TidBITS#905/19-Nov-07
=====================
  Issue link: <http://db.tidbits.com/issue/905>

  Steve Jobs gave all of Apple this week off in recognition of 
  shipping the iPhone and Leopard this year, which meant that last 
  week produced a flurry of updates and releases across many of 
  Apple's software product lines. They include Mac OS X 10.5.1, Mac OS 
  X 10.4.11, Safari 3, iPhoto 7.1.1, iPhone 1.1.2, Final Cut Express 
  4, and all the applications in Final Cut Studio 2. Other companies 
  were busy too, with Fetch 5.3 appearing and FileMaker Inc. releasing 
  a preview of its new Bento database; consultant Jeff Porten has some 
  opinions about how well Bento achieves its goals. Plus, Amazon 
  shipped its Kindle ebook reader, which Glenn Fleishman compares to 
  the iPhone and the Sony Reader. Like Apple, we're taking our next 
  issue off, but we'll be busy processing your holiday gift ideas in 
  TidBITS Talk in preparation for the TidBITS Gift Guide in December. 
  Bonus stories this week look at WireTap Studio, the Nokia N800 
  Internet Tablet, a service for eliminating unwanted catalogs, and 
  more.

Articles
    No TidBITS Issue on 26-Nov-07
    Submit Ideas for the 2007 TidBITS Gift Guide
    Mac OS X 10.5.1 Fixes Numerous Leopard Flaws
    Apple Releases Mac OS X 10.4.11 with Safari 3
    iPhoto 7.1.1 Increases Leopard Compatibility
    Fetch 5.3 Dons Leopard Spots
    iPhone 1.1.2 Ships: OS X Recaptured Briefly
    Final Cut Express 4 Adds AVCHD, iMovie '08 Interoperability
    Apple Updates Final Cut Studio 2 Applications
    PGP Causes Leopard Slowdown, But Fix Is Simple
    FileMaker's Bento: Undercooked and Slightly Fishy
    Comparing Amazon's Kindle to the iPhone and Sony Reader
    Bonus Stories for 19-Nov-07
    Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk/19-Nov-07


------------ This issue of TidBITS sponsored in part by: --------------

* READERS LIKE YOU! Support TidBITS with a contribution today! 
  <http://www.tidbits.com/about/support/contributors.html> 
  Special thanks this week to Driek, the Ridgecrest Apple User Group, 
  James Knight, and Nancy Toothman for their generous support!

* TidBITS Exclusives from Small Dog for Nov 19 - Dec 3: 
  AppleCare Deals including a TidBITS Exclusive for iMac 
  AppleCare. Save up to $50 off Apple's prices. Learn 
  more and order today at <http://www.smalldog.com/tb/>

* Fetch Softworks: Fetch 5.3 has a new look for Leopard, 
  and new support for Leopard technologies. And you can 
  upload with the oldest technology of all, Copy and Paste! 
  Download your free trial version! <http://fetchsoftworks.com/>

* WebCrossing Neighbors Creates Private Social Networks 
  Create a complete social network with your company or group's 
  own look. Scalable, extensible and extremely customizable. 
  Take a guided tour today <http://www.webcrossing.com/tour>

* Bare Bones Software's BBEdit 8.7 -- Latest version offers a 
  major interface overhaul, new prefs, text clippings, improved 
  JavaScript, new Ruby/SQL/YAML/Markdown support, code folding. 
  Over 160 new features in all! <http://www.barebones.com/>.

* MARK/SPACE, INC: The Missing Sync provides the very best in 
  synchronization for Mac users with BlackBerry, Palm OS, or 
  Windows Mobile devices. Integrates with Address Book, iCal, 
  Entourage, iPhoto, and iTunes. <http://www.markspace.com/bits>

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

* Seamlessly run Windows on your Mac with VMware Fusion! Run 
  Windows, Linux, and Solaris simultaneously without rebooting. 
  Customizable toolbars, easy to manage virtual packages, and more. 
  VMware Fusion: $69.99! <http://www.allume.com/mac/vmware/tb/>

* Freeverse, Inc.'s SOUND STUDIO 3.5.5 - Sound Studio is for anyone 
  who needs to record or edit audio with a professional tool, but at 
  a consumer price. Perfect for Podcasts, Music, More! Now updated 
  for OS X 10.5 Leopard. <http://www.freeverse.com/soundstudio>

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


No TidBITS Issue on 26-Nov-07
-----------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9323>

  As is our custom this time of year, we won't be publishing next 
  week's emailed issue of TidBITS on 26-Nov-07 due to the Thanksgiving 
  holiday in the United States. And, honestly, we need a little rest 
  after the recent release of Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard, the five "Take 
  Control of... Leopard" titles that arrived the same day Leopard 
  shipped, Jeff Carlson's book "iMovie '08 and iDVD '08 for Mac OS X: 
  Visual QuickStart Guide" (hitting stores in December), Adam's book 
  "iPhoto '08 for Mac OS X: Visual QuickStart Guide" (arriving in time 
  for Macworld Expo in January 2008), and the various projects the 
  other members of the staff are currently juggling. 

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/webx?50@@.3cb6809a>
<http://www.amazon.com/iMovie-08-iDVD-Mac-QuickStart/dp/032150187X/tidbitselectro00/>
<http://www.amazon.com/iPhoto-08-Mac-OS-QuickStart/dp/0321501888/tidbitselectro00/>

  However, we're creatures of habit, so don't be surprised if we 
  continue to post articles or updates to the TidBITS Web site or to 
  our staff blogs. Check back at the site or subscribe to the TidBITS 
  RSS feed or Twitter stream to keep up with everything we're writing.

<http://www.tidbits.com/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/blogs.html>
<http://db.tidbits.com/feeds/tidbits.rss>
<http://twitter.com/TidBITS>


Submit Ideas for the 2007 TidBITS Gift Guide
--------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9326>

  It's time once again to gird our loins for the annual holiday 
  shopping season, in which Apple is on track to sell an estimated 29 
  gazillion iPods and 13 packages of iPod socks. But if you want to go 
  beyond the obvious for your gift giving and receiving, we're here to 
  help with something a little different. Instead of soliciting ideas 
  from readers and then assembling every last one of them into a 
  massive gift issue that many people probably can't finish reading 
  before the end of December, we're going to focus in on just the best 
  ideas. We'll collect ideas in TidBITS Talk, as always, but after 10 
  days we'll create a survey from the suggestions and open that up to 
  public vote. Once the voting has identified the top gift ideas in 
  the various survey categories, we'll write them up in the 2007 
  TidBITS Gift Guide, currently scheduled for 07-Dec-07. Of course, 
  the TidBITS Talk threads will remain available for anyone who wants 
  to explore further.

  We've started threads for the initial categories in TidBITS Talk 
  already, so if you subscribe to TidBITS Talk, just reply to a 
  message in the right thread. If you read TidBITS Talk via the Web, 
  you can post via the Web too; just scroll down to the bottom of the 
  window in the appropriate thread. 

* Hardware Gift Ideas

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1666>

* Software Gift Ideas

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1667>

* Game Gift Ideas

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1668>

* Computer-Related Miscellaneous Ideas

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1669>

* Non-Technical Ideas for the Macintosh-Minded

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1670>

  Please suggest only one product or idea per message, give the reason 
  why you're recommending it, make sure to include a URL or other 
  necessary contact information, and recommend only others' products. 
  If possible, try to suggest products that haven't appeared in 
  previous gift issues. To refresh your memory on what readers have 
  suggested previously, check out the last three gift issues from 
  2006, 2005, and 2004 before writing in. Thanks in advance!

<http://db.tidbits.com/issue/858>
<http://db.tidbits.com/issue/808>
<http://db.tidbits.com/issue/758>


Mac OS X 10.5.1 Fixes Numerous Leopard Flaws
--------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>, Rich Mogull <rmogull@securosis.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9318>

  Apple has released the first update for Leopard, Mac OS X 10.5.1, 
  with a laundry list of fixes for widely reported problems among 
  early users. It's available via Software Update in Leopard, with the 
  downloads under 40 MB for both PowerPC- and Intel-based Macs; oddly, 
  the standalone versions for the desktop and server versions of 
  Leopard weigh in at 110 MB.

<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/macosx1051update.html>
<http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=306907>
<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/macosx1051update.html>
<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/macosxserver1051update.html>

  One significant improvement is Apple's statement that 10.5.1 
  "improves the reliability of Back to My Mac-enabled Macs appearing 
  in the Finder's Shared Sidebar." In our experience and that of 
  colleagues, Back to My Mac has worked erratically or not at all, but 
  early signs are promising; see "Punching a Hole for Back to My Mac" 
  (2007-11-17).

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9322>

  The 10.5.1 update also reportedly fixes problems in storing wireless 
  network passwords and using Disk Utility, and it addresses five Mail 
  flaws. A bug that resulted in "potential data loss issue when moving 
  files across partitions in the Finder" has been corrected; this 
  issue cropped up when using Command-drag to move, not copy, files in 
  the Finder across local hard drives and mounted volumes. Most other 
  fixes are cosmetic and minor. 

<http://tomkarpik.com/articles/massive-data-loss-bug-in-leopard/>

  One missing fix in this release is a solution for the progressive 
  Wi-Fi performance degradation experienced by some AirPort users.

  The update also fixes some security and usability issues with the 
  firewall, some of which we have previously covered (see "Leopard 
  Firewall Takes One Step Forward, Three Steps Back," 2007-11-05). The 
  label for the Block All option has been updated to read "Allow Only 
  Essential Services." In other words, the firewall behavior hasn't 
  changed, but the label now more accurately represents how the 
  firewall functions. 

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9294>
<http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=307004>

  The most notable other changes are in the application firewall: 
  Skype and other applications that modify themselves when they run 
  are no longer rendered unusable when the application firewall is 
  selected. In 10.5.0 the application firewall would digitally sign 
  the code of any application you authorized for network access and 
  refuse to run the application if the application changed (a 
  technique to protect your computer from attackers). Now, instead of 
  just stopping the application from running without notifying the 
  user, 10.5.1 prompts you to allow network access again if the 
  application has been modified. 

  The application firewall now also enables you to block programs 
  running under the root user, giving you much better control over 
  your system. These don't completely fix all of the problems with 
  Leopard's firewall, but they're good steps in the right direction.


Apple Releases Mac OS X 10.4.11 with Safari 3
---------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9314>

  Safari 3 has been released for Tiger, along with a host of security 
  updates and bug fixes, as part of the Mac OS X 10.4.11 update. The 
  updates are mammoth: update for PowerPC (67.9 MB), combo update for 
  PowerPC (180.8 MB), update for Intel (128 MB), and combo update for 
  Intel (321.5 MB). That last update would take 18 hours to download 
  over a dial-up modem or 3 minutes via a home fiber link. Mac OS X 
  10.3 Panther also received a revised security update - 2007-008 - 
  for its terminal 10.3.9 release (client, 49 MB; server, 63.4 MB).

<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/macosx10411updateppc.html>
<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/macosx10411comboupdateppc.html>
<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/macosx10411updateintel.html>
<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/macosx10411comboupdateintel.html>
<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/securityupdate20070081039client.html>
<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/securityupdate20070081039server.html>

  The list of security updates and bug fixes is long. Many of the 
  security updates are rather important, fixing six kernel-level bugs. 
  Malicious Flash content could allow a machine to be taken over, and 
  Apple has updated Tiger to use version 9.0.47.0 of Flash Player, 
  which is also available separately. It's worth noting that a few of 
  the WebCore fixes are credited to a Google employee, reflecting 
  Google's use of the WebKit (which underlies Safari) for the Android 
  mobile-phone platform (see "Google's View of Our Cell Phone Future 
  Is an Android, Not a GPhone," 2007-11-12).

<http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=307041>
<http://webkit.org/blog/142/android-uses-webkit/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9291>

  On the non-security side, the list is more modest except for the 
  inclusion of Safari 3 for Tiger. Many of the issues are relatively 
  minor, although important to those that they affect. Our Kiwi 
  friends might be happy to see that Apple, months too late, has 
  finally provided the correct updates for Daylight Saving Time for 
  their nation (see "Daylight Saving Time Rules Fixed for New 
  Zealand," 2007-09-20.)

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9192>

  Apple also updated the Safari 3 beta for Windows XP and Vista to fix 
  a number of security problems found in both the Mac OS X and Windows 
  versions, as well as to add a vast amount of feature refinement. The 
  list of new and improved items is rather extensive, including basic 
  functionality like printing page numbers and more important features 
  such as listing FTP directories and managing cookies.

<http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=307038>
<http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=306914>


iPhoto 7.1.1 Increases Leopard Compatibility
--------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9315>

  Apple has released iPhoto 7.1.1, saying only that it "supports 
  compatibility with Mac OS X 10.5, improves overall stability, and 
  addresses a number of other minor issues." The update is available 
  via Software Update as a 10.8 MB download; a standalone download has 
  also been posted. You must have already updated to iPhoto 7.1; if 
  you've missed that version for some reason, install it first, and it 
  in turn requires the iLife Support 8.1.1 update.

<http://www.apple.com/ilife/iphoto/>
<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/iphoto711.html>
<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/iphoto71.html>
<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/ilifesupport811.html>

  I'm in the final throes of updating my "iPhoto '08 for Mac OS X: 
  Visual QuickStart Guide" book, and I'm looking forward to this 7.1.1 
  update's improved "overall stability." I haven't lost any data that 
  I know of, but iPhoto 7.1 has crashed seven times on me so far while 
  I've been writing in November.

  If you ever want to see how unreliable an application has been, try 
  this in Tiger (in Leopard, you can just look at the number of crash 
  log files for the application in ~/Library/Logs/CrashReporter):

  1. Open the Console application from your Utilities folder.

  2. Click the Logs button in the upper-left corner to open the Logs 
  pane.

  3. Click the triangle next to ~/Library/Logs in the Logs pane, and 
  then do the same for the triangle next to CrashReporter.

  4. Find iPhoto.crash.log (or whatever) in the list and select it to 
  display the log in the main pane.

  5. Click the Reload button in the toolbar. If the Reload dialog 
  appears (to give you access to the rest of a large file), load the 
  entire log by dragging the slider all the way to right.

  6. Type "Date/Time" into the Filter field to filter the list to just 
  the lines that include "Date/Time", which effectively limits to just 
  the lines that show the date and time of each crash.


Fetch 5.3 Dons Leopard Spots
----------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9312>

  Fetch Softworks has released Fetch 5.3, a Leopard-focused update to 
  the company's venerable file transfer software that goes well beyond 
  basic compatibility with Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard. Fetch 5.3 sports a 
  redesigned look-and-feel that integrates better with Leopard, has 
  been digitally signed to reduce keychain alerts, adds support for 
  Leopard's application-specific firewall, uses the default Downloads 
  folder in Leopard, exempts the Fetch Cache from Time Machine 
  backups, and more. The most notable new feature that's unrelated to 
  Leopard is that Fetch 5.3 now allows you to use the Copy and Paste 
  commands to upload files and copy files between servers, a perfectly 
  sensible approach that's sometimes easier than drag-and-drop. 

<http://fetchsoftworks.com/>
<http://fetchsoftworks.com/fetch5.release.notes.html>

  My favorite feature in Fetch remains WebView, the clever way you can 
  set it to copy HTTP URLs for files you've uploaded to an FTP server. 
  I use Fetch for uploading article images because once I've uploaded 
  them, I can just select the file in Fetch, press Command-C, and then 
  paste the reformatted HTTP URL into my article.

  Fetch 5.3 is a universal binary that requires Mac OS X 10.3.9 or 
  later; it's a 16 MB download. The update is free for all Fetch 5 
  users; upgrading from Fetch 4 costs $15 and new copies cost $25. 
  Free licenses are available for educational and charitable use.

<http://fetchsoftworks.com/downloads.html>


iPhone 1.1.2 Ships: OS X Recaptured Briefly
-------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9308>

  Apple has released iPhone 1.1.2 and iPod touch 1.1.2 software via 
  iTunes to patch a severe flaw in the image library used to handle 
  TIFF images. This flaw was used by iPhone hackers to "jailbreak" the 
  iPhone, and required simply visiting a specially crafted Web page. 
  The freed iPhone could then run arbitrary software. This was a 
  severe flaw, as it would allow any malicious Web page to hijack an 
  iPhone's operating system. The patch disables jailbreaks and 
  prevents malicious efforts, too. (There's no link to the software 
  download; iPhone and iPod touch software updates are retrieved and 
  installed via iTunes.)

<http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=61798>

  However, independent iPhone/iPod touch developers are a step ahead 
  of Apple. Jailbreak software for 1.1.2 is already available. It 
  requires that you perform a preparatory step with the 1.1.1 software 
  in place before the upgrade. (There are instructions for downgrading 
  to 1.1.1 to perform this step.)

<http://www.tuaw.com/2007/11/11/1-1-2-jailbreak-software-released/>
<http://jailbreakme.com/1.1.2/>

  I followed the instructions to enable my hacked iPhone with 1.1.1 
  software to continue running third-party software with 1.1.2, but it 
  failed to work. I had to perform a complete restore and then 
  retrieve a backup from iTunes.

  The iPhone 1.1.2 software was first seen in the UK on iPhones sold 
  there last week, as the update includes support for languages other 
  than English and activation of the iPhone with carriers outside the 
  United States.

  A battery indicator for the device now appears next to its name in 
  iTunes, and the iPod touch gained the initially missing capability 
  to create events in the Calendar application.

  Apple seeded the 1.1.2 software to a publicly downloadable location 
  on its servers, but neither released its security note nor triggered 
  the software update notification mechanism in iTunes until 
  12-Nov-07.


Final Cut Express 4 Adds AVCHD, iMovie '08 Interoperability
-----------------------------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9317>

  Apple has released Final Cut Express 4, the latest version of its 
  intermediate video editing software. Taking its cues (and code) from 
  Final Cut Pro 6, the new Final Cut Express features an open format 
  Timeline that lets you mix DV and HD formats in the same project and 
  adds the capability to import AVCHD formatted footage (which is 
  transcoded to Apple Intermediate Codec (AIC), the same way Final Cut 
  Pro and iMovie handle the format.) Also like Final Cut Pro, simply 
  adding the first clip to the Timeline dictates a project's format. 
  More than 50 new FxPlug plug-ins are also included.

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

  Apple is also touting the capability to import iMovie '08 projects, 
  which Final Cut Express accomplishes by being able to read Apple's 
  Final Cut XML format. (In iMovie, choose Share > Final Cut XML. When 
  you import the text file that's generated, Final Cut Express 
  accesses the footage from the iMovie Events folder on disk.) 
  However, importing is limited to edit points and transitions, and 
  doesn't include titles or video adjustments; Final Cut Express 
  substitutes cross dissolve transitions for the ones used in the 
  iMovie project. Audio levels are retained, however. In projects 
  where DV and HD footage is combined, Final Cut Express crops (or 
  doesn't) according to the iMovie project's aspect ratio setting.

  Tying Final Cut Express and iMovie '08 is a sensible move. iMovie 
  lacks several fine editing operations, such as precise control over 
  audio levels within a clip, an area in which Final Cut Express 
  excels. Now, iMovie can be seen as a place to store and manage video 
  - and quickly assemble a rough cut of a movie - before handing it 
  off to Final Cut Express for fine tuning.

  The Final Cut Express package also includes LiveType 2.1 for 
  creating animated titles. Soundtrack, the separate audio editor that 
  shipped with Final Cut Express HD 3.5, is no longer part of the 
  package; in a briefing, Apple said that more people were using 
  GarageBand instead for the same features.

  Final Cut Express 4 is available now for $199 (a $100 price drop 
  from version 3.5); owners of any previous version of Final Cut 
  Express can upgrade for $99. It's a universal application that 
  requires a Mac with a 1.25 GHz or faster PowerPC G4 processor, a 
  PowerPC G5, or an Intel processor; AVCHD support is available only 
  on Intel-based Macs. Mac OS X 10.4.10 or later is also required.


Apple Updates Final Cut Studio 2 Applications
---------------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9316>

  Apple has updated its Final Cut Studio 2 suite of applications, 
  bringing Leopard compatibility and specific fixes to the set of 
  video and audio editing tools. They're available via Software Update 
  or as stand-alone downloads.

  Final Cut Pro 6.0.2 (a 38 MB download) rolls in numerous 
  improvements and compatibility updates, such as support for Sony 
  XDCAM EX footage, the Sony HVR-V1 HDV camera, Sony HDV cameras that 
  record to internal hard disks, the AVC-Intra footage format, and 
  DVCPRO HD 720p50 footage. Support for the AVCHD format has been 
  improved as well, though spanned clips ingested in Final Cut Pro 
  6.0.1 may need to be re-ingested. Other improvements include support 
  for 60 fps drop frame timecode, 50p video formats, and Broadcast 
  Wave Format (BWF) iXML metadata; new Motion templates; and a host of 
  other fixes. Note that Final Cut Pro 6.0.2 projects are not backward 
  compatible with Final Cut Pro 6.0.1.

<http://www.apple.com/support/releasenotes/en/Final_Cut_Pro_6.0_rn/>
<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/finalcutpro602.html>

  The other updates aren't as involved, but include welcome changes 
  nonetheless. Soundtrack Pro 2.0.2 (a 70 MB download) fixes issues 
  with audio effects and adds support for 50 fps and 720p60 Final Cut 
  Pro projects. DVD Studio Pro 4.2.1 (an 11.9 MB download) provides 
  native support for more HDV and H.264 formats and fixes problems 
  with processing still images and using multiple tapes in a DLT drive 
  under Mac OS X 10.4.10. Motion 3.0.2 (a 20.6 MB download) adds 
  support for 50 fps frame rates and 60 fps drop frame projects, and 
  also improves performance in Motion master templates used in Final 
  Cut Pro. 

<http://www.apple.com/support/releasenotes/en/Soundtrack_Pro_2.0_rn/>
<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/soundtrackpro202.html>
<http://www.apple.com/support/releasenotes/en/DVD_Studio_Pro_4.2_rn/>
<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/dvdstudiopro421.html>
<http://www.apple.com/support/releasenotes/en/Motion_3.0_rn/>
<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/motion302.html>

  Color 1.0.2 (a 79.8 MB download) improves its support for the new 
  formats in Final Cut Pro 6.0.2, addresses problems with round-trip 
  operation between Color and Final Cut Pro, and fixes a number of 
  other issues. Cinema Tools 4.0.1 (a 10 MB download) addresses bugs 
  and limitations such as improper length values in pull lists, 
  message text in exported lists, and support for PDF formatting. 
  Compressor 3.0.2 (a 95.5 MB download) adds a Color tab in the 
  Filters pane of the Inspector. Lastly, the Pro Applications Update 
  2007-02 (an 8.8 MB download) fixes underlying frameworks and shared 
  components that affect these applications.

<http://www.apple.com/support/releasenotes/en/Color_1.0_rn/>
<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/color102.html>
<http://www.apple.com/support/releasenotes/en/Cinema_Tools_4.0_rn/>
<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/cinematools401.html>
<http://www.apple.com/support/releasenotes/en/Compressor_3.0_rn/>
<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/compressor302.html>
<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/proapplicationsupdate200702.html>


PGP Causes Leopard Slowdown, But Fix Is Simple
----------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9311>

  I don't like being kept waiting. And the 10 to 15 seconds it was 
  taking for a beta of Bare Bones Software's Mailsmith 2.2 to preview 
  each email message in Leopard was far, far too long. Bare Bones head 
  and founder Rich Siegel is a pal of mine, so my quality assurance 
  email report was full of detail and umbrage. Rich suggested that 
  Spotlight under Leopard might be engaged in some activity - 
  Mailsmith 2.2 uses Spotlight quite effectively - and that I might 
  see an improvement after a couple of days.

<http://www.listsearch.com/Mailsmith/Thread/index.lasso?1933#8621>

  Drat the man, he was right, and he's a gloater. He sent me a tweet 
  via Twitter: "@glennf Stay after class and write on the board a 
  hundred times: 'I will never doubt @siegel again.' Hm. Might make a 
  good 'Simpsons' intro."

<http://twitter.com/siegel/statuses/384138042>

  But after installing QuickTime 7.3 and restarting the PowerBook, the 
  problem recurred. I sent Rich some more troubleshooting data - a 
  Sample Application report available with a button click via 
  Leopard's Activity Monitor that pulls in tons of low-level detail 
  about what a program is doing - and he saw the problem: PGP Desktop. 

  Although I didn't have PGP Desktop 9 launched, the pgp-agent process 
  was still running. I disabled the item in the Login Items portion of 
  my account setup in the Accounts preference pane and restarted. No 
  good. Terminal showed me that when Mailsmith launched, several 
  pgp-agent daemons would also appear. Mailsmith works directly with 
  PGP's encryption tools; other mail programs tend to rely on 
  AppleScript for integration.

  I was unable to find instructions for uninstalling all the PGP 
  components, and the company confirmed for me via email that I should 
  have taken the wise step of uninstalling the program and its pieces 
  via the PGP application before upgrading to Leopard if I was worried 
  about compatibility.

  Rich suggested I upgrade to PGP's Leopard-compatible beta of Desktop 
  9.7 to see if that solved the problem. Of course I did, and the 
  problem went away. (See the tweet above.) With this version 
  installed, I can also now easily uninstall the software through the 
  application. The folks at PGP also said that their support group can 
  provide an uninstaller script for those who don't want to run or 
  even install a beta.

<http://beta.pgp.com/>
<http://www.pgp.com/support/>

  Upgrading PGP seemed to solve a host of mysterious other slowdowns 
  that might have been related to Mailsmith's interaction with PGP, 
  and my PowerBook no longer feels nearly unusable under Leopard. In 
  fact, Mailsmith 2.2 (build 227) is notably zippier under Leopard 
  than in Tiger.

  I'd like to believe there's a moral to this story. Check all your 
  software for upgrades and compatibility issues before moving to a 
  new operating system? But I didn't think I was "running" PGP as the 
  obvious application portion wasn't running. Perhaps the moral is 
  "have a revert position in case of failure." Or just, "I will never 
  doubt @siegel again."


FileMaker's Bento: Undercooked and Slightly Fishy
-------------------------------------------------
  by Jeff Porten <civitan@jeffporten.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9313>

  Databases have been available since the dawn of personal computers, 
  but they have always suffered from a simple issue: just about 
  everyone needs one, but few people know how to build one. 

  Mac users (and computer users in general) have generally had two 
  options. The simple method is to use databases that succeed by 
  providing specialized interfaces and very limited customization 
  options. Two examples: Address Book and iCal. Both are databases, 
  and both are great if you need exactly what Apple provides. You can 
  add a middle initial to anyone in Address Book, but if you want to 
  keep track of people who owe you money, you're pretty much out of 
  luck trying to calculate a grand total.

  The more complicated method is database software that enables you to 
  build exactly what you want. FileMaker Pro has generally been the 
  software of choice covering the middle ground between "easy to 
  learn" and "decently powerful," but FileMaker Pro's ease of use is 
  deceptive. Building a good database in FileMaker is like writing a 
  good novel in Word; anyone can buy and use the program, but you need 
  skills to make the results worthwhile.

  This drives the publishers of database software batty. It's easy to 
  picture the staff meetings where the senior executive says, "If we 
  can just come up with the database that lets my mother run her 
  bridge club, and my brother run his fantasy football league, we'll 
  sell a bazillion copies and retire to Aruba." For this reason, 
  complex database software has for years come with templates that 
  work out-of-the-box for recipes and the inevitable "project 
  management solution." Scratch the surface, though, and all of that 
  complexity is still there waiting to bite you.

  FileMaker Inc. clearly had one of these executive meetings sometime 
  in the past year, because they've just released a "preview edition" 
  of Bento - which apparently is Japanese for both "lunchbox" and 
  "FileMaker without all of the messy bits that require programming 
  skills." Who knew?

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

  I _am_ a database programmer, so I took a look at the preview 
  release of Bento with two questions in mind. First, what _can't_ I 
  do with it, and are these limitations that my clients would also 
  notice? Second, does it work well enough with what it _can_ do that 
  I would recommend it on those merits?


**Poor First Impressions** -- Bento is currently a free download that 
  gives you a full version of the software which won't expire until 
  14-Feb-08. All you need is a copy of Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard; the 
  hardware requirements for Bento are exactly the same. So you might 
  think, as I did, "Aw, heck, let's just grab it and fire it up."

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

  This might then cause the same dawning sense of horror that I had 
  when Bento, by default, immediately populates your initial database 
  with all of your contacts and events from Address Book and iCal. Put 
  another way, this _beta_ software is touching some of the most 
  crucial data you store on your computer. If there's a bug anywhere 
  in Bento, man, are we in for a world of hurt. 

  So before you fire up Bento, make a backup. (And yes, Virginia, Time 
  Machine may be backing up your stuff, but it doesn't have a long 
  track record yet either. So let's make another backup.) In Address 
  Book, go to File > Export > Address Book Archive and save your 
  contacts. This is a newly nested menu item in Leopard. In iCal, you 
  can still use File > Back Up iCal.

  Safety net properly established, let's see what's in all those 
  little compartments.


**An iLife Approach to Data** -- Bento provides an all-in-one window, 
  where you can see all of your databases in much the same way that 
  iTunes groups all of your media. On the left side of the window, you 
  have a master list of "libraries," which are synonymous with 
  FileMaker tables (in versions 7 through 9) or databases (in earlier 
  versions). In the center of the screen is a focus on a selected 
  library. 

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2007-11/Bento-main-window.png>

  The right side of the window shows a master list of fields available 
  for the selected library; for example, if you're looking at a 
  contacts library, you'll see "Birthdate" on the right side of the 
  window regardless of whether it's in use. This is the same 
  functionality that Address Book hides in Card > Add Field, but the 
  crucial difference is that many people reading this didn't know they 
  could add fields in Address Book until just now, because it's buried 
  in that menu. Bento scores points by making this capability more 
  transparent.

  As it happens, since I installed Leopard, I've been 200 miles away 
  from my installation CDs for both FileMaker Pro and Quicken, so I 
  actually have a real-world need I can use to test Bento. What I'd 
  like to make is a quick-and-easy poker database, so I can track my 
  play at various casinos and see how I'm doing in various types of 
  games. Let's see how Bento stacks up.


**Building My Bento Box** -- When you launch Bento (and apparently 
  every time you launch the application), a drop panel offers you some 
  startup options, including an introductory movie. Note that the 
  movie is also in a panel, and until you specifically close it you're 
  likely to wonder why you can't open any menus or click on anything 
  else in Bento. If you're like me, that is. 

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2007-11/Bento-on-launch.png>

  After watching the movie, the first thing I did was turn off the 
  Address Book and iCal integration. This integration is obviously one 
  of the main selling points of Bento, and one of the reasons it 
  probably requires Leopard is that it does some slick synchronization 
  that keeps all three applications updated no matter where you make 
  your changes. But my test case didn't require that data, and if 
  yours doesn't either, I suggest you disconnect them too.

  The first library I needed was a list of poker rooms in various 
  casinos. So I created a new library from the Contacts template, and 
  used the checkboxes on the right side to pare down the fields to 
  only names and phone numbers. Bento shines here; the equivalent 
  FileMaker process for doing this requires much more know-how, 
  especially for changes after your initial setup.

  Next, I created a blank library for game types: three fields that 
  say "Hold 'Em", "No Limit", and "1-2". When I dragged these fields 
  onto the blank form where I would enter my data, the fields 
  automatically alphabetized by name, which was slightly annoying as I 
  had created them in the order I wanted them. But when I rearranged 
  them, Bento treated me both to automatic alignment and a pretty 
  animation sliding everything around. It's clearly nowhere near as 
  customizable as a FileMaker layout, but anyone who has ever zoomed 
  in to 400 percent to line things up in FileMaker will appreciate 
  Bento's approach here. Bento provides a table view to go along with 
  the form, but it doesn't automatically match the form as I expected 
  it to. Still, with a few checkbox clicks I easily duplicated my 
  work... once I realized that drag-and-drop doesn't work in the table 
  view.

  Finally, I created a "poker sessions" library using the Expenses 
  template. I deleted a bunch of fields I didn't need, and they 
  vanished with a Dockish "poof." To create relationships between 
  libraries, you simply drag one library into the form view for 
  another. With that done, I had a view for all of my sessions, with 
  links back to both my list of poker rooms and my other list of game 
  types. A quick switch back to the other libraries, and another 
  drag-and-drop, and I could see a table under "Borgata" showing only 
  the sessions I played there.

  It was all very quick and pretty. Unfortunately, after that, it was 
  pretty much useless.


**The Preview, the Bad, and the Ugly** -- This is a preview version, 
  so any of the following issues might go away in the real release. 
  The problem is that there are a lot of them.

  The documentation claims that Bento will auto-complete when you type 
  a few characters into a field. I'm not sure when this happens 
  because I never saw it. Worse still, I managed to create a new 
  casino named "Trop" when I attempted to auto-complete "Tropicana".

  I was perfectly happy with a spreadsheet view rather than using the 
  pretty forms, but relationships between libraries work only in 
  forms. When viewing as a table, all you see are the fields for the 
  primary library.

  If you want a field showing dollars and cents, it's easy to add it 
  to a form - but only if you know to scroll down past "number" and 
  specifically select "currency," an option that doesn't appear 
  onscreen until you scroll to it. In any other software, this would 
  be no big deal - but Bento's main feature is that you shouldn't have 
  to hunt for things like this or wonder how to format the number 
  field in the first place. 

  There's a nifty pop-up clock that helps you enter a time, but don't 
  bother hitting Enter, Tab, or Return to move to the next field - you 
  must instead press Command-W and briefly wonder whether that will 
  close the entire Bento interface. Speaking of pop-ups, if you want 
  to use that easy, simple relational library you created, you have to 
  click an icon to bring up a second window to select entries for it.

  Finally - and here's the killer for any semi-sophisticated use of a 
  database - the advanced find function barely has its high school 
  equivalency degree. There's no method that I could discover to 
  filter within the relationships I had created - so no chance of 
  seeing only the No Limit games that I played at the Borgata. This to 
  me is the key reason for creating relations, so I can cross-tabulate 
  and slice-and-dice my data. Bento provides easy methods for creating 
  sums and averages - but I can do that just as well using Numbers or 
  Excel.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2007-11/Bento-advanced-find.png>


**Bento Ingredients Are Raw** -- To be honest, I was pretty certain 
  that I'd be writing a negative review before I even launched the 
  software... because I read the manual first. The manual is 
  straightforward and easy to read, _provided_ you're proficient at 
  FileMaker. As soon as I saw constant uses of "table view" and "form 
  view," it seemed to me that Bento accidentally defines the gap 
  between programmers and non-technical users. Bento's developers have 
  taken out functionality that might be too much for the poor dears, 
  but they haven't removed the complexity in the basic concepts and 
  language that actually cause problems with using the software. The 
  result is "FileMaker for Dummies," and unlike the book series, the 
  disdain for "dummies" comes across in the implementation.

  This is a shame, because they're onto something here. FileMaker Inc. 
  is a subsidiary of Apple, and I found myself wishing that Steve Jobs 
  had wandered into their offices, picked up the Bento development 
  team, and shipped them over to the iWork '08 group. Bento could be a 
  spectacular addition to iWork - if only they dropped all the 
  FileMaker terminology, and even some of the functionality, in favor 
  of something that flowed more smoothly. Bento is FileMaker with 
  training wheels bolted on, and anyone who could learn Bento on their 
  own could just as easily become semi-proficient with FileMaker Pro.

  What we really need is database software that stops worrying about 
  forms and views, and starts integrating user data into part of an 
  overall workflow. That's the beauty of Address Book and iCal - you 
  put your data there, and it automagically appears elsewhere as 
  needed throughout all of your Mac OS X applications. Bento provides 
  cosmetic integration _from_ those sources, but doesn't create 
  integration _to_ anywhere else. The poker session I wrote about 
  above is simultaneously an iCal event (when), a Quicken entry (how 
  much), and a separate bit of autonomous information that I want to 
  work with on its own merit (lots of other data). If I want that data 
  to appear in all three places, I have to build that third place (in 
  FileMaker or Excel, because Bento doesn't provide sufficient tools), 
  and then enter the data in each application separately. 

  Apple's applications have, at their best, provided this sort of 
  breakthrough thinking. Bento didn't need to rethink database 
  concepts to get a positive review - but if you're going to ship 
  FileMaker for Dummies, you shouldn't be surprised if it's not 
  recommended to people who aren't dummies.

  So I won't be recommending Bento to any of my clients, but that's 
  partially because my clients have needs that Bento clearly won't 
  meet. There are two groups of people whom Bento might serve well: 
  those who will be happy with the built-in templates and integration 
  out of the box, and those who don't want to spend $200 on FileMaker 
  and its own included templates. At $49 for the release version of 
  Bento ($99 for the 5-user Family Pack), I would recommend it only to 
  people who have a specific need for one of the included templates - 
  although it would be a decent freebie if it were included with the 
  bundled software in the consumer Macs.

  Rob Russell on TidBITS Talk made me think of one additional feature 
  that could really make Bento worthwhile: if Bento 1.0 ships with 
  integration into an online library that lets the user choose among 
  hundreds or thousands of _user-contributed_ templates, then suddenly 
  we _do_ have the database that will serve the needs of the 
  non-programmer, and that would be well worth Bento's $49. Give my 
  grandmother ten recipe templates to choose from, and she won't need 
  her grandson to build one. Better yet, if you tag the data so she 
  can _switch_ templates as desired without re-entering her recipe for 
  matzoh ball soup, and suddenly you're providing a power that only we 
  programmers enjoy today.

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/webx/TidBITS/Talk/1647/>

  For now, Bento does have limited template options, but it's also a 
  freebie - so you have nothing to lose by getting in on the trial (as 
  long as you back up your Address Book and iCal data first). I have 
  no doubt that Bento will serve the database needs of the "parents 
  with iMacs" crowd - but their technically oriented children will be 
  needed to get it working well unless my mythical online library 
  exists. I think that's falling short of the premise.


  [Jeff Porten is a database guru with a fondness for sushi.]


    PayBITS: Did Jeff's timely look at Bento save you from wasting
    time on it now? Show your appreciation via a PayBITS donation!
    <http://www.paypal.com/xclick/business=civitan%40jeffporten.com>
    Read more about PayBITS: <http://www.tidbits.com/paybits/>


Comparing Amazon's Kindle to the iPhone and Sony Reader
-------------------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9327>

  Amazon has released its much-anticipated Kindle, a $399 electronic 
  book reader that features a persistent high-speed network connection 
  using Sprint's 3G EVDO cellular network. Amazon is offering over 
  88,000 books for sale for use with the Kindle, with New York Times 
  best-selling titles and new releases generally priced at $9.99. 
  Short stories and classics cost $2 or less; a seemingly small number 
  of books cost more than $10 in a quick browse through the library.

<http://amazon.com/gp/product/B000FI73MA/tidbitselectro00/>


**Basic Comparisons** -- The Kindle breaks away from previous 
  electronic book readers by providing a large number of titles and a 
  continuous network connection. The most closely comparable device 
  prior to the Kindle is the Sony Reader, a second generation of which 
  shipped recently with a street price of around $300 (see "Sony's PRS 
  Ebook Reader and Connect Bookstore," 2006-12-18 for a review of the 
  first generation). The iPhone isn't a direct competitor, but it's 
  worth comparing because of its network connection and highly legible 
  screen.

<http://www.sonystyle.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/ProductDisplay?catalogId=10551&storeId=10151&langId=-1&partNumber=PRS500U2&INT=sstyle-PortableReader-tophero-portable_reader>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8794>

  The Sony Reader uses the same E Ink technology as the Kindle, which 
  apparently provides an extremely bright, low-glare display that can 
  be read in direct sunlight and at varying angles. The Reader is 6.9 
  by 4.9 by 0.3 inches (17.5 by 12.5 by 0.8 cm) and weighs 8 ounces 
  (0.23 kg). The heftier Kindle is 7.5 by 5.3 by 0.7 inches (19 by 
  13.5 by 1.8 cm) and weighs 10 ounces (0.28 kg). The iPhone, which 
  offers no built-in book-reading features - even reading 
  email-delivered or Web-hosted PDFs is a chore - is smaller than 
  both, at 4.5 by 2.4 by .46 inches (11.5 by .61 by .12 cm) and weighs 
  in at 4.8 oz. (0.14 kg).

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2007-11/Kindle-front.png>

  The displays on the Kindle and Sony Reader are both grayscale (4 
  shades of gray for the Kindle versus 8 shades for the Sony Reader), 
  so books with complex illustrations or which require color won't 
  work well or at all. Both devices have 6-inch diagonally measured 
  screens that display 800-by-600 pixels at about 160 pixels per inch 
  (ppi). The iPhone is a full-color device that uses anti-aliasing to 
  improve text legibility on a 480-by-320-pixel, 3.5-inch diagonally 
  measured screen at about 160 ppi.

  The Kindle features a Secure Digital (SD) expansion slot and a USB 
  port. The Sony Reader has both, along with support for Sony's 
  proprietary Memory Stick, while the iPhone has just USB 
  connectivity. Amazon doesn't list Kindle's memory capacity, but 
  elsewhere the company said that the Linux operating system that 
  drives it and internal files occupy about 60 MB of 256 MB of 
  internal storage. The Sony Reader has 192 MB; an iPhone a whopping 8 
  GB. The iPhone trumps the others here because it's designed to play 
  audio and movies.

  Whereas both the Sony Reader and the iPhone require a computer 
  (Windows for the Sony Reader, Mac or Windows for the iPhone), the 
  Kindle doesn't require a computer at all. However, if you do want to 
  load personal content or audio files, the Kindle mounts as a USB 
  drive, and you can manually back up content or copy over new items 
  in formats Kindle supports. (The Kindle is therefore the first 
  electronic book reader that works with Unix, Linux, and variants.)

<http://amazon.com/gp/help/customer/display.html?nodeId=200137060>


**Zooming in on Differences** -- After those basics, though, the 
  differences between the three multiply. The offerings for what to 
  read with the Kindle make it clear how serious Amazon is about 
  making Kindle a success.

* Library. The Sony Reader's online bookstore reportedly contains 
  20,000 titles. Amazon said in its press materials it has over 88,000 
  books (including most New York Times best sellers), although the 
  Amazon Web site shows over 91,000 items. A rare bit of 
  understatement? The number of titles is limited by the process of 
  converting them, not by publishers' disinterest, according to - 
  well, according to publishers, including Penguin's chief. 
  (Publishers love to sell less-popular books that they no longer 
  market actively, called the backlist. Within about 18 months of the 
  company's launch in mid-1995, Amazon was among many publishers' 
  largest resellers of backlist titles.)

* Periodicals. Amazon has so far signed up eight newspapers to provide 
  daily delivery of versions tailored for online reading. The New York 
  Times costs $13.99 per month; the Wall Street Journal is a mere 
  $9.99 per month. Sony offers no periodicals. Amazon also lists eight 
  magazines, too, with prices ranging from $1.49 to $3.49 per month, 
  including the online Slate and Salon, and print magazines Time, 
  Fortune, The Atlantic, Forbes, and The Nation. Also, inexplicably, 
  Reader's Digest Express. (Although Newsweek got the scoop on the 
  Kindle, they're not part of this initial subscription deal.)

<http://amazon.com/b/ref=sv_kinc_2/103-7427955-9375052?ie=UTF8&node=165389011>
<http://amazon.com/b/ref=sv_kinc_4/103-7427955-9375052?ie=UTF8&node=241646011>
<http://www.newsweek.com/id/70983>

* Music. The Kindle doesn't have a music store per se, but it can play 
  back unprotected MP3 files and Audible (.aa) files synced via USB. 
  Amazon coincidentally launched a music store that sells MP3s without 
  digital rights management (DRM) recently (see "Amazon MP3 Takes on 
  the iTunes Store," 2007-09-25). The Sony Reader can play unprotected 
  MP3 and AAC format files, but Sony provides no associated music 
  store. The iPhone has access to all iTunes Store offerings, as well 
  as any unprotected music files in MP3, AAC, and a few other formats. 
  Because there's so little internal memory in either the Kindle or 
  Reader, a cheap multi-gigabyte SD card would be necessary for either 
  to play audio. The Kindle has built-in speakers, as does the iPhone; 
  all three devices each have a headphone jack.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9203>

* Blogs. Kindle's content offerings include the unique option to pay 
  to subscribe to blogs that are otherwise free, including BoingBoing, 
  with updates being pushed to the device. (I assume the bloggers get 
  a cut.) Sony offers no such option. The iPhone's monthly fee 
  includes unlimited data over EDGE, so you don't pay an incremental 
  cost for any additional Web page, blog, or email message. However, 
  the iPhone doesn't yet have a news reader or other tool to poll for 
  updates, although Web sites like NewsGator enable you to manage RSS 
  feeds and view them in an iPhone-oriented design.

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

* Web browser. Kindle, yes, although reporters are calling it 
  "rudimentary" and best suited for text; it's apparently there to 
  show Wikipedia articles, but can access any Web page. There is no 
  charge for browsing the Web on the Kindle. The Sony Reader has no 
  browser. The iPhone has the best browser ever built for a mobile 
  device; I just tested Research in Motion's latest, most advanced 
  BlackBerry, and nearly barfed when working with its practically 
  unusable browser. Popular Web sites look like garbage and are nearly 
  impossible to navigate.

* Document Support. The Kindle can view files that start out in - but 
  must be converted from - Word, JPEG, GIF, BMP, and PNG formats, but 
  notably not PDF. The Sony Reader can display Word documents saved in 
  RTF format, along with plain text files and PDF files. The iPhone 
  can display all popular document and Web image formats that can be 
  brought up in a Web browser or email message, including Word 
  documents, pictures, PDF files, and Excel spreadsheets.

* Re-download Policies. If you lose your Kindle or it breaks, you can 
  simply re-download the library of stuff you purchased to a new one; 
  Amazon's Unbox video store has a similar policy. Apple has a 
  one-per-lifetime iTunes re-download policy for music you purchased, 
  and there are additional conditions that apply. Sony's policy is 
  unclear.

* Network. The Kindle relies on Sprint's EVDO network to access online 
  content. The Sony Reader must be synced via USB to load new content. 
  The iPhone can now purchase music only over a Wi-Fi connection, 
  although it features full Internet access via AT&T's EDGE network. 


**It's All about the Network** -- Much of what makes Amazon's overall 
  approach with Kindle work is its persistent network connection. The 
  Kindle is the first device I'm aware of that ships with high-speed 
  network access and without a subscription fee or a recurring fee of 
  any kind. The cost of network use and data delivery is built into 
  the price of each item you purchase or subscribe to. It's the first 
  portable ebook reader that might have a shot because of how it 
  marries legibility, a network, and a large library.

  Blogs and periodicals are delivered continuously as new items or 
  issues are published over what Amazon calls "Whispernet," a 
  continuous push network for content you subscribe to. When you 
  purchase a book, it's immediately downloaded.

  The Sprint EVDO network that Amazon relies on is available 
  extensively in most medium-sized and larger cities, but is scarce 
  outside of major population centers. That might lead to Kindle being 
  more frustrating to use when on the road or in smaller towns where 
  the Kindle uses a more widespread, but modem-speed technology called 
  RTT. 

  However, extensive use of Kindle - in the millions of units - could 
  conceivably lead Sprint to change its deployment pattern for where 
  to put new EVDO base stations, as Sprint will receive a piece of all 
  transactions in lieu of subscription revenue. As Amazon head Jeff 
  Bezos said at the device's announcement, "We pay for all of that 
  behind the scenes so you can just read."

<http://gizmodo.com/gadgets/amazon-kindle-live/amazon-kindle-e+book-reader-launch-live-324292.php>


**Obvious Limitations** -- Before I sound overly enthusiastic about 
  the Kindle, let me note a few problems.

* While each Kindle has an email address, you have to a pay a 10-cent 
  conversion fee for each document in one of several supported formats 
  that you send to the address; formats include Word, HTML, JPEG, GIF, 
  PNG, and BMP. The fee is clearly to cover network delivery costs. 
  You can email documents to a special address and receive converted 
  files back to a non-Kindle address at no cost, and then copy those 
  files over USB at no cost. (Audio files need to be copied instead of 
  emailed, and don't require conversion.)

<http://www.amazon.com/gp/help/customer/display.html?nodeId=200140600>

* The Kindle can't read or convert PDF files. That's a baffling 
  decision and makes it useless for reading Take Control ebooks and a 
  vast amount of other content. The ability to handle HTML means a lot 
  of people will be converting documents into HTML for portability 
  (but a loss in legibility and features). [Editor's note: A review on 
  Tuesday said that there is "experimental" support for viewing PDFs; 
  I'm waiting to confirm -gf.]

* The Kindle lacks a well-developed Web browser, even though it has 
  email and a keyboard. Though this seems a significant omission, the 
  Kindle is really designed to be an ebook reader with a few extras, 
  not a multi-purpose device, despite its cost and its cellular 
  connection. Amazon could choose to make the browser better, but they 
  could also choose to charge for Web access if so.

* Really, $399 for an ebook reader? Isn't there a razor/blade 
  relationship here? Reports indicate Amazon may be selling many 
  best-selling and new titles below cost to develop the market, which 
  they hope will include high-margin offerings, which clearly include 
  the periodical subscriptions.

  With Amazon's marketing power and customer reach behind this device, 
  with a full-time network connection, and with so many titles 
  available at such low cost at launch, it's possible Kindle will 
  light the fire that Amazon hopes, and finally get a mass audience of 
  ebook readers. 

  One wonders, though, why Amazon produced such a toadstool of a 
  product when the thoughtfulness for what lies within is so obvious. 
  In pictures, it's the only real misstep. The iPhone is among the 
  most beautiful _and_ functional devices ever created, while the 
  Kindle is just plain homely for something that similarly aims to 
  change the world. 


Bonus Stories for 19-Nov-07
---------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9325>

  One of the advantages of our Web redesign is that it's a lot easier 
  for us to publish articles and blog posts than ever before. The 
  downside of that flexibility is that we now have much more content 
  than we've been able to squeeze into each email issue while keeping 
  the issue to a reasonable size. We've dealt with this so far by 
  focusing on the most timely and relevant content for the email 
  issue, but that's come at the expense of keeping otherwise excellent 
  articles from our tens of thousands of email subscribers.

  No longer. We're going to start an email-only Bonus Stories column 
  in which we list some of the most useful and interesting articles 
  that have so far appeared only on the Web site. Simply click through 
  to read the full articles on our Web site. Do note that these 
  stories may not have received the final edit pass that pieces in an 
  email issue receive, and that our blog posts tend to be a bit less 
  formal than normal articles. Some of these articles may still make 
  their way into an email issue when we have a slow week.

  We have quite a bit of a backlog, so we're going start slow while we 
  feel out the best approach and format to present these listings. But 
  we have a good feeling about this project - text wants to be read.


**Talking Your Way Out of a Plastic Bag** -- Turns out that an iPhone 
  is interoperable with plastic baggies. (2007-10-18)

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9250>


**WireTap Studio: Lossless Editing and Real-Time Audio Preview** -- 
  Ambrosia Software's new WireTap Studio ups the ante in the field of 
  easy-to-use audio recording and editing tools. Find out what Andy 
  Affleck, author of "Take Control of Podcasting on the Mac," thinks 
  of the new release and how it stacks up against existing tools. 
  (2007-10-18)

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9249>


**Nokia N800 Internet Tablet: iPhone without the Phone?** -- Many 
  people claim they want the iPhone without the phone part, but the 
  iPod touch seems to have a few too many limitations. What about 
  Nokia's N800 Internet Tablet, which provides a full-featured Web 
  browser on a Linux-based platform? Travis Butler looks deep into the 
  N800 to see how it stacks up. (2007-10-12)

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9234>


**ICANN Tests Non-Roman Characters in Domain Names** -- Speakers (and 
  writers) of languages that use non-Roman character scripts and 
  letters should rejoice: they'll finally be able to type .com in 
  their native tongue and keyboards. (2007-10-12)

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9235>


**Stop the Catalog Madness with Catalog Choice** -- If you hate 
  receiving unnecessary and overly frequent catalogs as much as Adam 
  does, check out Catalog Choice, a new free service aimed helping 
  reduce the 19 billion catalogs thrown at us each year. (2007-10-11)

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9232>


**Use Custom CSS to Tweak TidBITS Display** -- A TidBITS reader wrote 
  to us with a suggestion for the new Web site redesign: "My top 
  suggestion of all suggestions is to make the title in all caps so 
  your new format is easier to scan." That's not something we'll be 
  implementing, but if you want it, you can use CSS to make it happen. 
  (2007-10-09)

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9227>


Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk/19-Nov-07
------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9324>

**Hosting on .Mac** -- Apple's online service now offers domain 
  hosting, but only if used in conjunction with iWeb '08. (5 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1636/>


**Spotlight Strikes Back: In Leopard, It Works Great** -- Readers 
  react to the changes in Spotlight under Leopard, including much 
  better search criteria, a built-in calculator, and searching 
  networked volumes. (9 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1637/>


**Phone Message Software Recommendation please** -- A number of 
  suggestions are made for software that will easily accept 
  transcribed phone messages. (6 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1638/>


**iPhone Provides a Light** -- Your iPhone (or other LCD-equipped 
  piece of electronics, including an old PowerBook!) can also serve as 
  an impromptu flashlight. (2 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1640/>


**Leopard: Stopping Buffer Overflows** -- The latest version of Mac OS 
  X includes security improvements, but is our interconnectedness 
  increasing vulnerability? (2 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1641/>


**Leopard Firewall Takes One Step Forward, Three Steps Back** -- Early 
  problems with Skype and the Leopard firewall point to other problems 
  with Skype's implementation. (2 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1642/>


**Office 2004 printing problem Intel Mac** -- Several users are seeing 
  problems when printing from Office 2004 under Leopard. (3 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1643/>


**Grumbling about Pages and iWeb** -- You can use sources other than 
  iPhoto for accessing photos in iWork, but the solution isn't 
  necessarily obvious. (4 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1645/>


**Mac Book Pro Screen Smear** -- A mark that appeared to be a finger 
  smear is oddly persistent. Perhaps the solution is Melamine foam. (3 
  messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1646/>


**Bento** -- Readers react to Jeff Porten's article about FileMaker's 
  Bento preview. (5 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1647/>


**Leopard File Sharing** -- When our children comb our electronic 
  discussions, they will marvel at our capabilities to remember dates 
  such as 19-Nov-97 in honor of the release of LaserWriter 8.5.1, or 
  the oldest version of the Mac system that can still network with the 
  newest version. (2 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1649/>


**BBEdit 8.7.1 Adds Features, Fixes Bugs, Saves Data** -- Adam's note 
  about dealing with a large BBEdit Backups folder inspires others to 
  share their solutions for keeping folders at manageable sizes. (2 
  messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1650/>


**Running Adobe Products in Leopard** -- Adobe has posted a FAQ about 
  what to expect when running its software under Leopard. (1 message)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1652/>


**Recent iMacs** -- Sporadic problems with new iMacs may be solved by 
  a recent firmware update. (3 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1653/>


**OS X On Generic PC Hardware** -- Some hackers have been able to run 
  Mac OS X on generic PC hardware. Should Apple be worried? Is it 
  really usable? (5 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1654/>


$$

This is TidBITS, a free weekly technology newsletter providing timely
news, insightful analysis, and in-depth reviews to the Macintosh and
Internet communities. Feel free to forward to friends; better still,
please ask them to subscribe!

Non-profit, non-commercial publications and Web sites may reprint or
link to articles if full credit is given. Others please contact us. We
do not guarantee accuracy of articles. Caveat lector. Publication,
product, and company names may be registered trademarks of their
companies. TidBITS ISSN 1090-7017.

Copyright 2007 TidBITS: Reuse governed by Creative Commons license.

Contact us at:	  <editors@tidbits.com>
TidBITS Web site: <http://www.tidbits.com/>
License terms:    <http://www.tidbits.com/terms/>
Full text search: <http://www.tidbits.com/search/>
Subscriptions:	  <http://www.tidbits.com/about/list.html>
Account help:	  <http://www.tidbits.com/about/account-help.html>





