Top

mini-guide to Mac OS X

January 27, 2005

For those Windows folks planning to add a Mac Mini to their stable (or anyone else switching to a Mac, for that matter), Ars Technica has just posted an excellent mini-guide to Mac OS X.

It’ll show you a lot of the ins-and-outs of day to day usage of OS X (it also nicely demonstrates just how easy it is to make the change, if you’ve been sitting on the fence.)

I picked up a trick or two myself.

Like this article? Share it!
  • Digg
  • Sphinn
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon

Comments

One Response to “mini-guide to Mac OS X”

  1. rimone on January 31st, 2005 11:13 am

    thank you, chuck; i did as well. coincidentally, right after i read this i found david pogue’s ‘Mac OS X, the missing manual’ which i’ve been reading since.

Got something to say? [privacy policy]





Possibly Related


Mac Mini as a DIY Dedicated Web ServerIf you’ve been suffering from having a dedicated server taste and a virtual hosting budget, you might want to check out this great little series of articles from Nerd Vittles. Essentially, over the course of about a dozen or so posts, they take you through all of the steps involved in setting up a Mac Mini to run a web server, mail server, dns, statistics, database, etc.—pretty much everything you’d want on a dedicated server.  Everything is explained in detail, and if you can follow directions, you can turn your own Mini into a pretty full-featured hosting environment. Here is the first article: ISP-In-A-Box: The $500 Mac mini "Over a year ago, we undertook a similar project on the Windows...


Mac Mini — More Than Meets the Eye?Not that I should complain about people dis’ing the Mac Mini, but my objections were more about Apple’s policies than the machine itself, and now that the RAM question seems to be shaking out, I’m a little put off with spins like this one from Technology Review "But to get the most out of the Mac mini, users need to—yes—think different. Banish any thoughts of desktop use from your mind. Here are a baker’s dozen ways to put the Mac mini to work:"As a Portable Depot for Digital PicturesAs a Satellite Interface for HamsAs a Regional X10 ServerAs a Christmas Lights SequencerAs Part of a Home Theater SystemAs a Car EnhancerAs a Hardware Firewall for LaptopsAs a Physical Security SystemAs...


Belkin BZ103050vTVL Mini Surge Protector w/ USB I had this conversation in chat this morning... He wouldn't shut up about it, but I couldn't get him to bother to write it all up for a review, either. So, by the miracle of chat transcripts, here's more-or-less a guest review -- the hard way... heh... just got this... dude. it's sweet 3 surge protected outlets and 2 usb ports i shoulda bought two... 1 for travel and 1 for the imac this belkin surge protector is brilliant... the 3 prongs can rotate 360 degrees to get you into pretty much any wall outlet configuration bbiam. gotta shut this off so i can plug the protector in absolutely brilliant... a usb charging hub and a surge protector.... with...


iPod Audiobook GuideAt iPodlounge, Kirk McElhearn has posted "The Complete Guide to iPod Audiobooks" This nice little write-up covers both purchasing and listening to audiobooks from Audible (via iTunes Music Store) and producing your own audiobook and making i bookmarkable. I do a lot of the latter myself, but I still managed to learn a few things (among other things, I didn't realize that making an audio bookmarkable automatically put it in the Music > Audiobooks menu; I always just find mine based on the playlist I've put them in.)...


The Mac Mini^h^h^h^h MaybeApple came out with the Mac Mini on Tuesday.  I’ve been busier than hell this week, so I haven’t had time to do much more than go out to apple.com, read the features, and oooh and aaah about the packaging.  It’s another brilliantly packaged piece of Apple techno-pr0n, of course.  I completely missed the stupidity angle, at first blush. An old friend of mine has been e-mailing me for a day or two about it.  He’s kind of caught the bug, and since I’m the kind of person who thinks that everybody’s life would be enriched to a substantial degree by spending more time on OS X and less on XP, I’ve been offering some advice. His first e-mail was...

Bottom