TidBITS#910/14-Jan-08
=====================
  Issue link: <http://db.tidbits.com/issue/910>

  We're on the ground at Macworld Expo in San Francisco, waiting for 
  things to kick off Tuesday (so be sure to check our Web site for 
  breaking news from the show!). But before the keynote and ensuing 
  craziness of the show, we have plenty of news to pass along. Apple 
  surprised us last week by announcing new eight-core Mac Pros and 
  Xserves, adding more intrigue to what might be announced tomorrow. 
  Adam looks at the recent news of Amazon MP3 gaining more DRM-free 
  music and wonders if a change at the iTunes Store is in the cards. 
  If you're coming to San Francisco or travelling in general, be sure 
  to read our coverage of new rules for flying with computer and 
  camera batteries, as well as Glenn Fleishman's advice for protecting 
  your wireless connections while at the show. We also note the 
  releases of a beta of Parallels Server, NetNewsWire 3.1 (now free!), 
  Interarchy 9, and Airfoil 3, with a peek at Rogue Amoeba's Live Disc 
  utility for distributing current software versions on CD. Lastly, 
  Macworld Expo isn't the only big tech event this month: our intrepid 
  correspondent Jeff Porten reports on the latest gizmos, gadgets, and 
  gewgaws from last week's Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas.

Articles
    Flying to Macworld? Carry On Your Batteries!
    Amazon MP3 Scores DRM-Free Music: What About Apple?
    Parallels Server Brings Virtualization to Leopard Server
    NewsGator Turns NetNewsWire Loose for Free
    Nolobe Ships Major Interarchy Update
    Airfoil 3 Spreads Music Streaming Beyond AirPort Express
    Rogue Amoeba's Live Disc Avoids Wasting CDs
    New Mac Pro Goes Eight-Core Before Macworld Expo
    New Xserve Goes Eight-Core Too
    Secure Your iPhone Connections at Macworld Expo - and Beyond
    CES 2008 Day 1: Finding My Bearings
    CES 2008 Day 1: Keyboards, Power, Eyewear, and More
    CES 2008 Day 2: From iPods to iShoes
    CES 2008 Day 3: Robots and Wrap-up
    Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk/14-Jan-08


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Flying to Macworld? Carry On Your Batteries!
--------------------------------------------
  by Mark H. Anbinder <mha@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9385>

  Macworld Expo attendees (and anyone else) flying to or within the 
  United States will be affected by a new set of rules implemented 
  recently by the U.S. Department of Transportation that limits how 
  and where air travelers can carry spare lithium batteries for their 
  electronic devices. Effective 01-Jan-08, the rules prohibit carrying 
  spare batteries in checked luggage, and limit spare batteries 
  brought aboard in carry-on luggage.

<http://safetravel.dot.gov/whats_new_batteries.html>

  The DOT recommends carrying electronic devices with you (we do, too, 
  considering how often our checked luggage has gone astray), but if 
  you wish to pack an electronic device in your checked luggage, you 
  _may_ pack it with its battery installed - as long as the device is 
  securely turned off. You must protect the terminals of spare 
  batteries in your carry-on bags to avoid short-circuits; the DOT 
  provides how-to tips for safely covering battery terminals, such as 
  using the plastic slip-cover that may have come with the battery, or 
  electrical tape over the terminals.

<http://safetravel.dot.gov/how_to.html>

  The battery guidelines specifically refer to cell phone and laptop 
  spare batteries, but apply to all lithium and lithium metal 
  batteries, also common in digital cameras and camcorders, portable 
  DVD players and video games, etc. Check the DOT Web site for 
  specific limits on the allowed lithium content per battery, which is 
  especially important if you have an extended-life battery.

<http://safetravel.dot.gov/whats_new_batteries.html>

  Concerns about Sony-made laptop batteries overheating, leading to 
  battery recalls by Apple, Dell, and several other laptop 
  manufacturers in 2006, make this the most rational and least 
  arbitrary restriction on passenger baggage we've seen affecting air 
  travelers in recent years. (For details on that recall, see "Apple 
  Recalling 1.8 Million Laptop Batteries," 2006-08-26.)

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8653>


Amazon MP3 Scores DRM-Free Music: What About Apple?
---------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9394>

  First came EMI's test of selling music free of digital rights 
  management (DRM) with Yahoo. Then Steve Jobs let fly with his 
  "Thoughts on Music" open letter (see "Steve Jobs Blasts DRM," 
  2007-02-12), and Apple followed it several months later with the 
  announcement that the iTunes Store would sell DRM-free tracks from 
  EMI (see "Apple and EMI Offer DRM-Free Music via iTunes," 
  2007-04-02). Next, Amazon.com jumped into the fray with Amazon MP3's 
  DRM-free downloads from EMI and Universal (see "Amazon MP3 Takes on 
  the iTunes Store," 2007-09-25, and "Apple Cuts iTunes Plus Price to 
  99 Cents," 2007-10-16).

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8856>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8937>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9203>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9245>

  With EMI and Universal offering DRM-free music, Warner Music Group 
  and Sony BMG were the remaining holdouts, and in the last few weeks, 
  both have caved. In late December 2007, Amazon announced that 
  DRM-free tracks from Warner Music would be available via Amazon MP3. 
  And on 10-Jan-08, Amazon repeated the announcement with Sony BMG, 
  the fourth of the major music labels (and the one that intentionally 
  installed spyware on Windows PCs in an insane attempt to prevent CDs 
  from being copied).

<http://phx.corporate-ir.net/phoenix.zhtml?c=176060&p=irol-newsArticle&ID=1089998>
<http://phx.corporate-ir.net/phoenix.zhtml?c=176060&p=irol-newsArticle&ID=1095117>
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2005_Sony_BMG_CD_copy_protection_scandal>

  Amazon MP3 now claims 3.1 million tracks, all without any DRM. Apple 
  says the iTunes Store has over 6 million songs, but only iTunes Plus 
  tracks from EMI aren't hampered by Apple's FairPlay DRM. In April 
  2007, in the announcement of the iTunes Plus tracks, Steve Jobs 
  said, "We expect to offer more than half of the songs on iTunes in 
  DRM-free versions by the end of this year." 

  It's now 2008, and I'm happy to give Apple a two-week grace period 
  if one of the announcements at Macworld Expo is that all the music 
  in the iTunes Store will become available in DRM-free format. 
  Otherwise, any moral high ground Apple may have achieved with the 
  "Thoughts on Music" letter and subsequent promotion of iTunes Plus 
  tracks will be ceded to Amazon. 

  And yes, I realize that this decision is not Apple's to make 
  unilaterally, and if Apple isn't just sitting on an announcement 
  until the Macworld Expo keynote, the spotlight will then focus on 
  the labels that are playing favorites with Amazon over Apple.


Parallels Server Brings Virtualization to Leopard Server
--------------------------------------------------------
  by Joe Kissell <joe@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9392>

  Parallels has announced the first beta release of Parallels Server, 
  a new virtualization program that, like Parallels Desktop, lets one 
  operating system run as a virtual machine inside another. But 
  Parallels Server introduces some significant new capabilities, not 
  the least of which is support for running Leopard Server as a guest 
  operating system. Thanks to Apple's recently updated licensing terms 
  (see "Apple to Allow Virtualization of Leopard," 2007-10-31), owners 
  of Leopard Server can run it as a virtual machine - and even run 
  multiple copies of it on a single computer - as long as each copy is 
  purchased and licensed individually and the host computer is made by 
  Apple. (Parallels Server itself runs on Mac OS X, Windows, or 
  Linux.) 

<http://parallelsvirtualization.blogspot.com/2008/01/parallels-server-open-beta-launches.html>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9277>

  The option to run two or more copies of Leopard Server (along with 
  other operating systems, such as Windows Server and Linux) on, say, 
  one of the spiffy new eight-core Xserves (see "New Xserve Goes 
  Eight-Core Too," 2008-01-08) could prove to be very interesting to 
  sites needing to get the most flexibility out of a limited number of 
  machines.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9382>

  In addition to guest support for Leopard Server, Parallels Server 
  finally offers (limited) support for multiple processors or cores in 
  guest machines, a capability the company says will migrate to 
  Parallels Desktop in the future. Among the other new features is the 
  option to install and run guest operating systems using a "bare 
  metal" hypervisor that eliminates dependence on the host operating 
  system. Since I haven't seen this capability in action personally 
  yet, I'm having some trouble grasping exactly how it will work, but 
  it certainly sounds interesting.

  The beta testing program for Parallels Server is private, meaning 
  that registration is required, though apparently Parallels has 
  opened participation to anyone.

<http://www.parallels.com/support/beta/registration/server/>


NewsGator Turns NetNewsWire Loose for Free
------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9388>

  NetNewsWire 3.1 is the latest release of the long-developed news 
  aggregator of RSS and Atom feeds - and it's now free. NewsGator, 
  which acquired Seattle developer Brent Simmons's NetNewsWire 
  software in 2005 and hired Simmons, announced updates for its major 
  newsreading applications; their applications are all available at no 
  cost. Previously, NetNewsWire was available in a fully featured paid 
  Pro version and a free Lite version.

<http://www.newsgator.com/Individuals/NetNewsWire/>
<http://www.macworld.com/article/47263/2005/10/netnewswire.html>
<http://www.newsgator.com/CompanyInfo/Press/Archive.aspx?post=144>

  NewsGator's applications include FeedDemon 2.6, NetNewsWire 3.1, 
  Inbox 3.0 (in beta), and NewsGator Go! for Windows Mobile 2.0, as 
  well as Web-site based readers aimed at generic mobile devices and 
  one customized for the iPhone. NewsGator integrates newsreading 
  across programs and services by letting users create accounts that 
  can be used to synchronize feeds and track which items have been 
  read.

  NewsGator founder and CTO Greg Reinacker wrote on his blog that the 
  company is focusing on saturating the market with its clients to 
  provide a better environment for its corporate products, which 
  include NewsGator Enterprise Server. The server aggregates content 
  from the outside world and combines it with internal communications 
  for employees. A single source for the server software and no 
  per-seat licensing fee for every desktop and mobile operating system 
  and device could be a powerful tool to let NewsGator challenge 
  bigger competitors that lack good software for normal users.

<http://www.rassoc.com/gregr/weblog/2008/01/09/newsgators-rss-clients-are-now-free/>
<http://www.newsgator.com/Business/EnterpriseServer/Default.aspx>

  The latest release of NetNewsWire, by the way, includes a small list 
  of useful new features, including a refresh of the user interface, 
  better performance, and an HTML Archive option that saves news items 
  in a standard Web format. The performance improvements were 
  noticeable: I quit version 3.0, installed and launched 3.1, and 
  witnessed a dramatic improvement in retrieving new items and other 
  actions.

  I should also note that Simmons added a feature late in the 3.1 beta 
  that I've been requesting quietly for years: an 
  unsubscribe-from-feed option available from the contextual menu for 
  any news item. Because I subscribe to so many news feeds, and feeds 
  tend to go stale, become overwhelming, or simply start to irritate 
  me, it's great to have a click-and-select method of saying buh-bye 
  to a news feed. Previously, you had to select an option to reveal 
  the feed in the subscription list, select it, and choose 
  Unsubscribe.

  With NetNewsWire 3.1, generally considered to be one of the most 
  capable RSS newsreaders, now available for free, the bar has been 
  raised for all other RSS newsreaders (including Safari). As Rich 
  Siegel told TidBITS when Bare Bones released the capable text editor 
  TextWrangler for free, "You must now be this tall to play."


Nolobe Ships Major Interarchy Update
------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9396>

  Nolobe has shipped Interarchy 9, a major update to one of the 
  longest-developed Macintosh Internet applications. The new release 
  adds a new secure file-transfer mode using SSH encryption that 
  requires a server with Perl 4 or later to use. Nolobe promises 
  substantially improved performance with the new mode for mirroring, 
  in which files are automatically duplicated whenever they're 
  changed, typically to remote directories, such as the folder that 
  holds a Web site.

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

  A number of cosmetic changes were made as well, with the new main 
  window display resembling a Leopard Finder window, including 
  organizing information in a sidebar by categories, one of which is 
  Bonjour-accessible local volumes. Long-time users may need to read 
  the release notes to figure out where features they use have 
  migrated to; in particular, it appears that the network testing 
  features of the previous version have been removed. I particularly 
  like the addition of the Copy Public URL command in the Edit menu, 
  which lets you create a mapping between an FTP path and the 
  equivalent URL to reach that path from a Web site, and then copy the 
  public URL for any file in the FTP hierarchy for pasting into email 
  or documents. 

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2008-01/interarchy_v_9_screen.png>
<http://nolobe.com/interarchy/>

  Version 9 ties into Mac OS X's structure for mapping file extensions 
  to applications, rather than maintaining its own mapping. This can 
  cause some consternation. For instance, if you had previously set 
  Interarchy to edit .html files in BBEdit, but left the .html mapping 
  in Mac OS X to open such files in OmniWeb, you can't duplicate that 
  approach with Interarchy 9. An Edit With command has been added to 
  the contextual menu, too, so you can choose among valid applications 
  to edit a given file. This release incorporates Sparkle for updates, 
  which slipstreams improvements in an elegant manner while the 
  program is running (see "Sparkle Improves Application Update 
  Experience," 2007-08-20).

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9122>

  In February 2007, Nolobe obtained development rights for Interarchy 
  (originally Anarchie) from Peter Lewis's Stairways Software; Nolobe 
  was founded by Interarchy's lead developer Matthew Drayton (see 
  "Nolobe Takes Over Interarchy; 8.5 Ships," 2007-02-05). This is 
  Nolobe's first ".0" release of the software since the acquisition.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8844>

  Interarchy 9 costs $39 until 29-Feb-08, after which the price rises 
  to $59. Registered owners of Interarchy 8.5.4 and earlier may 
  upgrade for $29. Mac OS X 10.4.11 or later is required.


Airfoil 3 Spreads Music Streaming Beyond AirPort Express
--------------------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9393>

  Rogue Amoeba has released Airfoil 3, a significantly updated version 
  of their $25 software package that was originally designed to allow 
  any application or audio source, not just iTunes, to play audio 
  through speakers hooked to an AirPort Express Base Station.

<http://www.rogueamoeba.com/airfoil/mac/>

  The latest version can also play audio through remote Macs that are 
  running the Airfoil Speakers software, included with the release. In 
  addition, it can sync remote audio with video playing on your 
  computer using the new Airfoil Video Player that's part of the 
  package. Rogue Amoeba notes that Airfoil synchronization is now 
  "perfect": Each remote AirPort Express receiving audio gets it at 
  precisely the same time, which wasn't possible with previous 
  releases.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2008-01/airfoil-main-screen.png>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2008-01/airfoil-video-player.png>

  Upgrades from previous releases cost $10. Airfoil 3 requires Mac OS 
  X 10.4.0 or later, and is the first Airfoil release that works 
  correctly under Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard. A fully functional trial 
  version that overlays noise on the audio stream after 10 minutes of 
  continuous playback is available as a 9 MB download.


Rogue Amoeba's Live Disc Avoids Wasting CDs
-------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9387>

  Imagine that you're exhibiting at Macworld Expo and want to hand out 
  CDs containing demo versions of your software. It's easy to create a 
  master disc and a label, and send it out for printing and 
  duplication. But there can be a long lead time for big orders, 
  making it hard to release a new product at the show, and any unused 
  CDs become obsolete quickly afterwards, which is a waste of money 
  and resources.

  The clever lads at Rogue Amoeba have come up with a nifty solution 
  to this problem, which they call Live Disc. Essentially, Live Disc 
  is a custom application that presents a Finder-like window to the 
  user, showing icons for demos of Rogue Amoeba's products that you 
  can drag to copy or double-click to launch, just like in the Finder. 
  The magic is that if a newer version of the application is on Rogue 
  Amoeba's server, Live Disc seamlessly downloads that version and 
  copies or launches it instead. If there's no Internet connection, 
  Live Disc simply uses the copy on the CD.

<http://www.rogueamoeba.com/utm/posts/Article/LiveDisc-2008-01-02-1900.html>
<http://www.rogueamoeba.com/utm/content/images/20080103LiveDisc/liveDiscSmall.png>

  At the moment, Live Disc isn't a product anyone can buy or license, 
  although I imagine that Rogue Amoeba would consider making it one if 
  there's sufficient interest. Far too many CDs are wasted because 
  their contents have become obsolete; with Live Disc and some 
  forethought, nearly any promotional CD could have a significantly 
  longer life span and would be less likely to join the ever-growing 
  waste stream without at least being useful first.


New Mac Pro Goes Eight-Core Before Macworld Expo
------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9381>

  A week before Steve Jobs was set to take the stage at Macworld Expo, 
  Apple cleared away any need to talk about professional-level Macs to 
  concentrate on what we presume are more interesting announcements. 
  When a new Mac Pro that Apple advertises as "the fastest Mac ever" 
  (sure, the latest professional Mac is always the fastest Mac ever, 
  but still...) doesn't make the cut for the Macworld Expo keynote, 
  even the more jaded among us start salivating.

<http://www.apple.com/pr/library/2008/01/08macpro.html>

  The new Mac Pro features eight-core processing, thanks to a pair of 
  Intel's new 45-nanometer Quad-Core Xeon processors running at 2.8 
  GHz, 3.0 GHz, or 3.2 GHz. Actually, there is a build-to-order option 
  with only a single 2.8 GHz Quad-Core Xeon processor, but that feels 
  like a throwaway to keep the price of the lowest-end Mac Pro down, 
  and I usually avoid such oddball configurations when the direction 
  is clearly toward eight cores across the board.

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

  Apple claims the new Mac Pros are up to twice as fast as the 
  previous top-of-the-line 2.66 Quad-Core Mac Pro when using 
  processor-intensive applications like Maya and Logic Pro. Additional 
  performance comes from a whopping 12 MB of L2 cache per processor, a 
  high-bandwidth hardware architecture, dual-independent 1600 MHz 
  front size buses, and support for up to 32 GB (8 slots) of 800 MHz 
  DDR2 ECC FB-DIMM memory.

<http://www.apple.com/macpro/performance.html>

  In terms of storage expandability, the new Mac Pro features four 
  internal hard drive bays with direct-attach, cable-free installation 
  of SATA drives, giving it support for up to 4 TB of internal 
  storage. A SuperDrive with double-layer support is also standard, 
  with a second open optical drive bay available for another 
  SuperDrive... or perhaps a Blu-ray drive in the future.

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

  Graphics processing is also important for the professional crowd, 
  and although I'm not deep in that world, the specs sound impressive. 
  The standard video card is an ATI Radeon HD 2600 XT with 256 MB of 
  video memory, but build-to-order options include the Nvidia 8800 GT 
  with 512 MB of memory or Nvidia Quadro FX 5600 with 1.5 GB of 
  memory. You're not limited to just one of these cards (each of which 
  can drive a pair of DVI monitors) - the Mac Pro provides a total of 
  four PCI Express slots, making it possible for a Mac Pro to drive a 
  total of eight 30-inch monitors running at 2560 by 1600. Who needs 
  Spaces when you can address over 32 million pixels? Clearly, Apple 
  is looking to move into the stadium display market.

  On the communications front, the Mac Pro comes standard with a pair 
  of gigabit Ethernet ports (with support for jumbo frames), Bluetooth 
  2.0+EDR, an optional 802.11n AirPort Extreme card, and an optional 
  Apple USB Modem. Anyone who buys a modem for this machine deserves a 
  wedgie.

  Other specs include a pair of FireWire 800 ports (one in front, one 
  in back), a pair of FireWire 400 ports (one in front, one in back), 
  five USB 2.0 ports (two in front, three in back), front-panel 
  headphone minijack and speaker port, optical digital audio input and 
  output Toslink ports, and analog stereo line-level input and output 
  minijacks.

  Apple says the new Mac Pro is available immediately, with pricing 
  starting at $2,799 for a model that includes a pair of 2.8 GHz 
  Quad-Core Xeon processors, 2 GB of RAM, the ATI Radeon HD 2600 XT 
  graphics card, a 320 GB SATA drive, and SuperDrive, along with all 
  the other standard stuff. The only slight disappointment? The 
  industrial design remains the same, and while there's nothing wrong 
  with the "cheese grater" case introduced nearly five years ago with 
  the Power Mac G5, we'd sure like to see a hot new case design.


New Xserve Goes Eight-Core Too
------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9382>

  Hot on the heels of Apple's pre-Macworld announcement of the new Mac 
  Pro comes the release of a long-awaited update to the Xserve, the 
  company's 1U rackmount server. Given that the Xserve typically finds 
  itself racked in supercomputing and enterprise data centers, 
  hardware updates seldom warrant mention during the Macworld Expo 
  keynote anyway. This makes it unsurprising that Apple is releasing 
  specifications and taking orders now to avoid the Xserve upgrade 
  stealing any keynote thunder.

<http://www.apple.com/pr/library/2008/01/08xserve.html>

  Like the new Mac Pro, the Xserve's top-end models feature eight-core 
  processing, with a pair of 2.8 GHz or 3.0 GHz Quad-Core Xeon 
  processors. There's also a base model sporting just a single 2.8 GHz 
  Quad-Core Xeon processor. All models include 12 MB of L2 cache per 
  processor, a high-bandwidth hardware architecture, dual-independent 
  1600 MHz front side buses, and support for up to 32 GB (across 8 
  slots) of 800 MHz DDR2 ECC FB-DIMM memory. 

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

  In terms of expansion, the Xserve provides three drive bays that 
  support either SATA or SAS drives, a pair of PCI Express 2.0 
  expansion slots that can accept multi-channel 4-gigabit Fibre 
  Channel, and 10-gigabit Ethernet cards.

  Standard features include internal graphics support that can drive 
  anything up to a 23-inch Apple Cinema Display, dual gigabit Ethernet 
  jacks, two FireWire 800 ports (but no FireWire 400 ports), three USB 
  2.0 ports, and, of course, an unlimited client license for Mac OS X 
  Server 10.5 Leopard. The base Xserve configuration, shipping 
  immediately, includes a single 2.8 GHz Quad-Core Xeon processor, 2 
  GB of RAM, and a single 80 GB SATA Apple Drive Module for $2,999.

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

  Apple boasts that the new 45-nanometer Intel Quad-Core Xeon 
  processors improve on energy efficiency, with the processors drawing 
  a maximum of 80 watts and dropping as low as 4 watts when idle. 

  As with the Mac Pro, the industrial design of the Xserve remains 
  largely unchanged, which will cause disappointment in some quarters. 
  We've heard complaints from data center operators that the Xserve's 
  30-inch (76.2-cm) depth makes for awkward spacing in standard racks. 
  (The original Xserve was 28 inches (71.1 cm) deep.) Also, Apple's 
  policy of selling the Xserve's drive sleds only with drives makes it 
  expensive to upgrade storage with drives from vendors other than 
  Apple; that appears to be unchanged. 

  In a mixed blessing, Apple removed the FireWire 400 port from the 
  front panel and replaced it with a USB 2.0 port. That's a good step, 
  since it makes it easier to attach a keyboard and mouse for 
  troubleshooting, but doesn't go far enough, since rack-mounted 
  servers also usually need a monitor attached for troubleshooting, 
  and the video port remains at the back of the Xserve. 

  Chuck Goolsbee, Vice President of Technical Operations for hosting 
  company digital.forest, suggests that "user-related" ports, such as 
  USB, video, and FireWire be accessible from the front panel, whereas 
  "system-related" ports like Ethernet, Fibre Channel, and power be 
  relegated to the back. (USB and FireWire should exist in both 
  places, of course.) The reason is that ideal data center design 
  calls for hot aisles and cold aisles, with the hot backs of servers 
  facing each other and the cold fronts facing each other. That way, 
  the hot aisles can be enclosed and cooled more effectively. But 
  that's not feasible if the staff needs regular access to the backs 
  of servers for troubleshooting, as the Xserve requires due to the 
  placement of its video port on the back.

<http://chuck.goolsbee.org/archives/497>

  All that said, we've been needing new server hardware for some time 
  and this looks like the unit we've been waiting to order!


Secure Your iPhone Connections at Macworld Expo - and Beyond
------------------------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9391>

  What do you get when you cross thousands of iPhones users, hundreds 
  of Wi-Fi nodes across dozens of networks, and no network security? 
  Lots of snarfed passwords from what could be as few as a handful of 
  ne'er-do-wells who know what to look for.

  If you're an iPhone user headed towards the Macworld Conference and 
  Expo, I'll see you there, but I hope I won't see your passwords 
  floating through the air. The iPhone - and Mac OS X and all other 
  major operating systems designed for personal computers and mobile 
  phones - doesn't secure data sent over Wi-Fi by default. Rather, the 
  operating system and hardware makers assume that you will layer your 
  own security on top.

<http://macworldexpo.com/>

  Most users aren't aware they need to add security on top of their 
  in-transit data, and I've tried to be Johnny Wi-Fi Security Seed - 
  if I'm not stretching the king of Applejack's reputation too far - 
  in spreading the word on simple ways you can ensure your passwords 
  and data aren't sucked in while walking around. You can read an 
  in-depth article I wrote several months ago for Macworld about the 
  iPhone and its security limitations or scan the following tips. (A 
  few obscure VPN flaws mentioned in the article have been fixed in 
  subsequent iPhone updates since the article was written last 
  summer.)

<http://www.lairdandcompany.com/products_applejack.htm>
<http://www.macworld.com/article/58991/2007/07/iphone_security.html>

  Fundamentally, every network connection you make over an iPhone or a 
  laptop via Wi-Fi when roaming away from home is insecure unless the 
  particular program you're using or network connection has been 
  designed to include encryption or overlaid with some secure 
  elements. (At home, you might enable WPA Personal encryption on your 
  network, which reliably protects the data from snoopers who don't 
  have the network password.)


**Protect Email Passwords and Contents** -- The iPhone tries to be 
  good. When you set up a new email account using the prefabricated 
  partner email host options in iPhone's Mail preferences, or when you 
  add an email account manually, Apple's procedure is to use an 
  encrypted connection unless one isn't available. (Yahoo Mail's push 
  service for the iPhone secures its passwords but sends the contents 
  of your messages in the clear.)

  Email passwords are often sent in the clear by default, which means 
  that without adding encryption on top, someone could access your 
  password. Mail programs and mail servers, like Web servers, use 
  SSL/TLS to tunnel data without allowing a snooper a position to 
  intercept what's being sent. Almost all mail software, including 
  Apple's iPhone Mail and Mac OS X Mail, include support for SSL/TLS 
  connections.

  Most but not all Internet service providers offer SSL/TLS  for 
  sending (SMTP) and receiving (POP3/IMAP) email. It may be worth 
  forwarding email to Gmail or another service that offers encrypted 
  POP, IMAP, and SMTP while traveling if your ISP's own mail servers 
  don't support encryption. (Here's a detailed article on how secured 
  email works and why to use it.) 

<http://luxsci.com/extranet/articles/email-security.html>

  You can protect just your email password by using APOP 
  (Authenticated POP) with ISPs that support that protocol. Using 
  APOP, each time you retrieve messages your mail client creates a 
  unique hash of your password that the server, knowing your password 
  as well, can confirm. The iPhone doesn't offer APOP support, but 
  many mail programs include it as a legacy option.

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

  If your ISP requires your password for sending outgoing email - as 
  most do - that password is frequently sent in the clear if SSL/TLS 
  isn't used.


**Keep Insecure Web Surfing Private** -- When you're browsing Web 
  sites that don't use encryption to protect your sessions, a sniffer 
  on the same network can monitor all your activity. Banking sites 
  nearly always use SSL/TLS to entire sessions, while ecommerce sites 
  may limit SSL/TLS to your account login and the checkout phase.

  It used to be fine to be sanguine and say, well, I have no secrets; 
  if my password is protected during login to a site - as many firms 
  like Yahoo and Google offer - what do I care if the session is in 
  the clear? That was an attitude one could take before sidejacking 
  was defined.

  Sidejacking is a way of grabbing the account token sent by sites 
  like Google that enable your browser to maintain a continuous 
  session as you request pages. That token, stored as a cookie that 
  your browser sends on each transaction, can be grabbed through 
  in-the-clear Web surfing, as is typical for sites that don't involve 
  financial details, medical information, or other private 
  transactions. The token may last minutes, days, or years, depending 
  on the security model chosen by the site's developers.

  An account token doesn't let someone decode your password, but it 
  can allow them access to your current session, which they can hijack 
  on the side. This lets them send email as if it came from your 
  account, receive and read your messages, and, on security-poor Web 
  sites, ask the site to send your password to their email address 
  with little effort. (For more details, read my article "Sidejack 
  Attack Jimmies Open Gmail, Other Services," 2007-08-27.)

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9129>

  You can secure Web sessions and prevent sidejacking on a Mac with 
  the Secure-Tunnel service (available in Gold or Platinum offerings, 
  $7.95 or $9.95 per month, respectively), which acts as an encrypted 
  proxy for Web requests.

<https://www.secure-tunnel.com/signup/signup_1.cfm>

  But if you're using an iPhone, this won't work. The iPhone 
  unreasonably requires that Web and other network proxies be set 
  individually for each Wi-Fi network, rather than for the Wi-Fi 
  adapter and the EDGE adapter, as is the case in Mac OS X, and how 
  most operating systems handle proxy services.

  So for your laptop browsing, Secure-Tunnel is an option, but iPhone 
  users must consider a VPN if they want this form of protection. That 
  carries its own limitation on the iPhone, too, as described next.


**VPN for Hire** -- A VPN (virtual private network) connection 
  encrypts all the data entering and leaving your computer or iPhone 
  to a remote point. For those of you who work for companies that run 
  VPN servers, that remote point is inside the corporate network. But 
  several firms sell VPN service, terminating the remote point at 
  their server inside a data center somewhere: the end point isn't 
  secure, but typically you're just trying to protect your data over 
  the Wi-Fi link and the local network. These VPN service providers 
  offer that. 

  Mac-friendly services include publicVPN's eponymous service and 
  WiTopia's personalVPN. After you sign up for publicVPN's $5.95 per 
  month or $59.95 per year service, you receive a simple set of 
  instructions explaining how to set up the L2TP-over-IPsec VPN client 
  built into the iPhone (called just L2TP) and Mac OS X 10.3 and later 
  to connect to publicVPN's servers. 

<http://publicvpn.com/>
<http://www.witopia.net/personalmore.html>

  WiTopia offers a $39.99/year SSL-based VPN service, and provides a 
  complete package for installing the open-source TunnelBlick 
  connection client with the necessary digital certificates custom 
  created for you. Unfortunately, the iPhone doesn't currently support 
  SSL VPNs or the installation of third-party software, and 
  TunnelBlick can cause freezes in Leopard. (I was able to solve these 
  freezes only by uninstalling TunnelBlick. It works fine in Tiger. 
  The TunnelBlick developer is working on fixing the Leopard 
  problems.)

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

  WiTopia does an end run around both the iPhone limitation and the 
  current Leopard crashes through their free addition a few months ago 
  of a second VPN account as part of your service. WiTopia offers the 
  widely supported PPTP (Point to Point Tunneling Protocol), which can 
  be used by the iPhone and in Leopard. PPTP is an older VPN protocol 
  that has weaknesses when poor passwords are chosen; WiTopia chooses 
  a strong password for you to bypass this. (Other limitations have 
  led to most companies bypassing PPTP in favor of IPsec and SSL-based 
  VPNs.)

  On the iPhone, select Settings > General > Network > VPN, and enter 
  information provided by WiTopia for PPTP or publicVPN for 
  L2TP-over-IPsec. After entering the information, a VPN button 
  appears beneath the Wi-Fi switch in the main Settings screen to make 
  it easier to turn the VPN on and off; more on that in a moment.

  In Panther and Tiger, you use Internet Connect to configure a VPN; 
  in Leopard, VPN service is an option in the Network preference pane 
  displayed like another network adapter. (If you don't see a VPN 
  service in the adapter list, click the + [plus sign] at lower left, 
  select VPN from the Interface menu, and choose L2TP over IPsec or 
  PPTP from the VPN Type menu as appropriate.)

  But here's the rub with the iPhone. While a VPN is the best overall 
  solution, Apple hasn't made it easy to keep a VPN active while you 
  roam, which could lead to you browsing with the VPN off 
  unintentionally. Because the iPhone is so good at roaming between 
  EDGE and any available Wi-Fi network you've chosen to join before, 
  your VPN connection is liable to break during any of these network 
  switchovers. Some corporate software is designed to work on mobile 
  devices and maintain a continuous connection back to the enterprise 
  network regardless of your connection media - Ethernet, Wi-Fi, 
  cellular, or other. But Apple and AT&T haven't provided this kind of 
  flexibility yet. With the addition of third-party software for the 
  iPhone in February 2008, developers might be able to extend this 
  flexibility to the device.

  In the meantime, you need to pay attention to your VPN connection 
  before each browsing session if you're concerned about the issues I 
  raise in this article. A security expert I consulted suggests that 
  the EDGE network is generally secure - some heavy resources need to 
  be brought to bear to break its encryption and then only for a 
  single device - but Wi-Fi is wide open.


**Macworld Optimism** -- With the release of the iPhone development 
  kit due in February, and a preview of it likely part of the Macworld 
  Expo keynote, I can only hope that some of the rough edges that 
  expose data and passwords of the unwary at the show can be fixed 
  through third-party software that will make networked data transfer 
  that much easier to keep private at events like Macworld - and at 
  your neighborhood hot spot.


CES 2008 Day 1: Finding My Bearings
-----------------------------------
  by Jeff Porten <civitan@jeffporten.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9384>

  [Editor's note: Intrepid roving correspondent Jeff Porten braved the 
  aisles at this year's Consumer Electronics Show (CES), which was 
  held last week in Las Vegas, Nevada. We published his reports on our 
  Web page as he filed them, when he was conscious enough to write.]

  Hello from CES, the largest consumer electronics trade show in the 
  world, dedicated to testing the upper limits of human endurance and 
  forcing its attendees to exceed them.

  No, really. I just spent the first day of CES at The Venetian/Sands 
  Expo and Convention Center in Las Vegas, where I succeeded in 
  covering just about half of the show floor. There's the other half 
  of this floor, three other levels of exhibits, the Tower Suites for 
  select companies, and an additional exhibition next door at the Wynn 
  that runs until 10 PM.

  After I finish all that tomorrow, I head to the Las Vegas Convention 
  Center. The Venetian holds just the satellite show; most of the 
  exhibits and events are at the LVCC. All told, CES has 1.8 million 
  square feet of exhibit space, and around 250,000 people are expected 
  to walk on it this week. The entire show requires seven different 
  folding maps. 

  To put it another way, given my habit of attacking a trade show 
  floor in grid style (up one aisle and down the next), and since most 
  exhibitors are all too happy to hand me paper brochures made of 
  thinly sliced wood, I'm expecting to hike 10 miles a day carrying 
  upwards of 40 pounds of conference swag. (If anyone is interested in 
  my Getting Things Done approach to trade shows, see my sidebar 
  article.)

<http://jeffporten.com/2008/01/07/a-gtd-trade-show-survival-tactic/>

  I have a stack of such swag which I have yet to go through and write 
  about, so here's a quick note about what I'm looking to cover for 
  TidBITS. There are a few companies here with products that are more 
  or less unique in their area, and interesting products will catch my 
  eye. But the majority of exhibits have devices that differ only in 
  slight ways from the competition, so my focus is on the products 
  whose competitive differences really connect with the target 
  audience.

  I have some items here which illustrate this idea. In front, a media 
  kit from Solio (manufacturers of solar power accessories); by 
  putting this on a flash drive, it's easy to carry and will in the 
  future be useful to me in a way a DVD won't. The round red pen is a 
  giveaway from Genius; unlike most other pens given away at the show, 
  it won't get lost in the bottom of my bag. Finally, the official 
  World Series of Poker lighter I bought yesterday; not for the logo, 
  but for the form factor: it's flat and will fit in just about any 
  pocket I care to throw it into.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2008-01/CES-swag.jpg>
<http://www.solio.com/>

  I'll generally be too polite to mention the companies whose 
  competitive features are negatives, but there are many people here 
  who are making the same mistake by giving out information on 
  mini-CDs the size of a business card. These are guaranteed to break 
  the slot-loading drive in my MacBook immediately, and if that's the 
  only way they're circulating information, it counts as points off on 
  their friendliness to the Mac community; unless someone came here 
  with a Mac Pro desktop, they're not reading those disks.

  Onward! Tune in soon for some actual product coverage.


CES 2008 Day 1: Keyboards, Power, Eyewear, and More
---------------------------------------------------
  by Jeff Porten <civitan@jeffporten.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9386>

  You know you're a geek when one of the best parts of your day in Las 
  Vegas is seeing a new hot new keyboard.

  Art Lebedev is showing the real, non-vaporware, made-of-actual-atoms 
  Optimus Maximus keyboard, on which each key houses a tiny OLED 
  display. When you switch your layout from QWERTY to Dvorak, all the 
  keycaps change with it. Perhaps more usefully, special function keys 
  and the standard Fkeys can display application icons to remind you 
  what they're all going to do.

<http://www.artlebedev.com/everything/optimus/>
<http://www.artlebedev.com/everything/optimus/optimus_maximus_01w.jpg>

  At $460 a pop, the Optimus Maximus is a splurge for most people, but 
  I can see how it would be useful for public computers that are used 
  by an international group - I've been to dozens of conferences where 
  the participants had to mentally remap a physical keyboard to their 
  home country's layout. I suspect it's also just a matter of time 
  before some lifehack Web site comes up with a method to make this a 
  fantastic productivity tool; just think of what you could do with 
  AppleScript, macros, and a keyboard that dynamically changes 
  functions _and shows you how it's changing_ to automate your 
  workflow into one or two keystrokes.

  There are some fascinating power accessories here at CES. Powercast 
  is demoing various methods of transmitting power without wires, 
  which would be great for charging cell phones and laptops without 
  plugs. Aqua PowerSystem is looking for American distributors for 
  their batteries that run on water. _Any_ kind of water: "It will 
  work with alcoholic drink, beer, cola, coffee, and even saliva or 
  urine in an emergency situation without water." Apparently fuel 
  cells are also being demonstrated elsewhere on the show floor; 
  finding them is on my to-do list.

<http://www.powercastco.com/>
<http://www.aps-j.jp/english/>
<http://www.gizmag.com/hydropak-water-activated-portable-generator/8583/>

  The winner for Best Geordi LaForge iPod accessory is i-Vue's video 
  eyewear. A decent display and built-in headphones make this a killer 
  toy for watching movies on a plane, but text starts to break down at 
  greater than 800 by 600 resolutions, so it won't do much for 
  portable productivity.

<http://www.i-vue.net/>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2008-01/iVue.jpg>

  It's cool, but is it useful? SanDisk's Cruzer Titanium Plus is a USB 
  flash drive with 4 GB of memory, with a twist. The gimmick is that 
  everything you put on the drive is also uploaded simultaneously to 
  online storage. (Through your computer; the drive itself doesn't go 
  online.) It's good to have a redundancy plan, but I can't think of a 
  use where I'd need to have a file in three places, one of them being 
  on my person - if I'm physically carrying a file, that's because 
  I've decided I _won't_ have online access to it. The drive costs 
  $60, and the online storage costs $30 per year after six months for 
  free. (I have to say, when you're carrying around about 20 GB in 
  free flash storage from exhibitors, it lowers your opinion of the 
  market value.)

<http://www.sandisk.com/Products/Catalog(1391)-SanDisk_Cruzer_Titanium_Plus.aspx>

  Another neat idea - I think - comes from PhoneCasting, which lets 
  you record a podcast or audio blog entry by phone, simplifying what 
  can be a tricky process. PhoneCasting also assigns a phone number to 
  every podcast it records, enabling your listeners (all 3.25 billion 
  worldwide cell phone subscribers, according to PhoneCasting's rather 
  breathless press release, which you can hear at 702-553-2764) to 
  call up and hear your latest podcast over the phone. There are SMS 
  messages to alert people to the existence of a podcast show, and 
  PhoneCasting can insert radio-style ads into your podcast so you can 
  generate revenue as well. How many people want to listen to podcasts 
  via long and likely expensive phone calls? I can't criticize too 
  much, having accidentally left my iPod nano at home, but it seems 
  questionable. Podcasters receive 250 MB of storage for free and 
  presumably pay for extra; the cost, if any, to those making the 
  calls is oddly not mentioned in my press kit or on the home page.

<http://www.phonecasting.com/>
<http://www.phonecasting.com/Press/PressKit.aspx>


CES 2008 Day 2: From iPods to iShoes
------------------------------------
  by Jeff Porten <civitan@jeffporten.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9395>

  CES continues to amaze, with an astonishing variety of products and 
  services. Here's what stood out on my second day.

  ifrogz caught my eye with their interesting "thumpz" iPod cases with 
  built-in speakers, about the same size as earbuds. Unfortunately, my 
  ears don't work well enough for me to report back on speaker 
  quality, so I turned down the demo in the soundproof booth. Versions 
  for the 3G iPod nano are slated to ship 14-Jan-08 for $24.99, with a 
  version for the iPod classic to follow.

<http://ifrogz.com/products.php?cat=411>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2008-01/ifrogz-thumpz.png>

  Earbud or spaceman? Speaking of poor hearing, if you're interested 
  in keeping your ears in pristine condition, or if you're encouraging 
  your children to do so, you might want to check out the American 
  Speech-Language- Hearing Association's Listen to Your Buds campaign. 
  Featuring, er, either an anthropomorphic earbud, or a Lego spaceman, 
  depending upon your interpretation. Essentially, you can permanently 
  damage your hearing with your headphones, and children are 
  especially susceptible; if you'd rather avoid learning to lip-read 
  in noisy environments like I have to, stop by their site.

<http://www.listentoyourbuds.org/images/budstop-gr.gif>
<http://www.asha.org/>
<http://www.listentoyourbuds.org/>

  Are you bored with that monotonous single-color case for your 
  MacBook or iPod? Gelaskins impressed me with their eye for design in 
  their line of custom skin cases. I'm particularly fond of MC 
  Escher's Drawing Hands laptop case and Hokusai's The Great Wave for 
  iPods. But if that's not enough for you, Digiskin showed off their 
  kiosk, which they claim can be used to print custom images for _any_ 
  device, including cell phones. I neglected to ask for the price, but 
  this looks like something a business would use to sell customized 
  cases to its customers. If you can't pick up one on your own, look 
  for it at a mall near you.

<http://www.gelaskins.com/>
<https://www.gelaskins.com/images/skins/DrawingHands/57_MCEscher_DrawingHands_450.jpg>
<https://www.gelaskins.com/images/skins/TheGreatWave/119_KatsushikaHokusai_TheGreatWave_450.jpg>
<http://www.mydigiskin.com/sites/>

  When it comes to design, LaCie offers a wide variety of storage 
  devices with cases by famous designers. They're now extending their 
  Little Disk product line with even smaller models that look more 
  like Zippo lighters than cases for the forthcoming 1.3-inch 30 or 40 
  GB hard drives; even so, they still have a built-in USB cable. 
  Larger models (still around the size of a tin of Altoids) offer up 
  to 250 GB and have an option for FireWire. LaCie's press release 
  says immediate availability, but the Web site hasn't yet been 
  updated and the booth said "next month."

<http://www.lacie.com/products/product.htm?pid=10984>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2008-01/LaCie-Little-Disk.jpg>

  TechForward wasn't demoing any technology, but rather an interesting 
  angle on electronics insurance. They'll sell you a "buyback plan" 
  which guarantees that they'll pay you a set amount of money for your 
  hardware at some future date. For example, buy a MacBook today and 
  pay them $39; sell them your MacBook in one year for $460, or in two 
  years for $380, regardless of its market value. Interestingly, they 
  offer plans for iPods, but not for Zunes - I wonder why. They'll 
  sell this to you directly, or offer it as a point-of-sale purchase 
  from other vendors. (And they're promising those vendors a cut of 
  the revenue, so that might be a negotiating point for savvy buyers.) 
  The idea is that you can upgrade your equipment at less than the 
  actual cost, since you'll get a guaranteed payment later. I suspect 
  you'll sometimes do better on eBay, but this is certainly a 
  no-hassle alternative.

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

  If you've ever wanted to zip around town like Woz on his Segway, but 
  with a gizmo that fits into a backpack, check out iShoes. Somehow 
  they've managed to come up with battery powered roller skates that 
  can carry you about 3 miles (not quite 5 kilometers) on a single 
  charge, with a top speed of about 13 miles per hour (21 kilometers 
  per hour). I have no idea how safe this is, but it looks like the 
  coolest locomotion you'll see until someone can sell us a 
  hoverboard. They're apparently available now, for a mere $599 plus 
  $20 shipping. If you buy a pair, let us know how it goes.

<http://www.theishoes.com/>
<http://www.theishoes.com/images/shoes2.jpg>

  Finally, a shout-out to the folks from Opera Software, authors of 
  (among other software) the wonderful Opera Mini for cell phones and 
  Java-capable devices. I ran into several of them in the outdoor 
  smoking area, and jokingly introduced myself by saying, "Hey, I 
  think you guys just crashed my phone." To my surprise, they really 
  cared and asked me all sorts of questions about my usage, then 
  quizzed me about my thoughts on their product and how they could 
  increase usage in the United States. (My reply: the people most 
  likely to need their software are unfortunately the ones least 
  likely to ever hear about it.) If you've ever surmised from Opera's 
  Web site and forums that this is a company made up of really nice 
  Norwegians, I can attest to your accuracy.

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


CES 2008 Day 3: Robots and Wrap-up
----------------------------------
  by Jeff Porten <civitan@jeffporten.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9398>

  They say Las Vegas has a strong psychological effect on the males of 
  our species, causing us to say and do things here that we'd 
  otherwise know to avoid due to good sense or good taste.

  That said, I'm probably the first man in the history of Vegas who 
  has ever walked up to a Playboy Playmate and said, "Hi, I'm looking 
  for whatever you can tell me about Tasers."

  Really, that's the whole story. I have no excuse. Yes, I had noted 
  that she and the three other women sitting at her table stood out 
  from the crowd, but I somehow didn't notice that they were there to 
  sign autographs instead of hand out product information.

  As for the actual products at the show, I'll have to admit to being 
  underwhelmed. CES is where I like to see for the first time the new 
  technologies that I think will be ubiquitous in five years. Not so 
  much of that at this show. If you wanted to compare 100 brands of 
  truly massive televisions, or 350 brands of eardrum-blowing 
  speakers, CES was definitely the place to be. But I've been coming 
  here on and off for 20 years, and I remember seeing my first DVD and 
  picking up the first issue of Wired. It's entirely possible I missed 
  something with a show this size, but little jumped out at me as 
  being truly groundbreaking.

  One possible exception was the bizarre iRobot ConnectR, coming later 
  this year from the people who normally automate your vacuuming with 
  the Roomba. The ConnectR is another short round robot, but it's for 
  communicating with your family: when you're away from home, you log 
  into the ConnectR over the Internet, and use the swivel-mounted 
  webcam and two-way audio to talk to your kids (or your extremely 
  patient spouse, presumably). If the boy goes mobile, you just drive 
  it around to follow him. [Editor's note: The mind boggles, but we'll 
  save our comments from the perspective of being actual parents for 
  another article. -Adam]

<http://www.irobot.com/sp.cfm?pageid=338>
<http://www.irobot.com/images/consumer/connectr/stayconnected.jpg>

  I'd write the ConnectR up anyway, just on the basis of it just being 
  a cool piece of gear, but it strikes me as potentially breakout - if 
  the mid-21st century finds us all using telematic devices to create 
  a physical virtual presence, in addition to the ways we use the 
  Internet today to cut down on virtual distance, then this will have 
  been among the first of its kind. It's also quite possible that it's 
  just too far out in left field to take hold; I can think of several 
  rather geeky friends who travel away from their families often, and 
  I still can't picture one of them using this.

  There was also plenty of information at CES about "intelligent 
  transportation systems," with a nice overview provided by the U.S. 
  Department of Transportation's department of the same name. ITS 
  seems to cover, broadly, pretty much any information technology you 
  might want to put in a car, but there are several technologies that 
  might change the way we travel. Most interesting to me is Vehicle 
  Infrastructure Integration, which essentially makes every car a node 
  in a peer-to-peer network. In the early stages, this will be used 
  for realtime traffic data and the like, but it could be an 
  incremental on-ramp, as it were, to the self-driving cars of the 
  future, which can fit more cars on the existing asphalt with less 
  congestion, and let you safely talk on the phone because the car 
  computer is handling the driving. An alternative path being explored 
  to the same destination is the "smart highway"; but which do you 
  think makes more sense, putting a few billion dollars into every 
  road, or incrementally upgrading the smarts of each automobile?

<http://www.its.dot.gov/>

  (Speaking of which... only a government would inflict its employees 
  with a URL with the _word_ "dot" in the domain. Imagine yourself at 
  parties: "hi, I'm Jeff at dot dot gov.")

  I did see a few other things of note.

  Vonage was handing out their $39.99 V-Phone for laptops; 
  essentially, it's just a 250 MB USB flash drive with a 2.5mm 
  headphone/microphone jack. It came with the Windows software to make 
  calls, but they neglected to include the Mac version (despite ample 
  room on the drive), so I can't comment on its sound quality just 
  yet. You can try it out yourself by downloading the Mac software, 
  along with a 30-day trial account. You don't need the USB dongle - 
  the Mac audio in/out will work fine - although I can tell you from 
  experience that it's nice to have a dedicated hardware port to use 
  with Vonage and similar software.

<http://www.vonage.com/device.php?type=VPHONE>
<http://www.vonage.com/images/vphone.jpg>
<http://www.vonage-forum.com/ftopic21146.html>

  If you have a bunch of home electronics that aren't yet wireless, 
  and you're tired of stringing 100-foot cables from room to room, you 
  might want to check out MoCA (the Multimedia over Coax Alliance), an 
  industry consortium that's creating standards aimed at letting you 
  use your home's existing internal coaxial cable for home networking.

<http://mocalliance.org/>

  Wacom impressed me with the $999 Cintiq 12WX external touchscreen 
  monitor. Hook it up as an external monitor to your Mac, and you end 
  up with a touch-sensitive tablet displaying the video; the 
  promotional materials show it in use with Photoshop and a Wacom pen. 
  The 12.1-inch Cintiq 12WX requires an external control box, so I 
  wouldn't think of it as providing an ersatz tablet computing 
  experience, unless you're crazy enough like _some_ people to carry 
  around lots of hardware (see "Build Your Own 23-inch MacBook," 
  2007-02-05).

<http://www.wacom.com/cintiq/12WX.cfm>
<http://www.wacom.com/lightbox/images/Cintiq12WX_3.jpg>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8849>

  I didn't stick around to play with one, but I was impressed by the 
  brief demos I saw of the Moxi home digital media recorder system; in 
  addition to the Tivo-style capabilities, the hardware and software 
  provides a wide range of interactivity with your home network.

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

  I also missed a demo of the new Myvu personal media viewer headgear. 
  Like the i-Vue video eyewear I mentioned in "CES 2008 Day 1: 
  Keyboards, Power, Eyewear, and More" (2008-01-09), I'm intrigued by 
  wearable monitor technology, but without trying it, I can't tell you 
  if the Myvu video eyewear lets you see what's happening around you 
  better.

<http://www.myvu.com/>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2008-01/Myvu-video-eyewear.png>

  Finally, the award for best practical joke at CES goes to Dan Frakes 
  of Macworld. I ran into him in front of the Zoombak booth, where 
  they were demoing the $199.99 "LoJack for dogs" (actually called 
  "Advanced GPS Dog Locator"), a pager-sized device that you can 
  attach to a dog, suitcase, or some other similarly sized item that 
  might wander off without you. If it goes missing, you track said 
  item on their Web site.

<http://www.zoombak.com/>
<http://www.zoombak.com/products/pet/>

  But this wasn't immediately clear to me, and the way Dan described 
  it, I thought that Zoombak's stuffed animal giveaways _were_ the 
  product, and that there was a GPS locator chip inside so you could 
  track your children. (Which, frankly, strikes me as a pretty cool 
  idea, until such time as parents are comfortable with subdermally 
  "chipping" their children.) Trust me when I say this led to a highly 
  confused conversation between me and two PR guys.

  I'm still not sure whether Dan deliberately tried to put one over on 
  me, or if I'm just so fried this week that I jumped to conclusions 
  from his perfectly good explanation. Considering my conversation 
  about Tasers with Miss June 2004, I probably shouldn't blame him.


Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk/14-Jan-08
------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9400>

**Intuit** -- Rich Mogull's article on Intuit's mistreatment of its 
  users prompts one reader to suspect that the company isn't hostile 
  to Mac users - they secretly hate all their customers. (1 message)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1752/>


**Eudora question** -- Will switching Eudora to paid mode solve a 
  number of annoying errors? Or will the problem just go away on its 
  own? (16 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1753/>


**Intuit Alienates Mac Users With QuickBooks Fiasco** -- More examples 
  of poor customer experiences with Intuit programs leads one reader 
  to compile a list of 30 finance software packages for the Mac. (4 
  messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1754/>


**Backup Databases and Time Machine** -- When it comes to backing up 
  large database files (such as Entourage mail databases), Time 
  Machine can be very inefficient and slow, since it backs up the 
  entire file, not just recent changes. A reader suggests a workaround 
  that backs up those files regularly, but not on Time Machine's 
  hourly schedule. (4 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1756/>


**Endnote, Bookends, Sente, Zotero, oh my** -- Frustrated with 
  expensive upgrades and performance issues, readers discuss dropping 
  Endnote and using alternative programs. (3 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1757/>


**Aperture crashes** -- Updating to Leopard causes Aperture to crash 
  for a user, even under a clean test account. (1 message)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1758/>


**New Mac Pro Goes Eight-Core Before Macworld Expo** -- Readers 
  discuss the tech specs and timing of Apple's pro hardware 
  announcements of last week. (4 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1759/>


**Request for help: MacBook sound problem** -- Why would a MacBook 
  stop outputting sound? Readers suggest several possible fixes. (8 
  messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1760/>


**Parallels - Mac Upgrade for Tiger Disabled Drag & Drop?** The 
  convenient method of copying files to a Parallels environment by 
  dragging and dropping seems to be broken under Tiger, but other 
  options for moving files are available. (8 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1761/>


**Backing up Time Machine restores** -- After restoring a Time Machine 
  backup, the next Time Machine operation wants to make a duplicate 
  backup, using up much more disk space. (4 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1762/>


**Location-aware printing** -- Leopard will recognize your location 
  based on the network your Mac is connected to, and switch to using 
  the local printer automatically - sometimes. Are there other 
  location-aware applications that can do a better job? (7 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1763/>


**Mail is Slow** -- Readers bemoan performance of Mail under Leopard. 
  (2 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1764/>


**Widget Problem** -- For some reason, Dashboard widgets refuse to 
  appear for a user when Dashboard is invoked. Any suggestions? (2 
  messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1765/>


**Amazon MP3 Scores DRM-Free Music: What About Apple?** Readers 
  respond to Adam's article about Apple's capability to sell DRM-free 
  music. Is Apple being excluded by the music labels, or will Macworld 
  Expo bring more openness to the iTunes Store? (3 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1767/>


**New 8800GT video card** -- The new video cards available for the Mac 
  Pro models announced last week appear to work only with the newest 
  Macs, not earlier models. (1 message)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1768/>


$$

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