Slashdot Mirror


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.

4 of 124 comments (clear)

  1. 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.
  2. 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
  3. 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
  4. 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.