TidBITS#856/20-Nov-06
=====================
  Issue link: <http://db.tidbits.com/issue/856>

  There's a lot to cover before our Thanksgiving hiatus. Jeff Carlson
  marvels at how much less his new MacBook Pro costs compared to his
  previous Apple laptops, and also runs into a dastardly Retrospect
  problem while upgrading. Matt Neuburg notes the release of
  PTHPasteboard 4.0 and looks at MindManager for the Mac. Glenn
  Fleishman ponders power and iPods on airplanes after a recent Apple
  announcement, and we also note the release of firmware updates for
  Intel-based Macs, Apple Remote Desktop 3.1, and an update of "Take
  Control of Digital TV." Our next issue will be 04-Dec-06, but please
  send your holiday gift suggestions to TidBITS Talk in the meantime!

Articles
    Thanksgiving Hiatus: Next Issue 04-Dec-06
    Submit Your Holiday 2006 Gift Ideas
    Apple Updates Firmware for Intel-based Macs
    Apple Remote Desktop 3.1 Adds Lights-Out Management
    PTHPasteboard Really Returns, Adds Pro Version
    iFly Me!
    MindManager Comes to the Mac
    More Bang, Less Bucks for My MacBook Pro
    Retrospect vs. Sparse Disk Image Files
    Take Control News/20-Nov-06
    Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk/20-Nov-06


------------ This issue of TidBITS sponsored in part by: --------------

* READERS LIKE YOU! Support TidBITS with a contribution today!
  <http://www.tidbits.com/about/support/contributors.html>
  Special thanks this week to Donald Bahringer, Terje Berg
  Wade Fox, and Marco De Zordo for their generous support!

* DealBITS: Get the word out about your product AND generate sales!
  It's simple: give away a few copies and offer a discount to entrants.
  A DealBITS drawing is quick to set up and can easily pay for itself.
  For more info and rates, visit <http://www.tidbits.com/dealbits/>.

* SMALL DOG ELECTRONICS: Apple iPod 20 GB with
  Color Display (refurb), Premium leather Belkin
  Sportcase, armband, free shipping - $149.00!
  Visit: <http://www.smalldog.com/tb/> -- 800-511-MACS

* FETCH SOFTWORKS: Fetch 5.1 makes FTP and SFTP easy!
  Upload, download, mirror, and manage your Web site. Dozens of
  new features to make file transfers easier and more reliable.
  Get your free trial version at <http://fetchsoftworks.com/>

* WebCrossing Neighbors Creates Private Social Networks
  Create a complete social network with your company or group's
  own look. Scalable, extensible and extremely customizable.
  Take a guided tour today <http://www.webcrossing.com/tour>

* Bare Bones Software's BBEdit 8.5 -- Must-have upgrade sports
  major interface overhaul, new prefs and clippings systems,
  improved JavaScript, new Ruby/SQL/YAML support, code folding.
  More than 160 new features in all! <http://www.barebones.com/>.

* Circus Ponies NoteBook: Organization for a Creative Mind.
  De-clutter your Desktop. Organize your Web clippings. Manage
  your projects.  Voice annotate your notes. With NoteBook, it's
  simple. Try it free for 30 days. <http://www.circusponies.com/>

* MARK/SPACE, INC: Connecting the coolest gadgets from Dell,
  Garmin, HP, HTC, Motorola, Palm, Samsung, Sony and others to
  Mac OS X. Address Book, iCal, iPhoto, iTunes and more. See
  what you've been missing! <http://www.markspace.com/bits>

* CheckIt System Performance Suite bundles three top Mac utilities!
  TechTool Platinum diagnoses and repairs your disk, Spring Cleaning
  organizes your files and Retrospect Express backs up your data.
  Buy today for only $79.99! <http://www.allume.com/tidbits/>

* Microsoft: Supporting professional Mac users with Office 2004. 
  Supporting the Mac community through tech support newsgroups,
  user group appearances, our new team blog, and more!
  Save up to 25%! <http://www.microsoft.com/mac/go/promotions/> 

---------- Help support TidBITS by supporting our sponsors ------------


Thanksgiving Hiatus: Next Issue 04-Dec-06
-----------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/8754>

  This coming Thursday is the Thanksgiving holiday in the United
  States, so we're taking the week off to spend time with family and
  friends (and, of course, to Take Control of Thanksgiving Dinner with
  the help of Joe Kissell's ebook). Look for our next issue on
  04-Dec-06, and we'll post any breaking news on our home page in the
  meantime.

<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thanksgiving>
<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/thanksgiving.html?14@@!pt=TB856>


Submit Your Holiday 2006 Gift Ideas
-----------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/8755>

  For those of us who publish holiday gift coverage, the approach of
  Thanksgiving is a warning sign - get started! So, for our
  traditional holiday gift issue of reader suggestions, scheduled for
  publication toward the end of the first week in December, please
  tell us what gifts you're planning to put on your holiday wish list
  or to present to your loved ones this year. As always, we're
  collecting ideas in TidBITS Talk, so send your suggestions to
  tidbits-talk@tidbits.com or submit them in the TidBITS Talk Web
  forum, and please use plain text format, not HTML. We've already
  started threads for specific categories. Please suggest only one
  product or idea per message, give the reason why you're recommending
  it, make sure to include a URL or other necessary contact
  information, and recommend only others' products. If possible, try
  to suggest products that haven't appeared in previous gift issues;
  we may drop repetitive suggestions from the issue itself. To refresh
  your memory on what readers have suggested previously, check out the
  last three gift issues from 2005, 2004, and 2003 before writing in.
  Thanks in advance!

<mailto:tidbits-talk@tidbits.com>
<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/issue/808>
<http://db.tidbits.com/issue/758>
<http://db.tidbits.com/issue/709>


Apple Updates Firmware for Intel-based Macs
-------------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/8756>

  Apple released firmware updates for its line of Intel-based Macs
  last week, addressing Boot Camp, start up, and wake-from-sleep
  issues. Be sure to follow the directions (worth printing out) when
  applying the updates; instructions for creating a Firmware
  Restoration CD are also available. The updates affect all
  Intel-based Mac models, and are available via Software Update or by
  direct download: MacBook Pro EFI Firmware Update 1.2 (2.7 MB), iMac
  EFI Firmware Update 1.1 (6.1 MB), MacBook EFI Firmware Update 1.0
  (1.6 MB), Mac mini EFI Firmware Update 1.1 (1.6 MB), and Mac Pro EFI
  Firmware Update 1.1 (1.6 MB).

<http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=303364>
<http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=303469>
<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/macbookproefifirmwareupdate12.html>
<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/imacefifirmwareupdate11.html>
<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/macbookefifirmwareupdate10.html>
<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/macminiefifirmwareupdate11.html>
<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/macproefifirmwareupdate11.html>


Apple Remote Desktop 3.1 Adds Lights-Out Management
---------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/8757>

  Apple last week released Apple Remote Desktop 3.1, making the
  company's remote control and management application into a universal
  binary and fixing numerous bugs and limitations that you can read
  more about on Apple's Web site. The main new capability in Remote
  Desktop 3.1 is support for "lights-out management," which enables a
  system administrator to monitor and manage a remote server whether
  or not the machine is powered on. Lights-out management is a new
  feature of the Intel-based Xserves, so if you're managing one of
  those machines with Remote Desktop 3.1, you can turn it on if it's
  off, even via AppleScript; all that's necessary is an Ethernet
  connection. (According to a post on the Ars Technica Infinite Loop
  journal, the Intel-based Xserve uses nearly all of the IPMI 2.0
  specification, meaning that third party solutions will also be able
  to manage the Xserve remotely.) Apple Remote Desktop 3.1 is a free
  update for owners of version 3.0, and although the admin comes with
  a matching 3.1 client that's presumably necessary for the new
  lights-out management features, Remote Desktop 3.1 Admin can still
  control older versions of the client. The admin is a 28 MB download;
  the client is a 2.5 download, available from Apple Downloads and
  from Software Update.

<http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=304569>
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lights_out_management>
<http://origin.arstechnica.com/journals/apple.ars/2006/10/27/5773>
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IPMI>
<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/appleremotedesktop31admin.html>
<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/appleremotedesktop31client.html>


PTHPasteboard Really Returns, Adds Pro Version
----------------------------------------------
  by Matt Neuburg <matt@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/8758>

  As I predicted in "PTHPasteboard Returns, Better Late than Never"
  (2005-03-21), Paul Haddad's PTHPasteboard 4.0 is here, it's free,
  and it's better than ever. PTHPasteboard is a simple but powerful
  automatic multiple pasteboard: basically, every time you choose Copy
  or Cut in any application, PTHPasteboard remembers the clipboard
  contents, so that you can later paste that item even though you have
  subsequently tromped on the system clipboard with another Copy or
  Cut. With PTHPasteboard, it becomes trivially easy to collect
  multiple items from one place or many places and paste them
  separately elsewhere; unless you've experienced it, you may not
  realize how much easier your entire workflow becomes when suddenly
  there is no need to plan or hesitate before copying, because all
  your recently copied items are available to you, everywhere, all the
  time.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8024>
<http://pth.com/products/pthpasteboard/>

  PTHPasteboard 4.0 is a significant rewrite. Options are now managed
  through a System Preferences pane. The saved clipboard items
  (referred to as "buffers") are accessed through a window. This
  window can be constantly present, or it can be manually summoned and
  hidden, or - this is what I use - it can appear temporarily, sliding
  into the screen from the side or bottom when you hover the mouse
  over that region (like the Dock's hiding behavior). Frequently used
  material can be stored in additional windows (rather like the old
  Scrapbook). Windows are searchable. You can learn what application a
  buffer was copied from, and when. Hot keys can be defined to show or
  hide particular windows or paste particular buffers; I find the
  simplest approach is to summon the window through a hot key and then
  type a buffer's number to paste it. (So, for example, to paste
  buffer 2 from the main PTHPasteboard window, I first press
  Shift-Option-Command-V, which shows the window; I then type "2",
  which pastes that buffer and hides the window.)

  If you want even more power, or simply want to assuage your guilt
  over getting so much for free, you can pay $20 to upgrade to
  PTHPasteboard Pro. This adds syncing, whereby the contents of
  clipboard windows can be shared between machines across the local
  network. It also adds filtering, letting text pass through various
  pre-defined transformations as it is pasted. (Personally, I'd prefer
  a feature that lets me write my own transformations in some
  well-known scripting language.)

<http://pth.com/products/pthpasteboard/pro/>

  I've used various multiple-pasteboard utilities for years (see
  "Multiple Clipboards on Mac OS X", 2003-02-17), and my advice
  remains the same: you owe it to yourself to try one, and
  PTHPasteboard, for its clarity, its power, and its wonderful "set it
  and forget it" ease of use, not to mention its (lack of) price, is
  the one to try. PTHPasteboard 4.0 is a universal binary, and
  requires Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger. It's a 1.3 MB download. It's free; the
  Pro version costs $20 with a free 30-day trial period.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/7078>
<http://download.pth.com/PTHPasteboard/PTHPasteboard.prefPane.dmg>


iFly Me!
--------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/8759>

  Up to six airlines will soon make it easier to use your iPod in
  flight by providing power connections at each seat along with an
  adapter to enable viewing video content on a seat-back screen.
  Continental, Delta, Emirates, and United will start rolling out
  these upgrades in 2007. Air France and KLM are in talks with Apple,
  but have not entered into agreement for the services. (Apple's press
  release said the latter two airlines are committed, but in a Reuters
  story, Air France and KLM said it was too early to state that.)

<http://www.apple.com/pr/library/2006/nov/14ipod.html>
<http://today.reuters.com/news/articlenews.aspx?type=technologyNews&storyID=2006-11-14T224156Z_01_N14278348_RTRUKOC_0_US-APPLE-AIRLINES.xml>

  Of course, not all the planes in these airlines' fleets have
  seat-back screens. And it costs a fortune to run wiring through
  existing planes; this sort of wiring is also a prime suspect in some
  other unexplained plane crashes, so airlines are wary of new
  systems. Thus I imagine it will be particular long-haul planes that
  already have some manner of per-seat wiring in place that will
  receive these upgrades first. For a 6- or 10- or 14-hour flight, not
  having to bring extra charging devices to use your iPod will be a
  blessed relief for many travelers. But they'll have to be sure,
  first, that the planes on their itinerary are all powered up.

<http://www.usatoday.com/money/biztravel/2003-07-08-plane-cover_x.htm>

  What's more interesting to me is how this iPod announcement
  intersects with future in-flight broadband services that will be
  offered over Wi-Fi. While Connexion by Boeing's pioneering
  satellite-based broadband service - which provided service only on
  long-haul international routes - will be shut down by year's end
  after $1 billion or more in losses, other parties are just about to
  launch theirs.

  With an onboard Wi-Fi network, the airlines could conceivably work
  with Apple to place media servers stocked with the iTunes Store's
  library (or the most popular parts of it) online for purchase. True,
  iTunes currently uses a centralized purchase and digital-rights
  management (DRM) wrapping system. But with a low-bandwidth
  backchannel to Apple for the media server to check your account -
  well, you could grab the current episode of Lost while over the
  Atlantic and get it in five minutes, not fifty, using local area
  network speeds.

  The iPod lacks Wi-Fi right now, of course, so this is a non-starter,
  unless you were using your laptop to purchase music onboard and then
  transfer that music to your iPod. Too much friction, I'm sure. But
  airlines might be able to sell pay-per-seat rights to movies and TV
  shows that would be stored on such a media server, too. (You could
  watch movies and listen to music on your laptop, but laptop
  batteries can support video playback for shorter periods than the
  latest iPods.)

  An airline electronics integrator mentioned in Apple's press
  release, Panasonic Avionics Corporation, is nearing a self-imposed
  deadline on launching a high-speed in-flight network that will
  resemble Boeing's but use much cheaper components and have more
  bandwidth. Apple partnering with Panasonic would put them at the
  forefront of these new efforts. I spoke to Panasonic a few weeks
  ago, and they (like all airlines and train operators I've spoken to)
  put on-board media servers for streaming content at the top of their
  list of features for the local network. The step to providing
  content you can purchase and download is just a small one.

<http://wifinetnews.com/archives/006989.html>

  Two other satellite-based firms are launching their offerings with
  mobile phones in 2007 - OnAir and AeroMobile - and Air France and
  Emirates are two of the five early customers of the two companies.
  Internet access will follow, although it might be expensive via
  these two firms, which will use a different satellite network than
  Boeing did and Panasonic will. In the United States, AirCell
  recently closed on a license for relatively inexpensive
  air-to-ground broadband communications, and Continental, Delta, and
  United - along with American and Northwest - will be among the early
  customers for their service.

<http://www.onair.aero/>
<http://aeromobile.aero/>
<http://www.aircell.com/>


MindManager Comes to the Mac
----------------------------
  by Matt Neuburg <matt@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/8760>

  A mind map is a diagram of connected ideas. In the past, I've
  written about various mind-mappers, including the minimalist Pyramid
  ("Pyramid Therapy," 2004-09-13) and the full-featured NovaMind
  ("Draw What's On Your Mind With NovaMind," 2006-04-17). Recently, a
  new heavy hitter has appeared on the scene: Mindjet MindManager 6.
  The "6," a surprisingly high version number for an initial release,
  is because MindManager has actually been around for a long time over
  on That Other Platform. The Mac version is in no discernible sense a
  port, however; it's a true Cocoa application from the ground up
  (indeed, the story of its cross-platform migration was recently
  featured in a puff piece on Apple's own developer site).

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/7812>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8500>
<http://www.mindjet.com/us/products/mindmanager_6_mac/?s=6>
<http://developer.apple.com/business/macmarket/mindmanager.html>


**The Good** -- MindManager is very easy to start using. As you
  brainstorm, press Return to add a topic at the current level, or
  Command-Return to add a child of the current topic; that's basically
  all there is to it. Yet at the same time, MindManager is extremely
  full-featured. A topic can also have callout topics (ancillary
  attached information), and you can make floating topics (unattached
  to anything). An image can be added to a topic, from a file or from
  MindManager's own library. A topic can have markers, which are
  little decorative icons, such as smileys or colored flags, or text
  boxes indicating things such as whom a task is assigned to. A topic
  can have a note, which is styled text. It can have a date, and can
  be assigned a priority.

  A topic can be hyperlinked to another topic, to an http or mailto
  URL, or to a file or folder on disk. A topic can also be given file
  attachments; these are files of any kind, which actually live inside
  the MindManager document and open on command. A boundary, optionally
  labelled, can be drawn around a topic and its subtopics. A
  relationship, which is basically a line or curve (also optionally
  labelled) can be drawn between topics, and you can jump from one end
  of the relationship to the other. The entire visual presentation of
  the document is very competent; topic selection and navigation works
  just as you'd expect.


**The Bad** -- Considering its maturity, I found much of MindManager's
  implementation to be surprisingly rough, flawed, or downright
  lacking. For example, the physical positioning of topics drove me
  crazy: the program insists on auto-positioning everything for you,
  with the result that sometimes I would drag a topic to the left and
  it would jump further right than before. Topic markers come in
  groups, and when you click one it changes to a different marker in
  the same group without asking or warning you. There are two ways of
  hiding topics temporarily: you can collapse a topic's subtopics, or
  you can choose from the Filter menu to hide selected topics; that's
  great, but in the latter case there's no visual indication whatever
  that hidden topics exist. A topic can be "bookmarked," but bookmarks
  have no names so this feature is sort of useless (all you can do is
  jump from one bookmarked topic to the next). A document can be
  exported as a graphic or as text, but not in any complete and
  universal format such as XML. Contextual menus often lack important
  commands applicable to the selection.

  Most frustrating of all, I found MindManager to be barely competent
  as a drawing program. The thickness and style of a topic's
  geometrical shape can't be changed, and I had great difficulty
  setting the shape's fill color: sometimes I could get it to work,
  sometimes not, and I never figured out why. Maintaining stylistic
  consistency among topics is possible, though perhaps a bit
  challenging. (The documentation says, "If you are an experienced
  MindManager user you can create your own styles," which sounds more
  threatening than helpful.) Named styles don't exist. You can copy
  and paste styling, but you get no choice of what stylistic aspects
  to copy and paste: it's all or nothing. You can select a topic or
  other entity and dictate that its styling should be used as the
  default. And MindManager uses a complicated system of templating
  where a document or part of a document can be saved into a library
  and used as a stylistic basis for future documents. It's all rather
  confusing, really.

  Finally, the documentation is a lot of disconnected Help Viewer
  pages, many consisting of vapid chatter such as how to close a
  document by clicking on the red button in the title bar; thus,
  working your way through the help is a difficult, time-consuming,
  frustrating, and mind-numbingly dull task.


**The Ugly** -- Overall, MindManager is slick and generally easy to
  use, but I'm forced to conclude that, considering the state it's in
  and the nature of the competition, at $230 it may be overpriced.
  Still, it costs nothing except the submission of your email address
  to download it (50 MB) and give it a try. MindManager requires Mac
  OS X 10.4 Tiger or greater.

<http://www.mindjet.com/us/download/>


More Bang, Less Bucks for My MacBook Pro
----------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/8761>

  After patiently waiting for Apple to give the MacBook Pro line a
  boost, I finally ordered a new Intel Core 2 Duo-based MacBook Pro to
  replace my three-year-old PowerBook G4. To my astonishment, buying a
  new MacBook Pro cost less than what I paid for my current PowerBook.
  In fact, after looking over some numbers, I realized that the
  MacBook Pro cost less than all recent models I've ordered before it.

<http://www.apple.com/macbookpro/>
<http://support.apple.com/specs/powerbook/PowerBook_G4_15-inch_FW800.html>

  The configuration I chose is the high-end 15-inch model for $2,500.
  It includes a 2.33 GHz Core 2 Duo processor, 2 GB of memory, a 120
  GB hard drive, 6x double-layer SuperDrive, and the ATI Mobility
  Radeon X1600 graphics card with 256 MB of RAM. Given that my
  PowerBook G4's 80 GB drive was almost full, I decided to spring for
  the build-to-order 160 GB hard drive in the MacBook Pro for an extra
  $100.

<http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/practicalmac/2003344228_ptmacc04.html>

  That was actually my first surprise. Conventional wisdom is that
  Apple charges a premium for such build-to-order items (like adding
  more memory), but the $100 fee for the 160 GB drive is less than
  what I could find online. If I were to buy one from a third-party
  vendor, I'd probably get a 160 GB Seagate Momentus 5400.3 notebook
  drive from NewEgg.com for about $175 with shipping. (That's not the
  cheapest offering out there, but I've relied on Seagate drives for
  years. Expect to spend as little as $156 for an inexpensive 160 GB
  drive right now, with prices no doubt dropping over time.)

<http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.asp?Item=N82E16822148184>
<http://www.pricewatch.com/notebook_drives/160gb.htm>

  The next surprise? This is the first laptop in ages where I haven't
  needed to factor in the cost of upgrading the amount of memory. My
  configuration came with 2 GB of built-in RAM, which is fine for my
  needs right now. The MacBook Pro can support up to 3 GB of memory,
  but getting there is awfully expensive: you need to replace one of
  the 1 GB DIMMs with a 2 GB DIMM, for which Apple charges $575
  through the online Apple Store. A search at dealram turns up a 2 GB
  DIMM for $290 through 18004memory.com, a company with an unfortunate
  name but from whom I've successfully bought RAM in the past.
  Although I'm sure I'll move up to 3 GB at some point in the future,
  it's not an immediate concern, and hopefully prices will have
  dropped a bit by then.

<http://dealram.com/>
<http://www.18004memory.com/>

  In terms of other build-to-order items, I chose to keep the
  non-glare version of the screen (which I'm glad is still an option,
  versus moving all of Apple's portables to the glossy screens found
  on the MacBook line), and opting not to buy the $50 USB modem. I
  don't necessarily object to the MacBook's reflective screen - I just
  prefer the non-glare version I'm accustomed to.

  I opted not to buy extra power adapters for the MacBook Pro. With
  previous PowerBooks, it's always been worth the cost to have an
  adapter at home, one at the office, and one in my bag. (Apple
  changed the physical power connector between each PowerBook model,
  so I've had to purchase new adapters each time.) In this case, I've
  decided to carry the included MagSafe adapter with me, and plug it
  into the power cord extensions from my existing adapters; the cord
  plugs into the slot on the adapter's brick that normally offers
  flip-out prongs. I retain the ease of having a power plug available
  on my desks, without shelling out $160 in extra MagSafe adapters.

  So, with tax and free shipping, my total cost was $2,844.


**Comparing Past PowerBooks** -- Going back chronologically, my
  PowerBook G4/1.25 GHz model ended up costing me $3,412 with tax and
  shipping in 2003. That included the PowerBook itself, two power
  adapters, and $200 worth of RAM. Last year I also spent another $250
  to bring the memory up to the PowerBook G4's full 2 GB capacity, but
  I'm not including that in the total.

  In 2001, I bought one of the first wave of PowerBook G4 Titanium
  models, which set me back about $3,375 for the PowerBook, two power
  adapters, and one 256 MB DIMM.

  And in 1998, I paid a whopping $4,114 for a PowerBook G3, two power
  adapters, an expansion bay Zip drive, and a copy of Virtual PC 2.0
  (I'm going through old email receipts, so I don't have the breakdown
  of each item at hand, but I'm guessing the latter two cost about
  $350, leaving $3,764 with shipping).


**AppleCare** -- I also need to factor in one more cost: the AppleCare
  extended protection plan, which adds two years of coverage to the
  one year that comes with the machine. I usually don't go for
  extended warranties when buying most devices, but in the case of the
  laptop that goes everywhere I go, and which I rely on for my
  livelihood, AppleCare is essential. I've purchased AppleCare for
  every laptop mentioned above, and without fail I've had to send the
  computers back to Apple for one reason or other.

<http://www.apple.com/support/products/proplan.html>

  Apple charges $350 for its MacBook Pro AppleCare coverage, but you
  can do better at Amazon.com (currently $293) or TidBITS sponsor
  Small Dog Electronics ($299). You'll end up paying a little for
  shipping, but it's an item that you can add to a future order to
  spread out the mailing cost.

<http://www.amazon.com/AppleCare-Protection-MacBook-PowerBook-M8853LL/dp/B00007J8SA/tidbitselectro00/>
<http://www.smalldog.com/product/41664>


**And Even More Savings** -- I want to also point out that buying the
  MacBook Pro is saving me another $600 to $900 by removing the need
  to purchase a Windows PC laptop. A few years ago I bought a
  refurbished Dell Inspiron for $850 to use during those times when I
  need to test something under Windows. That machine is starting to
  feel a bit pokey, and a couple of projects on the horizon will
  demand that I run Windows.

  Because I work in a handful of locations, it doesn't make sense to
  buy a cheap desktop PC that runs Windows, and if possible I'd rather
  not carry two notebooks with me. With the MacBook Pro, I don't have
  to, since it will run Windows under Parallels Desktop or Boot Camp.
  I get to work on whatever I need, wherever I am.

<http://www.parallels.com/en/products/desktop/>
<http://www.apple.com/macosx/bootcamp/>

  Buying a new computer is always a big investment, especially in my
  case where my laptop goes everywhere with me. But I didn't expect
  the actual cost for a significantly better machine to come in
  _below_ my budget. That frees me up to buy other accessories (or
  toys) if necessary.


Retrospect vs. Sparse Disk Image Files
--------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/8762>

  Here at TidBITS, we like to think that we face adversity so you
  don't have to. We use our Macs _all day long_, sometimes even in the
  evenings, looking for ways to shoulder your karmic burden of
  computer troubles.

  In other words, when bad stuff happens, we write about it because we
  can, and sometimes that can help someone. Such is the case with my
  specific travail this week, when I lost important data due to a
  Retrospect problem.

  Following the excellent advice in Joe Kissell's "Take Control of Mac
  OS X Backups" (which I edited), I set up a backup system using
  Retrospect that backs up my laptop's data each night to one of a set
  of rotating hard drives. Following some further excellent advice by
  TidBITS contributor Derek Miller (see "Unintelligible Garbage Is
  Your Friend," 2006-06-26), I used Apple's Disk Utility to create an
  encrypted disk image that stores financial records and other
  sensitive data. That disk image is a sparse image file, which
  occupies only enough space on disk as needed by the files added to
  it. To access my data, I double-click the file Secure
  Stuff.sparseimage and enter a password, after which the disk appears
  on my Desktop just like any other attached drive.

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/backup-macosx.html?14@@!pt=TB856>
<http://www.emcinsignia.com/products/smb/retroformac/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8578>

  Each night, Retrospect copies files that were added or changed
  during the day to the backup, including the sparse image file. Or so
  I thought.

  Retrospect's default backup settings include a useful option called
  Don't Back Up FileVault Sparseimages. FileVault, as we've discussed
  before (see "How FileVault Should Work," 2004-03-01), encrypts your
  entire home directory as a single file - an encrypted sparse image
  file, in fact. But that's FileVault's fatal flaw: Mac OS X typically
  stores music, photos, and movie files in the home directory, so the
  hidden disk image balloons to gigantic proportions. If even one
  small file in the home directory is changed, the entire disk image
  is marked as changed, and Retrospect backs up the whole thing. So,
  sensibly, Retrospect's developers added the option to ignore that
  huge file.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/7566>

  I don't use FileVault, so I didn't think that leaving the option
  enabled would matter. However, it turns out that Retrospect ignores
  _all_ sparse image files if the option is on. And when I
  repartitioned my laptop's hard disk the other night, which of course
  involved backing up and erasing the disk, I discovered that my
  Secure Stuff volume was gone.

  Fortunately, this story doesn't end as badly as you might have
  expected. I was repartitioning my new MacBook Pro, so my Secure
  Stuff.sparseimage file still existed on my PowerBook G4. And because
  the MacBook Pro had recently arrived, the data was only about a week
  old. All told, I lost only about four hours of work in Quicken,
  which isn't good, but it also isn't catastrophic.

  If you also use sparse image files for storing secure data and back
  up using Retrospect, check your backup scripts to make sure you've
  turned off Don't Back Up FileVault Sparseimages (in Retrospect's
  Automate tab, open a script and click the Options button).
  Otherwise, your most important data could end up in the bit bucket.

  [A tip of the hat to Jonathan 'Wolf' Rentzsch, who wrote about this
  problem in a bit more detail on his blog back in June. Alas, I
  didn't see his report until after I had posted this article on
  ExtraBITS.]

<http://rentzsch.com/bugs/retrospectSparseimageWarning>


Take Control News/20-Nov-06
---------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/8763>

**"Take Control of Digital TV" Updated for Holiday Season** -- We've
  released a new version of Clark Humphrey's "Take Control of Digital
  TV," updating information about HDTV programming in the United
  States, the next-generation DVD format war, and Internet-based video
  download sites. Although the book has no pre-release details about
  Apple's promised iTV video device (sorry!), we wanted to make sure
  anyone considering a digital TV purchase this holiday season had the
  latest details available. As reader Kathy Berndt told us, "I think
  everyone who walks into the media section of Best Buy, Circuit City,
  Wal-Mart, etc. should be given a copy of this book." We haven't
  figured out how to make that happen while still ensuring that Clark
  can pay his cable bill, but there's no reason you can't walk in
  armed with your own copy. This is a free update; if you own the
  previous version, just click the Check for Updates button on the
  cover of your copy to download a new version. Print-on-demand setup
  is underway and should be available soon.

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/digital-tv.html?14@@!pt=TRK-0027-TB856-TCNEWS>


Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk/20-Nov-06
------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/8764>

**Disappearing laptop display** -- The backlighting on a reader's
  iBook occasionally goes dark, prompting several suggestions from the
  TidBITS community. (10 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1008/>


**Dreamweaver previews not opening in Internet Explorer** -- A Web
  designer runs into trouble with Internet Explorer 5 for Mac, which
  leads to the question of whether it's worth it to test in an
  outdated and unsupported browser. (13 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1009/>


**Special Character question** -- What's an easy way to access special
  characters and symbols? From keyboard combinations to the Unicode
  Hex Input menu, several options are available. (9 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1010/>


**Zune Doom** -- If a product is made by Microsoft, does it
  automatically appeal to a certain segment of potential buyers?
  Readers discuss the new Zune music player. At length. (56 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1011/>


**Dates in TidBITS** -- Adam's article in last week's issue about our
  new preferred date formatting spurs discussion of the various ways
  to express year, month, and day in text. (9 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1012/>


**MacTech Creates Archive CD** -- Gauging interest in a CD compilation
  of the TidBITS archive brings up a request to include the late Easy
  View application. (2 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1013/>


**Zune and Universal Music** -- Geoff Duncan's article about Microsoft
  paying Universal Music a piece of every Zune music player sold
  prompts one reader to declare that such a deal with Apple would keep
  him from buying an iPod. (2 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1017/>


**Digital Camera RAW Support Update** -- Apple's latest updates to
  support digital cameras that use the RAW image format hasn't
  appeared in a reader's Software Update pass. How can one tell if the
  update has 'taken?' (2 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1019/>


$$

This is TidBITS, a free weekly technology newsletter providing timely
news, insightful analysis, and in-depth reviews to the Macintosh and
Internet communities. Feel free to forward to friends; better still,
please ask them to subscribe!

Non-profit, non-commercial publications and Web sites may reprint or
link to articles if full credit is given. Others please contact us. We
do not guarantee accuracy of articles. Caveat lector. Publication,
product, and company names may be registered trademarks of their
companies. TidBITS ISSN 1090-7017.

Copyright 2006 TidBITS: Reuse governed by Creative Commons license.

Contact us at:    <editors@tidbits.com>
TidBITS Web site: <http://www.tidbits.com/>
License terms:    <http://www.tidbits.com/terms/>
Full text search: <http://www.tidbits.com/search/>
Subscriptions:    <http://www.tidbits.com/about/list.html>
Account help:     <http://www.tidbits.com/about/account-help.html>

