TidBITS#883/11-Jun-07
=====================
  Issue link: <http://db.tidbits.com/issue/883>

  We're overflowing with news this week, including the release of our 
  "Take Control of Troubleshooting Your Mac" book, TidBITS staffers 
  being honored in the MacTech 25, the iPhone sidestepping a bullet in 
  the form of a patent ruling against Qualcomm, the release of 
  enhancements to the MacBook Pro line, a surprise release of Adobe 
  GoLive 9, Typinator 2.0 adding auto-correction capabilities, 
  NetNewsWire 3.0 sporting better integration with Apple applications, 
  a new remote-control option for Macs, and a trio of announcements 
  about running Windows on a Mac. But despite all that, the big news 
  comes from San Francisco, where Steve Jobs held court at the WWDC 
  keynote, showing off Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard, Safari for Windows 
  (gasp!), and how developers can write applications for the iPhone.

Articles
    TidBITS Staffers Honored in 2007 MacTech 25
    Adam & Tonya Speaking at O'Reilly Tools of Change for Publishing
    DealBITS: Win a Tom Bihn Laptop Briefcase, Case, and Strap
    DealBITS Winners: BeLight Software's Live Interior 3D
    Apple iPhone Won't Be Barred Under Ruling
    Apple Improves MacBook Pro
    And Today's Surprise Guest Is... GoLive 9
    Typinator Turns Two
    NetNewsWire 3.0 Speeds Up, Adds Integration
    LogMeIn Adds Remote Control for Mac
    A Trio of Windows-on-Mac Announcements
    Leopard Roars at WWDC 2007 Keynote
    Take Control News/11-Jun-07
    Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk/11-Jun-07


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TidBITS Staffers Honored in 2007 MacTech 25
-------------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9030>

  Congratulations to my fellow TidBITS staffers - Adam Engst, Tonya 
  Engst, Glenn Fleishman, Joe Kissell, and Matt Neuburg - who were 
  included on the now-annual MacTech 25 list of most influential 
  people in the Macintosh technical community (see "Adam & Tonya Engst 
  Honored in MacTech 25," 2006-07-17). Although Adam regularly places 
  high on lists like this one and the MDJ Power 25, along with being 
  named one of MacDirectory's "top ten visionaries articulating the 
  spirit of the Macintosh community," it's particularly pleasing to 
  see other members of TidBITS being similarly recognized for their 
  contributions to the Mac community via TidBITS and Take Control. 
  Other groups we work with receiving significant representation on 
  the list include Macworld, Peachpit Press, and MacNotables.

<http://www.mactech.com/articles/mactech/Vol.23/23.06/2007MacTech25/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8603>
<http://www.tidbits.com/adam/>

  Recognition should of course go to all the other people on the 
  MacTech 25 list this year, many of whom are developers and heads of 
  influential Macintosh software companies. For the full list, check 
  the Web version of this article.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9030>


Adam & Tonya Speaking at O'Reilly Tools of Change for Publishing
----------------------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9029>

  Around our dinner table, the tools, economics, standards, and future 
  of publishing are topics of daily discussion. If you share our 
  interest, I'd encourage you to join us at the upcoming O'Reilly 
  Tools of Change for Publishing conference. It runs from 18-Jun-07 
  through 20-Jun-07 in San Jose, California. The first day offers sets 
  of half-day tutorials, and the next two days are chock full of 
  45-minute sessions. We're glad that we're both going, since we can 
  split up and see twice as much; it would be frustrating to miss some 
  of these sessions. I'll be talking about collaborative writing tools 
  with a specific look at the lessons we've learned over many years of 
  group publishing along with some thoughts about where tools need to 
  evolve to keep up with the fast-paced world of publishing. Tonya 
  will be participating on a panel on the pros and cons of selling 
  in-progress books. If you do want to go, use coupon code "toc07scd" 
  to save 25 percent on the cost of admission.

<http://conferences.oreillynet.com/toc/>


DealBITS: Win a Tom Bihn Laptop Briefcase, Case, and Strap
----------------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9033>

  In our very first DealBITS drawing in 2003, we gave away a Tom Bihn 
  Brain Bag and laptop case; it remains one of our most popular 
  drawings of all time, with nearly 1,300 entrants. Well, Tom Bihn is 
  back, and this time they're offering an even better prize, a Tom 
  Bihn Empire Builder Briefcase, Brain Cell Hard-Sided Laptop Case, 
  and Absolute Shoulder Strap, collectively worth $225. I don't have 
  one, personally, but it looks extremely well thought-out.

<http://www.tombihn.com/page/001/PROD/700/TB0730>

  Tom Bihn has a special offer even if you don't win, 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/tom-bihn1/>
<http://www.tidbits.com/about/privacy.html>


DealBITS Winners: BeLight Software's Live Interior 3D
-----------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9023>

  Congratulations to William Causey of msn.com, Susan Alles of 
  dontgotmail.com, and Jeremy Meadows of not-pc.com, whose entries 
  were chosen randomly in last week's DealBITS drawing and who 
  received a copy of BeLight Software's Live Interior 3D, worth 
  $79.95. Since Jeremy was referred to DealBITS by Randall Meadows, 
  Randall will also receive a copy as a thank you. But don't fret if 
  you didn't win, since BeLight is offering everyone who entered this 
  DealBITS drawing a 15 percent discount on Live Interior 3D through 
  21-Jun-07, dropping the price to $67.95. Thanks to the 1,195 people 
  who entered this DealBITS drawing, and we hope you'll continue to 
  participate in the future!

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8876>
<http://belightsoft.com/products/liveinterior/overview.php>
<https://usd.swreg.org/cgi-bin/s.cgi?s=31176&p=311761836&v=3&d=0&q=1&t=&a=tidbits>


Apple iPhone Won't Be Barred Under Ruling
-----------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9031>

  Apple should be breathing a sigh of relief right now that they 
  didn't include third-generation (3G) cellular data networking 
  technology in the iPhone. A highly unusual U.S. International Trade 
  Commission (ITC) ruling last week prevents the importation of any 
  new 3G phone that uses silicon chips from Qualcomm. Bloomberg News 
  confirmed that the iPhone doesn't use any Qualcomm chips.

<http://www.usitc.gov/ext_relations/news_release/2007/er0607ee1.htm>
<http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601103&sid=amES_0bssrNk>

  The ITC ruled in October 2006 that Qualcomm had infringed patents 
  owned by Broadcom, a rival maker of cellular chips as well as a 
  major Wi-Fi chip maker. However, until last week's ruling, it was 
  unclear what action might be taken. The ban affects all 3G chips 
  sold by Qualcomm; most handsets are manufactured overseas and then 
  imported. Any handset model imported by 07-Jun-07 can continue to be 
  imported in future shipments, according to the ruling.

  The iPhone uses Wi-Fi for local networks and EDGE for cell networks. 
  EDGE fits into the 2.5G cell technology category, a peculiar name - 
  "second and a half generation" - assigned to interim standards 
  released mostly in the United States to bridge the gap between 2G 
  (slow modem speed) and 3G (low-end broadband speed) offerings during 
  a long period that 3G wasn't ready to deploy. EDGE offers as much as 
  three times the bandwidth of a dial-up analog modem, or roughly 150 
  Kbps in ideal cases.

  Many pundits and journalists opined that by charging $500 or $600 
  for the iPhone (depending on capacity) and by including a 
  slower-than-3G cell data connection, Apple had missed the boat - 
  forgetting, of course, that smartphones are only gradually adding 3G 
  networking, that few offer 3G and Wi-Fi in a single offering (and 
  none allow seamless network handoffs), and that other smartphones 
  cost in the hundreds of dollars. With new Qualcomm-based 3G phones 
  banned, Apple may get the last laugh.

  The decision went into effect immediately, and Qualcomm, Verizon, 
  and others are already attempting to have the ruling reversed. The 
  ruling becomes final within 60 days unless overturned by the U.S. 
  president; the White House said that it would delegate the decision 
  to the U.S. Trade Representative, as it has since 2005. If there's 
  no decision from U.S. Trade Representative Susan Schwab, Qualcomm 
  can file an appeal in federal court.


Apple Improves MacBook Pro
--------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9024>

  Apple revamped its MacBook Pro line of portables last week with 
  faster processors, better graphics capabilities, 802.11n wireless 
  networking (removing the need to run an enabler), and screens that 
  are backlit using LED technology. I need to remind myself that the 
  MacBook Pro I bought last November is still a perfectly fine machine 
  for my needs, and not allow techno-lust to overpower me (see "More 
  Bang, Less Bucks for My MacBook Pro," 2006-11-20). That won't be 
  easy, however.

<http://www.apple.com/macbookpro/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8761>

  The new 15-inch and 17-inch models are powered by Intel Core 2 Duo 
  processors running at 2.2 GHz or 2.4 GHz. The new chips belong to 
  the recently announced Intel "Santa Rosa" family, which offer 
  improvements in power consumption and bus speed (800 MHz versus 667 
  MHz for the Core 2 Duo processors used in the previous MacBook Pro 
  revision). The chips also enable the use of up to 4 GB of RAM, up 
  from a maximum of 3 GB. The base configurations include 2 GB of 
  memory. For graphics, the MacBook Pros use the Nvidia GeForce 8600M 
  GT processor with either 128 MB or 256 MB of memory.

  That memory comes in handy not only for graphics-intensive 
  applications such as Final Cut Studio but also for powering the 
  17-inch model's optional (for $100 more) display with a resolution 
  of 1920 by 1200 pixels, large enough to view and edit 1080i 
  high-definition video at native resolution. The default 
  configuration remains the same as before, with a native resolution 
  of 1680 by 1050 pixels.

  The MacBook Pro is also the first Mac to use energy-efficient LED 
  (light-emitting diode) backlighting for its display, though only on 
  the 15-inch model for now. Steve Jobs alluded to LED-backlit 
  displays in his "A Greener Apple" open letter posted at the Apple 
  Web site in May (see "Steve Jobs Talks Green," 2007-05-07) because 
  replacing fluorescent backlighting with LEDs reduces the amount of 
  toxic mercury used in computers. According to comments by Apple, the 
  LED backlighting can also add 30 to 60 minutes of time to a battery 
  charge.

<http://www.apple.com/hotnews/agreenerapple/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8974>
<http://gizmodo.com/gadgets/apple-interview/details-on-the-new-led-macbook-pro-266091.php>

  Storage has been increased, offering 120 GB or 160 GB hard drives 
  running at 5400 rpm for the 15-inch model, with an optional 160 GB 
  drive at 7200 rpm or a 200 GB drive at 4200 rpm. The 17-inch model 
  comes with a 160 GB drive, but can be outfitted instead with the 
  7200-rpm 160 GB drive or a 250 GB 4200-rpm drive. Note that drives 
  spinning at faster rates will not necessarily perform more quickly 
  in real-world usage.

  In most other respects, the configurations are similar to the 
  previous generation, including one FireWire 400 port, one FireWire 
  800 port, two USB 2.0 ports (three ports on the 17-inch model), 8x 
  slot-loading SuperDrive, built-in iSight camera, backlit keyboard, 
  ExpressCard/34 slot, Bluetooth 2.0+EDR short-range wireless 
  networking, and gigabit Ethernet.

<http://www.apple.com/macbookpro/specs.html>

  The new MacBook Pro models are available now for the same prices as 
  the previous generation. The 15-inch model with the 2.2 GHz 
  processor, 120 GB hard drive, and Nvidia card with 128 MB of memory 
  costs $2,000. The 15-inch model with the 2.4 GHz processor, 160 GB 
  hard drive, and Nvidia card with 256 MB of memory runs $2,500. And 
  the 17-inch model with the 2.4 GHz processor, 160 GB hard drive and 
  an Nvidia card with 256 MB of memory costs $2,800.


And Today's Surprise Guest Is... GoLive 9
-----------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9032>

  Sometimes it's good to be wrong. Or, perhaps more apt in this case, 
  wrong for the time being.

  Last week Adobe surprised me with the release of GoLive 9, an update 
  to the company's _previous_ flagship Web design application before 
  it acquired Dreamweaver. GoLive 9 now supports Intel-based Macs as a 
  universal binary, adds paragraph and character styles similar to 
  InDesign's implementation, inherits the new user interface of 
  Creative Suite 3, adds a Place command (also similar to InDesign), 
  simplifies site management, and inter-operates with other Adobe 
  applications. GoLive 9 also appears to be reinventing itself as a 
  powerful CSS (Cascading Style Sheets) tool, even though its CSS 
  capabilities have been pretty good in recent versions.

<http://www.adobe.com/products/golive/>
<http://www.adobe.com/products/dreamweaver/>

  I didn't expect to see any further development of GoLive, especially 
  not what appears to be significant engineering work in GoLive 9. 
  Following Adobe's acquisition of Macromedia in 2005 (see "Adobe 
  Swallows Macromedia," 2005-04-25), Glenn Fleishman and I figured 
  that GoLive would either be sold or put out to pasture like its 
  sibling FreeHand (see "Farewell FreeHand," 2007-05-21). Dreamweaver 
  had essentially trounced GoLive in the marketplace, a fact reflected 
  in the disappointing sales of the book we co-authored, "Real World 
  Adobe GoLive."

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8077>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8997>

  Then, late last year, Adobe officially dropped GoLive from the 
  Creative Suite in favor of Dreamweaver, untying it from the sole 
  reason many people presumably still used GoLive: it was part of the 
  bundle (see "GoLive Booted from Adobe Creative Suite, Acrobat 8 
  Released," 2006-09-18). And when Creative Suite 3 finally shipped in 
  April of this year, GoLive was nowhere in sight (see "Adobe Ships 
  Creative Suite 3, Offers Video Betas," 2007-04-16).

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8679>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8951>

  Needless to say, despite this release I'm still not optimistic for 
  GoLive's future at Adobe. My guess is that enough engineering work 
  had already been invested to finish the job, and that a core group 
  of Web designers still prefer the GoLive approach. But Adobe's 
  product page features prominent links to information on switching 
  from GoLive to Dreamweaver. The first line on the switching page 
  reads, "Before purchasing Adobe GoLive 9 software, consider Adobe 
  Dreamweaver CS3, the market-leading tool to design, develop, and 
  maintain websites and web applications."

<http://www.adobe.com/products/dreamweaver/switch/>

  In other words, you're perfectly welcome to buy it, but we don't 
  recommend it, even though we probably put a lot of work into it.

  GoLive 9 costs $400, with upgrades from GoLive 6, Creative Suite, or 
  Creative Suite 2 (but, notably, _not_ Creative Suite 3) priced at 
  $170. A free 30-day trial is available as a 323 MB download.

<http://www.adobe.com/go/trygolive>


Typinator Turns Two
-------------------
  by Matt Neuburg <matt@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9026>

  I'm a pretty good typist, but my thoughts still race ahead of my 
  fingers, so it's nice to have a utility for entering frequently used 
  words and phrases by typing just an abbreviation. Such a utility can 
  also act as a live typographical error correction mechanism, if you 
  set up some "abbreviations" that are actually mistakes your fingers 
  habitually make, like inverting the "h" and the "e" in the word 
  "the". Of all the utilities I've tried for doing this, Ergonis 
  Software's Typinator remains the simplest and most reliable. The 
  interface is clear, and there are just enough options to make 
  Typinator powerful and flexible without sacrificing clarity and ease 
  of use. TidBITS first reviewed Typinator in "You Type, It 
  Typinates," 2005-06-27; the news this week is that Ergonis has 
  released version 2.0.

<http://www.ergonis.com/products/typinator/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8151>

  Typinator is an ordinary application (not a dreaded input manager); 
  it watches your typing and controls the application where that 
  typing takes place, by using the accessibility features of Mac OS X 
  (see my articles "Are Input Managers the Work of the Devil?," 
  2006-02-20, and "Scripting the Unscriptable in Mac OS X," 
  2003-03-10, if you don't understand the technical terms in that 
  sentence). Its only interface is its single preferences window. This 
  window lists, at the top, your abbreviation sets (these sets are a 
  major new feature of this version of Typinator), and below that, the 
  abbreviations in the currently selected abbreviation set.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8430>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/7102>

  Abbreviation sets are useful because of their enablement behavior. 
  In a secondary dialog, you set up a list of applications where you 
  want special abbreviation set enablement; each abbreviation set can 
  then be enabled or disabled for each of those applications and for 
  all other applications en masse. Thus, for example, an abbreviation 
  set that should be operative only in BBEdit would be enabled for 
  BBEdit and disabled for "All Other Applications." Typinator 2.0 also 
  comes with three sets of frequently mistyped words (one each for 
  English, German, and French).

  Each abbreviation can have several options too. It can be 
  automatically expanded either at word-beginning or only when it is 
  used as an entire word; and expansion can be sensitive, insensitive, 
  or responsive to the case in which you type an abbreviation's 
  letters. By "responsive" I mean that, for example, "FYI" would yield 
  "For Your Information," but "Fyi" would yield "For your 
  information."

  That's essentially all there is to it, but I'd be failing in my duty 
  if I didn't mention one more really cool additional new feature. An 
  expansion can include a specification of where the insertion point 
  should be afterwards, and it can paste whatever is in the clipboard 
  at the moment at a specified place within itself. Thus, for example, 
  you could copy the phrase "wow" and then type the abbreviation "em" 
  to get "wow" surrounded by EM HTML tags and with the insertion point 
  right after the "wow". This kind of intelligent, flexible clipping 
  insertion is a feature of some applications, such as BBEdit; now 
  Typinator makes it universal.

  Typinator costs $20 for a two-year license, meaning that two years 
  after you purchase your license, if you want to take advantage of 
  any subsequent upgrades, you must pay an additional fee. It's a 2.4 
  MB download, and a universal binary; it requires Mac OS X 10.3.9 or 
  later, but 10.4 is recommended. You can try Typinator for free, but 
  there will be some special behavior until you purchase a license; I 
  believe what happens is that Typinator will nag you as it performs 
  an expansion, except when you are working in TextEdit.


**Staff Roundtable** -- I'm not alone in my use of Typinator and other 
  auto-completion utilities - Adam has long used auto-correction 
  capabilities in other applications, and has started using Typinator 
  as well.

  [Adam Engst] Abbreviation expansion utilities have never rocked my 
  world, since I'm a sufficiently fast typist that typing even 
  relatively long words and phrases is easier than remembering 
  abbreviation and expansion keys. However, I'm really liking 
  Typinator's new auto-correction capabilities, complete with an 800+ 
  entry set of typos and correct expansions (in English, French, and 
  German, not that I ever make mistakes in either French or German) 
  that Typinator can fix no matter what application you're using. I've 
  gotten used to auto-correction in Eudora and Microsoft Word, and I 
  miss it in other applications. 

  I would like to see Ergonis add a contextual menu item that would 
  simplify adding common mistakes to the list; it can be easier to add 
  such things while writing rather than requiring a switch to 
  Typinator.

  [Matt Neuburg] When using BBEdit to write a TidBITS article, I 
  actually find another utility even more useful than Typinator: it's 
  BBAutoComplete, by Michael Tsai (whose other invaluable applications 
  include SpamSieve). BBAutoComplete is a one-trick pony, but that 
  trick is a great one. When you summon it, usually by pressing some 
  keyboard shortcut, it looks at the letters preceding the insertion 
  point and then considers all the other words in your document, 
  seeking one that starts with those same letters. If it finds one, it 
  completes your letters, turning them into that word. If that's the 
  wrong word, press the keyboard shortcut again to get a different 
  completion. Optionally, BBAutoComplete can look through other 
  documents open in the same application, and can even resort to the 
  built-in Mac OS X spell-checker's word list. However, I use it only 
  for the frontmost document, and generally only with peculiar, 
  technical terms (such as "TidBITS,", "SpamSieve," or 
  "BBAutoComplete" - yes, I entered all three of those using 
  BBAutoComplete). BBAutoComplete works in only a few applications, 
  because serious scriptability is a prerequisite for it to do its 
  magic; those applications include BBEdit and Microsoft Word. Best of 
  all, it's free!

<http://c-command.com/bbautocomplete/>

  Speaking of "free," let's get back to Typinator, and in particular, 
  how its pricing model works. Granted, $20 is a very reasonable price 
  indeed; but having to pay again every two years in order to continue 
  getting updates means, to me, that you really have no idea how much 
  you'll end up paying. Aren't you going to feel pretty cheated if you 
  pay for your two years and then, one day after it expires, Ergonis 
  comes up with the bug fixes or improvements you've been waiting for 
  all this time? That is, in fact, just what happened with Typinator 
  2.0: it came out two years and one month after Typinator 1.0. Now, 
  as it turns out, Ergonis recognized this fact and secretly extended 
  the license period; but that's just my point: they did this secretly 
  (nothing in Typinator informs you of the fact: indeed, my copy 
  explicitly says that the free update period expired last month), and 
  they did it arbitrarily. Basically, my view is, during the two years 
  you pay for, anything (or nothing) could happen: you're gambling 
  either on the program being totally satisfactory and bug-free (when 
  was the last time that happened?) or on getting a reasonable amount 
  of improvement in a reasonable amount of time (no guarantees there 
  either). Plus it seems to me that this pricing scheme penalizes the 
  early adopter, who, just the other way round, I think, should be 
  rewarded for suffering through the bugs and shortcomings and ponying 
  up the funds that make future improvement possible.

  However, I don't seem to be able to muster much support for my views 
  here at TidBITS, and Ergonis's Christoph Reichenberger tells me I 
  have the facts all wrong (though I assure you, I'm just drawing what 
  seem to me the logical conclusions from the information available on 
  the Ergonis Web site). But then, that's why these Staff Roundtables 
  are so cool: everyone gets a say! So let me hand the virtual 
  microphone back over to Adam for an opposing view.

  [Adam Engst] Matt and Christoph and I have had this discussion 
  several times over the last few years, and I'm not bothered by the 
  overall policy. With software, all pricing decisions are in a sense 
  arbitrary, since software is created with pure thought rather than 
  raw materials, and overhead is generally low. Plus, requiring users 
  to pay to use a new version after two years of free upgrades feels 
  no more arbitrary than a developer deciding that the next release 
  should require an upgrade fee - there are no rules here. 

  Since no developer commits to a release schedule with upgrade fees 
  years in advance, there's no way to calculate whether Ergonis's 
  approach would cost more or less than a conventional "pay only for a 
  major upgrade" method. What you do know with Ergonis's approach is 
  that it will cost at least an extra $10 (that's the upgrade fee, not 
  $20) if you want to take advantage of new features and bug fixes 
  after two years (your current version does not stop working). The 
  only possible surprise is a good one - if Ergonis decides to extend 
  the two-year time frame to reward early adopters (who have also 
  benefited from the software the longest) or to fix a particularly 
  egregious bug. With a conventional approach, you never know at what 
  point you'll be required to pay an upgrade fee, how significant the 
  upgrade will be, or how much it will cost. So if anything, Ergonis's 
  approach seems much more predictable.

  But what I like most about Ergonis's approach is that it's a little 
  different. Just as we benefit when products offer unusual features, 
  I believe we benefit when developers try different business models. 
  If they're good, they'll survive and become available for others to 
  try. If they're bad, consumers will revolt, and the company will be 
  forced to try something else. Therein lies the true test, and the 
  mere fact of Ergonis's five-year history would seem to indicate that 
  most people aren't concerned about this upgrade approach. Christoph 
  tells me that what little negative feedback they have received is 
  based on misunderstandings.

  I do think Ergonis could ameliorate many of these misunderstandings 
  technically. For instance, Typinator could display a splash screen 
  that would warn the user after two years that the next upgrade would 
  no longer be free. Or Ergonis could implement an automatic update 
  mechanism that would make clear to the user during the update 
  process that an upgrade fee would be required if sufficient time had 
  passed.


NetNewsWire 3.0 Speeds Up, Adds Integration
-------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9028>

  The latest version of the popular news reader NetNewsWire is out, 
  sporting a spiffier interface, improved performance, and direct 
  connections to several Apple and third-party applications. 
  NetNewsWire 3.0 lets you subscribe to RSS and Atom syndication feeds 
  offered by media sites, blogs, search engines, and others, regularly 
  checking for updates and aggregating the results into a compact 
  window.

<http://www.newsgator.com/Individuals/NetNewsWire/>

  The new release, despite its major version number change, has much 
  the same above-the-hood functionality as version 2.1. The interface 
  revision is welcome, adding quite a bit of subtlety and shading to 
  the previous, more quotidian look. 

  NewsGator, the developer, says that under the hood, they revised 
  some fundamental parts of how the program stored its bits of news, 
  making it more robust and quicker in handling extremely large 
  subscriptions and quantities of news items.

  NetNewsWire has insinuated itself more deeply into Mac OS X by tying 
  into Spotlight, Address Book, iCal, and iPhoto. In Spotlight, 
  searching on any word found within any retrieved item shows a stub 
  within the list of Document results with a NetNewsWire icon. 
  Double-clicking the result opens the item within NetNewsWire. Photos 
  can be copied from a feed into iPhoto, too.

  The program supports micro-formats, which are embedded structured 
  elements within Web pages that can be interpreted by clever 
  software. If a page includes a calendar or contact entry in this 
  format, NetNewsWire presents you with the opportunity to add it to 
  iCal or Address Book. 

  NetNewsWire 3.0 adds Growl notifications, Twitterific support, and 
  the capability to email the contents of a news item or a link to a 
  news item through a menu command. Also new is what NetNewsWire calls 
  "cover art": a tiny screen capture of the home page of the Web site 
  for the news feed you're currently viewing. Finally, you can now 
  store news items as clippings, which are synchronized with an 
  account you set up at NewsGator's Web site. 

<http://growl.info/>
<http://twitter.com/Twitterrific>


LogMeIn Adds Remote Control for Mac
-----------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9027>

  Mac users have a new tool for remotely accessing other Macs 
  regardless of whether the remote computers have routable IP 
  addresses. LogMeIn released a beta last week of their LogMeIn Free 
  software for Mac OS X. LogMeIn already supports Windows and Linux 
  operating systems, and some handheld platforms. This version enables 
  a Mac running Mac OS X 10.4.9 to connect to, or be connected to by, 
  any LogMeIn client on their supported platforms.

<https://secure.logmein.com/products/mac/download.asp>

  Remote control software is often used to view and control the 
  operating system interface of a computer elsewhere on a local or 
  remote network, and to retrieve or transfer files among multiple 
  computers owned by one person - I have Quicken installed only on my 
  computer at home, for instance, and use it remotely while I'm in the 
  office. Remote control software is also widely used for technical 
  support, enabling a technician to view precisely what a user is 
  doing, and to install software remotely. 

  The free flavor of LogMeIn allows unlimited computers and 
  connections, but doesn't include file transfer, just remote screen 
  control. The company offers several paid versions of their products, 
  including a premium personal release that does include file 
  transfers, remote printing, and a dashboard for managing multiple 
  machines. The Mac version is available only in the free edition at 
  the moment.

  LogMeIn requires a software installation (but without the need to 
  restart) on the computer that will be remotely controlled. The 
  company's Web site manages your connection to remote computers. 
  Remote control is handled through a Web browser: a Web plug-in for 
  Safari and a Java applet that works in Firefox provides the 
  interface. Just like iChat, Skype, and other communications 
  software, LogMeIn can work with either routable IP address or 
  private, non-routable addresses typically used in home networks, 
  hotspots, and some business networks. (The trick is that computers 
  on either end of a connection open a link to a central server which 
  ties each separate connection together.)


**Other Buttons on the Remote** -- While Timbuktu Pro has long 
  provided a combination of remote control, file transfer, and other 
  communications features, the product is priced and designed for 
  technical support or advanced users with specific needs, not 
  personal use. Timbuktu Pro can't penetrate networks to reach private 
  addresses, either, since Netopia doesn't operate central servers 
  that would enable that. Timbuktu Pro can traverse NAT gateways using 
  Skype, but I have found that slow and sometimes unreliable in 
  practice.

<http://www.netopia.com/software/products/tb2/>
<http://www.netopia.com/software/products/tb2/tb2_skype.html>

  Similarly, Apple's Remote Desktop software provides remote control, 
  file transfer, and client management, but it's relatively expensive; 
  has no capability for working with private, non-routable IP 
  addresses; and is aimed at large installations (see "Apple Remote 
  Desktop 3 Released," 2006-04-17).

<http://www.apple.com/remotedesktop/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8499>

  Fog Creek's Copilot software can reach routable and non-routable 
  addresses, but is sold on a time-used basis and is meant for 
  technical support (see "Fog Is My Copilot," 2007-01-09); usage can 
  cost 25 cents a minute or $5 per day, or can be included in monthly 
  subscription plans. Likewise, Mac HelpMate Remote can reach any 
  computer, but is designed for remote technical support, and is part 
  of a package starting at $600 per year.

<https://www.copilot.com/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8833>
<http://www.macworkshops.com/machelpmate/>


A Trio of Windows-on-Mac Announcements
--------------------------------------
  by Joe Kissell <joe@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9036>

  For almost a year, we've covered the ongoing rivalry between 
  Parallels Desktop and VMware Fusion, the two leading ways to run 
  Windows on an Intel-based Mac without rebooting. Last week, the 
  competition escalated yet again as both products received major new 
  releases. And, just to keep things interesting, Apple also released 
  another beta of Boot Camp, their official dual-boot solution for 
  running Windows.


**VMware Fusion Beta 4** -- VMware has released the fourth public beta 
  of their Fusion virtualization software. The biggest news in this 
  release is that Fusion has outdone Parallels Desktop's Coherence 
  feature (for now, at least) with a feature called Unity. Both 
  Coherence and Unity free Windows from running in a separate box, 
  putting windows from both Mac OS X and Windows on equal footing - 
  and giving Windows applications their own Dock icons. However, 
  Coherence puts all windows from Windows in the same "layer," which 
  is to say that you can't put a Mac OS X window between two Windows 
  windows; switching any Windows window to the front brings them all 
  to the front - and Exposé groups all Windows windows together. 
  Fusion's Unity has no such limitations; it not only provides full 
  support for Exposé but also adds drop shadows to each window, for a 
  much more Mac-like Windows experience. In addition, Unity replicates 
  most of the contents of the Windows Start menu in your Mac menu bar, 
  unlike Coherence, which displays the whole Windows task bar within 
  Mac OS X. On the other hand, Unity currently works only with Windows 
  XP, whereas Coherence already supports Windows Vista as well.

<http://www.vmware.com/mac/>

  Beta 4 also gives Fusion the capability of using Boot Camp 
  partitions with Windows Vista installed. (Previously, only Boot Camp 
  partitions running Windows XP were supported.) This support is still 
  considered experimental, however, meaning users must reactivate 
  Windows Vista each time they switch between Boot Camp and Fusion. 
  Fusion's Boot Camp support received several other bug fixes and 
  enhancements in Fusion beta 4 as well, including automatic updating 
  of Fusion's drivers when running Windows from a Boot Camp partition 
  in a virtual machine. Other improvements in beta 4 include improved 
  performance, a customizable tool bar, and support for Apple 30-inch 
  Cinema Displays. Fusion beta 4 is a 167.4 MB download.


**Parallels Desktop 3.0** -- Meanwhile, Parallels has kept busy on 
  other fronts, and their newly released version 3.0 of Parallels 
  Desktop provides a number of major improvements and new features. At 
  the top of the list is the long-awaited support for 3D graphics, 
  which finally enables gamers to consider Parallels as a viable 
  alternative to Boot Camp.

<http://www.parallels.com/products/desktop/>

  A new Snapshots feature lets users save the state of their Windows 
  virtual machines at any time, so that they can install new software 
  or make other changes and then easily go back to the system's 
  earlier state if crashes or serious problems occur. Another new 
  feature, SmartSelect, provides the capability to associate file 
  types with particular applications in either Windows or Mac OS X - 
  so that, for example, you could double-click a .txt file in Windows 
  and have it open in TextEdit under Mac OS X, or double-click a .doc 
  file in Mac OS X and have it open in the Windows version of Word. 
  And Parallels Explorer provides a way to view and access files 
  stored in your Windows system even if Windows itself isn't running.

  Among the many other changes in version 3.0 are improvements to 
  Coherence, Boot Camp support, Shared Folders, and USB support, plus 
  hundreds of bug fixes.

  This is the first paid upgrade to Parallels Desktop since its 
  release. The upgrade costs $50; new copies remain priced at $80. 
  Parallels Desktop 3.0 is a 78.3 MB download.


**Boot Camp Beta 1.3** -- Lastly, Apple released beta 1.3 of Boot 
  Camp, a 274 MB download. This latest version supports the newest 
  Macs (including, presumably, the new MacBook Pro models introduced 
  on 05-Jun-07). It also adds support for keyboard backlighting on 
  MacBook Pros, pairing of Apple Remotes (for those who have more than 
  one), and improvements in several areas, such as graphics drivers 
  and international keyboard support. Apple recommends the update for 
  all current Boot Camp users. As in previous versions, updating 
  requires burning a new Mac Windows drivers CD or DVD, restarting 
  under Boot Camp, and installing the updated drivers.

<http://www.apple.com/macosx/bootcamp/>


Leopard Roars at WWDC 2007 Keynote
----------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9038>

  At today's Worldwide Developer Conference keynote, Apple CEO Steve 
  Jobs demoed the first feature-complete developer beta release of Mac 
  OS X 10.5 Leopard, showing off slick new features, including what 
  appears to be the most significant overhaul of the Finder in some 
  time. At last year's WWDC, demos focused largely on marquee features 
  like Time Machine, Spaces, Mail, and Dashboard (see "Mac OS X 10.5 
  Leopard Previewed at WWDC 2006," 2006-08-07). Today Jobs also 
  shocked the Mac world by announcing the release of a test version of 
  Safari 3 for Windows XP and Vista, and then wrapped up by explaining 
  how developers will be able to create applications for the iPhone, 
  due at 6 P.M. on 29-Jun-07.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8632>

  Although Jobs claimed 300 new features in Leopard, he chose to focus 
  on only a few in the keynote, and didn't cover the new features in 
  Mail or iCal, or Mac OS X's accessibility capabilities, which were 
  previously revealed. Jobs reiterated a shipping date of October 2007 
  for Leopard. 


**Basic Finder Improvements** -- Eye candy is important to Apple these 
  days, and Leopard provides plenty of it, with the new translucent 
  menu bar and a reflective "floor" on which Dock icons sit. These 
  features are likely due to Core Animation, a new API that simplifies 
  the process of creating sophisticated animations.

  Computer makers, processor makers, and operating system developers 
  all conspire to make sure that each new update to an operating 
  system's interface includes something that requires more horsepower. 
  Not so much that it hobbles older computers, but enough that it can 
  wow existing owners into buying new hardware. Multi-core processors 
  make it somewhat easier to justify burning processor cycles on 
  trendy 3D effects, too.

  Stacks, a new element of the Dock, should appeal to clean-desk types 
  irritated by Mac OS X's inability to handle piles of things. As far 
  as we can tell, a stack is a new way of looking at the contents of a 
  docked folder; you can either fan out the contents to see (and 
  select from) them, or you can view them in a grid if there are too 
  many for the fan display to make sense. The newest document is 
  always placed on top of a stack. 

  In essence, Stacks brings back the tabbed folder functionality from 
  Mac OS 9, although with a modern look and feel. In a bid to end 
  piles of downloads scattered across your Desktop, Jobs said that a 
  default stack named Downloads will automatically capture downloaded 
  files, notifying you when new ones arrive.

<http://www.apple.com/macosx/leopard/features/desktop.html>

  Another Finder improvement is Quick Look, which provides a fast 
  preview of any document in the Finder. Pressing the spacebar with a 
  file selected presents a preview of the file's contents. This 
  preview includes the capability to play QuickTime movies and page 
  through multi-page documents. Apple will provide Quick Look support 
  for common document types, like Microsoft Word and Excel, PDF, text, 
  movie, and image files, and will offer a plug-in architecture for 
  developers to build their own Quick Look preview interfaces. 
  Clearly, Steve's documents are prettier than ours, but Quick Look 
  may still prove useful for examining documents quickly without 
  having to launch the associated application.

<http://www.apple.com/macosx/leopard/features/quicklook.html>

  The popularity of iTunes is having a notable effect on the Finder, 
  with an iTunes-like sidebar that contains top-level items labeled 
  Devices (disks), Shared (networked computers), Places (folders), and 
  Search For (essentially smart folders). For those who enjoy the 
  iTunes Cover Flow feature that lets you browse by album art, Jobs 
  said that the same option will now be available for Finder windows, 
  letting you browse through items and even play QuickTime movies in 
  the interface. 

<http://www.apple.com/macosx/leopard/features/finder.html>

  Spotlight extends its reach in Leopard to search networked Macs and 
  PCs, providing a fundamental enhancement to the technology. 
  Leopard's Spotlight will also feature Boolean searching, exact 
  phrases, dates, ranges, and absolute dates. Oddly, it will 
  reportedly also perform simple calculations (much the way you can 
  perform calculations in LaunchBar, we suppose). It remains to be 
  seen if these improvements will cause those of us who find Spotlight 
  relatively useless now to change our minds. Because Jobs said this 
  new Spotlight feature will search PCs, Apple may need to release 
  Spotlight for Windows, too, perhaps in a challenge to the various 
  desktop searching programs like Google Desktop.

  Finally, a shared computer listed in the Finder's sidebar can be 
  accessed not just for file sharing, but also for remote control, 
  just as though you were in front of it. Apple didn't stop there. The 
  awkwardly named "Back to My Mac" feature allows remote access to 
  other Macs for which you have authorization over the Internet, with 
  Apple's .Mac service managing the connection. Several products - 
  including LogMeIn, a beta of which was released last week for Mac OS 
  X (see "LogMeIn Adds Remote Control for Mac," 2007-06-11) - allow 
  remote control connections to computers behind home and corporate 
  gateways that assign private network addresses. Private network 
  addresses are typically non-routable, unreachable from the rest of 
  the Internet. 

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9027>


**The More Bits the Better** -- Jobs said Leopard will be a 64-bit 
  operating system that will also support 32-bit applications. In a 
  slight jab at Microsoft, which has sold 32-bit and 64-bit versions 
  of Windows separately, Jobs said that Leopard will have a single 
  version that can handle both kinds of applications.

  The advantage of 64-bit processors when they have operating system 
  support is, in part, their capability to perform mathematical 
  operations on larger chunks of data a time. That can produce 
  substantial improvements in computationally intensive tasks, which 
  invariably include the display of new, fancy interface elements - 
  Quick Look, Cover Flow, etc. - and serious application tasks, like 
  creating movies in iDVD or playing games. Apple is unique in selling 
  mostly computers that feature 64-bit processors. Until now, the real 
  underlying power hasn't been used to its full advantage.


**Boot Camp Changes Little** -- Leopard will, as expected, have Boot 
  Camp built in, but only as a complement to Parallels Desktop and 
  VMware Fusion. By "built in," it appears that Apple means you'll be 
  able to switch to Windows by choosing Restart in Windows from the 
  Apple menu. But Leopard won't require that you end your session on 
  the Mac side; instead, it goes into "safe sleep" mode so when you 
  return, you'll be right back where you left off.

<http://www.apple.com/macosx/leopard/features/bootcamp.html>

  Nonetheless, this approach to Boot Camp means that Apple chose not 
  to compete with the third-party software offering virtualization 
  capabilities. That's unusual in the sense that Boot Camp, by forcing 
  the user to reboot into Windows, isn't a very Mac-like solution to 
  the problem of needing to run the occasional Windows application. 

  Both Parallels Desktop, with Coherence, and VMware Fusion, with 
  Unity, offer far more integrated approaches, but Boot Camp is free 
  with Leopard. Jobs did say that Apple is helping both companies, and 
  both are working hard to provide seamless compatibility with Windows 
  partitions created by Boot Camp so you can use either Boot Camp or a 
  virtualization program without duplicating your Windows 
  installation.

  On the other hand, Boot Camp enables full use of all hardware 
  drivers and peripherals in Windows, along with 100 percent of the 
  potential processor power. Virtual machines can never achieve that 
  efficiency - although they can get close to it, depending on task - 
  and specific hardware that uses software that bypasses the driver 
  abstraction layer may never be supported on a virtual machine.


**Spaces** -- With Spaces, Leopard users will be able to create and 
  switch among multiple desktops, each with different active 
  applications. Such capabilities are by no means new, but by 
  integrating Spaces into Mac OS X at a low level, we suspect that 
  multiple desktops will become significantly more popular among 
  normal users. It appears that Apple has done a particularly good job 
  with Spaces, making it simple to switch among spaces, drag windows 
  from one space to another, and more.

<http://www.apple.com/macosx/leopard/features/spaces.html>

  The attraction of Spaces comes in part from the constant demands for 
  attention inherent in today's Macs - it can be difficult to 
  concentrate on writing, for instance, when people can interrupt via 
  iChat, when email is constantly flowing in, when Web pages update 
  automatically, and when various other distractive applications are 
  constantly at the ready.


**Dashboard & Web Clips** -- Jobs claimed that over 3,000 Dashboard 
  widgets have been written, making the technology a success. However, 
  creating a widget currently requires a bit of programming, whereas 
  with the new Web Clip feature of Dashboard, anyone will be able to 
  cut out a regularly updating part of a Web page - perhaps the comic 
  of the day, a Google Analytics usage graph, or CNET's "What's Hot" 
  treemap of popular and timely articles - and turn it into a 
  Dashboard widget.

<http://www.apple.com/macosx/leopard/features/dashboard.html>


**iChat** -- Leopard's iChat may be one of the most compelling 
  improvements for many of us. First and foremost, audio quality has 
  been improved through support for AAC-LD (AAC Low Delay) encoding. 
  iChat in Leopard also offers tabbed chats, as are currently 
  available via Chax, and in a bit of a silly but fun move, Photo 
  Booth effects that can be applied to live video, as well as 
  bluescreen effects behind (and overlays in front of) someone in a 
  video chat, much like Script Software's ChatFX.

<http://www.apple.com/macosx/leopard/features/ichat.html>
<http://www.ksuther.com/chax/>
<http://www.scriptsoftware.com/chatfx/>

  But what's really interesting is that you can now share iPhoto 
  slideshows via iChat, along with Keynote presentations and videos. 
  Plus, anything you can display with Quick Look can be shown in 
  iChat, making it possible to show others documents in real time. 
  We're looking forward to using iChat for remote presentations with 
  Mac user groups; we've done a few that way already, but it's nearly 
  impossible to flip back and forth between video and showing 
  something onscreen. Even better, anything you show with iChat can be 
  saved, audio chats as AAC files, and video chats as MPEG-4 files. 
  The podcasting world may explode, thanks to the added ease of 
  recording live audio and video.


**Time Machine** -- This year's demonstration of Time Machine wasn't 
  particularly detailed, but Jobs revealed one previously unannounced 
  feature that's notable. It turns out that Time Machine can back up 
  multiple computers to a hard drive connected to an 802.11n-based 
  AirPort Extreme Base Station (2007 release). Network backups are far 
  easier and more efficient (if slower) than schlepping a hard drive 
  between Macs - it would be nice if an initial backup could be made 
  while the drive was connected locally, and then attached to the 
  AirPort base station for remote backups. Time Machine will let you 
  change the disk to which you're backing up, exclude items you don't 
  want backed up, encrypt your backed up data, and set time limits on 
  how long versions of files should be kept to avoid filling up the 
  destination drive. It remains to be seen if it will be easy to store 
  a Time Machine-based backup drive off-site, as is ideal to protect 
  against fire or burglary.

<http://www.apple.com/macosx/leopard/features/timemachine.html>


**Winning Hearts and Minds (and Browser Market Share)** -- The classic 
  "one more thing" announcement was a shocker, with Jobs announcing 
  that Apple would be taking advantage of the experience in porting 
  iTunes to Windows to release Safari 3 for Windows XP and Vista as 
  well as for Leopard and for Tiger. Although this seems like an odd 
  move, given that Apple won't make any money from a Windows version 
  of Safari, it may be designed to encourage Web developers working in 
  Windows to create sites that will display properly on the iPhone, 
  which itself will be running a version of Safari. The public beta 
  version of Safari 3 was released today.

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

  Security and standards support may provide another rationale for 
  Apple porting Safari to Windows. A long-standing complaint among 
  security experts has been the many holes in Internet Explorer that 
  allow exploitation of a user's computer by simply visiting a Web 
  site. Internet Explorer 7 solved some of this problem by creating a 
  kind of walled garden in which browsing takes place, but it's a hack 
  on Microsoft's part. Plus, Web designers have long been irritated by 
  successive versions of Internet Explorer that fail to fix 
  fundamental problems in the browser's CSS support. A single line of 
  simple CSS that works correctly in Safari, Firefox, and Opera on all 
  platforms can require several lines of additional code to work in 
  multiple versions of Internet Explorer.

  It's ironic that Apple is releasing a browser for Windows, given 
  that Microsoft released Internet Explorer for the Mac in 1996. 
  Internet Explorer was the Mac's default browser until early 2003, 
  when Safari was unveiled, after which the program saw no more 
  development effort before being discontinued in 2006. See "Microsoft 
  Unveils Internet Explorer for Mac," (1996-01-22), "Internet Explorer 
  for Mac in Maintenance Mode" (2003-06-16) and "Internet Explorer 
  Officially Fades Away," (2006-01-09) for more on Internet Explorer 
  for Mac's history.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/1169>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/7227>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8383>

  Jobs didn't let last week's appearance with Microsoft CEO Bill Gates 
  at the Wall Street Journal's D: All Things Digital conference stop 
  him from poking fun at Microsoft's multiple versions of Windows 
  Vista. Jobs announced - apparently to a little initial shock - that 
  Leopard would be available in Basic, Premium, Business, Enterprise, 
  and Ultimate versions, all of which will cost $130. (It's a joke - 
  there's only one version.) This is the same price as all previous 
  versions of Mac OS X.

<http://www.macworld.com/weblogs/macword/2007/05/gatesjobsd/>

  The release of the beta of Safari 3 for Windows, the potential of 
  Spotlight for Windows (based on Jobs's comments), and continued 
  development of iTunes, Bonjour network discovery, QuickTime, AirPort 
  Utility, and other programs continues to change Apple's role 
  vis-a-vis the Windows platform. Apple is a very serious, top-level 
  Windows software developer now with tens of millions - if not more - 
  customers using their software for Windows.

  If, as our illustrious editor in chief, Tonya Engst, has suggested, 
  the iPhone is the new network computer, then Windows and Mac OS X 
  become equally viable platforms for interacting with the iPhone, 
  just as is true for the iPod.


**Developing for the iPhone** -- Speaking of the iPhone, Jobs's final 
  announcement was that Apple has come up with a new way for 
  developers to create applications that can run on the iPhone, a 
  question that has been much debated since the iPhone was first 
  announced. Apple's approach is to leverage the Safari engine to 
  enable AJAX-based applications that can communicate with the 
  Internet and integrate with other iPhone services like placing 
  calls, sending email, accessing Google Maps, and so on. And that's 
  all without the need for Apple to publish and maintain a software 
  development kit.

  (Lest this sound like gibberish to those readers who aren't Web 
  developers and designers, AJAX, or asynchronous JavaScript and XML, 
  enables a Web page to retrieve information and update a page via 
  JavaScript without reloading the page. This lets a single page to 
  work like a mini-application along the lines of Google's Gmail.) 

  In retrospect, this approach makes perfect sense, and lets Apple 
  make it possible for anyone (well, anyone who could create an 
  AJAX-enabled Web site) to create an iPhone application without 
  actually opening the platform up for development. Apple's Scott 
  Forstall, vice-president of the iPhone division, demoed a corporate 
  address book that took less than 600 lines of code and a 
  person-month to write and test, but which enabled remote lookups via 
  LDAP (Lightweight Directory Access Protocol), direct dial, direct 
  sending of email, and more. 

  Jobs didn't explain how many iPhone-specific functions will be 
  reachable via JavaScript. He noted that AJAX applications could dial 
  the phone and send email, but that's not saying much. Notably, by 
  relying on AJAX for third-party programs, Apple can likely prevent 
  the direct access to the iPhone's hardware that might make voice 
  over IP (VoIP) calling possible, something we suspect Apple's 
  partner AT&T wouldn't want cutting into cell phone earnings.


**From June to October** -- With all those announcements out of the 
  way, we can sit back and contemplate what it will be like to use 
  Leopard come October. Or at least, those of us for whom the iPhone 
  will simply cost too much can ponder Leopard - everyone else will 
  undoubtedly be too busy playing with their iPhones on the subway, 
  while stuck in traffic, or at the beach to notice the intervening 
  months.


Take Control News/11-Jun-07
---------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9035>

**Solve Mac Problems with Our Latest Ebook** -- It's always 
  frustrating when your Mac fails to start up, kernel panics 
  repeatedly, or starts acting strangely for no apparent reason. But 
  with "Take Control of Troubleshooting Your Mac," you can learn how 
  to diagnose and fix nearly any Mac-related problem. Written by Mac 
  guru Joe Kissell, the 86-page ebook helps you assemble a 
  troubleshooting toolkit and teaches you the key troubleshooting 
  procedures. It then provides specific instructions for solving the 
  most common problems you're likely to experience before showing you 
  how to apply the troubleshooting techniques to solving entirely new 
  problems. Pick up a copy today so you're prepared before trouble 
  hits! For those who want a print copy for reference during more 
  severe Mac troubles, we hope to have print-on-demand copies 
  available soon.

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/troubleshooting-mac.html?14@@!pt=TRK-0051-TB883-TCNEWS>


Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk/11-Jun-07
------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9037>

**Spatial references applied to time** -- It's commonplace in everyday 
  conversation to refer to time as if it existed spatially, but have 
  you ever thought about what you're actually saying? (27 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1316/>


**Portable scanner recommendations?** What products are available (and 
  recommended) for easily scanning journal articles at the library? (6 
  messages) 

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1317/>


**New iPhone Commercials** -- The television ads that first appeared 
  last week feed our technology desires. (2 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1318/>


**Keyboard Keys Shortcuts** -- The normal Mac OS X keyboard shortcuts 
  stop working on a reader's Mac. Any ideas? (3 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1320/>


**The ways we acquire video** -- Adam shares feedback from his recent 
  article on finding alternatives to TV cable or satellite service. (6 
  messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1321/>


**Vonage and AirPort Extreme** -- Could Apple's AirPort Base Station 
  be the cause of problems using Vonage's voice-over-IP service? (4 
  messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1322/>


**Current remote access solutions** -- What are the options for 
  controlling a Mac remotely? Readers share their experiences. (7 
  messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1323/>


**Tooting TidBITS's horn** -- Hoist a pint for the staff members of 
  TidBITS and other organizations that made the MacTech 25 list! (2 
  messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1326/>


$$

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