Selected Product: | Mac OS X Leopard Pocket Guide (Pocket Reference) Paperback Edition: 5th Ed Author: Chuck Toporek Publisher: O'Reilly Media, Inc. Release Date: November 2007 ISBN-10: 0596529813 ISBN-13: 9780596529819 List Price: £8.99 Average Customer Rating: | | Mac OS X Leopard: The Missing Manual ISBN-10: 059652952X Mac OS X Leopard For Dummies ISBN-10: 0470054336 iPhoto '08: The Missing Manual ISBN-10: 0596516185 Office 2008 for Mac, Home and Student Edition (Mac) ISBN-10: B000X86ZAS The Macintosh iLife 08 ISBN-10: 032150190X |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for Mac OS X Leopard Pocket Guide (Pocket Reference) by Chuck Toporek (ISBN-10: 0596529813, ISBN-13: 9780596529819). At this time we have not yet written a review for Mac OS X Leopard Pocket Guide (Pocket Reference) by Chuck Toporek (ISBN-10: 0596529813, ISBN-13: 9780596529819). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com A Leopard in your pocket | Customer Rating: | This guide to the new features of Mac OSX.5 is the latest update to the series. It's a true pocket book and is easy to carry around by those supporting this new OS or as a desktop reference to the user. Its clear contents and index allow you quickly find the topic or function you need, and its style a simple read. It took me four hours for the 190 pages and found myself quoting the new function buzz-words such as coverflow and stack quite naturally afterwards. The only drawback to this book is its over-enthusiasm for Macs over other systems. The truth is that Vista and Leopard have more similarities than XP and Tiger. For those Windows users who find they have to use a Mac OS for the first time, Leopard and this book are a good starting point. Also missing is any critical evaluation of how well the new features operate in general use. What you do get are clear and concise instructions of how to operate and configure this OS.
I am primarily a Windows user who needs to support Mac desktop systems at work. I already have solid knowledge to support Tiger, but many people in my workplace are moving on to Leopard right now. Having read and absorbed this book so easily, I would recommend it to any general user of Leopard or anyone who has to support users of the system. It does not contain any detailed troubleshooting of the system, but if you're new to Macs or OSX then this book will allow you to quickly make very good use of a Leopard system. |
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