Wanted: iChat AV Buddies

Get your face in my book.

Sometime next week, I’ll be working on Chapter 19 of Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard: Visual QuickStart Guide. That chapter covers (among other things) iChat. And, as I do each edition, I need to illustrate an iChat video chat session.

Lars on Page 347Although I could chat with people I already know — or Lars, who managed to get his face in two of my books — I’d much rather chat with strangers. (My mother never managed to teach me not to talk to strangers.) Would you like to be one of the folks I chat with while writing the chapter? It could get your face in my book.

Here’s what you need:

  • A Mac running Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger or later.
  • iChat.
  • A video camera that works with iChat. (iSight cameras work pretty well, as you can imagine.)
  • Availability. When I’m ready to do my screenshots, I’ll start contacting folks to chat with. If I can’t get the first one on my list, I’ll move on to the second one — and so on until I find someone available.

To get on my list of contacts, use the Comments link or form below to enter a comment for this message. Include your name, country, and AIM or .Mac account info. Then wait patiently until I get in touch — if I don’t reach someone listed before you.

Oh, and there’s two more things to think about before signing up:

  • By listing your iChat info in the Comments for this post, you are agreeing to allow your likeness to appear in Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard: Visual QuickStart Guide by Maria Langer, which should be published in October, 2007.
  • In consideration for participation in this program, anyone who appears in the book will get a free, autographed copy.

Questions? Leave them in the comments. Don’t use the Contact form for this.

When it’s all over, if you want your info removed, please note that with your info. I can go in and remove the info from the comments.

Excel Book Done

That’s book number 68.

ImageI put the finishing touches on Microsoft Office Excel 2007: Visual QuickStart Guide. It’s my 68th book (I just counted) and right now, I feel as if I wrote them all yesterday.

Okay, so not that tired.

I had some trouble with this book. First, there was the beta software situation. Not only did I have to work with the Office 2007 beta, but I had to run it on the Vista beta. Double Microsoft Windows betas for a person who usually works on a Mac! You can imagine my concern.

But everything went pretty smoothly with that and I’ve been using release versions since January, so I know everything in the book is based on the final software.

Motivation slowed me down a bit in the middle of the project. I think I really need an editor cracking a whip over my head to get me to work at my old pace. These days, I’d rather fly than write about Excel. (Can you imagine?) The thing that snapped me out of it was money. If I don’t make milestones, my publisher does not send checks. Although Flying M Air is now paying all of its own bills — thank heaven; you should see some of those bills! — it’s not paying my bills. If I don’t write, I don’t eat. And since I like to eat, I became motivated.

Of course, the killer was my February hard disk crash and the two weeks it took me to get everything back to normal here. What a productivity killer! But it taught me a new valuable lesson about backups — you think I would have learned the last two times — and my old dual G5 is still running, now with a new hard disk to go with last year’s new motherboard. Sheesh. (Now you know why I bought AppleCare for my MacBook Pro.)

I churned through the last few chapters relatively quickly, anxious to meet deadlines tied to promotional opportunities. (I’m not sure of those promos really exist or if my editor has learned to tell me about fantasy promos to get me to work faster. I wouldn’t blame her if she made it up.) I had first pass files done last week and spent the past few days finalizing files based on edits. Today, after fooling around a bit — I’m the queen of procrastination — I laid out the index, created an ad for the book’s companion Web site, and turned it all in. The e-mail message I sent to my editor said:

I think I’m done. Can you ask them to send that final check? (Still waiting for the last one, too.)

The book weighs in at 360 pages, which is about the same as the last edition. It’s got the new VQS cover design. It lists for $21.99, but you can buy it from Amazon.com for $14.95 right now, which is 32% off. (Not a bad deal.) It should be in stores by April 20 or thereabouts.

Meanwhile, life goes on.

Tomorrow, I have to take my helicopter in to the avionics shop in Mesa to see if they can figure out why my radio isn’t working right. I have a meeting with a marketing guy down there at 10 AM. Then a tour of Phoenix for a man and his daughter at 2. Somewhere in between, I’ll have lunch with Mike, who has been away for the past few days. Then a flight home.

Friday I get started on my next book. Those of you who know me should know what that is.

Creating Spreadsheets and Charts in Microsoft Office Excel 2007 for Windows: Visual QuickStart Guide is Off to the Printer

(I just write ‘em — I don’t name ‘em.)

Excel Visual QuickProjectThe revision to my Excel 2007 Visual QuickStart Guide was shipped to the printer this week. My editor expects the book to be in stores by year-end.

The book is a raw beginners guide to Excel. This version covers Excel 2007, which will be widely available at January month-end. The previous edition, which is still available and has been selling very well since its publication over two years ago, covers Excel 2003 for Windows and Excel 2004 for Macintosh. I expect both editions of the book to sell side by side at least until Excel for Macintosh is revised — whenever that may be.

For more information about the book and downloadable files, visit the Excel QuickProject area of this site.

Interested in buying the book? Check it out at Amazon.com.

Book Review from Blog Business Summit

A nice review of our WordPress book.

Teresa Valdez Klein of the Blog Business Summit liked our WordPress book, as you can read for yourself in her review, “Don’t Hire Us, Just Buy WordPress 2…THE BOOK!.”

Among her comments, she writes:

We’ve been doing a lot of WordPress consulting of late, but to be perfectly honest, tech-savvy business folks can probably get most of the same value-add out of this book. It’s a very useful tool for anyone who doesn’t already know WordPress inside and out, which is the vast majority of the population. I can also imagine that it would be a handy desk reference for even the most experienced guru.

Thanks!

New Excel Book in Progress

After two months off from writing, I begin work on an Excel book revision.

Creating Spreadsheets and Charts in Excel: Visual QuickProject GuideI dove into a revision of my Creating Spreadsheets and Charts in Excel: Visual QuickProject Guide book today. I actually got the first chapter — all 16 pages of it — done.

If you’re not familiar with the VQJ (as Peachpit calls it) series, it’s pretty simple. Written for raw beginners, the books use a lot of full color illustrations, large text, numbered steps, and callout lines. Each book in the series is only 144 or 168 pages long — this one weighs in at 144 pages. It’s not the least bit intimidating for any reader.

The first edition of the book covered Excel 2003 for Windows and Excel 2004 for Mac OS. The two versions of Excel are virtually identical, so it made sense to do one book to cover them both. I think I did a good job giving each platform equal space and showing screenshots from both platforms when they were significantly different.

The idea behind the series is to present a project — in this case, creating a budget spreadsheet, duplicating it for multiple months of information, consolidating the months, formatting the spreadsheets so they look good, creating a chart, and printing. All the basics are covered in one project, presented over multiple chapters. The first chapter covers preliminary stuff like interface elements and terminology. The next chapter is where we start creating the spreadsheet.

Creating Resumes, Letters, Business Cards, and Flyers in Word: Visual QuickProject GuideI have two books in this series. This one is doing very well and has been translated into at least two languages. The other book — take a deep breath if you plan to read the title out loud — Creating Resumes, Letters, Business Cards, and Flyers in Word: Visual QuickProject Guide (I had to look it up; I can never remember the title of that book), isn’t doing quite as well. I like to think it’s because people don’t really want to create all those things. But it’s probably because the Word book market is full of titles and this 168-page tome just doesn’t stand out enough on bookstore shelves.

Creating Spreadsheets and Charts in Microsoft Excel 2007: Visual QuickProject GuideThis Excel book revision is not cross platform. Tentatively titled Creating Spreadsheets and Charts in Microsoft Excel 2007: Visual QuickProject Guide, it covers Excel 2007 for Windows only. (It always amazes me when Amazon.com knows what one of my books will look like before I do.) To write it, I not only had to get my hands on the Office beta, but I also had to get the Windows Vista beta, which my editor wanted running on the computer for all the screenshots. Without Vista, he claimed, the book would look outdated right away. He’s right. And although I wasn’t too thrilled about running beta application software on beta System software, it seems to be working pretty well. Of course, I had to buy a new computer to run all this stuff. My ancient Dell desktop machine would have dropped dead if I tried installing Vista on it, especially with the new graphics-intensive interface. The new Dell Latitude 820 laptop I bought to replace it is handling everything with ease. It should for what it cost me. But with luck, I won’t have to replace it for 4 to 5 years.

Office 2007 is no secret. You can see screenshots and all kinds of training material on the Microsoft Office 2007 Preview site. You might even still be able to download a beta. It’ll run on Windows XP and Vista, so you don’t have to do a double beta like I did to run it.

Over the years, many have complained that Office doesn’t change much with each new version. You won’t hear those complaints this time around. Microsoft has completely reworked the interface. The menus and toolbars are gone, replaced with something called the Ribbon. Click a Ribbon tab to view groups of commands. Click a command to invoke it. Or click a tiny button in the corner of a group to display a good old dialog box.

The new design does appear to be easier for newbies to grasp. But I think it’ll frustrate the hell out of seasoned Office users — at least until they get used to the interface. There’s logic behind it, so if you think about what you want to do, you can figure out where to find the buttons or menus you need to do it. And all the old keyboard shortcuts still work, so if you’ve been using Office applications for years, you won’t be at a total loss in the new version.

Of course, all this has me wondering whether they’ll use the same interface in the Mac version of Office when it gets updated. That would be almost sacrilegious. After all, didn’t Apple invent the interface so widely used by Mac OS and Windows programs? I can’t imagine a Mac program without a menu bar that starts with File and Edit. I guess time will tell.

What’s good about all this for me is that people will need a book to learn the new versions of Office applications. They can’t just use an old Office book to work with the new version. With luck, that’ll help book sales a little. After all, I have to pay for that fancy new computer, don’t I?

Stay tuned for more information about this book as it is completed. It will definitely make it to stores at the same time as Office 2007 — heck, at the rate I’m going, I should be done with it by the end of the month.

WordPress 2: Visual QuickStart Guide is Out

At least I think it is.

The strangest thing has happened. I have not yet received my first author copy of my latest book (co-authored with Miraz Jordan), WordPress 2: Visual QuickStart Guide. Yet according to Amazon.com and Miraz, the book is out and selling quite well. I even got a support question for it the other day.

This is extremely odd. I usually my first author copy of a Peachpit book directly from the printer via UPS 2nd-day package, one to two weeks before it hits the bookstores.

Rumor has it, the book’s color scheme is not as shown on the book’s companion Web site. Can anyone confirm this? This is the color scheme Peachpit’s site displayed. I assumed the publisher got it right. Maybe they haven’t seen it either.

And it feels really weird to have to ask someone else what my book looks like.

In any case, the book is out. I hope you find it. Let me know what you think by posting a comment here.

WordPress, VQS, book, howto, Langer, Jordan

WordPress QuickStart Almost Done

Due to ship to the printer this Friday.

WordPress 2 Visual QuickStart GuideMiraz Jordan and I have been putting the finishing touches on WordPress 2: Visual QuickStart Guide for Peachpit Press. The book is set to go to the printer this coming Friday and should be in stores by the end of the month.

You can order a copy in advance from Amazon.com, BN.com, or Peachpit Press. The book appears to be selling quite briskly at Amazon; it’s ranking is relatively high for such a limited-interest book that hasn’t even been published yet.

Miraz and I will be providing support for the book on a separate Web site — www.wpvqs.com — although you’ll also find support articles here and on Miraz’s site. As I write this, the support Web site is already set up. But it’s a mess because we’ve been using it as a testing ground for plugins, theme file modifications, and other topics covered in the book. One day soon, I’ll wipe the site clean and reinstall WordPress from scratch. We’ll then build up the support site with articles, links, and other features to help readers learn more about WordPress.

So if you’re a WordPress user — or want to be one — keep checking in to learn more about WordPress and our book.

Apple Stores Here I Come

My publisher arranges for appearances in Apple Stores.

Apple Computer, Inc. opened its first retail store a few years ago. It was a great success. Since then, it has opened over a hundred stores in the US, UK, and Japan.

Like Apple-designed products, Apple stores are sleek, bright, and attractive. They show off all currently available Apple products, including hardware and software, and there are plenty of hands-on opportunities for store visitors. The stores also show off products by third-party vendors that are “Made for Macintosh” or made to work with Mac OS X. That’s where I come in.

My Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger: Visual QuickStart Guide will be one of just two Mac OS X Tiger books available when Tiger is released this Friday. I worked my butt off (figuratively speaking, of course; there’s no losing fat on your butt when you’ve got it parked in a chair all day) to get this book done on time. And it’s paying off. The marketing folks at my publisher, Peachpit Press (an imprint of Pearson Education), tell me that Apple has designed a lucite stand to display Mac OS X Tiger when it is released. The stand will display my book, side by side, with Tiger retail boxes. How cool is that?

Apple has also promoted my book on its Apple eNews electronic newsletter and corresponding Web page. They even included an image of the book’s cover. My publisher has reportedly doubled the initial print run to handle large orders from Apple, Barnes and Noble, and CompUSA.

I told my publisher’s marketing folks that I was interested in doing Apple Store appearances and listed the stores in this area: Phoenix (Biltmore), Chandler, Tucson, and Las Vegas. (Okay, so Las Vegas isn’t exactly around the block, but it is nice to be able to go there for a legitimate business reason.) Kim, who is in charge of author appearances, sent out a few e-mails to Apple Stores. The response was impressive. All the stores wanted me. Tucson even offered an appearance on Friday evening, as part of the Tiger release festivities. (Unfortunately, personal obligations will prevent me from attending that day.) I chose among the offered dates and added them to my Calendar.

Then Apple invited me to another Vendor Fair, this one in Elk Grove, CA. (I attended one in Austin, TX last week.) I asked Peachpit to see if they could get me a gig in the Apple store in Sacramento (Arden Fair) the same day. A few e-mails and it was a done deal. Wow.

What do I do at these appearances? I normally do a presentation. This time, my presentation will concentrate on productivity features in Tiger, showing attendees how the new operating system can make them more productive. The presentation isn’t a slide show. (I don’t want to put anyone to sleep.) Instead, it’s a live demo. I plug my PowerBook into their projection system and go. It’s unscripted and mildly rehearsed. I usually work with a list of topics I want to cover and go from there. After about 45 minutes of that, we open the floor to questions. That can be fun, too.

What’s weird about all this is that I haven’t done any of this stuff in about three years. I got really burned out and didn’t want to do appearances anymore. I actually turned down a bunch of appearances and interview requests. I thought I’d be getting out of the business. But Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger has gotten me all fired up again. Apple is doing really well and it’s a pleasure to work with its new technology. So I’m excited and really looking forward to all of these events.

If you’re reading this on a Windows PC, you don’t know what you’re missing. Stop by an Apple Store in your area and see if the techs there can convince you to switch.