I followed the link and decided to get "Take Control of What's New in Entourage" (and a couple of "Take Control" books about Garageband <grin>).
This book is valuable to me not so much because it contains a mass of new information, but because it puts what I already know in context with just a little bit more information that makes the whole experience better. In particular, the section on Project Center convinced me to use this very valuable feature. "Take Control" books are cheap and easy to search -- so it doesn't take much to make the purchase worthwhile for a long time. [Plus, updates are free... Though there haven't been any <grin>.] -- Joshua On 2/13/05 5:51 PM, "Jeremy Whipple" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On 2005/02/13 23:25 -0900 (JST), sequoia wrote: > >> My question about removing Mail Views, and the strong responses it got, has >> made me think once again how valuable an in-depth class on �How to Use >> Entourage to Run Your Business & Life� would be. >> > > Good point. This is probably only a small part of what you're suggesting, > but there is a book called "Take Control of What's New in Entourage 2004" by > Tom Negrino, part of the Take Control series of electronic books from Adam > Engst's TidBITS organization. Costs all of $5! > > > I have no connection with TidBITS or Tom Negrino, and I haven't read this > book, so I can't actually recommend it, but the online blurb sounds good to > me. You can check it out at > http://www.tidbits.com/takecontrol/entourage-2004.html > > And if you get it and read it, I'd be interested to hear your assessment. > > > -- > Jeremy Whipple <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > Setagaya-ku, Tokyo > -- To unsubscribe: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> archives: <http://www.mail-archive.com/entourage-talk%40lists.letterrip.com/> old-archive: <http://www.mail-archive.com/entourage-talk%40lists.boingo.com/>
