Those two pages were most informative, though, when talking about channel histograms, he used curves instead of levels in order to protect the red channel, which left me wondering how he knew the red channel would be protected, and, is the knowing when to use curves and when to use levels just a 'level of photoshop experience' thing... I shall think about buying a book...
Easy answer - ALWAYS USE CURVES.
The Levels tool is just a "dumbed-down" UI for the Curves tool. Photoshop does almost all color-channel manipulations through Curves internally, and using that tool gives you access to the "bare metal" as it were. That book I mentioned has a whole section on why you shouldn't use the Levels tool. It comes down to that the Levels tool can throw data away much too easily.
Generally, the only exception to the general "always use curves" rule is for grayscale images. In that case, the Curves and Levels tools work identically. This is a pretty good rule-of-thumb, once you learn how to use the curves tool well. However, for general photo editing where you just want to tweak some brightness levels and add a bit of fill lighting and maybe correct a color cast a bit, the
Shadows/Highlights tool is a godsend. It is a specialized Curves interface that makes many common adjustments much more visual and simple-to-use.
So, a simple way to do many easy adjustments is this:
1. Layers -> Duplicate Layer
2. Image -> Adjustments -> Shadows/Highlights
If you need to get fancy, do:
1. Layers -> New Adjustment Layer -> Curves
EDIT: By the way, Marko...
http://forums.creativecow.net/ and
http://library.creativecow.net/tutorials/adobephotoshop