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Mac OS X Leopard: The Missing Manual ペーパーバック – イラスト付き, 2007/12/17
購入オプションとあわせ買い
With Leopard, Apple has unleashed the greatest version of Mac OS X yet, and David Pogue is back with another meticulous Missing Manual to cover the operating system with a wealth of detail. The new Mac OS X 10.5, better known as Leopard, is faster than its predecessors, but nothing's too fast for Pogue and this Missing Manual. It's just one of reasons this is the most popular computer book of all time.
Mac OS X: The Missing Manual, Leopard Edition is the authoritative book for Mac users of all technical levels and experience. If you're new to the Mac, this book gives you a crystal-clear, jargon-free introduction to the Dock, the Mac OS X folder structure, and the Mail application. There are also mini-manuals on iLife applications such as iMovie, iDVD, and iPhoto, and a tutorial for Safari, Mac's web browser.
This Missing Manual is amusing and fun to read, but Pogue doesn't take his subject lightly. Which new Leopard features work well and which do not? What should you look for? What should you avoid? Mac OS X: The Missing Manual, Leopard Edition offers an objective and straightforward instruction for using:
- Leopard's totally revamped Finder
- Spaces to group your windows and organize your Mac tasks
- Quick Look to view files before you open them
- The Time Machine, Leopard's new backup feature
- Spotlight to search for and find anything in your Mac
- Front Row, a new way to enjoy music, photos, and videos
- Enhanced Parental Controls that come with Leopard
- Quick tips for setting up and configuring your Mac to make it your own
- 本の長さ912ページ
- 言語英語
- 出版社O'Reilly Media
- 発売日2007/12/17
- 寸法17.78 x 4.37 x 23.34 cm
- ISBN-10059652952X
- ISBN-13978-0596529529
登録情報
- 出版社 : O'Reilly Media; 第1版 (2007/12/17)
- 発売日 : 2007/12/17
- 言語 : 英語
- ペーパーバック : 912ページ
- ISBN-10 : 059652952X
- ISBN-13 : 978-0596529529
- 寸法 : 17.78 x 4.37 x 23.34 cm
- カスタマーレビュー:
著者について

著者の本をもっと発見したり、よく似た著者を見つけたり、著者のブログを読んだりしましょう
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トップレビュー
上位レビュー、対象国: 日本
レビューのフィルタリング中に問題が発生しました。後でもう一度試してください。
このマニュアルで,Mac OS-X を 詳細に書かれている。
依然,海外から 懐かしく Machintochの 開発マニュアルを取り寄せたが,
これみたら,GUIをコピーして Windows できちゃうよね。
亡き 偉大なSteve Jobsさんの早い死(56歳)に 哀悼の意を捧げる。
ただ、ペーパーバックで800ページ以上の分厚い本は、持ち歩くのは、少し大変だし、活字が細かいので、読みにくいという人もいるだろう。
そのような人のために、全内容が、電子ブック化されている。
インターネットに接続できる環境であれば、どこでも読めるし、フォントを拡大したり、一行の文字数を変更したりすることもできる。
45日間、自由に読めるが、それ以降は、権利を購入する必要がある。
もちろん、TextEditにコピペして、編集することもできるが、その際、リンクが切れ、普通のテキストと同じ扱いになる。
内容は、パソコンの世界を感じさせる。
多少、間違いはあるだろうが、自分で調べて修正しておいてほしい、という意味だ。
それより包括的な説明を急いでいるという印象を受けた。
学校の教科書のようなものを期待している方は、失望するかもしれない。
しかし、これを好機ととらえ、正確にバグ報告をするように心掛けてみてはいかがだろうか。
何らかの見返りが得られるはずである。
Unixの端末の操作も説明がある。
oreillyの本は、読者も誤植の報告ができ、誤植がWEBで公開されるので、安心できます。
Mac OS Xがはじめての人は、一度はざっと眺めるとよいと思います。
便利な道具をつかわずにいることに気がつくかもしれません。
他の国からのトップレビュー

I would recommend this book (and probably anything Mr. Pogue has written) to anyone who desires a clear understanding of their tech issues... Well done Mr. Pogue!

The book covers many points that are very useful. It is easy to find specific information and well worth reading whole chapters on the new tools provided. The detailed screen shots makes it fun to read and experiment. I've discovered many features which are a great help in using the operating system more effectively. Highly recommended.
If you are a Mac user and wondering if there is anything new and useful in Leopard, OS 10.5, that can offset the cost and effort of upgrading, the answer is yes. This book provides an engaging way of exploring the new functions and abilities. A number of these improvements will make your use of a Mac easier and more efficient, while you are working to improve your students learning.
If you are not a Mac user and have decided to switch to a Mac, this book will be quite helpful. Pogue explains things well and allows you to get up and running using the basics, with lots of depth as you add to your uses for the computer.
Pogue is the NY Times technology columnist and a prolific writer of books on using computers.
Note: Pogue, and I in this review, use the term icon to represent any file, picture, video, etc. This follows the trend that many applications will handle all data types.
Quick Look
To be honest I haven't read all 800+ pages and you won't have to either to get quite a bit out of it. One of my favorite additions is Quick Look. As examples let's say that you have decided to clean up your hard drive, or your Downloads folder, or the Lecture folder that contains all the diverse files you use.
Just click on the folder you want to examine and press the spacebar (by the way pressing the spacebar in many programs made for the Mac, performs useful functions like stopping and starting a movie in iMovie). A dark window opens and you can use arrow keys to navigate to any folder or file. This window gives the size of the folder or
file-it will open most files, without having to start the application that created it. If you have a lot of files that don't open check [...] for plugins for many popular programs. Quick Look comes able to open most files-doing a great job with graphics, photos, PDF, text, audio, movie, Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Pages, Keynote, etc.
In addition to having the window with the files you are checking you have the Quick
Look window which shows the actual content without having to open the program you usually use to work with the file. Movie and sound files will open and play. Different files come up fast and are easy to scroll through. This is a great way to check the contents of folders. It can provide a slideshow of all the files it recognizes.
It is also useful to open tricky mail attachments and much faster than waiting to have the application open to read the attachment.
Spotlight finds icons and opens them. You can bring up Spotlight at anytime by pressing Command spacebar. It will then very rapidly list its findings in an ordered set of categories which you have chosen from Spotlight System Preferences. It will place its' top hit on top, already selected. If this is what you want just press Enter and it will open in the appropriate program.
Or maybe you need to do a math calculation, just bring up Spotlight and type in the problem. Your first line is the equation you typed in and the answer. Or you need to look up a words definition. Select the word and copy and paste it or type it and one of the first entries is the definition, mouse over it and the entire definition appears, click on this to open the dictionary for all the info, including access to the item in wikipedia.
You can have 14 different categories in your preferred order. To make it more selective you can do Boolean searches. If you want to find all your presentations, pressing option command spacebar opens the Spotlight search window, type in kind:presentation. This will list all PowerPoint and Keynote files. Select one and press the spacebar and the Quick Look window will open allowing you to look through all of your material wherever it is located on any attached hard drives! If you wish to limit it kind:presentation date this month will show presentations opened this month. This is a very versatile tool, and I've barely scratched the surface.
Time Machine
Time Machine is an automated backup system, you will maximize its insurance and safety value if you use a big separate hard drive. After initially duplicating all your files it will automatically recopy any file that has changed in the last hour, at the end of the day it combines the hourly backups into a daily backup. At the end of the week all dailies are combined into a weekly backup, the weeklies into a monthly backup, etc. When the HD gets full Time Machine deletes the oldest backups to make room for newer backups. If you use a lot of big files like a 5 GB video file and you change it 7x during the day you may take up 35 GB on the backup.
It may be better to exclude these really big files when they are changing a lot and just do a save on you own. In Time Machine preferences click options, a `do not backup' window appears, then drag any folders you don't want backed up to the window. I keep the big folders on a separate large external drive and remember to periodically save the work as I finish a change.
Automator and AppleScript: Automator can help with a series of actions you may repeat fairly often. For instance you may want to send your class an article you are reading on the web quite a few times during a semester. This could be a useful program, but it is so flaky it generally isn't worth playing with.
AppleScript is more generally applicable and stable but it is more like programming. If you have a lot procedures you'd like to automate it is worth looking into since it is very powerful. You can include your own or other AppleScripts in Automator using the Run Applescript action.
For instance it is convenient to be able to insert your email or address anywhere anytime. Write an Applescript to insert your name and address and save it as a program named `zz address'. Use command space to call up Spotlight, type z and when Spotlight appears your program `zz address' will be selected in the Spotlight window, press return and `zz address' will run inserting your address wherever you are. This will work to start any program - type wo in Spotlight and Microsoft Word appears press return and Word runs. Even easier, use is a keyboard Shortcuts manager such as Spark (free) and assign keys such as option e to insert your email anywhere.
System preferences is an application (in the Applications folder) allowing a great deal of customization: The default for this program shows a panel organized by categories, by going to views you can display alphabetically. So if you want to adjust the Display panel there it is under D rather than having to remember that it listed under the hardware category.
If you find yourself needing specialized symbols like ', ', ',' choose the International panel, Input Menu Tab, click on Character Palette and Keyboard Viewer. Your menu bar shows a flag, if you choose Character Palette it opens and Arrows for instance will give you a wide choice of arrows or other special symbols. Choose Keyboard Viewer press option or many other key combinations such as shift-option and a miniature keyboard shows for instance that option-k is ', quite handy when you need the degree sign.
Preview
This is a versatile program for reading documents, graphics, manipulating pictures. In fact the color adjustment panel is almost the same as iPhoto, and adjusting the size and resolution cropping and rotating of images is easy. You can even extract a person or piece of apparatus from its background.
With the tendency to include User Guides for equipment and programs etc., as PDF files Preview is quite useful not just for reading them, but as an enhanced index for these documents. Given the increased number of programs we all use and the increasing number of permutations of interactions between them it is difficult to read it all and the included indexes seem less efficient for finding specifics. Preview is very efficient for finding material you need, especially when the searching for new techniques and you are not sure what you are looking for.
TextEdit, the program most Read me files open in, has also been improved and has been extended to do more word processing.
A neat trick when you have an icon on your desktop that you want to include as a mail attachment is to press F11, to see just the desktop, start dragging the file you want, press F11 again to make your mail visible again, and drop the file into your mail as an attachment. You can also drag files from any source directly to the Mail Dock icon and a new message with your attachments will open.
QuickTime is useful for playing back a variety of movies, pictures, sound or simulations in your lectures. In QT choose Window ' Show A/V Controls and a panel opens to allow you to adjust the audio and video of your QT movie . Move the cursor to the video scrollbar at the bottom of the window and selection handles appear. These can be used to copy, cut, delete or paste selected parts of the movie. Pictures, text, images and clips can be pasted or inserted.
If you have movies that come with your textbook or some other source you may want to use just a portion of the movie. QT is by far the easiest way to extract what you want and have a useful clip to use in your lecture presentation. You can also compress clips for other uses. This is great for simple changes, but I've found iMovie to have much more complete controls for more elaborate work.
Choose Window ' Favorites and you have a convenient place to store clips and videos that you use often in lecture. Different export options can be chosen, DV Stream to use as a clip in iMovie, AVI for Windows, etc. The number of options and the amount of control is amazing.
If you find QT useful check out QT Pro, it has quite a few other options.
Disk Utility Is a hard drive repair utility and can also be used for burning repeatedly to CD's and DVD's that are usually considered single write. With a CD in the drive open Disk Utility select the CD choose Burn. You will see the burn window,
Fig. 6, be sure to check - Leave disc appendable.
It can also be used to partition hard drives, and readjust the size of partitions under some circumstances.
.
I did the testing of the above topics on a MacBook Pro using OS 10.5.4 with a 2.6 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo with 4 GB of SDRAM, it is a nice system. The 17 inch screen is really excellent.

Dieses Buch hat mir einen so tiefen Einblick verschafft, dass ich damit eine so gute Basis hatte, um mir das restliche Wissen per Google-Suche anzueignen und eine ganze Mac-Abteilung in unserem Unternehmen in unser Windows AD einbinden konnte.
Daher kann ich dieses Buch zum Einstieg absolut empfehlen.

The step by step instructions are particularly useful to those who are sitting in front of a Mac for the first time. There's also some useful information about third party software which can enhance a Mac further; for example, if the user wants to run Windows alongside Mac OS X on the same computer. There's also advice about customising Leopard as well.
Yes, this is a heavy book and, yes, it does become a little anecdotal in places, but I recommend it to anyone who wants to unleash the full power of Leopard.
