Mac Mini Hacks & Mods for Dummies - Rizzo_ John.pdf

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Mac mini Hacks & Mods For DUMMIES
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Mac ® mini
Hacks & Mods
FOR
DUMmIES
by John Rizzo
with Arnold Reinhold
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Mac ® mini
Hacks & Mods
FOR
DUMmIES
by John Rizzo
with Arnold Reinhold
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Mac ® mini Hacks & Mods For Dummies ®
Published by
Wiley Publishing, Inc.
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Hoboken, NJ 07030-5774
www.wiley.com
Copyright © 2006 by Wiley Publishing, Inc., Indianapolis, Indiana
Published by Wiley Publishing, Inc., Indianapolis, Indiana
Published simultaneously in Canada
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Library of Congress Control Number: 2005935166
ISBN-13: 978-0-471-74900-4
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Manufactured in the United States of America
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About the Authors
John Rizzo bought his first Mac in 1984, which came with 128 k of RAM and
no hard drive. He soon began modding the Macintosh with a soldering iron to
add RAM. Later, he cut some holes in the case and hacked in a new mother-
board and a hard drive.
Since then, John has been writing about Macs (and Windows, too). His books
include Mac Annoyances (O’Reilly), Mac Toys (with Scott Knaster; Wiley),
Customizing Windows XP (Peachpit Press), and the How the Mac Works
series (Que).
John writes about computer technology for Ziff Davis Online, which includes
eWEEK.com and Publish.com. His columns, features, reviews, news, and
analysis stories have appeared in every major Mac magazine, including
Macworld , MacAddict , MacHome , and the no-longer-published MacWeek and
MacUser . From 1988 to 1995, he was a staff editor and columnist for MacUser
magazine. His stories have also appeared in the San Francisco Chronicle,
CNET, and PC Magazine.
John is a leading authority on Mac and Windows integration issues. Since
1997, he has published MacWindows.com, the Web’s largest resource for
helping people get their Macs and Windows PCs to play nice together.
Before Apple invented the Mac, John worked as an engineer at Boeing in
Seattle building aircraft electronics.
Arnold Reinhold has been programming computers since they had fila-
ments. His first introduction to the hype/so-what?/wow! cycle that governs
computer industry evolution was the invention of the transistor. He has
gotten to do cool stuff in spacecraft guidance, air traffic control, computer-
aided design, robotics, and machine vision. Arnold has been on the Internet
for over twenty-two years and has been a loyal Mac user for twenty. Recent
writing includes “Commonsense and Cryptography” in Internet Secrets , E-Mail
For Dummies , 2nd edition, and Internet For Dummies Quick Reference , 8th edi-
tion (all by Wiley).
Arnold studied mathematics at CCNY and MIT, and management at Harvard.
You can check out his home page at http://www.hayom.com/
reinhold.html.
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