However, Mac OS X: TMM was originally oriented strongly to addressing the needs of Classic Mac OS users migrating to Apple's all-new, Unix-based operating system, and while the more recent editions of a book have been refocused somewhat to accommodate the considerably different requirements of increasing numbers of Windows users switching to the Mac on the coattails of the iPod phenomenon, due to terminal frustration with the Windows malware plague, or just because they've discovered that the Mac is very cool, there is a risk of casting too broad a net. The time seemed right for a more specific Missing Manual solution for switchers from Windows.
Enter the subject of this review, Switching to the Mac: The Missing Manual - Tiger Edition, call authored by David Pogue and teenage wunderkind and founder of GoldfishSoft ( http://www.goldfishsoft.com ) Adam Goldstein. As the authors note in the book's introduction, "Switching to the Mac is not all sunshine and bunnies. The Macintosh is a different machine, running a different operating system, and built by a company with a different philosophy - a fanatical perfectionist/artistic zeal. When it comes to their issues and ideals, Apple and Microsoft have about as much in common as a melon and a shoehorn."

Since you're reading this review on an Apple enthusiast Website, there is a strong likelihood that you're not in the main target market for this book (but if you are a recent or prospective switcher looking for information, you've come to the right place - welcome), but chances are that you know somebody or bodies that are. This book would make a fine Christmas gift for such a person, or an appreciated suggestion.
Anyway, the authors assume only a cursory level of knowledge about Macs on the part of the typical reader, so the introduction concentrates on explaining basic Mac concepts and the advantages the Mac has over Windows such as system stability, no copy-protection nagging, superior software, and simpler everything.
The main body of the book is divided into four parts of several chapters each. The authors acknowledge up-front that some of the material in Switching to the Mac: TMM is adapted from Mac OS X: TMM, and that is certainly no bad thing.
Part One: Welcome to Macintosh, begins with Chapter 1: How The Mac Is Different, noting reassuringly that: Mac OS X offers roughly the same features as recent versions of Windows," but that "these features are called different things and parked in different spots," which can create some confusion for the Windows émigré to the Macintosh. This chapter aims at cutting through that confusion, explaining how to start up the Mac, to deal with a one-button mouse, equating the Mac Finder with Windows Explorer, the OS X Dock with the Windows Taskbar, and so forth. There are also sections on what special Mac keyboard keys do, disc differences, where your stuff is located, working with (Mac Finder) windows, and a short glossary of terminology differences.
Chapter 2, Windows and Icons, continues on with explaining the elements of the Mac OS X Desktop and how they work, the optional List and Column views, the Home Folder, file and folder icons, Labels, the Trash, finding files with Spotlight and the Find command, and the Smart Folders feature.
Chapter 3 moves on to The Dock, Desktop, Toolbar, And Sidebar, with tips and hints for getting the best out of these OS X user interface features, and including a section on designing your Desktop.
Programs and Documents is the title of Chapter 4, bringing the reader up to speed on some of of the 50-odd software programs that are bundled with OS X. Topics covered include things like launching, quitting, and force quitting applications, switching programs, drag and drop, using OS X's Expose feature, the Dashboard and its widget collection. More advanced stuff like ow documents know their parents, filename extensions, keyboard shortcuts, open and save dialog boxes, and the distinctions among cocoa, Carbon, and Classic programs are also addressed. Few users switching from Windows will have interest in using OS X Classic Mode, so it is brushed over quickly in four pages. The chapter wraps up with short tutorials on installing and uninstalling programs. Thus endeth Part One.
Part Two is also, somewhat confusingly, titled Welcome to Macintosh, which gives a clue as to its four chapters' content.
Chapter 5, Five Ways To Transfer Your Files, details the ins and outs of data transfer using disk (the Mac can read Windows disks), networking (wired or wireless), file-sending Websites, email, iDisk and Bluetooth, and Fire Wire Disk Mode. That seems like more than five to me, but I guess it depends on what you consider subcategories. Anyway, the information is good.
Chapter 6 is about Transferring Email And Contacts from a variety of Windows email programs and the Windows Address Book to equivalent applications on the Mac, helping you avoid pitfalls in so doing.
Chapter 7, Special Software, Special Problems, tackles the troublesome fact that "sooner or later, you'll probably run into a favorite Windows program for which there's no equivalent on the Mac. The purpose of this chapter is to make that discovery less painful...." and to suggest potential substitutes that can be used.
Chapter 8 moves on to Hardware on the Mac, printers and printing, faxing, and scanning, as well as some still software-related topics like PDF files and fond management, plus digital cameras, disks, burning CDs and DVDs, the iPod, iTunes, and the iTunes Music Store, DVD movies, the keyboard, the mouse, and monitors.
Part Three, Making Connections, contains three chapters on issues that may perplex Windows veterans connecting a Mac to the Internet.
Chapter 9, Getting Online, starts with elementary stuff like configuring Internet connections via dial up and broadband, plus using the OS X firewall, switching locations, multihoming, and Internet sharing.
Chapter 10 covers OS X Mail and Address Book, which are built into OS X, with comprehensive tutorials on using both.
Chapter 11, Safari. iChat and Sherlock, moves on to discussing the finer points of the OS X Safari Web browser, iChat chat client, and the Sherlock search engine, again with tutorials on the use of each.
Part Four his about putting down roots, and contains four chapters.
Chapter 12, Accounts And Security, continues the tutorial mode of the previous several chapters, explaining how to configure and use OS X's account and security features, as well as the six Mac OS X security shields.
Chapter 13, is an item by item tutorial on OS X System Preferences.
Chapter 14 does the same for The Freebie Programs that come with OS X, including a tutorial on using the AppleScript programming language, iCal, iChat, iMovie, iPhoto, Preview, Text Edit, the various system utilities, the Terminal, and many more.
Chapter 15, is on Installation and Troubleshooting of OS X, exercises most users migrating from Windows will find a pleasant surprise, relatively speaking, compared to what they're used to.
Part Five: Appendix, contains one, a handy "Where'd It Go?" Dictionary that can serve as a quick reference to find Mac equivalents to familiar Windows functions and terminology.
As usual with Missing Manuals books, there is an excellent Index, and the book is illustrated liberally with screenshots. Selling at the modest price of $24.95 for a 508 page book, Switching to the Mac: The Missing Manual is a must-have for anyone making the Windows to Mac transition. It will smooth the way immensely by omitting needless confusion and potential frustration. It will also prove a treat for Windows users who may not be familiar with best-selling Mac author David Pogue's delightfully witty and conversational prose style.
Switching to the Mac: The Missing Manual, Tiger Edition
By David Pogue, Adam Goldstein
September 2005
Series: The Missing Manuals
ISBN: 0-596-00660-8
520 pages,
$24.95 US, $34.95 CA, £17.50 UK
For more information, visit:
http://www.oreilly.com/catalog/switchmacmm2/
Charles W. Moore
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