O’Reilly supplied this book for review purposes.
I like to think that I know my way around my Mac pretty well. I use all kinds of shortcuts that help me get things done more smoothly and efficiently.
At least I thought I knew a lot of shortcuts, until I read this book.
At 884 pages including the index, there is so much information here that it’s pretty much impossible to learn it all. There are tips for using the Finder, the dock, for all the applications that ship with OS X as well as some of the freeware and shareware utilities that can be used to tweak the OS X interface.
David Pogue is one of my favourite technical authors. He’s unashamedly a Macintosh devotee. And he takes a lot of opportunities to poke fun at that other operating system, you know, that one that apparently runs on 90-odd percent of the world’s PCs.
The book contains many, many screen shots showing you exactly what is being presented and what the outcome of various commands and changes should be.
Pogue takes some of the more sticky problems and addresses them so that you can finally get to the bottom of things like Bluetooth and connecting to Windows machines (if you really, really need to do such a thing). He discusses Mobile Me, what it does, and why you might want it, networking, what to do and what not to do, file sharing, fonts, speech recognition, iChat, TextEdit… you name it, if you have it on your Mac, it’s discussed in this book.
There’s even a detailed section on Unix (the rock that OS X is built on top of).
If I had to pick a favourite topic in the book, I’d pick the chapter on the Finder. For example, did you know that you can attach anything to the strip of icons that runs across the top of the Finder window? Neither did I. Here’s a real world example. Say you have a file of passwords (which you shouldn’t have, but never mind) that you use all the time. Instead of scurrying through volumes and folders to find the file when you need it multiple times each day, or, heaven forbid, leaving it on your desktop for the whole world to see, you can drag that single file to the icon bar at the top of the Finder window, and it will be right there whenever you open Finder. That tip alone is worth the price of the book for me.
Speaking of price, at a penny short of $44 Canadian, there are certainly cheaper books out there on this topic, but there’s not a single one that even comes close to matching Pogue’s humour or style, never mind the abundance of gems of tips and tricks.
Get this book. Your friends will think you’re a Mac wizard, hey, you’ll think you’re a Mac wizard. You’ll get things done in the way that Apple meant for you to get them done, quickly, efficiently and easily.