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15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Very good book about everything you could ever ask!
This book introduces you to OS X, with a complete walkthrough of nearly every feature OS X has to present. It will be valuable to Wintel users too, because the introduction to Macs is done very professional. It treats every user the same, and it does just what it's supposed to do, namely as a complete reference, in which I think it does very well. The book is also based...
Published on June 20, 2001 by Andre

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16 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Extensive, but shallow
A better title for this book might be "Mac OS X: The Complete Overview". Coverage of the new OS is a mile wide and an inch deep. It might be a good book for someone thinking about moving to OS X who is looking for general information to help make their decision, but its lack of depth will frustrate a new OS X user wanting to master their system. For some...
Published on August 28, 2001 by Donald Hall


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16 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Extensive, but shallow, August 28, 2001
This review is from: Mac OS X: The Complete Reference (Paperback)
A better title for this book might be "Mac OS X: The Complete Overview". Coverage of the new OS is a mile wide and an inch deep. It might be a good book for someone thinking about moving to OS X who is looking for general information to help make their decision, but its lack of depth will frustrate a new OS X user wanting to master their system. For some chapters the low level of detail is fine and to be expected, but for others it effectively renders the information provided useless. For example, I found the chapter on using the command line particularly frustrating as I wanted to learn how to use some of the basic commands. There is an extensive list of commands, but no explanations of how they work. Here is an example: chmod: Change file permissions chmod [-R [-H | -L | -P]] mode file ... That is it! No explanations of the options, what the modes are, or what exactly you need to type in for 'file'. This may be okay for a Unix user needing to confirm the command syntax, but for a classic Mac user, this section is largely useless without an accompanying Unix manual. Having said that, if all you want is a flavor of OS X, and not any detail, the book is extensive and does touch on almost all of its features.
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15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Very good book about everything you could ever ask!, June 20, 2001
By 
Andre (Oslo, Norway) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Mac OS X: The Complete Reference (Paperback)
This book introduces you to OS X, with a complete walkthrough of nearly every feature OS X has to present. It will be valuable to Wintel users too, because the introduction to Macs is done very professional. It treats every user the same, and it does just what it's supposed to do, namely as a complete reference, in which I think it does very well. The book is also based on version 10.0.2 as of this writing, which makes all those other books written for the beta version old and outdated. You won't find better books about OS X !!!
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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Nice book for a new Mac User, June 27, 2001
By 
Frank Bergdoll "LFD" (Calgary, Alberta Canada) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Mac OS X: The Complete Reference (Paperback)
As a new Mac User, this book is an excellent resource! I searched high and low to find something that was comprehensive enough to appeal to the more technical aspects of the OS and this book did delve into them to a fairly good extent (some mention of architecture and comparative architecture). For the most part, I would have given the book a 4/5, but ... there's a programming section! This is very nice to add to a book and it brought back all sorts of warm and fuzzy feelings of the old days when all manuals and texts dealt with programming to some extent. Nice book and a good choice for those needing a Mac reference. The book spends some time on the interface and interaction with the interface -- so you may wish to skim "some" of the material if you are already comfortable with GUI operations. However, sometimes reading these sections will give you insight into something you forgot or a detail you never quite knew.
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars I am afraid I concur with the negative reviews, October 31, 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: Mac OS X: The Complete Reference (Paperback)
This book spends a lot of time on the obvious.

My two main complaints are:

1. Very shallow, almost useless treatment of the terminal application. This is a unix machine. The GUIs for the most part are self-explanatory. I need to know how to use this particular flavor of unix, how to compile code, etc. Something about the peculiarities of the root structure, unusual commands like "open", how to set up an NFS network, X-windows, and other unixy things would have been helpful. I am still looking for such a book but will be cautious about spending my money.

2. For GUI applications like MAIL, the entire chapter explained the obvious, but very little was there for the harder part of configuring and setting preferences. I still don't know how to sort my saved messages into files having individual user names, how to import from other programs (pine, etc). Sure would have been nice. Ditto for NETINFO. This thing is crucial. Also they should at least tell you how to establish a root account. Many of us actually do want to use this computer for computing.

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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Not as "Complete" as I was hoping for..., March 26, 2002
By 
This review is from: Mac OS X: The Complete Reference (Paperback)
I am a long-time and dedicated Mac user, with varied amounts of experience with other platforms -- I have enough Windows experience to earn an MCSE, but only enough Unix experience to be afraid of the root account. I have been very excited about the potential of Mac OS X and wanted a book that was a comprehensive reference for the GUI side but also had substantial documentation of the Unix side, particularly the command line interface.

This book is a fairly decent intro to OS X, but its command line reference is awful. I bought the book and ended up returning it to the store later the same day.

This weekend I just picked up "Mac OS X Unleashed" by John Ray and I would definitely recommend that title over this one.

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars The "Complete Reference" is not quite complete, January 30, 2002
By 
Don Cartwright (Fullerton, Ca. USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Mac OS X: The Complete Reference (Paperback)
Jesse Feiler's "Mac OS X:The Complete Reference" includes most of the basic information necessary
to operate Mac OS X presented in a clean, organized fashion. It covers all of the features of the original release of the OS and serves its pupose as a basic reference for a new user. The book also touches on the underpinnings of the operating system (Carbon, Cocoa, etc.).

What is missing is troubleshooting information. The book assumes OS X is in good working order. It gives little advice as to how to deal with installation problems, incompatibility problems, or anything that requires repair.

If you are looking for what is basically an extended owner's manual that explains the features of OS X, this book does a good job. But if you want to troubleshoot, repair, or otherwise tweek OS X (ala "Sad Macs, Bombs, and Other Disasters" and "Mac Secrets"), you should wait for one of the newer books based on OS X.1.

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars The Complete Reference?, October 5, 2001
By 
Craig Hobart (Encinitas, Ca USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Mac OS X: The Complete Reference (Paperback)
I am not sure who this book was wriiten for. If you can start your computer and open an application then most of this book will be useless to you. Before you purchase this book look in the index for some common tasks you know how to do in OS 9.0. For instances taking a screen shot, burning data CD's, and networking with non macs are not listed in the index. Things that are indexed are in such broad detail you won't get it done following Jesse's book.
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Too techy and not logically organized, July 16, 2002
By A Customer
This review is from: Mac OS X: The Complete Reference (Paperback)
Disappointing. I've been a Mac user for eleven years, and have bought my share of Mac books especially in the beginning. I recently purchased this 750-page tome as an introduction to Mac OS X, but whoa boy...it's not exactly an asset to my Mac library. If your idea is to get conversant with Mac OS X in a jiffy, this is really not the book for you. Especially the organization of the chapters is of the "what the hell was he thinking" variety. The first 90 pages, rather than gradually easing the reader up the OS X learning curve, push him or her into an abyss of mostly highly technical background information about the nuts and bolts beneath the new Mac skin. Before you know it, you're struggling your way through discussions of old coding languages and operating systems. A deluge of arcana ensues -- stuff about Pascal, Mach, DOS and UNIX architecture, kernels, Darwin, POSIX, etcetera. None of it seems the least bit relevant to anyone but the most hardcore propellerhead. It would be OK if that's all the book wanted to be -- a repository of high-tech geek info -- but Feiler then bizarrely veers off into detailed advice-giving to another demographic altogether: absolute beginners. We are told How to Move a Window, How to Scroll a Window's Content, How to Close a Window, and so on. We also receive an explanation of the difference between a pop-up menu and a radio button, and other tips that will extract a heartfelt "duh" from anyone who has been NEAR a computer, Mac or Windows, in the past ten years. Granted, there IS much solid information here, and I don't want to knock the Herculean task that Feiler accomplished -- but due to the book's haphazard organization, its absence of levity, and its supergeek leanings, reading and internalizing the useful information is harder than it should be. You never get the impression that Feiler is a careful coach who seeks to gently guide his students through the Mac OS X minefield; rather, he just kinda reproduces the considerable knowledge he's acquired, without much regard for didactic niceties, and without any appreciable effort to make the hard parts go down a little easier. I gave up on this book in frustration after a day and a half, went looking for an alternative, and found David Pogue's "Max OS X, the Missing Manual" (correctly billed as "the book that should have been in the box"). For my money, Pogue's book -- not just authoratative but well-organized, clearly written and designed, pleasantly conversational, and ocassionally funny -- is head and shoulders above Feiler's. And at almost 600 packed pages, it's almost as complete as Feiler's "Complete Reference."
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8 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Too General for Most Mac OS X Users, May 26, 2002
This review is from: Mac OS X: The Complete Reference (Paperback)
As a Mac power user for almost ten years, I've seen quite a few sad Macs, bombs, and blinking question marks on monitors. What I hadn't seen before upgrading my PowerBook to a TiBook with OS X about six months ago was a Unix command-line interface. Until recently, I had dealt with major OS X crashes by rebooting in OS 9.2.2 (a.k.a. Classic) and then resetting the Startup Disk control panel preference to OS 10.1.4 (OS X) and hitting the restart button. One day, I was tweaking some data in the NetInfo Manager utility and some related library files, and somehow I accidentally trashed my root password. When I rebooted, I encountered the command-line interface on a black screen, with a line of text that read 'etc/master.passwd not found.' I entered my System Administrator and sysadmin (root) logins and passwords to no avail. Next, I reached for my copy of 'Mac OS X: The Complete Reference' by Jesse Feiler, which I had received as a gift but had never had occasion to use much.

'Using the Command Line,' Chapter 21, is intended for use with the OS X Terminal utility application, not for use in the situation I have described above. However, I entered almost every command listed there, from 'sudo' to 'chmod' to 'mkdir.' Nothing worked. I couldn't access the Mac Network Administration Help file for this problem because I needed to be logged onto the OS X network to do so, and I couldn't log on. I looked in this 'Complete Reference' for the troubleshooting section, and there wasn't one. The index didn't even have a listing for 'troubleshooting,' except for one on 'troubleshooting utilities,' which wouldn't have been useful for this kind of problem. I rebooted into Classic from a CD and then did enough online research to figure out that the best way for me to solve the problem would be to do a backup of my files, reinitialize the hard disk, and reinstall the OS X and OS 9.2 system software, applications, and files.

Next, I decided to partition the 48 GB hard drive. (The new TiBook had shipped with OS X and Classic pre-installed on one partition.) I consulted the 'Complete Reference' for some advice on partitioning. On page 103, there was one long paragraph that ended with this recommendation: 'One strategy is to create a small partition - with a very stable set of software - on your hard disk.' In other words, this book recommended that I create two partitions, one small (used for rebooting purposes) and one large (for everything else). There was no information on formatting with Unix, which it is possible to do by using Disk Utility. On pages 239-41, I found more vague information on using Disk Utility for partitioning that didn't answer my questions. 'Complete Reference' made the assumption that unless one was a software developer or tester, there would be no need for more than two partitions on one's internal hard drive. I had been doing extensive beta testing with OS X software applications, not industry related or for fun but out of necessity because so many of my apps for OS 9.x had not interfaced well, and some not at all, with OS X.

'Mac OS X: The Complete Reference' is an 800-page general overview. It gives a succinct history of the Mac OS evolution from 1984 to today, including chapters on Classic, Carbon, and Cocoa. From my perspective, the information presented in this book is too simplistic for most Mac users. The 'Using Mac OS X' section may be helpful to first-time Mac users who prefer a nonintuitive approach to learning their way around the Aqua environment. The information on iTools is nothing more than what is available at the Apple site. The 'Networking' chapter has very basic information that could be useful to Internet and Intranet novices. I think the lack of troubleshooting advice is a glaring omission. Based on other reviewers' helpful advice, I'm purchasing John Ray's 'Mac OS X Unleashed' to assist me with what's 'under the hood' with OS X, and Robin Pogue's 'Missing Manual' for some new 'tips and tricks.'

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars either surf chat groups or buy David Pogue's O'Reilley text, June 30, 2002
By A Customer
This review is from: Mac OS X: The Complete Reference (Paperback)
Lots of fluff here. If the author had given actual tips and tricks, and technical detail as to why and how things work, AND how to fix them when they go wrong, rather than continuously extolling Mac OS X's capabilities, then I might recommend this book. Instead, he drones ad nauseam about Mac 10's virtues.

A convenient browse at the library one afternoon for 2 hours of David Pogue's 'Mac OS X: The Missing Manual' provided me with numerous hints and tips that I was able to use immediately. The two books cost and weigh the same, yet the ratio of useful text to overall text in Mr. Pogue's book is nearly one, while I'd be hard pressed to even rate Mr. Feiler's text with 0.3. Text size is somewhat smaller in Mr. Pogue's book too, so you're getting lots more information, at a much higher degree of informativeness/utility.

Why did I bother buying this book? It was the only one in the computer store when I bought my iBook! Drat!!

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