TidBITS#909/07-Jan-08
=====================
  Issue link: <http://db.tidbits.com/issue/909>

  Happy New Year! Although we took our yearly holiday hiatus, that 
  didn't stop us from keeping up with the Mac world. In this issue, 
  Rich Mogull questions Intuit's commitment (or even interest) in the 
  Mac platform following a series of QuickBooks bugs that permanently 
  deleted some users' data. Adam weighs in on the settlement between 
  Apple and Think Secret, speculating on why Think Secret chose to 
  shut down. He also passes along advice on adjusting dates in iPhoto 
  calendars, captures a rare Googlewackblatt, and shares the 
  TidBITS-related events at the upcoming Macworld Expo in San 
  Francisco. In other news, we note the releases of Security Update 
  2007-009 1.1, the "MacBook, MacBook Pro Software Update 1.1," and a 
  set of MacTech benchmarks that compare the performance of Parallels 
  Desktop and VMware Fusion. Lastly, Glenn travels back in time to 
  receive groceries via the Web, not with the failed Webvan but with a 
  Seattle startup called Amazon.com.

Articles
    Security Update 2007-009 1.1 Released with Important Fixes
    Update Fixes Unresponsive Laptop Keyboards
    MacTech Benchmarks Parallels Desktop and VMware Fusion
    TidBITS Events at Macworld SF 2008
    Think Secret Shuts Down in Wake of Apple Settlement
    Intuit Alienates Mac Users With QuickBooks Fiasco
    The iPhone and the Googlewhackblatt
    The Trick to Adjusting Dates in iPhoto Calendars
    Amazon Delivers Like It's 1999
    Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk/07-Dec-08


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Security Update 2007-009 1.1 Released with Important Fixes
----------------------------------------------------------
  by Rich Mogull <rmogull@securosis.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9369>

  Shortly before the end of the year, Apple released Security Update 
  2007-009 to patch 41 vulnerabilities in Mac OS X 10.4.11 and 10.5.1. 
  Many of these vulnerabilities can allow an attacker to take over 
  your computer by simply sending you a malicious file or having you 
  visit a malicious Web site. The affected applications and services 
  include Address Book, CUPS (the printing service), and Quick Look.

  (A few days after the initial Security Update 2007-009 was posted, 
  Apple released version 1.1, which corrected a problem with Safari 
  introduced in the prior update.)

  Be aware that the Quick Look update will block any Quick Look 
  plug-ins. We suspect this is a temporary fix and Apple will safely 
  re-enable plug-ins in the (hopefully near) future. 

  A full listing of the updates can be found in Apple's security 
  release notes. It's available through Software Update and in 
  stand-alone form for Leopard (a 35.6 MB download) and Tiger 
  (Universal) (a 27.4 MB download) or Tiger (PowerPC) (a 15.9 MB 
  download).

<http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=307179>
<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/securityupdate2007009111051.html>
<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/securityupdate20070091110411universal.html>
<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/securityupdate20070091110411ppc.html>

  This is an extremely important update fixing multiple critical 
  vulnerabilities. You should apply this as soon as possible, since 
  many of these are the kinds of vulnerabilities favored by Internet 
  attackers.


Update Fixes Unresponsive Laptop Keyboards
------------------------------------------
  by Mark H. Anbinder <mha@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9373>

  If you think your recent Mac laptop has decided to slack off, an 
  update released at the end of 2007 might be the solution. For 
  Intel-based laptop owners, the MacBook, MacBook Pro Software Update 
  1.1, fixes a problem wherein the keyboard occasionally stops 
  responding for a minute or longer. (I've wondered what that was all 
  about!) This update requires that the Mac OS X 10.5.1 update be 
  installed first. (No word on whether the problem can affect 10.4 
  users.) The update is less than 1 MB and can be downloaded from 
  Software Update or the Apple Web site.

<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/macbookmacbookprosoftwareupdate11.html>


MacTech Benchmarks Parallels Desktop and VMware Fusion
------------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9370>

  Our friends over at MacTech have taken on the laborious task of 
  running benchmarks on the popular virtualization programs Parallels 
  Desktop and VMware Fusion, comparing them against each other, 
  running both Windows XP and Windows Vista, against Apple's Boot 
  Camp, and against a standard PC laptop. 

<http://www.mactech.com/articles/mactech/Vol.24/24.02/VirtualizationBenchmark/>

  MacTech's tests included real-world activities in each of the main 
  Microsoft Office 2007 applications (Outlook, Word, Excel, and 
  PowerPoint), along with tests for network and filesystem I/O, 
  Internet Explorer, and cross-platform tasks that involve working 
  with the host operating system (like viewing a PDF attachment to an 
  Outlook email message in Apple's Preview).

  The full MacTech article makes for a fascinating read, but it seems 
  to boil down to the following conclusions. 

* Windows XP outperforms Windows Vista by 17 to 30 percent in 
  virtualization, so if you want the fastest Windows performance, 
  stick with Windows XP. 

* When running Windows XP, Parallels Desktop was somewhat faster than 
  VMware Fusion, and even a bit faster than Boot Camp.

* If you want to run Windows Vista, VMware Fusion provides noticeably 
  better performance than Parallels Desktop on all tasks involving raw 
  processing, whereas Parallels Desktop offers significantly better 
  integration with Mac OS X (and thus real-world performance) for all 
  cross-platform tasks.

  Keep in mind that these conclusions are relevant only for the things 
  MacTech tested, which did not include gaming (where Boot Camp 
  probably has the edge over both virtualization options) or 
  applications that can use multiple processors (where VMware Fusion 
  would probably outperform Parallels Desktop).

  If you want to analyze MacTech's results further, you can download 
  an Excel spreadsheet containing all the test data.


TidBITS Events at Macworld SF 2008
----------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9380>

  We're gearing up for our annual trip to Macworld Expo in San 
  Francisco, a significant part of which is trying to find time to see 
  the show floor among a slew of meetings and presentations. Here's 
  our current schedule, and please do come by and say hello! Note that 
  Macworld Expo takes place in both the new Moscone West and the old 
  Moscone South, so plan for some walking time between the two and pay 
  attention to booth numbers.

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


**Monday, January 14th** -- Tonya and I, along with a host of other 
  Mac luminaries, will be at the Apple User Group Advisory Board's 
  Wine and Cheese Reception at 4 PM at the Westin (formerly the 
  Argent). Alas, this event has sold out, so you're out of luck if you 
  haven't already registered.

<http://www.mugcenter.com/macworld-expo-2007-apple-user-group-wine-and-cheese-reception/>


**Tuesday, January 15th** -- We don't have any public appearances on 
  Tuesday, largely so we can cover the keynote in the morning and get 
  a chance to see some of the show floor in the afternoon. If you see 
  us, make sure to point us in the direction of interesting booths.


**Wednesday, January 16th** -- At 11 AM, Tonya will be giving a Users 
  Conference session called "Get Smart about the Leopard Finder," all 
  about making the most of the functionality Apple added to the Finder 
  in Leopard. Then, at 1:15 PM, I'll be talking about "Collaborative 
  Editing Tools and Techniques," again in a Users Conference session.

<http://www.macworldexpo.com/node/21323>
<http://www.macworldexpo.com/conference_program/users-conference/collaborative-editing-tools-and-techniques>

  At 3 PM at the Macworld Podcast Studio in Moscone West, Tonya and I 
  will join Ted Landau and Chuck Joiner for a MacNotables roundtable 
  discussion about the show (and whatever we can sidetrack Chuck into 
  talking about). A short time later, at 3:45, I'll dash over to the 
  Peachpit booth (S-1026) to talk about my favorite new aspects of 
  iPhoto '08, as covered in my "iPhoto '08: Visual QuickStart Guide."

<http://www.macnotables.com/wordpress/the-macnotables-at-macworld-expo-2008/>
<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/iphoto7-vqs.html>


**Thursday, January 17th** -- At 11 AM, Tonya and I will be discussing 
  our picks of the show in the User Group Lounge, which is Room 250 on 
  the Mezzanine level of Moscone South. Then at 3 PM, we'll meet up 
  with Chuck Joiner again at the Macworld Podcast Studio in Moscone 
  West for another MacNotables session. And at 3:30, we'll bring Glenn 
  Fleishman and possibly a new TidBITS face on stage with us for a 
  MacVoices podcast with Chuck (we think he puts on different hats for 
  each one).

<http://www.mugcenter.com/macworld-conference-expo-2008-user-group-lounge/>

  At 6 PM, we'll be meeting at the top of the Moscone South escalators 
  in preparation for the annual Netter's Dinner. At 6:30, we'll all 
  walk to the Hunan at Sansome and Broadway, where the hot and spicy 
  Chinese dinner (vegetarian dishes are available) costs $18. You must 
  register in advance by Tuesday, January 15th, via Kagi; the link has 
  all the details. Jon Pugh is back to host this year, so I can once 
  again enjoy the food and conversation.

<http://www.seanet.com/~jonpugh/nettersdinner.html>


**Friday, January 18th** -- If you're still around at 3 PM, head over 
  to the Macworld Podcast Studio in Moscone West one last time for 
  Shawn King's Your Mac Life Expo Wrap Up Session, where you'll see 
  me, Jason Snell of Macworld, and Leo Laporte in an exhaustion-fueled 
  trip through the events of the week. It was a heck of a time last 
  year, and I'm sure it will be again.

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


**Even More** -- Looking for more to do? First, check out the Macworld 
  Show Highlights, and then be sure to skim through all the events in 
  Ilene Hoffman's annual Hess Memorial Macworld Expo Events List, now 
  updated for 2008.

<http://www.macworldexpo.com/about/show_highlights>
<http://www.ilenesmachine.com/partylist.shtml>


Think Secret Shuts Down in Wake of Apple Settlement
---------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9371>

  The long-running legal battle between Apple and rumor site Think 
  Secret is now over, with the two agreeing to what's described as an 
  "amicable settlement" that "results in a positive solution for both 
  sides."

<http://thinksecret.com/news/settlement.html>

  For Apple the positive solution can be only that Think Secret will 
  stop publishing. For Think Secret publisher Nick Ciarelli, the 
  positive solution is likely that Apple stops suing him. It's 
  entirely possible there are other terms to the settlement, but the 
  only other public detail is that Ciarelli says he never revealed his 
  sources. 

  On the downside, Apple comes off looking like a bully, particularly 
  given that at the time the suit was filed, Ciarelli was a 
  19-year-old Harvard student. And unless Ciarelli was looking to get 
  out of Mac rumor mongering anyway, being forced to shut down a site 
  receiving over 300,000 monthly visitors (according to Quantcast) 
  wouldn't seem like a good thing.

<http://www.quantcast.com/thinksecret.com>

  According to CNet, Apple originally sued Think Secret three years 
  ago to get an injunction against the further release of trade 
  secrets and to learn the site's sources for an article (via the 
  Wayback Machine) that revealed details about the Mac mini in advance 
  of its Macworld Expo release two weeks later. The suit likely hinged 
  on whether Apple could prove that Think Secret knew its source was 
  violating an NDA, that Think Secret had induced the source to reveal 
  confidential information, and that Think Secret's actions caused the 
  source to breach his or her NDA with Apple. That may have been tough 
  to prove, or even impossible, but the fact that the suit dragged on 
  as long as it did shows that it wasn't clear cut on either side. 
  Think Secret was defended by Terry Gross of Gross & Belsky LLP.

<http://www.news.com/Apple-suit-foreshadows-coming-products/2100-1047_3-5513582.html>
<http://web.archive.org/web/20041231014822/http://thinksecret.com/news/0412expo2.html>

  Response to the settlement announcement among Web publications ran 
  nearly universally to damning Apple and lionizing Nick Ciarelli. For 
  instance, Mike Masnick, on the Techdirt blog said, "It's really a 
  shame that Apple even decided to pursue this vendetta, and the fact 
  that it ends with Think Secret being shut down completely is a 
  travesty." And on TechCrunch, Duncan Riley praised Ciarelli for 
  taking the moral high ground of refusing to reveal his sources.

<http://techdirt.com/articles/20071220/013343.shtml>
<http://www.techcrunch.com/2007/12/20/oh-my-god-apple-killed-thinksecret-those-bastards/>

  I'm of two minds about the entire situation. With regard to the 
  specific case, I distinctly agree that a company shouldn't be able 
  to compel a journalist to reveal sources. And although it may have 
  been less obvious back in 2005, I strongly believe that bloggers and 
  purely Internet-based publications should receive the same 
  protections as traditional reporters (at least under California law; 
  a U.S. federal shield law protecting journalists is still before 
  Congress). So on principle alone, it's too bad Ciarelli agreed to 
  the settlement.

<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/10/07/AR2007100701273_pf.html>

  On the other hand, Apple has all the right in the world to be angry 
  about widely disseminated rumors about forthcoming products, whether 
  the rumors are correct or not. If the rumor is right, customers stop 
  buying the current product to wait for what's coming. (That's a 
  perfectly rational thing to do as an individual customer, but 
  clearly harmful to Apple when spread to tens of thousands of 
  potential customers.) Incorrect rumors also damage Apple by setting 
  false expectations that the company then "fails" to live up to. 
  (That's what happened back in 2004 when rumor sites, including Think 
  Secret, pegged the price of what would be released as the iPod mini 
  at about $100. When Apple released the 4 GB iPod mini at $249, the 
  higher price generated negative publicity that may have affected 
  early adoption of the iPod mini.) 

  Ideally, Apple would have figured out a more effective approach to 
  solving the problem with leaked information than suing Think Secret, 
  given the reputation hit the suit caused. But at the same time, it's 
  hard to feel sorry for Think Secret. By revealing Apple's trade 
  secrets, Nick Ciarelli was playing with fire, and he now has the 
  scorched fingertips to prove it.


Intuit Alienates Mac Users With QuickBooks Fiasco
-------------------------------------------------
  by Rich Mogull <rmogull@securosis.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9378>

  On 04-Jan-08, Intuit released a patch for QuickBooks Pro for Mac 
  2006 to resolve a widely reported problem where all files on a 
  user's Desktop, including subdirectories, could be permanently 
  deleted if automatic updates were enabled. Instructions for manually 
  updating QuickBooks are available from Intuit. All QuickBooks users 
  should immediately apply this patch, even if you manually disabled 
  automatic updates.

<http://www.quickbooksgroup.com/webx/forums/mac/1965/0>


**The QuickBooks Fiasco** -- Several weeks ago, just as we (and many 
  others) were starting to wrap up for the holidays, some users of 
  QuickBooks Pro for Mac 2006 experienced failed automatic updates 
  that deleted the Desktop folder and its contents. The update would 
  fail partway through the process, alerting the user that "There is 
  not enough space to install." The updater would then delete the 
  Desktop folder. The files were permanently deleted, not moved to the 
  Trash. Only QuickBooks 2006 users lost any data; QuickBooks 2007 
  users merely had extraneous folders placed in their user directory 
  when the update failed. Intuit issued an initial patch on 18-Dec-07, 
  but it was still possible to download the bad patch accidentally 
  under certain circumstances. The new patch (version R5) disables the 
  automatic update mechanism.

  More information is available from Macworld and the QuickBooks user 
  forum, which is filled with hundreds of angry QuickBooks users.

<http://www.macworld.com/article/131397/2008/01/quickbooks.html>
<http://quickbooksgroup.com/webx/forums/mac/1917>

  Intuit reportedly responded slowly to the problem at first, but 
  later sent an email message to at least some affected users offering 
  assistance in recovering files using Prosoft's $99 Data Rescue II. 
  Users near an Apple Store were directed to the Genius Bar for help, 
  and those who couldn't visit an Apple Store were provided with 
  instructions for using Data Rescue II, with both groups being 
  reimbursed for the software. (If you're still dealing with this 
  situation, contact Intuit at machelp@intuit.com.) 

<mailto:machelp@intuit.com>

  Unfortunately, data recovery isn't always easy or even possible 
  after file deletion, depending largely on whether the computer was 
  used after the deletion happened. In some situations, users have 
  been forced to resort to professional data recovery services such as 
  DriveSavers that can cost hundreds or even thousands of dollars. 
  Intuit's public statements haven't discussed whether or not the 
  company will reimburse users for such expenses; they merely say, "If 
  you have already performed a data recovery activity before this 
  email was sent, please inform us at machelp@intuit.com so that we 
  can work with you on a one-on-one basis."

  As always, remember that the best protection against unexpected data 
  loss is not data recovery software, but regular backups. There's a 
  reason why Joe Kissell's "Take Control of Mac OS X Backups" and 
  "Take Control of Easy Backups in Leopard" ebooks are so popular.

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/backup-macosx.html?14@@!pt=TB909>
<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/leopard-easy-backup.html?14@@!pt=TB909>


**Should Mac Users Support Intuit?** Intuit has had a tumultuous 
  relationship with the Macintosh community ever since dropping, then 
  reviving, support for Macs in 1998 (see "Intuit Drops Quicken for 
  Macintosh", 1998-04-20). QuickBooks Pro for Mac 2007 lacks many 
  features of its Windows-based cousin, including critical features 
  like credit card processing support. While Intuit offers an 
  online-only version of the product (QuickBooks Online Edition), it 
  too runs only with current versions of Internet Explorer on Windows.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/4830>

  While software updates that introduce additional bugs are more 
  common than we'd all like, issuing an update that permanently 
  deletes unrelated user data is absolutely inexcusable. It's 
  mind-boggling that this update passed through Intuit's quality 
  assurance process. 

  Speaking as a small business owner who runs his business on Macs, I 
  have yet to find an accounting solution I'm satisfied with. When I 
  started my business in August 2007, I enrolled with QuickBooks 
  Online Edition, which I access by running Windows in Parallels 
  Desktop. It initially appeared to meet my accounting and payroll 
  needs, but I recently ran into an obstacle that's forcing me to look 
  at other options. QuickBooks Online Edition does not support any 
  type of file import - not even Intuit's own widely used data 
  exchange formats. Since my corporate credit card isn't supported by 
  a direct online link within QuickBooks, I must manually enter all 
  transactions even though my credit card provider offers 
  QuickBooks-compatible downloads.

  Since I'd rather spend my time writing TidBITS articles than 
  hand-entering receipts for every snack I pick up at the airport, I 
  started the process to export my data out of QuickBooks Online 
  Edition and into a desktop version of QuickBooks. The limitations of 
  the Mac version gave me pause, and I was about to purchase the 
  Windows version when this update problem became public.

  Being a firm believer of putting my money where my mouth is, I've 
  reconsidered supporting any Intuit product and am downloading an 
  evaluation version of MYOB FirstEdge. [For what it's worth, we've 
  long used MYOB AccountEdge for the TidBITS business accounting. 
  -Adam] I'm open-minded, and may consider returning to Intuit in the 
  future if they improve the quality and reliability of their Mac 
  products, but for now it's time to explore options from companies 
  that treat their Mac users better.

<http://www.myob-us.com/firstedge/>
<http://www.myob-us.com/accountedge/>


The iPhone and the Googlewhackblatt
-----------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9372>

  As much as I want an iPhone, it's hard to justify the cost when I 
  pay roughly the same per year to Virgin Mobile as the low-end iPhone 
  plan costs per month. In commenting on this fact in a private 
  mailing list posting, I realized that I had no idea what the word 
  for "twelve times" is. Two times is double, three times is triple, 
  four times is quadruple, but what's twelve times?

  A bit of research on Wikipedia turned up the entry for "tuple" (a 
  finite sequence of objects) with names for tuples of specific 
  lengths, but alas, it didn't include twelve. So I looked up "twelve" 
  in Wikipedia, and discovered that a group of twelve things is a 
  "duodecad." Jamming the two words together, I came up with 
  "duodecaduple," which looks funny but turns out to be absolutely 
  wonderful to say: duo-deca-duple. Try it a few times. Bonus points 
  to anyone who can work it into a conversation.

<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tuple>
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/12_%28number%29>

  Curious to see if I had gotten it right, I did a Google search, and 
  was shocked and amazed to discover that my word appeared only once 
  in the entire Google index, in a comment on a Slashdot story that, 
  interestingly enough, was about some research performed at Cornell 
  University here in Ithaca. I include the image below as 
  documentation that there were no other instances of duodecaduple 
  when I wrote this.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2007-12/Slashdot-usage.png>

  For those who missed it, there's a game to find pairs of words that 
  appear only once in Google, and such a finding is called a 
  "Googlewhack." But Googlewhacks must contain two words, and mine was 
  only a single word. While reading the Wikipedia entry for 
  Googlewhack, I learned that a single-word Googlewhack is called a 
  "Googlewhackblatt." 

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

  There's a problem with Googlewhackblatts, as I'm sure you've just 
  realized. Publishing the existence of one destroys it as soon as 
  Google crawls your site, since it then exists in at least two 
  places. I agonized about this, since I wanted to preserve my 
  Googlewhackblatt, but I'll bet that there are Googlewhackblatt 
  vandals out there who delight in ruining Googlewhackblatts, even 
  when they've been protected by writing them backward and viewing 
  through elgooG (a site that mirrors Google not by replicating it, 
  but by reflecting it). Amusingly, if you type "Engst" and press 
  Return to activate the "ykcuL gnileeF m'I" button, elgooG promptly 
  displays the search results for Tsgne .C Mada, my 1997 April Fools 
  issue alter-ego.

<http://elgoog.rb-hosting.de/>

  In the end, I decided that a Googlewhackblatt has meaning only in 
  disappearing, that it doesn't truly exist until it's shared, even 
  though the act of sharing  will almost certainly result in its 
  destruction. Thus, the joy in the Googlewhackblatt is like blowing a 
  dandelion's seeds. Fly free, little duodecaduple!

  Of course, as you can see in the screenshot, Google helpfully 
  suggests that perhaps the word I want is actually "dodecatuple," 
  which appears several thousand times in the Google index. 
  Dodecatuple uses the same stem that gives us "dodecagon" (a polygon 
  with twelve sides and twelve angles) and "dodecahedron" (a 
  polyhedron with twelve faces). But some further poking reveals that 
  "duodecagon" and "duodecahedron" are also perfectly reasonable, if 
  older, variants of those words.

  So I'm sticking with my version, and if you ask me at Macworld Expo 
  why I still don't have an iPhone, it's because I'd duodecaduple my 
  yearly cell bill.

  [Update: Thanks to Christopher Squire for alerting me to the 
  existence of "duodecuple," which is the canonical word for 
  "twelvefold." However, in my defense, duodecaduple is far more fun 
  to say; the tongue stumbles over duodecuple. -Adam]


The Trick to Adjusting Dates in iPhoto Calendars
------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9374>

  Put yourself in my shoes for a moment. You spent a bunch of time in 
  June designing and laying out a calendar in iPhoto as an anniversary 
  present, complete with photos on the blank dates for each month and 
  birthdays and anniversaries imported from iCal for everyone in your 
  family. It's gorgeous, your wife loves it, and she wants to give 
  copies of it with a few different events to her relatives for 
  holiday presents. That's a great idea, so you head off into iPhoto 
  to make the changes and... that's when your troubles begin.

  Although iPhoto makes it fairly easy to create a calendar from 
  scratch, making a near-duplicate of a calendar you've already 
  created comes with some gotchas, ranging from losing photos you 
  placed on dates to reimported event text coming in with incorrect 
  styles. But with the process I outline here, you should be able to 
  create a near-duplicate calendar with relatively little fuss.

  (You might wonder why I have you duplicating the calendar below, 
  rather than just modifying it. My experience is that it's always 
  best to work on a copy, just in case something gets messed up, since 
  then you can toss the copy and start again on another copy. It's 
  also useful to keep finished calendars around in case you discover 
  some days later you want to order another copy.)


**Duplicate the Calendar** -- First off, I assume you to want your 
  second calendar to contain different or additional events, and if 
  you made the original calendar with unusual start and end dates 
  (June 2007 to May 2008, in my case), you need to change the date 
  range too. But don't blithely modify the date range on your existing 
  calendar, because when you do that, iPhoto removes all the photos 
  you've placed in date boxes. Curses! So follow these steps to reduce 
  the effort of remembering which photos go where:

  1. Select your calendar in the Source pane's Projects list, choose 
  File > Print, and in the Print dialog, click Preview. This causes 
  iPhoto to create a PDF and display it in Preview; you'll need this 
  PDF to refer to as you replace photos in Step 4. Obviously, if you 
  have the paper copy of the calendar handy, you could also just refer 
  to it.

  2. Right-click your calendar in the Source pane, and choose 
  Duplicate from the contextual menu. Rename the new calendar so you 
  can differentiate it from the original.

  3. Click the Settings button, and in the Calendar view, change the 
  dates as desired. Don't worry about importing new iCal calendars 
  just yet. Click OK.

  4. Now comes the truly tedious step. Referring back to the PDF or 
  paper copy of your original calendar, drag any photos from the 
  available photos list to the desired date boxes on the calendar. I 
  like to fill up all the blank boxes at the start and end of each 
  month's grid. 


**Fix Dates** -- Now is a good time to check your calendar events in 
  iCal and make sure they're correct and up-to-date. For instance, we 
  welcomed new nephews on either side of the family in November, so I 
  had to add their birthdays. Since we want separate iPhoto calendars 
  for our respective sides of the family, we've created two iCal 
  calendars, one for Tonya's family's birthdays and anniversaries, and 
  one for mine. Of course, some events are duplicated.

  (Even if you don't normally use iCal as your calendaring software, 
  which I don't, it makes a lot more sense to create these calendars 
  in iCal than to enter events manually in iPhoto. That way you can 
  use the same iCal calendars next year, and take advantage of iCal's 
  smarts for events like Thanksgiving, which takes place on the fourth 
  Thursday of November.)

  It's also important to make sure you have the appropriate holidays 
  in iCal, which turns out to be trickier than I had hoped. I was 
  unimpressed with iPhoto's built-in list of U.S. holidays, so I went 
  looking for a more complete list. The best I found was the U.S. 
  Holidays calendar at iCalShare; you can find lots of other calendars 
  at iCalShare as well. Using it as a base, I copied those events I 
  wanted to a new calendar of my own, and then I added a variety of 
  other events from the Year 2008 Holidays Calendar, from Wikipedia's 
  List of Commemorative Days, from Wikipedia's International 
  Observances, and by going through a commercial calendar I had around 
  to see which holidays they chose. How else would you find Towel Day, 
  the Chinese New Year (Year of the Rat!), and Wright Brothers Day?

<http://iCalShare.com/article.php?story=20020912105939521>
<http://www.calendardate.com/year2008_holidays.php>
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_commemorative_days>
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_observance>


**Reimport Events** -- It would seem straightforward to reimport your 
  updated iCal calendars, but that wasn't my experience. The problem 
  was that in the Big Dates theme (and possibly others), clicking the 
  Reimport button in the Calendar view of the Settings dialog brought 
  in the events, but at least some of them came in with incorrect 
  styles. This was particularly glaring in the Big Dates theme when 
  the new events and their dates had black text, rather than the red 
  text normally used for special dates. You can manually change the 
  color of text you enter in iPhoto, but not the color of the date 
  numbers.

  It's possible that other themes don't suffer from this problem, but 
  here's the workaround I discovered. The downside of this approach is 
  that changing themes may cause you to lose text entered on the photo 
  pages (though I didn't see that happen in my testing). Perform these 
  steps:

  1. Click the Themes button and switch to another theme.

  2. Click the Settings button, and in the Calendar view, select the 
  desired iCal calendars and click Reimport. This ensures that you 
  have the latest events.

  3. Click the Settings button again, switch to the Styles view, click 
  Restore Defaults, and click OK. This clears any custom formatting 
  you might have done (or that iPhoto may think you've done; I suspect 
  this is the culprit when styles aren't correct upon reimport).

  4. Click the Themes button again, and switch back to the desired 
  theme. 

  5. Go through every page and visually verify that all the events 
  came in properly and are styled properly. When I did this, one photo 
  with a description somehow had that description entered as a caption 
  in the calendar, even though I hadn't set that. And on one occasion, 
  all the events in November and December had the wrong styles even 
  still; running through these steps again fixed the problem.

  That's it! If, like me, you actually want yet another calendar with 
  different events (I wanted another version to give as Christmas 
  presents for my side of the family), duplicate your new calendar 
  again, select different iCal calendars, and, if necessary, run 
  through the Reimport Events steps again.


Amazon Delivers Like It's 1999
------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9356>

  Seventy-five percent of my family recently suffered an awful virus: 
  emesis, to be polite about it, followed by fever which laid low 
  first our toddler Ben, then our baby Rex, then yours truly. My wife 
  Lynn was initially untouched - the fever eventually hit her after 
  I'd recovered - and so had to minister to a lot of sickos. 

  The cupboard was already a bit bare, and she was trying to sort out 
  how to get some more food in the house even with Ben (now well) back 
  in childcare - she didn't want to take the baby out in public and 
  expose others, and I wasn't well enough to look after him on my own. 
  Despite my addled state, I recalled that we could get groceries 
  delivered via a new Amazon.com service in testing in Seattle: Amazon 
  Fresh. (Lynn fortunately didn't think I was having hallucinations 
  that flashed me back to the dotcom era.)

<https://fresh.amazon.com/>

  Your first thought, like mine, is probably, "Great. They're taking 
  an idea that failed dramatically several years ago and throwing more 
  money at it." (See "Groceries in Our Midst" for TidBITS coverage of 
  HomeGrocer, Webvan, and other grocery delivery services.) But I 
  think Amazon occupies a unique position in the marketplace that 
  could allow them to succeed where Webvan and others failed. Amazon 
  already ships millions of items a day. 

<http://db.tidbits.com/series/1184>

  It's not that strange to think that instead of using UPS, USPS, and 
  other shippers, Amazon could direct some of the shipping to their 
  own operations by throwing groceries into the mix. Grocery stores 
  have extremely thin margins, as little as 1 to 2 percent, and 
  require huge volume to produce any reasonable return.

  If you can add in the high-margin items that Amazon already sells, 
  conserve shipping through internal operations (thus shifting the few 
  dollars an item from shipping companies to your own trucking fleet), 
  and add grocery to provide regular neighborhood stops and a tiny 
  margin, you might have a winning model.

  It's also worth noting that there are still many grocery delivery 
  services, often run by major chains, that typically charge a fee for 
  deliveries of any size. The idea became more widespread but less 
  interesting after Webvan's spectacular crash. One of the crummier 
  supermarket chains, Albertson's, has online ordering for home 
  delivery in several cities, for instance.

<https://www.albertsons.com/delivery.asp?>

  Amazon could combine some of the best aspects of its own massive 
  warehousing of products, of Kozmo (a totally ridiculous snack and 
  small-item delivery service that I loved; ironically, Kozmo was 
  funded in part by Amazon), and grocery delivery. Consider ordering a 
  DVD and having it delivered along with broccoli later the same day. 
  That's not a new idea, but it requires a lot of scale and 
  infrastructure to carry out with the potential of profit.

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

  In this test phase of Amazon Fresh, the company offers three 
  delivery options: unattended delivery before 6 AM or between 7 PM 
  and 10 PM; attended delivery in one-hour blocks between 7 AM and 10 
  PM; and pick-up service at a few limited locations, many of which 
  are currently within corporations like Google, available only to 
  employees.

  The unattended service has a $25 minimum purchase to avoid a $9.95 
  service charge; attended service requires $50 or more in an order 
  for free delivery; pick-up service is always free. You can place an 
  order for attended delivery or pre-dawn delivery by midnight the 
  night before; for after-dinner delivery by noon the same day; and 
  for pick up as little as four hours in advance.

  We placed an order in the afternoon for delivery in the 8 to 9 AM 
  slot the next day. The driver arrived in a spiffy new truck around 
  8:10 AM. He offered to bring the bags in, but with Lynn and the baby 
  asleep and the miasma of virus, I suggested he leave them on the 
  porch.

<http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2326/2103914058_bb94f044f6.jpg>
<http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2082/2103912616_bfe1efd0dd.jpg>

  Pricing is comparable to Whole Foods, which many people also call 
  "Whole Paycheck." Whole Foods tends to have the highest prices for 
  foods we buy regularly; we often cycle through Trader Joe's, QFC (a 
  division of Kroger), and PCC, a local food co-op, to get the best 
  deals. Unless Amazon is more competitive on pricing, we'll use it 
  only in a pinch.

  Now, I can't predict if Amazon really will shift shipping to its own 
  trucks, or whether this isn't just a small-scale test that they'll 
  never roll out. All I know is that with a house full of sick people, 
  I'm glad to be living in what seems to be the past with the promise 
  of the future.


Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk/07-Dec-08
------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9379>

**Word 2004 Crashing Bug Squashed** -- After applying the latest 
  Microsoft Office update, some of the applications themselves aren't 
  actually updated; you need to check the versions of the Office 
  components. (5 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1730/>


**Recovery from Disk Utility Erase** -- What tools will work to 
  recover a drive that was accidentally erased using Disk Utility? (5 
  messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1731/>


**QuickTime 7.3.1 Fixes RTSP Vulnerability** -- When trying to 
  download the latest version of QuickTime, a reader finds that Apple 
  is trying to be too smart: he can't grab the Mac version from a 
  Windows browser. (4 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1734/>


**Open source replacement for Text Expander, Typeit4me and 
  Typinator...** For someone who works on multiple computers 
  throughout the day, would an open-source version of these powerful 
  auto-complete programs be a good solution? (3 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1735/>


**Think Secret Shuts Down in Wake of Apple Settlement** -- A reader 
  speculates that Apple may have bought out Think Secret in order to 
  end the lawsuit between the two parties. (1 message)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1736/>


**Digital voice recorder that works with the Mac** -- With several USB 
  voice recorders available, which of them easily transfer the digital 
  audio to the Mac? (9 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1738/>


**Wake Up, Little Keyboard** -- Running a recent update seems to have 
  messed up other components of Mac OS X for some people. (2 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1740/>


**Books for a new user** -- Did the holidays bring a new Mac to you or 
  someone you know? Readers share their suggestions for books that a 
  new user would find helpful. (6 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1741/>


**Library Donations** -- Where does money raised by libraries go? (Not 
  exactly a Mac-related thread, but interesting for the book-minded 
  people on this list!) (5 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1743/>


**Powerpoint from Office Vx crashes under Leopard** -- Could corrupted 
  fonts be the source of trouble with PowerPoint under Leopard? (3 
  messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1744/>


**[ANN] The Entourage Help Blog: Entourage and Time Machine** -- 
  Readers discuss the merits and shortcomings of how Entourage stores 
  all of its data in one large database file. (25 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1745/>


**Permissions repair** -- Some people are having trouble with 
  permissions under Mac OS X 10.5, with several possible fixes 
  mentioned. (6 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1746/>


**Buy Office Mac test drive by Jan 14 to get upgrade?** In 
  anticipation of the release of Microsoft Office for Mac 2008 next 
  week, readers discuss the best ways to upgrade. (8 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1748/>


**Conversions of a Twitter Revert** -- Glenn decided that he wanted to 
  be productive or something, so he stopped checking his Twitter feed 
  using Twitterific. Some readers agree with the move, while others 
  still see value in Twitter. (4 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1750/>


**Automator Help** -- A reader runs into what turns out to be a 
  well-established bug in the new version of Automator. (2 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1751/>


$$

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