Five main parts comprising 25 chapters make up this 800-page tome, covering such topics as installing Mac OS X; comparing X to OS X Server and OS 9.x; the new interface; network architecture; and configuring user accounts, privileges, and network communications.
Part III, "Getting Things Done with Mac OS X," discusses the use of the bundled applications (Mail, Address Book, Preview, Keychain Access, Grab, etc.), as well as the new printing architecture and how to set up printers and manage color with ColorSync; using QuickTime; and automating the OS and applications using AppleScript.
The book falls short on only a few things. There is little reference to its heritage (NeXT's NeXTStep OS) or other carryover features from NeXTStep (such as NetInfo), and not much about the Unix startup process and the scripts that run during bootup (although you will learn that you can hold down Command+V to see system messages during booting). The book is much more focused on bringing up to speed an experienced Mac user, not necessarily a user with some Unix experience who needs to know just how Apple is handling Unix.
There are many good things about this book--the troubleshooting section is informative, and there's a terrific chapter on using Terminal and writing Unix shell scripts. The appendix, "Installing and Setting up Mac OS X," in Mastering Mac OS X goes far beyond Apple's own minimal hardcopy documentation, as do the chapters on the preinstalled applications.
Mastering Mac OS X makes a fine handbook for users anxious to dig into the new operating system, and it offers a subtle introduction to some of the core Unix workings. --Mike Caputo
Mastering Mac OS X is your comprehensive guide to the latest OS from Apple. Designed for Mac users of every experience level, this book gives you all the information you need to begin fresh with Mac OS X, or to make a fast, trouble-free transition from an earlier release.
Coverage includes: Installing Mac OS X Using the new Aqua interface and Dock Performing local and Internet searches with Sherlock Connecting to the Internet over a modem or broadband connection Managing e-mail with the built-in Mail application Accessing remote servers using Web browsers and FTP applications Configuring your own network, including Web and FTP servers Using all built-in Mac OS X applications Setting up local and network printing Managing fonts Working with ColorSync Viewing and editing movies and other multimedia with QuickTime Automating your Mac with AppleScript Troubleshooting Mac OS X Installing peripheral devices
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
21 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
This is the place to start OS X,
By Don Levy (Los Angeles) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Mastering Mac OS X (Paperback)
While I agree with MacGizmo's review that this is far from complete or with the depth Mac gurus could wish for, I think it is vastly superior to the other books that are out on OS X as of July 28, 2001. For the beginner or experienced Mac person it's ideal: clear and readable, much more detail than all the rest, and very well illustrated. It's extremely well organized, and while each chapter logically builds on the others, yet each can be read independently and out of sequence, thanks to an excellent index (which makes looking up a term or concept quick and easy). My pet peeve with most tech books is sloppy, incomplete indexing. Novels are read start to finish; tech books are primarily for reference. To be genuinely useful, a good index is essential, and Mastering Mac OS X is one of the better tech books at fulfilling this critically important requirement. Most OS X books currently out are simple re-hashes of what one can find in MacWorld and MacAddict magazines, or from Apple's own official "consumer level" information. One has the feeling when reading them that the author just digested a bunch of articles, tried OS X for a few hours (or few minutes, perhaps) and then rushed into print, in hopes of being devoured by the masses starved for more info about OS X. Not so this book. One has the sense that the author has actually USED OS X hands-on, in depth and at length for a considerable time. That some of the trickier, deeper areas of OS X are not addressed is not a bad thing for a book whose primary purpose is to introduce us to the new OS. There will be plenty of books along in the coming months and years to address these issues, mostly topics that are of interest only to techies and Mac professionals. I recommend this book as a starting point for all our clients, at virtually all levels of Mac skills. I wish I had written it. I wish I could write technical stuff this well.
23 of 25 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Master is the wrong word...,
By James "macgizmo" (Phoenix, AZ United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Mastering Mac OS X (Paperback)
Get aquainted is more like it. This book, like so many others, covers a lot of "basic" things about MacOSX and even "Classic". It explains a lot of 'theory' behind the terminal and how usefull it is - but you will NOT master anything in OSX from reading this book. Not one single reference to NetInfo Manager is in this book (other than an obscure note regarding the database in relation to something else). No extensive FTP or Filesharing info beyond the obvious is stated.I did find a brief section about file permissions to be quite usefull - so the book wasn't a total loss. For those with a little Unix experience there is a section devoted to Darwin and some advanced shell stuff - however if the rest of the book is any indication, this section will seem amateur to them as well (I dont know anything about Unix - I was hoping I might learn something when I bought the book). The book is very well written, has lots of tips/notes to break up the thickness - but it falls extremely short of making you a "Master" of OSX. This book is a step above the "Dummies" series, but far below any advanced/power user level. I give it 2 stars because it does cover a lot of info (even though they are basic topics such as browsers use and mail.app etc...) but only 2 because it doesn't even come close to what the title promises.
15 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
OSX for Begining Mac Users,
By M Lapham (Marysville, WA United States) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Mastering Mac OS X (Paperback)
If you want to learn about the new OSX operating system and how to use a Macintosh, this is the book for you. It begins with using the interface, such as trashcan, and advances to basic troubleshooting of the OSX and classic operating systems.On the other hand, if you are familiar with Mac OS pre-X you are already familiar with the majority of this book. Its advanced OSX sections simply give a cursory treatment of the operating system. In my case I was hoping for much more advanced information about the new operating system. From what I read, either I am far more fluent with OSX and Unix than I thought or this book is intended for a different reader.
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