Can you picture a Mac lesson without words?

Wiley Publishing thinks that you can, running into Apple Mac territory with its training book Teach Yourself Visually: Mac OS X Snow Leopard. The book series that promises you can “Read Less – Learn More” unspools more than 300 full-color pages of instruction on the full range of everyday use of the Mac’s latest operating system release.

Visually Snow Leopard coverIf you haven’t seen one of these books, it may not be easy to describe how much color and how many screen shots prance across the pages. This is a book for the switcher who’s moved from a business Windows system to the simplicity of the Mac — or a more advanced user who needs a quick refresher and can just scan a picture to recall how to reset a forgotten password.

The emphasis here is on the complete set of computing tasks at an everyday level. Using the Dock, entering a Web address into Safari, composing email in Mail, locating files you’ve downloaded from the Web: it’s all shown screen by screen in Paul McFriederies’ book. The lessons are broken down into two-page spreads with alternative methods for some tasks, such as uninstalling applications or customizing the Dock.

If you’re working with a Mac for the first year, or in the first year of using Snow Leopard, this training tool might be just the right amount of information to avoid overload. Some users don’t need extensive details on the nuances of networking, or the best way to bring iPhone voice memos onto the Mac without a complete snyc of everything on the iPhone with the Mac. This isn’t a power users’ book, but it’s got plenty to show the small business and creative user who’s exploring the utility of the Mac.

About 20 percent of the book covers using the highly-visual Mac apps, iPhoto, iDVD, and iMovie. There’s a healthy spread devoted to iTunes, where across almost 50 pages you can learn how to manage music and the ever-growing controls of synchronization between iPhone and Mac.

One of the shortest sections of this book is its networking instructions. For plenty of users, networking amounts to linking with a WiFi network in their office or at a client site. Setting up a network is beyond the scope of this book, and securing a network isn’t covered at all. There’s a firewall in every Mac, but this book won’t help you understand that protection. On the upside, you’ll get a good primer on creating a robust password using Snow Leopard’s Password Assistant.

The Mac ships with software included to build Web sites, as well as features to record video from a Webcam or audio messages, but there’s nary a page about iWeb or Quicktime Player 7 in this book. The former is a underwhelming tool for building fundamental Web sites, while the latter is an optional install that provides much more multimedia power than Apple’s simple Quicktime Player.

But a training book like this one can’t really be judged by what’s missing as much as how it handles the included tasks, taught from scratch. You will learn how to create and manage iCal appointments or organize business contacts using Address Book, and this book — Wiley’s only Mac title in the Teach Yourself Visually Series — is a useful addition to a training library. It’s something to hand to the curious user who’s got the motivation to follow a pictured path to productivity. Let your Mac guru or administrator wrestle with one of Wiley’s 800-page bibles.

Teach Yourself VISUALLY Mac OS X Snow Leopard
ISBN: 978-0-470-43638-7
Paperback
352 pages
September 2009

US $29.99

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