TidBITS#811/09-Jan-06=====================  After a much-needed holiday hibernation, we're back and ready  for the busy week ahead of us at Macworld Expo (be sure to check  the ExtraBITS Web page to stay current on what's announced!).  While in San Francisco, we may wish that we had a Garmin iQue 3600  GPS device, which Travis Butler reviews in this issue. Also this  week, Geoff Duncan eulogizes the late Microsoft Internet Explorer  for the Mac, and we note the releases of History Hound 1.9 and two  new AirPort firmware updates, as well as a program to exchange CDs  for an iPod.Topics:    MailBITS/09-Jan-06    Internet Explorer Officially Fades Away    Increasing Your Cartographic iQue    Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk/09-Jan-06<http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/TidBITS-811.html><ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/issues/2006/TidBITS#811_09-Jan-06.etx>Copyright 2006 TidBITS: Reuse governed by Creative Commons license   <http://www.tidbits.com/terms/> Contact: <editors@tidbits.com>   ---------------------------------------------------------------This issue of TidBITS sponsored in part by:* READERS LIKE YOU! 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RADIUS isn't obscure for those  who use it, of course, and a bug I found in testing a server that  used RADIUS for Wi-Fi logins may be fixed in this update.<http://www.apple.com/support/airport/>  As with previous base station firmware releases, I recommend  waiting to install these upgrades for a few days or weeks unless  you are experiencing a specific problem enumerated in the release  details. There are routinely reports of firmware installation  problems when upgrades are released, and Apple often ships a  quick fix a few weeks later. [GF]**History Hound 1.9 Now Indexes and Searches RSS** -- Hot on the  heels of SmileOnMyMac's new browseback (covered in TidBITS-810_),  St. Clair Software has released an update to HistoryHound, their  utility for indexing and searching visited Web pages. Along with  normal Web pages that you've viewed in Safari, Internet Explorer,  Firefox, OmniWeb, Camino, Mozilla/Netscape, Opera, and Shiira, or  in the built-in browsers of the NetNewsWire 2 and PulpFiction RSS  readers, HistoryHound 1.9 now indexes and searches RSS feeds that  you've visited or bookmarked in Safari. The update also includes  fixes for troublesome URLs; resolves a launch-time crashing bug;  and clears the search result list when you start a new search,  rather than after the new search completes. Version 1.9 is a  free update to registered users; new copies cost $20. It's a  2.2 MB download. [ACE]<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=08369><http://www.stclairsw.com/HistoryHound/>**Trade Old CDs for an iPod - Really** -- A store in  Charleston, South Carolina, will accept good quality CDs  in exchange for iPods. 130 used CDs that meet their quality  criteria gets you a 30 GB iPod, for instance. That's under  $3 a CD. The one variable is that if you live outside the area  and ship them discs, you might have to pay for return shipping  if they don't agree with their evaluation of your collection.<http://www.millenniummusic.com/trades.html>  A quick tour of Half.com and Amazon.com's Marketplace section  would probably help quite a bit. Many folks amassed enormous CD  collections over the last two decades and listen to few of them  now. I've tried to sell CDs in the past, but the peculiarities  of the market supply now at Half.com et al. mean that popular  CDs often have low prices because there are so many in circulation  for resale. [GF]**DealBITS Drawing: Midnight Mansion Winners** -- Congratulations  to Tomas F. Serna of ngsec.com, Rob Hennessy of hyperion.com, Lynn  Nebus of cox.net, James Feinberg of jamesf.com, and Chuck McDonald  of log.on.ca, whose entries were chosen randomly in last issue's  DealBITS drawing and who each received a copy of ActionSoft's  Midnight Mansion. Even if you didn't win, you can save 10 percent  off Midnight Mansion by placing an order using the third link  below; this offer is open to all TidBITS readers through 17-Jan-06  and drops the price to $18. Thanks to the 443 people who entered,  and keep an eye out for future DealBITS drawings! [ACE]<http://www.actionsoft.com/midnightmansion.html><http://www.tidbits.com/dealbits/midnight-mansion/><http://www.actionsoft.com/mm/dealbits/register.html><http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=08373>Internet Explorer Officially Fades Away---------------------------------------  by Geoff Duncan <geoff@tidbits.com>  Although Apple's introduction of Safari caused Microsoft to  put the Mac version of its Internet Explorer Web browser into  "maintenance mode" way back in June 2003 - ceasing development  while pledging to make bug fixes or patch security loopholes  in the even-then-aging browser - Internet Explorer on the Mac  has now officially come to the end of its life cycle. Microsoft  stopped supporting the Mac version of Internet Explorer on  31-Dec-05, and will remove it from its Mactopia Web site on  31-Jan-06. (So grab a copy now for your archival software  collection or stable of programs for HTML testing!)<http://www.microsoft.com/mac/products/internetexplorer/internetexplorer.aspx><http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=07227>  Although Internet Explorer remains a dominant browser for Windows  (where it's creeping toward a version 7 and served as a focus of  Microsoft's long antitrust battles), Internet Explorer on the Mac  was always a somewhat distant cousin, having been birthed back  in 1996 by what would eventually become Microsoft's Macintosh  Business Unit (MacBU), made up of genuine Macintosh programmers  at a time when Apple seemed to be careening towards dissolution.  Even its first beta release (version 2.0, which I reviewed back  in TidBITS-311_ using my shiny 28.8 Kbps modem!) one could see  Mac-centric design features, and its last major revision (which  Adam reviewed in TidBITS-523_ back in March 2000) pushed to offer  useful and powerful features for the time, like a scrapbook and  auction tracker, plus a serious attempt at a platform-agnostic  page rendering engine.<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=01169><http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05872>  Internet Explorer made the jump to Mac OS X early on and, like a  thorn in Apple's paw, remained the operating system's default Web  browser until Apple shipped Safari in early 2003. Despite some  longstanding, glaring issues (cookie management, anybody?) and  never having been updated to offer features like tabbed browsing,  pop-up window blocking, and RSS support, Internet Explorer's  integrated scrapbook was a phenomenally good idea, and, to my  knowledge, its auto-completion feature has been matched only  by OmniWeb. Internet Explorer also provided the only built-in  access to suffix and file-mapping settings in Mac OS X: now, as  installed, Mac OS X enables users to configure only default email  and Web applications, and you can't even do that within system-  wide preferences but must instead adjust those settings within  Mail and Safari. Users with more sophisticated needs must use  programs like RCDefaultApp, MisFox, or More Internet.<http://www.omnigroup.com/applications/omniweb/><http://www.rubicode.com/Software/RCDefaultApp/><http://www.clauss-net.de/misfox/misfox.html><http://www.monkeyfood.com/software/moreInternet/>  So, it's hard to say we'll miss Internet Explorer: after all, like  Netscape, it stopped coming to Macintosh parties a few years ago  and hardly ever writes or calls anymore. But there was a long  period - preceding and during the so-called Internet Boom - where  Microsoft led the pack amongst Mac Web browsers and jauntily kept  getting better, while Apple was struggling for air and Internet  Explorer's main competitor, Netscape, publicly writhed in its  own agonies and drifted further away from the Mac. I may not be  speaking for everyone here, but Internet Explorer and the Mac  walked a long way together, and some of it was uphill in the snow,  both ways, on some very cold days. So, thanks, IE: ya did good.Increasing Your Cartographic iQue---------------------------------  by Travis Butler <tbutler@mac.com>  With all the driving I do, the out-of-town consulting I've been  doing, and Adam's reviews of GPS (Global Positioning System)  devices, I've been tempted by GPS navigation units for a year  or two - but they've always been too expensive for me to consider.  One that caught my eye was Garmin's iQue - a GPS navigation  unit built into a Palm OS handheld, promising either a much more  intelligent GPS or a more capable Palm - but it, like the others,  was too expensive. Recently, though, Geeks.com had the iQue 3600  refurbished on sale for $300; after a consulting payment, that  was close enough to be doable, and after some waffling, I sprang  for it.<http://www.garmin.com/products/iQue3600/><http://www.geeks.com/details.asp?invtid=010-N0264-11&cat=CON>  So far, I've used it on one major trip and a fair amount of  testing around town, and am overall pleased, though the experience  has not been without its warts. By far the biggest one is Garmin's  half-hearted Mac support; although they've relented to the extent  of posting a Mac OS X version of Palm Desktop that supports the  iQue, the map generation software still requires a PC to run.  You can work around this fairly painlessly by using Virtual PC,  but that's still a hassle.**The iQue 3600 as a Palm Handheld** -- The Palm models I've used  most recently have been a Tungsten T2 and a Tungsten E. The iQue  3600 feels roughly contemporary with these units from a software  standpoint - all three run Palm OS 5.2.1, handle input using  Graffiti 2 character recognition, and have a high-resolution  display. All of my normal Palm software installed and ran on the  iQue 3600 without a hitch. Garmin modified several of the standard  Palm applications, such as Address Book and Date Book; in all  honesty, though, the only difference I noticed outside of a GPS  context was the Find feature. Garmin's Find button takes you to  the application QueFind, which includes the standard Palm OS Find  feature as one option, along with a variety of "finds" related to  the navigation features (such as Waypoints, Cities, or Food and  Drink).<http://www.palm.com/us/products/handhelds/>  The biggest software difference from the T2 and E models is  the iQue's "soft" input area at the bottom section of the  320 by 480 display, which is comprised of active pixels instead  of the Tungstens' silkscreened writing area; the area works much  the same as the soft input area of the Tungsten T3, T5, and TX  models, though not exactly. For example, on the T5, the on-screen  keyboard replaces the writing area when activated; on the iQue  3600, the keyboard pops up in the main display area. However,  reader programs like Mobipocket, iSilo, and Plucker recognized  and used the extra display space without trouble. When the writing  area is minimized, the small control strip left at the bottom of  the display displays GPS-related items, versus the Palm's default  buttons.  From a hardware standpoint, the iQue 3600 is also comparable  to the T2 or E. In addition to the high-resolution display, the  iQue includes an SD/MMC memory slot (though it apparently does  not support SDIO cards for Bluetooth or Wi-Fi), a built-in  speaker, a headphone jack for audio (Garmin bundles their own  audio player instead of the RealOne Player Palm includes), and  a recording microphone similar to the T2. It uses the no longer  universal Palm Universal Connector of the vintage that came in  with the M500 and went out with the T3.  The iQue 3600 has 32 MB of RAM, again comparable to the T2 and E,  although only about 10 MB of that is free after installing the  included software; this isn't any particular handicap for me,  because I use SD cards for any serious storage (such as ebooks).  The main processor is a 200 MHz Motorola Dragonball, instead of  the TI OMAP processors used by the T2 and the E, but I didn't  notice any major speed differences; the iQue's interface response  does occasionally feel a bit sluggish when making a lot of screen  taps quickly, as with a solitaire game, but applications launch  and redraw about as fast (sometimes faster) on it than on the  others.  The controls are closer to an older Sony Clie than a Palm; the  iQue 3600 uses basic up/down buttons, instead of the five-way  navigator used on almost all Palms since the Tungsten T, with  a "jog dial" (not an actual rotating dial, just a spring-loaded  rocking switch) and an Esc button on the left side of the unit.  I've been using the five-way navigator for a couple of years now,  and find it hard to adjust to up/down plus jog dial; I expect  Clie users would have a much easier time of it.  Different controls aside, the iQue 3600's construction feels about  the same as the E's - plastic case and controls, buttons with a  firm click, plus a metal stylus. About the only construction weak  point I worry about is the jog dial, but I don't really use it.  The iQue as a whole doesn't have the heft and solidity of the T2,  but it feels perfectly serviceable and should wear well as long  as you take reasonable care of it. The iQue is slightly taller and  about a third thicker than the E, mostly due to the GPS antenna;  the case thins going away from the antenna, and at the bottom is  about as thin as the E. I wouldn't try carrying it in a pants  pocket, but I wouldn't try the E in one either; it should fit  fine in most shirt and jacket pockets.  On the whole, I could easily live with the iQue 3600 as my only  Palm handheld; the controls are somewhat disappointing compared  to newer Palms, but I could get used to them in time. It's not up  to the performance or features standard of the newest high-end  models, but it's perfectly fine for everything I use a Palm for:  calendar, address, portable reference for things like serial  numbers, and ebooks and simple games to pass the time.**The iQue 3600 as a GPS Navigator** -- Unlike Palm handhelds,  I have very little experience with GPS navigation units; the  iQue is the first I've used for more than a few minutes. With  that understood, I've been impressed with it and am very glad  to have it.  The iQue's standout feature as a GPS navigation system is  undoubtedly its Palm OS base - both the integration with standard  Palm software, and the use of Palm OS applications to handle the  GPS navigation features. While a few interface widgets are unique  to the Garmin software, by and large the GPS application suite  follows Palm OS conventions, making it easy for me to pick it up  with minimal reference to the manual. Integration with standard  Palm applications ranges from the very useful - a new button  in the Address Book takes you straight to the QueFind Address  application with the proper fields filled in, and the resulting  location is stored with the address - to the mildly helpful  (for example, a location can be attached to an appointment in  the Date Book, and can then be routed to via GPS navigation).  And I can't help feeling that the use of Palm applications makes  the system somewhat more powerful and full-featured than the  equivalent stand-alone unit; the tools for searching the map  database are one example.  Unfortunately, the integration is not always clear or consistent;  I kept banging my head against the navigation system's route  generation. In the various categories of the QueFind application,  which searches the map database, you always have a Route To button  that creates a route to the selected item. The iQue also lets you  create routes using saved locations attached to Address Book or  Date Book entries - but there is no Route To button to make this  easy or even apparent. Instead, you have to bring up the (normally  hidden) menu bar, then select Route To from the Que menu. To be  fair, there's also a method that works the same for both areas:  select the item, then tap the Route icon to bring up the Route  control panel. A new banner across the top of the control panel  reads "Route to <selected item>"; the banner looks like display  text and not an interface button, but tapping on it generates  a route to the selected item.  Interface quirks are not the biggest issue I have with the  iQue, however; that lies with the completeness and accuracy  of the underlying map database. The Garmin City Select maps  that come with the iQue are from NavTeq, which, according to  gpsinformation.org, is the same database used by most built-in  car navigation systems, as well as MapQuest and Magellan GPS  units.<http://www.gpsinformation.org/dale/mapmakers.htm>  I understand that it's not possible to keep up-to-the-minute with  new neighborhoods, roads, and the like. However, I really think  the iQue should be able to find my mother's correct address on  _North_ Kellogg Street in Galesburg, IL, instead of constantly  trying to route me to that street number on _South_ Kellogg  Street, when she's been living in the same place for a decade.  Likewise, as often as small restaurants can open and close,  I don't expect the iQue's listing to be completely up-to-date;  however, having an attempt to route me to a restaurant in  Jacksonville, IL dump me into a well-established residential  area does not inspire confidence. This was using the version  of City Select that shipped with the iQue 3600, version 6.02;  Garmin's Web site lists a version 7 update that I've ordered,  and we'll see if that is improved at all. I'm still not inclined  to excuse the errors I encountered, though; neither location had  changed for years, to all appearances. One comment I did see in  a couple of places online is that NavTeq started expanding their  coverage area in 2001 by including data of lesser reliability,  which could be what I ran into.  (As a side note, trying to find map update information on Garmin's  Web site was overly frustrating. Apparently there are two major  navigation maps compatible with the iQue 3600 - City Select and  City Navigator - as well as specialized topographic and marine  maps. However, after close to an hour of shuttling around the  Garmin Web site, I could not find a single clear explanation of  the difference between City Select and City Navigator, beyond a  mention in passing that City Select comes with certain GPS units;  in particular, I was hoping to see whether City Navigator would  offer improvements that would make it worth buying if I already  had City Select. And as Adam noted in his review of the Garmin  StreetPilot c330, you get only one free map update from Garmin;  update prices range from $50 to $125 otherwise, with most products  costing either $50 or $75.)<http://www.garmin.com/unlock/update.jsp><http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=08121>  Since the full detailed map database covering the entire continent  would be far too large to fit in the iQue's internal memory or in  most SD cards, the iQue uses a base map covering major highways,  combined with detailed street-level navigation maps for specific  areas. You generate the street-level map for areas you want using  a program called Map Install. Unfortunately, Map Install is  Windows-only, integrated into Palm Desktop for Windows; it does  run (if slowly) under Virtual PC. The program itself is simple  to use, if tedious; a map of the coverage area is divided into  (rather oddly delineated) segments, where clicking on a segment  adds it to the map you are building. Building a map of any  significant size that includes major metropolitan areas is likely  to require a lot of scrolling around and/or zooming in and out.  Map Install does show the segments you currently include on your  map, with sizes listed and a running total at the end - a nice  touch when you're trying to fit a map into a smaller memory card.  After all the complaints above, you may wonder if the iQue is even  worth it. Trust me - it is. Adam already described the advantages  of a GPS navigation system in his prior articles, and I have at  least one more advantage to add.<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=08111><http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=08203><http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=08335>  I tend to be somewhat obsessive about knowing where I am when  driving. Even if I know the route I'm taking on a long trip,  I'll still pull out the road atlas frequently to check my progress  against the map, unless I've driven it often enough to have an  instinctive feel for how far I've come and how far I have to go.  Or, I may know the proper route to a particular location in a  city, and the route to a different location, but I want to know  how they fit together in relation to each other - especially if  there are any odd, winding roads along the way. Having a good GPS  navigator satisfies that obsession; I can always look at the map  and see where I'm at, how far along the route I am, and zoom and  scroll the map to get a picture of my surroundings. I love that.  Despite the integration flaws I mention above, in general I find  the iQue easy to use as a GPS navigator. Scrolling can be done  easily by tapping and dragging; the up/down buttons give a simple  way to zoom in and out, and a pop-up menu lets you select from a  broad range of map scales. The iQue does a generally intelligent  job of auto-scaling; as you approach a turn on the route, it  automatically steps down to lower scales, showing an ever more  detailed picture of your change in course, and pops up turn  preview dialogs as you approach. The iQue also has voice  notification - though as with two of the units Adam reviewed,  it's limited to comments such as "turn left in 500 feet" and  does not read street names. I don't find this to be a particular  problem, as the screen displays the full information and is easy  for me to read at a glance. Map displays are limited to a 2D  top-down view; again, this doesn't particularly bother me, as  I find the clarity of the overhead view easier to decipher at  a glance than the 3D displays I've seen in screenshots of other  GPS units.  Like the units Adam reviewed, the iQue has an automatic re-route  feature that takes over when you leave the programmed route; also  like what Adam described, it seems overly fond of getting you  back on course by turning you around instead of moving you on.  (There is an option you can enable to block U-turns, which the  iQue mostly honors, but it likes to circle you around the block  instead.) A Route Via function allows you to make a list of  several destinations to be visited on a trip, with a nice feature  that will put them in order to minimize driving time; Route Via  can also be used to alter your route manually (to avoid accidents  or construction, for example), but it's not well-suited for this  task. I'd prefer an "avoid this spot" feature of some kind;  the iQue has a Detour function, which is supposed to bypass  the originally selected roads for a distance you specify, but  I rarely see it alter the route significantly.  The only other serious complaint I can make about the GPS  interface is that the on-screen controls are scaled to Palm OS  size, making them hard to hit at arm's distance, especially  without a stylus. When you turn on the GPS circuitry by opening  the antenna, a splash screen gives you what appears to be a  boilerplate warning about operating the device while driving -  and I would take that seriously.  Geeks.com sold the iQue 3600 in a Garmin bundle pack, which  adds an automobile mount and power adapter to the iQue's  standard equipment. Instead of a suction cup, the iQue mount  uses a flexible rubberized surface meant to sit on top of a  dashboard, with four weighted beanbag flaps to help hold it  in place, and the cradle attaching on top. This mount worked  well for me; I have a relatively flat dashboard and the mount  was stable, yet easy to reposition for best viewing. It was also  easy to pull it off completely if I wanted a closer look or to  hide it at a rest stop. The cradle itself swivels, and has angle  adjustments at top and bottom; as long as your dashboard is flat  enough to hold the base without sliding off, you should be able  to find a comfortable viewing position. The DC adapter includes  an amplified speaker (with volume control) that makes it easy to  hear voice directions, Palm alarms, or even MP3 music, although  the added bulk may be a problem for some people's 12V lighter  sockets. (Music continues to play in the background when the  GPS is active, and voice navigation alerts will cut out the Palm  sounds for a moment while the voice speaks. However, the speaker  sound quality is worse than an AM radio, so I don't recommend it  for in-car listening.)  The iQue can be used as a GPS outside of the car, of course,  though the battery life suffers considerably. The GPS antenna  is a slab that flips out from the back of the iQue, and can be  rotated to several angles; for best reception it needs to stay  relatively level to the horizon. I had no trouble with reception  outdoors or in the car. I can't get a good lock-on from inside my  office's building, but surprisingly I could see enough satellites  to lock-on in my top-floor apartment. There's also a socket for  an external antenna, though I'm not sure how many people will  actually need it.  Overall, I have to give the iQue 3600 a good grade as a GPS;  it's not perfect, but it's good enough that I'd buy it just to  use it as a GPS, without regard to its PDA functionality. Even at  the $600 list price, it seems to be as good a product as the first  two GPS units Adam reviewed, for significantly less money, and at  the $300 I paid for mine, it was a steal.**Using the iQue 3600 with a Mac** -- And now we come to the real  bugaboo, right? Garmin has become semi-notorious among Mac users  for its hostility to the Mac; how hard is the iQue to get working  with a Mac?  The answer is: surprisingly easy, in fact, when it comes to the  PDA side of the equation. Garmin has posted a Mac OS X version  of Palm Desktop in its iQue 3600 software update section, dated  August 2004; this version installed and ran without problems on  an iBook G4 running Mac OS X 10.4.3. If you already own a Palm  unit with a version of Palm Desktop installed, however, installing  the Garmin version will likely cause problems with your current  installation; in that case, you may want to consider a program  called PDiQue. PDiQue modifies the property list files Palm  Desktop uses to recognize supported machines, so that the iQue  3600 is recognized. I tested it with Palm Desktop 4.2.1 Rev D,  the most current version on Palm's Web site, and it allowed the  iQue to HotSync without apparent problems.<http://www.lycestra.com/ique.htm>  Getting an iQue set up as a GPS unit is... considerably harder.  PDiQue's author, Joe Garcia, has a set of notes on using the iQue  with a Mac that I found very useful, although they haven't been  updated since 2004. The procedure below is based heavily on his  notes, with my own interpolations based on my experiences.<http://www.lycestra.com/iQueDoc/?1>  As noted above, the map creation software runs only on Windows.  In addition, the initial software install for Windows creates  several Palm packages (such as the base map) that need to go on  the iQue before you can use it to navigate. Therefore, you need  access to either a regular PC or Virtual PC to use the iQue as  a GPS navigator. Using Virtual PC is complicated by the fact  that you cannot HotSync with it; something that surprised me,  as I got my start with Palm products using Virtual PC to HotSync  an original Palm Pilot, until the Claris Organizer-based Mac  Palm Desktop was released. You can still set up the iQue with  nothing but Virtual PC, but the process is more complicated.  In a nutshell, you do all the required steps in Virtual PC,  up to the point where you'd HotSync; at that point, you instead  copy the resulting files from the install folders in Virtual PC  to the Mac side, and then HotSync them with the Mac version of  Palm Desktop.* Do the initial setup of the Garmin software in Virtual PC; as  part of the process, you'll create a name/user account for your  iQue. After the Palm Desktop setup, it will ask you to plug in  your iQue to HotSync it; stop the installation at this point.* Go to the Install directory created by Palm Desktop during  the setup. (By default, the directory should be something  like "C:/Program Files/Palm/[User Last Name followed by first  initial]/Install".) You'll see the initial setup files that need  to go on the iQue; copy them to a folder on your Mac. In a normal  Virtual PC install, you can do this just by dragging them from the  directory window in Virtual PC to a folder on your Mac desktop.* Open HotSync Manager on the Mac, and choose Install Handheld  Files from the HotSync menu. Then drag the files you copied to  your Mac into the list in the Install Handheld Files dialog.* HotSync your iQue. At the end of the HotSync, you'll need  to reset it.* If you're going to store your detailed map file on a memory  card - and map files grow large enough that you almost have to -  you must put a file in your user directory in Windows Palm Desktop  so that the Map Install program will know you're using an SD card.  Joe Garcia links to a copy of the file (with somewhat longer  directions) at the URL below; the default location for the file  should be "C:/Program Files/Palm/[User Last Name followed by  first initial]/"<http://www.lycestra.com/iQueDoc/?18>* Generate your map with Map Install; be sure to specify the SD  card when it asks you for an install location. The newly created  map file will be in the "CardInst/Slot-SD/" subdirectory of  your user directory; by default, this should be "C:/Program  Files/Palm/[User Last Name followed by first initial]/CardInst/  Slot-SD/GMAPSUPP.IMG" Copy this file to your Mac, just as you  did with the initial setup files.* Launch HotSync Manager and open the Install Handheld Files  dialog, again as you did before; this time, after dragging the  GMAPSUPP.IMG map file to the install list, click on the Change  Destination button to have the map file sent to the Secure  Digital Card.* Insert your SD card into the iQue, if you haven't already,  and HotSync again; the map file will be copied to the SD card,  which can take a long time.  And now, you're set to go! If you create new maps in the future  (and you undoubtedly will), simply repeat the last three steps:  create the map with Map Install, copy the resulting map file to  the Mac side, and install it with HotSync Manager.**My New Travelling Companion** -- As I've already said, the iQue  3600 isn't perfect. It has several minor flaws in the software,  and I've stumbled over holes in the map database. As a Palm PDA,  it's nice, but the design is definitely showing its age compared  to the newer Palm models. It was cutting-edge when it was released  but now lags behind the curve to some degree and has gaps in its  feature set (like the lack of SDIO support, making it impossible  to use an add-on Bluetooth or Wi-Fi card) compared to newer units.  And most important - while Garmin has tossed a bone to Mac users  by posting a Mac OS X version of Palm Desktop for the iQue, their  attitude to Mac users continues to be "Oh, well, if you _must_,  but don't expect us to help you."<http://www.garmin.com/products/faq.jsp?product=010-00264-00#faq25>  In the end, though, the flaws don't weigh heavily in the balance  for me. Having a full-fledged GPS navigation system for a price  I could afford is worth some hassle; having a still quite capable  Palm OS handheld included is a bonus. And the synergy between  the Palm and GPS sides of the iQue creates a unit that, while  blemished, is still greater than the sum of its parts.Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk/09-Jan-06------------------------------------  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>  The first link for each thread description points to the  traditional TidBITS Talk interface; the second link points to  the same discussion on our Web Crossing server, which provides  a different look and which may be faster.**Printing a list of messages in an Entourage folder?** A reader  wants to print just a list of email messages, not the messages  themselves, and is rewarded with an AppleScript solution.  (2 messages)<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tlkthrd=2829><http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/671/>**Apple's Calculator vs. decimal places** -- Calculator (the  application, not the Dashboard widget) sometimes rounds decimal  points incorrectly. But is it actually a feature instead of a  bug? (11 messages)<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tlkthrd=2830><http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/672/>**Word processor for a book** -- Attempting to write an entire  book in a single Microsoft Word file is an invitation for trouble.  Find out what other word processors are recommended by TidBITS  Talk readers. (7 messages)<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tlkthrd=2831><http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/673/>**Cleaning up iPhoto Library** -- iPhoto Buddy is nominated as  a suggestion for taming a 5 GB iPhoto library. (2 messages)<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tlkthrd=2832><http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/674/>**UMN Mapserver** -- Readers offer advice on running a mapserver,  plus some information about one of the companies involved.  (3 messages)<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tlkthrd=2833><http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/675/>**Super 8 Transfer** -- What do you do with all those Super 8  movie rolls in storage? Several ideas emerge, ranging from  re-shooting the projected movies to sending them out for  professional digitizing. (7 messages)<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tlkthrd=2834><http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/677/>**Firefox bookmark location** -- After updating the Web browser  Firefox to the latest version, a reader's bookmarks disappear.  In addition to discovering where Firefox stores its bookmark  file, other folks chime in with their various Firefox experiences.  (7 messages)<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tlkthrd=2836><http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/678/>$$ Non-profit, non-commercial publications may reprint articles if full credit is given. Others please contact us. We don't guarantee accuracy of articles. Caveat lector. Publication, product, and company names may be registered trademarks of their companies. For information: how to subscribe, where to find back issues, and more, see <http://www.tidbits.com/>. 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