| Mac OS X Leopard Edition: The Missing Manual | |
| author | David Pogue |
| pages | 893 |
| publisher | O'Reilly Media Inc. |
| rating | 10 |
| reviewer | John Suda |
| ISBN | 9780596529529 |
| summary | Great Manual for all levels of users |
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I'd buy it... (Score:2)
Re:I'd buy it... (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.macinstruct.com/node/213 [macinstruct.com]
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Re:I'd buy it... (Score:4, Informative)
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Re:I'd buy it... (Score:5, Informative)
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Yuk yuk yuk. Your wit is painful to witness.
Yeah, remove Application Enhancer before installing Leopard. That always does the trick.
iPhone edition (Score:2)
Re:iPhone edition (Score:4, Informative)
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Mouse Acceleration (Score:2)
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Is there an app that works better under it? Tablet use? Fine(st) grained control?
If it's just personal preference, fine.
Re:Mouse Acceleration (Score:4, Informative)
Then, I installed Logitech's all-in-one OSX utility (the Logitech Control Center). It recognized my Logitech USB mouse and - voila - the awful acceleration was gone, swept aside by using the hardware vendor's driver instead of the one that ships with the OS.
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Wrong ISBN ! (Score:2, Informative)
ISBN-10: 059652952X
ISBN-13: 978-0596529529
Re:Wrong ISBN ! (Score:5, Funny)
- We can still go years with the existing ISBN-10 system.
- We can gain even more years if large publishers were to return unused parts of their ISBN-10 space.
- The ISBN-13 system will require vast changes to existing libraries costing billions of dollars.
- In fact, BAT ("Book Address Translation") is good enough for most users.
- BAT provides an extra layer of security that ISBN-13 just doesn't have.
- The extra digits are inefficient and take up needless space.
- None of the problems with ISBN-10 are fixed by ISBN-13.
- Noone can remember ISBN-13 numbers, they are just too long.
Did I miss any?
And while I'm here anyway, just who is misplacing all those manuals anyway and why is that newsworthy?
What's next on slashdot? "Cowboy Neal: the Missing Carkeys"?
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Will it tell me how to fix these bugs? (Score:3, Insightful)
* Looooong wait times for wake-from-sleep (15 seconds typical) with no indication whether it's going to wake from sleep at all (e.g. if the battery is drained)
* sometimes doesn't sleep when lid is closed (until the battery drops to emergency levels, see above)
* sometimes doesn't recognize monitors when waking from sleep. Sometimes the monitor it doesn't recognize is the macbook's own.
* Fucks up screen geometry when plugged into a 1600x1200 external monitor (menu bar moves to external monitor as needed, but stays at the native-screen width; X windows and most applications silently ignore clicks near the lower or right edges of the external monitor
I'm sorry I ever upgraded to Leopard -- it's such a buggy piece of crap that I'm beginning to feel like I'm using a Microsoft product.
Re:Will it tell me how to fix these bugs? (Score:4, Insightful)
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Needs to be tagged "Apple"... (Score:4, Insightful)
Slashdot needs better review guidelines (Score:3, Insightful)
It would be better, if different parts and aspects of the books were given separate ratings, and then a total rating was calculated from the parts. Please also look into how other publications rate books. I'm sure there's a lot to be learned.
Re:$21 for something you would expect to be suppli (Score:4, Insightful)
Why would you expect a comprehensive book written by a 3rd party to be supplied free with the OS?
If you want help from Apple, there's the built in help function, the section of their website, and their Discussions Forums [apple.com]
, not to mention the free call number available in almost all countries they officially sell in.Parent
Re:$21 for something you would expect to be suppli (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.apple.com/support/leopard/ [apple.com]
(and yes, they assume you can get to and read a web page).
I see ENORMOUS books on how to use Windows... or even Word for that matter. 600+ pages describing how to use a word processor.
Why doesn't Microsoft give those third-party books away for free?
You do realize this is a third-party book, right?
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Also - it's been a long time since I bought a copy of Windows XP, but I seem to recall that the "manual" it came with was basically a "Getting Started" guide, maybe 50 pages long or so, with big, easily-readable text on small pages. I don't really see that as much of an improvement over what Apple supplies.
Re:$21 for something you would expect to be suppli (Score:4, Informative)
if it was called "Secrets of OS X" instead of "The Missing Manual" nobody would bitch. People are more than happy to take any opportunity they can to take a shot at apple. My girlfriend recently bought a vista laptop. It didn't come with a vista manual (or even install/recovery disks)... but there is no "Vista: The missing manual (and recovery disk)"
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OK... I stand corrected [amazon.com]
There most certainly is a missing manual for vista.
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But you will have to do a fsck first.
Quite, and that was my point (Score:2)
VideoTips and Guided Tour too (Score:3, Informative)
you can subscribe to the videocast. While most video tips are things I knew about, some are truly useful and well hidden features (oops?). The best part is probably the short length of the videotips themselves: 1 minute per week is something I can afford.
And let's not forget the Guided Tour. 30 minutes, but worthed: http://www.apple.com/macosx/guidedtour/ [apple.com]
And while I'm a it, there's a new section this year: http://www.apple.com/findouthow/ [apple.com]
Re:$21 for something you would expect to be suppli (Score:2)
Re: $21 is too much? (Score:2)
It all depends on what Dickensian weasel words are worth to you.
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OK, I'll Bite (Score:4, Informative)
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I finally broke down and picked up a second-hand machine (Mac Mini G4 1.42 MHz) with MacOS X Leopard installed. It'
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
You may want to look into this, then: Classic on Intel [macos-user.com].
Set that up, and you won't need your 10.3 install anymore.
Re:Does OSX documentation go out of print so fast? (Score:5, Insightful)
Just because Microsoft can't come out with OS updates but once or twice a decade doesn't mean that Apple isn't providing significant updates to their OS more regularly. People see a reason to spend $130 for Leopard; there must be something new there.
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Users would of course find that many things from the Tiger "missing manual" would still apply. Obviously, though, anything that changed between Tiger and Leopard would be different. Why wouldn't O'Reilly want to stay up to date?
This really isn't a tough logic problem.
Re:Does OSX documentation go out of print so fast? (Score:5, Informative)
No, but it does become obsolete that fast. Features new to Leopard that were not in Tiger include:
Yes. 10.n to 10.n+1 is major upgrade akin to going from XP to Vista. As one of those people who doesn't read the manual before diving into something, I'm still finding new features and I've had it for months. Just yesterday I noticed in an e-mail a friend sent me about a concert he was going to downtown "next friday at 9:00", that right clicking on the time, gave me the option of automatically creating an event in the calendar program for that day at that time labelled with the concert name. That's exactly the kind of stuff a book about Leopard is nice for finding out about.
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Trust me, if you expect "Spaces" to be like the virtual desktops you're used to in Gnome or KDE -- it isn't. It's practically useless in fact being based on the notion of application partitioning rather than task partitioning. This means if you try to spread out windows from one program over several desktops, you're in for some confusing behavior. And if you used forwarded X sessions over X11 via ssh -- get ready for really crazy behavior unless you keep all your windows on one deskt
Re:Bad ISBN (Score:5, Informative)
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apple + right arrow (end)
get a mac before you complain about how its not a "real" computer.
Re:Jump to End of Line (Score:5, Informative)
I'd say that's enough *real* features whatever that means...
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On older keyboards it's command+left / command+right. Alt+left/right goes between words.
I think the newer keyboards do have end/home keys, as well as an fn key and better-labelled page up, down and command keys.
^E: simple emacs bindings are supported (Score:3, Informative)
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Apparently it's command-left/right. Skipping a single word is option-left/right. Unless you are in a Qt app, in which case it might be control, because Qt developers wouldn't know interface consistency if someone beat them to death with it (not sure if this has been fixed in recent versions of
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Command-LeftArrow, Command-RightArrow has always worked fine for me.
Yaz.
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Additionally, most standard EMACS key bindings are supported. Is that 'real' enough for you?