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Brian Jepson

Author of Mac OS X for Unix Geeks

11+ Works 467 Members 2 Reviews

About the Author

Brian Jepson is President and cofounder of the SMT Computing Society.

Works by Brian Jepson

Associated Works

Excel Hacks: 100 Industrial-Strength Tips and Tools (2004) — Editor, some editions — 253 copies, 1 review
Science Ninja Team Gatchaman: The Movie [1978 film] (1978) — Voice, some editions — 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Gender
male
Organizations
Providence Geeks
Raspberry Pi Foundation
Nationality
UK
Places of residence
Providence, Rhode Island, USA
Associated Place (for map)
Providence, Rhode Island, USA

Members

Reviews

2 reviews
Mac OS X For Unix Geeks 4th Edition provides an overview of the "Leopard" (10.5) version of the Mac OS X operating system. It is divided into four sections covering day-to-day use, developing software for the Mac, dealing with various package management systems (ports, fink, etc), and using Mac OS X as a server. The first two sections are particularly good at providing an overview of their topics along with many references to online resources for further information. The package management show more section was interesting, but less illuminating as there is not really much to learn if you are familiar with the tools. The final section is the weakest in the book: you could probably write a whole book on how to run Mac OS as a serve and this section feels very rushed.

Books covering specific software packages suffer from two problems: pallid regurgitation or online reference material, and rapid obsolescence.

Mac OS X For Unix Geeks avoids the first problem by way of its unifying theme: what does Mac OS X look like to a UNIX geek? The authors do a very good job of relating how Mac OS X differs from other UNIX variants in both technical detail (for example, differences in handling dynamic libraries) and in user workflows (for example, using the Terminal to fire off an SSH connection over Bonjour rather than just using ssh).

There is not too much that an author can do regarding obsolescence. Already a new version of Mac OS X is available (Snow Leopard). However many of the topic in this book will be relatively stable with that release and so this book is still worth a look at least until O'Reilly comes up with a new edition.
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Statistics

Works
11
Also by
3
Members
467
Popularity
#52,671
Rating
½ 3.6
Reviews
2
ISBNs
18
Languages
1

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