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Book:   Mac OS X: The Missing Manual, Panther Edition
Subject:   Mac OS X: The Missing Manual, Panther Edition Review
Date:   2004-02-03 04:10:22
From:   John Suda
Rating:  StarStarStarStarStar


This is the third iteration of “Mac OSX: The Missing Manual”, by David Pogue. It updates the contents to cover the new features and elements of OS 10.3, known as “Panther” which is touted as having 150 new features. I’ve already described the previous editions as representing the best of software manual writing and this edition continues that excellence.


The format, structure, and graphical features are the same as the earlier editions, although this volume is a bit larger, at 763 pages, including index. All the important and most popular features of Panther are covered comprehensively, including the new Sidebar navigation feature, the Exposé application “launcher”, FileVault encryption, the return of the Labels feature, and fast-user switching. The new applications are covered here also, like the built-in fax program, iChat AV, and the Font Book font manager.


Pogue is best when he provides power-user tips and discloses hidden or little-known features of Panther. The nearly-obscure ColorSync control panel now illustrates gamut spaces in color profiles, for example, and he describes “Pixlet”, a new video codec which is a lossless highly efficient video compression tool (supposedly designed for use by Pixar employees and associates only).


Other little-known tidbits include descriptions and insights to some of the Developer tools on the XCode Tools CD . There is an OSX version of Simple Text which includes a sound-record feature, not available anywhere else in Panther or in OSX applications, with the exception of iMovie. A special feature is the addition of mini-manuals on Safari and the iLife applications - iMovie, iPhoto, iChat, and iTunes.



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"One of the beauties of the Missing Manuals is that there is always something new to discover and the research is quite thorough...I kept finding snippets of information, in the way of Tips or Notes, that would give just that bit extra."
--Graham K. Rogers, Bangkok Post