Features
- Cover Type: Paperback with 728 pages
- Published by: Pogue Press
- Edition: 1st Edition July 2002
- Written in: English
- ISBN 10 Number: 0596003323
- ISBN 13 Number: 978-0596003326
-
Book Dimensions:
8.8 x 7 x 1.8 inches
- Weighs: 2.4 pounds
Book Description
Mac OS X, Apple's super-advanced, Unix-based operating system, offers every desirable system-software feature known to humans. But without a compatible
software library, the Mac of the future was doomed.
Microsoft Office X for Macintosh is exactly the
software suite most Mac fans were waiting for. Its four programs--Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and Entourage--have been completely overhauled to take advantage of the stunning looks and rock-like stability of Mac OS X. But this awesome package comes without a single page of printed instructions. Fortunately, Pogue Press/O'Reilly is once again there to rescue the befuddled and overwhelmed--with
Office X for Macintosh: The Missing Manual. It tackles each of the primary Office applications with depth, humor, and clarity, and provides relief for the hapless Mac user who'd rather read professionally written printed instructions than hunt through a maze of dryly written help screens.
Office X for Macintosh: The Missing Manual is coauthored by a dream team of Macintosh experts: Tonya Engst, coeditor of the popular TidBITS Macintosh newsletter; David Reynolds, former executive editor of MacAddict magazine (now working at Apple); and Nan Barber, Macworld contributor and coauthor of
Office 2001 for Macintosh: The Missing Manual, on which this book is based. Once again, the authors are joined by series founder David Pogue, who has closely edited the book to ensure excellence of depth, accuracy, and prose.
Book Info
Covers the number one bestselling Mac software, with word processor and spreadsheet programs that are even more dominant in the Mac world than they are among PC users. All Mac OS X applications are included. Softcover.
Reader Reviews
I purchased this book last year for my wife who uses Office at work on a PC and at home on a Mac. She frequently has trouble figuring out how to do something at home that she does every day at work. Certainly this is due to variations in "the same" Microsoft product. However, every time she has turned to "The Missing Manual" she can not find the answer to what she feels is a simple problem. Just today she made athat we should just burn the book because it simply has never once taught her anything. Yes, it is full of hints and suggestions but to call it a "manual" is misleading. We have found it impossible to use as a reference, to look up something and find the answer. I am very disappointed and do not recommend purchasing this book, save your money.
Comment | |
(Report this)