Audience


This book is written for users and power users of Mac OS X and assumes that you already have some experience with Mac OS X and with computers in general. For example, this book assumes that you have found and used the System Preferences application, have discovered how to change the way that your windows minimize and how the Dock works, and that you've figured out how to change your desktop background. I'm going to speak to you as somebody who wants to truly master what is going on with your system. Maybe you want to turn your Mac into a web server. Or maybe you want to know the pros and cons of the various filesystem choices that you have. Possibly you want to understand how Mac OS X's networking subsystem makes it possible to switch effortlessly between wired and unwired networks as well as letting you share your connection with others.

The command line will be covered extensively in this book and, while I expect that you are at least comfortable with the idea of the command line, one thing I won't assume is that you are a Unix guru who is knowledgeable about all of the shell's dark corners. I'll give you enough help and explanation of how the command line works so you can accomplish everything you need to. If you decide you like the Unix side of Mac OS X, you can learn more about it by reading Learning Unix for Mac OS X Tiger, by Dave Taylor (O'Reilly).

On the other hand, if you are a Unix guru, you may be interested in Mac OS X Tiger for Unix Geeks, by Brian Jepson and Ernest E. Rothman (O'Reilly), as a companion book that serves as a magic decoder ring describing the differences between Mac OS X's internals and those of Linux, Solaris, and other variants of Unix.

And, if you really do want to learn how to set your desktop pictures and how to use Stickies, iChat, and iTunes, I suggest you put this book down and pick up Mac OS X: The Missing Manual, Tiger Edition, by David Pogue (Pogue Press); surely it's located somewhere nearby in the bookstore. Better yet, buy it at the same time you pick up this book. The two books go well with each other.

There are two other books that you should consider as companion books to this one:

  • Mac OS X Tiger in a Nutshell, by Andy Lester (O'Reilly), serves as a quick reference to many of Tiger's features.

  • Mac OS X Tiger Pocket Guide, by Chuck Toporek (O'Reilly), squeezes the most- used features into a pocket-sized quick reference guide.




Running Mac OS X Tiger
Running Mac OS X Tiger: A No-Compromise Power Users Guide to the Mac (Animal Guide)
ISBN: 0596009135
EAN: 2147483647
Year: 2004
Pages: 166

flylib.com © 2008-2017.
If you may any questions please contact us: flylib@qtcs.net