mac os x panther all-in-one desk reference for dummies (isbn - 0764543253)

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mac os x panther all-in-one desk reference for dummies (isbn - 0764543253)

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by Mark L.Chambers MacOS ® X PantherALL-IN-ONE DESK REFERENCE FOR DUMmIES ‰ by Mark L.Chambers MacOS ® X PantherALL-IN-ONE DESK REFERENCE FOR DUMmIES ‰ is a trademark of Wiley Publishing, Inc. Mac OS ® X PantherAll-in-One Desk Reference For Dummies ® Published by Wiley Publishing, Inc. 111 River Street Hoboken, NJ 07030-5774 Copyright © 2004 by Wiley Publishing, Inc., Indianapolis, Indiana Published by Wiley Publishing, Inc., Indianapolis, Indiana Published simultaneously in Canada No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, scanning or otherwise, except as permitted under Sections 107 or 108 of the 1976 United States Copyright Act, without either the prior written permission of the Publisher, or authorization through payment of the appropriate per-copy fee to the Copyright Clearance Center, 222 Rosewood Drive, Danvers, MA 01923, (978) 750-8400, fax (978) 646-8600. Requests to the Publisher for permission should be addressed to the Legal Department, Wiley Publishing, Inc., 10475 Crosspoint Blvd., Indianapolis, IN 46256, (317) 572-3447, fax (317) 572-4447, e-mail: permcoordinator@wiley.com. Trademarks: Wiley, the Wiley Publishing logo, For Dummies, the Dummies Man logo, A Reference for the Rest of Us!, The Dummies Way, Dummies Daily, The Fun and Easy Way, Dummies.com, and related trade dress are trademarks or registered trademarks of John Wiley & Sons, Inc. and/or its affiliates in the United States and other countries, and may not be used without written permission. Mac and Panther are trade- marks of Apple Computer, Inc. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners. Wiley Publishing, Inc., is not associated with any product or vendor mentioned in this book. LIMIT OF LIABILITY/DISCLAIMER OF WARRANTY: WHILE THE PUBLISHER AND AUTHOR HAVE USED THEIR BEST EFFORTS IN PREPARING THIS BOOK, THEY MAKE NO REPRESENTATIONS OR WARRANTIES WITH RESPECT TO THE ACCURACY OR COMPLETENESS OF THE CONTENTS OF THIS BOOK AND SPECIFICALLY DISCLAIM ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. NO WARRANTY MAY BE CREATED OR EXTENDED BY SALES REPRESENTATIVES OR WRITTEN SALES MATERIALS. THE ADVICE AND STRATEGIES CON- TAINED HEREIN MAY NOT BE SUITABLE FOR YOUR SITUATION. YOU SHOULD CONSULT WITH A PROFESSIONAL WHERE APPROPRIATE. NEITHER THE PUBLISHER NOR AUTHOR SHALL BE LIABLE FOR ANY LOSS OF PROFIT OR ANY OTHER COMMERCIAL DAMAGES, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL, CONSEQUENTIAL, OR OTHER DAMAGES. For general information on our other products and services or to obtain technical support, please con- tact our Customer Care Department within the U.S. at 800-762-2974, outside the U.S. at 317-572-3993, or fax 317-572-4002. Wiley also publishes its books in a variety of electronic formats. Some content that appears in print may not be available in electronic books. Library of Congress Control Number: 2003114616 ISBN: 0-7645-4325-3 Manufactured in the United States of America 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 1O/QZ/RS/QT/IN About the Author Mark L. Chambers has been an author, computer consultant, BBS sysop, pro- grammer, and hardware technician for more than 20 years. (In other words, he’s been pushing computers and their uses far beyond “normal” perform- ance limits for decades now.) His first love affair with a computer peripheral blossomed in 1984 when he bought his lightning-fast 300 bps modem for his Atari 400. Now he spends entirely too much time on the Internet and drinks far too much caffeine-laden soda. His favorite pastimes include collecting gargoyles, watching St. Louis Cardinals baseball, playing his three pinball machines and the latest com- puter games, supercharging computers, and rendering 3-D flights of fancy with TrueSpace — and during all that, he listens to just about every type of music imaginable. (For those of his readers who are keeping track, he’s up to 1,200+ audio CDs in his collection.) With a degree in journalism and creative writing from Louisiana State University, Mark took the logical career choice and started programming computers. However, after five years as a COBOL programmer for a hospital system, he decided there must be a better way to earn a living, and he became the Documentation Manager for Datastorm Technologies, a well- known communications software developer. Somewhere in between organiz- ing and writing software manuals, Mark began writing computer books; his first book, Running a Perfect BBS, was published in 1994. Along with writing several books a year and editing whatever his publishers throw at him, Mark has recently branched out into Web-based education, designing and teaching a number of online classes — called WebClinics — for Hewlett-Packard. Mark’s rapidly expanding list of books includes Building a PC For Dummies, Scanners For Dummies, CD and DVD Recording For Dummies, PCs All-in-One Desk Reference For Dummies, Microsoft Office v. X Power User’s Guide, BURN IT! Creating Your Own Great DVDs and CDs, The Hewlett-Packard Official Printer Handbook, The Hewlett-Packard Official Recordable CD Handbook, The Hewlett- Packard Official Digital Photography Handbook, Computer Gamer’s Bible, Recordable CD Bible, Teach Yourself the iMac Visually, Running a Perfect BBS, Official Netscape Guide to Web Animation, and the Windows 98 Troubleshooting and Optimizing Little Black Book. His books have been translated into 12 different languages so far — his favorites are German, Polish, Dutch, and French. Although he can’t read them, he enjoys the pictures a great deal. Mark welcomes all comments and questions about his books. You can reach him at mark@mlcbooks.com, or visit MLC Books Online, his Web site, at www. mlcbooks.com . Dedication This book is dedicated to my oldest daughter, Erin Chambers — “Version 1.0” — with all the love and happiness I can give her. — Mark Chambers Author’s Acknowledgments It’s high time I express my heartfelt thanks to everyone who helped produce the book you’re holding! Copious thanks are due (again) to the technical editor, Greg Willmore, who checked each and every word of this Desk Reference for technical accuracy . . . and that, my friends, is no easy job, especially when you consider that Panther was in beta during the development of this book! I was very lucky to have the help of such a knowledgeable technical editor. Mondo kudos also to Teresa Artman for her outstanding work as copy editor. A book of this size places a huge burden on the publisher’s Composition Services team because those folks have to design over 700 pages and then prepare both the copy and the high-resolution figures. Again, as in the past, the work they’ve done is wonderful, and I appreciate the hard work of every- one on the Composition Services team. As with all my books, I’d like to thank my wife, Anne, and my children, Erin, Chelsea, and Rose, for their support and love — and for letting me follow my dream! Finally, I turn to the two people at Wiley who made this book possible: Bob Woerner, the acquisitions editor whom I’ve been lucky enough to know for several years now; and Linda Morris, the project editor who seems to be “rewarded” with all my longest titles (and yet keeps her sense of humor). Their talents and ongoing assistance made this project a joy instead of a job as they gave me all the support that every author craves. Many, many thanks to you both from a very grateful Mac owner! — Mark Chambers Publisher’s Acknowledgments We’re proud of this book; please send us your comments through our online registration form located at www.dummies.com/register/. Some of the people who helped bring this book to market include the following: Acquisitions, Editorial, and Media Development Project Editor: Linda Morris Acquisitions Editor: Bob Woerner Senior Copy Editor: Teresa Artman Technical Editor: Greg Willmore Editorial Manager: Leah Cameron Media Development Supervisor: Richard Graves Editorial Assistant: Amanda Foxworth Cartoons: Rich Tennant ( www.the5thwave.com) Production Project Coordinator: Maridee Ennis Layout and Graphics: Amanda Carter, Seth Conley, Andrea Dahl, Stephanie D. Jumper, Julie Trippetti Proofreaders: Laura L. Bowman, Andy Hollandbeck, Dwight Ramsey, Kathy Simpson, Rob Springer Indexer: Tom Dinse Publishing and Editorial for Technology Dummies Richard Swadley, Vice President and Executive Group Publisher Andy Cummings, Vice President and Publisher Mary C. Corder, Editorial Director Publishing for Consumer Dummies Diane Graves Steele, Vice President and Publisher Joyce Pepple, Acquisitions Director Composition Services Gerry Fahey, Vice President of Production Services Debbie Stailey, Director of Composition Services Contents at a Glance Introduction 1 Book I: Introducing Mac OS X 7 Chapter 1: Shaking Hands with Mac OS X 9 Chapter 2: Navigating and Running Programs 27 Chapter 3: Basic OS X Housekeeping 53 Chapter 4: Using Sherlock 3: It’s Elementary 85 Chapter 5: Keeping Track with the Address Book 101 Chapter 6: The Joys of Maintenance 115 Chapter 7: Using Classic Mode 137 Chapter 8: Getting Help for the Big X 147 Chapter 9: Troubleshooting the X 155 Book II: Customizing and Sharing 167 Chapter 1: Building the Finder of Your Dreams 169 Chapter 2: Giving Your Desktop the Personal Touch 189 Chapter 3: Delving Under the Hood with System Preferences 201 Chapter 4: You Mean Others Can Use My Mac, Too? 237 Chapter 5: Setting Up Multi-User Accounts 245 Chapter 6: Sharing Documents for Fun and Profit 259 Book III: The Digital Hub 271 Chapter 1: The World According to Apple 273 Chapter 2: Jamming with iTunes and iPod 283 Chapter 3: Focusing on iPhoto 307 Chapter 4: Making Magic with iMovie 327 Chapter 5: Burn Those DVDs! Using iDVD 3 355 Chapter 6: No, It’s Not Called “iQuickTime” 369 Chapter 7: Turning Your Mac into a DVD Theater 385 Book IV: The Typical Internet Stuff 395 Chapter 1: Getting on the Internet 397 Chapter 2: Using Apple Mail 407 Chapter 3: Staying in Touch with iChat AV 429 Chapter 4: Expanding Your Horizons with iDisk 441 Chapter 5: Going Places with Safari 449 Chapter 6: Staying Secure Online 463 Book V: Networking in OS X 473 Chapter 1: Setting Up a Small Network 475 Chapter 2: Using Your Network 493 Chapter 3: You May Even Need AppleTalk 509 Chapter 4: Going Wireless 519 Chapter 5: Sharing That Precious Internet Thing 531 Book VI: Expanding Your System 543 Chapter 1: Hardware That Will Make You Giddy 545 Chapter 2: Add RAM, Hard Drive Space, and Stir 561 Chapter 3: Port-o-rama: Using USB and FireWire 573 Chapter 4: I’m Okay, You’re a Printer 579 Chapter 5: Programs That You’ve (Probably) Gotta Have 589 Book VII: Advanced Mac OS X 613 Chapter 1: . . . And UNIX Lurks Beneath 615 Chapter 2: AppleScript Just Plain Rocks 643 Chapter 3: Forget Hal! Talking and Writing to Your Macintosh 659 Chapter 4: Hosting a Web Site à la OS X 675 Index 693 [...]... Creating a Home Page with HTML and iDisk 680 Using Mac OS X Web Sharing .681 I love Apache: Confessions of a UNIX Webmaster 681 Configuring and running Apache .682 Index 693 xxiv Mac OS X Panther All-in-One Desk Reference For Dummies Introduction E legant I remember the first moment that I moved a mouse across a Mac OS X Desktop — at that time, it was the beta of version 10.0... time preferences .230 Software Update preferences 231 Speech preferences 232 xiv Mac OS X Panther All-in-One Desk Reference For Dummies Startup Disk preferences 234 Universal Access preferences 235 Chapter 4: You Mean Others Can Use My Mac, Too? 237 How Multi-User Works on Mac OS X 237 Configuring Your Login Screen 239 Locking Things Down... Special Start-Up Keys for Those Special Times .135 Crave the Newest Drivers 136 xii Mac OS X Panther All-in-One Desk Reference For Dummies Chapter 7: Using Classic Mode 137 Classic Mode Explained 137 Cranking Up Classic 138 Reaching That Antique Software .141 Configuring Classic Mode 142 Returning to Your Mac OS 9 Roots ... Using Classic Mode 137 Chapter 8: Getting Help for the Big X 147 Chapter 9: Troubleshooting the X 155 Chapter 1: Shaking Hands with Mac OS X In This Chapter ߜ Understanding the advantages of Mac OS X ߜ Checking your system requirements ߜ Upgrading from earlier versions of Mac OS ߜ Installing Mac OS X ߜ Running Mac OS X for the first time I t’s human nature to require instant... to be important stuff on the opposite side of the page) How This Book Is Organized I’ve done my best to emulate the elegant design of Mac OS X by organizing this book into seven mini-books, with cross-references where appropriate Book I: Introducing Mac OS X This mini-book begins with an invigorating chapter explaining exactly why you should be so happy to be a Mac OS X owner Then I provide an introduction... designed Mac OS X for regular people, and I designed this book for people of every experience level Even if you’ve never used a Mac before, you’ll find no hostile waters here ✦ A fortune in software: I do describe additional software that you can buy to expand the functionality of your Mac; however, that section is only a few pages long Everything else covered in this book is included with Mac OS X Panther. .. fast 616 The UNIX keyboard is a powerful beast 616 Go where no mouse has gone before 617 Automate to elevate 618 Remote control 618 Uncovering the Terminal 618 What’s a prompt? .619 A few commands to get started .620 Using the skills you already have 622 xxii Mac OS X Panther All-in-One Desk Reference For Dummies UNIX Commands 101 ... Book I: Introducing Mac OS X 4 Book II: Customizing and Sharing 4 Book III: The Digital Hub .5 Book IV: The Typical Internet Stuff .5 Book V: Networking in Mac OS X 5 Book VI: Expanding Your System 5 Book VII: Advanced Mac OS X .5 Icons Used in This Book 6 Book I: Introducing Mac OS X .7 Chapter 1: Shaking Hands with Mac OS X ... just haul off and proclaim that Mac OS X can run rings around — well you know, the W word — without solid proof In this chapter, I introduce you to the advantages of Mac OS X and why it’s such a step ahead for those running Mac OS 9 I also cover the hardware requirements that you’ll need to run Mac OS X version 10.3 (Panther) as well as guidelines on upgrading from Mac OS 9 Finally, I familiarize you... to the Remember icons for those tidbits that you need to file away in your mind Just remember to remember Follow these road signs for all the cool updates and innovations in Mac OS X version 10.3 Panther Book I Introducing Mac OS X Contents at a Glance Chapter 1: Shaking Hands with Mac OS X 9 Chapter 2: Navigating and Running Programs 27 Chapter 3: Basic OS X Housekeeping . L.Chambers MacOS ® X Panther ™ ALL-IN-ONE DESK REFERENCE FOR DUMmIES ‰ by Mark L.Chambers MacOS ® X Panther ™ ALL-IN-ONE DESK REFERENCE FOR DUMmIES ‰ is a trademark of Wiley Publishing, Inc. Mac OS ® X. preferences 232 Mac OS X Panther All-in-One Desk Reference For Dummies xiv Startup Disk preferences 234 Universal Access preferences 235 Chapter 4: You Mean Others Can Use My Mac, Too? . . For Dummies, CD and DVD Recording For Dummies, PCs All-in-One Desk Reference For Dummies, Microsoft Office v. X Power User’s Guide, BURN IT! Creating Your Own Great DVDs and CDs, The Hewlett-Packard

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  • Mac OS X Panther All-In-One Desk Reference For Dummies

    • About the Author

    • Dedication

    • Author’s Acknowledgments

    • Contents at a Glance

    • Table of Contents

    • Introduction

      • What’s Really Required

      • About This Book

      • Conventions Used in This Book

      • How This Book Is Organized

      • Icons Used in This Book

  • Book I: Introducing Mac OS X

    • Contents at a Glance

    • Chapter 1: Shaking Hands with Mac OS X

      • Convince Me: Why Mac OS X?

      • What Do I Really Need to Run the Big X?

      • Upgrading from Earlier Versions of Mac OS

      • Personalizing the Big X

    • Chapter 2: Navigating and Running Programs

      • Restarting, Sleeping, and Shutting Down

      • A Window Is Much More Than a Frame

      • Menu Mysteries Explained

      • Icons ’R Us

      • Selecting Icons for Fun and Profit

      • Keyboard Shortcuts for the True Power User

      • Houston, We’re Go to Launch Programs

      • Switching ’Twixt Programs with Aplomb

      • Opening and Saving Your Stuff in an Application

      • Quitting Programs

    • Chapter 3: Basic OS X Housekeeping

      • The Finder: It’s the Wind beneath Your Wings

      • Copying and Moving Files and Folders

      • Cloning Your Items — It’s Happening Now!

      • Deleting That Which Should Not Be

      • Emptying That Wastepaper Basket

      • WAIT! I Need That After All!

      • Renaming Your Items

      • Adding a Dash of Color

      • Displaying the Facts on Files and Folders

      • Creating an Alias

      • Using the Apple Menu

      • Availing Yourself of Mac OS X Services

      • Get Thee Hence: Using the Go Menu

      • Monkeying with the Menu Bar

      • Eject, Tex, Eject!

      • Common Tasks Aplenty

      • All You Really Need to Know about Printing

    • Chapter 4: Using Sherlock 3: It’s Elementary

      • Sherlock Is Just Plain Neat

      • Looking for the Scent with the Great Detective

      • You Don’t Need a Remote for These Channels

      • Tracking Businesses, Movies, Definitions, and Auctions

      • Using Internet Search Sites

      • Minding Your Portfolio

      • Translating, ’Twixt Languages

      • Finding Flight Information

    • Chapter 5: Keeping Track with the Address Book

      • Hey, Isn’t the Address Book Just a Part of Mail?

      • Entering Contact Information

      • Using Contact Information

      • Arranging Your Contact Cards

      • Using Network Directories

      • Printing Contacts with Flair

      • Swapping Bytes with vCards

    • Chapter 6: The Joys of Maintenance

      • Deleting Applications the Common Sense Way

      • Popping the Hood: Using the Apple System Profiler

      • Tracking Performance with Activity Monitor

      • Fixing Things with the Disk Utility

      • Updating Mac OS X

      • I Demand That You Back Up Your Hard Drive

      • I Further Demand That You Defragment

      • Special Start-Up Keys for Those Special Times

      • Crave the Newest Drivers

    • Chapter 7: Using Classic Mode

      • Classic Mode Explained

      • Cranking Up Classic

      • Reaching That Antique Software

      • Configuring Classic Mode

      • Returning to Your Mac OS 9 Roots

    • Chapter 8: Getting Help for the Big X

      • Displaying the Help Viewer Window

      • Searching for Specific Stuff

      • Prodding Apple for the Latest Gossip

      • Calling for Help Deep in the Heart of X

      • Other Resources to Chew On

    • Chapter 9: Troubleshooting the X

      • Don’t Panic!

      • The Troubleshooting Process

      • Troubleshooting Problems with Classic Mode

      • Do I Need to Reinstall Mac OS X?

      • It’s Still Not Moving: Troubleshooting Resources

  • Book II: Customizing and Sharing

    • Contents at a Glance

    • Chapter 1: Building the Finder of Your Dreams

      • Will That Be Icons or Buttons . . . or Even Columns?

      • Doing the Toolbar Dance

      • Searching for Files from the Toolbar

      • Searching for Files from the Find Dialog

      • Configuring the View Options

      • Setting Finder Preferences

    • Chapter 2: Giving Your Desktop the Personal Touch

      • Changing the Background

      • Changing the Screen Saver

      • Changing Colors in Mac OS X

      • Adding Stickies

      • Customizing the Dock

      • Arranging Your Precious Desktop

    • Chapter 3: Delving Under the Hood with System Preferences

      • The Preferred Way to Display the Preferences

      • Saving Your Preferences

      • Let’s Get Personal

      • It’s All about the Hardware

      • Sharing the Joy: Internet & Network

      • Tweaking the System

    • Chapter 4: You Mean Others Can Use My Mac, Too?

      • How Multi-User Works on Mac OS X

      • Configuring Your Login Screen

      • Locking Things Down

      • Starting Applications Automatically After Login

    • Chapter 5: Setting Up Multi-User Accounts

      • Adding, Editing, and Deleting Users

      • Setting Limitations

      • Using Keychains — NOT

    • Chapter 6: Sharing Documents for Fun and Profit

      • Sharing over a Network versus Sharing on a Single Mac

      • Permissions: Law Enforcement for Your Files

      • Permission and Sharing Do’s and Don’ts

      • Sharing Stuff in Office v. X

      • Password Protection in AppleWorks

  • Book III: The Digital Hub

    • Contents at a Glance

    • Chapter 1: The World According to Apple

      • First, Sliced Bread . . . and Now the Digital Hub

      • What Does Digital Mean, Anyway?

      • What Can I Digitize?

      • The Software That Drives the Hub

      • Can I Use All This Stuff at Once?

    • Chapter 2: Jamming with iTunes and iPod

      • What Can I Play on iTunes?

      • Playing an Audio CD

      • Playing a Digital Audio File

      • Keeping Slim Whitman and Slim Shady Apart: Organizing with Playlists

      • Know Your Songs

      • Ripping Audio Files

      • Tweaking the Audio for Your Ears

      • A New Kind of Radio Station

      • iSending iTunes to iPod

      • Burning Music to Shiny Plastic Circles

      • Changing iTunes Visuals

      • Adding More Visuals to iTunes

      • Buying Music the Apple Way

    • Chapter 3: Focusing on iPhoto

      • What iPhoto Can Do

      • Delving into iPhoto

      • Importing Images 101

      • Organizing with Photo Albums

      • The Art of Organizing with Keywords

      • Taking Care of Business: Basic Editing

      • Producing Your Own Coffee-Table Masterpiece

      • Sharing Photos with Friends and Family

    • Chapter 4: Making Magic with iMovie

      • The iMovie Interface

      • The Powers of Three

      • The Movie-Making Process

      • Working with Clips ( Not the Paper Kind)

      • Basic Composition the iMovie Way

      • Transitions for the Masses

      • Even

      • Had Titles

      • What Good Is a Movie without Special Effects?

      • Hey, There’s a Photo in My Video!

      • Working with Sound

      • Completing Your Cinematic Masterpiece

    • Chapter 5: Burn Those DVDs! Using iDVD 3

      • What Am I Doing, Anyway?

      • Mastering Menus

      • Adding Media Files to Your DVD

      • Customizing Titles

      • Checking Things Out with a Preview

      • Saving and Burning a DVD

    • Chapter 6: No, It’s Not Called “ iQuickTime”

      • QuickTime Can Do That?

      • Playing Media with QuickTime

      • QuickTime: The Super Converter

      • Make QuickTime the Center of Your Digital Universe

      • Tweaking QuickTime

    • Chapter 7: Turning Your Mac into a DVD Theater

      • The DVD Hardware

      • The DVD Player: It’s Truly Shiny

      • Taking Advantage of Additional DVD Features

  • Book IV: The Typical Internet Stuff

    • Contents at a Glance

    • Chapter 1: Getting on the Internet

      • Shopping for an ISP

      • Investigating Various Types of Connections

      • Setting Up Your Internet Connection

      • Connecting with a Dialup ISP ( The Hard Way)

    • Chapter 2: Using Apple Mail

      • Know Thy Mail Window

      • Setting Up Your Account

      • Receiving and Reading E-Mail Wisdom

      • Raise the Little Flag: Sending E-Mail

      • What? You Get Junk Mail, Too?

      • Attachments on Parade

      • Fine-Tuning Your Post Office

      • Automating Your Mail with Rules

    • Chapter 3: Staying in Touch with iChat AV

      • Configuring iChat

      • Changing Modes in iChat AV

      • Will You Be My Buddy?

      • Chat! Chat, I Say!

      • Sending Files with iChat AV

      • Eliminating the Riffraff

    • Chapter 4: Expanding Your Horizons with iDisk

      • Grabbing Internet Storage for Your Mac

      • Understanding What’s on Your iDisk

      • Opening and Using iDisk

    • Chapter 5: Going Places with Safari

      • Let’s Pretend You’ve Never Used This Thing

      • Visiting Web Sites

      • Navigating the Web

      • Setting Up Your Home Page

      • Adding and Using Bookmarks

      • Downloading Files

      • Using Subscriptions and History

      • Saving Web Pages

      • Protecting Your Privacy

    • Chapter 6: Staying Secure Online

      • What Can Really Happen?

      • “ Shields Up, Chekov!”

      • A Dose of Common Sense: Things Not to Do Online

  • Book V: Networking in OS X

    • Contents at a Glance

    • Chapter 1: Setting Up a Small Network

      • What Do I Need to Set Up My Network?

      • Setting Up Your Network

      • Understanding the Basics of Network Configuration

      • Configuring Network System Preferences

      • Verifying Connectivity

      • Troubleshooting Your New Network

    • Chapter 2: Using Your Network

      • It’s All about ( File) Sharing

      • Sharing a Connected Printer

      • Sharing Files to Windows Computers

      • Accessing File Shares on Windows Computers

      • Using FTP to Access Files

      • Using the Built-in Firewall

      • Remote Control of Your Mac

    • Chapter 3: You May Even Need AppleTalk

      • Setting Up AppleTalk

      • Accessing Files and Printers with AppleTalk

    • Chapter 4: Going Wireless

      • Speaking the Wireless Lingo

      • Figuring Out the Different Flavors of Wireless Ethernet

      • Keeping Your Wireless Network Secure

      • Setting Up Your Wireless Network

    • Chapter 5: Sharing That Precious Internet Thing

      • Sharing the Internet

      • Using Network Address Translation

      • Ways to Share Your Internet Connection

      • Connecting Everything

      • Adding Wireless Support

  • Book VI: Expanding Your System

    • Contents at a Glance

    • Chapter 1: Hardware That Will Make You Giddy

      • Parading Pixels: Digital Cameras, DV Camcorders, and Scanners

      • Incredible Input: Keyboards, Trackballs, Joysticks, and Drawing Tablets

      • Sublime Storage: CD/DVD Recorders and Tape Drives

      • Awesome Audio: Subwoofer Systems and MP3 Hardware

    • Chapter 2: Add RAM, Hard Drive Space, and Stir

      • Adding Memory: Reasons for More RAM

      • Shopping for a RAM Upgrade

      • The Tao of Hard Drive Territory

      • Internal versus External Storage

      • Determining How Much Space You Need

      • Shopping for a Hard Drive

      • Installing Your New Stuff

    • Chapter 3: Port-o-rama: Using USB and FireWire

      • Appreciating the Advantage of a FireWire Connection

      • Understanding USB and the Tale of Two Point Oh

      • Hey, You Need a Hub!

      • Uh, It’s Just Sitting There

    • Chapter 4: I’m Okay, You’re a Printer

      • Meet the Printer Setup Utility

      • Printer Setup Utility Toolbar Buttons

      • Adding a Funky Printer

      • Managing Your Printing Jobs

      • Sharing a Printer across That There Network

    • Chapter 5: Programs That You’ve ( Probably) Gotta Have

      • The Trundling Microsoft Mammoth

      • Your Mac OS X Toolbox: Drive 10

      • Image Editing for the Masses

      • The Morass of Digital Video

      • Yes, It’s Really Called “ Toast”

      • If You Positively Have to Run Windows . . .

      • All Hail FileMaker Pro

      • Utilities That Rock

      • At Least One Game

  • Book VII: Advanced Mac OS X

    • Contents at a Glance

    • Chapter 1: . . . And UNIX Lurks Beneath

      • Why Use the Keyboard?

      • Uncovering the Terminal

      • UNIX Commands 101

      • Working with Files

      • Useful Commands

      • UNIX Cadillac Commands

      • UNIX Programs That Come in Handy

    • Chapter 2: AppleScript Just Plain Rocks

      • What’s So Great about AppleScript?

      • Running a Script

      • Writing Your Own Simple Scripts

      • One Step Beyond: AppleScript Programming

      • Help Is at Your Fingertips

    • Chapter 3: Forget Hal! Talking and Writing to Your Macintosh

      • Using Ink with a Tablet

      • Computer, Can You Hear Me?

      • Your Mac Talks Back!

      • Speaking Your Own Phrases

    • Chapter 4: Hosting a Web Site à la OS X

      • Building a Site with .Mac

      • Creating a Home Page with HTML and iDisk

      • Using Mac OS X Web Sharing

  • Index

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