Introducing Accounts
The concept of user accounts is central to OS X’s security approach. Like the Unix under its skin (and also like Windows these days), OS X is designed from the ground up to be a multiple-user operating system. That is, you can set up your OS X so that everyone must log in—click his name and type his password—when the computer turns on (Figure 14-1).
Upon doing so, you discover the Macintosh universe just as you left it, including these elements:
Your documents, files, and folders.
Your preference settings in every program you use: Web browser bookmarks and preferred home page; desktop picture, screen saver, and language; icons on the desktop and in the Dock—and the size and position of the Dock itself; and so on.
Email account(s), including personal information and mailboxes.
Your personally installed programs and fonts.
Your choice of programs that launch automatically at startup.

Figure 14-1. When you set up several accounts, you don’t turn on the Mac so much as sign into it. A command in the
menu called Log Out summons this sign-in screen, as does the Accounts menu described later in this chapter. Click your own name, and type your password (if any), to get past this box and into your own stuff.
This system lets different people use it throughout the day, without disrupting ...
Become an O’Reilly member and get unlimited access to this title plus top books and audiobooks from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers, thousands of courses curated by job role, 150+ live events each month,
and much more.
Read now
Unlock full access