TidBITS#881/28-May-07
=====================
  Issue link: <http://db.tidbits.com/issue/881>

  Our gaze wanders far and wide this week, with Jeff Carlson offering 
  a review of Ovolab's Geophoto, a tool for giving your photos 
  location tags and then browsing through them via a cartographic 
  interface. Jeff also alerts us to the latest security update from 
  Apple, passes on tips for making multiple-page documents in Adobe 
  Illustrator, and points to a useful shopping list for HD video 
  editing gear. Not to be outdone in the tip department, Adam collects 
  oodles of scroll wheel-related tips, notes that MacLink Plus 16 can 
  read Word and Excel 2007 for Windows documents, and expresses both 
  amusement and alarm about the latest news from the copyright front. 

Articles
    Security Update 2007-005 Released
    Copyright Fun and Games
    MacLinkPlus Deluxe Converts Word/Excel 2007 Documents
    DealBITS Winners: SmileOnMyMac's PageSender
    Making Pages in Adobe Illustrator
    Scroll Wheel Tips
    A Personal Shopper for HD Video Editing Gear
    Geophoto Puts Your Photos on the Map
    Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk/28-May-07
    Take Control News/28-May-07


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Security Update 2007-005 Released
---------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9005>

  Apple has released its fifth Mac OS X security update of 2007 to 
  patch a number of potential vulnerabilities. Security Update 
  2007-005 makes changes to CoreGraphics, iChat, VPN, BIND, crontabs, 
  PPP, and other components, in most cases correcting problems that 
  require either local user access or access to the Mac via a local 
  network. However, several fixes are more important. An update to 
  BIND prevents a possible remote denial of service attack (but 
  because it reportedly overwrites the BIND launchd plist file, it may 
  both turn BIND off and cause other changes to be lost, a potential 
  problem for Mac OS X Server machines), a new version of fetchmail 
  prevents possible disclosure of passwords, and a fix for 
  CoreGraphics in Mac OS X 10.4 provides additional verification of 
  PDF files to avoid possible crashes when opening maliciously crafted 
  PDFs. The update is available via Software Update or for download in 
  four varieties: for Mac OS X 10.4.9 as Universal (29.2 MB) and 
  PowerPC (15.7 MB) installers; and for Mac OS X 10.3.9 Client (42.5 
  MB) and Server (56 MB) systems.

<http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=305530>
<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/securityupdate2007005universal.html>
<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/securityupdate2007005ppc.html>
<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/securityupdate20070051039client.html>
<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/securityupdate20070051039server.html>


Copyright Fun and Games
-----------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9006>

  In the fun category, Professor Eric Faden of Bucknell University has 
  created a video review of copyright principles. You're probably 
  thinking, "How could anyone make a video about a legal concept even 
  mildly entertaining?" But Faden's truly inspired video works on many 
  levels because it consists entirely of extremely short clips (often 
  no more than one word) from a wide variety of animated Disney 
  movies. It's thanks in large part to Disney that copyright - which 
  was designed to encourage creativity by giving the creator control 
  over copying for a limited time - now lasts for the life of the 
  creator plus 75 years, or, for a work of corporate authorship, 95 
  years. But thanks to the short length of the clips, its non-profit 
  educational nature, and the fact that it would in no way affect the 
  potential market for the copyrighted works, Faden's video 
  undoubtedly falls under fair use.

<http://cyberlaw.stanford.edu/documentary-film-program/film/a-fair-y-use-tale>
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sonny_Bono_Copyright_Term_Extension_Act>
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fair_use>

  Moving from fun to games, the latest idiocy to emanate from the U.S. 
  Department of Justice is a legislative proposal (in other words, 
  something the DoJ would like Congress to turn into law) that would 
  criminalize copyright infringement. (For a selection of entirely 
  reasonable, real-world copyright infringements that could be 
  criminalized by this proposal, see my article, "J.D. Lasica's 
  Darknet: People in the Copyright Wars," 2006-06-05.) Under this 
  proposal, the RIAA wouldn't have to settle for extracting money from 
  citizens who may have infringed copyright; instead, they could just 
  get the federal government to take away the miscreants' computers 
  and throw them in prison. That's right - the DoJ wants people who 
  even attempt to infringe copyright to be liable for property 
  forfeiture and prison time, just like drug dealers.

<http://politechbot.com/docs/doj.intellectual.property.protection.act.2007.051407.pdf>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8552>

  And to make sure that none of these attempted copyright 
  infringements go undetected, the DoJ wants to allow law enforcement 
  to wiretap personal communications in copyright infringement 
  investigations. The sheer audacity of this proposal is astonishing - 
  it's hard to do more than sputter, "But but but!" as you read it. 
  But what you can do is write to your elected representatives to urge 
  them to oppose this proposal if it is introduced; the Electronic 
  Frontier Foundation has a tool that makes it easy. 

<http://action.eff.org/site/Advocacy?id=299>


MacLinkPlus Deluxe Converts Word/Excel 2007 Documents
-----------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9007>

  Thanks to Jim Dewitt, who alerted me that DataViz's venerable 
  MacLinkPlus Deluxe, now at version 16, also includes read-only 
  support for the file formats used by Word 2007 and Excel 2007 under 
  Windows. So, if Microsoft's free beta converter doesn't work for you 
  (see "Microsoft Office Open XML File Format Converter in Beta," 
  2007-05-21), and you want an alternative to Panergy's docXConverter, 
  check out MacLinkPlus Deluxe. DataViz deserves kudos for sticking 
  with the conversion game for so long and with such a large list of 
  file formats. My experience is that conversions are seldom perfect, 
  but any automatic tool that brings you closer to the desired result 
  is a good thing.

<http://www.dataviz.com/products/maclinkplus/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8995>
<http://www.panergy-software.com/products/docxconverter/features.html>


DealBITS Winners: SmileOnMyMac's PageSender
-------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/8999>

  Congratulations to Paul Michaelis of pmds-search.com, Gerry Swislow  
  of certif.com, and Scott Gay of mcleodusa.net, whose entries were 
  chosen randomly in last week's DealBITS drawing and who received a 
  copy of SmileOnMyMac's PageSender, worth $40. Thanks to the 412 
  people who entered this DealBITS drawing (and who received a 
  discount on PageSender), and we hope you'll continue to participate 
  in the future!

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8876>
<http://www.smileonmymac.com/pagesender/>


Making Pages in Adobe Illustrator
---------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9008>

  When writing about the end of FreeHand last week (see "Farewell 
  FreeHand," 2007-05-21), I mentioned one of the features that Adobe 
  Illustrator still lacks, the capability to create multiple pages 
  within a document.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8997>

  A few readers quickly pointed out that multiple pages are possible, 
  though not as easy to implement as in FreeHand. Charles A. Reeves, 
  Jr. wrote:

  "I'll admit to never using FreeHand, so I don't know how it handles 
  multiple pages, but it is possible to do multi-page documents in 
  Illustrator. I do it all the time, and in fact have several booklets 
  I publish which I print directly from Illustrator. Just go to 
  Document Setup and create an artboard that is big enough so that all 
  the pages will fit on it and is a multiple of the document page 
  size, and then click the button next to Tile Full Pages. A simple 
  example would be a two page document. Make the artboard 11 inches 
  high by 17 inches wide. When you go back to the document window you 
  will have two side-by-side pages with little non-printing numbers 
  "1" and "2" in the lower left corners. You may have to pull up Page 
  Setup and select the printer and letter size, and then click on the 
  Page Tool to get the pages oriented correctly."

  John M. Stafford pointed out a feature that I was unaware of (since 
  I need to use Illustrator only occasionally):

  "Since version 10, Illustrator automatically includes a PDF in each 
  document. So in the case of your two-sided postcard, use Acrobat Pro 
  and combine the two sides. Now open the resulting document in 
  Illustrator, and on open it will present a dialog asking which page 
  you wish to edit."

  Lastly, long-time reader Brendon Cheves of Hot Door, Inc. pointed me 
  to his company's MultiPage plug-in ($100) for Illustrator, which 
  looks like what I'm accustomed to in FreeHand.

<http://www.hotdoor.com/multipage/index.php>

  So, the next time a client needs me to massage an Illustrator file, 
  I'll have a better idea of how to think like Illustrator, not 
  FreeHand. Thanks for the tips!


Scroll Wheel Tips
-----------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9003>

  Thanks to our buddy Bill Rabel in Seattle for the impetus to write 
  this article. After Mark Anbinder wrote in "Call Me 'Two Finger' 
  Mark" (2007-05-21) about how he was surprised to find himself 
  addicted to two-finger scrolling on his MacBook (which is equivalent 
  to using a scroll wheel or Mighty Mouse scroll ball), Bill went 
  spelunking and found a trick I hadn't previously known, causing me 
  to look for other scroll wheel tips. (And if you're interested in 
  the history of the scroll wheel, check out "The Evolution of 
  Scrolling: Reinventing the Wheel," 2004-12-13.)

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8991>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/7925>


**Scroll Horizontally** -- Many applications, such as word processors, 
  are oriented vertically, so scrolling up and down with the scroll 
  wheel is intuitive. But what about applications like Microsoft Excel 
  and ProVUE Development's Panorama database, which often require 
  scrolling horizontally? Just hold down the Shift key and your scroll 
  wheel switches to controlling the horizontal scroll bar instead of 
  the vertical scroll bar. Applications must support this Mac OS X 
  feature explicitly, so it may not be universal to all applications 
  with a horizontal scroll bar.


**Zoom In, Zoom Out** -- Hold down the Control key while you scroll 
  with the scroll wheel and Mac OS X 10.4.8 or later will zoom the 
  screen smoothly. Mac OS X has long provided screen zooming (see the 
  Universal Access preference pane), but it required keyboard 
  shortcuts that were awkward and jerky. Screen zooming isn't just for 
  those who have trouble reading too-small text or for presenters who 
  want to focus on a particular part of the screen, though; it's also 
  great for zooming tiny Internet videos up to full-screen size. Of 
  course, they pixelate more at larger sizes, but that's fine if 
  you're sitting further back from the screen anyway. The only 
  downside is that it's hard to get the mouse pointer out of the 
  picture when you're zoomed in on a video; normally you want the 
  pointer to stay in the zoomed screen.

  A further tip: if you take a selection screenshot with 
  Command-Shift-4 or Snapz Pro X while zoomed in, the screenshot 
  reflects your zoom level properly (trying to take a screenshot of an 
  entire window while zoomed doesn't work, though).


**Scroll to Switch Applications** -- I'm not sure if this is any 
  easier or not, but if you press Command-Tab, let up on the Tab key, 
  and then use your scroll wheel, Mac OS X will scroll the selection 
  in the application switcher. Of course, you can also just keep 
  pressing Tab, which seems easier, or hover the mouse pointer over an 
  application's icon to select it.


**Per-Frame Advance in QuickTime Player and iMovie HD 6** -- Want to 
  see if animators hid secret messages in individual frames of a film? 
  If you can open it in QuickTime Player, using the scroll wheel 
  pauses playback and then either advances or rewinds a frame at a 
  time. It's probably a little easier to do with a real scroll wheel 
  that has little detents as you scroll. Alas, this trick doesn't work 
  in iTunes, DVD Player, or VLC, though you can play .m4v files from 
  the iTunes Store in QuickTime Player.

  The same trick works in iMovie HD 6, too, but with a caveat. The 
  scrolling seems to work only as a per-frame preview; if you press 
  the left or right arrow keys, which also rewind or advance per 
  frame, the video jumps back to the point where you started 
  scrolling.


**Tab History Navigation in Mozilla-based Browsers** -- Here's the tip 
  Bill found. If you use Firefox or Camino with tabbed browsing, hold 
  down the Option key and turn the scroll wheel to scroll backward and 
  forward in the tab's history. These browsers navigate back or 
  forward one page for every scroll detent. It's a fast way to move 
  back through a lot of pages in a tab, though it's easy to overshoot 
  your target. Oddly, Netscape and Mozilla use Shift as the modifier 
  key to navigate through a tab's history, and Safari and OmniWeb 
  don't have the feature at all.


**Change Font Size in Firefox and Camino** -- It's all too common to 
  run across a Web page with text that's too small to read (Geoff 
  Duncan explained this in "Why Windows Web Pages Have Tiny Text," 
  1999-02-15). All Web browsers make it easy to expand or shrink text, 
  usually with Command-+ and Command--, but you can also use the 
  scroll wheel to do this in Firefox and Camino. Just hold down 
  Command-Control and scroll to adjust text size.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/5284>


**Slow Down Text Scrolling in Firefox** -- Normally, if you're 
  scrolling through a long Web page, the speed accelerates as you turn 
  the wheel. That's good, since it means you can get to the bottom of 
  a page quickly if you want. But at times you might want a slower 
  scrolling speed so you don't accidentally scroll past where you're 
  reading. Hold down the Command key while scrolling in Firefox and 
  scrolling will slow to what seems to be an almost fixed rate. It 
  might be useful if you prefer to keep your eyes in one spot on the 
  page and scroll the text past that spot.


**Zoom In and Out in Word and Excel** -- Speaking of small text... In 
  Microsoft Word and Excel, if you find yourself squinting to read 
  text at the default font size, you can zoom in and out with the 
  scroll wheel. In Word, hold down Command-Control and scroll to 
  change the zoom level by 10 percent increments per detent. In Excel, 
  hold down Control-Option to zoom in and out by 15 percent 
  increments. If you're using two-finger scrolling on a trackpad, 
  zooming in and out in this fashion may be hard to control.


**Control Time with iCal** -- In iCal's Day and Week view, you 
  normally see the hours from 8 AM to 6 PM, or whatever you've set in 
  iCal's General preference pane. But by holding down Option and 
  rolling your scroll wheel, you can increase or decrease the number 
  of hours that appear in Day or Week views without opening the 
  preferences window. Note that the changes are persistent, but they 
  aren't reflected in the preferences window.


**Scroll Through the Years in iPhoto** -- In iPhoto 6's Calendar pane, 
  Apple gave us funny little up and down arrows on either side of the 
  pane's title for scrolling through the years. An easier way to 
  scroll forward and backward in time in that pane is to use the 
  scroll wheel - just make sure the mouse pointer is over that portion 
  of the screen first.

  There is one notable place where the scroll wheel doesn't match up 
  to dragging the scroller in the scroll bar. In iPhoto 6, when you 
  scroll by dragging the scroller, iPhoto pops up a translucent 
  display containing the name and date of the current film roll, 
  updating it smoothly as you drag. Alas, that doesn't work if you 
  scroll with a scroll wheel, so here's hoping that iPhoto 7 rectifies 
  that situation.


A Personal Shopper for HD Video Editing Gear
--------------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9009>

  When friends and family need to buy a new computer or accessories, 
  they often turn to me for advice. I've learned over the years that 
  they're usually not looking for one of my "history of computing" 
  answers that explains not only how much RAM the computer should 
  have, but how RAM works and why more is better - they just want to 
  know how much to get, and where to get it inexpensively. So, I'll 
  spend a few minutes online and work up a couple of options.

  However, my experience extends only so far, and although I've 
  written several editions of a book on video editing ("iMovie HD 6 & 
  iDVD 6 for Mac OS X: Visual QuickStart Guide"), I've not had to deal 
  in the higher realm of editing uncompressed high-definition video.

<http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0321423275/tidbitselectro00/ref=nosim>

  Fortunately, Mike Curtis lives and breathes HD. His Web site, HD for 
  Indies, is geared toward independent filmmakers who are focused more 
  on getting great footage and creating a movie than on the ins and 
  outs of pushing HD video through a system.

<http://www.hdforindies.com/>

  If you're looking to edit your own indie feature or starting a 
  business editing video for others, Mike has taken on the role of 
  personal shopper and put together three recommended Mac-based 
  editing systems. In addition to the computer (all Mac Pro machines, 
  but not necessarily the most powerful ones), Mike's picks include 
  LCDs and video monitors, RAM, graphics cards, HD capture devices, 
  and multiple storage options. The bundles range in price from $9,000 
  for an entry-level system capable of editing uncompressed HD footage 
  to $23,000 for a well-equipped system.

<http://silverado.cc/shop/home.php?cat=107>

  He's worked out a deal with Silverado Systems (and he gets a cut of 
  the order), but all the information is there, with notes and 
  explanation, if you prefer an alternate vendor.

  I've followed Mike's site for a while, and even though I don't shoot 
  HD video, it's always an entertaining and insightful read.


Geophoto Puts Your Photos on the Map
------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9010>

  Photography is a visual medium, and yet our tools for locating 
  digital photos are mostly textual and temporal. When you open 
  iPhoto, you can visually scan through the pictures, but that becomes 
  a problem in large libraries when hundreds of thumbnails streak by 
  as you drag the scroller. Instead, you're more likely to search 
  according to date: scrolling down the page, the names and capture 
  dates of iPhoto's film rolls appear. Or, if you're thorough, you may 
  set up photo albums that describe their contents ("Africa Trip," for 
  example). In each case, you're using a text-dependent, non-visual 
  approach to finding images.

  Now, think about how your mind locates images. In addition to 
  knowing roughly when the photographs were taken ("March," or 
  "Spring," or "Sometime in the last two years"), you no doubt 
  associate a location such as "home," "Los Angeles," or "Africa." 
  Unless you had the foresight to set up albums or keywords with that 
  specific information (and instead of "Los Angeles," the location 
  could have also been specific nearby areas such as "Glendale" or 
  "Anaheim"), there's no good way to use that information in your 
  search. At least, not in iPhoto or most other photo-cataloging 
  applications.

  Ovolab's $20 Geophoto looks to add that visual element to finding 
  your pictures, as well as images from around the world. Geophoto 
  lets you place your photos on a map, so you can easily find the ones 
  you've taken in Montana, Madrid, or Pretoria. It also lets you 
  subscribe to photo feeds over the Internet, whether or not those 
  images are tagged with geographic data. A trial version of Geophoto 
  1.3 is a 42.5 MB download; it's a universal binary and requires Mac 
  OS X 10.4 and a graphics card with at least 64 MB of VRAM.

<http://www.ovolab.com/geophoto/>


**Get Out the Map** -- Geophoto opens with a slowly rotating satellite 
  image of the Earth, which you can manipulate by clicking and 
  dragging with the mouse. It feels very much like starting up Google 
  Earth. Zoom in or out using the mouse's scroll wheel, menu commands, 
  or keyboard shortcuts.

<http://www.google.com/earth/>

  (An aside: The keyboard command for zooming in is Command-+, with 
  the plus sign being a long-established common shorthand for "zoom 
  in." However, you actually must press Command-Shift-= because the 
  plus sign is the shifted character on the equal sign's key. I 
  understand the literal context at work, that you're not zooming in 
  by pressing "Command-equals." But since Command-= does nothing 
  except produce a system beep indicating you pressed the wrong 
  button, why not map that key to zoom in too? You can get around this 
  by pressing Command and the plus sign on an extended keyboard's 
  number pad, but that doesn't help laptop users. Geophoto is by no 
  means the only culprit in this regard, but merely the program where 
  I want to put my foot down and beg developers to anticipate such 
  minor user interface annoyances so users aren't compelled to write 
  lengthy parenthetical asides like this.)

  Photo albums appear in a sidebar list to the left of the globe and 
  the photos themselves run horizontally across a pane at the bottom 
  of the window. Initially, a new Geophoto library is empty. To start 
  adding photos, you can drag photo files to the Geophoto Library 
  Pictures collection, but it's more likely that you already have a 
  bunch of photos stored in iPhoto. If that's the case, you can import 
  iPhoto albums directly by clicking the iPhoto Album button and 
  selecting an album. Geophoto doesn't duplicate the photo files 
  (thankfully, so it doesn't chew up hard disk space), but only 
  references the files linked to your iPhoto library

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2007-05/geophoto_interface.jpg>

  Another way to add photos - either your own or those of others - is 
  to subscribe to online photo feeds - either an iPhoto photocast or a 
  photostream from Flickr. This is a fun and interesting feature that 
  provides an ongoing selection of photos that's refreshed manually or 
  when you launch Geophoto. You can specify a Flickr group (for 
  example, the Flowers group) to see the 20 most recent photos without 
  going to the Web, a handy feature if you want to view photos from 
  several groups at once. Even if you're not as interested in 
  attaching geographical information to pictures, Geophoto turns out 
  to be a nice image browser for online feeds.

<http://www.flickr.com/>
<http://www.flickr.com/groups/florus/>

  You can also subscribe to the feed of a specific Flickr user, but 
  you must take a roundabout way to get to it. The dialog asks for one 
  or more tags (words describing the image; "geotagged" is 
  automatically filled in) and the user's name. It seems odd that I 
  can't instead just enter the URL of the RSS feed that appears at the 
  bottom of every user's photos page.

  Unless you imported photos that already contain mapping information, 
  the thumbnail images in the strip at the bottom of the window 
  display a globe icon with a slash through it. The next step is to 
  place your images on the map, which, surprisingly, is one of 
  Geophoto's shortcomings.


**Mark the Spot** -- Geophoto offers a few different ways to tag your 
  photos with location data; these methods range from easy to 
  maddening, depending on how precise you want to get.

  Of course, the real solution to recording location metadata will 
  require that digital cameras have built-in GPS capabilities. A few 
  cameras already do this, and there are various accessories and 
  techniques for existing cameras, but until such capabilities are 
  widespread, you can use Geophoto's tools.

<http://www.google.com/search?q=digital+camera+GPS>

  The preferred method seems to be Go To Location, a button and menu 
  item (but not a keyboard shortcut) that displays a Mac OS X sheet 
  with a Country pop-up menu and a field in which you can type a city 
  or landmark name. Search results appear at the bottom of the sheet 
  in another pop-up menu. Although most of my queries were successful, 
  I encountered a few strange results, too: the search located teeny 
  Bitter Lake in Seattle, but not the larger and more scenic Green 
  Lake, although Green Lakes in Wisconsin, Alaska, and other states 
  appeared. Actually, while typing just "green lake" brought no 
  correct results, typing "green lake washington" popped up several 
  options that did appear to be in Washington, but weren't the one I 
  was looking for.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2007-05/go_to_location_sheet.jpg>
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bitter_Lake_(Seattle)>
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Green_Lake_(Seattle)>

  Another method is to drag a photo or album directly onto the globe. 
  If you're not zoomed in very far, this approach could result in your 
  Paris vacation photos being displayed in Brussels or Berlin or 
  Warsaw. So you'll find yourself zooming in on sections of continent 
  looking for more specific areas as you get closer to the ground. 
  Bringing up the contextual menu (Control-click or right-click) 
  offers a Zoom In command that centers the mouse pointer's location 
  in the window, which helps somewhat.

  But you'll soon get frustrated, because Geophoto ships with a 
  limited amount of geographic detail. Unlike Google Earth, or 
  Google's satellite maps on the Web, zooming in doesn't automatically 
  increase the resolution of the terrain. To move beyond a thick soup 
  of blurry pixels, you need to open Geophoto's preferences, click the 
  Imagery button, and download the next-best quality of satellite 
  images. I say "next-best" because there's no option to just download 
  the highest resolution; you need to increase your view of the world 
  in waves, downloading one set of files, then the next, and so on, 
  four or five times.

  The highest-resolution data (an average of 0.13 miles per pixel) is 
  still pretty far away. Performing a search for Cornell University 
  yields a patch of Earth roughly 50 miles square. I can zoom in 
  further, but I have to take it on faith that dragging photos from 
  the strip to the middle of the map will put them at the right place.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2007-05/geophoto_cornell.jpg>

  Fortunately, there are two options for fine-tuning your photo 
  placement.

  Selecting a photo and bringing up the Inspector reveals a Set button 
  next to the Latitude and Longitude fields (which are not editable, 
  so you can't plug in those values if you happen to know them). 
  Clicking Set takes you to the Go To Location sheet; after you get a 
  search result, clicking the Set button positions your photo at that 
  location. 

  (Selecting one or more photos in the strip and using the Set button 
  is more efficient than finding a location and dragging photos onto 
  it. However, Geophoto's highly visual approach discourages one from 
  looking for solutions in dialogs or palettes. Also, the introductory 
  sticky notes that appear the first time the program is launched 
  emphasize dragging photos to the globe and make no mention of the 
  Set Location approach; you have to stumble upon it or find a 
  reference in the getting started PDF.)

  The other option is to display the Loupe. In traditional 
  photography, a loupe is a magnifying glass that you place over 
  negatives on a light table to inspect the quality of the images you 
  shot. In Geophoto, the Loupe bridges the gap between the 
  middle-altitude view of the globe's highest resolution and street 
  level. Within the Loupe's square field of view is a Google street 
  map; the resolution depends on how far you're zoomed in on the map. 
  Holding the spacebar and moving the mouse keeps the Loupe stationary 
  and moves only its contents if you're looking for something in 
  particular, but clicking the mouse jumps you right back to where you 
  were before pressing the spacebar.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2007-05/geophoto_loupe.jpg>

  If you find a more accurate location for your photo (like the city 
  block where the picture was taken), you can move the picture to a 
  new spot by Command-clicking it and dragging. A red crosshair 
  appears to help you pinpoint, but its movement can be jerky 
  depending on your zoom level.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2007-05/geophoto_crosshair.jpg>

  Basically, placing your photos with any degree of accuracy beyond 
  city level is a lot of work. Perhaps this is because we've all seen 
  how the operation should work: like Google Maps on the Web or Google 
  Earth, where the image resolution dynamically increases as you move 
  closer to your destination. Using Google Earth and the Yahoo Maps 
  feature in Flickr, for example, I was able to pinpoint the parking 
  lot from where I shot a photo on Seattle's waterfront. Geophoto 
  couldn't offer that level of detail, and even in cases where you 
  might be able to narrow a location down to a city block, it's not 
  easy to get there.

<http://maps.google.com/>
<http://www.flickr.com/map/>
<http://www.flickr.com/photos/jeffcarlson/477982194/>

  Adobe Photoshop Elements 5.0 under Windows provides just this type 
  of geotagging, giving you a window to an interactive map that lets 
  you drill down with usable resolution. (Photoshop Elements wasn't 
  updated beyond version 4.0 for the Mac.) Geophoto should adopt the 
  same approach.

<http://www.adobe.com/products/photoshopelwin/>

  If you're looking for specificity, the better approach is to tag the 
  images with geographic data using Flickr's tools, then import them 
  as a Flickr feed in Geophoto. However, I don't have a sense of how 
  precise most people want to get. It may be enough to drop a folder 
  full of images onto London to differentiate that set from photos 
  taken in Seattle.

  That leads to another problem, one which Geophoto is more adept at 
  handling.


**Find It Again** -- Once you start adding large numbers of photos to 
  Geophoto, you'll find yourself in the same situation that brought 
  you to the program in the first place: searching for the photos you 
  want to view. Assuming you've tagged your photos with locations, you 
  can spin the globe and select stacks (multiple photos grouped 
  together) based on their thumbnails; a slider in the lower-right 
  corner of the screen controls the size of the thumbnail previews. 
  But especially when you're zoomed out, the stacks merge together so 
  you're still seeing only one thumbnail image with a number 
  indicating how many photos are in the stack, not everything you've 
  shot. (I actually like the way this effect operates, because visual 
  clutter can be just as bad as scarcity when looking for something.)

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2007-05/geophoto_stacks.jpg>

  Geophoto's tools for locating photos in its database are smooth and 
  quick. Double-click a thumbnail to zoom one magnification level with 
  the photo set centered, up to the globe's maximum resolution. From 
  there use the other zoom features to get closer if necessary.

  But even zoomed out, clicking a group of photos makes them all 
  appear in the strip at the bottom of the screen. From there you can 
  double-click an image to view it at full size in an attractive 
  slideshow screen.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2007-05/geophoto_slideshow.jpg>

  A Search field actively narrows the number of visible images by 
  searching the photos' metadata, such as title and description, much 
  the way the iTunes Search field finds songs as you type. And 
  providing further textual filtering, a Tag Cloud floating palette 
  lists every tag, with some sized larger than others to denote more 
  frequent usage. Click a tag to view the photos it describes, as well 
  as the other tags applied to those photos.

  What I find most interesting about Geophoto, despite its 
  difficulties in applying geographic data, is its focus on 
  exploration. In fact, I'd go so far as to say that Geophoto is 
  primarily a fun application for photo discovery, and secondarily a 
  tool that serious photographers might use to geotag their picture 
  libraries.

  For example, I've already mentioned how it's possible to maintain a 
  running collection of the most recent images uploaded to Flickr 
  groups. But you can also create new, custom Flickr feeds by 
  positioning your mouse pointer on the map and choosing Find Flickr 
  Photos in this Location from the contextual menu. Geophoto casts a 
  virtual net over the area visible in the globe area and grabs 20 
  geotagged images. (It's not as entertaining as FlickrVision, but not 
  as fleeting either.)

<http://flickrvision.com/>


**Photos in the Real World** -- The proliferation of digital cameras 
  is dramatically altering photography, democratizing it in a way that 
  I think few people thought would be so pervasive. Geophoto 
  contributes, too, by enabling you to export the location data back 
  to the photos in your iPhoto library (choose Update Original with 
  Location Information from the Item menu); the metadata is added to 
  the image file. So if you applied a location in Geophoto, you can 
  upload it from iPhoto to Flickr (or another service that can pull 
  the data out of the file's metadata) with the location intact.

  People all over the planet are not only snapping pictures, they're 
  uploading and sharing the images with anyone who happens to stumble 
  into their corner of the world - a corner that's easier to find when 
  spotlighted on a globe. Geophoto may be only an early and somewhat 
  awkward solution to this desire, but it shows where we - or at least 
  our digital photos - will be going.


Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk/28-May-07
------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9011>

**Backwards from DVD to iMovie?** Is it possible to extract the video 
  from a DVD without requiring an intermediate conversion application? 
  (1 message)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1303/>


**Other scrolling utilities** -- Mark's article on two-fingered 
  scrolling brings up a suggestion for a utility that works on older 
  Macs. (1 message) 

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1304/>


**Keeping Home (Desktop) and Hearth (Notebook) together** -- Readers 
  share their solutions for keeping data on multiple machines in sync. 
  (5 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1305/>


**Recording Streaming Video-Audio** -- Who needs to take notes during 
  class when the class has a video stream? Here are some suggestions 
  for capturing that stream to disk for later viewing. (5 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1306/>


Take Control News/28-May-07
---------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9012>

**One Day Left in Take Control Sale** -- Here's a quick reminder that, 
  because of the Memorial Day holiday in the United States, our 50 
  percent-off sale on all Take Control ebooks continues through 
  29-May-07. 

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/catalog.html?14@@!pt=TB881&cp=CPN70518TB17>


$$

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