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This
little book has enriched so many lives, mine included.
Long
before I ever had the privilege of working with Robin Williams,
I felt as though I knew her as if I'd known her all my
life. I worked my way through college as a typesetter, proofreader,
and layout artist, and I took great pride in knowing how to create
professional-quality publications.
Then
came the Mac, and I felt so incredibly stupid. All of us in publishing,
type, and printing shops had to scramble to become Mac-literate,
while watching our customers gleefully creating some of the worst-looking
documents on the planet. But really, who could blame them? Almost
overnight the Mac had democratized publishing tools. Suddenly,
anyone who could type and owned a Mac could be a desktop publisher.
We were all itching to learn how the tools could save us time
and money. Most of all, we were all itching to stop feeling stupid
and start being creative.
Then,
out of the blue one day, someone handed us The Little Mac Book.
I say "us" because to this day, ten years after I was
handed my first copy, people are still telling me --and with as
much pride as I tell my story -- how they were first introduced
to Robin's Little Mac Book. Our stories are astonishingly similar:
A friend helping us plug in our first Mac shared her copy; a work
colleague slipped it to us over the cubicle wall; our boss gave
us the first-day-on-the-job "read-this" routine. People
not only recommend it, but they physically hand it to new users.
We who were once nervous new users ourselves are confident, and
pleased to reassure those who come after us, "Don't worry,
everything will make sense once you read this little book"
-- just as Robin reassured her students back when she first got
the idea to write this book.
Little
did she know that her self-published classroom textbook would
turn into a million-plus bestseller that's still going strong
ten years later! The Little Mac Book was the first book, and to
this day still is the only book, to integrate commonsense, jargon-free
teaching to show you how to get on friendly terms with your computer,
with basic desktop-publishing do's and don'ts.
It's
not just the book that's still going strong. Robin's come a long
way since the days when she was raising three young children and
teaching graphics classes at Santa Rosa Junior College. She's
become an icon in the Mac community. An internationally recognized
expert on graphics, desktop publishing and Web publishing, Robin
has earned countless awards, attracted legions of fans, and launched
several successful series of books, including The Non-Designer's
series, the Little Book series, as well as desktop publishing
classics such as The Mac is not a typewriter, The Little iMac
Book, and one of her latest, Windows for Mac Users.
If
I know Robin, right about now she's starting to get embarrassed.
She feels more comfortable teaching and nurturing others than
fielding praise, which is why her readers come to view her as
a friend. Her advice resonates as much for those who don't know
an operating system from a sound system as for the folks who don't
know a typeface from a smiley face. And when we learn it from
Robin, we don't feel stupid or ashamed. As Robin's readers, we
are a part of a much larger community -- a community that has
survived Apple's ups and downs, and a community that cares about
quality and creativity. Nothing can ever diminish the community
feeling among Mac users that Robin first sparked with this book.
Robin,
I'm honored to speak on behalf of all your readers: Thank you
for this little book. Thanks for your insights, your warmth, your
wit, and your friendship. But above all, thanks for your hard
work and commitment to your readers. Peachpit is honored to be
your publisher and we want to congratulate you for ten amazing
years of writing great books. We look forward to the next ten!
Nancy
Aldrich-Ruenzel Publisher
Peachpit Press
Robin Williams' biggest fan
P.S.
Dear reader: Take my word for it -- everything WILL
make sense once you read this little book.
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