You may also find <http://developer.apple.com/mac/library/documentation/OpenSource/Conceptual/ShellScripting/Introduction/Introduction.html#//apple_ref/doc/uid/TP40004268-TP40003516-SW1> useful.
On 7/26/10, manskybook <[email protected]> wrote: > I agree with others that, for a physical paper magazine, MacTech is what you > want, and you'll just have to ignore the developer portion (which is easier > than ignoring the consumer portions of MacLife or MacWorld). But your online > options are more relevant and more plentiful. > > MacTech has also recently consolidated its online resources into Apple > Central. There are forums and other information-based web pages. But > probably the most succinct and professionally focused tech information has > been provided for years by Tidbits. Their weekly Monday newsletter is > refreshing and direct, with lots of Apple reviews, and deep considerations > of using the Macintosh and its peripherals. Free to subscribe. They also > publish a fair number of eBooks describing the Mac universe. > > You might also spend some time considering non-developer resources at > O'reilly publishers. They're a Mac-friendly publisher that also provides > many non-Mac resources. Pick and choose as you will. > > --John > > On Jul 26, 2010, at 12:00 PM, [email protected] wrote: > > On 25 Jul 2010, at 13:42:50, Eric Gorr wrote: > >> MacLife or MacWorld > > Those aren't technical mags. There are a few (very few) articles in them > which mention command lines, but nothing serious. The last major > command-line oriented article I know of from MacLife, for example, before my > subscription expired earlier this year, was the article on page 34-42 of the > January 2009 issue: "25 must-know terminal tricks" which was a quickie intro > to the basics of the Terminal, containing such gems as how to access the man > pages, what 'cd' means, what a shell is, and, (a personal favorite) how to > SSH in. > >> >> Personally, I prefer MacLife. > > They do go into somewhat greater detail on their website than they do in the > magazine itself. For example, there are actual useful items available at > www.maclife.com/ssh_surf. MacWorld is a better magazine, though. > >> >> >> Sent from my iPhone >> >> On Jul 25, 2010, at 12:47 PM, Sven Aluoor <[email protected]> wrote: >> >>> Hi folks >>> >>> Anyone can recommend me good Mac magazine? There should be some >>> technical info like UNIX command line and other behind-the-scene >>> things (but no development things). > > You're outta luck right there. The only Mac mag I can think of which > actually provides useful info about command-line stuff on a regular basis is > also a development mag: MacTech. There are a number of technically oriented > Linux mags out there, which will give you command-line stuff which will also > work on OS X. However, most of them are not merely developer-oriented, but > _Linux_ developer-oriented, which usually means that they really don't like > Macs. > > I don't think that there's anything which meets your requirements. > > -- Best Regards, John Musbach _______________________________________________ MacOSX-talk mailing list [email protected] http://www.omnigroup.com/mailman/listinfo/macosx-talk
