TidBITS#882/04-Jun-07
=====================
  Issue link: <http://db.tidbits.com/issue/882>

  Would you like to pay less for just the TV and movies you want to 
  watch? That was the question that started Adam down the path to this 
  week's comprehensive overview of all the different ways you can get 
  TV, how much you'll pay, and what gotchas you may encounter. Also in 
  this issue, if you've been dreaming lately of touchscreens and 
  mobile Web browsing, you'll be happy to know that the iPhone now has 
  a release date: June 29th, 2007. Also later this month, Apple will 
  start offering YouTube downloads on the Apple TV. But you won't have 
  to wait for an Apple TV model with a 160 GB hard disk, nor iTunes 
  7.2 (featuring DRM-free iTunes Plus tracks), nor several more 
  security updates, all of which are available now.

Articles
    Apple to Release iPhone on June 29th
    Apple TV Gains 160 GB Drive, YouTube Downloads
    Two Small Security Updates
    DealBITS Drawing: BeLight Software's Live Interior 3D
    iTunes 7.2 Enables DRM-Free Music
    I Want My *TV: Comparing Video Acquisition Methods
    Take Control News/04-Jun-07
    Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk/04-Jun-07


------------ 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 Carl Walser, Erik Carlson, 
  Ken Wait, and John Clements for their generous support!

* SMALL DOG ELECTRONICS: TidBITS Exclusive for June 4 - June 11: 
  MacBook 13" 1.83 GHz Core 2 Duo, TWO GB RAM, 60/combo/AP/BT 
  (white), new, never used. Powerful, eminently portable. Limited 
  time only $1199! Order now at <http://www.smalldog.com/tb/>

* FETCH SOFTWORKS: With Fetch 5.2, FTP and SFTP are simpler 
  than ever. Use it on Mac OS X to upload, download, mirror, 
  and manage your Web site, eBay images, and data sets. 
  Download your free trial version! <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>

* MARK/SPACE, INC: New, from the makers of The Missing Sync, comes 
  SyncTogether, a brand new app for syncing contacts, calendars, 
  notes and more between multiple Macs and one or more user 
  accounts. $49.95 for 3 Macs. <http://www.markspace.com/bits>

* Microsoft's MacBU: Supporting Mac users with Office 2004.  
  Supporting the Mac community through tech support newsgroups, 
  user group appearances, our new team blog, and more! 
  Check out our team blog at <http://blogs.msdn.com/macmojo/>

* DealBITS: Get the word out about your product AND generate sales! 
  It's easy: 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/>.

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


Apple to Release iPhone on June 29th
------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9018>

  Through a trio of commercials, Apple has revealed that Friday, June 
  29th will be the release date of the iPhone. The ads demonstrated 
  some of the iPhone's unique combination of capabilities, including 
  watching video, a "glass" (key-free) keyboard, rich email, and 
  integration with Google Maps and local results (see "iPhone Seeks to 
  Redefine the Mobile Phone," 2007-01-15) . While each of these 
  capabilities is available on existing smartphones and other devices, 
  no phone combines all of them, nor offers a library of music and 
  video anywhere as extensive as Apple's iTunes Store.

<http://www.apple.com/iphone/ads/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8810>

  It's unclear what Apple means by the June 29th release date: that 
  the iPhone will arrive on your doorstep if you've ordered one or 
  that you will be able to go to an Apple Store or an AT&T (formerly 
  Cingular) corporate store to obtain one. AT&T has not yet started to 
  accept orders for the iPhone, but I would imagine that will occur 
  soon. AT&T recently changed the signage and other details at its 
  many corporate stores to shed the Cingular logo and name in 
  preparation for the iPhone launch, the company said a few weeks ago.

  The advertisements confirm that an iPhone requires a two-year 
  commitment through AT&T. Recent rumors suggested that a prepaid 
  option would be available, but that seemed unlikely given the 
  premium nature of the phone and the exclusivity that results from 
  it.

  The iPhone will appear in two models: a 4 GB unit for $500 and an 8 
  GB model for $600. The iPhone includes Wi-Fi and EDGE support, the 
  latter being a cell data standard that runs two to three times 
  faster than a dial-up modem, and is widely available. Pricing for 
  Wi-Fi and EDGE plans hasn't yet been announced. 

  T-Mobile offers the closest competition for such a package, with $30 
  per month providing unlimited use of EDGE data everywhere and Wi-Fi 
  connections at over 7,000 T-Mobile Wi-Fi hot spots in the United 
  States.


Apple TV Gains 160 GB Drive, YouTube Downloads
----------------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9015>

  Call me a rainmaker. Just a few days after I sent my latest book 
  ("The Apple TV Pocket Guide") to be printed, Apple announced 
  upgrades to the Apple TV.

<http://www.amazon.com/Apple-TV-Pocket-Guide/dp/0321510216/tidbitselectro00/>
<http://www.apple.com/appletv/>

  During last week's D: All Things Digital conference, Apple CEO Steve 
  Jobs and Wall Street Journal columnist Walt Mossberg chatted onstage 
  about Apple's latest "hobby," the Apple TV. "The reason I call it a 
  hobby," said Jobs, "is a lot of people have tried and failed to make 
  it a business. It's a business that's hundreds of thousands of units 
  per year but it hasn't crested to be millions of units per year, but 
  I think if we improve things we can crack that."

<http://d5.allthingsd.com/>
<http://www.engadget.com/2007/05/30/steve-jobs-live-from-d-2007/>

  One method of cracking the business comes in the form of a 
  build-to-order option, now available, to include a 160 GB hard drive 
  in the Apple TV instead of the relatively small 40 GB capacity in 
  the base model. Apple claims the more capacious drive will hold up 
  to 200 hours of video or 36,000 songs, compared to 50 hours of video 
  and 9,000 songs on the 40 GB model. The 160 GB version costs $400; 
  the 40 GB version remains priced at $300.

  More intriguing is the addition of downloadable YouTube content, 
  something that we suspected would appear, given that the box is 
  already capable of downloading movie trailers and other video 
  content (see "Apple TV: The Real Video iPod," 2007-03-26). A new 
  YouTube menu item will lead to categories such as Featured and Most 
  Viewed, with video streamed directly to the Apple TV. (Unofficial 
  hacks have made it possible to view YouTube videos - and other 
  online content - on the Apple TV since a few days after the device 
  began shipping, but the process to implement them isn't trivial.) 
  The capability will be available sometime in June as a free update.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8924>
<http://wiki.awkwardtv.org/wiki/Main_Page>


Two Small Security Updates
--------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9014>

  Apple last week released two security updates, version 1.1 of 
  Security Update 2007-005 (see "Security Update 2007-005 Released," 
  2007-05-28) and Security Update (QuickTime 7.1.6). As of this 
  writing, Apple had said nothing about what was fixed in the 1.1 
  version of Security Update 2007-005, but the QuickTime security 
  update fixes two issues in QuickTime for Java that could result 
  either in arbitrary code execution or disclosure of sensitive 
  information. That sounds similar to the security fixes in QuickTime 
  7.1.6 itself from earlier this month, but it seems to be different 
  (see "QuickTime, AirPort, Security Updates Released," 2007-05-07). 
  In either case, both updates are likely worthwhile. Downloads for 
  Security Update 2007-005 1.1 are available in PowerPC (15.7 MB) and 
  Universal (29.2 MB) forms, and Security Update (QuickTime 7.1.6) is 
  a 1.4 MB download. Or just use Software Update to get the 
  appropriate version for your Mac.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9005>
<http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=305531>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8975>
<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/securityupdate2007005v11ppc.html>
<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/securityupdate2007005v11universal.html>
<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/securityupdatequicktime716formac.html>


DealBITS Drawing: BeLight Software's Live Interior 3D
-----------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9021>

  I imagine that for all of us, there are things we'd really like to 
  do, but somehow have never found the opportunity. For me, one of 
  those things is to create a 3D model of rooms in our house for the 
  purpose of playing with furniture placement, remodeling plans, or 
  honestly, just the fun of having a digital model of a real-world 
  house. And were I ever to build a new house, such a tool would be 
  essential. Alas, time doesn't permit such experimentation at this 
  stage in my life, but for anyone who does want to try 3D modeling of 
  rooms, BeLight Software's new Live Interior 3D looks like it would 
  be a boon. It comes with more than 1,000 objects you can place 
  within your own plans or those you modify from the 50 or so editable 
  templates included. It supports Google 3D Warehouse, and can import 
  objects from other 3D programs. You can also work in 2D mode, where 
  it supports automatic dimensioning, automatic floor and ceiling 
  creation, and smart guides. In 3D mode, there's a walk-through mode 
  with multiple adjustable cameras, and you can set the time of day, 
  geographic orientation, and lighting. It's definitely worth a look.

<http://belightsoft.com/products/liveinterior/overview.php>

  In this week's DealBITS drawing, you can enter to win one of three 
  copies of Live Interior 3D, each worth $79.95. Entrants who aren't 
  among our lucky winners will receive a discount on Live Interior 3D, 
  so be sure to enter at the DealBITS 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.tidbits.com/dealbits/live-interior-3d/>
<http://www.tidbits.com/about/privacy.html>


iTunes 7.2 Enables DRM-Free Music
---------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9016>

  Apple has released iTunes 7.2, which is notable for only one thing - 
  the fact that it now lets you preview and purchase "iTunes Plus" 
  music that is both higher in quality and free of Apple's FairPlay 
  digital rights management. As I wrote in "Apple and EMI Offer 
  DRM-Free Music via iTunes" (2007-04-02), Apple and EMI Music 
  announced in April 2007 that EMI's entire digital catalog of music 
  would be available for purchase in DRM-free form from the iTunes 
  Store worldwide. The promised start date was May 2007, so they just 
  squeaked in under the wire, but that's good enough to consider it a 
  kept promise. iTunes 7.2 is available via Software Update and as a 
  29.6 MB standalone download. 

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8937>
<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/itunes72formac.html>

  Besides lacking FairPlay, iTunes Plus songs and music videos are 
  encoded as 256 Kbps AAC files, up from 128 Kbps AAC. The price for 
  songs increases as well to $1.29, up from $0.99. Music videos remain 
  priced at $1.99, and although their audio quality increases, the 
  video quality remains the same. 

  To purchase songs and videos in iTunes Plus format, you must enable 
  iTunes Plus in your account preferences, although iTunes 7.2 prompts 
  you to do this if you try to purchase a song that's available in 
  iTunes Plus. Once enabled, you see a little + sign next to the $1.29 
  price of iTunes Plus tracks. 

  If you've purchased DRM-protected songs already, you can upgrade 
  them to iTunes Plus versions for the $0.30 price difference from the 
  Upgrade My Library page in the iTunes Store. You'll have to check 
  back at that page over time to see if additional songs have been 
  released in iTunes Plus format. Music videos cost $0.60 to upgrade, 
  and entire albums are available at 30 percent of the current album 
  price. When you upgrade a song, iTunes downloads the new one and 
  optionally places the original version in an "Original iTunes 
  Purchases" folder so you can compare it to the iTunes Plus version 
  to see if you can hear the quality difference.

<http://phobos.apple.com/WebObjects/MZPersonalizer.woa/wa/upgradeMyLibraryPage>

  (It's interesting to see Apple putting both the iTunes Plus 
  preferences and the Upgrade My Library functionality in the iTunes 
  Store, rather than in iTunes itself. The approach makes sense, since 
  iTunes is increasingly becoming a true Internet application that's 
  easier to enhance without pushing code to millions of Macs and PCs.)

  iTunes Plus is certainly a good thing for consumers who found even 
  FairPlay's relatively reasonable restrictions irritating, for those 
  who will appreciate the higher audio quality, and for the subset of 
  people who refused to purchase from the iTunes Store because of DRM 
  restrictions. Even though EMI is offering DRM-free music to other 
  online music stores, and eMusic has long sold DRM-free music, it's 
  also a PR boon for Apple, which gets to be seen as helping in the 
  push to free music from onerous DRM. EMI wins too, both in terms of 
  increased revenue from sales of iTunes Plus tracks and the increased 
  sales that will no doubt result from EMI music being featured on the 
  new iTunes Plus page in the iTunes Store.

<http://phobos.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/iTunesPlusPage>

  However, Ars Technica is reporting that Apple embeds your full name 
  and email address in tracks purchased from the iTunes Store, 
  something that has apparently been true since the beginning but that 
  wasn't relevant when those tracks couldn't be played without 
  authorization. With iTunes Plus tracks, though, this hidden branding 
  could theoretically be used to trace shared tracks back to the 
  original purchaser, although without some form of digital signature, 
  that information could also be spoofed as a way to frame an innocent 
  user. It's not yet clear what Apple plans to do with this 
  information, if anything, but such use of personally identifiable 
  information should be included in the company's privacy policy. This 
  could be an issue particularly in the EU, where privacy is treated 
  with significantly more importance than in the United States.

<http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20070530-apple-hides-account-info-in-drm-free-music-too.html>

  Audio developer Rogue Amoeba is happy about iTunes Plus, since the 
  removal of DRM enables their Fission audio manipulation program to 
  work with iTunes Plus tracks to create ringtones, create sound 
  bites, or just edit out the applause in live tracks. (John Gruber of 
  Daring Fireball noted, however, that updated terms of service for 
  iTunes 7.2 specifically disallow use of purchased music as 
  ringtones, not that such a limitation is in any way enforceable.) 
  What I'm really looking forward to, though, is audiobooks in iTunes 
  Plus format, since it bugs me that a single audiobook comes from the 
  iTunes Store in multiple files, making it annoying to play. There 
  are workarounds (see "Audio File Concatenation: Driven to 
  Distraction by DR," 2005-11-14), but they're cumbersome, and just 
  being able to join unprotected AAC files would be a boon.

<http://www.rogueamoeba.com/utm/posts/News/Fission-loves-iTunesPlus-2007-05-30-17-30.html>
<http://daringfireball.net/linked/2007/may#wed-30-ring_tones>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8326>

  The two questions that remain are how quickly other music labels 
  will jump on the iTunes Plus bandwagon and whether Apple will remove 
  DRM from video. Stay iTuned...


I Want My *TV: Comparing Video Acquisition Methods
--------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9004>

  We're in the middle of a sea change in how we acquire and watch 
  video, whether serialized television shows, must-see sporting 
  events, blockbuster movies, quirky documentaries, or even homemade 
  video clips. It has become wildly confusing, with choices ranging 
  from the old rabbit ears to the iTunes Store. I've been thinking 
  about the topic for quite some time with an eye toward trying to 
  compare all the possibilities in terms of cost, show selection, and 
  more. This started as a personal project, but as I delved into the 
  research, I realized that what made sense for our family was by no 
  means ideal for everyone. And so I increased my scope in an attempt 
  to lay out for everyone the possibilities and to come up with 
  recommendations for those whose viewing preferences differ from 
  ours. Sit back, relax, and join me on a long tour through our 
  video-filled world.


**The History of Video** -- For many years, and for all of my rural 
  childhood, over-the-air broadcast television was all that was 
  available, though cable TV and, later, satellite dishes increased 
  the number of channels that could be received. At some point in the 
  1980s, the VCR appeared, enabling both time-shifting and an 
  aftermarket for movies, prompting MPAA head Jack Valenti's famous 
  quote, "I say to you that the VCR is to the American film producer 
  and the American public as the Boston Strangler is to the woman home 
  alone." Needless to say, Jack Valenti couldn't have been more wrong, 
  with the VCR and then the DVD player generating a vast source of new 
  revenue for the movie and television industry via post-release 
  sales. In 1998, the slim size and durability of DVD discs also made 
  possible the online DVD rental company Netflix and a number of 
  smaller and more focused competitors.

<http://cryptome.org/hrcw-hear.htm>
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Netflix>

  As the original Napster caused panic among the music studios, the 
  movie industry watched carefully, initially insulated from 
  peer-to-peer copying by numerous technical limitations. Computers in 
  the mid-1990s lacked sufficient processing power to encode and 
  decode video at necessary speeds, hard disks weren't sufficiently 
  large to store reasonable amounts of video, and too few people had 
  sufficiently fat broadband pipes to download full-length movie 
  files. Needless to say, those limitations fell by the wayside 
  quickly. Aided by the breaking of the DVD copy-protection approach, 
  the Content Scramble System in October 1999 by Jon Lech Johansen and 
  two others via the program DeCSS, full-scale copying of DVDs became 
  possible and indeed commonplace. 

<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Content_Scramble_System>
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DeCSS>

  Legal downloading of video wasn't far behind, with numerous 
  video-on-demand services springing up for people with Windows PCs. 
  But none put all the pieces together (wide selection, good business 
  model, simple user experience) until Apple introduced video to the 
  iTunes Store, making it possible for individuals to purchase 
  full-length movies, first-run television shows, short films, and 
  music videos for playing in iTunes on either a Mac, a PC, or a video 
  iPod. Although Apple's selection was initially slim, significantly 
  more videos have appeared on the iTunes Store since, and it's clear 
  from sales (see "Disney Sells 125,000 Movies in First Week on iTunes 
  Store," 2006-09-25) that the Internet will be a popular method of 
  acquiring video. 

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8682>

  Perhaps the most unexpected challenge to the studios and networks 
  came, however, not from illegal downloads, but from video-sharing 
  sites like YouTube and Google Video, which attract tens of thousands 
  of homemade video uploads daily, and many millions of viewers. 
  Though no money changes hands, the time viewers spend watching short 
  clips on sites like YouTube (now owned by Google; see "Google Buys 
  YouTube for $1.65 Billion," 2006-10-16) is time that won't be spent 
  watching traditional television and movies.

<http://www.youtube.com/>
<http://video.google.com/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8709>


**Setting the Stage** -- All this raises the question - what's the 
  best way to acquire video entertainment these days? And that in turn 
  asks the question of what "best" means. I think people determine how 
  they'll acquire video in a number of ways:

* Availability. Every method of acquiring video has some requirements, 
  and for many people, those requirements may be impossible or 
  financially infeasible. Broadcast television assumes that there's a 
  signal you can receive, and any sort of downloadable video assumes 
  you can acquire and afford high-speed Internet access.

* Cost. Scott Adams's comic strip character Dilbert may not have been 
  referring to video when he said, "What the customer wants is better 
  products for free," but the quote applies. Television used to be 
  free in exchange for our viewing of commercials, but those days are 
  long gone. Or are they?

* Selection of shows. The rise of cable TV was driven by one factor 
  alone - the selection of shows on broadcast TV (which was 
  non-existent if you couldn't pick up any channels). But as we 
  quickly discovered, selection isn't everything, as Bruce Springsteen 
  complained in "57 Channels (And Nothin' On)."

<http://phobos.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewAlbum?playlistId=485637&s=143441&i=486633>

* Freshness. We want it in our produce, and we want it in our video 
  too. After all, for better or worse, television remains the way many 
  people learn about what's happening in the outside world, and 
  discussing the latest baseball game or hit TV show with friends and 
  colleagues remains a significant cultural common ground. 

* Time-shifting. In addition to freshness, we also want control over 
  when we watch. Thanks to new technologies and business models, the 
  tyranny of the broadcast TV schedule is becoming a thing of the 
  past. 

* Place-shifting. Finally, although most people still watch video on 
  TV screens that continually increase in size, portable DVD players 
  have been around for a while, laptop displays are now frequently 
  large and widescreen, and video iPods are becoming ever more 
  popular. In essence, we're saying that we want control over not just 
  what and when we watch, but where we watch it too.

  There's one additional variable that most people probably don't 
  think about, but which comes into play whenever time- and 
  place-shifting are discussed: legality. Almost by definition, time- 
  and place-shifting require a copy to made, whether it's on a VHS 
  tape or an iPod. In some cases, that action may be entirely legal, 
  whereas in others it may be fraught with legal liability. (At least 
  the FCC's controversial "broadcast flag" rule, which would have 
  prohibited the manufacture of hardware lacking copy prevention 
  hardware to prevent time- and place-shifting, was struck down in 
  2005 before it went into effect.)

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

  Let's rate each of the following methods of tuning in according to 
  these criteria.


**Broadcast Over the Air** -- To many of us, with our high-speed 
  Internet connections, over-the-air broadcast television may seem a 
  quaint image of the 1950s, with images of Dad up on the roof 
  adjusting the antenna to improve reception of the big game. The 
  reality is that as of December 2006, about 13 percent of U.S. 
  television households - roughly 15 million homes - still rely on 
  broadcast TV, as do higher percentages of viewers in other 
  countries. And why not? Availability suffers from physical barriers 
  and the selection of shows can be restricted by limited channel 
  reception. But at the same time, advertising-supported broadcast TV 
  is free to receive; provides the latest network news, major sports 
  events, and most commonly watched shows; and doesn't restrict 
  viewers' ability to time-shift. Place-shifting is tougher, since it 
  requires first recording shows to a digital format, but I suspect 
  that most people content with broadcast television aren't the target 
  audience for place-shifting hardware like the iPod.

  It's worth noting that a digital video recorder (DVR) like the TiVo 
  significantly improves not just the viewer's ability to time-shift, 
  but also broadcast TV's show selection. That's not because it can 
  pull in shows that weren't there before, but because it enables more 
  efficient mining of shows that are broadcast at odd times.

  For those in the United States, it's particularly worth noting that 
  as broadcasters switch from old analog channels to new 
  high-definition digital channels, they can offer more channels. The 
  switch must be complete by 18-Feb-09, so by that point you'll need a 
  converter to use existing analog televisions, or you'll need to buy 
  a new digital TV (see the just-released second edition of Clark 
  Humphrey's "Take Control of Digital TV" for help with that process). 
  The Consumer Electronics Association estimates that 99 percent of 
  U.S. television households can receive one digital channel; 89 
  percent can receive five or more. The Consumer Electronics 
  Association's AntennaWeb site has an interesting FAQ and an online 
  "interactive antenna mapping program" that provides advice about 
  which stations (digital and analog) you are likely to receive, along 
  with a map showing exactly how to orient your antenna. You can also 
  check Antenna Direct's list of HDTV stations to see a long list of 
  over-the-air HD stations. The Canadian HD experience for 
  over-the-air broadcasts is similar; see HDTV Digital Home.

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/digital-tv.html?14@@!pt=TB882>
<http://www.antennaweb.org/aw/welcome.aspx>
<http://www.antennasdirect.com/HDTV_station_lists.html>
<http://www.digitalhome.ca/hdtv/>

* Availability: Good, particularly in metropolitan areas

* Ongoing Cost: $0, with ads

* Selection of shows: Limited to mainstream shows; improved with a DVR

* Freshness: Excellent for TV, poor for movies

* Time-shifting: Requires VCR or DVR, but legal

* Place-shifting: Possible, but requires extra effort and gear


**Cable/Satellite** -- Broadcast isn't yet dead, and satellite TV is 
  attracting ever more subscribers, but cable TV still rules, at least 
  in the United States, where about 60 percent of households (65.6 
  million homes) have cable, and another 27 percent (30.1 million 
  homes) subscribe to satellite TV. Worldwide, there are 1.2 billion 
  television households, but only about 30 percent of those rely on 
  cable TV. Although the average price for basic expanded cable is 
  about $41 per month in the United States, both cable and satellite 
  subscribers report paying an average of $58 per month thanks to 
  extra services, and it's easy to see bills into the $80 per month 
  range. Despite those steep monthly charges that generated $68.2 
  billion for the U.S. cable industry in 2006, advertising is still 
  prevalent, accounting for another $23.8 billion in revenues. If we 
  know that the average monthly bill is $58, and the average American 
  watches (gasp!) 4.5 hours of TV per day, that puts the cost of cable 
  or satellite TV at only $0.43 per hour. (As an aside, a recent study 
  found that watching 3 or more hours of TV per day puts teenagers at 
  increased risk of learning difficulties.)

<http://www.nielsenmedia.com/newsreleases/2005/AvgHoursMinutes92905.pdf>
<http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/05/070507183630.htm>

  Cable and satellite TV fare very well when it comes to freshness, 
  with plenty of real-time news, sports, and current programming, and 
  they also do well in terms of show selection. However, the massive 
  amount of programming available is applied in shotgun fashion, so 
  you can easily find yourself flipping through hundreds of channels 
  without finding anything you want to watch. The sheer number of 
  programs is overwhelming, making a DVR like the TiVo - or even the 
  less-capable models rented out by the cable/satellite companies - 
  essential not just for time-shifting (which is legal), but also for 
  separating the wheat from the chaff. As with broadcast TV, 
  place-shifting requires extra hardware and fuss; few people will go 
  to the effort of extracting video from a TiVo to watch on an iPod.

* Availability: Excellent

* Ongoing Cost: $20-$80 per month, with ads (average is $58 per month, 
  or $0.43 per hour)

* Selection of shows: Very good; almost requires a DVR to sort through

* Freshness: Excellent, especially for sports fans

* Time-shifting: Requires VCR or DVR, but legal

* Place-shifting: Difficult


**Purchasing Pre-Recorded Video on DVD** -- The market for 
  pre-recorded video started with the VCR but has been almost entirely 
  supplanted by DVD. Although VCRs and DVD players are essentially 
  equally popular, with between 75 and 82 percent of U.S. households 
  owning one, the VCR is in significant decline, with sales of DVD 
  players outstripping VCRs 40 to 1 globally. More telling, of the 
  $24.2 billion spent on pre-recorded content in the United States 
  last year, VHS claimed only $100 million (way down from $3 billion 
  in 2004). 2006's total take of pre-recorded content was, in fact, 
  lower than both 2005 and 2004, with the only increased portion 
  coming from a $300 million jump in DVD sales. And even that growth 
  was largely fueled by the increase in sales of TV show collections, 
  which made up 18 percent of market in 2006, up from 8 percent in 
  2002. Also, TV DVDs cost an average of $41 for a full season, in 
  comparison to an average price of $17 for a DVD movie.

  The per-minute cost of purchased content on DVD varies 
  significantly, from just under 4 cents to nearly 17 cents, with the 
  lower costs coming for large bundles that bring together multiple 
  seasons of a TV show or a movie and several sequels. That works out 
  to between $2.40 and $10.20 per hour, and if all you watched was 
  pre-recorded video, even assuming only 2 hours of watching per day, 
  that would still come out to between about $140 and $600 per month. 
  Obviously, dropping the average watching time to only 1 hour per day 
  halves those numbers, but it's still much higher than cable or 
  satellite. 

  However, although purchasing pre-recorded content may not make sense 
  for one-time viewing, children often watch DVDs many times, reducing 
  the cost with each viewing. I couldn't find stats to back this up, 
  but I also believe that people in their 20s, who grew up squarely in 
  the generation that could watch videotapes or DVDs multiple times, 
  are still more likely to watch TV shows or movies multiple times as 
  adults. That's in contrast with those of us who predate the VCR 
  generation, and remember when it was a big deal because "The Wizard 
  of Oz" came on TV each year. (Tonya and I own only a handful of 
  movies that we watch multiple times, with each viewing often 
  separated by years.) Plus, even for people who don't plan to watch a 
  purchased DVD many times, the DVD has value as a collector's item.

  The selection of shows is good, but not great, because back catalogs 
  are still being transferred to video, so, for instance, not all 
  seasons of the 1990s TV series "Northern Exposure" are available 
  yet. It's not just TV shows either; reportedly, only about 50,000 of 
  the 500,000 or so movies listed on the Internet Movie Database have 
  been digitized and made available on DVD. Plus, the lag time between 
  the airing of new TV shows and the theatrical release of movies and 
  the subsequent release of the DVD hurts both show selection and the 
  freshness of available content. Time-shifting is inherent in the 
  medium, since you can watch whenever you want, but place-shifting is 
  legally possible only if you own a portable DVD player or 
  DVD-equipped laptop. Ripping physical DVDs to avoid carrying them on 
  a plane or to watch them on a video-capable iPod is perfectly 
  possible with the open-source HandBrake, but ripping is a violation 
  of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA), despite the fact 
  that place-shifting is legal in all other situations.

<http://handbrake.m0k.org/>

* Availability: Excellent (requires inexpensive DVD player)

* Ongoing Cost: $140 to $600 per month, or $2.40 to $10.20 per hour

* Selection of shows: Good

* Freshness: Poor

* Time-shifting: On a per-DVD basis

* Place-shifting: Requires laptop or portable DVD player; otherwise 
  violates DMCA


**Netflix and Online Video Rental Services** -- Purchasing 
  pre-recorded content may make little sense for one-time viewing, but 
  renting DVDs is an entirely different cost proposition. A Netflix 
  subscription costs between $5 and $48 per month, depending on how 
  many DVDs you want checked out simultaneously. Other online video 
  rental services offer similar plans, but with nearly 6.8 million 
  customers, Netflix is by far the largest, with Blockbuster a distant 
  second. One advantage of the Blockbuster Total Access service is 
  that you can also pick up DVDs at a local Blockbuster store if you 
  can't wait for snail mail delivery.

<http://www.netflix.com/HowItWorks>
<https://www.blockbuster.com/signup/s/howItWorks>

  It's hard to calculate Netflix's cost on a per-hour basis, but on an 
  "unlimited" plan, the limiting factor is how quickly you can watch a 
  DVD and return it to Netflix. Assuming an average turnaround time of 
  7 days, a 1-out unlimited subscription equates to 4 DVDs in a month. 
  Four DVDs of a TV series could reach 16 hours or more, whereas four 
  DVDs of short 80 minute movies would be about 5.2 hours. Thus, the 
  cost-per-hour for a month ranges from $0.63 to $1.92 for the 1-out 
  plan. The 2-out plan is a bit cheaper, and starting with the 3-out 
  plan, the costs settle into the range of $0.38 to $1.15 per hour.

  In terms of show selection and freshness, Netflix is nearly as good 
  as the option of purchasing pre-recorded video - the difference 
  coming in adult content, which Netflix doesn't carry. Other services 
  specialize in it, however, so the overall category of online video 
  rental services is comparable. Another slight ding for Netflix's 
  show selection is that popular new releases generate waiting lists, 
  so you may need to wait a little longer to receive a hot new movie.

  Netflix brings a new twist to the issue of time- and place-shifting. 
  You can of course watch any DVD you've received from Netflix 
  whenever you want, though ripping it to a hard disk for later 
  watching violates not just the DMCA, but Netflix's own Terms of Use; 
  the same goes for place-shifting. It's hard to know if Netflix added 
  the no-ripping clause to forestall lawsuits from Hollywood or if 
  ripping would present a business problem for Netflix. Someone who 
  was ripping to enable time- and place-shifting would probably churn 
  DVDs more quickly than anyone other than a dedicated TV watcher, 
  costing Netflix more in postage and handling.

<http://www.netflix.com/TermsOfUse>

* Availability: Excellent (at least in the United States)

* Ongoing Cost: $5-$48 per month, or $0.38 to $1.92 per hour

* Selection of shows: Good, with queue and genre caveats

* Freshness: Poor

* Time-shifting: On per-DVD basis; otherwise violates Netflix Terms of 
  Use and DMCA

* Place-shifting: Requires laptop or portable DVD player; otherwise 
  violates DMCA


**P2P File-Sharing Services** -- Of course, the fact that ripping DVDs 
  violates the DMCA has in no way prevented it from happening. Nor, 
  now that many people have sufficient bandwidth to download 
  full-length movies, has the legal liability prevented massive 
  sharing of video online via peer-to-peer file-sharing services. The 
  appeal? Downloading is free, or at least no additional cost beyond 
  the price of a broadband connection.

  However, P2P downloading makes users pay in other ways. Finding and 
  downloading particular movies or TV shows is time-intensive and 
  often fraught with frustration and failure. Problems include being 
  unable to find the desired show or movie, download times measured in 
  days or weeks, ending up with a foreign-language dub, poor audio or 
  video quality, and more. The selection of shows is impossible to 
  predict, since the availability of a given show varies constantly 
  with who's online. The freshness of content can be good, since users 
  are more likely to share the latest releases than old movies, but 
  there's no guarantee that you'll be able to download the latest 
  episode of anything. 

  Not surprisingly, most of the users of the P2P file-sharing services 
  are young people with more time than money, and for whom downloaded 
  video has a whiff of danger and the cachet of rebellion. 

* Availability: Good (requires broadband Internet and a modern 
  computer)

* Ongoing Cost: $0 (but requires a large time investment)

* Selection of shows: Poor

* Freshness: Mediocre

* Time-shifting: Violates DMCA

* Place-shifting: Violates DMCA


**iTunes Store** -- Not all video downloads are inherently a violation 
  of the DMCA, and thanks to Apple, it's now possible to purchase a 
  variety of TV shows and movies from the iTunes Store. Or rather, 
  it's possible if you have an iTunes Store with video in your 
  country, if you have a modern computer running iTunes, and if you 
  have a broadband connection. Lots of people do, but far fewer than 
  those who can, for instance, receive cable or satellite TV.

<http://www.apple.com/itunes/>

  The selection of shows is, on balance, poor. Apple is adding shows 
  and movies all the time, but in comparison with the wealth of video 
  content available in any other forum, the iTunes Store doesn't yet 
  match up. What it does have is quite fresh, though, with new TV 
  shows appearing quickly, along with first-run movies, and some 
  sports shows. 

  Calculating the cost of video purchased from the iTunes Store is 
  both easy and difficult. TV shows, whether they're 30 or 60 minutes 
  long, cost $2. And movies cost either $15 for recent releases or $10 
  for older movies, with running times varying between about 80 
  minutes and 140 minutes. Purchasing a multi-pass for 16 episodes of 
  something like "The Daily Show with Jon Stewart" drops the price by 
  about 40 percent; buying a season pass to a TV show cuts the price 
  by 5 to 40 percent (usually about 17 percent). So to return to the 
  cost-per-hour calculation we performed for pre-recorded video, we'd 
  end up with a range starting at $1.25 per hour for an hour-long TV 
  show purchased as part of a multi-pass and going all the way up to 
  $11.25 per hour for a first-run movie that's relatively short. At 2 
  hours per day (less than half the national average), the monthly fee 
  would range from $75 to $675. 

  As with pre-recorded content, if you fall into the 2 hour per day 
  category, getting all your video from the iTunes Store makes no 
  financial sense, but there are other advantages, such the ease of 
  getting just what you want, the ease of moving video to an iPod, and 
  the ease of watching downloaded video on a television via Apple TV.

  Of all the methods of acquiring video, downloading from the iTunes 
  Store is perhaps the friendliest to time-shifting, since you can at 
  any time decide what you want, buy it, and be watching nearly 
  instantly. (To be fair, Netflix now offers the similar Watch Now 
  service with some of its movies, but it requires Windows XP-only 
  software to handle the Microsoft DRM.) Place-shifting is easy and 
  legal as well, but only if you want to watch on a laptop or 
  video-capable iPod. 

<http://www.netflix.com/WatchNow?lnkctr=mhWN>

  Competing with the iTunes Store is Amazon Unbox, which like the 
  Netflix immediate download approach, works only with Windows and 
  broadband-connected Series2 or Series3 TiVo units. Purchasing TV 
  shows and movies costs essentially the same as the iTunes Store, 
  though Amazon Unbox also offers movie rentals for between $2 and $4.

<http://www.amazon.com/b?ie=UTF8&node=16261631>
<http://www.amazon.com/gp/video/tivo>

* Availability: Good (requires broadband Internet and a modern 
  computer)

* Ongoing Cost: $75 to $675 per month, or $1.25 to $11.25 per hour

* Selection of shows: Poor, but improving

* Freshness: Excellent

* Time-shifting: Easy and legal

* Place-shifting: Easy and legal, but requires laptop or video-capable 
  iPod


**Online Streaming from the Television Networks** -- In recent months, 
  the major television networks have started to change their role from 
  pure providers of content to distributors as well, thanks to the 
  Internet. Episodes of a number of current TV shows are provided free 
  via the networks' Web sites, though with ads that cannot be skipped. 
  The quality of the players varies a little and suffers a bit at full 
  screen, but seems generally fine over a broadband connection, and it 
  works fine on the Mac. Both time-shifting and place-shifting are 
  supported with this approach, although both have some limits. The 
  networks don't provide full back catalogs of shows, so you may have 
  to watch on a fairly regular basis or purchase missed shows from the 
  iTunes Store. And place-shifting is inherent in the system... as 
  long as you're watching on a laptop and have a broadband Internet 
  connection available. As far as I can tell, there's no easy way to 
  record these video streams for later viewing on a video iPod.

  In some ways, online streamed TV provides what so many cable and 
  satellite subscribers have wanted - the ability to pick and choose 
  without feeling as though you're paying for the vast amount of dreck 
  that's available on the rest of those 200 channels. 

  It's also worth mentioning Joost, a company founded by the guys who 
  started Skype. Currently in invitation-only beta, Joost promises to 
  provide streamed video. Unlike the networks, it's using a 
  peer-to-peer system that spreads the bandwidth load, but which may 
  suffer quality of service problems, since the bandwidth cannot be 
  guaranteed. It requires special software that's available for Mac OS 
  X along with Windows XP and Vista. Joost is ad-supported, with short 
  ads that are inserted at fairly frequent intervals into the 
  programming. Not having seen Joost in person yet, I can't provide 
  more details, but I imagine it will be public soon enough.

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

* Availability: Good (requires broadband Internet and a modern 
  computer)

* Ongoing Cost: $0, with ads

* Selection of shows: Limited to a selection of mainstream shows

* Freshness: Excellent

* Time-shifting: Limited to the episodes of shows made available

* Place-shifting: Requires laptop and broadband Internet connection


**YouTube** -- The sea change that's threatening to engulf mainstream 
  video is led by Google's YouTube, although there are a number of 
  competing services, including Google's own Google Video. What's 
  different about YouTube is that its many millions of videos are 
  contributed for free by users of the service, although there has 
  been a spate of partnerships with groups like CBS, the BBC, the NBA, 
  and the Sundance Channel. It's almost impossible to compare 
  YouTube's content with what you would find anywhere else, because 
  almost all of it is short, amateurishly produced, and poorly 
  displayed in a tiny box in a Web page. (Apple just announced that 
  YouTube content would become available on the Apple TV by way of a 
  free software update later this month, but the video quality doesn't 
  appear to be improved - in fact, you're taking highly compressed Web 
  video and enlarging it for a widescreen TV, so the quality is going 
  to be less than ideal.) But that's the charm of it as well; it's 
  easy to find yourself watching utterly unpredictable bits of video 
  after idly clicking into YouTube from a Web link.

<http://www.youtube.com/>
<http://www.youtube.com/press_room?morgue=yes>

  While it may not be possible to compare YouTube to mainstream video, 
  there's no question that TV networks and providers are extremely 
  nervous about the rise of YouTube. We all have a limited amount of 
  time to watch video (though it's apparently more limited for people 
  like me than for the average American), and time spent watching 
  YouTube takes away from time spent watching normal TV. What's not to 
  fear? It doesn't cost anything for people to watch videos on 
  YouTube, and it's unclear if even Google will be able to come up 
  with a way to make YouTube earn its bandwidth keep. YouTube is not a 
  future that TV executives like to dream about at night. 

* Availability: Good (requires broadband Internet and a modern 
  computer)

* Ongoing Cost: $0

* Selection of shows: Insane

* Freshness: Excellent

* Time-shifting: Easy and legal

* Place-shifting: Legal, but requires video-capable iPod or 
  Internet-connected laptop


**Personal Experiences** -- The genesis of this article came from my 
  attempt to bring coherency to the video landscape for our family. 
  From the point Tonya and I left for college in 1985 until 2001, when 
  we moved back to Ithaca, we had only over-the-air TV, either because 
  that was all that was available or because we weren't willing to pay 
  for cable or satellite TV. We've always made heavy use of 
  time-shifting, first with a VCR (supplemented for a while with a 
  short-lived electronic program scheduler called a VideoGuide; 
  mentioned in "Macworld Superlatives," 1995-08-21), and then with a 
  TiVo, which we've covered in TidBITS numerous times.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/1359>
<http://db.tidbits.com/series/1204>

  When we returned to Ithaca in 2001, Time Warner made it easy to add 
  digital cable TV to our cable-modem subscription, and it was fun for 
  a while to let the TiVo loose among the hundreds of channels we 
  received. But having all that video available on the TiVo proved 
  stressful, since we felt the need to keep up in order to prevent 
  older unwatched shows from being deleted. We realized that we were 
  watching TV more - 7 to 10 hours per week - just to manage the 
  TiVo's contents, and worse, we often ended up watching shows that we 
  either didn't reliably enjoy or found stressful before bed. It was 
  fascinating - we were drawn like moths to a flame, to an activity 
  that required significant time and money and often left us either 
  slightly disgusted about how we'd spent the time or too wired to 
  sleep. So in December 2004, we dropped cable TV and promised 
  ourselves that we'd spend the money we saved on just the media that 
  we wanted, whether print books, purchased DVDs, a Netflix 
  subscription, audiobooks that we used to help us fall asleep (see 
  "iPods Defeating Insomnia," 2005-02-28), support for podcast radio 
  shows like This American Life or On the Media, or donations to the 
  local public library.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8004>
<http://www.thisamericanlife.com/>
<http://www.onthemedia.org/>
<http://www.tcpl.org/>

  So as much as this appears to be downright un-American, we're down 
  to 3 to 5 hours of video per week. Thanks to a Netflix subscription, 
  when we choose to watch video (on my MacBook or Tonya's MacBook Pro, 
  since we don't own a standalone DVD player), we're catching up on TV 
  series that we missed during the many years we could get only 
  over-the-air broadcasts, along with the occasional movie (we've 
  never been big moviegoers either). Tristan's choices tend toward 
  naval history documentaries left on the TiVo and Looney Tunes DVDs 
  he received for Christmas. Occasionally we watch YouTube clips I've 
  heard about from friends, and tons of great lectures are available 
  from the Internet too, such as the discussion between author Michael 
  Pollan (of "The Omnivore's Dilemma" fame) and Whole Foods CEO John 
  Mackey. But what's important is that we're choosing what to do, 
  whether watching video, reading books, listening to podcasts, 
  discussing the day's events, or participating in other indoor 
  sports.

<http://webcast.berkeley.edu/event_details.php?webcastid=19147>
<http://www.amazon.com/Omnivores-Dilemma-Natural-History-Meals/dp/1594200823/tidbitselectro00/>


**What About You?** -- I'm fine with the fact that we're statistical 
  outliers in terms of the amount of video we watch. But if you're 
  trying to figure out what of this cornucopia of options makes the 
  most sense for you, here are a few thoughts, based on viewing 
  patterns I've observed:

* TV-involved. If you eagerly await the new shows every season and 
  follow the plots of multiple series, or if you're addicted to 
  watching live sports on TV, cable or satellite TV is the only way to 
  go. The selection is very good, the freshness can't be beat, and the 
  cost per hour drops as you watch more. Do yourself a favor and get a 
  DVR, though, so you can control what you watch when - there is no 
  reason in this modern world to enslave yourself to the whims of 
  network TV schedulers. Over-the-air broadcasts and network Web 
  streams probably lack the selection you want, even if you can't beat 
  the price; the iTunes Store would be more expensive and have a 
  smaller selection; and all the other options fail entirely in the 
  freshness category.

* Movie buff. The choice is clear here - you need a Netflix 
  subscription. You're unlikely to find many movies you want to see 
  that Netflix doesn't carry, and both the monthly and per-hour costs 
  are bargains compared to purchasing the DVDs yourself. Over-the-air 
  and cable/satellite TV run lots of movies, but the selection is 
  highly random, and iTunes doesn't have the selection yet, though I 
  anticipate that will change in the next few years. 

* Kid vid. Since children so often want to watch shows repeatedly, 
  purchasing pre-recorded content on DVD or VHS tape is the best deal 
  and provides the best selection. The iTunes Store is also a 
  contender in this space if what you want to see is included in the 
  35 TV shows and 66 movies in the Kids category, and as a bonus, 
  digital files won't wear out or get scratched. If you don't want a 
  kid monopolizing a Mac for watching DVDs, an Apple TV or a portable 
  DVD player would be a help. For another option, consider subscribing 
  to cable for a period of time, loading up a TiVo with kid shows and 
  movies, and then canceling your subscription. Over-the-air 
  broadcasts fall down in terms of selection and in the ease of 
  recording and replaying content. Netflix is good, but only if you 
  don't want to enable repeated viewings over time (and ripping a 
  rented DVD for that purpose violates both the letter and the spirit 
  of copyright law).

* Time-constrained. If you don't wish to spend what limited time you 
  have on TV, while not cutting it out entirely, go with a Netflix 
  subscription, supplemented with current TV shows from the iTunes 
  Store and networks' Web streams. You'll stay in control and save 
  money by restricting the amount of video available to watch to just 
  those items you really want to see. Whatever you do, don't get 
  sucked into downloading video from P2P file-sharing services, since 
  then you'll spend much of your precious time on finding and managing 
  downloads.

* Tight budget. If your goal is to pay as little as possible for 
  video, either pull out the rabbit ears for over-the-air broadcasts 
  or turn to the Internet, where you can download vast amounts of 
  video for free, legally. To supplement Internet video with 
  commercial video, I recommend either a cheap Netflix plan or 
  selective use of the iTunes Store's multi-passes or season passes. 
  Whether or not you choose to download video from P2P file-sharing 
  services is up to you, but at the moment, it seems relatively safe 
  from prosecution, although it's a large time sink.

  Again, perhaps I'm odd, but I feel a lot better having worked 
  through the economics and restrictions of the options. Before, I had 
  a nagging feeling that we were paying too much for the amount of 
  enjoyment we derived from TV, and now I can rest easy knowing that 
  we're on just the right plan, at least for the moment.


Take Control News/04-Jun-07
---------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9022>

**Two New Ebooks Improve Your TV Experience** -- Whether the video you 
  see on your TV screen is too blurry, too jagged, too small, too old, 
  too new, too boring, too weird, or just too much, you can make it 
  better with the advice in two new ebooks.

  Are you tired of hearing how your analog viewing habits make you a 
  crusty dinosaur, but worried that DVDs from your Netflix 
  subscription won't look good on a new high-definition digital TV? Or 
  are you wondering how you can survive shopping for a new TV without 
  paying too much for features you don't need? Learn how to shop like 
  a pro and get the right peripherals, find HD content, and set up 
  your new system with the second edition of "Take Control of Digital 
  TV." If you're like us, you're also downloading video from the 
  Internet or wondering if you can just use your computer as a TV, so 
  the ebook also looks at how to bring your computer into the mix, 
  with notes on video-download sites and products such as the Apple TV 
  and Elgato's EyeTV line. The ebook includes coupons for $5 off at 
  Small Dog Electronics and $20 off the purchase of Elgato's EyeTV 
  Hybrid.

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/digital-tv.html?14@@!pt=TRK-0027-TB882-TCNEWS>

  Of course, the just-enhanced Apple TV is the hottest 
  mix-your-computer-with-your-TV product around, and if you want to 
  know more about how to set it up, work with it, and troubleshoot any 
  problems, you can find friendly, expert advice in the "Macworld 
  Apple TV Superguide." Buy both books together and save $5.

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/mw-apple-tv.html?14@@!pt=TRK-0052-TB882-TCNEWS>


Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk/04-Jun-07
------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9020>

**Over-the-air HDTV** -- A reader provides recommendations for 
  receiving high-definition television programming using an antenna. 
  (1 message)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1308/>


**Scroll Wheel Tips** -- Adam's article on scroll wheel uses brings up 
  a question of direction: should scrolling down advance video content 
  (as it does by scrolling text content), or should it rewind the 
  content? (6 messages) 

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1309/>


**Methods of geotagging photos** -- Jeff's review of Geophoto brings 
  up a recommendation for HoudahGeo, a similar utility for assigning 
  geographical data to photos. (1 message)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1310/>


**Visions of the Sublime and the Inane** -- Does Twitter emphasize the 
  shallowness and meaninglessness of life, or is it indicative of the 
  changing modes of communication among younger generations? Or both? 
  (3 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1311/>


**First FreeHand, now Canvas** -- Adobe's acquisition of Macromedia 
  spelled doom for FreeHand, but now another competitor is bowing out 
  of the illustration market: Canvas for the Mac. (1 message)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1312/>


**Issues with international pricing** -- If a developer offers a 
  product in multiple countries (which have multiple currencies), 
  what's the best approach for pricing? (14 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1313/>


**Upgrading to iTunes Plus** -- Readers share their experiences with 
  the new iTunes Plus music, such as whether iTunes Plus tracks 
  automatically appear in playlists where the original iTunes 
  Store-bought tracks were assigned. (6 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1314/>


**Latest Computer Comparison** -- A Mac Plus versus a dual-core AMD PC 
  running Windows XP - guess which machine wins most of the tests? (1 
  message)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1315/>


$$

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 2007 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>





