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TransportationI'm a professional Mac/Unix developer for a relatively large, very well-known, and generally well loved company. I'm also a sort of junkie for good tech books, and this one is among the best. I've read a lot of Amit's technical writings on his website over the years, and they were always chock-full of awesome tid-bits, had unmatched depth, and were written very well. So, when I heard he was writing a book, I could hardly...
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Most Mac OS books were authored by the same handful of recycled authors, except the occasional new one. The UNIX underpinning of OS X enriched Mac libraries with new authors and perspectives, however, all the books were either Beginner or Intermediate regardless of the classification on the back. I had been eager for an OS X equivalent of Windows Resource Kits or the many other very detailed books on Windows such as Windows...
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This book has to be one of the most comprehensive treatments of any operating system ever. I read through the sections with which I am most familiar (file systems, Spotlight and HFS). The level of detail and understanding expressed in those sections is very impressive. I thought I might find some errors or at least niggling details that weren't quite right but I could not find any. Perusing the other sections of the book...
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This book is essential for anybody that wants to understand the inner workings of Mac OS X, which should include all serious OSX software developers. This book is also a must read for any technical users of OSX, in order for them to know what's really underneath the covers, even when they are not writing software for OSX. I am the second type of reader: I am a researcher with Microsoft Research, where I work mostly on operating-systems...
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I had the opportunity to review the draft manuscript of Amit Singh's Mac OS X Internals book. With so many different types of operating systems books out there, let me try to place the book to give a better idea what to expect. There are general introduction books that normally introduce the operating system to the reader, without explaining what is actually going on. We have concept books (I put "The Design and Implementation...
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