Sebastopol, CA--The latest system software for the resurgent Macintosh
platform is Mac OS 9, which includes over 50 new features. Despite
the long list of enhancements however, Apple ships Mac OS 9 without
one of the most important features of all: a manual.
O'Reilly/Pogue Press comes to the rescue with the first book in the
eagerly anticipated Missing Manual series--
Mac OS 9: the
Missing Manual. Award-winning author David Pogue brings his humor
and expertise to Mac OS 9 in this lucid, impeccably written guide.
Readers will appreciate the step-by-step guides to setting up small
networks, the tutorials on Mac OS 9's new Multiple Users control
panel, and the coverage of Mac OS 9's speech-recognition, color
printing, digital video, and self-updating software features. Along
the way, Pogue communicates the joy of using the little shortcuts,
drag-and-drop surprises, and elegant design touches that make the
Mac the most passionately championed computer in the world.
"The Missing Manual idea wasn't actually mine," says Pogue. "It came
from a guy on a trade-show bus. Something about me must have screamed
'Free therapy,' because the guy started to vent. He was furious that
most software companies have stopped producing printed manuals. (Or,
as he put it: "Like they can't afford another 50 cents a box?")
Instead they--Netscape, Intuit, Adobe, Microsoft, Apple,
everyone--expect you to learn complex software using online help
screens. You can't underline it, bookmark it, or read it in the
bathroom. You couldn't follow the steps even if you wanted to,
because its own window covers up the software you're trying to
use. And worst of all, online help is usually terribly written."
"By this time, my mind was racing. Everyone complains about the
disappearance of software manuals, but nobody does anything about
it! By gum, I wasn't going to waste my life hunting through online
help. I would create--the Missing Manual series. If the Missing
Manuals scratch a global itch, I'll be thrilled. But as I write
or edit the book, in the back of my mind, I'm thinking of that
guy on the bus. If only I could get back to him now... 'You were
right all along' I'd say, 'this one's for you."
"But above all, a Missing Manual is about the writing," explains
Pogue. "It's clear, crisp, jargon-free, and often witty, with enough
patience for the novice and enough depth for the power user."
About the Missing Manual series:
Microsoft does it. Apple does it. Adobe, Netscape, and FileMaker do
it. Almost every major software company, in fact, sells increasingly
sophisticated software without a printed manual. To cut costs and
save production time, today's software companies don't offer physical
instruction manuals at all. Instead, you're expected to learn these
complex programs by reading electronic help screens. One technical
writer finally became inspired enough to do something about the
problem. David Pogue, author of the bestselling
PalmPilot: The
Ultimate Guide, has teamed with O'Reilly to launch a new imprint,
Pogue Press, dedicated to producing beautifully written manuals for
popular consumer software and hardware products. O'Reilly/Pogue
Press is pleased to introduce its new line: the Missing Manual
series.
Online Resources
Mac OS 9:
The Missing Manual
By David Pogue
1st Edition March 2000
1-56592-857-1, 472 pages, $19.95
order@oreilly.com
1-800-998-9938