TidBITS#879/14-May-07
=====================
  Issue link: <http://db.tidbits.com/issue/879>

  The debate surrounding Apple and Greenpeace continues, as Adam looks 
  at responses to the environmental topics raised at Apple's annual 
  shareholder meeting and finds a better measurement scale from the 
  Green Electronics Council. He also looks into why fax technology 
  isn't yet pining for the fjords and what the Danes have against 
  Apple (and the iBook G4's logic board). In the news, we look at the 
  releases of Microsoft Office 11.3.5, Apple's Pro Application Support 
  4.0, PopChar X 3.2, the promising Encyclopedia of Life, and the 
  Macworld Apple TV Superguide.

Articles
    Microsoft Releases Office 2004 11.3.5 Update
    Apple Releases Pro Application Support 4.0
    Encyclopedia of Life Launches
    PopChar X 3.2 Gets More Subtle
    DealBITS Drawing: Parallels on USB Drive from Small Dog
    Danes Publicize iBook G4 Defect
    PageSender 4.0 Shows Fax Isn't Dead
    Steve Jobs Addresses Greenpeace at Shareholders Meeting
    Take Control News/14-May-07
    Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk/14-May-07


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Microsoft Releases Office 2004 11.3.5 Update
--------------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/8980>

  Microsoft has issued an update to Office 2004 for Mac, which the 
  company says includes "fixes for vulnerabilities that an attacker 
  can use to overwrite the contents of your computer's memory with 
  malicious code." The update is 58.5 MB, largely because it also 
  includes all previous Office 2004 updates, and is available as a 
  stand-alone download or via the Microsoft AutoUpdate application.

<http://www.microsoft.com/mac/downloads.aspx?pid=download&location=/mac/download/Office2004/Office2004_1135.xml>


Apple Releases Pro Application Support 4.0
------------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/8984>

  Apple has released Pro Application Support 4.0, a non-specific 
  update that "improves general user interface reliability for Apple's 
  professional applications." Affected programs include Final Cut 
  Studio, Final Cut Pro, Motion, Soundtrack Pro, DVD Studio Pro, 
  Aperture, Final Cut Express HD, Soundtrack, Logic Pro, and Logic 
  Express. I'm guessing this release heralds the arrival of Final Cut 
  Studio 2, which is expected to ship this month (see "Apple Announces 
  Final Cut Studio 2, Final Cut Server," 2007-04-16). The update is 
  available via Software Update or as a 7.6 MB stand-alone download.

<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/proapplicationsupport40.html>
<http://www.apple.com/finalcutstudio/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8953>


Encyclopedia of Life Launches
-----------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/8987>

  A number of high profile scientific institutions joined together 
  last week to announce the Encyclopedia of Life, a global project to 
  document on a Web site every one of the 1.8 million named species of 
  animals, plants, and other organisms. In essence, the Encyclopedia 
  of Life will run along some of the same lines as the Wikipedia, 
  although contributions may be limited to scientists with expertise 
  in the subject, a restriction that may both slow the growth of the 
  project and avoid some of the errors and argumentativeness that 
  exist in Wikipedia. But from the standpoint of those who need 
  information about living organisms, the Encyclopedia of Life's 
  demonstration pages look extremely promising, bringing together 
  written information, photos, video, audio, maps, and more, and 
  presenting it all in an interface that can be scaled to the reader's 
  level of experience. There isn't any live information yet, but it's 
  worth viewing the demo pages, reading the FAQs, and watching the 
  video on the main page.

<http://www.eol.org/>
<http://www.eol.org/demonstration.html>
<http://www.eol.org/faqs.html>


PopChar X 3.2 Gets More Subtle
------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/8981>

  Along with fixing a variety of bugs, Ergonis Software's recently 
  released PopChar X 3.2 font utility adds an option to hide the 
  application's corner "P" unless the cursor is nearby, something 
  regular users might appreciate, whereas less frequent users may 
  prefer the constant reminder of PopChar's presence. (See "PopChar X 
  3.0 Improves Usability," 2006-07-03, for a more detailed 
  description.) Other improvements include an option to highlight 
  recently selected characters for easier re-use, faster display 
  rendering, and an architectural change to make PopChar X 
  resolution-independent for future Mac OS X releases. PopChar X 3.2 
  is free for customers who purchased within the last two years; new 
  copies cost 30 euros and upgrades are 15 euros. The program requires 
  Mac OS X 10.3.9 or newer, and is a 1.7 MB download.

<http://www.ergonis.com/products/popcharx/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8582>


DealBITS Drawing: Parallels on USB Drive from Small Dog
-------------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/8988>

  A year ago, I might have needed to explain this week's DealBITS 
  drawing in more detail. But a year ago, virtualization - the 
  capability to run Windows and other PC operating systems on an 
  Intel-based Mac - was just getting started, and Parallels Desktop 
  hadn't yet become the must-have application for anyone who needs to 
  use Windows applications on a Mac. 

  This week's drawing is a bit unusual, since the prize - from Small 
  Dog Electronics - is a copy of Parallels Desktop on a 512 MB 
  Kingston USB drive, worth $69.99. Entrants who aren't among our 
  lucky winners will receive a discount on it from Small Dog, so be 
  sure to enter at the drawing page. All information gathered is 
  covered by our comprehensive privacy policy. Be careful with your 
  spam filters and challenge-response systems, since you must be able 
  to receive email from my address to learn if you've won. Remember 
  too, that if someone you refer to this drawing wins, you'll receive 
  the same prize as a reward for spreading the word.

<http://www.smalldog.com/product/42498>
<http://www.tidbits.com/dealbits/smalldog1/>
<http://www.tidbits.com/about/privacy.html>


Danes Publicize iBook G4 Defect
-------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/8983>

  The Consumer Complaints Board of the National Consumer Agency in 
  Denmark is claiming to have found evidence of a manufacturing flaw 
  in Apple's iBook G4 - defective solder joints that fail after a year 
  or more of use. Because the solder joints in question are for a 
  component that controls power flow, iBook G4s afflicted with this 
  problem reportedly shut off or display a blank screen. The most 
  common workaround for the problem is to apply additional pressure to 
  the area to the left of the trackpad with a clamp or internal shims.

<http://www.forbrug.dk/presse/nyheder/pressekit/ibookg4/ibook-g4-english/>
<http://www.forbrug.dk/presse/nyheder/pressekit/ibookg4/pressefoto/>
<http://www.coreyarnold.org/ibook/>

  The iBook G4 was introduced in October 2003 and discontinued in May 
  2006, when it was replaced with the MacBook. Ironically, the PowerPC 
  G3-based iBook models that the iBook G4 itself replaced also had 
  troubles with their logic boards, prompting Apple to issue a repair 
  program for certain iBook models back in January 2004 (see "Apple 
  Announces Replacements for Some iBook Logic Boards," 2004-02-02 and 
  our followup in "iBook Repair Program Extended," 2004-06-21). But 
  the discussions of the problems suffered by the older models sound 
  awfully similar to the problems encountered by iBook G4 owners. The 
  chatter on the Applefritter site follows much the same path, 
  identifying a weak solder joint and sharing the clamp and shim 
  workarounds. For even more detail, you can read the lab report 
  commissioned by the Danish board.

<http://www.apple.com/support/ibook/faq/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/7527>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/7711>
<http://discussions.apple.com/thread.jspa?messageID=1369476>
<http://discussions.apple.com/thread.jspa?messageID=3249364>
<http://www.applefritter.com/node/10193>
<http://www.forbrug.dk/presse/nyheder/pressekit/ibookg4/lab-report/>

  Apple has settled a number of cases in Denmark after the release of 
  the report. The question, of course, is if Apple will create another 
  repair program to address this problem worldwide, something the more 
  than 2,000 signatories to an online petition have joined Denmark's 
  Consumer Complaints Board in asking for. Apple didn't respond to our 
  request for comment.

<http://www.petitiononline.com/ibookg4/petition.html>


PageSender 4.0 Shows Fax Isn't Dead
-----------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/8982>

  Fax is dead, right? After all, you don't see ultra-hip Web 2.0 sites 
  trumpeting their fax services, and the Internet in general has 
  surely supplanted the lowly fax machine, hasn't it? And if you do 
  need to fax a document, Mac OS X has fax capabilities built in.

  Not so fast. If fax were dead, surely SmileOnMyMac wouldn't waste 
  their time updating their five-year-old fax program PageSender, 
  which they just did. Along with its existing features for sending 
  and receiving faxes, PageSender 4.0 features spam fax filtering, PDF 
  cover pages, direct lookup of numbers from Address Book, font and 
  style control over the cover page text, and an improved preview 
  capability. It's easy to use from the Print dialog, scriptable, and 
  provides oodles of features lacking from Mac OS X 10.4's fax 
  function. PageSender 4.0 requires Mac OS X 10.4 or later. It's $40, 
  and registered users who purchased before 2007 can upgrade for $20; 
  it's free for anyone who bought a copy this year. 

<http://www.smileonmymac.com/pagesender/>
<http://www.smileonmymac.com/pagesender/features.html>
<http://www.smileonmymac.com/pagesender/compare.html>

  (Amusingly, SmileOnMyMac made a special birthday cake for PageSender 
  and then used it to bribe a bunch of kids into singing Happy 
  Birthday to the program. Speaking as a parent, listening to a mother 
  try to get one toddler to use a fork instead of his hands gives the 
  video the ultimate aura of authenticity. And while PageSender may be 
  5 years old, fax technology itself dates back to 1843.)

<http://smileonmymac.net/blog/2007/04/23/pagesender-is-5-years-old/>
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fax#History>

  I try to use faxes as little as possible, and when I do, I send via 
  our stand-alone fax machine and I receive via MaxEmail (see 
  "Replacing eFax with MaxEmail," 2005-04-04). Curious as to who could 
  really be using PageSender, I asked Jean MacDonald at SmileOnMyMac 
  about it.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8049>

  She forwarded me the results of a survey they did of 500 random 
  PageSender users. The survey had a 10 percent response rate, and of 
  the responses, half said they definitely saw themselves using faxes 
  in 5 years, a quarter said "probably/maybe/less and less" and a 
  quarter said "no/hope not." The other two questions were: "What do 
  you fax?" and "Why can't it be emailed?"

  For the most part, survey respondents agreed with John Baughman of 
  BY'te DESIGN Hawaii, who said that he faxes documents, especially 
  those that need signatures, to groups like governmental agencies, 
  banks, or insurance companies. Others relied on the fax for sending 
  medical records, lab results, construction bid proposals, sketches 
  and art proofs, purchase orders, order confirmations, and more. 

  More surprising though, was that nearly every respondent talked 
  about how the reason they used faxes was because recipients required 
  faxes. As Walter Kicinski said, "Some people want documents faxed - 
  mostly business applications that may involve forms. We use fax 
  because that is what they want." 

  Reasons for requiring faxes ranged from organizations that have 
  large centralized fax reception capabilities, easier compliance with 
  the medical HIPAA regulations, lack of email in construction company 
  offices, and some level of added security by eliminating the ISP 
  middlemen. Only a few people said that fax was easier to deal with 
  than email, and in most of those cases, the problem revolved around 
  dealing with file formats, attachment sizes for large graphics, or 
  having to print the received attachment just so it could be signed 
  and faxed back.

<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HIPAA>

  In the end, although fax may not be sexy, it's functional. As much 
  as it may be hard for those of us who have spent most of our 
  professional lives in the era of email to realize, large portions of 
  the business world still haven't adopted email for certain types of 
  critical communications. For the form that needs a signature right 
  away, just fax it. 

  But hey, where possible, let's try to create a technological 
  environment (with better file formats, easy and secure digital 
  signatures, and online forms) that enables these people to wean 
  themselves from 19th century technology, OK? Shoveling coal into the 
  fax machine is getting old.


Steve Jobs Addresses Greenpeace at Shareholders Meeting
-------------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/8986>

  At Apple's annual shareholders' meeting on 10-May-07, the company's 
  environmental efforts played a large role, though one that was 
  undoubtedly reduced in contentiousness by Steve Jobs's open letter, 
  "A Greener Apple," which I analyzed in "Steve Jobs Talks Green" 
  (2007-05-07). In that letter, Jobs laid out what Apple is doing 
  today and plans to do in the future to reduce the use of toxic 
  chemicals in manufacturing Macs and iPods, and to increase the level 
  of recycling of old equipment.

<http://www.apple.com/hotnews/agreenerapple/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8974>


**Shareholder Proposals** -- In particular, the letter caused two 
  proposals regarding Apple's manufacturing and recycling efforts to 
  be withdrawn by their presenters, Trillium Asset Management and the 
  As You Sow Foundation, before being voted upon. The San Francisco 
  Chronicle wrote, "Nevertheless, the groups urged Apple to assume a 
  leadership role among other tech companies in recycling old products 
  and removing toxic chemicals from new products." A different take on 
  the same words came from Roughly Drafted, which wrote, "Both groups 
  praised Apple's new public commitments, saying that their immediate 
  concerns had been addressed satisfactorily, and that they hoped to 
  continue progress on future goals with the company." Notice how the 
  first quote implies the groups weren't entirely happy, whereas the 
  second presents a more positive retelling?

<http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2007/05/11/APPLE.TMP>
<http://roughlydrafted.com/RD/RDM.Tech.Q2.07/60A1C88F-B504-4CD7-ACC4-4104C9887A5A.html>


**Apple vs. Greenpeace** -- Then there was the interaction with 
  Greenpeace representatives. Roughly Drafted painted an evocative 
  picture:

  "Those comments didn't stop Greenpeace representatives from using 
  the meeting as an opportunity to advertise the group's anti-Apple 
  campaign. Among the activists sent by Greenpeace was Iza Kruszewska, 
  one of the key architects of the corporation's Apple-oriented 
  fundraising program. Kruszewska was wearing a Greenpeace t-shirt 
  styled after the former iPod ads, presenting Apple's products as 
  dangerously toxic and encouraging user donations to Greenpeace to 
  somehow solve that issue. After attempting to take credit for 
  Apple's announcements, Kruszewska questioned Jobs about Apple's 
  potential to do more to advance Greenpeace's political goals in 
  announcing principles, but Jobs insisted that such 'flowery' 
  announcements were not really doing anything for the environment."

  In contrast, Macworld wrote, "Two representatives from Greenpeace 
  were present at the meeting and congratulated Jobs and Apple for the 
  company's commitment to the environment." Again, depending on which 
  you read, you come away with a rather different impression.

<http://www.macworld.com/news/2007/05/10/shareholder/>

  However, both described Jobs's response to Greenpeace in similar 
  terms - Macworld's "Jobs had strong words" and Roughly Drafted's 
  "Jobs also blasted." And here's where it gets interesting. Macworld 
  quoted Jobs as saying:

  "I think your organization particularly depends too much on 
  principle and not enough on fact. You guys rate people based on what 
  people say their plans are in the distant future, not what they are 
  doing today. I think you put way too much weight on these glorified 
  principles and way too little weight on science and engineering. It 
  would be very helpful if your organization hired a few more 
  engineers and actually entered into dialog with companies to find 
  out what they are really doing and not just listen to all the 
  flowery language when in reality most of them aren't doing 
  anything."

  In other words, Jobs agrees with my criticism of Greenpeace's 
  scorecard in last week's article, where I complained that the scores 
  aren't based on quantitative measurement, but on public statements. 
  Needless to say, Jobs didn't follow the thought to its logical 
  conclusion, which is that those who are concerned about Apple's 
  environmental efforts have nothing more to go on than Apple's public 
  statements. Macworld reported that Jobs then offered to help 
  Greenpeace and other environmental groups improve their measuring 
  technology such that future scorecards could be based on science, 
  not statements. That's very much along the lines of my call for 
  quantitative rankings, though I'd like to see something that could 
  be independently verified as well.

  I also remain struck by the differing language used by the various 
  publications and how that mirrors the problem as a whole - when all 
  we have to go on are words, it's hard to know where on the continuum 
  reality lies.


**Enter EPEAT** -- After last week's article, reader Jerry Zernicke 
  pointed me to an Ars Technica article mentioning another system to 
  help purchasers evaluate the environmental impact of particular 
  computer models. EPEAT, the Electronic Product Environmental 
  Assessment Tool, is a project of the Green Electronics Council, 
  itself part of the International Sustainable Development Foundation. 
  Funding for the three-year development and implementation of EPEAT, 
  which launched in July 2006, came from the U.S. Environmental 
  Protection Agency. According to Scot Case of the Green Electronics 
  Council, the development process included environmental non-profit 
  groups, academics, government officials, professional IT purchasers, 
  manufacturers, computer recyclers, and others.

<http://arstechnica.com/journals/apple.ars/2007/1/6/6507>
<http://www.epeat.net/>
<http://www.greenelectronicscouncil.org/>
<http://www.isdf.org/>

  Although EPEAT seems both more comprehensive and more specific than 
  Greenpeace's Green Electronics Guide, it too relies a good deal on 
  public statements from the companies whose products are being 
  evaluated. Where I think it stands out is in its product 
  verification policy, whereby EPEAT periodically selects particular 
  products to verify that they meet the standards as claimed by their 
  manufacturers. This verification process can include just requesting 
  more information from the manufacturer, or it might involve detailed 
  laboratory analysis or even destructive disassembly.

<http://www.greenpeace.org/international/campaigns/toxics/electronics/how-the-companies-line-up>
<http://www.epeat.net/ProductVerification.aspx>

  On the EPEAT scale, there are 23 required criteria and 28 optional 
  criteria in 8 categories. To qualify for bronze status, a product 
  must meet all the required criteria. Silver status requires all the 
  required criteria plus at least 50 percent of the optional criteria. 
  And gold status ups that percentage of optional criteria met to 75 
  percent.

  430 systems earned the EPEAT's bronze status, and of those, 374 went 
  on to earn silver, including all of Apple's products. No systems 
  qualify for gold status. In the Integrated Systems category, only 
  three systems merited silver status at all, the 17-inch, 20-inch, 
  and 24-inch iMacs, each with 16 of 28 points. In the Notebooks 
  category, Apple's 15-inch and 17-inch MacBook Pros were also at the 
  top of the list, with 19 of 28 optional points (no mention was made 
  of the MacBook). For Desktops, the Mac Pro garnered 17 points, with 
  only one manufacturer's PC picking up 18 points. Similarly, in the 
  Monitors category, Apple's 20-inch, 23-inch, and 30-inch Cinema 
  Displays were only 1 point away from the top, with 16 points each (a 
  number of NEC monitors received 17 points). 

  On EPEAT's ratings, then, Apple is doing well in comparison to other 
  manufacturers, though there's still plenty of room to improve. The 
  iMacs may have been alone in the silver, but 16 of 28 points is only 
  57 percent, just enough to squeak in. In comparison, the Gateway 
  Profile computers also in the Integrated Systems category didn't 
  pick up any optional points at all.


**Other Coverage** -- My article last week generated a bit more 
  coverage than normal, with the Guardian Unlimited quoting a bit in a 
  piece arguing that people don't care much about how environmentally 
  friendly their computer is. To bolster that point, the article 
  pointed out that Jobs's "Thoughts on Music" open letter generated 
  postings on about 6,200 blogs according to Technorati and 3,300 
  according to Google Blog Search. In comparison, "A Greener Apple" 
  generated posts on only 860 blogs tracked by Technorati or 450 
  according to Google Blog Search. (My double-checking of those 
  numbers showed that they had increased only slightly since.) 

<http://technology.guardian.co.uk/weekly/story/0,,2075531,00.html>
<http://www.apple.com/hotnews/thoughtsonmusic/>

  It's an interesting approach, since it would imply that people feel 
  more strongly about DRM than corporate environmental policies. That 
  may be because DRM is a purely artificial construct that's 
  functionally unnecessary and could be removed in short order 
  throughout the industry if there were sufficient desire, whereas 
  most people recognize that elimination of toxic chemicals and 
  complete recycling of old hardware is a worthy goal, but one that 
  certainly can't be reached quickly through changing the minds of a 
  few executives.

  I also had an enjoyable conversation with Shawn King of Your Mac 
  Life on the 09-May-07 show. My 20-minute segment starts about 72 
  minutes in (mostly easily found by opening the URL in QuickTime 
  Player), after Shawn finishes up talking with Greg Scown of 
  SmileOnMyMac about PageSender - amusingly, they end up discussing 
  several points from my article "PageSender 4.0 Shows Fax Isn't 
  Dead," (2007-05-09) at about 65 minutes. We talked about the Jobs 
  letter, and Shawn, as always, asked great questions and directed the 
  conversation in amusing and insightful ways.

<http://www.yourmaclifeshow.com/>
<http://www.yourmaclifeshow.com/QT/YML070509s.mov>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8982>

  In the end, whether Greenpeace or the Apple shareholders were 
  responsible in any way for Steve Jobs's letter, or if Apple merely 
  decided that now was the time to make environmental responsibility 
  part of the Apple brand, is immaterial. We all need to be able to 
  look past the specifics of the present and focus on the overall goal 
  of making the environmental impact of our electronics as minimal as 
  possible. If we consumers and the industry as a whole don't start 
  paying to maintain a clean environment now, we'll all pay later. 

  Let's be clear. As with every other environmental push, this isn't 
  about saving the Earth. The planet couldn't care less. Instead, it's 
  about maintaining an environment that's conducive for us, one that 
  we as a species not only can tolerate but actively want to live in. 
  Many people see environmentalism as some sort of altruistic desire 
  to improve quality of life in ways few people would notice, often 
  for unknown people in other parts of the world. But it's more than 
  that - with a longer-term view, environmentalism is both 
  appropriately selfish and necessary for the survival of the human 
  species.


Take Control News/14-May-07
---------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/8985>

**Learn All About Your Apple TV** -- Whether you're an early adopter 
  of the Apple TV or still considering adding one to your home 
  entertainment system, we have a new ebook for you. Our friends at 
  Macworld (many of whom also write for Take Control) have been 
  working with the Apple TV since the day it was released, and they've 
  brought together everything they've learned about it in the 
  "Macworld Apple TV Superguide," the latest in Macworld's series of 
  electronic books.

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/mw-apple-tv.html?14@@!pt=TRK-0052-TB879-TCNEWS>

  Inside, you'll find help setting up the Apple TV, navigating its 
  interface, and managing your media - video, music, and photos - for 
  easy access on the Apple TV. Should anything go wrong, an extensive 
  troubleshooting section covers common problems and solutions. After 
  a while, you may find the Apple TV's 40 GB hard disk limiting, at 
  which point you can refer to the ebook's step-by-step, illustrated 
  instructions for replacing the disk with a larger one. 

  There's even a very short section on choosing an HDTV, if you don't 
  already have one, but honestly, if you're in the market for such a 
  TV, read Clark Humphrey's "Take Control of Digital TV" for a much 
  more in-depth discussion of what all the jargon means and how to 
  choose the best set for your needs. As incentive, we're offering $5 
  off if you buy both ebooks together.

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/digital-tv.html?14@@!pt=TRK-0052-TB879-TCNEWS>


Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk/14-May-07
------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/8990>

**Skype on MacBook Pro** -- A reader encounters poor performance using 
  Skype's Voice-over-IP service, but is the problem in his network 
  connection or audio input source? (11 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1281/>


**Timeslips in Parallels** -- Are others encountering a problem 
  running the program Timeslips in virtualization? (1 message) 

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1282/>


**ICeCoffEE functionality everywhere** -- Recent discussion of old 
  Apple Data Detectors technology leads to an awareness of how it's 
  hard to find a solution as easy as Command-clicking a URL to open it 
  in a Web page. (4 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1283/>


**MacBook drive failure?** A hard drive is acting up - time to break 
  out DiskWarrior? Yes, but using an old version could prove 
  disastrous. (8 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1284/>


**Encrypted disk image won't close** -- Readers offer solutions for a 
  disk image that wants to stick around. (7 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1285/>


**Wired or wireless network for a graphics lab?** A computer lab is 
  moving to a new location, which is an excellent time to reevaluate 
  infrastructure. For graphics-focused machines, is it worth stringing 
  cable, or can a wireless network handle the data throughput needs? 
  (5 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1286/>


**Treo 755 Review** -- The latest Palm Treo is found to be 
  underwhelming; is a mystery device on the horizon, or will the 
  iPhone knock Palm out of its own market? (2 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1287/>


**Losing Address Book Data** -- What's a good solution for 
  automatically backing up Address Book, given that a reader has 
  watched its database implode on several occasions? (2 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1288/>


**Apple TV** -- The Apple TV won't stream Internet radio from a 
  computer or over the Internet, which dampens a reader's enthusiasm 
  for the device. (1 message)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1290/>


**Remembering passwords** -- Is it a good idea to carry your passwords 
  written in your wallet? Perhaps, but with a little trickery. (2 
  messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1291/>


$$

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