Mac OS X Tiger for Unix Geeks
Category: Technical
Tag: Mac OS X
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Description
If you're one of the many Unix developers drawn to Mac OS X for its Unix core, you'll find yourself in surprisingly unfamiliar territory. Unix and Mac OS X are kissing cousins, but there are enough pitfalls and minefields in going from one to another that even a Unix guru can stumble, and most guides to Mac OS X are written for Mac aficionados. For a Unix developer, approaching Tiger from the Mac side is a bit like learning Russian by reading the Russian side of a Russian-English dictionary. Fortunately, O'Reilly has been the Unix authority for over 25 years, and in Mac OS X Tiger for Unix Geeks, that depth of understanding shows. This is the book for Mac command-line fans. Completely revised and updated to cover Mac OS X Tiger, this new edition helps you quickly and painlessly get acclimated with Tiger's familiar-yet foreign-Unix environment.
Book Info:
Published in 2005
Published by O'Reilly
Author Brian Jepson
ISBN 0596009127 Size 6.91MB
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Comments
Comments for "Mac OS X Tiger for Unix Geeks":
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I bought this, and apart from MacOS X internals, it's the only book that really explains how the OS works underneath the GUI.
The thing you really have to get your head around with OS X is the driver model, and the fact that the OS/file system looks completely different on the command line than does via the GUI.
So if you're actually looking for the stuff the Apple Admin manuals don't tell you, this is the book for you. If you want to know more about kernel processes etc. You want OS X Internals.
I've looked, and even asked a "genius" and there just isn't anything else. The rest of the OS X books you'll find are all telly tubby for the intellectually impaired.
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The thing you really have to get your head around with OS X is the driver model, and the fact that the OS/file system looks completely different on the command line than does via the GUI.
So if you're actually looking for the stuff the Apple Admin manuals don't tell you, this is the book for you. If you want to know more about kernel processes etc. You want OS X Internals.
I've looked, and even asked a "genius" and there just isn't anything else. The rest of the OS X books you'll find are all telly tubby for the intellectually impaired.