TidBITS#888/16-Jul-07
=====================
  Issue link: <http://db.tidbits.com/issue/888>

  Where do you get your Mac-related news and information? Adam digs 
  further into the results of the TidBITS 2007 Reader Survey and comes 
  up with some surprising answers. Also in this issue, Brian Tanaka 
  shares the secret of how he tracks his billable hours: OfficeTime. 
  Rounding out the news, we note the releases of QuickTime 7.2, iTunes 
  7.3.1, MacBook Pro EFI Firmware Update 1.3, Firmware Restoration CD 
  1.3, Microsoft Office 2004 11.3.6, and a major update to "Take 
  Control of Running Windows on a Mac." Lastly, if you're a new iPhone 
  owner with a weak stomach, you may not want to watch the video of 
  the device's losing battle with a high-powered blender.

Articles
    Apple Releases QuickTime 7.2, iTunes 7.3.1
    MacBook Pro EFI Firmware Update 1.3 Released
    Microsoft Office 2004 11.3.6 Addresses Security Issues
    An iPhone in a Blender?
    Track Project Time with OfficeTime
    TidBITS 2007 Reader Survey Results: News & Info Sources
    Take Control News/16-Jul-07
    Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk/16-Jul-07


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Apple Releases QuickTime 7.2, iTunes 7.3.1
------------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9073>

  Apple has updated QuickTime and iTunes, resolving issues with the 
  H.264 video codec and fixing bugs. The primary changes in QuickTime 
  7.2 are fixes for several potential security vulnerabilities related 
  to playback of malformed movie files or visiting maliciously crafted 
  Web sites. However, more interesting is one other long-overdue 
  change: movies can now be viewed full screen in QuickTime Player, a 
  feature previously available only after purchasing a QuickTime Pro 
  license. This update also adds two export formats: Movie to iPhone 
  creates an .m4v video, while Movie to iPhone (Cellular) creates a 
  smaller .3gp video. QuickTime 7.2 also rolls in unspecified updates 
  to the H.264 codec and other bug fixes. It's available via Software 
  Update or as stand-alone downloads for Mac (a 51.4 MB download) or 
  Windows (a 19.3 MB download).

<http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=305947>
<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/quicktime72formac.html>
<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/quicktime72forwindows.html>

  iTunes 7.3.1, according to Apple, "addresses a minor problem with 
  iTunes 7.3 accessing the iTunes Library." As such, the new version 
  rebuilds your library, so it's a good idea to make sure you have a 
  recent backup before you update. iTunes 7.3.1 is available for Mac 
  (a 33.8 MB download) or Windows (a 47.6 MB download).

<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/itunes731formac.html>
<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/itunes731forwindows.html>

  There has been discussion in TidBITS Talk of these updates causing 
  problems with Microsoft Office 2004 and some other applications that 
  rely on Mac OS X's Rosetta translation environment for PowerPC-based 
  applications running on Intel-based Macs. From what we can tell 
  based on a discussion at Apple's site and from MacFixIt reports, the 
  problem relates to update_prebinding failing to run properly during 
  the update process. Once update_prebinding has been run successfully 
  by typing "sudo update_prebinding" in Terminal or by reapplying the 
  Mac OS X 10.4.10 combo updater, all should be well unless Java SE 
  6.0 Release 1 Developer Preview 6 has also been installed; it must 
  be uninstalled according to the directions at MacFixIt before 
  running update_prebinding.

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1377/>
<http://discussions.apple.com/thread.jspa?threadID=1039074&start=0&tstart=0>
<http://www.macfixit.com/article.php?story=20070713094450677>
<http://www.apple.com/downloads/macosx/apple/macosx_updates/macosx10410comboupdatev11intel.html>


MacBook Pro EFI Firmware Update 1.3 Released
--------------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9077>

  Apple has released MacBook Pro EFI Firmware Update 1.3, which "fixes 
  a display issue on 2.2/2.4 GHz 15-inch MacBook Pro models," 
  according to the minimal text on Apple's download page. MacFixIt 
  speculates that this update fixes a color distortion problem 
  introduced in the earlier MacBook Pro Software Update 1.0, which is 
  required prior to applying the latest firmware update.

<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/macbookproefifirmwareupdate13.html>
<http://www.macfixit.com/article.php?story=20070713091025918>
<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/macbookprosoftwareupdate10.html>

  Apple also released Firmware Restoration CD 1.3. This utility (a 
  22.5 MB download) burns a CD that can be used to start up and repair 
  an Intel-based Mac that won't work due to an interrupted or failed 
  firmware update. The CD won't restore a machine's firmware if a 
  firmware update was successfully applied. Needless to say, download 
  the utility and burn a CD before applying the MacBook Pro EFI 
  Firmware Update.

<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/firmwarerestorationcd13.html>


Microsoft Office 2004 11.3.6 Addresses Security Issues
------------------------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9078>

  Microsoft has released Microsoft Office 2004 for Mac 11.3.6 Update, 
  which addresses vulnerabilities in Excel and fixes a bug in 
  Entourage. In Excel, an attacker could "overwrite the contents of 
  your computer's memory with malicious code," according to Microsoft. 
  The Entourage issue concerns data loss when using Microsoft Exchange 
  public folders. Additionally, the Japanese postal code dictionary 
  has been updated. The update, which can be applied most easily via 
  the Microsoft AutoUpdate utility, is a 15.4 MB download and requires 
  the Microsoft Office 2004 for Mac 11.3.5 Update to have been applied 
  previously.

<http://www.microsoft.com/mac/downloads.aspx?pid=download&location=/mac/download/Office2004/Office2004_1136.xml>
<http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=93157>


An iPhone in a Blender?
-----------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9074>

  This is just painful to watch. There's a company called Blendtec 
  that makes a high-powered blender. To showcase its capabilities, 
  they've done a number of hilarious "Will It Blend?" videos that 
  feature a wide variety of objects being subjected to blending. 
  They've destroyed a can of fake cheese, old toilet components, and 
  even a garden hose. But for their latest spin de force, Blendtec put 
  an iPhone into their demon blender, and... well, you'll just have to 
  see what happens for yourself. Don't try this at home, not that any 
  sane person would.

<http://www.willitblend.com/videos.aspx?type=unsafe&video=iphone>


Track Project Time with OfficeTime
----------------------------------
  by Brian Tanaka <brian@briantanaka.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9019>

  I'm forever juggling multiple projects. Naturally, I must track the 
  hours I spend on each project so I can bill my clients, and over the 
  years I've tried a variety of time tracking applications. A few 
  months ago, I switched to OfficeTime, and I think it's the best of 
  the bunch I've tried.

<http://www.officetime.net/>

  OfficeTime will benefit anyone who tracks time spent on multiple 
  activities. It's simple enough to be quick to learn, yet it has 
  substantial features that make it truly useful. In day-to-day use, 
  it always seems to do just what I want it to do - no more and no 
  less.

  Sessions - periods of time you track - are organized by user-defined 
  project names. For example, if you have three clients, you could 
  have a project for each of them. In reports, sessions are neatly 
  grouped within their respective projects. Each session can also 
  optionally belong to a category. Categories are types of tasks you 
  perform, such as Writing or Programming, and can have a default 
  dollar-per-hour rate.

  Timing is simple. The QuickStart menu lists all your projects, and 
  the first 10 are bound to keyboard shortcuts Command-0 through 
  Command-9. To begin timing, pick a project off the list, use the 
  keyboard shortcut, or select a project from the pop-up menu in the 
  main OfficeTime window. All fields in the timer window, such as 
  elapsed time, are editable on the fly. Each session also contains a 
  Notes field. Pausing, stopping, starting, and re-starting the timer 
  can all be done from either the keyboard or a menu.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2007-07/timer-window.jpg>

  Speaking of rates, though the rate is set by the default category 
  (if one is defined) for each project, for each timed session you may 
  choose a different category (and possibly a different rate), or you 
  can even simply change the rate for the current session regardless 
  of category. You can also change categories, define a new category, 
  or not use a category at all. In other words, when you start a timed 
  session, if you like the defaults, you're all set. If you don't, you 
  can change whatever aspects you don't like, right where you are, 
  while the timer ticks away. This is an example of one of 
  OfficeTime's strengths: it employs logical conventions to make basic 
  use fast and simple, and yet it allows a refreshing degree of 
  flexibility as you work.

  Another especially useful feature is the capability to switch 
  between projects rapidly. If, for example, I'm in the middle of a 
  project, and something comes up that forces me to work on another 
  project for 15 minutes, I simply change project timers quickly and 
  easily.

  The necessary reporting and graphing features are done well. For 
  example, if I want to see how I've spent my time during the current 
  day and how much money I've earned, I simply press Command-T. A 
  quick report appears that shows all the projects I've worked on, how 
  long I worked on them, and how much money I've earned - both by 
  project and total for the day. Plus, the report includes a nice 
  color-coded pie chart that shows at a glance that, for instance, I 
  spent too much time today reviewing my Getting Things Done lists and 
  not enough time writing code!

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2007-07/pie-chart.jpg>

  Generating a new report with a different time period or with data 
  from one particular project or category requires simply choosing a 
  few options from the pop-up menus. There are also keyboard shortcuts 
  for common time periods: today, last week, this month, and so on. 
  You can quickly see how much time you've spent on the currently 
  timed project over the entire life of the project by simply pressing 
  Command-R.

  When you reach the end of your billing cycle, you can generate 
  invoices in OfficeTime, or simply copy and paste data from the 
  OfficeTime reports into an email message or your own billing 
  template in another application.

  OfficeTime synchronizes with iCal and Address Book, is a universal 
  binary, and costs $40. It requires Mac OS X 10.4 or later. A fully 
  functional demo version is available as a 9.5 MB download and 
  expires after 21 days.

<http://www.officetime.net/download.html>

  [Brian Tanaka is a freelance writer, IT consultant, Web developer, 
  and the author of "Take Control of Permissions in Mac OS X."]

<http://briantanaka.com/>
<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/permissions-macosx.html?14@@!pt=TB888>


TidBITS 2007 Reader Survey Results: News & Info Sources
-------------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9075>

  We've been busy with other things, but we haven't forgotten the 
  results of our recent reader survey, which garnered responses from 
  over 3,500 people. In the first installment (see "TidBITS 2007 
  Reader Survey Results: Who Are You?," 2007-03-12), I looked at what 
  the results said about who reads TidBITS. This time I'm instead 
  focusing on how our readers acquire technical news and information. 
  I have a few charts that illustrate the numbers, which you can view 
  either by visiting the linked graphic or just reading this article 
  on our Web site, where graphics now appear inline within the 
  article.  

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/webx?displaySurvey@@.3c8dc29b>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8904>

  In the survey, we asked about the ways in which you acquire Mac- and 
  tech-related news and information. The table below summarizes the 
  answers.

    News Source          (1)  (2)  (3)  (4)   (5)     Rank
    ------------------------------------------------------
    Email newsletters    48   119  363  687  2177    15008
    Web sites            52   215  706  949  1422    13506
    Personal email      255   732  825  638   820    10846
    Print magazines     541   738  746  598   638     9837
    Discussion forums   589   918  707  498   501     9043
    In-person           753   974  766  419   291     8130
    RSS feeds          1261   641  350  226   705     8022
    Aggregator sites   1357   665  486  268   345     6942
    Podcasts           1383   799  415  285   267     6701
    Personal blogs     1294   871  527  289   151     6528


  First, some notes. Remember, 1 is "Never," 2 is "Infrequently," 3 is 
  "Sometimes," 4 is "Often," and 5 is "Regularly." What that means is 
  that email newsletters are ignored entirely by 48 people, read 
  infrequently by 119, read sometimes by 363, read often by 687, and 
  read regularly by 2,177. 

  The last column, "Rank," is a calculation of the column number (1 
  through 5) multiplied by the number of votes in each column, all 
  added together to provide a single method of comparison. The goal 
  with Rank is to work around the problem that it's difficult to scan 
  the middle rows and make sense of the fact that nearly as many 
  people said they never read discussion forums as those who read them 
  often or regularly.

  I've sorted this table and the corresponding chart by Rank, making 
  it easy to see, in a bit of a tautology, that TidBITS readers, most 
  of whom read TidBITS in email, get news via email newsletters 
  frequently. Even without TidBITS itself skewing those results, email 
  newsletters would likely be popular with our readers, many of whom 
  have been using the Internet for a long time and would thus have 
  stuck with habits formed before blogs, podcasts, and RSS were even 
  conceived of. TidBITS readers also rely heavily on going to Web 
  sites directly for information - sites like Macworld and MacFixIt 
  are examples of sites you visit directly for news and information. 

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2007-07/rank-comparison.jpg>
<http://www.macworld.com/>
<http://www.macfixit.com/>

  To my mind, what's most telling about these results are the 
  extremes; the people who never use a particular news source versus 
  those who use one regularly. On the other end of the spectrum from 
  email and direct visits to Web sites, we can see that TidBITS 
  readers for the most part seldom rely on blogs, podcasts, or 
  aggregator sites for their information.

  There's one significant anomaly that becomes obvious when the data 
  is visualized as a stacked bar chart. In terms of pure rank, RSS 
  ends up fairly low, but as you can see in the chart, that's because 
  RSS seems to be an all-or-nothing proposition. Lots of people never 
  use RSS or do so only infrequently, and only a handful use it 
  sometimes or often, but a rather large number of people rely on it 
  regularly.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2007-07/rank-components.jpg>

  With that data in mind, I want to look at each of these methods of 
  acquiring news, in terms of the user audience for whom each method 
  makes sense, and the goals in using each method.


**Email Newsletters** -- For many of us who have been on the Internet 
  for years, email newsletters remain the best way to receive news and 
  information. They're mixed in with other messages, making it easy to 
  read through as you deal with other mail. Plus, there's a comfort in 
  knowing that anything received and stored in your email archive can 
  be found later. Email clients generally make it easy to read 
  everything that appears.

  But all these advantages work against email newsletters too. Many 
  people are unsubscribing from mailing lists of all types in an 
  effort to reduce email overload created by too many messages and the 
  ever-increasing influx of spam. And while email clients make it easy 
  to read mail, they seldom aid in skimming the contents of messages 
  that you may not want to read in their entirety. My understanding is 
  that while younger people always have email addresses, they're much 
  less likely to use them in favor of comment and discussion features 
  in walled garden Web sites like MySpace or Facebook.

<http://www.myspace.com/>
<http://www.facebook.com/>

  From a publisher's point of view, I think email newsletters are 
  incredibly valuable, because if someone invites you to contact them 
  regularly via email, that's a far more powerful communication 
  channel than anything else. But managing a large mailing list, 
  handling bounces, and dealing with subscription problems takes a 
  non-trivial amount of time and effort, and once you've sent 
  something out in email, you can't update it or fix mistakes, as is 
  possible with Web-based publications.


**Web Sites** -- TidBITS readers go directly to Web sites for 
  information nearly as much as they rely on email newsletters, which 
  makes sense, since I suspect TidBITS readers are likely to have 
  established a collection of must-visit sites to be read regularly. 
  (I do this via a workspace in OmniWeb and by Command-clicking a 
  folder of bookmarks in Safari to open numerous sites in tabs.) With 
  many sites, the desired information appears on the initially loaded 
  page, eliminating any need for further navigation. When you're 
  looking for headlines, a Web site provides them in their original 
  context and intended presentation.

  In short, a Web site remains the core of any publishing project, 
  although to read Web sites effectively requires that you focus in on 
  a relatively small set that you can digest in your available time.


**Personal Email** -- I included personal email as a method of 
  gathering news and information largely because it's how I pick up on 
  a large amount of what's going on. It's essentially electronic 
  word-of-mouth, and works well because there's nothing better than 
  another person for evaluating what might interest you. In other 
  words, using your actual friends and colleagues (not just other 
  Internet users, as is done by social bookmarking sites like Digg and 
  del.ico.us) as editors is perhaps the most effective way to discover 
  interesting news.

<http://www.digg.com/>
<http://del.icio.us/>

  The problem, of course, is that you must have a large personal 
  network of people who know what interests you and have sufficient 
  incentive to alert you to important articles. Many people don't have 
  such a network, and thus must rely on other methods of discovering 
  what's hot.


**Print Publications** -- Of course, print magazines and newspapers 
  have long selected the news that most people read, and they remain 
  unparalleled at that role, if only because they can hire 
  professional editors who spend their lives determining what is and 
  is not interesting. The downside is that print publications are 
  generally not free - as with Internet-based content - and usually 
  have advertising in addition to the subscription fees that offset 
  the cost of printing and distribution.

  The fact that TidBITS readers rely heavily on print publications 
  fits with the demographics of the audience - older people are more 
  likely to have established trusted sources of information, to have 
  disposable income to spend on subscriptions, and to prefer reading 
  on paper. 

  That said, print is a tough world, and we're seeing publications 
  that competed largely on timeliness moving entirely online in favor 
  of a mixed print/online model. In my mind, the only way a print 
  publication is likely to succeed in today's world is if it's 
  publishing sufficiently in-depth content that readers want to devote 
  all their attention to it in an offline environment. I could read 
  The New Yorker online, but I far prefer to focus on its lengthy 
  articles (nicely interspersed with cartoons) on paper while sitting 
  on the couch.

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


**Discussion Forums** -- I was initially a little confused that people 
  rated discussion forums as highly as they did, until I considered 
  that a discussion forum provides a large network of like-minded 
  people. Sending a link to a bunch of friends individually requires 
  effort and knowing lots of people. But on a discussion forum, it's 
  easy both to inform lots of people about interesting events quickly, 
  and, on the consumption side, to read what others in the group think 
  is interesting.

  Relying on discussions in a mailing list or Web forum for news 
  probably isn't an effective way to learn what's going on overall, 
  but if you want to keep up on the discussions for other 
  information-gathering reasons, the news that seeps in is likely 
  highly topical and timely.


**In-person** -- Very few of our respondents regularly get their news 
  and information in person, which shouldn't be surprising, if only 
  because we're likely to spend most of our time with people who have 
  roughly the same sources of information that we do. However, this 
  method of news acquisition ranked as highly as it did due to large 
  numbers of people saying that they get information in-person 
  infrequently or sometimes - perhaps at Macintosh user group 
  meetings. In other words, talking with friends, relatives, and 
  colleagues can provides the occasional bit of information, but few 
  people rely heavily on word-of-mouth these days. 


**RSS Feeds** -- As I said before, TidBITS readers either use RSS 
  (Really Simple Syndication) heavily or hardly at all - there's no 
  in-between. (And to answer the people who said they didn't even know 
  what RSS is, it's a technology that any Web-enabled site can use to 
  publish frequently updated information in a manner that many RSS 
  programs, including Safari and the popular NetNewsWire, can present 
  in a coherent, easily scanned display.)

<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RSS>
<http://www.newsgator.com/Individuals/NetNewsWire/>

  I've been thinking about the bifurcation of the RSS numbers, and I 
  think what's going on is that signing up to receive an email 
  newsletter is in essence an informal agreement that you'll read 
  whatever is sent. RSS embodies the other extreme, where your goal is 
  to _avoid_ reading as much as possible. I've heard from a number of 
  people who subscribe to an insane number of feeds - often several 
  hundred - and when I ask how they find the time to read all that 
  content, they usually admit that they seldom read more than a tiny 
  proportion of what comes through. But what's important is that 
  scanning all the headlines gives them a sense of what's happening 
  with a minimal time commitment. 

  As a result, I think RSS lends itself to use by specific professions 
  and personality types. For instance, our editor Glenn Fleishman also 
  runs a number of blogs related to Wi-Fi networking and other 
  wireless technologies. To keep up with everything that's happening, 
  it's important that he be able to scan a very large number of sites 
  and publications with the understanding that most of what he sees 
  won't interest him at all. Anyone who finds themselves needing to 
  extract needles from haystacks will find RSS useful. Similarly, 
  there are people who aren't so much looking for needles, but who 
  need to know a very small amount about many different topics; if 
  they discover that they need to know more, they'll dive in further. 
  Politicians may fall into this category - even a local politician 
  may find the quick RSS overview of local publications and blogs to 
  be helpful in identifying areas that might become important.

  For many people, though, RSS isn't about either finding needles or 
  getting the big picture for professional reasons. Instead, I think 
  it meets a psychological need to feel informed, to feel as though 
  you know what's happening in the world, or at least in some specific 
  subset of the world. People who feel this need are the sort who used 
  to read (or at least skim) the New York Times from front to back 
  every day. Personally, I think this is a dangerous need in today's 
  world, since the Internet can provide far more information - even 
  just in headline form - than anyone can hope to absorb. But it's 
  something that news junkies are dealing with now, and will have to 
  continue to deal with in the future, because the amount of news 
  available will continue to increase.


**Aggregator Sites** -- The fact that TidBITS readers don't use RSS 
  much appears to carry over to aggregator sites such as MacSurfer and 
  the new Apple Investor News, which is focused on business news 
  related to Apple. These sites do a good job of collecting and 
  presenting news headlines from elsewhere on the Web - often using 
  RSS, in fact. I suspect the problem is the raw number of headlines, 
  and just as with RSS, people can feel overwhelmed.

<http://www.macsurfer.com/>
<http://www.appleinvestornews.com/>

  These sites become useful primarily when the headlines they choose 
  to collect and the way they present them happen to resonate with the 
  type of information you want and how you consume it.


**Podcasts** -- Despite the hype of the last few years, podcasts have 
  not made significant inroads with TidBITS readers as a way of 
  acquiring news. Perhaps they're not sufficiently oriented toward 
  news (though some certainly are, such as Your Mac Life and the 
  MacNotables podcast Tonya and I participate in), or not sufficiently 
  timely (few are updated as frequently as Web publications), or not 
  sufficiently professional - personal blogs seem to fall into roughly 
  the same boat.

<http://www.yourmaclifeshow.com/>
<http://www.macnotables.com/>

  I love podcasts, but frankly, not very many of them. It's not that 
  most of them aren't good, but that listening to audio is far more 
  time-consuming than reading, and I simply don't have time to keep up 
  with many. Those who must suffer through long commutes or frequent 
  travel, or who like to listen to iPods while exercising may have 
  more time that can be spent listening to podcasts.


**Personal Blogs** -- Bringing up the bottom of the list are personal 
  blogs; it appears that the TidBITS readership doesn't participate in 
  a big way in the blogosphere, at least when it comes to news. I 
  can't say that I'm particularly taken aback by this result, since 
  while individual blog posts may provide interesting insight into an 
  event, more often than not, they merely point to an original article 
  on another site. So unless you find a blogger whose interests 
  parallel yours, and who is particularly effective at noticing those 
  events that you want to read about, relying on a personal blog would 
  seem a relatively haphazard approach to learning about what's 
  happening.


**Other** -- In the event that we missed entire ways that people 
  obtain Mac-related news and information, our survey solicited reader 
  suggestions as well. Most suggestions were specific examples of a 
  method of obtaining news, but a few bona fide trends emerged.

* Books. Because we were thinking about frequently updated news and 
  information, we didn't include books among the answers, but readers 
  said that books remain a significant way in which they learn more 
  about the Mac. Can't argue with that!

* Conferences. Similarly, we didn't think about conferences, which 
  generally occur too infrequently to be useful from a news 
  perspective. But of course, conferences are a great source of less 
  timely information, and Macworld Expo in particular was cited as a 
  key source.

* Search engines. Although search engines are really just a way of 
  finding particular Web sites, enough people mentioned using Google 
  to search for Mac-related information that I decided to include it 
  here. With a search engine, you're waiting to look for information 
  until you need it, rather than letting it come to you, but that's a 
  totally legitimate (and perhaps more sane) method of learning.

* Apple Stores. Lastly, quite a few people mentioned that they learn 
  at Apple Stores, either in the classes or from staffers at the 
  Genius Bars. Although that would seem to fall into the "In-person" 
  category, it feels sufficiently different to be called out. The fact 
  that Apple Stores have turned into a useful informational resource 
  is impressive, and Apple deserves credit for making them work beyond 
  the realm of commerce.


**Future Analysis** -- That's it for this time; as I continue to pore 
  through the results of the reader survey I'll write more about the 
  specific places you acquire your information, the kinds of articles 
  you like in TidBITS, and what you'd like to see more of.


Take Control News/16-Jul-07
---------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9076>

**Run Windows on a Mac with Up-to-Date Advice** -- We've just released 
  version 2.5 of "Take Control of Running Windows on a Mac," bringing 
  this essential 148-page book completely up-to-date. It's loaded with 
  all the details you need to run Windows on a Mac successfully with 
  Apple's Boot Camp 1.3 beta, Parallels Desktop 3.0, the release 
  candidate of VMware Fusion, or the free public beta of VirtualBox. 

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/windows-on-mac.html?14@@!pt=TRK-0034-TB888-TCNEWS>

  Written by best-selling author and TidBITS Senior Editor Joe 
  Kissell, the book, which now covers both Windows XP and Vista, also 
  includes real-world advice about installing Windows, dealing with 
  tricky peripherals, sharing files between Windows and Mac OS X, 
  backing up a Windows installation, avoiding Windows malware, and 
  more. And, of course, for anyone just getting into virtualization, 
  the $10-off coupon for Parallels Desktop 3.0 makes buying the $10 
  book a no-brainer. 

  If you already own "Take Control of Running Windows on a Mac," 
  please note that we're offering a free update to anyone who bought 
  it after 01-Sep-06, and a 25% discount to those who purchased before 
  that. We've sent email with the necessary links to those people; 
  drop us a note if you missed yours.


Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk/16-Jul-07
------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9079>

**State of Mac Support for GPS** -- Following Adam's review of GPS 
  devices last year, what's the current state of the art? And more 
  importantly, how is the Mac support? (9 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1366/>


**Best FM transmitter** -- There are lots of devices designed to play 
  music from an iPod over your car's stereo system, but how do they 
  stack up? And is a wired cassette adapter a better alternative? (12 
  messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1367/>


**PDF "resolution"** -- A PDF file is resolution-independent, but the 
  quality of the imagery can vary if it includes bitmapped pictures 
  (such as JPEG photos, for example). (8 messages) 

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1368/>


**FTC abandons net neutrality** -- The Federal Trade Commission in the 
  United States has decided to abandon the notion of net neutrality, 
  which could open the door to variable pricing for delivering 
  Internet content. (1 message)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1369/>


**Open Message AppleScript for Mail** -- If you want Apple's Mail 
  application to open messages in separate windows based on a rule, 
  download this collection of AppleScript scripts. (1 message)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1372/>


**Trading In-Home Wi-Fi for Powerline Networking** -- A reader shares 
  his unhappy experiences with Powerline networking following Kevin 
  van Haaren's article last week. (1 message)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1373/>


**Apple "Proof of Purchase Coupons"** -- Just what is the use of the 
  Proof of Purchase Coupons that come with Apple products? A few 
  readers have used them in the past to get replacement system discs. 
  (7 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1375/>


**Jogging with your iPod in a Thunderstorm** -- Could jogging with an 
  iPod have caused a man to be struck by lightning? Despite the 
  contents of a medical report, some readers want more information 
  before drawing a direct link. (6 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1376/>


**Updaters cause problems for Office and other Rosetta apps** -- Some 
  people experienced problems with applications that run under Rosetta 
  on Intel-based Macs after updating to QuickTime 7.2 and iTunes 
  7.3.1. Could Java be a cause? (4 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1377/>


**ProCare** -- Recent changes to Apple's ProCare support program are 
  leaving some users unhappy. (2 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1378/>


$$

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