Errata

Mac OS X:  The Missing Manual

Errata for Mac OS X: The Missing Manual

Submit your own errata for this product.

The errata list is a list of errors and their corrections that were found after the product was released. If the error was corrected in a later version or reprint the date of the correction will be displayed in the column titled "Date Corrected".

The following errata were submitted by our customers and approved as valid errors by the author or editor.

Color key: Serious technical mistake Minor technical mistake Language or formatting error Typo Question Note Update

Version Location Description Submitted By Date submitted Date corrected
Printed
Page vi
missing 7 chapter after 4th paragraph

There is no chapter 7 in Table of Contents

AUTHOR: Fixed in 2nd printing

{P. 294} Note: Second sentence is erroneous and should read "Still, Key Caps is the
only way to get an at-a-glance overview of every symbol you can make with different
keystrokes." Reason: Fonts can contain thousands of symbols and Character Palette,
not Key Caps, is the only way to access all of them.

AUTHOR: Fixed in 2nd printing

(P. 295) para 2: Add sentence at the end "For many fonts you will also
need to change the keyboard to access more of the characters." Reason:
If you leave the keyboard set to English, all keycaps can see are the first
characters in a given font, which are almost always Roman. To see Hebrew
letters in Hebrew fonts on Key Caps, you need to have the keyboard set to
Hebrew, etc.

AUTHOR: Fixed in 2nd printing

426 (Typo or formatting problem)

The text used to read:

as described on page 322.

It now reads:

as described on page 330.

---------------

554 (Typo or formatting problem)

The text used to read:

a program like Wipe Away

It now reads:

a program like Wipe Creator

---------------

573-583 (Typo or formatting problem)



[minor indentation and capitalization problems corrected]

Anonymous    Jan 01, 2002
Printed
Page 6
2nd from the bottom paragraph

Second Edition: In the sentence preceding the final paragraph, it says: "
Yet here is again, in what's supposed to be the world's most modern and
advanced operating system."

The beginning of this sentence obviously should say, "Yet here it is again?"

The word "it" is missing from your book.

AUTHOR: Fixed in 4th printing

15 (Typo or formatting problem)

The text used to read:

and click Connect

It now reads:

and click Log In

---------------

19 (Minor technical error)

The text used to read:

If you add the Option key as you choose from this menu, the first window
doesn't close as you open the second.

It now reads:

If you add the Option key after opening this menu, the first window doesn't
close as you open the second.

---------------

20 (Minor technical error)

The text used to read:

concept much father.

It now reads:

concept much farther.

---------------
25 (Typo or formatting problem)

The text used to read:

The next chapter describes this fascinating new Mac OS X element in great
detail.
It now reads:

Chapter 3 describes this fascinating new Mac OS X desktop-window element in
great detail.

---------------

38 (Typo or formatting problem)

The text used to read:

choose View?Show View Options

[? should appear as an arrow]

---------------

64 (Typo or formatting problem)

The text used to read:

You don't have without wait until

It now reads:

You don't have to wait until

---------------

73 (Typo or formatting problem)

The text used to read:

also as shown in Figure 3-1

It now reads:

as shown in the box on page 75.

---------------

74 (Minor technical error)

The text used to read:

To remove a button,

It now reads:

To remove a Dock icon,

---------------

75 (Typo or formatting problem)

The text used to read:

As shown in Figure 3-1, for example,

It now reads:

As shown here, for example,

---------------

Anonymous    Feb 01, 2002
Printed
Page 9

The text used to read:
Note: A series of minor, no-new-features updates followed, including 10.1.1
(improvements in USB and FireWire, printing, camera compatibility, CD burning,
etc.), 10.1.2 (better DVD playback, USB and FireWire compatibility, and so on).
The Software Update feature (page xx) is designed to notify you automatically
when they become available.

It now reads:

Note: A series of minor, no-new-features updates followed, including 10.1.1
(improvements in USB and FireWire, printing, camera compatibility, CD burning,
etc.), 10.1.2 (better DVD playback, USB and FireWire compatibility, and so on),
and 10.1.3 (still more hardware compatibility updates and bug fixes). The
Software Update feature (page 203) is designed to notify you automatically when
they become available.

------------------

19 (Typo or formatting problem)

The text used to read:

If you add the Option key after opening this menu, the first window doesn't
close as you open the second.

[Cut that line]

------------------

20 (Typo or formatting problem)

The text used to read:
Add the Option key if you want to close the outgoing window in the process.
It now reads:

Add the Option key if you want to switch into "Old Finder Mode" in the process
(see page 25).

-----------------

20 (Typo or formatting problem)

The text used to read:

"For example, if you [Apple-key-symbol]-click a background window's close
button, Mac OSX registers your click, closes the window
and never even takes you out of your current window or program"

It now reads:

(Note, by the way, that you don't need the Apple key to close a background
window. Just click its close button normally. Mac OS X closes the window without
taking you out of your current window or program.)

-----------------

23 (Typo or formatting problem)

The text used to read:

"Those same keys also slow down the un-minimizing animation, the one you see
when you click a window icon in the dock to restore it to full size."

It now reads:

The Shift key also slows down the un-minimizing animation, the one you see when
you click a window icon in the dock to restore it to full size.

---------------

45 (Typo or formatting problem)

The text used to read:

Press the power button on your flat-panel Apple screen. (If doing so just puts
the Mac tos leep, you may have to visit h Energy Saver pane of System
Preferences; see page 195.)

It now reads:

Note: If you have a flat-panel Apple screen, pressing the power button doesn't
summon the "Are you sure you want to shut down?" box; it simply puts the Mac to
sleep.

---------------

45 (Typo or formatting problem)

The text used to read:

Once the Shut Down dialog box appears, you can press the S key instead of
clicking Shut Down, R for Restart, or Esc for Cancel, if you like.

It now reads:

Once the Shut Down dialog box appears, you can press the S key instead of
clicking Sleep, R for Restart, Esc for Cancel, or Enter for Shut Down.

---------------

55 (Typo or formatting problem)

The text used to read:

A Mac OS X icon's name can have up to 256 letters and spaces

It now reads:

A Mac OS X icon's name can have up to 255 letters and spaces

---------------------------

69 (Minor technical error)

The text used to read:

Tip: The icon at the upper-left corner of the General Information panel is
double-clickable. You can use it to open whatever it is you're examining,
whether it's a program, document, disk, folder, alias, or whatever.

Cut this tip.
---------------

107 (Update)

The text used to read:

(Unfortunately, there's still no keyboard equivalent for "clicking," so there's
actually not much value to this one.)

It now reads:

Then just tap the Space bar to "click" the highlighted button.

---------------

142 (Update)

Insert this tip:

Big fat tip: If you have both Mac OS 9 and Mac OS X installed on the same hard
drive (technically, the same volume), and you last started up from Mac OS 9, you
can skip these steps. Use this shortcut instead: Just hold down the letter X key
down while the Mac is starting up. You'll go straight to Mac OS X.

---------------

192 (Typo or formatting problem)

The text used to read:

setting a low resolution (see page 192) is one solution

It now reads:

setting a low resolution (see the next page) is one solution

---------------

194

The text used to read:

If you have a choice here at all, this pop-up menu lets you adjust how many
thousand times per second your screen image is repainted

It now reads:

If you have a choice here at all, this pop-up menu lets you adjust how many times per second your screen image is repainted.

---------------

239 (Typo or formatting problem)

The text used to read:

to keep Mac OS 9 and Mac OS X on different "disks," as described on page 140

It now reads:

to keep Mac OS 9 and Mac OS X on different "disks," as described on page 142

---------------

282 (Typo or formatting problem)

The text used to read:

Once you've set up more than one account, the dialog box shown in Figure 11-5
appears

It now reads:

Once you've set up more than one account, the dialog box shown in Figure 11-1
Appears

---------------

296 (Typo or formatting problem)

The text used to read:

DHCP stands for dynamic post control protocol, and means "make up a new IP
address every time I try to connect to another computer."

It now reads:

DHCP stands for dynamic host control protocol, and means "issue me a new IP
address every time I try to connect to another computer."

---------------

298 (Typo or formatting problem)

The text used to read:

Use the Users & Groups control panel."

It now reads:

Use the Users & Groups tab of the File Sharing control panel."

---------------

310 (Typo or formatting problem)

The text used to read:

The Built-in, One-Way Way: SAMBA

It now reads:

The Built-in, One-Way Way: SMB

---------------

400 (Typo or formatting problem)

The text used to read:

orphaned home directory of a deleted account, described on page 400

It now reads:

orphaned home directory of a deleted account, described on page 281

---------------

416 (Typo or formatting problem)

The text used to read:

a glance at man5 crontab shows you how

It now reads:

a glance at man 5 crontab shows you how

---------------

465 (Typo or formatting problem)

The text used to read:

.vcf. A "business-card" ?le; see page 477.

It now reads:

.vcf. A "business-card" ?le; see page 478.

---------------

Anonymous    Mar 01, 2002
Printed
Page 18
3rd paragraph

Some bulleted items that follow start with "they." As it now reads,the antecedent
for "they" seems to be "nuances," but that is clearly not what you mean.
CORRECTED IN 14TH PRINTING

PRINTING NUMBER14
17 (Minor technical error)

The text used to read:

You may notice that icons and Mac OS X are much larger

It now reads:

You may notice that icons in Mac OS X are much larger

---------------

Anonymous    Sep 01, 2002
Printed
Page 26
Bottom callout (Multiple views, same folder)

Each view of a folder maintains its own selected item. The selection can be and most
likely is different for each view.
NOTED IN 14TH PRINTING

Anonymous    Sep 01, 2002
Printed
Page 27
last paragraph

Switching between "Jump to Next Page" and "Jump to Here" does not affect any
windows--even new windows--in any running program. Only after the program is
restarted does it register the change in scrolling behavior. This applies to the
Finder as well; you have to Log Out and Log In to see the effect of your changes in
the General panel.
CORRECTED IN 14TH PRINTING

Anonymous    Sep 01, 2002
Printed
Page 52
fifth paragraph

It reads "Within the folder that bears your name... Except as noted, you're free to
rename or delete them..." .
Error: the Desktop folder isn't the only one that shouldn't be deleted or renamed,
but it is the only one noted as such.
CORRECTED IN 14TH PRINTING

PRINTING NUMBER14
69 (Minor technical error)

The text used to read:

Here's where you can view and edit the name of the icon

It now reads:

Here's where you can view the name of the icon

---------------

Anonymous    Sep 01, 2002
Printed
Page 86
First paragraph

This paragraph appears to indicate that "Comments" is one of the kinds of information
one can search for in the Find Program. I am running OS 10.2.1. In addition to the
"File Name" and "Contents" boxes which appear automatically, when I open the "Add
Criteria" pop-up menu, only six other options appear, "Date Created," "Date
Modified," "Kind," "Size," "Extension," and "Visibitily." There is no option for
"Comments." I notice that the listed items add up to eight, which is the number of
options mentioned on page 84 paragraph 3 and the number of options displayed in the
illustration Figure 2-15 on page 83. I notice, however, that in the "Add Criteria"
pop-up menu, there appears to be a space for a missing option between "Size" and
"Extension." Do some versions of OS X have the "Comments" option and others do not,
or is this a mistake?

AUTHOR: The "Comments" paragraph on page 86 is indeed a mistake, which I'm removing
from this reprint.

95 (Typo or formatting problem)

The text used to read:

see pages 249 and 507

It now reads:

see pages 247 and 507

---------------

96 (Minor technical error)

The text used to read:

show Choose Package Contents

It now reads:

choose Show Package Contents

---------------

103 (Minor technical error)

The text used to read:

and turn off "Always show file extensions."

It now reads:

and turn on "Always show file extensions."

---------------
110 (Typo or formatting problem)

The text used to read:

as Figure 4-9 illustrates

It now reads:

as Figure 4-10 illustrates

---------------

114 (Minor technical error)

The text used to read:

this dialog box lacks the New Folder button, Add to Favorites button, Save
button, file name field, and so on

It now reads:

this dialog box lacks the New Folder button, Save button, file name field, and
so on

---------------

125 (Minor technical error)

The text used to read:

whose name ends with the letters .dmg (see page 125).

It now reads:

whose name ends with the letters .dmg (see page 237).

---------------

137 (Typo or formatting problem)

The text used to read:

Startup Disk, TCP/IP, Trackpad, and Web Sharing

It now reads:

TCP/IP, Trackpad, and Web Sharing

---------------

Anonymous    Feb 01, 2002
Printed
Page 147
UP TO SPEED - The Color Picker

This isn't exactly errata; but something that you seemed to have missed. When talking
about the new Color Picker, there are several things that I find exciting; but you
don't mention.

For instance, "Image Palettes" isn't just a cloudy rainbow. You can put any image you
want in there, and pick colors from it even if it's not on your desktop. To do it,
just click the Palette button at the bottom (under the picture.) A menu will drop
down, letting you choose a new image from anywhere on your disks, or your clipboard.
You can also remove, rename, or copy the existing image. I'm sure that you can
imagine the implications of being able to do this!

Also, you can make your own color swatches, and store them in the "drawer" at the
bottom, (which expands when you drag the two little horizontal "handle" lines.) All
you have to do is drag from the large color swatch at the top to any of the little
squares at the bottom. To remove them, just drag an empty one over the one you want
gone. Or you can drag a different color into a square, if you just want to replace
the one that's there, or rearrange them.

Color Palettes aren't just canned sets; you can make your own. All you have to do is
go to the Palette section, and choose "New" from the List menu under the swatch
window. You can also name the palette, or remove it if you don't need it any more.

You can add colors to your palette by either dragging a color from the swatches at
the bottom or the current color swatch at the top, or by choosing "new" from the
Color menu below the named colors, which automatically adds the current color. You
can name the colors, remove them, or find the one you want by name from the Color
menu, too.

As you make them, they seem to be automatically saved as Macromedia Flash Color
Tables in your Home/Library/Colors folder. You can open any Flash Color Tables by
using "Open" in the List menu. So you can give a table of the colors for a project to
everyone working on it, and they can use them very easily, no matter what program
they are working in. (I'm sure you can see how important that is.)

In short, the color picker has really become extremely useful for those of us who are
graphic artists. I think it's worth mentioning, especially since you have to do some
digging to find out what you can do with it.

AUTHOR: Added to this printing.

151 (Minor technical error)

The text used to read:

Tip: The CDs you can burn in the Finder are Mac-only. If you want to burn CDs
that play equally well in Windows, you need a program like Toast
(www.roxio.com).

[delete the tip]

---------------

152 (Minor technical error)

The text used to read:

Top right: Specify your name and password, if necessary.

It now reads:

Top left: Specify your name and password, if necessary. If this box doesn't
appear, then you may need to add the PC's workgroup name, such as MSHOME, to the
address you typed in the second dialog box. The full address might look like
this: smb://MSHOME/Dell4100/Drafts.

---------------

159 (Typo or formatting problem)

The text used to read:

you should be able to see how you it could save you time

It now reads:

you should be able to see how it could save you time

---------------

174 (Typo or formatting problem)

The text used to read:

(Whoever wrote this particular description didn't know how the difference

It now reads:

(Whoever wrote this particular description didn't know the difference

---------------

214 (Update)

The text used to read:

This pop-up menu specifies what should happen automatically when you connect the
camera to the Mac. Usually you'll want Image Capture itself to open, which is
precisely what Mac OS X proposes. But if your camera came with a specialized
downloading application, you can identify it using this pop-up menu.

It now reads:

This pop-up menu specifies what program should open automatically when you
connect the camera to the Mac. Usually you'll want Image Capture itself to open,
or better yet, Apple's free iPhoto program. But if your camera came with a
specialized downloading application, you can identify it using this pop-up menu.

---------------

215 (Update)

Add this text:

iPhoto

This remarkable (and free) new "I" program debuted in January 2002 as a worthy
successor to iMovie, iTunes, and iDVD. When you connect a USB camera and click
Import, the program automatically sucks the pictures in to your Mac, whereupon
you can rotate, crop, organize, sort and print them. The best part may be the
Book feature, which lets you design and order a hardbound, linen-covered,
professionally printed picture book for as little as $30. It comes to you by
mail in about a week.

---------------

221 (Typo or formatting problem)

The text used to read:

RTFD. RTDF, a strange and powerful variant

It now reads:

RTFD. RTFD, a strange and powerful variant

---------------

230 (Typo or formatting problem)

The text used to read:

That entails installing a $100 AirPort card installed in your Mac

It now reads:

That entails installing a $100 AirPort card in your Mac

---------------

251 (Update)

The text used to read:

which Apple sells for $10 each

It now reads:

which Apple sells for $5 each

---------------

289 (Update)

The text used to read:

Unless you intervene, everybody else who uses this Mac will be able to peek into
everything in every new folder you create.

It now reads:

Unless you intervene, everybody else who uses this Mac will be able to peek into
everything in every new folder you create (unless it?s inside a folder that is,
itself, off-limits).

---------------

292 (Typo or formatting problem)

The text used to read:

(Just repeat steps 1 and 2 on the previous page. In step 3, choose Security ->
Enable Root User.

It now reads:

(Just repeat steps 1 and 2 on the previous page. In step 3, choose Security ->
Disable Root User.

---------------

295 (Typo or formatting problem)

The text used to read:

like the one illustrated in Figure 12-2

It now reads:

like the one illustrated in Figure 12-3

---------------

295 (Typo or formatting problem)

The text used to read:

Network icon (Figure 12-2)

It now reads:

Network icon (Figure 12-3)

---------------

295 (Minor technical error)

The text used to read:

You can use instead another AirPort-equipped Mac that you've configured, using
the AirPort Setup Assistant, to serve as a software-based base station.

It now reads:

You can use instead an AirPort-equipped Mac OS 9 machine that you've configured,
using the AirPort Setup Assistant, to serve as a software-based base station.
(As of Mac OS X 10.1.2, you can?t set up a Mac OS X Mac to be a software base
station.)

---------------

376 (typo or formatting problem)

The text used to read:

remember that capitalization matter

It now reads:

remember that capitalization matters

---------------

386 (Minor technical error)

The text used to read:

but they're even more are available (and useful)

It now reads:

but even more are available (and useful)

---------------

424 (Typo or formatting problem)

The text used to read:

sky's the limit (see Figure 17-3).

It now reads:

sky's the limit (see Figure 17-2).

---------------

425 (Typo or formatting problem)

The text used to read:

illustrated instructions (Figure 17-4)

It now reads:

illustrated instructions (Figure 17-3)

---------------

426 (Typo or formatting problem)

The text used to read:

graphic in place (Figure 17-5).

It now reads:

graphic in place (Figure 17-4).

---------------

426 (Typo or formatting problem)

The text used to read:

clock face (Figure 17-6),

It now reads:

clock face (Figure 17-5),

---------------

428 (Typo or formatting problem)

The text used to read:

display shown in Figure 1-7-7.

It now reads:

display shown in Figure 1-7-6.

---------------

439 (Typo or formatting problem)

The text used to read:

Shareware programs like BrickHouse and Firewall

It now reads:

Shareware programs like BrickHouse and Firewalk

---------------

440 (Minor technical error)

The text used to read:

using the AirPort Setup Assistant (available for both Mac OS 9 and Mac OS X),

It now reads:

using the AirPort Setup Assistant for Mac OS 9,

---------------

Anonymous    Feb 01, 2002
Printed
Page 230
last paragraph, first line

add 'r' to "Apple System Profile"
CORRECTED IN 14TH PRINTING

Anonymous    Sep 01, 2002
Printed
Page 233
penultimate paragraph

not Apple Launcher; Applet Launcher
CORRECTED IN 14TH PRINTING

Anonymous    Sep 01, 2002
Printed
Page 234
Tip, last sentence

not Apple Launcher; Applet Launcher
CORRECTED IN 14TH PRINTING

Anonymous    Sep 01, 2002
Printed
Page 289
Caption for Fig 9-15, last two words.

The text says "click OK" - but there is NO "OK" button, as can be seen from the
figure itself!

I honestly do not know what the correct text should be. In my own case, I fumbled
around for about 15 minutes, re-formatting/partitioning my drive three times before I
finally got what I wanted. But I don't know what I did different that third time.

There is also a fudamental interface issue with this dialog box, and I suggest some
explanation or warning. The default is for "Install Mac OS 9 Disk Drivers" to be
checked (as shown) in the "Partition" tab, but unchecked in the "Erase" tab. So
which takes priority? The interface issue is: How do I know if the information
entered under all tabs is executed or just those under the active tab? It seems to
be different in different tabbed dialog boxes.

AUTHOR: Fixed in 5th printing

369

The text used to read:

Figure 6-3:
Top left: Begin by sharing certain folders on the Windows machine.
Top right: In the Connect to Server box, type out the network address of the
folder you want to access from the Mac.
Top left: Specify your name and password, if necessary. If this box doesn't
appear, then you may need to add the PC's workgroup name, such as MSHOME, to the
address you typed in the second dialog box. The full address might look like
this: smb://MSHOME/Dell4100/Drafts.
Bottom right: Like magic, the Windows folder shows up on your Mac screen, ready
to use!

It now reads:

Figure 6-3:
Top left: Begin by sharing certain folders on the Windows machine.
Top right: In the Connect to Server box, type out the network address of the
folder you want to access from the Mac. If the shared folder name contains
spaces (My Documents), leave them out (MyDocuments).
Bottom left: Specify your name and password, if necessary. If you just get an
error message, then you may need to add the PC?s workgroup name, such as MSHOME,
followed by a semicolon, to the address you typed in the second dialog box. The
full address might look like this:
smb://MSHOME;Dell4100/Drafts.
Bottom right: Like magic, the Windows folder shows up on your Mac screen, ready
to use!

Anonymous    Feb 01, 2002
Printed
Page 295
"Change the Key Caps font"

Well. I don't know if it's that serious, but it's certainly a real problem.

You state "...Key Caps lets you see the characters lurking within any installed
font;..." Not true. Some fonts yes, some fonts no. I don't know why. Discussion
in the Apple Disussion Forum suggests it has something to do with "keyboads" but I
don't understand it. All I know is that many of my fonts do not show up correctly in
Key Caps under OS-X. The obvious one is the Symbol font. It's true of my math
fonts, too, and even some relatively standard english alphabet fonts. The sad thing
is that Key Caps pretends to work (there are usually no error messages or other
warnings), but does not (it shows the standard keyboard character in some other
font), so things just get frustrating. When I select Symbol font I sometimes get a
warning that "some" of the characters might not show up correctly, but the warning is
not consistent (in that the warning does not always appear) or accurate (it's not
"some" of the characters, but "most" of the characters, that show up incorrectl!
y.)

The work-around is to use Key Caps in Classic.

AUTHOR: Fixed in 5th printing

Anonymous    Feb 01, 2002
Printed
Page 296
2nd paragraph

"DHCP Stands for dynamic post control protocol"

should read:

"DHCP stands for dynamic host configuration protocol"

Anonymous   
Printed
Page 420
4th par

Your text promisses a free download of TinkerTool at www.missingmanuals.com. It's not
there, thanks, or at least I cannot find the "software page".
CORRECTED - AVAILABLE THRU "MISSING CD-ROM" LINK

PRINTING NUMBER14
444 (Update)


Insert this before the graphic:

Read This First: In September 2002, Apple discontinued the free iTools service-and replaced it with something called .Mac, which, much to the dismay of many Mac fans, costs $100 per year. The iDisk now holds 100 MB instead of 20, and the name has changed from iTools to .mac. Otherwise, except for the name and fee changes, the features described in the following pages still work as described.

---------------

Anonymous    Sep 01, 2002
Printed
Page 449
Box at bottom of page on Shells. First line of last paragraph.

Reads: "You can open additional Terminal windows (36 max)..."
Either it is a typo or the limit has changed in 10.2.2, but I can open 46 terminals
before I get a "Resource temporarily unavailable" meesage.

AUTHOR: Fixed in 4th printing

455

The text used to read:

Free, Web-based servers like Hotmail and Yahoo

It now reads:

Free, Web-based servers like Hotmail

---------------

473 (Minor technical error)

The text used to read:

phrase you want Entourage to watch out for

It now reads:

phrase you want Mail to watch out for

---------------

476 (Minor technical error)

The text used to read:

You'll find it Mac OS X's little-black-book program

It now reads:

You'll find Mac OS X's little-black-book program

---------------

492

The text used to read:

You can al search

It now reads:

You can also search

---------------

507 (Typo or formatting problem)

[bad line wrap fixed]

---------------

520 (Minor technical error)

Add this entry:

Key Caps
The new Mac OS X version is in the Applications -> Utilities folder.

---------------

528

[replace screenshot with About This Mac dialog box]

---------------

571 (Typo or formatting problem)

The text used to read:

Disk Copy, 236

It now reads:

Disk Copy, 237

---------------

575 (Update)

Add this entry:

iPhoto, 214-215

---------------

Anonymous    Feb 01, 2002
Printed
Page 563
5th paragraph

it's not your error but apple's: it seems that the feature that automatically added
an address book photo to email messages for some reason doesnt work in jaguar. you
describe it well but it apparantly only worked in 10.1 (there's lots of complaints
about this in apple's discussion boards and nothing but silence on the part of the
apple moderators)

AUTHOR: Fixed in 3rd printing

Anonymous    Feb 01, 2002
Printed
Page 629
8th paragraph, "Start by following steps 1-4..."

It should be noted here that there is no "Options" button displayed when installing
from the OS 10.2 _upgrade_ disk. In fact, it does not seem possible to do a clean
install from the 10.2 Upgrade disk.

AUTHOR: Fixed in 4th printing


Anonymous    Feb 01, 2002
Printed
Page 631
Figure

The figure is labeled "C-1". It should be labeled "A-1".

AUTHOR: Fixed in 4th printing

Anonymous    Feb 01, 2002