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Mac OS X Tiger in a Nutshell: A Desktop Quick Reference
Unavailable
Mac OS X Tiger in a Nutshell: A Desktop Quick Reference
Unavailable
Mac OS X Tiger in a Nutshell: A Desktop Quick Reference
Ebook518 pages9 hours

Mac OS X Tiger in a Nutshell: A Desktop Quick Reference

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About this ebook

Following the common-sense O'Reilly style, Mac OS X Tiger in a Nutshell cuts through the chaff and gives you practical details you can use every day. Everything you need to know about the Unix side of Mac OS X has been systematically documented in this book.

Mac OS X Tiger in a Nutshell offers a complete overview of Mac OS X Tiger (Version 10.4), focusing on the BSD Unix layer. This book familiarizes you with over 300 of Tiger's Unix commands, the Terminal application, file management, system and network administration issues, and more.

Completely revised for Mac OS X Tiger, this book offers:

  • The most complete and thorough coverage of Mac OS X's Unix commands you'll find anywhere (even in the system)
  • An overview of basic system and network administration features, including coverage of NetInfo and Directory Services
  • An introduction to using Mac OS X's Unix command-line interface, the Terminal application
  • An overview of Mac OS X's Unix text editors, including vi and Emacs
  • Information on shell syntax variables for Tiger's default Unix shell, bash

Each command and option in this book's Unix Command Reference has been painstakingly tested and checked against Tiger; even the manpages that ship with Mac OS X can't compete in accuracy. Mac OS X Tiger in a Nutshell is the most comprehensive quick reference on the market and is a must for any serious Mac user.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateNov 10, 2005
ISBN9780596519049
Unavailable
Mac OS X Tiger in a Nutshell: A Desktop Quick Reference
Author

Andy Lester

Andy Lester started with computers early by keypunching letters to Grandma on IBM 029 punchcards. Now into his third decade of professional software development, he's the QA & Release Manager for Socialtext. Andy is also in charge of PR for The Perl Foundation and maintains over 25 modules on CPAN. Andy's two latest book projects are Mac OS X Tiger In A Nutshell from O'Reilly, and Pro Perl Debugging from Apress. 04.19.2013 Platform Retrospective Attendees: Vered, Sarah, Jeff, Marcel, Matthew, Laura, Adam Start working together on Tasks within a Story for more successful completed storiesKeeps people more engaged in meetings since everyone is part of storyHelps keep team focus Continue having shorter review meetings by getting early acceptanceKeep to 15 minute Stand Up MeetingsStart discussing issues prior to meetings to keep moving forwardStop stressing to get meeting over – feel good to discuss what is needed Work outside of Sprint prioritizationWork with Manager outside of Team to align work and time spent Start having notes ready for last/next 24 / blocks to keep reporting quick Start calling ‘further discussion’ meetings if Open Floor is going longIf Open Floor topic going long, invoke 5 minute rule to move to another timeAsk if everyone is good to stay on or need a follow on Start – G2 reach out to anyone needing to be on Stand Up Start, more Product Owner buy in for the detailsTo help avoid missed details where no one person owns the full processProduct review of done-done - Demo Watch for changes to environment requiring a retestingOut of Cycle Release – CCD for all to view, exposure of release to QAOther options to expose release/changes to code/environmentsPoss: build release managerAvoid too much “process” Stakeholder – Product OwnerWhen differences occur, how best to communicateAcceptance Criteria is contract with Product Owners 04.05.2013 Platform Retrospective Attendees: Marcel, Adam, Jeff, Sarah, Rachel Do not add User Stories in middle of Sprint A lot of stories rolled over Multi teams are requesting time of same resourcesBoth people and environmentsTime put into tasks to handle issues of prev sprint deliverablesTasks can be added as needed – but wont show in planning Stories small enough to be end:end deliver/testAdd hours in testing stories to have hours to fix failuresTest plans cover full expectations of the Business acceptors Doable Acceptance Criteria Shorter, more focused meetingsFull attention in meetingsAvoid being pulled into areas not covered by team/sprint Get acceptance prior to Review meeting where possibleAssures story has been completed

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