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MacBook For Dummies (For Dummies (Computer/Tech))


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List Price: $24.99
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Manufacturer: For Dummies
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Binding: Paperback Dewey Decimal Number: 004.165 EAN: 9780470278161 ISBN: 0470278161 Label: For Dummies Manufacturer: For Dummies Number Of Items: 1 Number Of Pages: 408 Publication Date: 2008-07-21 Publisher: For Dummies Studio: For Dummies
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Editorial Reviews:
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Got a new MacBook, MacBook Air, or MacBook Pro? Want the scoop on Mac laptop basics, using Mac OS X Leopard, networking a laptop, or connecting your laptop to wireless devices? There’s no better place to find what you need than MacBook For Dummies, 2nd Edition! With your Mac laptop, you can take your movies, music, documents, e-mail, and Internet wherever the action is. MacBook For Dummies, 2nd Edition provides the lowdown on maintaining and upgrading your MacBook, customizing the Dock and desktop, traveling with a laptop, turning iPhoto into your portable darkroom, and much more. Learn to: - Locate the battery compartment, iSight camera, ports, and “on” button
- Move your existing files from an older computer
- Use all the cool new features of Mac OS X Leopard
- Work with iTunes, iMovie, iPhoto, iDVD, and GarageBand, all packaged with your MacBook
- Identify the signs of a well-functioning laptop and check for trouble
- Set up your Mac for multiple users
- Explore the cool options available with a .Mac account and iDisk storage that lets you retrieve your files anywhere
- Manage your digital music, photos, and movies
- Use Bluetooth and get all your wireless devices communicating with each other
And if you’ve been considering switching from a PC to a Mac, MacBook For Dummies, 2nd Edition guides you through the process and even shows you how to run Windows on your Mac laptop. If there’s a MacBook in your future — or present — this is the book for you!
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: Good Into to Mac Laptops Comment: This is not "EVERYTHING" you wanted to know about your laptop but it does provide some helpful information and a few surprises. If you buy it with OTHER BOOKS it can be a good part of a collection. I rate it a C+. The author is very amusing sometimes.
Customer Rating:      Summary: MacBook Dummie No More! Comment: Look, Apple made a GREAT personal Labtop. PERIOD! If you want to get up to speed (before the Genius Bar), there is simply no better book than Mark L. Chambers' MacBook For Dummies. Plainly written, well laid out; you'll get ALL the basic information you'll ever need to logically understand your GREAT tool!
Customer Rating:      Summary: Two Years Makes A Lot of Difference in Computers ! Comment: Two years in the rapidly changing landscape of computers makes a lot of difference. "Macbook For Dummies" is helpful to a novice Mac owner like myself, but there is a lot of already outdated material in this manual. The book invests a lot of its pages defining the "Tiger" operating system. While there are many similarities to the new Leopard OS, I stumble through a lot of the exceptions presented that were distinctive to Tiger.
I've learned a lot of basics through this book, but I spend almost as much time filtering through outdated material. I wish now that I had waited for the update revision I hope is coming.
In my opinion, in terms of usefulness to owners of new Macbooks, this manual should be price discounted considerably.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Great book for beginners Comment: This book has definitely not disappointed. I switched to the mac world from a pc world and found myself struggling just to do basic things on my new mac book pro. This book is a great resource and really gets you up to speed very quickly. If you have always had a mac and know the basics this book maybe a little too basic for you.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Its not for dummies and is actually pretty good Comment: MacBook for Dummies
reviewed by Dr. Eric Flescher, Olathe, KS: (dreric1kansas@aol.com)
Author: Mark L. Chamber
Publisher: Wiley
Released: 2006
Pages: 366
$ USA 22
Canada 26
UK 15
ISBN: 0-470-04859-X
Strengths: The book includes a very introduction. Good screenshots and illustrations including the pointers to specific areas within the illustrations. Five icons help pinpoint helpful information along the way. Chapter 23 " Top Ten Things to Avoid like the Plague " is quite good as well as Chapter 22 " Top Ten Laptop Rules to Follow (which is insightful and well written). Good price, well written and readable.
Weaknesses: Chapters like the ones with iDVD and Imovie have minimal amounts of information. Really these and some of the sections just have the basics. To know and learn more, books that detail more information regarding specific applications should be found besides these basics. the iLife applications, you might want to turn elsewhere. Users who read about "movies," "projects." "video clips," may find the information in this book not well defined, especially concerning when and how the media can be imported, exported and utilized
Novice/Intermediate
Rating: 4.5/5
There are several books on the market dealing with MacBook. Several include not only information about MacBook but MacBook Pro. This is one includes both. I wanted to see what the author had to offer in this MacDummies series related to these laptops. I found the author of this book has previously published the Mac OSX All-In-One desk Reference for Dummies and completed thirty computer books. My wife related bought a MacBook so I decided to research this book to see what it could tell me.
The book covers 366 pages and spans 23 chapters with seven part/ sections. The first part of the book includes a very nice introduction that gives the reader a nice prelude to learning about the laptops but more . As the author says, " he started with no assumption " regarding knowledge of the laptop. The book starts "from the ground up" and launches into some interesting ideas that relate to more then the "hardware." It is nice that in this beginning section, the author pinpoints information about "switchers," those computer users who are moving into the Macintosh realm from the PC/windows usage (particularly targeting Windows XP users). He also nicely mentions that if you are new to Macintosh and the Apple world, most of the software is in the computer and does not have to be purchased. This is a great tip that probably many PC people still don't know about even though many Apple users already are mindful about.
While many of the Dummies books vary in their versatility , breadth and depth of the instructional content, this one is solid. While the illustrations are only black and white, the screen shots are readable. Several include pointers to various sections within the illustrations that zone in on the information talked about. This takes away the annoying quess work that I have found in some books that I have read in which "hunting" within the illustrations was a regular and recurring point. There are also five icons that are placed throughout the pages. These (Tip; mark's Maxim; Technical stuff; Warning!; Remember) serve to include precise additional information that assists along the way regarding the instructions.
The Part 1 includes information pertaining to Mac laptops, turning on and starting with the system and computer. Part focus in on the OSX and operating system while Part 3 launches into the world of connecting and communicating. Part 4 focuses on the iLife applications ( introductory instruction and while the text takes you through each application starting up and using, if you want more in-depth information other books will be needed). Part 5 is sharing access and information while Part 6 deals with important troubleshooting, upgrading information and maintaining your laptop.
Part 7 is called the Parts of Tens. This includes Chapter 22 " Top Ten Laptop Rules to Follow (insightful and well written) and Chapter 23 " Top Ten Things to Avoid like the Plague " (useful for many reasons in your encounter with the internet, applications, hardware and more).
All in all I liked the book and what it had "to say." Novice and intermediate laptop users might like it not only for its good price but also the information it provides. Readable and you gain insights throughout the book. But especially if you already have a Macbook or Pro and have worked with it and want more information (concerning the iLife applications), you might want to turn elsewhere. Users who read about "movies," "projects." "video clips," may find the information not well defined, especially concerning when and how the media can be imported, exported and utilized.
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