O’reilly books
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D.3. Advanced Books, Programming Books By a happy coincidence, this book is published by O'Reilly Media, the industry's leading source of technical books for Mac users, programmers, and system administrators.
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Chapter 19. Mail and Address Book Email is a fast, cheap, convenient communication medium. In fact, these days, anyone who doesn't have an email address is considered some kind of freak.
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B.7. Where to Get Troubleshooting Help If the basic steps described in this chapter haven't helped, the universe is crawling with additional help sources. In general, this is the part in any Mac book where you're directed to Apple's help Web site
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19.10. Address Book Address Book is Mac OS X's little-black-book program—an electronic Rolodex where you can stash the names, job titles, addresses, phone numbers, email addresses, and Internet chat screen names of all the people in your life
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17.5. Your Bright Hacking Future Someone could write a whole book on hacking Leopard, and somebody probably will (or has). Plenty more little recipes are floating around the Web. Lots of them involve typing a few commands into Terminal (Chapter 16)
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16.8. 20 Useful Unix Utilities So far, you've read about only a handful of the hundreds of Unix programs that are built into Mac OS X and ready to run. Yes, ls and sudo are very useful tools, but they're only the beginning. As you peruse beginner-level Unix books and Web sites
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To find this: A program Someone in your address book A folder A message in Mail An iCal appointment An iCal task A graphic A movie A music file
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Getting Help in Mac OS X It's a good thing you've got a book about Mac OS X in your hands, because the only user manual you get with Mac OS X is the Help menu.
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14.7. Fonts—and Font Book Mac OS X delivers type that is all smooth, all the time. Fonts in Mac OS X's formats— called TrueType, PostScript Type 1, and OpenType—always look smooth onscreen and in printouts
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