Mac OS X: The Missing Manual David Pogue Changes made in the 11th printing (June 2002) PRINTING NUMBER11 [add tip that you can install Mac OS X on an iPod] It now reads: --------------- PRINTING NUMBER11 The text used to read: 10.1.4 update It now reads: 2. Desktop icons no longer wrap around the Dock. One can now set the desktop to "Keep arranged by..." and count on the icons being nearly ordered from the top right corner of the desktop instead of being scattered about. Huzzah! Way to go Apple for adding full SCSI CD R/W support to Mac OSX... we're rocking now! --------------- PRINTING NUMBER11 The text used to read: found that in OS 10.1 you can quickly change the position of the Dock by holding Shift while grabbing the divider line and dragging it to the left, right, or bottom edge of the screen. Hit the shift after the cursor changes into the little "resize the dock" icon and then drag! If the dock is currently on the bottom of the screen, you'll need to shift-drag the line up and right (or left); dragging straight across won't do anything. It now reads: --------------- PRINTING NUMBER11 9 (Typo or formatting problem) The text used to read: [fix duplicate book name in front matter] It now reads: --------------- PRINTING NUMBER11 45 The text used to read: It now reads: OSX missing manual, page 45: you don't list a keyboard shortcut for sleep. Cmd-shift-zero does not work. But Option-cmd-power does. --------------- In the first paragraph on page 200; under the bullet point labeled, "Email"; the last sentence currently reads, "From now on, whenever you click a "Click here to send email" link on a Web page, your that program opens automatically." On Page 245: "Traceroute lets you can track..." On Page 274 under "Tip:" "There is a backdoor -- you could start up from a Mac OS 9, for example..." On Page 464 under "Opening Attachments" "Just as you can attach files to a message, so people often send files to you." --It may not be technically wrong. But, it took me a couple of readings through the sentence to understand what you meant. On page 503, under FTP: "Interarchy" is misspelled at the end of the second paragraph. On page 504, the same misspelling occurs at the bottom of the page. You didn't seem to mention it specifically, but I discovered that in Mac OS X, you can just drag and drop Windows .ttf files into the font folder and they work. So if you are moving to X from WinTel, you can take all your fonts with you. Clay On page 511, in the second paragraph, "--and which have bit the dust." That should probably be changed to "bitten." On Page 528, Figure B-1 references the "About This Computer" window--yet, your illustration shows the "About The Finder" window. On Page 530, under "Preferences"- the end of the first sentence says, "...as shown in Figure A-2."--It should actually be "B-2." On Page 551, under "Minor Eccentric Behavior," "Mac OS X itself is about as unstable as Mount Everest."--There's really nothing wrong with this sentence. But, I didn't get what you meant until I read a couple of times. At first, I thought you were saying Mac OS X is "unstable." --------------- PRINTING NUMBER11 426 (Typo or formatting problem) The text used to read: aqua blue is not "welcome to Mac OS X", it's actually the desktop picture. It now reads: ---------------