TidBITS#641/05-Aug-02
=====================

  Does mousing cause you pain? Read on for Adam's review of the
  Contour Design RollerMouse Station, an unusual pointing device
  that could help. Plus, Matt Deatherage casts a cynical eye on
  Intuit's announcement of QuickBooks 5 for Mac OS X, and Kirk
  McElhearn examines two books on Mac OS X. In the news, we cover
  PowerMail 4.0, a security update for Mac OS X, and PopChar X 1.2,
  plus the MacHax Best Hack Contest CD and a digital photography
  cruise conference.

Topics:
    MailBITS/05-Aug-02
    Intuit's QuickBooks Employs FUD Against MYOB
    Get It Rolling with the RollerMouse
    Two Books on Mac OS X

<http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/TidBITS-641.html>
<ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/issues/2002/TidBITS#641_05-Aug-02.etx>

Copyright 2002 TidBITS Electronic Publishing. All rights reserved.
   Information: <info@tidbits.com> Comments: <editors@tidbits.com>
   ---------------------------------------------------------------

This issue of TidBITS sponsored in part by:
* Make friends and influence people by sponsoring TidBITS!
   Put your company and products in front of tens of thousands of
   savvy, committed Macintosh users who actually buy stuff.
   For more information and rates, email <sponsors@tidbits.com>.

* READERS LIKE YOU! You can help support TidBITS via our voluntary <- NEW!
   contribution program. Special thanks this week to Adam Bell,
   Robin Armstrong, and Paul Durrant for their generous support!
   <http://www.tidbits.com/about/support/contributors.html>

* Small Dog Electronics: PowerBook G4/800 Combo Drive: $2,919! <----- NEW!
   iMac G4/700 Flat Panel 256/60/Combo Drive Refurbished: $1,349!
   iMac G3/600 256/40/CD-RW/56k Snow: $777 G3/700 Graphite: $849!
   5GB iPod: $235 <http://www.smalldog.com/tb/> 802/496-7171

* Protect Yourself from Internet Intruders! IPNetSentry is the <----- NEW!
   intelligent, easy-to-use way to deter hackers from an Internet-
   connected Mac. Rated 5 "locks" by SecureMac.com. Just $35
   from Sustainable Softworks <http://www.sustworks.com/tb/>

* DEALMAC: 64 MB SmartMedia for $20. <------------------------------- NEW!
   <http://dealmac.com/articles/39110.html?ref=tb>
   DEALMAC: 12-ounce Pressurized Canned Air 3 pack for $10.
   <http://dealmac.com/articles/39113.html?ref=tb>

* Now Software is delighted to sponsor TidBITS and support its <----- NEW!
   efforts in providing news and commentary to the Mac community.
   Visit <http://www.nowsoftware.com/> to learn more about
   Now Up-to-Date & Contact. Made for Mac OS X and now Windows!
   ---------------------------------------------------------------

MailBITS/05-Aug-02
------------------

**PowerMail 4.0 Beefs Up Mail Handling** -- Despite Apple bundling
  Mail with every copy of Mac OS X, email developers continue to
  forge ahead, with the latest major release coming from Swiss
  company CTM Development. PowerMail 4.0 adds partial POP3
  downloads, server-side mail management, an enhanced address book
  that tracks addresses in sent and received mail automatically,
  integrated text clippings, mail scheduling, and a recent mail
  log window that simplifies the task of processing just-received
  messages. (See "Migrating to New Climes with PowerMail" in
  TidBITS-530_ for a review of the previous version.) The $50
  program is compatible with Mac OS 8.6 and later and also runs
  natively under Mac OS X (including the forthcoming Jaguar),
  where it now supports Quartz text smoothing. Upgrades cost $30
  for registered users, though they're free for anyone who purchased
  PowerMail 3.1.2 after 15-Apr-02. A 30-day demo version is
  available as a 4.6 MB download. [ACE]

<http://www.ctmdev.com/powermail4.shtml>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05930>
<http://www.ctmdev.com/download.shtml>


**Security Update 2002-08-02 Closes Unix Holes** -- Apple has
  released yet another security update for Mac OS X and Mac OS X
  Server, fixing vulnerabilities in OpenSSL, the Apache mod_ssl
  module, and the Sun RPC XDR decoder. Most Mac OS X users wouldn't
  have been vulnerable to these problems anyway, since they must
  be enabled manually in Mac OS X (though not Mac OS X Server).
  Even though the risk is low, it's still important to install this
  update, either via Software Update or manually from the download
  link below (4.8 MB). [ACE]

<http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=120139>


**PopChar X 1.2 Opens a New Window** -- Version 1.2 of ergonis
  software's PopChar X brilliantly eradicates the shortcomings noted
  in "Snap, Crackle, and PopChar X" in TidBITS-631_. You can now
  Command-click on the small "P" to move it to another part of the
  menu bar; more important, PopChar X can now display and insert
  _all_ of a font's hundreds or thousands of Unicode characters.
  The interface for character display is superbly simple, clean,
  and convenient: characters are shown in a single scrolling pane,
  but that pane is clearly divided into sections (Greek, Cyrillic,
  Arrows, Hiragana, and so forth) and a pop-down menu scrolls
  instantly to any section. PopChar X is now both an excellent way
  to examine your fonts and a significant Unicode input method: for
  those wishing to use more than the plain Latin alphabet, it's a
  must-have utility. PopChar X costs $30; this upgrade is free to
  registered users. [MAN]

<http://www.macility.com/products/popcharx/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=06827>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=06780>


**MacHax Best Hack Contest CD 2002 Now Available** -- Want to see
  some cool hacks? The 2002 MacHax Best Hack Contest CD is now
  available directly from the MacHax Group for $20 plus shipping
  and handling. Check out our contest coverage in TidBITS-636_ for
  descriptions of some of the most interesting entries. Keep in mind
  that these programs are written very quickly, so they're seldom
  polished and will very likely crash, but they're still often
  extremely amusing. Plus, many come with full source code that will
  interest developers who were unable to attend this year's MacHack
  conference. [ACE]

<http://hax.com/BestHackCDForm.html>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=06861>


**Digital Photography Cruise** -- If your appetite for cruise-
  based conferences was whetted by our coverage of the Mac Mania
  Geek Cruise, you might want to check out the upcoming Digital
  Photography Workshop at Sea, especially since the lead instructor
  is Arthur Bleich, a frequent contributor to TidBITS on digital
  photography topics. It takes places over eight days in early
  December in the Caribbean and looks like it would be a great
  way to hone your photography skills. [ACE]

<http://www.dpcorner.com/cruise/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=06847>


Intuit's QuickBooks Employs FUD Against MYOB
--------------------------------------------
  by Matt Deatherage <mattd@macjournals.com>

  Intuit today announced that it is developing QuickBooks Pro 5.0
  for Mac OS X, to be available in the first quarter of 2003. What
  does it do? Intuit won't say, other than that it runs natively
  in Mac OS X and Mac OS 9. How much will it cost? Sorry, that's
  a secret, too. Just like a June survey that leaked to the press,
  Intuit is trying to create fear, uncertainty, and doubt among
  Macintosh owners: if the great QuickBooks is coming soon, why
  should I buy MYOB today?

<http://www.intuit.com/company/press_releases/2002/08-05.html>

  Intuit didn't touch QuickBooks 4 for Macintosh for five years
  except to provide a legally required Y2K update, abandoning the
  product in 1996 because controlling 60 percent of the Macintosh
  accounting market apparently wasn't enough to turn a profit
  (those figures come from the Wall Street Journal, by the way,
  from February 1997). MYOB took the challenge and ran with it,
  making new versions of its software every year, adding an
  entry-level FirstEdge product this year, and jumping on the Carbon
  bandwagon early to have a Mac OS X-native program out well over
  a year ago. Despite all that effort, it took until three months
  ago - yes, until May 2002 - for MYOB to take the market lead in
  Macintosh accounting software away from the five-year-old
  QuickBooks Pro 4.0 that Intuit has continued to sell (without
  any warnings on the box that the program is outdated and
  unsupported). Intuit won't even update the payroll tables
  in QuickBooks; it refers you to Aatrix for a free copy of
  its compatible payroll program TopPay.

<http://www.myob.com/us/news/releases/archive/general_may30_2002.htm>
<http://www.aatrix.com/1.800.426.0854/top_pay/index.shtml>

  Intuit apparently couldn't stand for MYOB to take the market lead
  away from its moribund product, so the company issued a survey
  asking if customers would pay $100 for a Mac OS X-native upgrade,
  or $279 for new purchases of the product (other people may have
  seen different prices). The survey didn't discuss any of the new
  features added to the Windows versions of QuickBooks in five years
  other than easier-to-configure forms and improved reporting. Take
  a look at Intuit's comparison chart for the various Windows
  versions and realize that almost none of those features are in
  the Macintosh product, nor did Intuit's survey talk about adding
  them - just charging the same $279 price.

<http://www.newsfactor.com/perl/story/18380.html>
<http://www.quickbooks.com/drawchart.html?premier=1&pro=1&basic=1
&web=1&chartID=default&submit1=Compare>

  Today's announcement is no better: no promises of parity with
  QuickBooks Pro for Windows, no discussion of any new features,
  just a promise to add features to the software in six months
  for the first time in five years. Intuit's Dan Levin said, "We
  listened to our customers and they have spoken loud and clear.
  They want a Mac OS X-compatible version of QuickBooks." Intuit's
  customers spoke even louder and clearer five years ago that they
  didn't want the product dropped, and Intuit ignored them. Now,
  with no specifics whatsoever, Intuit says it will revise the
  product and "expects to release a new version of QuickBooks
  for the Mac on approximately an annual basis."

  There is no product here, just an announcement from a company with
  one of the greediest, most cynical, and most customer-unfriendly
  track records of any Macintosh software company. The sole point of
  this announcement is to stop you from buying MYOB AccountEdge or
  MYOB FirstEdge before Intuit can get some unknown version of
  QuickBooks out the door to milk more money out of a market it
  determinedly abandoned five years ago. Don't let it fool you.

<http://www.myob.com/us/products/accountedge/>
<http://www.myob.com/us/products/firstedge/>

  [Matt Deatherage is the publisher of MacJournals.com, where he
  oversees MDJ and MWJ - daily and weekly subscription-based, ad-
  free journals for serious Macintosh users, on hiatus this week.
  For a free trial, visit MacJournals.com.]

<http://www.macjournals.com/>


Get It Rolling with the RollerMouse
-----------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>

  Those of you who have been reading TidBITS for years may remember
  that back in 1992, I had a bout with carpal tunnel syndrome. I
  beat it with proper ergonomics and addressing the psychological
  stresses in my life, but I've retained a fascination with
  alternative keyboards and pointing devices that promise to
  reduce pain from repetitive stress injuries.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbser=1222>

  So, when I saw a press release from Contour Design claiming
  that their RollerMouse Station reduced discomfort and pain by 47
  percent in the call center of a major U.S. pharmaceutical company,
  I was intrigued enough to ask for a review unit. It came a few
  days later, and I've been using it for a couple of months now.
  In short, it's a good pointing device, although, like most
  pointing devices, it isn't for everyone.

<http://www.contourdesign.com/rollermouse_press.htm>


**Physical Design** -- The RollerMouse Station is essentially a
  pointing device built into a wrist rest, all attached to a two-
  piece plastic tray that holds your keyboard - you can see a
  picture of it on Contour Design's Web site. The pointing device
  sits between a pair of gel-filled wrist rest pads right below
  the spacebar on your keyboard, and it offers a roller bar,
  three buttons, and a scroll wheel.

<http://www.contourdesign.com/rollermouse/>

  The buttons do more or less what you'd expect - the left one
  performs a standard single click, the middle button does a double
  click, and the right one selects contextual menus (essentially
  a Control-click). The scroll wheel scrolls the window underneath
  the cursor (at least in Mac OS X), and pressing the scroll wheel
  activates a button that performs a standard single click.

  The interesting part of the pointing device is the roller bar.
  It's covered with rubber for guaranteed grip, and it rolls
  extremely easily. Rolling the bar up and down moves the cursor
  appropriately, and the entire roller bar slides left and right
  to provide that range of motion. You can even press down for yet
  another standard single click, and a dial on the underside of the
  RollerMouse lets you adjust the force necessary to activate the
  roller bar's button.

  All the functions I've described so far are built into the
  firmware of the device. It's truly plug-and-play, with no software
  to install or configure. And that's fine, as long as you're happy
  with these defaults.


**Software? What Software?** Unfortunately, my experience with the
  RollerMouse began unpleasantly, for several reasons. The most
  serious concern I had immediately after plugging it in was that
  the roller bar hit its left and right edge well before the cursor
  made it to the corresponding side of the screen. That's because
  I always use a pair of monitors, and the RollerMouse is clearly
  designed for a single-monitor system. (Those lucky sods with
  22-inch and 23-inch Apple Cinema Displays would have exactly
  the same problem - it's related to the pixel dimensions of your
  Desktop, not the number of monitors).

  My second problem was that although I've never used all the
  buttons available on my Kensington TurboMouse Pro, I do like
  to assign a button to go back in Web browsers, and I occasionally
  define other buttons for specific tasks. But Contour Design
  simply doesn't offer any software for adjusting cursor speed
  or redefining button actions. Plus, Mac OS 9 doesn't support
  scroll wheels. However, there turned out to be a solution - USB
  Overdrive - as Contour Design's tech support suggested quickly
  when I raised these concerns.

  USB Overdrive, a universal driver for USB pointing devices and
  game controllers, comes from Alessandro Levi Montalcini, a long-
  standing Macintosh shareware developer. Alessandro's code even
  underlies many of the drivers distributed by manufacturers of
  mice, trackballs, and other pointing devices. With USB Overdrive,
  you can adjust cursor speed and acceleration and assign a wide
  variety of functions to different buttons, even limiting those
  custom button assignments to specific applications. I've never
  needed it before, since Kensington's MouseWorks has provided
  similar features for the TurboMouse Pro trackball I use, but
  it was clearly time to give USB Overdrive a try.

<http://www.usboverdrive.com/>

  Alessandro is still working on USB Overdrive X, which will offer
  Mac OS X compatibility, but I didn't see any alternative to
  relying on the current beta. It's still a bit convoluted to
  install, but seems to work well. I bumped cursor speed to the
  160 dpi setting (the default seemed to be about 400 dpi), and
  instantly I was able to make the cursor cover my entire Desktop.
  A couple of quick tweaks later and I had my buttons configured
  as well, though not quite how I wanted them. USB Overdrive X
  could identify and control the RollerMouse's left and right
  buttons separately, and it lets you pick which button to attach
  to the scroll wheel's button, but the RollerMouse's middle button
  was hard-coded to perform a double click with the left button,
  and the roller bar's button was also locked into being a left
  button single click. USB Overdrive X couldn't touch those two
  buttons without also modifying the behavior of the left button
  itself. I ended up using the scroll wheel's button for the Back
  command in Web browsers, which was problematic only because the
  tension on the scroll wheel's button is very high, making it
  quite difficult to click.


**Actual Usage** -- With those problems out of the way, I
  unplugged my TurboMouse Pro and forced myself to use the
  RollerMouse. At first, I tried using my thumb on the roller
  bar to control the cursor, which seemed to make sense, since the
  roller bar is right below the keyboard's spacebar, and if I could
  use my thumb, I'd barely have to shift my hands off the keyboard
  at all. Unfortunately, that required either that I click with my
  left hand, something I had trouble learning (although I'm
  considering trying it again, since it seems like a good way
  to divide effort between my hands), or that I click using the
  roller bar's button (which is a left button single click). A nice
  idea, but pressing down on a roller bar that rolls and slides with
  almost no pressure at all made the cursor jump just as I wanted to
  click. I almost managed to learn single clicks, but double clicks
  and clicking and dragging were beyond my manual dexterity, even
  after a week of use.

  After that approach failed, I went back to the technique I'd used
  with the TurboMouse Pro - running the roller bar with the index
  finger of my right hand, and clicking the left button with my
  thumb. It requires a little more movement of my right hand from
  the typing position, but it's still easy, and I was totally
  comfortable with the RollerMouse after only a day or two  of
  this technique. I use the right button for contextual menus a fair
  amount, and for the first time, I've actually started to use and
  like the scroll wheel (the scroll wheel location on the TurboMouse
  Pro - above the trackball - put it out of reach for me). The
  scroll wheel isn't as smooth as the one on a Microsoft mouse I
  have around as well, but it's much less stiff than the TurboMouse
  Pro's scroll wheel. I can tell I've become addicted to the scroll
  wheel because it doesn't work in Classic applications, and I'm
  constantly trying to use it to scroll in Nisus Writer, the main
  Classic application I still use regularly.

  So has the RollerMouse reduced my discomfort and pain by 47
  percent? No, although I wasn't in much discomfort to start with,
  so it's not surprising. I have noticed a change in the soreness
  I get in my right arm - it used to be related to reaching further
  to the right to get to the trackball, whereas now it seems to be
  related to keeping my right arm pointing more to the left when I'm
  using the roller bar and left button. It's just enough different
  from the typing position that I notice it by the end of the day.

  I haven't tried using my left hand to control the roller bar,
  although from what I can tell, left-handers will find it easy
  to do so. USB Overdrive would be particularly helpful then, since
  it would let you swap the functions of the left and right buttons
  if desired.


**Trackpad Comparisons** -- Upon reflection, my finger technique
  with the RollerMouse is identical to the one I use with the
  trackpad on my iBook. It's not entirely surprising, since the
  RollerMouse extends out from the front of your keyboard much
  the way the trackpad and wrist rests extend out from the front
  of the keyboards on PowerBooks and iBooks. There's even a laptop
  predecessor to the RollerMouse: the Outbound Laptop and Outbound
  Notebook, early portable Macintosh clones, both used the Isopoint
  Trackbar, which was essentially the same idea as the RollerMouse's
  roller bar.

  So if there's room for a trackpad between the RollerMouse's wrist
  rests, would a trackpad work better than the roller bar? It would
  eliminate the problem of hitting the physical limits of the roller
  bar when moving left and right, since you can always pick up your
  finger and move it back to the middle of a trackpad when you hit
  the edge. But in the RollerMouse's favor, the roller bar is really
  smooth and easy to use, even when your hands are a little sweaty
  (a common summer occurrence for me).

  For some reason, the trackpad has never taken off outside the
  laptop world - ALPS sold the GlidePoint, a stand-alone trackpad
  a while back, and Adesso makes a split keyboard with an integrated
  trackpad that's still seemingly available. Contour Design might do
  well to investigate manufacturing a trackpad-based version of the
  RollerMouse Station - the reduction in moving parts could help
  lower the cost as well as making the product instantly familiar
  to a large audience accustomed to trackpads on laptops.

<http://www.adessoinc.com/product_detail.cfm?productid=42>


**Rolling the Dice** -- Should you buy a RollerMouse right away?
  It's not cheap at $190 (available direct from Contour Design or
  from TidBITS sponsor Small Dog Electronics), and although it
  worked extremely well for the work I do (email, word processing,
  Web browsing, and so on), I worry that it wouldn't do as well in
  situations where you need highly accurate control, such as with
  some types of graphics work or certain games. Not surprisingly,
  that's often true of trackpads as well.

  That said, if you're experiencing discomfort or pain related to
  mousing, the RollerMouse is definitely worth a try, since it
  changes both your arm position and the type of motion necessary
  to move the cursor. Make sure to ask about return policies if you
  find it doesn't match your preferred working style - input devices
  are highly personal and what works for me may or may not be as
  comfortable for you.


Two Books on Mac OS X
---------------------
  by Kirk McElhearn <kirk@mcelhearn.com>

  When I started using Mac OS X, back in the days of the public
  beta, I was both confused and disappointed. The habits and
  familiarity I had developed over more than a decade working with
  Macs had been tossed by the wayside. Mac OS X offered a totally
  new user experience, and one that threw me for a loop. I didn't do
  much more than fiddle with that beta version; while I am an early
  adopter, I didn't want to adopt something that was so sketchy.

  Then came the first official release. It was better, but many
  things were still missing. I began using it more, especially to
  update a manual I wrote for a popular utility. But my usage of
  Mac OS X remained, at the time, very limited. I ran Mac OS X on
  my iBook, but I kept my main computer running Mac OS 9 so I could
  get "real" work done. When the 10.1 release came out, life began
  to improve. Not only had Apple refined Mac OS X's interface, but
  I started to use it more and became more comfortable with the
  changes - if only because my work, writing manuals and books,
  required me to do so. The turning point came when I started
  co-writing my first book, Microsoft Office v. X Inside Out,
  and I looked more closely at just what was behind Mac OS X's
  attractive interface.

<http://www.mcelhearn.com/insideout.html>

  Quite a few books on Mac OS X have hit the stores, some written
  during the public beta, others before the 10.1 update came out.
  But the many improvements that appeared in 10.1 made these early
  books obsolete almost instantly. That left us with another flurry
  of books that followed the 10.1 update (which will certainly be
  somewhat out of date soon, when 10.2 comes out, but that's the way
  this business works). From this last set, I've examined more than
  a dozen Mac OS X books, and have chosen two that, to me, seem to
  offer the most useful information for intermediate or advanced
  users. Beginning users have a variety of other books that will
  help them get started (and I hope to look at a few in upcoming
  articles), but if you, like me, have been working with Mac OS X
  since the beginning, these two books will probably be the most
  valuable for your library.

  One of the most interesting (and frightening) things about Mac OS
  X for us long-time Mac users is its Unix foundation. Chris Pepper
  covered much of this in several TidBITS articles already, but
  suffice it to say that we Mac users now have at our fingertips
  some intensely powerful - if not user-friendly - tools. Although
  many Mac users don't want to fiddle with command-line programs
  (and I am one of them), I've discovered that they can be real
  lifesavers at times. There's nothing wrong with long-time Mac
  users refusing to use command-line tools - Apple certainly doesn't
  require it - but there's equally little wrong with dropping into
  the Terminal every so often to do something that's much easier
  from the command-line.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbser=1186>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbser=1214>


**Everything about OS X** -- Several years ago, David Pogue and
  O'Reilly & Associates created the Missing Manual series, a now-
  successful imprint. His Missing Manual series has raised the bar
  in computer books - these books are generally well-written,
  complete, and full of tips and tricks. One of the most successful
  books in the series was his Mac OS 9: The Missing Manual, which
  gave many users the detailed information they needed to go beyond
  the basics. I reviewed it for TidBITS two years ago, and it
  remains one of my favorite books for those needing to learn
  more about Mac OS 9.

<http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1565928571/tidbitselectro00>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=06089>

  Now Pogue is back with the followup: Mac OS X: The Missing Manual.
  Like the Mac OS 9 book, the Mac OS X Missing Manual follows a
  logical sequence. If you read it sequentially, it starts with
  the Desktop (folders and windows, organization, the Dock, and the
  toolbar), then moves on to examine applications. The sections that
  follow deal with a more heterogeneous group of subjects: the
  Components of Mac OS X section covers preferences, the programs
  that come bundled with Mac OS X, and CDs and DVDs; and the
  Technologies of Mac OS X section deals with users, networking,
  graphics, sound, and the Terminal. The final section explains
  using Mac OS X to go online, and several appendices offer menu by
  menu explanations, talk about installing and troubleshooting, and
  provide some Web sites and additional books to consult for more
  information.

  To Pogue's credit, he fills the book with useful information, from
  the basics of setting up user accounts and using windows, to how
  to set up a network. Everything is here - a brief section entitled
  The Very Basics even explains clicking and double-clicking. But,
  like Pogue's Mac OS 9 volume, this is not a book for beginners,
  who would soon be lost in the sheer quantity of information.

  I learned many things I hadn't previously known - keyboard
  shortcuts for quick navigation in the different Finder views;
  how to create and manage user accounts; and some neat hacks,
  such as redefining keystrokes, something that used to be a breeze
  with ResEdit, and which now must be done from the command line.

  One especially useful section is the first appendix, The "Where'd
  It Go" Dictionary, which lists the many things that Apple replaced
  from Mac OS 9 when creating Mac OS X. It's a boon for new users
  looking for familiar landmarks. I do have to disagree with one
  snide remark Pogue makes, however: under the heading Button View,
  he says it's "gone - to the great disappointment of the six people
  who ever used it." Not only do I miss button view - it's a great
  way to roll your own launcher using pop-up folders - but I
  personally know more than six people who use it.

  When I was reviewing Mac OS 9: The Missing Manual, I commented,
  "The problem here is that the book is written more like an
  encyclopedia or other reference book." You can level the same
  criticism at this book - it's an encyclopedia, and many of its
  chapters read like a series of tips, keyboard shortcuts, and
  workarounds. This is both positive and negative - while the
  breadth of Mac OS X calls for a thorough approach, the almost
  list-like nature of the book can be overwhelming.

  Mac OS X: The Missing Manual has 450 pages and lists for $25;
  it's currently available for 30 percent off from Amazon, and
  it's extremely likely that your favorite bookstore will have
  it as well.

<http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0596000820/tidbitselectro00>


**For Power Users Only** -- Mac OS X Unleashed, by John Ray and
  William C. Ray, is one of the biggest books on Mac OS X, and
  the one that currently gives the best coverage of its Unix
  underpinnings. With nearly 1,500 pages, this huge tome covers
  an incredible amount of information, but is relatively weak on
  the basics. It's not a book for beginners, nor for those who don't
  want to learn about the command line, given that the heart of the
  book, about 300 pages, is devoted to using the command line. Plus,
  a good part of the book deals with using Mac OS X as a server,
  which isn't essential for many users.

  The extensive coverage of Unix begins with the most basic commands
  to run from the command line: cd, ls, rm, and others. For users
  with no Unix experience, this section reads like a tutorial. It
  gives concrete examples you can type into Terminal to see what
  happens. Follow along with the authors, and you will quickly
  understand the main Unix commands that you may need to use.
  I learned more than I thought I wanted to know as I worked my
  way through these chapters. (And the best way to learn these
  commands is to use them; following the authors' examples is
  helpful.) I am now confident when I open the terminal, though
  I try not to do it often.

  Mac OS X Unleashed remains a high-level book, written more for
  administrators than average users. Sections on FTP serving, mail
  servers, and Web serving are well beyond what most of us need,
  but if that's the sort of information about Mac OS X you've been
  hungering for, this book won't disappoint.

  It also features strong chapters on connecting to Windows - much
  easier under Mac OS X than Mac OS 9 - and other subjects such
  as Perl scripting, printer and font management, and system
  maintenance. Unfortunately, covering all these topics in depth
  can have negative consequences - it is a huge, dense book that may
  throw off a lot of intermediate users by its size. But if you want
  to learn more about what lies under Mac OS X's pretty interface,
  this book is for you. All that paper also doesn't come cheap, with
  a list price of $50, though the 30 percent discount currently in
  place at Amazon drops the price to a more reasonable $35.

<http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0672322293/tidbitselectro00>


**Which to Choose?** Although  neither of these books is
  appropriate for the beginner, they approach the more advanced
  aspects of Mac OS X in different ways. Mac OS X Unleashed focuses
  much more on Mac OS X's Unix underpinnings - power users who want
  the keys to the kingdom should buy this book. In contrast, Mac OS
  X: The Missing Manual is exactly what it says - a reference
  manual. It deals with the basics, all the basics, and then
  everything else. It suffers, at times, from being a compendium,
  though its index is sufficient to find most everything you need.

  The two books actually complement each other well. One provides
  a window on the visible side of the operating system and the other
  looks behind the scenes; many intermediate to advanced users of
  Mac OS X will need a little from each. If you don't even want to
  run Terminal - and I'm sure many of you don't - the Missing Manual
  is probably all you need.

  In the few months I have had these books, both have gotten a fair
  amount of use, and, next to all the other Mac OS X books on my
  shelf, they have turned out to be the ones I look to first when
  I need to know something.

  [Kirk McElhearn is a freelance translator and technical writer
  living in a village in the French Alps.]



$$

 Non-profit, non-commercial publications may reprint articles if
 full credit is given. Others please contact us. We don't guarantee
 accuracy of articles. Caveat lector. Publication, product, and
 company names may be registered trademarks of their companies.

 This file is formatted as setext. For more information send email
 to <setext@tidbits.com>. A file will be returned shortly.

 For information: how to subscribe, where to find back issues,
 and more, email <info@tidbits.com>. TidBITS ISSN 1090-7017.
 Send comments and editorial submissions to: <editors@tidbits.com>
 Back issues available at: <http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/>
 And: <ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/issues/>
 Full text searching available at: <http://www.tidbits.com/search/>
 -------------------------------------------------------------------




