A quick look at the reviewer's web site and a glance at Sybex's internal contacts documents shows no obvious link. He didn't write the book and he hasn't done any work for Sybex in that last few years.

    Is he related to somebody at Sybex? Who knows?

    Is he dating somebody at Sybex? I have no idea; I don't get the good gossip at work.

    Me? I work for Sybex. I'm the Director of Information Services. I have little to do with book creation, but I wouldn't mind if you bought a couple of our books. :)

  38. Programming by Ann+Coulter · · Score: 5, Informative

    Cocoa Programming is a very detailed book about the Cocoa environment. It gives you a very in-depth look into Apple's technology and even pulls you into the design philosophies behind Cocoa and Mac OS X. An excellent read.

    1. Re:Programming by SamBeckett · · Score: 1

      If you've read one "Cocoa" programming book, you've read them all. (I have, or at least it seems like it when browsing the new ones at Barnes and Nobles)... Anywho, here is your guide to writing a Guide To Cocoa programming:

      1. Talk about MVC design philosophy.
      2. Project Builder chapter.
      2.A. How to create a new project
      2.B. How to save your project
      2.C. How to compile your project
      2.D. How to close your project
      3. Interface Builder
      3.A. Do a bunch of stuff with the nifty controls
      3.B. Use the term "first responder" ten million times in this chapter and the remaining ones without describing what it means
      3.C. Initiate your classes and add files to project builder
      3.D. Add a bunch of ObjC code to your file
      3.E. Compile and WAHALA
      4. Advanced
      4.A. More of Chapter 3 but with different controls
      4.B. Appendix with crappy websites

  39. OS X book vs User Groups ? by Lord+Satri · · Score: 3, Insightful

    One of the best source for OS X help/info/tricks remains MUGs: Macintosh User Groups...
    Better than any book I know, and won't be outdated :-)

  40. slashcode sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    why isn't this story showing up at apple.slashdot.org? This happens often on slashdot. Whenever an apple story shows up on the front page of slashdot, it often does not show up at apple.slashdot.org. What gives?

    1. Re:slashcode sucks by jellomizer · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Yea as a Apple user myself. I would much rather have smaller stuff like this on the apple section then on the main page. Mostly because it is something that only effects apple users. There are some other things that could effect more people.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
  41. Damn! by crawdad62 · · Score: 1

    You can't here from Ork with dead reckoning alone. He had to have some computer experience.

  42. Mod Parent Up +1: Informative! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I always suspected it, but now we know it's true! Where are my mod points when I need them?

  43. Mod Parent Down -1: Redundant, -1: Unfunny! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Listen to that karma sizzle as it burns!

  44. Re:My Recent Experience with the McIntosh :(( by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I agree I think that there should be the troll poll or a special (Score: -2 Original Troll). Or an article 'Top Ten Slashdot Original Trolls'. Some trolls are good, sadly often more original and interesting than some of inane drivel that some slobbering slashdot beast pounds on the keyboard. Although some get tiring.

  45. Mod Parent Down by elliotj · · Score: 1

    Please! If anybody has mod points, mod this parent down.

    And please! If anybody is in the same room with the parent poster, smack him!

  46. Unleashed by Walrus99 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    One of the better books on OS X that I've found is "Mac OS X Unleashed" by John Ray and William C. Ray. It covers the new GUI based features and apps in OSX such as iPhoto and iTune, but the best part is that over half the book is dedicated to using the terminal. It covers the quirks in OS X/Darwin compared to other UNIX-like systems. Best used as a reference manual, but if you want to read all 1500 pages you are welcome to it.

    (I don't have a link to Amazon, but send me money if you like it.)

  47. There can be only one by ProfKyne · · Score: 3, Informative

    The combination of these two books might better server you rather than one "everything and the kitchen sink" Mac OS X book.

    Hang on to your pennies. It would seem that Running MacOS X, a book for MacOS X power users in the vein of Running Linux, is in development right now.

    --
    "First you gotta do the truffle shuffle."
  48. Re:Mac Problems by eclectic4 · · Score: 1

    It obviously shouldn't be taking 20 minutes to copy a file. There is obviously something wrong with the machine. I would suggest letting the Mac tech take a look at it. Most likely an easy fix.

    Funny is right.

    --

    "The greatest obstacle to discovery is not ignorance - it is the illusion of knowledge." - Daniel Boorstin
  49. What helped me with OSX by alfredo · · Score: 2, Interesting

    was several years before it was released, Apple insiders were suggesting that we learn Linux. They said it will help us with the new Mac OS. They also said that if Apple gets killed by MS, we would have a non MS alternative.

    So when I got my first taste of OSX, I went straight to the terminal and typed top. It's all been gravy since then.

    I like O'Reilly's Learning UNIX for Mac OS X. Advanced OSX is cool too if you like Peachpit press.

    Nothing beats experience, except Edy's Chocolate Fudge Sundae.

    --
    photosMy Photostream
    1. Re:What helped me with OSX by dmaxwell · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I think one of the BSDs would have been a better choice for that purpose. I had to maintain an OS X Server box for awhile. This was the somewhat flakey product Apple had out for a couple of years before 10.0.0 came out. I always thought of it as an expensive pre-beta. I came at it as a tech accustomed to Linux. My very first Samba install was on that machine...talk about a trial by fire. Anyway, I got tripped up quite a bit by the differences between BSD and GNU style userlands.

      I got used to it after awhile. It was basically a case of "well it's just like Linux only different". Anyway, a (NFO)BSD user would have been right at home immediately (although they would've bitched mightily about software packaging..even now a ports-like system is a bag hung on the side of it's newer kindred oses). I had an adjustment period.

  50. Agreed. unleashed for the rest of us. by Satchel+Buddah · · Score: 1

    OSX Unleashed is a great book, with the power to turn Mac GUI victims into power users. It covers very nicely the basics in Unix, the Next heritage, and advanced Mac geekness in general. It was the only book that explained what could be achieved with Netinfo (One of the Authors appeared to be a Next veteran). It is also very well written and quite entertaining for a technical book.

  51. Suxxors! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Okay, I come to slashdot to learn about 'real' unix, not some kind of bastardized, I have to pay for it, shit. Christ... and the 'review' sucked too. Who taught this moron to write. Seems to me he got on his Mac and fired up some crappy word processor with an oversized, over-energetic thesarus and just threw together some random, useless thoughts. I am with the poster below, I would rather have a giant GoatSeX dude painted on my bedroom ceiling than waste my time with a Mac, or this review. Yesh.

    1. Re:Suxxors! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Idiot - why are you reading this review or posting on this book. Stop wasting bandwidth with your jerkass postings.

      I'm amazed at the ignorant fool LuSRs who jump at the opportunity to flame anything on the Mac. And no the Mac is not a gay computer - but a bunch of latent closet queens keep saying that it is.

      I use Linux in several flavors, Windoze XP, 2000, BSD Unix, and recently Mac OSX running on top of BSD Unix out of the box with Perl, Python, Apache server, and a host of workable goodies. All but Windoze the crash monster are solid. My favorites are OSX and Linux.

      My least favorite people are 1) Spammers 2) Flamebaiters 3) Telemarketers - in that order.

    2. Re:Suxxors! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And here, above, we have the typical Maciot (Mac Idiot)... a vehement Linux geek converted to support Mac and it's poor OS coupled to outdated hardware simply because Mac/Apple made a bid for the geek market by building a closed OS built on the *nix core technologies. Piss off... people like you ranke number one on my list of idiots to avoid at all times, useless wanker.

  52. Re:There is no way this isn't a troll; by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, there r so many more gamez for GNU/Lunix apprently!!!!!!!!!!!!

  53. Typical result of apple's efforts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What you are seeing is the result of overhype. You will not see an acceptable level of documentation for OSX because we do not have proper access. I dislike Apple. Im putting that much too mildly. Why is it all the artsy, self proclaimed "computer geeks" go for apple and then complain they are not allowed hard core access to such a closed operating system? They wll never realise that they are being bent over the lime/aqua/tangerine colored barrel, hoping for apple to reform their ways. Grab the KY boys and girls! here comes another outdated chunk of hardware for you to complain about!

  54. Book seems to be about applications and tweaks. by BrookHarty · · Score: 1

    While the book explains how to use the applications, tweak the interface, and fix common problems, it doesnt seem to dive under the hood of osx.

    I want to see books about the disk/file structures, program directories and resources, processes, configuration files, etc.

    You know how Windowmaker works, this is how AQUA Works.
    You know how BlahFS works, this is how HFS+ works. (And how UFS works under OSX)
    How the control panel controls the configuration files.
    Using LSOF to trace iTunes sockets/ports/file handlers.
    How to recreate boot sectors on HFS+ if you mess it up with loading YellowDog linux. (Openprom boot techniques.)

    A real OSX Hackers book.

  55. Understanding Netinfo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    search on Apple's site for a document named "Understanding Netinfo"

  56. Re:Mac Problems by rifter · · Score: 1

    You have been bitten by an old troll. Every once in awhile this exact troll appears in the Mac stories on /. It is a good troll because it works; people will try to help the troll fix his/her mac, people will counter with their experience, etc. After you think a bit and realize that an 8600 is far faster than a 486 by any stretch of the imagination you realize what it is.

  57. Re:My Recent Experience with the McIntosh :(( by rifter · · Score: 1

    Oooooh.. Trolling the troll fans, I see. Excellent! :)

  58. Re:Unleashed by the Rays by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Agreed again. This is the best all around OS X book, for beginner through moderately advanced to even advanced users.

  59. MacOS X for Windows Admins? by Axello · · Score: 1

    I recently had to give a technical training for supporting MacOS X and MacOS 9 to seasoned Windows administrators. Two of them also had Solaris experience. My problems were "where to start" and "what book to offer".
    See, they had ample experience with the other OS, but none with MacOS special niceties. I did not want to bore them with the otherwise excellent Missing Manual series, since these cover mostly user apps. I needed a book that briefly touches the Mac user experience, Finder, windows, menus etc. and then quickly moves on to more advanced subjects. Account configuration, networking, servers, scripting. Also, I didn't want a humongous 1000+ pages book.

    Needless to say, I could not find such a book. In the end I settled for "Mac OS X Version 10.2 Jaguar Little Black Book" by Steinberg. It covers some basics and moves on to system admin tasks. Every chapter has a troubleshooting section. Also the book has a mere 560 pages and is well written.

    By the way, the Windows people enjoyed the MacOS X training & experience very much. But I doubt that the one day training made them into Macintosh service engineers & troubleshooters.