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About me (Bio) |
About me (Ted Landau) Mac stuff My interest in computers dates back to the 1970s. From HP programmable calculators to a mainframe system running Honeywell's Multics OS, I was soon hooked. By the early 1980's, I was using an Apple II at work. In 1983, I decided it was time to get my first home computer. I was about to buy an Apple IIe when word of the Macintosh began to leak out. So I waited. In January 1984, I went to a local computer store the day that the Mac hit the shelves. A few minutes later, my mind was made up. The Macintosh was the train to the future and I wanted to get on board. I bought one that day. My desire to learn about how the Mac worked went far beyond what I needed to know for my job as a professor. I found myself tinkering with the computer just for the fun of it. The first time I ever got paid for writing about the Mac was when I submitted a tip to MacUser. The tip explained how to edit the "Welcome to Macintosh" text that appeared on the screen at startup. MacUser published the tip and paid me $25. Macworld and other magazines. My initial "Mac job" was as a writer (and later, a contributing editor) for the MACazine (Bob LeVitus was its editor!). My first article was published in June 1987. I had submitted it in response to the magazine's request for brief articles from readers. Bob called me to say they were going to run the article. He also asked if I would be interested in writing more stuff for them. I thought about it for maybe two seconds, and said yes. And thus, my Mac writing career began. I wrote several more articles over the next year - after which the magazine unfortunately folded. I prefer to think that my arrival and the magazine's departure were unrelated. In 1988, I began writing for MacUser. At first, all I did was product reviews. Eventually, I graduated to feature articles and columns, becoming a contributing editor along the way. This wonderful relationship lasted until 1998, when MacUser and Macworld "merged" (essentially MacUser was terminated, and Macworld survived). I too survived the merger and became a contributing editor for Macworld, which I remain today. My official titled change in 2006 from Contributing Editor to Senior Contributor. Starting in 2007, I began writing the Bugs & Fixes column for Macworld. It's part of the Mac 911 section. In 2008, Bugs & Fixes shifted from a monthly print column (with selected items later posted to Macworld's Web site) to a weekly online column (with subsequent monthly print version). This format allows the online postings to be much more current. The Mac Observer. Starting in May 2005, I began writing a monthly column for The Mac Observer, called User Friendly View. Starting in 2008, I have also been doing the weekly User Friendly Blog. Macworld Expo. I attended my first Macworld Expo in Boston in 1987. If you were there, you might have seen me working at the MACazine booth. I have attended virtually every San Francisco and Boston/New York Macworld Expo from 1987 to the present. In the 1990's, I began presenting sessions at the Expo Users Conference, and have continued to do that as well. Starting in 2003, I have also occasionally presented one-day workshop sessions. Books. In 1993, after working on the project for 18 months, the first edition of Sad Macs, Bombs & Other Disasters was published by Addison-Wesley. By the third edition, the publisher had shifted to Peachpit. The book's fourth (and final) edition was published in 2000. Mac OS X Disaster Relief, written with Dan Frakes, was published in June of 2002. As its name implies, it just covers Mac OS X. In 2004, Ted Landau's Mac OS X Help Line was published. This book was an evolutionary leap beyond Disaster Relief. A Tiger Edition of Help Line, the final edition of the book, was published in January 2006. At almost 1200 pages, it is certainly the biggest Mac OS X troubleshooting book ever published!
In December 2007, working with Tonya and Adam Engst's Take Control Books, I published my first ebook: Take Control of Your iPhone. It is now in its second edition, with a third edition expected before the end of 2009. MacFixIt. In March of 1996, I started the Sad Macs Update Site which soon became MacFixIt. I sold MacFixIt in 2000 and, as of 2009, I am no longer associated with it in any way. ...and more. Beginning in the Fall of 2005, I joined up with the MacNotables group to produce a regular series of podcasts. In January of 2005, Doctor Mac Direct went live. Created by Bob LeVitus, it was a national tech support service for all things Macintosh. I was the original “Director of Support Services” - in charge of hiring and training the initial group of agents as well as making sure that all the support software and hardware were in place and ready to go on the day of launch. Although we had a successful launch, of which I was quite proud, the project was ended several months later, due to some "internal problems." Recognition. My books and MacFixIt have received numerous honors and awards (as listed on other pages here). In addition, I have twice been included in the MDJ Power 25 (2000 and 2001) as one of the 25 most influential people in the Mac community. I have not been on the list in recent years (although in 2006, I had the "honor" of being mentioned as someone "notable" who did not make the list). In 2007, I was included on the MacTech 25, a competing list of the most influential Mac people. Regardless of which of these lists I do or do not make in the future, I continue to have fun doing all this and will continue to do so as long as it remains fun and there are people interested in what I have to say. Beyond Mac stuff Throughout all of my Mac career (and even before), I have been a professor of Psychology at Oakland University (in Michigan). I retired in 2005, and I am now a Professor Emeritus. I have also (at last) moved back to the San Francisico Bay area, where (many years ago) I got my doctorate at U.C. Berkeley and met my wife. My area of speciality was biological psychology, working with how hormones affect behavior. I also have a special interest in evolution and behavior, and have been a long-time "fan" of Richard Dawkins (author of The Selfish Gene). When Professor Dawkins wrote The Blind Watchmaker, he also wrote a Macintosh program to help demonstrate some of the ideas in the book. My two worlds (Psychology and Mac) briefly came together at this point: I had the opportunity to interview Professor Dawkins for an article published in the MACazine in 1988. I mention my interest in the game of Othello on the Grab Bag page. Since January 2007, I have been studying blues piano (I've played the piano since I was 8; while this included fiddling around with the blues at times, I decided to take it more seriously now). My wife Naomi is a social worker. Years ago, I had to convince her of the advantages of using a computer. Now she considers her iMac to be essential equipment. She also happily uses an iPod and will be graduating to an iPhone soon. My son Brian is currently living in North Carolina and working at Viget Labs as a Web programmer. He received his BA from Oberlin College and a Masters degree in Information Science from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. I must have done something right when I raised him -- he is a more true-blue Mac fanatic than I am. And he knows much more about Web design and multimedia software than I ever will. In December 2007, his partner Stevi gave birth to Lillia. So Naomi and I are now grandparents. Our dog, Bailey, was my near constant companion as I worked at my computer, or did just about anything else where he was permitted to come along. Sadly, he died in 2007, at the ripe old age of 16. Currently, we have two cats, Miko and Yoshi. Dated: June 2009 |