TidBITS#900/15-Oct-07
=====================
  Issue link: <http://db.tidbits.com/issue/900>

  It's our 900th issue, which we're commemorating by giving away "The 
  Wireless Networking Starter Kit" ebook, and Glenn muses about how 
  the bandwidth landscape has changed since he was nearly bankrupted 
  by giving away a different ebook four years ago. Turning to the 
  iPhone, we focus first on the present, with responses from a number 
  of industry insiders about what they love and hate about the device, 
  and then on the future, with a look at the release of a chip that 
  could give the next-generation iPhone support for 3G cellular data 
  networks, a 5 megapixel digital camera, and video conferencing. Adam 
  bridges the iPhone/Mac divide while recanting his early snarky 
  opinion of the Twitter micro-blogging service, which can be used 
  from both a Mac and an iPhone. Switching completely to Mac software, 
  Matt thoroughly searches his hard disk with the free EasyFind 4.0 
  and diagrams his thought processes using Robert McNally's Flying 
  Logic. We also note the release (and the lack of Mac compatibility) 
  of Seagate hybrid hard drives, a pair of faux Take Control titles 
  from Crazy Apple Rumors Site, and the news that Apple board member 
  Al Gore has received the Nobel Peace Prize.

Articles
    Apple Board Member Al Gore Awarded Nobel Peace Prize
    900 Issues and a Free Ebook on Wi-Fi
    Seagate Hybrid Hard Drives Not Mac-Compatible
    Take Control Lampooned on CARS
    3G Cell Data iPhone Now Feasible
    EasyFind 4.0: It's Easy, It Finds, It's Free
    Flying Logic: That Would Be Illogical, Captain
    An Electronic Book Giveaway: 2003, a Disaster; 2007, a Pittance
    InterviewBITS: Love/Hate with the iPhone
    Confessions of a Twitter Convert
    Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk/15-Oct-07


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Apple Board Member Al Gore Awarded Nobel Peace Prize
----------------------------------------------------
  by Mark H. Anbinder <mha@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9236>

  Former U.S. Vice President Al Gore, whose documentary film "An 
  Inconvenient Truth" won an Academy Award (or "Oscar") and who 
  himself won an Emmy Award for his Current TV channel, last week 
  added the ultimate award to his resume. The Norwegian Nobel 
  Committee announced that the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize would be shared 
  between Gore and the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Such 
  announcements are normally outside what we cover in TidBITS, but 
  both Gore and his film are deeply connected to Apple and the Mac 
  industry.

<http://www.climatecrisis.net/>
<http://www.current.tv/>
<http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/peace/laureates/2007/press.html>

  In fact, while we were hoping for other news from Apple's PR machine 
  (see "Leopard Slated for October 26th?," 2007-10-04), they instead 
  spent the day touting Gore's achievement, customizing Apple's home 
  page and linking to multiple news reports on the Hot News page. The 
  one-time politician, named to Apple's board of directors in early 
  2003, has frequently been linked to the company's products. He has 
  for years been an avid user of Apple's Final Cut Pro software, and 
  he used Keynote to assemble the material presented in "An 
  Inconvenient Truth."

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9219>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2007-10/Gore-on-apple.com.png>
<http://www.apple.com/pr/bios/gore.html>
<http://www.apple.com/hotnews/articles/2006/05/inconvenienttruth/>


900 Issues and a Free Ebook on Wi-Fi
------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9242>

  We like to announce some major infrastructure change when we hit a 
  milestone like our 900th issue, but we weren't able to align our 
  schedule with the numbers this year, largely because we had a window 
  in August that allowed us to launch our site redesign in early 
  September (see "Designing a Modern Web Site for TidBITS," 
  2007-09-10). We had hoped to roll in some refinements that we have 
  in the works for this issue, but those plans fell victim to the need 
  to prepare Take Control content for the coming of Leopard, 
  presumably later this month. So we're throwing numeric neatness to 
  the wind for our 900th issue, but we didn't want to leave you 
  empty-handed.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9168>

  So as a little something to commemorate the occasion, we're giving 
  away an ebook version of "The Wireless Networking Starter Kit, 
  Second Edition," which Glenn Fleishman and I wrote in 2004. It's a 
  bit out of date in places, of course (which we've addressed by 
  publishing "Take Control of Your 802.11n AirPort Extreme Network" 
  and "Take Control of Your Wi-Fi Security"), but a lot of the book 
  remains accurate, interesting, and useful. You'll find information 
  about troubleshooting wireless networks, basic home networking, 
  long-range wireless networking, and a lot more. It's a 13.6 MB 
  download, and has a full set of bookmarks and internal links to make 
  PDF navigation easier. For another perspective on this release, read 
  Glenn's "An Electronic Book Giveaway: 2003, a Disaster; 2007, a 
  Pittance" (2007-10-09), in which he muses about how the bandwidth 
  landscape has changed since he nearly bankrupted himself by giving 
  away an ebook.

<http://www.wireless-starter-kit.com/>
<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/airport-n.html?14@@!pt=TB900>
<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/wifi-security.html?14@@!pt=TB900>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9226>


Seagate Hybrid Hard Drives Not Mac-Compatible
---------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9229>

  Seagate Technology has released the new Momentus 5400 PSD hard 
  drive, the first "hybrid hard drive" that puts 256 MB of 
  non-volatile flash RAM in a 2.5-inch notebook hard drive to improve 
  boot time and overall performance, reduce power consumption, and 
  increase reliability. In essence, the flash memory serves as a large 
  cache that can serve out commonly accessed data, enabling the drive 
  to spin down more frequently and providing that data more quickly 
  than it could be read from the disk platter. Because the drive 
  spends less time spinning, power consumption drops, and because the 
  drive is far less likely to be damaged while spun down, reliability 
  increases at the same time. (Put another way, not using the drive 
  makes it more efficient and more reliable - what a concept!)

<http://www.seagate.com/ww/v/index.jsp?&vgnextoid=f9be1194e3085110VgnVCM100000f5ee0a0aRCRD>

  Seagate's press release received quite a bit of play in the Mac 
  press, but I'm sorry to say that there's absolutely no point in 
  buying one for your MacBook Pro just yet. I confirmed with Mike Hall 
  of Seagate that explicit operating system support is required for 
  all the benefits of a hybrid hard drive, and the only operating 
  system that provides such support right now is Windows Vista. Mike 
  did say that Seagate hopes to increase the number of operating 
  systems that support the Momentus 5400 PSD, but he didn't know of 
  any support in the works from Apple. If you were to install one of 
  these drives in a Mac now, Mike said it would work just like any 
  other normal hard drive. And since the Momentus 5400 PSD drives are 
  likely to be more expensive than normal drives, you should save your 
  money.

  That said, it's likely that we'll see a refresh of Apple's laptops 
  in the next few months, and perhaps also the Mac mini and the Apple 
  TV, all of which use 2.5-inch hard drives. It would be entirely 
  within character for Apple to add hybrid hard drive support to 
  Leopard, and to include the Momentus 5400 PSD in laptops as a way of 
  increasing battery life and in the Mac mini and Apple TV to reduce 
  power consumption and noise.

  I think we'll be seeing more of this melding of solid-state storage 
  with spinning-disk storage trend. Flash RAM prices continue to drop, 
  with 16 GB Compact Flash cards as low as $128 and 8 GB SDHC cards at 
  $65. I don't know how comparable those prices are to what's being 
  used in the Momentus drives, since the 256 MB flash RAM that 
  Seagate's using may be faster and thus more expensive than 
  consumer-level cards, but Seagate can also undoubtedly reduce costs 
  significantly by buying in quantity. If operating system support for 
  hybrid hard drives becomes widely available, putting some flash RAM 
  in a hard drive would seem like an easy win for everyone.


Take Control Lampooned on CARS
------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9217>

  Oh man, I wish we'd thought of these titles! Crazy Apple Rumors has 
  pushed into our ebook turf with the mock announcement of their first 
  two titles in a new series: "Take Control of Being A Whiny-Assed 
  Apple Customer: The Missing Manual for Dummies" and "Take Control of 
  Suing Apple: The Missing Manual for Dummies." Be sure to read the 
  announcement's comments for my response.

<http://www.crazyapplerumors.com/?p=943>


3G Cell Data iPhone Now Feasible
--------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9239>

  Apple CEO Steve Jobs justified the iPhone's use of so-called 2.5G 
  cell data technology - technology that fills the gap between the 
  very slow second-generation (2G) and relatively fast 
  third-generation (3G) specifications - by noting that 3G chips with 
  the low power consumption and small form factor needed for the 
  innovative phone were perhaps a year away. A year turned into months 
  last week.

  Broadcom, a long-time Apple Wi-Fi chip partner alongside its arch 
  competitor Atheros, let slip the veil on its advanced, integrated 3G 
  chip for GSM networks, such as those run by AT&T, Apple's iPhone 
  partner, as well as most of cellular carriers in Europe and the rest 
  of the world.

<http://prnewswire.com/cgi-bin/stories.pl?ACCT=104&STORY=/www/story/10-15-2007/0004681492&EDATE=>

  The euphoniously named BCM21551 3G Phone on a Chip combines the 
  highest current data rates for both upstream and downstream 
  High-Speed Packet Access (HSPA, often called HSDPA, with D standing 
  for Downlink, because of the downstream focus). The chip is built on 
  a single 65 nanometer die, the smallest current chip scale; 65 
  nanometer refers to the smallest possible circuit path. The smaller 
  the die, the less power consumed, the less heat generated, and the 
  less space taken up by circuits, which leads to smaller chips 
  relative to what tasks they perform. Comparable HSPA systems use 90 
  nanometer or larger processes that result in larger chips or require 
  two or more chips to achieve the same functions. Broadcom is using 
  CMOS (complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor) technology for the 
  chips, which is the cheapest way to make integrated circuits.

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

  Although AT&T's 3G network operates at just 3.6 Mbps and isn't fully 
  deployed in the United States, European carriers are already using 
  the next flavor that offers 7.2 Mbps downstream and upstream rates 
  that will eventually reach 5.8 Mbps. These are raw data rates shared 
  among users; typical average rates run about 15 to 20 percent of the 
  raw rate.

  Broadcom calls their new product a 3G Phone on a Chip, because it 
  includes not just the 3G cell data technology, but two ARM11 
  processors, which are widely used in handhelds and mobile devices. 
  An ARM processor is on the iPhone's main logic board.

<http://www.ifixit.com/Guide/iPhone/Logic-Board/105/7/Page-10/Logic-Board>

  The Broadcom chip also includes Bluetooth 2.1+EDR, support for 
  30-frames-per-second video output, an FM radio receiver, an FM radio 
  transmitter (for car stereo playback), and processing for a camera 
  with up to 5-megapixel resolution. A host of other hooks enable 
  low-power output to an LCD display, stereo music with five-band 
  equalization, full speed USB 2.0, and - unless I misread the press 
  release - a built-in trouser press that can handle jeans and khakis.

  The chip is shipping in small quantities now - called "sampling" - 
  to Broadcom's best customers. The price in quantity will be $23 per 
  chip when it ships, at a date not yet announced, but which is 
  typically a range of 3 to 6 months following sampling in the chip 
  industry.

  A good half-dozen companies in addition to Broadcom and Atheros 
  compete for cellular and wireless networking equipment manufacturing 
  deals, and thus it's likely that other chipmakers will make similar 
  announcements within three months.

  The ready availability of Broadcom's 3G Phone on a Chip could mean a 
  Q2 2008 announcement from Apple of a significantly revised iPhone, 
  with support for 3G data, a 5-megapixel camera, and video 
  conferencing, to note just a few of the iPhone's features that could 
  use improvement and that require hardware support (I want a To Do 
  application as well, but that's just software.) 

  This is, of course, pure speculation, but given Steve Jobs's comment 
  about needing a better chip to enable 3G, you have to assume that 
  Apple has been talking to Broadcom and other chipmakers about the 
  chips necessary to power the second-generation iPhone.


EasyFind 4.0: It's Easy, It Finds, It's Free
--------------------------------------------
  by Matt Neuburg <matt@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9231>

  DEVONtechnologies has updated EasyFind, an important free utility 
  that should be in the arsenal of any power user or would-be power 
  user.

<http://devon-technologies.com/products/freeware/>

  EasyFind is an alternative to Spotlight: it's a utility for finding 
  text on your computer. That text could be the name of a file or 
  folder, or part of a file's contents. Unlike Spotlight, EasyFind 
  doesn't use an index, but finds things the old-fashioned way: it 
  hunts through your hard disk, directly, file by file and, if you're 
  looking for file contents, byte by byte. Unlike Spotlight, EasyFind 
  knows nothing of interpreting file types, such as Word documents, to 
  strip them of their formatting and examine only the text: it looks 
  at the raw data and that's all. Unlike Spotlight, EasyFind knows no 
  limits: there's no place on your hard disk that it won't search.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2007-10/EasyFind.png>

  Of course, that means EasyFind is rather slow; and while it's 
  working, it may dominate your CPU and make it nearly impossible to 
  do any other kind of work. No matter. Sometimes, you just want to 
  search, and Spotlight is no help. Recently, for example, I wanted to 
  look for a certain term used in Ruby files in my /usr directory. I'm 
  not even sure where all the Ruby files in my /usr directory are. 
  Spotlight won't look there at all. EasyFind found all files 
  containing that term in a couple of minutes.

  EasyFind is free; download it and use it. (It's an 820K download; 
  the application requires Mac OS X 10.3.9 or later.) The new update, 
  to version 4.0, contains some interface revisions making it easier 
  to specify a folder you want to search in; creation date has been 
  added to the columns of information about found files; and 
  multi-word searches are said to be handled more accurately. 

<http://devon-technologies.com/download/>

  While you're at the download page, don't neglect to examine some of 
  DEVONtechnologies' other freeware offerings; they've got several 
  free applications and Services that I use occasionally. I've also 
  reviewed DEVONtechnologies' flagship applications DEVONthink (see 
  "DEVONthink Thinks, So You Don't Have To," 2004-03-08) and 
  DEVONagent ("DEVONagent Rushes In Where Google Fears to Tread," 
  2005-02-07), which might be of interest.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/7575>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/7977>


Flying Logic: That Would Be Illogical, Captain
----------------------------------------------
  by Matt Neuburg <matt@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9204>

  Some years ago in "A Not-at-All Foolish Consistency," 2002-09-10), I 
  raved about Sciral Consistency, a simple but brilliantly effective 
  application that gently reminds you of activities that need 
  performance periodically. Now Consistency's author, Robert McNally, 
  is back with a new program: Flying Logic.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/6932>
<http://www.sciral.com/consistency/>
<http://www.flyinglogic.com/>

  You probably don't remember this, but one of the first articles I 
  ever wrote for TidBITS was about an application for charting logical 
  arguments, MacEuclid (see "MacEuclid," 1992-11-23)). It was a thesis 
  project, and was never developed further. Flying Logic is like 
  MacEuclid on super-steroids. It doesn't just chart logic; it 
  implements it, in accordance with the Theory of Constraints 
  (especially as described in Lisa Scheinkopf's book, "Thinking for a 
  Change"). Flying Logic doesn't merely describe a logical argument; 
  it constructs a kind of live logical dataflow diagram, composed of 
  causes (actions and preconditions) that combine to give desirable 
  and undesirable effects, leading, ultimately, to some goal. By 
  experimenting with this diagram, it may be possible to reduce 
  undesirable effects and see a way to achieving the goal more 
  successfully. 

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/2832>
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theory_of_Constraints>
<http://www.amazon.com/Thinking-Change-Processes-Constraints-Management/dp/1574441019/tidbitselectro00/>

  You could learn about the Theory of Constraints and develop a 
  diagram on paper, on a blackboard, or using a diagramming tool such 
  as OmniGraffle (see "Connect the Dots with OmniGraffle," 
  2006-02-13); but Flying Logic has some important advantages. It is 
  _dedicated_ to the appropriate kinds of diagram, so its tools and 
  automatic layout and formatting facilitate rapid, accurate diagram 
  construction without your having to worry about presentational 
  details. A diagram is constructed, developed, and rearranged by a 
  series of extremely simple mouse and keyboard gestures; for example, 
  a simple drag connects two entities causally, and the diagram 
  magically rearranges itself to reflect this. Thus you spend your 
  time entirely on content, letting Flying Logic take care of form. 
  And, as I've already mentioned, the diagrams are live, so that (for 
  instance) "confidence spinners" show the actual truth value of all 
  entities, given the current arrangement and initial assumptions. 
  Finally, the capability to group a bunch of interconnected entities 
  and then collapse them all into a single small placeholder box 
  indicating the group means that your diagrams can grow tremendously 
  without becoming unwieldy.

<http://www.omnigroup.com/applications/omnigraffle/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8420>

  I don't think you can just pick up Flying Logic and start playing. 
  The Theory of Constraints involves an extensive toolbox of 
  techniques, approaches, and structures; to use Flying Logic, you 
  need to know something about this. To help, Robert McNally has 
  provided extensive documentation, both about the application and 
  about the kinds of thinking and problem-solving approaches it's 
  intended for: there are several PDF files (they're really 
  explanatory books), plus some online movies, all excellent.

<http://flyinglogic.com/video/>

  As a simple example, I've made a document showing a big argument 
  that our neighborhood association had last night. A locked gate has 
  been thrown across a private road, Arundale Road, which our 
  association owns. There's one other way into the neighborhood, so 
  access is not prevented, but opinion is split: some people like the 
  gate because they fear that removing it would cause more strangers 
  to drive into the neighborhood, but others want to use Arundale, 
  both as a right (we own it) and as a convenience (it is more direct 
  when you want to drive out in certain directions). As the argument 
  stood, there was an apparently irresolvable conflict. This is shown 
  by the black and red arrows coming out of the Conflict entity, which 
  transmit opposite truth values; no matter what you do, either "gate 
  open" or "gate closed" will be false, and so the common objective 
  (on the far left) will be false.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2007-09/flyingLogic1copyAgain.png>

  The key to conflict resolution is to question your assumptions. 
  (Unfortunately, the assumptions here are shown as little yellow 
  dots; the text is visible in the Flying Logic program, but when you 
  export to a PNG as I've done here, it's lost. You can export the 
  text of the assumptions as a separate document, though that doesn't 
  make for a very clear or effective presentation of the underlying 
  reasoning.) Here, one question to ask yourself is: Is keeping the 
  gate closed the _only_ way to "keep the riff-raff out"? Someone at 
  the meeting argued that there was another way to achieve that need: 
  Make Arundale one-way, pointing away from the neighborhood. That 
  way, we can use it for convenience, but it won't add directly to 
  neighborhood traffic. So I've inserted that in the diagram as an 
  alternate way to achieve this need. Notice that now the resolution 
  of division in the neighborhood becomes achievable, and the 
  truth-values of the entities reveal how: open the gate _and_ make 
  Arundale one-way. (The rearrangement of the diagram all happened 
  automatically when I added the "Solution" entity and hooked it up.)

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2007-09/flyingLogic2copy2copy.png>

  It's possible to go even further. You can't make Arundale one-way 
  unless you open the gate (because with the gate closed, Arundale is 
  effectively zero-way). So I really ought to add a further connection 
  from "gate open" to "Make Arundale one-way only", to show that the 
  former is a necessary condition for the latter. That way, either 
  they're both true or neither is.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2007-09/flyingLogic3copy.png>

  I haven't begun to explore Flying Logic, or the Theory of 
  Constraints, in any depth. But it's clearly an ingenious 
  application, and is easy and fun to use. To try it out, download the 
  free 30-day trial (8 MB). Flying Logic comes in four versions: (1) a 
  free document reader; (2) a $39 educational edition, which 
  watermarks exports and limits grouping; (3) the standard $79 
  personal edition, which removes the limits of the education 
  editions; and (4) the $149 professional edition, which adds advanced 
  operators (combining inputs with more than AND, OR, and NOT) and 
  some further options. Flying Logic is a Java application (though 
  you'd hardly know it), running on Mac OS X 10.4 or later, as well as 
  Windows XP and Windows 2000.

<http://flyinglogic.com/download/>


An Electronic Book Giveaway: 2003, a Disaster; 2007, a Pittance
---------------------------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9226>

  In March 2003, I almost ruined myself financially by giving a book 
  away. Jeff Carlson and I decided to release "Real World Adobe GoLive 
  6" as a free ebook because sales had been so poor, and we thought it 
  would be a nice gift to the world.

<http://hyperarchive.lcs.mit.edu/HyperArchive/Archive/info/real-world-golive-6.hqx>

  My mistake was in not calculating the bandwidth bill ahead of time. 
  I hosted the file on a server run by a friend who had bought my Web 
  hosting company, and his co-location provider, Level 3, charged 
  based on sustained average usage across a month, dropping out about 
  five percent of the busiest hours and using the 95th percentile as 
  the threshold for what to bill. I nearly pushed the monthly bill 
  from $2,000 to $15,000. 

  I managed to pull the plug in time, but only after about 10,000 
  downloads of a nearly 20 MB PDF. Through hearing about my plight, 
  people contributed about $2,000 which I sent (with their permission) 
  to Project Gutenberg when it turned out I wasn't being bitten by 
  Level 3's pricing. You can read the whole story in Adam's article 
  for TidBITS, "Publish (Electronically) and Perish?" (2003-03-24), or 
  my New York Times account.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/7115>
<http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9A05E4D71F3AF937A15757C0A9659C8B63>

  I had this all in mind recently when Adam and I decided to give away 
  "The Wireless Networking Starter Kit, Second Edition," a book we 
  last updated in 2004. The book sold okay - we earned out our advance 
  from Peachpit Press - but not well enough for Peachpit or us to feel 
  it was worth another revision in print. 

<http://wireless-starter-kit.com/free_download.html>

  We had adapted part of the book into "Take Control of Your Wi-Fi 
  Security" (which we just released in significantly updated form last 
  week), and I wrote a separate book, "Take Control of Your AirPort 
  Network," which has since evolved into "Take Control of Your 802.11n 
  AirPort Extreme Network" (also heavily revised and re-released last 
  week).

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/wifi-security.html?14@@!pt=TB900>
<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/airport.html?14@@!pt=TB900>
<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/airport-n.html?14@@!pt=TB900>

  But we felt that the bulk of "The Wireless Networking Starter Kit" 
  was still useful, with advice on planning a network, putting the 
  pieces together, troubleshooting network problems, long-range 
  wireless connectivity, and more. We thought people around the world 
  might enjoy a free book on the subject, and if they needed current 
  information on security and other topics, perhaps the release of the 
  free book would translate into a few extra sales of our Take Control 
  books.

  In this case, I created a 14 MB PDF, and ran the numbers: Where 
  could I host a book that might be downloaded 10,000 or even 100,000 
  times without being cut off or breaking the bank? Though I'm a .Mac 
  subscriber, their 100 GB per month transfer limit for my regular 
  account could have been exceeded, although I would have paid nothing 
  extra for it. I host my own Web sites with digital.forest, also 
  TidBITS's Web host, and could have put the file there and paid 
  digital.forest for the transfer if I went over my monthly allotment. 
  But that seemed to be a bad bet if the transfers went sky high, and 
  it seemed a silly way to spike traffic on digital.forest's networks 
  if that happened.

<http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=303786>
<http://forest.net/>

  In the end, I opted for Amazon.com's S3 (Simple Storage System) 
  service, which allows arbitrarily large amounts of storage with 
  straightforward fees: $0.15/GB stored each month; $0.18/GB 
  downloaded up to 10 TB/month (at which point prices drop); and 
  $0.10/GB for uploads. (I use Nolobe's Interarchy to manage my S3 
  storage. S3 is a bit obscure, but it's very much like FTP in its 
  basics, once you overcome the XML and other abstractions that 
  Interarchy handles for you.) 

<http://amazon.com/s3>
<http://nolobe.com/interarchy/>

  At those rates, 10,000 downloads of a 14 MB file is 140 GB, which 
  translates into a whopping $25. While 100,000 downloads seems 
  unlikely, the $250 that would cost will hopefully be outweighed by 
  sufficient Take Control book sales. So far, we've sold a handful of 
  additional Take Control books and have hit over 50 GB of downloads, 
  for less than $10 in charges.

  There are services and methods of hosting content at no cost, too, 
  but all of them have tradeoffs, and I felt the S3 cost was low 
  enough to provide robustness and not abuse anyone's free network.

  In the space of four years, we've gone from $15,000 for a sustained 
  level of high bandwidth to $25 for a large hunk of bandwidth. Rates 
  that used to be $10 to $40 per gigabyte four years ago are now 
  commoditized in part due to Amazon's S3 and other services. 

  To me, this sort of change is just as significant - and perhaps more 
  so - as the growth in computational power and the sophistication of 
  online media. With faster computers, more video, and cheaper 
  bandwidth, the power of individuals to disseminate their ideas in 
  any form has increased as well.

  The real question is whether cheap bandwidth means more 
  mass-produced content brought to us faster, or a continued growth in 
  personal expression. While giving away an ebook isn't the same as 
  composing a new opera, filming it, and having an audience of a 
  million Web watchers, the difference in infrastructure is slight.


InterviewBITS: Love/Hate with the iPhone
----------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9201>

  Now that more than one million iPhones have been sold, it's time to 
  go beyond first impressions and find out what iPhone users love and 
  hate about their new companions. I assembled a panel of iPhone users 
  and asked them which feature of the iPhone they found themselves 
  using the most, or at least significantly more than they anticipated 
  before joining the iPhone revolution. On the other side, I also 
  asked them what one thing they found most annoying about using the 
  iPhone day-to-day.

  Join the discussion on TidBITS Talk by sharing your most-liked 
  iPhone features and gripes about the iPhone!

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1504>
<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1505>


**Ted Landau** -- [Ted is Senior Contributor for Macworld, creator of 
  the MacFixIt Web site, author of the in-progress "Take Control of 
  Troubleshooting Your iPhone," and much more.]

<http://www.tedlandau.com/>
<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/troubleshooting-iphone.html>

  There's no doubt about which feature I most appreciate: it is Maps. 
  Don't get me wrong. Safari is great too. But I anticipated that 
  before I bought the iPhone. What took me more by surprise is Maps. I 
  don't have a GPS device in my car. If I did, perhaps I would be less 
  enthusiastic about Maps. But I find I use it almost any time I go 
  anywhere. I have used it to find the closest Starbucks to my motel 
  (amazingly, there is not one on every corner in some places). I have 
  used it to get directions to restaurants (saving me the trouble of 
  having to look it up on MapQuest before I leave - and printing out a 
  map). And I have used it to check traffic conditions. Maps is simply 
  the most valuable of any of iPhone's widgets.

  The winner of the most annoying aspect of the iPhone is how 
  frustrating it is to use as an iPod in a car. In fact, it is so 
  annoying that I have stopped trying and have reverted to using my 
  iPod nano instead. Here's why:

  Suppose you want to skip to the next song in a playlist. First, you 
  have the annoyance of the screen constantly going to sleep. You need 
  to click to rewake and then slide Unlock just to access the iPhone. 
  (A solution here is to turn Auto-Lock off. However, this leads to 
  excessive battery drain, unless you are using a device that charges 
  your iPhone while you drive.) Then, you have to find the Skip 
  "button" on the screen. All of this is especially difficult to do 
  while driving, because there is no tactile feedback to guide you. 
  And that assumes that the Skip button is even on the screen. If you 
  shifted the iPhone to landscape mode, there is no Skip button 
  visible.

  There are workarounds for some of these issues, but it's still much 
  easier to use a real iPod instead. For what it's worth, I have a 
  blog entry where I discuss this issue and suggest that Apple should 
  fix it by creating a three-button iPhone.

<http://www.tedmac.com/slantedviewpoint/index.php/archives/2007/50>


**Shawn King** -- [Shawn is the host and executive producer of Your 
  Mac Life, "the most popular Macintosh-focused broadcast on the 
  Internet." On the Your Mac Life Web site you can listen to the show 
  live on Wednesday evenings at 5:30 PM Pacific/8:30 PM Eastern and 
  find archives of past shows.]

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

  My favorite part is definitely the browser. I've had a Treo 650 and 
  a Blackberry 8700c and quickly got sick of trying to surf "the 
  mobile Web." I've done everything from reading RSS feeds to checking 
  movie times to finding addresses - heck, I was outside a bar one 
  night and someone, apropos of nothing, walked up to me, his 
  Crackberry in hand, and asked, "Do you know the country code for the 
  UK?" (strangers ask me the oddest questions sometimes). I replied, 
  "No, but hang on..." I quickly Googled the answer for him and he 
  happily called his friends in the UK.

  I can't agree about the Maps usefulness - not as long as Google Maps 
  can show me where the traffic is but won't show me a route around 
  it! Does that make sense to anyone? I mean, Google Maps knows where 
  I want to go and it knows where the traffic congestion is. So why 
  would it think I want to drive through it?

  On the downside, two things bother me. Oftentimes there are too many 
  "buttons" to push to do something simple. Also, there are a variety 
  of interface inconsistencies, such as the keyboard being available 
  in landscape mode only in the browser, and common buttons like Edit 
  appearing in different places in different applications.


**John Baxter** -- [John has spent the last 12 years as a System 
  Administrator at the long-established ISP OlympusNet. Unfortunately, 
  he no longer has time to devote to Macintosh software development.]

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

  I find the most useful and unanticipated feature of the iPhone is 
  the way it lets me watch my company email via IMAP while away from 
  home or on weekends with the main machine shut down. But I also 
  agree with the comments about the Maps application. I had no idea I 
  would find it as useful as I have.

  But I find it utterly annoying that the iPhone lacks repeating 
  sounds for unacknowledged incoming SMS messages. My incoming SMS 
  messages are problem alerts from our systems. I'm partly 
  compensating by routing the messages both via SMS 
  (number@txt.att.net) and a newly established Yahoo account. At least 
  then I get two sounds separated by perhaps 20 seconds.


**Arlo Rose** -- [Arlo is currently an Entrepreneur in Residence at 
  Yahoo! working on next-generation open platforms. He's best known in 
  the Mac world for his work on Konfabulator, which brought the 
  concepts of widgets to the Mac before Apple's Dashboard.]

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

  I think the surprise for me is Maps. Having the real-time traffic 
  overlay is a lifesaver, and being able to use it as a way to look up 
  business phone numbers and addresses is great. The integration with 
  the Web browser and the phone is really well done.

  The biggest annoyance for me is the lack of basic text editing 
  features. Not being able to select text, cut, copy, paste, or have a 
  basic spell checker drives me nuts. I want to be able to select 
  large chunks of text for mass deletion or moving elsewhere, and 
  that's not possible.


**John Massengale** -- [John is an architect, urban designer and 
  educator, recently teaching at Notre Dame, the University of Miami, 
  and the Institute of Classical Architecture & Classical America - 
  where he's on the Board. He's also the Chairman of the New York 
  chapter of the Congress for the New Urbanism.]

<http://massengale.typepad.com/>

  I love the touchscreen, which makes it so easy to do many things, 
  including access the contacts list (my old phone had Bluetooth but I 
  could never get it to sync), move among different functions, and 
  more. I expect the touchscreen to revolutionize future laptops.

  In response to your second question, the iPhone is not annoying. It 
  has some bugs, but Apple will fix those. It could use more finishing 
  touches, but it will get those. It's the best phone, PDA, and 
  handheld Web browser I've ever owned, and even EDGE speed is usually 
  acceptable.

  The way Apple overhyped the introduction of the iPhone was annoying. 
  So was the experience of having the manager of an Apple Store tell 
  me I might have to return my acting-up iPhone and to come back nine 
  hours later for an appointment with a "Genius." I solved that 
  problem by calling Apple, who connected me to tech support right 
  away. Tech support then solved the problem, which did not require a 
  new iPhone.


**Chris Breen** -- [Chris is a Senior Editor for Macworld, where he 
  pens the magazine's popular Mac 911 tips and troubleshooting column 
  and hosts Macworld's podcast and video podcast. He also participates 
  in the MacNotables podcast as well as Scott Bourne's The iLife Zone 
  and The Apple Phone Show. Chris is the author of "Secrets of the 
  iPod," "The iPod and iTunes Pocket Guide," and "The iPhone Pocket 
  Guide," all from Peachpit Press.]

<http://www.macworld.com/weblogs/mac911/>
<http://www.peachpit.com/authors/bio.aspx?a=74617cf4-f3e8-4559-a587-3929665b0176>

  The feature I've used the most lately is, surprisingly, Maps. I just 
  returned from a vacation in Hawaii and it seems I was hitting Maps 
  several times a day - seeking restaurants, dive shops, fish markets, 
  and even a movie theatre (yes, I know going to a movie in Hawaii is 
  completely lame).

  In the middle of my trip I spoke to the Hawaii MacNuts user group, 
  which is located on the Hilo side of the Big Island. While I had 
  Google Maps directions to the University of Hawaii, Hilo, where the 
  meeting was to be held, I had no way to print out the directions and 
  I didn't feel like driving with a laptop planted next to me. The 
  solution was the iPhone.

  I just plugged in the start and end addresses and the iPhone laid 
  out every twist and turn for me. (Warning: Hawaiian street names are 
  really long; most start with an H, W, or P; and the iPhone's text 
  can be a little small, particularly when you're using the Journey 
  view with the map below and the specific direction above. Doing this 
  while driving can get you killed in a hurry.)

  I've found the single most annoying thing about the iPhone to be its 
  general application stability. Prior to the 1.0.1 update, Safari 
  crashed on me routinely, particularly when browsing pages zoomed in. 
  Since applying the latest firmware update applications still 
  randomly quit.

  Apple suggests it won't allow third-party applications because they 
  can threaten the stability of the phone. Fine. But in exchange for 
  having to use only Apple software, I'd like those applications to be 
  bulletproof, and so far, they're not.


Confessions of a Twitter Convert
--------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9228>

  I'm eating a hearty meal of crow (roasted, with garlic and rosemary) 
  today, since I'm here to tell you how interesting and downright 
  useful I've found Twitter to be since being turned onto it properly 
  at the C4 conference in August. My initial reaction to Twitter was 
  that it was utterly inane, but I was basing my opinion on the public 
  timeline that shows posts from all Twitter users and on the 
  Twittervision service that plots messages from Twitter users on a 
  map of the world (see "Visions of the Sublime and the Inane," 
  2007-06-18).

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9013>

  Frankly, I put much of the blame on Twitter itself, asking as it 
  does, "What are you doing?" as a way of prompting people to post 
  140-character messages. For the most part, as I acerbically noted 
  before, no one cares what you're doing. However, that's not entirely 
  true, and what I missed in my quick and disdainful overview is that 
  a certain number of people do care what you're doing, as long as 
  it's interesting, funny, or relevant in some other way. And here's 
  the other thing - they, not you, get to decide if you're 
  interesting, funny, or relevant.


**Building Your Nest** -- Here's how Twitter works. Visit the Twitter 
  Web site and sign up for a free account. Next, you have to decide 
  who is interesting enough to "follow," which means that you want to 
  read messages, called "tweets," written by that person. For the 
  purposes of argument, let's assume I'm that person, so go to my 
  Twitter page, and click the Follow button underneath my picture at 
  the top. Now you're following me, and you'll be able to read every 
  pearl of wisdom that I accidentally step on while going about my 
  life.

<http://twitter.com/>
<http://twitter.com/adamengst>

  Let's assume you're also interested in other people like me. Over on 
  the right side of my Twitter page are a bunch of tiny icons of all 
  the people who are following me. Mouse over them to see their names 
  in tooltips, and click any one to open their Twitter page. But it's 
  a lot easier to click the Following link to see a full page with 
  larger pictures and full names. From that page you can easily follow 
  any of the people who are following me, making it a fast way to add 
  cool people like my wife Tonya, Macworld's Jason Snell, the 
  incomparable Andy Ihnatko, John Gruber of Daring Fireball, Ars 
  Technica's Jacqui Cheng, and many others. 

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2007-10/Twitter-Web-interface.png>

  Although it's not a guarantee, most people who you follow will 
  receive an email message saying that you're following them, and if 
  they're anything like me, they'll be curious who you are, click 
  through to your Twitter page, and, if it looks like you're saying 
  interesting things, they'll follow you too. (So it might be a good 
  idea to seed your Twitter page with a few trenchant comments before 
  following people. If you don't want random followers, you can set 
  your account so you must approve followers first; that will 
  discourage all but your closest friends and relatives.)


**Twittering Away** -- So what should you twitter about? It doesn't 
  really matter as long as you can answer this simple question: Does 
  anyone care? Sometimes the answer may be limited - only your 
  co-workers planning to meet you in an unfamiliar city may care that 
  your plane was delayed, but that's fine. The fact you're brushing 
  your teeth is of interest to only your dentist, and he's probably 
  not following you. One friend with medical issues even uses Twitter 
  to keep his family updated on his whereabouts so they don't worry 
  about him.

  In essence, Twitter is a form of blogging, where blog posts are 
  limited to 140 characters, and where readers will likely see your 
  post right away. Consider it near-time micro-blogging then, which 
  makes it far, far easier to update than a traditional blog. (As 
  Tonya has noted, you only have to think of the title.) Your tweets 
  are preserved, so you or anyone else can go back to read them at any 
  time, but realistically, I doubt most people do. Twitter is about 
  the moment, and if you miss the moment because you're offline, so be 
  it.

  To help you think about what to twitter about, let me suggest some 
  alternatives to Twitter's "What are you doing?" question:

* What do you think about some current event?

* Tell us about something funny you just saw.

* What neat thing have you learned recently?

* What have you done lately that was particularly cool?

* What question would you like to ask your followers?

* Give us a link to the last great article you read.

* What was your last blog post/Flickr photo/YouTube video?

  This last one is particularly interesting. Twitter accounts can link 
  to publications as well as people, but publications twitter about 
  their latest stories. To see what I mean, follow TidBITS and Take 
  Control on Twitter. They're not very loquacious, but whenever we 
  post a new TidBITS article or have some notable Take Control news, 
  you'll get a tweet with a link. Cool, eh? Other publications I 
  follow via Twitter include Ars Technica, TechMeme, and science news 
  in the New York Times, all of which you can find in my Following 
  list. You'll also note a Twitter icon in the Get TidBITS via... 
  section in the upper left of our Web site.

<http://twitter.com/TidBITS>
<http://twitter.com/TakeControl>

  As an aside, one of Guy Kawasaki's current ventures is a site called 
  Truemors, where people post short 350-character comments about 
  things they found fascinating. Truemors doesn't seem to have an 
  official Twitter feed, but if you follow Guy (in my list, like the 
  others), you'll get a short list of the Truemors posts he most likes 
  along with other tweets. If you want everything from Truemors, or 
  any site that has an RSS feed, there's a service called Twitterfeed 
  that sends RSS posts to a Twitter account, so you could set up a 
  private Twitter account for all your feeds and then follow it. 
  Twitterfeed is a little clumsy to set up, but it works fine, and is 
  in fact how we're posting TidBITS articles to the TidBITS Twitter 
  account.

<http://truemors.com/>
<http://www.twitterfeed.com/>


**Twittering Conversations** -- Tweets are mostly aimed at your 
  followers in general, but there are two exceptions. You can point a 
  tweet at a particular person, or reply to something that someone 
  else has said, by prepending the tweet with that person's username 
  and an @, as in "@adamengst And you moved from Seattle because 
  Ithaca has better weather?" There's no guarantee that person will 
  see the tweet even if they follow you (and they definitely won't see 
  it if they don't follow you, which I think is incorrect behavior on 
  Twitter's part), but at the end of the tweet, Twitter appends "in 
  reply to" and the user's name. Click that, and you'll see the tweet 
  it replied to. The Twitter FAQ claims you'll see @ messages from the 
  people you follow only if you also follow the person it's aimed at, 
  but that's patently not true. Too bad, since @ messages in reply to 
  tweets you haven't seen initially are almost always uninteresting.

  The second special message type is the direct message, which is seen 
  by only the person it's directed at. To send a direct message, 
  prepend the message with "d username". If you wanted to send me a 
  direct message, you'd type something like "d adamengst Great article 
  on Twitter!" No one else sees direct messages to you, and you can 
  find them in the Direct Messages page in your account. Since you may 
  not remember to visit that page, I recommend a setting in the 
  Notices preferences that causes Twitter to send you email with the 
  text of direct messages.

<http://twitter.com/direct_messages>
<http://twitter.com/account/notifications>


**Growling Tweets** -- So far, everything I've talked about is 
  available via the Web, and that's one good thing about Twitter - 
  it's available anywhere via any Web browser. But the Web browser 
  isn't the best way to use Twitter, and what sets Twitter apart from 
  competing services like Jaiku (just acquired by Google) and Pownce 
  is Twitter's open API for making independent services that work with 
  Twitter. That's how Twitterfeed was created, for instance, and tons 
  of other programs and services work with Twitter. Check out the 
  Twitter Fan Wiki for a full list.

<http://www.jaiku.com/>
<http://www.pownce.com/>
<http://twitter.pbwiki.com/>
<http://twitter.pbwiki.com/Apps>

  Without implying anything bad about all the Macintosh Twitter 
  applications and Dashboard widgets and other utilities, I want to 
  tell you about the most popular one, Twitterrific. Written by Craig 
  Hockenberry of Iconfactory, the free Twitterrific provides an 
  elegant Macintosh interface for following others on Twitter and 
  posting your own tweets. It's sleek, easy to use, and highly 
  configurable. But what's most important about Twitterrific is that 
  it integrates with the free Growl system-wide notification service. 
  Without Twitterrific and Growl, Twitter would be more trouble than 
  it's worth for me.

<http://iconfactory.com/software/twitterrific>
<http://growl.info/>

  So here's what to do. Download Twitterrific and Growl from the links 
  above, and install them. When you first launch Twitterrific, it asks 
  you to log in to your Twitter account (for some reason, it suggests 
  logging out via the Web first). Click the little wrench icon at the 
  bottom of the window to access the preferences, which you can tweak 
  to your heart's content. I believe Twitterrific will automatically 
  register itself with Growl too, and you can configure Growl from 
  System Preferences. (I'm partial to the Music Video style of alerts 
  that rise up from the bottom of the screen.)

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2007-10/Twitterrific.png>

  Once you have everything configured and launched (and it's a good 
  idea to set both Twitterrific and Growl to launch at startup in 
  their preferences), every tweet that comes through in Twitterrific 
  will be reported to you via Growl. Since tweets are no more than 140 
  characters, you can easily read them in two or three seconds without 
  being distracted from whatever you're doing. I find this truly 
  compelling because I have trouble making the time to read a 
  collection of RSS feeds, and worse, if I happen on good stuff, I end 
  up spending even more time I can't afford to waste. Thanks to the 
  combination of Twitterrific and Growl reporting tweets not just from 
  my friends and colleagues, but also from publications I want to 
  track, I can stay up to date with a minimum of time and effort.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2007-10/Growl-tweet.png>

  You can also use Twitter from cell phones that support SMS messages, 
  including the iPhone, but I haven't done this largely because I 
  don't feel like paying extra to read tweets while I'm out, and I 
  don't generally feel the need to twitter about something while I'm 
  away from the Mac. More mobile people may appreciate the 
  integration, particularly with an unlimited SMS message plan, 
  although I'd encourage such people to remember the "Does anyone 
  care?" question - from what I've seen, those twittering from their 
  phones tend to blather a bit.

  If you use an iPhone, you can stay up to date with your Twitter 
  stream without incurring SMS charges by using PocketTweets in 
  Safari. It doesn't alert you when new tweets are published, but it 
  does let you catch up by refreshing the page. Of course, you can 
  also send tweets from it.

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


**Twitter Flying High** -- Like many social networking services, 
  Twitter relies on the network effect. It wasn't interesting to me 
  until there were people who I wanted to follow using it, writing 
  things I wanted to read. And because I got on, Tonya tried it, and 
  once Tonya and I were using and recommending Twitter, the rest of 
  the TidBITS staff gave it a try. Now, even if I wanted to try Jaiku 
  or Pownce (both of which are invitation-only at this point), they'd 
  suffer from not having the people with whom I want to network. (If 
  they're smart, they'll figure out how to integrate with Twitter via 
  its open API.)

  In the past few weeks, I've also seen A-list bloggers like Robert 
  Scoble and Dave Winer start using Twitter in a big way, and Robert 
  Scoble has said (on Twitter) that Twitter has taken over the 
  "personal blogging" role for him. Between the two of them, they have 
  nearly 9,000 followers, giving an indication of just how popular 
  Twitter is becoming. (In contrast, Robert Scoble notes that he has 
  only 882 followers on Jaiku, and I have a measly 289 followers on 
  Twitter as of this writing.)

<http://twitter.com/Scobleizer/statuses/305339492>
<http://twitter.com/Scobleizer/statuses/323800652>

  The combination of being able to get news headlines and tweets from 
  connected bloggers means that Twitter has become the place to find 
  breaking news. 

  The question is if Twitter will maintain its momentum or falter 
  under the load. Already the service is going down, sometimes for 
  minutes at a time, fairly regularly. While I was writing this 
  article, I saw the "we're working on it!" page twice, although I 
  find that Twitterrific insulates me from most of the momentary 
  lapses since it updates only once per minute (a frequency you can 
  configure). Reportedly, Jaiku and Pownce are more reliable, but 
  since they aren't yet public, they haven't had to scale to the point 
  where reliability becomes a tough nut to crack.

  Right now, I'd guess that the competing services have more features 
  and are slightly better thought-out than Twitter, simply because 
  they've come to the game later and haven't had to deal with the 
  real-world scaling issues. Twitter will need to keep the pressure 
  up, both in terms of solving its scaling issues and adding new 
  features. For instance, Jaiku offers threaded conversations, and 
  Pownce lets you send messages, files, links, and events, and people 
  can comment on each item. 

  One thing Twitter could use is the concept of groups. Tweets could 
  be aimed at the group, and thus seen only by other members of that 
  group. I know managers who would jump at the chance to keep up on 
  what their employees are doing in a low-pressure, low-bandwidth way, 
  and the employees would probably appreciate having to write only 
  140-character status reports.

  The fact that Google just bought Jaiku deserves notice. Of anyone, 
  Google knows how to scale and has vast server and network capacity 
  to do it. Plus, Google could easily integrate Jaiku into other 
  Google services, such as Gmail and Google Docs, in interesting ways. 
  But just as YouTube won out over Google Video (to the point where 
  Google bought it), Twitter has the network effect going for it now 
  and can, as long as it doesn't make any mistakes, likely stay ahead 
  of whatever Google does with Jaiku. But if Google publishes the 
  Jaiku API to enable services like Twitterrific and Twitterfeed, and 
  if Twitter suffers more significant reliability problems or falls 
  too far behind in the feature war, Jaiku stands a chance at taking 
  over.

<http://www.jaiku.com/help/google>

  All that said, right now, Twitter is perched firmly at the top of 
  the tree, and every day it proves its utility to me. Hmm, as I 
  finished writing this article, Twitterrific and Growl informed me 
  that Glenn just published an article on the TidBITS site that I need 
  to read and edit. I might not get to it until tomorrow, but now that 
  I know about it, I can more easily make some time for it in my 
  schedule.


Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk/15-Oct-07
------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9240>

**Running and vehicle-use logging on the iPhone** -- After replacing a 
  Treo with an iPhone, a reader is looking for a Web application that 
  can help him keep track of vehicle usage. (5 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1533/>


**Mac Market Share Rising in general** -- We've seen increases of Mac 
  use on college campuses, but the trend doesn't appear to be limited 
  to the dorm set. A reader reports on the larger number of Macs at 
  technical conferences. (1 message)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1534/>


**Apple Expo Paris 2007 Impressions** -- Following Joe Kissell's 
  article on his experiences at the most recent Apple Expo in Paris, a 
  fellow attendee shares her impressions of the size of the show as 
  well as the disparity between males and females in attendance. (1 
  message)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1535/>


**A niggling little contextual menu problem** -- Are you seeing 
  multiple instances of some applications listed by the Open With item 
  in the Finder's contextual menus? Here's a solution. (3 messages) 

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1536/>


**Adding notes to contacts in iPod touch** -- The iPod touch lacks 
  some of the basic features found on the iPhone, despite many 
  similarities, including the capability to edit notes in contacts. (3 
  messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1537/>


**Keeping your recipes ... forever** -- Andy Affleck's article 
  comparing recipe programs brings up an important issue: Can the 
  programs easily export their data to a form that will be readable in 
  50 years? (3 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1538/>


**Using iTunes from the chaise lounge** -- It's now almost possible to 
  run iTunes without getting out of your chair, no matter where the 
  computer is located. Slackers rejoice! (3 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1539/>


**Alternatives to iSight?** Apple discontinued the stand-alone iSight 
  camera last year. What other options are available? (5 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1540/>


**Retrospect speed on OS X 10.4.10** -- What could be causing a 
  dramatic slowdown in Retrospect's performance on Apple's latest 
  version of Mac OS X? The answer may lie in the number of files being 
  scanned, and not the operating system version. (7 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1541/>


**Mac Market Share Rising at Cornell University (and everywhere!)** -- 
  While we're seeing more Macs in more places, the prevalence of cheap 
  PCs may prevent the Mac from becoming too popular in some fields. (3 
  messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1542/>


**Use Custom CSS to Tweak TidBITS Display** -- As a followup to Jeff 
  Carlson's blog entry about changing the display of the TidBITS home 
  page, a CSS expert points out one way to ensure that changes in 
  one's personal style sheet are applied to the correct site. (1 
  message)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1543/>


**Wi-Fi card for old PowerBook 667** -- What's a good Wi-Fi solution 
  to an old PowerBook that didn't originally include AirPort? (6 
  messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1544/>


**Using the iPhone with "Pay as you Go" from AT&T** -- The Pay as You 
  Go plan from AT&T provides a workaround if you don't want to sign up 
  for the iPhone's exclusive two-year contract. And if you do it 
  right, you may be able to eliminate monthly charges entirely! (3 
  messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1545/>


**Stop the Catalog Madness with Catalog Choice** -- Is your mailbox 
  overflowing with catalogs and direct-marketing mailings? Several 
  organizations can help you reduce your junk mail and prevent so much 
  paper from going to waste. (1 message)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1548/>


$$

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