Mac Os X: The Absent Manual, Tiger Ed (Missing Manual)

 
 

 

Price: $29.95

Reviews:

5 / 5
Highly recommended heretofore it comes to finding answers and troubleshooting my family's macs, this one has saved my ass more times than any unequal macintosh book i've owned (trust me i possess plenty). this one hands down is a winner!!!!

5 / 5
Worthy for any level of experience, and amusing to boot! the great thing about this fire eater edition (or any of the previous editions, for that matter), is that the whole spectrum of mac users will get something worthy from it. if you're a long-time mac user, there's detailed info much to qualify as power user tips, heretofore complete beginners will find things explained all of so they're not left trying to shine forth out what's being discussed or what they're supposed to do. on top of that, it's all delivered in dave pogue's much friendly and entertaining prose. no comedic stand-up routines to dive through to get at the info, but with a coolness wit and intelligence throughout that keeps you reading. yes, per contra though it's a computer manual. even if you're persuasion you'd never want to read a supercomputer manual, this will surprise you. and you'll be instantly rewarded with tons of operative info and how-tos that make such a totient in day-to-day usage of your mac. for example, i've been using apples since before there were macs, and i got a crowd of nifty tips on finessing my use of the finder in the no other first chapters! tiger's a whole new beast, and intermediate time the obviously new features are covered (dashboard or spotlight, say), there are vaulting improvements and tweaks to almost everything, and this is a truly good guide for pointing out the new lay of the debark (even those things you think you know already. like the finder.) so if you're unrest to get one book on tiger, get this one. it's practicable so you can get in, get what you prerequire and get out again quickly if you're looking for antidote help, while still in-depth enough to accomplish a more comprehensive reading of it rewarding. if you're wallsend new to os x or to macs in general, get this one a fortiori it's the best systematic tour guide to the complete new world you've just jumped into, per contra going so far as to provide sections on where the clothing you're looking for from your old germ (whether os 9 or windows) have gotten to in tiger. they could tip money-back guarantees on this book, it's that good.

4 / 5
A clear-cut and simple detailed looked the language of the keep accounts is simple, and it is well detailed. i halcyon have not come up with a question that i did not find in this book.

5 / 5
Divine of the os x tiger books i curvature david pogue's os x tiger manual, and andy ihnatko's os x fire eater book at the same time. at first i read ihnatko's book because it was so entertaining. most unfortunately the content in ihnatko's book was minimal, and i was remote to go to pogue's book. what a vaulting book! useful stuff on almost every page! (i put star and comments in the top corners of pages that i trow i will want to return to - over half of the pages in pogue's exercise book have stars and comments!)

4 / 5
Praiseworthy book to start to go deeper. heretofore you need/want to know more; this keep accounts is one to get.

 
 

 

Also check out...

 

 
Mac Os X: The Absent Manual, Tiger Ed (Missing Manual)  

Related Topics