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Apple Training Series:
Mac OS X HelpDesk
by Peachpit Press
 

Photoshop Classic Effects. DVD Bundle
by Scott Kelby
 

The PhotoshopWorld Dreamteam Book
by Scott Kelby and Staff of the PhotoshopWorld Dream Team.
 

Adobe GoLive CS Tips and Tricks: The 200 Best
by Adam Pratt and Lynn Grillo
 

Hacking iPod + iTunes
by Scott Knaster
 
Over 300 Mac Titles, Most 20% Off!

Unlike your local megabookstore with its ever thinning and hard to find Mac section, our bookstore is packed with Mac books. We have listed as many currently-in print Mac books as possible. And to help you pick the best book, we show our Recommendations. To locate all books in a category, use the pull down menu on the top frame.
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Garage Band:
The Missing Manual
by David Pogue

 


Secrets of The iPod
by Christopher Breen
 

Apple Training Series: GarageBand
by Mary Plummer
 
 

Mac OS X Help Line, Panther Edition
by Ted Landau
 

Adobe Photoshop CS Down & Dirty Tricks
by Scott Kelby
 
Our Recommendations
Ipod hacks
iPod & iTunes Hacks
Hadley Stern

Published December 2004

Most iPod users are perfectly happy fabulously simple Itunes software and features Apple has developed for the rest of us". But then there are the few out there, the extremists. Ive looked at several iPod books offering "hacks", and this one seems the most creative. Many are not for the casual reader, you need to be comfortable creating Applescripts, but the code is provided for you. How about building a permanent home for your iPod is your car by molding a new center console with iPod dock out of plastic? Too extreme? Dont worry, there are many less ambitious hacks that you can try.
Hack 2: Exercise with Your iPod
Hack 26: Stream Music with AirPort Express
Hack 31: Build a Cheap Linux Music Server
Hack 38: Convert Text Files into iPod Books
Hack 43: Get Your Email on Your iPod
Hack 52: Clean Up Your ID3 Tags
Hack 54: Extend Your Visualizer Options
Hack 66: the iTunes Look and Feel by Resource Hacking
Hack 83: Make a New iPod Playlist from Your Selections
Hack 94: Manipulate Audio Using the Terminal
In all there are 100 creative hacks for your iPod and Itunes. Solutins for both mac and Windows users are offered wherevber possible. I liked the one about how to clutter up your desktop with album art. And then there are the hacks on how to replace your ipod battery when it finally meets its maker. Overall, this is an excellent choice if you are searching for ways to wow other iPod users with your technical wizardry!

Ipod Fan Book
iPod Fan Book
Yasakuni Notomi

Published September 2004

Not ready for hacks? Just looking for a way to get “in tune” with your new iPod, or seeking a gift for a new iPod owner? The iPod Fan Book might be for you. It’s a small, square book the same size as the iPod box, full color, and easy to read. Chapters have color codes on the edge of pages making it easy to find your way around as you “fan” through the book. Hence the unusual name!
  The biggest challenge you face as a new iPod owner is how to get your music into it. Apple has made iTunes very easy to use for both Mac and Windows users, but you still may have questions; for example, what bit rate to encode music, how to get music from old analog records into digital form, how to record from Internet radio or DVDs? This book gives brief but useful information on these subjects.
  Once you have your music loaded, you want to take it every where you go. The fan Book has useful info on how to hook up your iPod in your car, and to your stereo. It does not, however, cover Airtunes or Airport Express, which are relatively recent introductions.
  Playlists are one of the iPods powerful features. They allow you to group your favorites lists of songs to play. The book gives decent coverage on making the most use of playlists, adding songs on the fly. It also covers ways to share your playlists and your music with other ipod users, something Apple frowns upon!
  Other topics include using your iPod as a hard drive, downloading contracts and calendars, and accessories to make your iPod even more indispensable. Written for the average non-technical reader, this is a good introductory book for the non-geek, wives, girlfriends and teenagers. And with a list price under $15 and selling on Amazon for around $10, good value.

Inside .Mac
Chuck Toporek

Published May 2004

Inside .Mac by Chuck Toporek is written for new users’s of Apple’s .Mac service, which icludes Virex virus protection, Backup software, 100MB space on Apple’s server, and many more benefits. The book covers just about every question that a user could have. Which is just as well because Apple does not provide a manual. Apple provides online help on the DotMac site but for some people reading a book first is the preferred method of learning. (I am more of the dive in, play around, and only refer to the manual in case of dire necessity persuasion). The book not only covers OS X, it shows how to access your iDisk from OS 9 and yes, Windows!

Apple’s $99/year DotMac service is often confused by customers with an ISP account. Since it offers email services, that’s not surprising. (In fact, you need an ISP account to make use of DotMac’s email!) Toporek takes the reader through the methods of using DotMac as webmail, or accessing it using Apple’s mail program built into OS X.

DotMac is pitched as an automated, offsite backup solution; the basic service offers 100MB of space, enough for your word processing documents, spreadsheets and presentations, but probably not enough if you have a large photo or music library. You can use Apple’s Backup software included with DotMac to back up to local media and the book offers a comparison of costs and benefits of using DotMac’s iDisk vs. a CD-ROM or DVD, and also makes other suggestions for people with larger backup storage space needs. The book helps the user with backup strategies, what files to back up and where they are located and how to setup backup schedules.

Inside DotMac provides a chapter on iBlog, a simple program that allows you to create a blog on your Mac.com homepage. For a while, iBlog was free to DotMac users, but is no longer free or available on the DotMac site, so readers might find this confusing. As I had already downloaded iBlog during the free giveaway period, I used the book to guide me as I created a simple blog. On occasions the book is very pedantic in explaining the steps to install software in excruciating detail - in the case of iBlog I simply dragged the icon to my Applications folder but Toporek took almost two pages to explain his installation method. Obviously a new user would be more appreciate of the detail, while I hopped ahead.

Integration with the iLife suite of apps is another reason to have DotMac and Toporek explains building a Mac Home page using DotMac’s simple tools, uploading images from iPhoto and movies from iMovie. One of the tidbits I picked up was how to create a "Favicon". If you use Safari, you may have noticed that some web pages display a logo in the Address bar to the left of the URL. These are actually 16x16 pixel images that you can create for your own website. You need to embed a little HTML code in the web page to make them appear. (See http://www.oreilly.com/catalog/indotmac/ for an example.) I was glad to have found this little gem in the book. Another unrelated gem I noted was to check spelling as you type with Safari. If you use webmail, or are typing an email into a form on a website, being able to spell check is something I’ve always wanted to do. Just choose Spelling, Check as You Type from the Safari Edit menu.

In general I found the book to be readable, well organized and easy to use, with a decent index, and info that’s hard to find elsewhere. If you are a new Mac user and DotMac subscriber and have $20 to spend, I recommend this book.

Doug Noble

Mac OSX, The Missing Manual
By David Pogue
Published 2003

"By way of a printed guide to Mac OS X, Apple only a flimsy "getting started" booklet. To find your way around, you're expected to use Apple's online help system. And as you'll quickly discover, these help pages are tersely written, offer very little technical depth, lack useful examples, provide no tutorials, whatsoever, and aren't accessible at all unless you are online. You can't even mark your place, underline it or read it in the bathroom." [Excerpt from the Introduction.]

Having been a Mac user since 1985, I figured that learning Mac OS X would be a walk in the park. But OS X has many fundamental differences from OS 9, and attempting to use it without a reference manual is not recommended. As usual Apple has left it to third parties to write this manual. David Pogue has once again risen to the challenge, with another in the "Missing Manual" series. At around $20 this book is a bargain. I learned about many hidden features of OS X that I was not aware of. The book has an excellent section on using the web serving functions, a chapter on exchanging files with PCs, a chapter on Applescripting. Wants to know about OS X Utilities or File Sharing? He's got it covered. An excellent chapter "Where'd it go?" covers items that that moved or disappeared in the transition from OS 9 to X. And if you run into problems either installing or using OS X there is a chapter for that.
Pogue's style is as usual easy to read, chatty without being obnoxious, and the book is well illustrated. Pogue takes advantage of his non-Apple status to make the book more than a "manual"- he offers excellent advice to get around the issues that the Apple engineers failed to tackle.

Pogue also covers the applications like iMovie, iPhoto, iTunes, ical and other apps that Apple includes with every new computer. While not as exhaustive as the separate books available on these items it covers the basic info required to get up and running.

The latest 10.3 version of Pogue's popular OS X Missing Manual now covers Panther. It covers great features like the new Sidebar in the Finder. Learn how to use Expose to hide/show windows. Learn how to keep your files secret with Fielvault. Network your Mac with PCs. Doing a clean install and more.

I liked the first edition and the second, and like the third even better! [Doug Noble, MacBookshop]

The Little iDVD Book
By Bob LeVitus
Published 2002

Apple's suite of "i" applications, iMovie, iTunes, iPhoto, iDVD and so on, might well be called the "I CAN" apps, unleashing the creative talent that we didn't even know was in us! They enable Mac users to accomplish tasks previously only possible with high end, expensive equipment. The combination of iMovie and iDVD allows anyone with a DV camera and SuperDrive equipped iMac to create movies and burn DVDs. But not without a little instruction. Veteran Mac writer Bob LeVitus rises to the occasion with "The Little iDVD Book", with a straightforward, quick read, style and a dash or two of LeVitus humor. As befits these simple applications, the book is not too large, but packs in lots of useful advice, starting with planning the project (Before you even think about burning a DVD). In fact, this book is as much about the process of making movies as it is about the software itself. iDVD comes with a good tutorial which makes it easy enough to learn. But, learning to be a film maker is something else. LeVitus starts with a "Basic Training" section. Then continues on with Getting Your Stuff Into iDVD, Creating Menus and Buttons, Adding Audio, How to Backup Projects, and finally iDVD In Depth which goes through the menus and functions. He throws in some background on MPEG compression and a introductory section on FinalCut pro and DVD Studio Pro, (The Pit You Throw Your Money Into) to whet the appetite of serious movie impresarios. I recommend this book to anyone making their first digital movie. [Doug Noble, Reviewer, TheMacBookStore.com]
Real World Adobe InDesign 2.0
By Olav Martin Kvern and David Blatner

Published 2002

Adobe's InDesign 2.0 takes over the reins from the highly successful PageMaker app. InDesign is supposed to attract Quark users, and has adopted Quark's frame based layout methodology. It also has extensive drawing tools, XML support, better table support and many new features. It also has an advantage over Quark in that it is an OS X native application. Olav "Ole" Martin Kvern and David Blatner's latest book in the Real World series is a solid and hefty reference manual for InDesign. It includes decent coverage of the drawing tools that are similar to those in Illustrator, which enable the user to do more work within InDesign. The authors include many tips for former PageMaker and Quark users who have made the switch. As a longtime PageMaker user I was disappointed that there was not a section devoted to the differences between InDesign and PageMaker (and of course the same for Quark users). Instead, the tips are scattered throughout the book. Which is not a bad thing, but for folks like me who don't like to read the manual before diving into a new software app, that intro piece would have helped. There is a useful section on how InDesign deals with opening Quark and PageMaker files, what converts and what doesn't. The authors have clearly been up and down the desktop publishing street many times, and each subject is covered in detail. This is the sort of book you probably don't want to read cover to cover, but rather use it for help when you need it. Recommended. -- Doug Noble, reviewer.

Macintosh - The Naked Truth
By Scott Kelby

Published 2002

Once upon a time, there was a irreverent Mac magazine called Mac Today. It combined great articles with some PC bashing and witty retorts to ìPC weeniesî from its editor, Scott Kelby. Mac Today has morphed into Mac Design Magazine to reflect the Mac's predominance in all things visual, and Kelby not only edits it, he tours the country giving Photoshop seminars. I recently spent a very enjoyable day at one such seminar being entertained and learning at the same time as Kelby joked his way through his favorite passion, down and dirty tricks. Now, Kelby offers his own brand of evangelism by publishing ìMacintosh ñ The Naked Truthî, exploring what itís like to be a Macintosh user in a Windows world. He deals with such subjects as ìCompUSA - your own private hellî, ìStupid things PC Users sayî, ì20 most important things about being a Mac Userî, ìresisting the temptation to strangle Appleís Managementî and other pearls of wisdom. If you have ready any of Kelbyís columns, you already know what to expect. Sometimes he rants, other times he screams, yet always lighthearted. One of my favorite quotes: ìif God uses a computer, itís definitely a Mac. After all, since money is no object, why would he choose a PC, which is clearly the devilís work?î. Needless to say, Kelbyís Mac-centric views donít go down well with PC users. This book is not a tell-all about Apple management, nor is it a tipsínítrix compendium like other Kelby books. But if you are a true Macaholic, you are bound to be able to relate to his tales and it may help you to co-exist peacefully with your PC-toting friends!

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