Pages: 416 (Paperback) ISBN: 0072254521 Pub: McGraw-Hill Publishing Co. Pub date: 2004-04-01 Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 290731
|
|
![]() ![]()
Reader Reviews:How to Do Everything...really well! (172/182 people found this helpful)As a long-time PC user/sufferer I accumulated a slew of manuals & guides over the years and the bulk of them were of the O'Reilly/ Missing Manual variety. O'Reilly still seem to be at the top end of the 'most popular' search results for PC & Mac related books today. However, after years of deliberation, when I finally jumped ship from Win98 to OSX late last year as well as welcoming a stunning flat screen iMac into our home, a cute little 40GB iPod quickly followed (I'm a marketing man's dream!) and then followed another deluge of manuals & guides. For an iPod book I stuck with the O'Reilly 'Missing Manual' out of sheer habit but a few months down the line and it's a blind purchase I now regret. I just picked up the 'How to Do Everything...' book on the iPod/ iPod-mini and it is a complete revelation. Aside from the clear page layout and supremely readable text this book is THE most informative and genuinely interesting book I have read on the iPod. Case in point: One issue poorly covered in the O'Reilly 'Missing Manual' (which considering it's importance to importing songs into iTunes is bewildering) is that of file compression. Conversely, Guy Hart-Davis has done a sterling job of explaining in some depth all aspects of file size, compression and quality issues including a useful 'iPod capacities at widely used compression ratios' table which is one of many impressive touches seen throughout the book. This doesn't by the way mean this is exclusively a 'techie' book- it has simply struck a good balance between being welcoming enough to beginners while remaining interesting for more advanced users at the same time. Where the O'Reilly book tends to have a feeling that someone from Apple was peering over the author's shoulder when they were writing it- by contrast the 'How to Do..' book is peppered with irreverent facts like 'iPods have been used to steal software', provides workaround solutions for 'stubborn' disks that refused to be 'ripped' as well as an enlightening history lesson on P2P file-sharing and other dark arts. Similar ProductsThe Art Of Downloading Music The Rough Guide to IPod, ITunes and Music Online (Rough Guide to iPods, iTunes, & Music Online) The IPod Book: Doing Cool Stuff with the IPod and the ITunes Store The West Wing: Complete Season 5 [2001] CategoriesAmazon.co.uk places this book into the following categories:
Books -> Subjects -> Computing & Internet -> Computer Science -> Artificial Intelligence -> Speech Processing
Books -> Subjects -> Computing & Internet -> General Books -> Subjects -> Computing & Internet -> New to Computing -> Digital Music, Photography & Video -> MP3 & Music Books -> Subjects -> Computing & Internet -> Mac OS -> IPod Books -> Subjects -> Computing & Internet -> Digital Music -> iPod & iTunes Books -> Subjects -> Computing & Internet -> Digital Music -> Newbie Guides Books -> Subjects -> Computing & Internet -> Digital Music -> General AAS Books -> Subjects -> Computing & Internet -> General AAS Books -> Subjects -> Computing & Internet -> Hardware -> General AAS Books -> Subjects -> Computing & Internet -> Software & Graphics -> General AAS Books -> Subjects -> Computing & Internet -> Software & Graphics -> Graphics & Multimedia -> General AAS Books -> Subjects -> Computing & Internet -> Software & Graphics -> Graphics & Multimedia -> Animation & Multimedia -> General AAS Books -> Special Features -> Search Inside! Books -> Refinements -> Language (feature_browse-bin) -> English Books -> Refinements -> Age (feature_two_browse-bin) Books -> Refinements -> Format (binding_browse-bin) -> Paperback Books -> Refinements -> Condition (condition-type)
|