- Table of Contents
- Copyright
- About the Author
- Acknowledgments
- Tell Us What You Think!
- Introduction
- Part I: Introduction to Mac OS X
- Chapter 1. Mac OS X Component Architecture
- Chapter 2. Installing Mac OS X
- Chapter 3. Mac OS X Basics
- Chapter 4. The Finder: Working with Files and Applications
- Chapter 5. Running Classic Mac OS Applications
- Part II: Inside Mac OS X
- Chapter 6. Native Utilities and Applications
- Chapter 7. Internet Communications
- Chapter 8. Installing Third-Party Applications
- Part III: User-Level OS X Configuration
- Chapter 9. Network Setup
- Chapter 10. Printer and Font Management
- Chapter 11. Additional System Components
- Part IV: Introduction to BSD Applications
- Chapter 12. Introducing the BSD Subsystem
- Chapter 13. Common Unix Shell Commands: File Operations
- Part V: Advanced Command-Line Concepts
- Chapter 14. Advanced Shell Concepts and Commands
- Chapter 15. Command-Line Applications and Application Suites
- Chapter 16. Command-Line Software Installation
- Chapter 17. Troubleshooting Software Installs, and Compiling and Debugging Manually
- Chapter 18. Advanced Unix Shell Use: Configuration and Programming (Shell Scripting)
- Part VI: Server/Network Administration
- Chapter 19. X Window System Applications
- Chapter 20. Command-Line Configuration and Administration
- Chapter 21. AppleScript
- Chapter 22. Perl Scripting and SQL Connectivity
- Chapter 23. File and Resource Sharing with NetInfo
- Chapter 24. User Management and Machine Clustering
- Chapter 25. FTP Serving
- Chapter 26. Remote Access and Administration
- Chapter 27. Web Serving
- Part VII: Server Health
- Chapter 28. Web Programming
- Chapter 29. Creating a Mail Server
- Chapter 30. Accessing and Serving a Windows Network
- Chapter 31. Server Security and Advanced Network Configuration
- Chapter 32. System Maintenance
- Appendix A. Command-Line Reference
- Appendix B. Administration Reference
Introduction
May 1998. After hours of driving, I arrived at the conference hall just in time to see the World Wide Developer conference keynote speech by Apple CEO Steve Jobs. We, the Apple faithful, had been waiting years for this event. Within minutes, we'd know when the new modern revision of Mac OS would ship. In late 1996, Apple Computer purchased NeXT Computer in order to gain access to its advanced OpenStep operating system. At the developer conference in 1997, we saw the first signs of life when OpenStep booted on Macintosh hardware for the first time. Now, in mid 1998, we fully expected Apple to proclaim that the operating system was rapidly approaching a release date. Instead, we heard an announcement that would shock everyone: The operating system codenamed Rhapsody was not destined for the Mac desktop. Instead, a new "similar" system named Mac OS X (pronounced "ten") would become the first modern consumer Mac operating system.
Part I: Introduction to Mac OS X | Next Section

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