TidBITS#923/07-Apr-08
=====================
  Issue link: <http://db.tidbits.com/issue/923>

  Everyone seems to be communicating via instant messaging, but does 
  the idea of responding to short conversation bursts (or reading 
  Twitter posts) make you want to crawl into a small room and lock the 
  door? Joe Kissell looks at how his introversion feeds his aversion 
  to instant messaging (and how he uses that to his advantage). This 
  week also brings news from Adobe, as the company releases a beta of 
  Lightroom 2 (disclosing that the next version of Photoshop on the 
  Mac will not be 64-bit capable) and updates the Photoshop Express 
  terms of service concerning Adobe's usage of users' photos. In other 
  news, Adam explains how to fix corrupt Eudora mailboxes (from recent 
  first-hand experience, of course), AT&T lowers its cancellation fee 
  for new subscribers, Glenn and Joe talk Time Capsule and backups on 
  the MacVoices podcast, Glenn gets confirmation from Apple that Time 
  Machine backups to AirPort Disk aren't supported, and we (finally) 
  reinstate the printer-friendly mode for viewing TidBITS articles on 
  the Web. Lastly, in the TidBITS Watchlist, we note updates to 
  Daylite, MacSpeech Dictate, YummySoup, NetworkLocation, Default 
  Folder X, and Things. Apple joins in the fun with updates to 
  QuickTime, iTunes, Front Row, Keynote, and the AirPort Admin Utility 
  for Graphite and Snow AirPort base stations.

Articles
    Time Machine via AirPort Disk Is Unsupported, Apple Says
    AT&T Lowers Cancellation Fee
    Printer-Friendly Mode Returns to TidBITS
    MacVoices Podcast Covers Time Capsule Ins and Outs
    64-bit Controversy Accompanies Lightroom 2 Beta
    Adobe Adjusts Photoshop Express Terms of Service
    How to Fix Corrupt Eudora Mailboxes
    Instant Messaging for Introverts
    TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 07-Apr-08
    Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk/07-Apr-08


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

* READERS LIKE YOU! Support TidBITS with a contribution today! 
  <http://www.tidbits.com/about/support/contributors.html> 
  Special thanks this week to Jason Kerr, Harvey Barnett, 
  Daniel R. Wolter, and Fred Lampe for their generous support!

* Fetch Softworks: With Fetch 5.3, FTP and SFTP are simpler 
  than ever. Use it on Mac OS X to upload, download, mirror, 
  and manage your Web site, eBay images, and data sets. 
  Download your free trial version! <http://fetchsoftworks.com/>

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

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

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

* VMware Fusion. The most seamless way to run Windows on your Mac. 
  Backed by nearly a decade of proven virtualization technology. 
  Try VMware Fusion today for free, or order online for only $79. 
  Visit: <http://www.tidbits.com/about/support/vmware-fusion.html>

* StuffIt Deluxe 12: breakthrough compression of MP3 files, PDFs, 
  iWork and MS Office files! Reduce JPEG file sizes with no loss in 
  quality, burn to CD/DVD, back up archives to iDisk and more. Buy 
  today for only $59.99! <http://www.stuffit.com/mac/deluxe/tb/>

* ConceptDraw Business Suite: Take control over your business 
  workflow with this powerful set of tools. Mind Mapping, Project 
  Management, Business Graphics - all easily created on your Mac! 
  Right now Special Price: $449! <http://www.conceptdraw.com/tb>

* DealBITS: Get the word out about your product AND generate sales! 
  It's easy: give away a few copies and offer a discount to entrants. 
  A DealBITS drawing is quick to set up and can easily pay for itself. 
  For more info and rates, visit <http://www.tidbits.com/dealbits/>.

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


Time Machine via AirPort Disk Is Unsupported, Apple Says
--------------------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9547>

  Apple confirmed for me last week that a feature for using hard 
  drives attached via USB to an AirPort Extreme Base Station is an 
  unsupported feature. The company declined to provide further 
  information. This feature was available in the betas of Mac OS X 
  10.5 Leopard, as has been widely reported, but was removed from the 
  public Leopard feature list and from the shipping version of the 
  operating system. Apple had been working on providing me a 
  definitive statement since my review of Time Capsule for Macworld 
  was published on 21-Mar-08.

<http://www.macworld.com/article/132627/2008/03/timecapsule.html>

  What a "lack of support" means is that if you attempt to use an 
  802.11n AirPort Extreme Base Station for Time Machine backup, you 
  won't get any help from Apple's technical support, something that 
  readers have already told me. I've been receiving reports that 
  USB-attached drives work erratically with an AirPort Extreme. 
  TidBITS editor Joe Kissell and I have been discussing the strange 
  array of scenarios in which you find an Apple Filing Protocol (AFP) 
  volume that's shared by the AirPort Extreme server not appearing 
  automatically for Time Machine. (See "MacVoices Podcast Covers Time 
  Capsule Ins and Outs," 2008-04-03, for links to the podcasts. I also 
  talked about Time Capsule and this problem in a podcast on 26-Mar-08 
  with Jason Snell, editorial director for Macworld.)

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9543>
<http://www.macworld.com/article/132703/2008/03/mwpodcast117.html>

  This option to choose an AirPort Extreme-connected drive first 
  appeared with the release of several related firmware, driver, and 
  operating system updates on 19-Mar-08 (see "AirPort Update Extends 
  Time Capsule, Adds AirDisk Support," 2008-03-19). I speculated at 
  the time that this addition was an error on Apple's part, perhaps 
  due to a debugging feature left turned on that wasn't properly 
  turned off before the updates shipped. This was buttressed in part 
  by the way in which Time Capsule drives - whether an internal drive 
  or ones connected externally via USB - appear via Bonjour in a list 
  of selectable volumes when setting up Time Machine, but AirPort 
  Extreme disks do not.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9517>

  For more background on this situation, see the original response I 
  had in "Time Capsule and Its Associated Rage Factor, 2008-01-17" and 
  details on Time Capsule's USB drive support in "Time Capsule Ships 
  with Support for USB Drive Backups," 2008-02-29.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9407>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9479>

  Somewhere along the line, Apple changed the name of this concept of 
  sharing drives from USB over the network from "AirDisks" to "AirPort 
  Disks."

<http://www.apple.com/airportextreme/features/harddrivesharing.html>


AT&T Lowers Cancellation Fee
----------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9541>

  Exclusive U.S. iPhone carrier AT&T will reduce its cancellation fee 
  for ending a cell-phone contract before its term, starting with new 
  contracts on 25-May-08. On that date, 1- or 2-year contracts will 
  have an initial $175 cancellation fee that will be reduced by $5 
  each month during the contract term - $60 per year. This is part of 
  a trend among carriers to remove fixed cancellation fees. 

<http://www.att.com/gen/press-room?pid=4800&cdvn=news&newsarticleid=25390>

  Existing contracts won't see a change in their penalties. But based 
  on previous offers made to me by managers at cellular company mall 
  kiosks and freestanding stores, it's pretty easy either to get the 
  fee paid by a company that wants you as a customer, or to have the 
  fee waived if you have multiple lines, one or more of which has 
  already gone free agent with the expiration of a contract.

  AT&T has tried to provide the semblance of openness, a new meme for 
  the cell phone industry prodded by several efforts on the part of 
  Google, and notes in their press release that customers can also 
  choose month-by-month plans, bring their own phones or devices and 
  rent a SIM (Subscriber Identity Module) a month at a time, or use 
  AT&T's GoPhone prepaid service which requires no contract 
  commitment.


Printer-Friendly Mode Returns to TidBITS
----------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9546>

  Fans of the plain-vanilla method of displaying Web pages suitable 
  for printing (or even simplified on-screen reading and PDF making) 
  will be happy to know that we have restored our printer-friendly 
  article formatting mode.

  As regular readers know, over the last two years, we've overhauled 
  nearly every aspect of how TidBITS is written, edited, staged, 
  published, and composed into email issues. Somewhere along the line, 
  we stuck a to-do note on the virtual wall saying, "Remember to bring 
  back printer-friendly articles." (See, for instance, "Designing a 
  Modern Web Site for TidBITS," 2007-09-10.)

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

  At the top of every article you'll now see a Print link with a page 
  icon next to it. Click that, and you're taken to a nearly color-free 
  - to paraphrase Dr. Hibbert from _The Simpsons_, "Black is _not_ a 
  color" - page in which the links are referenced by number and listed 
  neatly at the bottom. Images are also removed. As an example, try 
  viewing this article in printer-friendly mode.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9546?print_version=1>

  We hope we've saved a tree or two by restoring this mode for those 
  who prefer to print articles from the Web. 


MacVoices Podcast Covers Time Capsule Ins and Outs
--------------------------------------------------
  by Tonya Engst <tonya@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9543>

  If you want to know more about Apple's new Time Capsule or about how 
  using Time Capsule compares to making backups with the newly 
  available option of using Time Machine with a drive attached to an 
  AirPort Extreme Base Station, tune into a recent pair of MacVoices 
  podcasts, which bring together the networking perspective offered by 
  Glenn Fleishman and the backups expertise brought by Joe Kissell.

  In MacVoices #873 they talk about the pros and cons of Time Capsule, 
  plus how it works under the hood. In MacVoices #874 the pair 
  continues the conversation, looking at who Time Capsule is 
  well-suited to, how backing up to Time Capsule compares to backing 
  up to a drive attached to a regular AirPort Extreme Base Station, 
  unexpected differences between the two Time Capsule models, and 
  recommendations for which of Apple's hardware-based backup solutions 
  to use.

<http://www.macvoices.com/wordpress/macvoices-873-talking-time-capsule-and-more-with-glenn-fleishman-and-joe-kissell-part-1/>
<http://www.macvoices.com/wordpress/macvoices-874-talking-time-capsule-time-machine-and-more-with-glenn-fleishman-and-joe-kissell-part-2/>


64-bit Controversy Accompanies Lightroom 2 Beta
-----------------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9550>

  Adobe announced the availability of the Photoshop Lightroom 2 public 
  beta last week, but a post on an Adobe blog generated almost as much 
  attention. In addition to adding new features, the Lightroom beta is 
  capable of taking full advantage of the 64-bit processors found in 
  Mac Pro models. (64-bit support is also included with Lightroom 2 
  under Windows Vista.)

<http://labs.adobe.com/technologies/lightroom/>

  The rub is that Photoshop, Adobe's image editing powerhouse, won't 
  gain 64-bit compatibility on the Mac for at least two revisions. In 
  a blog post, Adobe's John Nack explained that the discrepancy 
  between Photoshop and Lightroom is due to Photoshop's Carbon code 
  base:

<http://blogs.adobe.com/jnack/2008/04/photoshop_lr_64.html>

  "At the WWDC show last June [2007], however, Adobe & other 
  developers learned that Apple had decided to stop their Carbon 64 
  efforts. This means that 64-bit Mac apps need to be written to use 
  Cocoa (as Lightroom is) instead of Carbon. This means that we'll 
  need to rewrite large parts of Photoshop and its plug-ins 
  (potentially affecting over a million lines of code) to move it from 
  Carbon to Cocoa."

  As Nack elaborated, the lack of a 64-bit version of Photoshop isn't 
  a crippling blow to the Mac. In fact, most of the blog post is 
  devoted to heading off wild speculation about Adobe's or Apple's 
  intentions (and pointing out that Final Cut Pro, iTunes, and the Mac 
  OS X Finder are all built in Carbon). A 32-bit Photoshop CS4 will no 
  doubt run just fine. It will just not have the capability to handle 
  very large amounts of data (more than 4 GB) at once.

  As for the actual software released last week, Lightroom 2 adds a 
  number of new features such as multiple-monitor support, smart 
  collections (the capability to group photos automatically according 
  to metadata), and a clever method of suggesting related keywords as 
  you tag your photos.

  Lightroom 2 can also apply edits to select portions of an image 
  instead of just to the entire image. (Aperture 2.1, released the 
  previous week, added this capability through a new plug-in system; 
  see "Aperture 2.1 Adds Plug-in Capability to Edit Photos," 
  2007-09-07.)

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9536>

  Existing Lightroom owners can participate in the beta until version 
  2.0 is released by entering their serial numbers. They can also 
  invite friends to try the beta for the entirety of the program. For 
  everyone else, a 30-day evaluation period is available. The software 
  is a 24.7 MB download. The Lightroom 2.0 beta is installed 
  independently of earlier Lightroom versions, so photographers can 
  evaluate it without putting existing libraries and workflows at 
  risk.

<https://www.adobe.com/cfusion/entitlement/index.cfm?e=labs_lightroom_invite>
<https://www.adobe.com/cfusion/entitlement/index.cfm?e=labs%5Flightroom2>


Adobe Adjusts Photoshop Express Terms of Service
------------------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9548>

  Shortly after Adobe opened the public beta of its Photoshop Express 
  online photo-editing service, several early users who actually read 
  the site's terms of service noticed language that, in effect, gave 
  Adobe almost free reign with images that people uploaded and 
  publicly shared in galleries (see "Photoshop Express Offers Free 
  Photo Editing on the Web," 2007-09-07). Adobe has now posted revised 
  terms that clarify the company's usage.

<http://www.photoshop.com/express/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9526>

  The new wording goes into effect on 10-Apr-08, and is marked in red 
  on the Web page listing the terms. Section 8a now reads (additional 
  language in italics here):

<https://www.photoshop.com/express/terms.html>

  "Adobe does not claim ownership of Your Content. However, with 
  respect to Your Content that you submit or make available for 
  inclusion on publicly accessible areas of the Services, _and unless 
  otherwise specifically agreed in any Additional Terms that might 
  accompany individual services (such as Photoshop.com/Express)_, you 
  grant Adobe a worldwide, royalty-free, nonexclusive, perpetual, 
  irrevocable, and fully sublicensable license to use, distribute, 
  reproduce, modify, adapt, publish, translate, publicly perform and 
  publicly display such Content (in whole or in part) and to 
  incorporate such Content into other Materials or works in any format 
  or medium now known or later developed."

  To my surprise, the offending language (everything after "... you 
  grant Adobe...") remains. However, the new clause's pointer to the 
  Additional Terms of Use document reveals limitations to Adobe's 
  usage that were present at the beginning; Adobe has clarified the 
  link between the two documents. None of this language is new:

<https://www.photoshop.com/express/pxterms.html>

  "Adobe does not claim ownership of Your Content. However, we do need 
  certain rights from you, with respect to Your Content, in order to 
  operate the Service and in order to enable you to do all the things 
  this Service affords you the ability to do. Therefore, with respect 
  to Your Content, you grant Adobe a worldwide (because the internet 
  is global), royalty-free (meaning we do not owe you any money), 
  nonexclusive (meaning you are free to license Your Content to 
  others) fully sublicensable (so that we can permit our affiliates, 
  subcontractors and agents to deliver the Service on our behalf) 
  license to use, reproduce and modify Your Content solely for the 
  purposes of operating the Service and enabling your use of the 
  Service. With respect to Your Shared Content, you additionally grant 
  Adobe the rights to distribute, publicly perform and publicly 
  display Your Shared Content (in whole or in part) for the sole 
  purposes of operating the Service and enabling your use of the 
  Service and to sublicense Your Shared Content to Other Users subject 
  to the limitations of Section 7 below. These limited licenses do not 
  grant Adobe the right to sell or otherwise license Your Content or 
  Your Shared Content on a stand alone basis. Further, you may 
  terminate Adobe's right to distribute, publicly perform and publicly 
  display Your Shared Content by making it no longer shared. You may 
  terminate the remainder of Adobe's rights by removing Your Content 
  from the Service."

  Adobe also clarified its stance on being able to claim revenue from 
  ads and other initiatives that appear on the same page as a user's 
  content, by editing section 10a:

  _"You agree that Adobe may derive revenue and or other remuneration 
  from the Services including from portions of the Services that 
  include Your Content._ For example, Adobe may display Adobe and/or 
  third party paid advertisements and other information adjacent to or 
  included with the Services and adjacent to or in connection with 
  Your Content, and you agree that you are not entitled to any 
  compensation for any such advertisements. The manner, mode and 
  extent of advertising _or other revenue generating models_ by Adobe 
  on _or in conjunction with_ the Services are subject to change 
  without specific notice to you."

  The 10-Apr-08 implementation date is there to give any existing 
  users time to review the new terms. Comments from people at Adobe 
  indicate that the company wasn't attempting to grab rights it 
  shouldn't have, and it's good to see that their lawyers clarified 
  the language.


How to Fix Corrupt Eudora Mailboxes
-----------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9545>

  Although Eudora 6.2.4 has taken some body blows from Mac OS X 10.5 
  Leopard, the email program largely keeps on ticking. That's not to 
  say that it's as stable as it used to be, and I'm experiencing more 
  crashes and oddities than in the past. Most recently, I was doing 
  something with an in-progress message in the Out box and Eudora got 
  confused, started chewing CPU time, and wouldn't respond to the 
  keyboard or mouse. After a while I gave up and force quit the 
  program by Option-clicking Eudora's Dock icon and choosing Force 
  Quit.

  Unfortunately, when I relaunched Eudora, all the messages in my Out 
  mailbox since 14-Feb-08 showed a recovered status (a ?) instead of 
  the correct status, and all of Eudora's automatically saved versions 
  over the few days were visible. (When you use Eudora's auto-save 
  functionality, it saves copies of your message as you type, but 
  doesn't erase interim versions until you compact the mailbox, which 
  happens automatically at various times and can be invoked manually 
  by clicking the mailbox size box in the lower left corner of a 
  mailbox window. To turn on auto-save on 2 minute intervals, click 
  this x-eudora-setting:11520=120 URL within Eudora.)

  But when I started checking out some of the interim versions of 
  messages, it became clear that the problem went deeper, since 
  message summaries for the recovered messages no longer matched their 
  contents, and message contents no longer even filled in the 
  appropriate fields in a message window. Clearly the mailbox's table 
  of contents had become corrupted. In other programs, such a problem 
  might require relying on a special database utility. But this is 
  Eudora, which was developed when text files and resource forks ruled 
  the Earth.

  Long ago, Eudora creator Steve Dorner had told me how to fix a 
  corrupted mailbox, and it's something that anyone can do by 
  following these steps:

  1. Quit Eudora.

  2. Duplicate the Out box file, which is stored in ~/Documents/Eudora 
  Folder/Mail Folder by default, so you have a backup copy. If you're 
  nervous, make another copy on the Desktop. You can throw these out 
  when you're done if everything goes well.

  3. Open the Out box file using a plain text editor like the free 
  TextWrangler from Bare Bones. It may be a bit slow to work with a 
  very large mailbox (mine was over 30 MB), but it should be able to 
  handle the file.

<http://www.barebones.com/products/textwrangler/>

  4. Copy the first line of the file, which should look something like 
  the line below, and paste it on a line by itself at the very end of 
  the file.

    From ???@??? Fri Jun 16 22:52:45 2006

  5. Save the file, being absolutely certain to save as plain text 
  with Mac line breaks (likely the default in a plain text editor like 
  TextWrangler).

  6. Launch Eudora again, and open the Out mailbox. 

  In theory, that should cause Eudora to realize that the table of 
  contents, usually stored in the file's resource fork, is corrupt and 
  to rebuild it by looking at the mailbox data itself. You may lose 
  Eudora-specific data such as status and label, since that 
  information exists only in the table of contents, but that's much 
  less of a worry than not being able to access the messages at all. 
  If it works for you, great, and you're done.

  However, in my case, although this fix solved the problem of the 
  messages not matching their message summaries, all the dates on the 
  problematic messages were set to the same date. That wouldn't have 
  been the end of the world, but I was unhappy about it, since I like 
  to know when I sent a message. Referring to some more advice from 
  Steve Dorner, I followed these steps (I used Tiger, and I expect 
  they'd work in Leopard, but I'm less sure of Panther):

  1. Option-click the ? status for one of the messed-up messages to 
  select all of them (insert obligatory "I can't believe other 
  programs lack this insanely useful shortcut!" comment).

  2. Transfer the selected messages to a new temporary mailbox by 
  choosing Transfer > New. Call the new mailbox tempBox.

  3. Quit Eudora.

  4. Now you need to delete the resource fork from the tempBox 
  mailbox. Run Terminal and navigate to the folder containing the 
  tempBox mailbox. (The easiest way to do this is to type "cd" and a 
  space, drag the folder containing tempBox to the Terminal window, 
  and then press Return.) Now enter this command:

    cp /dev/null tempBox/rsrc

  5. Launch Eudora again, open the tempBox mailbox to rebuild the 
  table of contents, and verify that the dates have been fixed.

  6. Select all the messages and transfer them back to the Out box. 
  Once they're back (Eudora may warn about losing headers or images 
  that can't be found - don't worry about it), Option-click the unsent 
  status (a hyphen) for the transferred messages to select all of 
  them, click the status for one of them, and choose Sent from the 
  pop-up menu to reset them all to the Sent status (a checkmark). (If 
  you were performing this task on a mailbox other than Out, they'd 
  all come in with an unread status (a bullet), and you could change 
  that to read or replied or whatever). You can delete the empty 
  tempBox mailbox.

  7. Lastly, go through and manually delete any interim versions of 
  auto-saved messages. If you see four messages with the same Subject 
  line, delete the first three, since the last one is the final 
  version.

  Some users have reported troubles with Eudora's tables of contents 
  when running under Leopard, and they've worked around the problem by 
  switching from Eudora's default method of storing the table of 
  contents in the resource fork of each mailbox file to storing it in 
  an old-style .toc file. You can toggle that setting in Eudora's 
  Miscellaneous settings panel; there doesn't seem to be any harm in 
  trying it, although Eudora will complain if you have any mailboxes 
  with names longer than 27 characters, since the old-style .toc files 
  date from the time when filenames couldn't be more than 31 
  characters. Just rename those mailboxes in the Finder when Eudora 
  isn't running.

<http://eudorabb.qualcomm.com/showthread.php?t=13314>

  I tried this workaround but almost immediately ran into a problem 
  where reading messages in certain mailboxes wouldn't update the 
  status of those messages. It's possible I needed to delete the 
  resource forks in those mailboxes manually, but unless I start 
  having a lot more troubles, I'm going to stick with the normal 
  resource fork approach to storing tables of contents.

  For those of you who aren't happy with the workflow changes required 
  by other email programs and are sticking with Eudora 6.2.4 as long 
  as possible, I hope these instructions will keep your mailboxes 
  healthy. But remember, there's no substitute for frequent backups, 
  and if you're running Leopard, you should be backing up via at least 
  Time Machine as well.


Instant Messaging for Introverts
--------------------------------
  by Joe Kissell <joe@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9544>

  From time to time, someone I know asks me an ordinary and reasonable 
  question: "What's your iChat (or Skype) ID?" My usual reply is to 
  give them the information along with a big disclaimer: I'm almost 
  never logged in. In fact, let me be completely honest and say I 
  thoroughly dislike instant messaging (IM) except in a few specific 
  situations. For months, I've been thinking about why this is - both 
  the technological and psychological aspects - along with whether it 
  somehow exposes a fundamental character flaw, and whether it's 
  something I should attempt to change. Having experimented with a 
  variety of approaches to instant messaging (as well as its close 
  relative Twitter) and having done a considerable amount of 
  introspection, I'm inclined to think that my personality type is 
  fundamentally ill-suited to instant messaging. Specifically, I'd 
  like to advance the thesis that - for some people at least - an 
  aversion to instant messaging is a natural consequence of one's 
  temperament, and that this is neither good nor bad in and of itself, 
  though it does of course have consequences.

  This notion has been difficult for me to come to grips with, because 
  I'm a self-professed computer geek since way back when, someone who 
  lives and breathes technology. For me not to be excited about a 
  common modern mode of communication seems contradictory in some way. 
  In addition, my dislike for IM has caused - well, continues to cause 
  - practical communication difficulties. So I wanted to explore 
  what's underneath this, partly for my own benefit, but also as a 
  courtesy to others out there who may find themselves in a similar 
  situation and would like to commiserate, share their experiences, or 
  simply know they are not alone. And I want to offer suggestions from 
  my personal experience that may help others to make peace with 
  instant messaging, to one extent or another - or to better 
  understand those who seem to have the same trouble with it that I 
  do. Ultimately, I can't offer a solution that will magically and 
  perfectly bridge the gap between IM lovers and IM haters, but I hope 
  I can at least shed some light on what the situation looks like from 
  both sides.


**I Is for Introvert** -- Let me begin by stating that, like 25 to 50 
  percent of the world's population (depending on who's counting), I'm 
  an introvert. A common misconception about the word "introvert" is 
  that it means someone who's shy, withdrawn, afraid of crowds, or 
  lacking in social skills. If you've ever seen me give a presentation 
  to a large Mac user group, you'll surely know that description 
  doesn't fit me at all! I will happily stand in front of hundreds or 
  thousands of people, give a speech, answer questions, make jokes, 
  and generally take charge of keeping the group interested and 
  involved. If anything, I have a reputation for being long-winded in 
  social situations, telling stories that go off on one tangent after 
  another - and for being among the last to leave. I like people, and 
  I think I'm reasonably competent and comfortable in a crowd of any 
  size.

  However, given the choice, I do generally prefer to be alone. If you 
  asked me which would be more fun - going to a lively party where I'd 
  be socializing with a couple dozen other people or sitting in a 
  quiet corner reading a book - I wouldn't even have to think about 
  it: I'd much rather sit alone and read. All things being equal, I 
  prefer smaller gatherings to larger ones, and I prefer solitude to 
  company. To put it differently, being around other people seems to 
  drain my energy, whereas being alone (or with smaller, quieter 
  groups) gives me more energy. When I've spent hours around other 
  people, I need to be alone to recharge, whereas for an extrovert, 
  it's typically the opposite: being alone saps energy, and being 
  around other people restores it.

  Psychologist Carl Jung (himself an introvert) first developed the 
  notion of the introvert/extrovert distinction as a way of describing 
  whether a person's focus tends to be more inward or outward. The 
  categories don't represent simple binary states; there's a long 
  continuum between wholly introverted and wholly extroverted, and 
  everyone falls somewhere in between. In addition, a person may 
  exhibit introverted characteristics sometimes and extroverted 
  characteristics at other times. A variety of personality tests 
  reveal where on the continuum a person's tendencies lie - whether 
  you're strongly or weakly introverted or extroverted. One such test 
  is the popular Myers-Briggs Type Indicator, which employs the 
  idiosyncratic spelling "extravert" rather than "extrovert," and 
  which uses the terms primarily to indicate one's manner of spending 
  and drawing energy. Another good example is the Kiersey Temperament 
  Sorter.

<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carl_Jung>
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extraversion_and_introversion>
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Myers-Briggs_Type_Indicator>
<http://www.keirsey.com/>

  Introversion and extroversion are often referred to as "preferences" 
  or "attitudes," but such terms misleadingly suggest that either 
  characteristic is merely a matter of choice. In fact, being an 
  introvert is much like being left-handed: even though you may have 
  another fully functional hand that you could use, you didn't choose 
  for your left hand to be dominant and therefore the one you can use 
  more naturally, comfortably, and effectively. Although the influence 
  of nature versus nurture in the development of introversion or 
  extroversion has been much debated, research strongly suggests that 
  introversion is in some sense "hard-wired" in the brain. Once a 
  person has developed one tendency or the other, it's as difficult to 
  conceive of changing it as changing one's dominant hand.

  In decades past, left-handed people (like my grandfather) were 
  forced, sometimes violently, to write with their right hands, based 
  on the belief that right was right and left was abnormal and 
  therefore wrong. Today, even though lefties are still very much in 
  the minority, most people think such attitudes are ridiculous and 
  even offensive. But comparable enlightenment about introverts is 
  dawning more slowly. I routinely hear people talk about introversion 
  as a problem that needs fixing or as a trait that one should 
  actively try to suppress and change. True enough, extroverts tend to 
  be the movers and shakers, the squeaky wheels, and the stars. On the 
  other hand, many introverts have famously risen to positions of 
  wealth, influence, and authority - both in the real world (Warren 
  Buffett, Albert Einstein, Bill Gates, Al Gore, Julia Roberts, 
  Barbara Walters) and in fiction (Batman, Jane Eyre, Dr. Jean Gray, 
  Harry Potter, Mr. Spock). The point is: there's nothing wrong with 
  being an introvert, and this characteristic need not keep anyone 
  from success or happiness. Introverts can learn to work with this 
  trait rather than against it, while extroverts would benefit from 
  understanding introverts better and in some cases making 
  accommodations to interact with them more effectively.

  I learned about introversion and extroversion the same way I learned 
  about Macs: by experience and by reading. If you'd like to learn 
  more, I suggest (in addition to the links already given) reading the 
  book "The Introvert Advantage" by Marti Olsen Laney, Psy.D., as well 
  as "Caring for Your Introvert" by Jonathan Rauch in The Atlantic; 
  "Introverts of the World, Unite!," an interview with Rauch by Sage 
  Stossel; Extraversion/Introversion by Susan A. Santo, Ph.D., of the 
  University of South Dakota; and Spectatrix, a blog my wife runs 
  about life as an introvert. (And, no, that's not a contradiction!) 
  And if you'd like an easy way to find out where you fall on the 
  introvert-extrovert spectrum, try Quick Quiz: Extraverted or 
  Introverted? at Your Office Coach.

<http://www.amazon.com/dp/0761123695/?tag=tidbitselectro00>
<http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200303/rauch>
<http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200602u/introverts>
<http://www.usd.edu/~ssanto/extravert.html>
<http://spectatrix.com/>
<http://www.yourofficecoach.com/Topics/extrovert_introvert.htm>

  From considerable reading and from personal experience, I've learned 
  that introverts have a number of other tendencies. And taken 
  together, these traits may shed some light on why I (and numerous 
  other introverts I know) have a hard time with IM, Twitter, and the 
  like. For example, introverts typically need to concentrate on just 
  one thing at a time, and are often particularly sensitive to 
  interruptions and distractions. Now, I happen to think 
  "multitasking" is a concept that should never, ever be applied to 
  human beings (regardless of personality type), but be that as it 
  may, I can certainly say that I'm easily distracted, and having more 
  than one thing to  think about actively at any given time is sure to 
  make me both ineffective and grumpy. Chatting online while also 
  working on another task, therefore, is unthinkable. (For additional 
  perspective on what multitasking might mean to an introvert, read 
  Personality Types and Multitasking by Carol Kallendorf, Ph.D., at 
  BizWatch Online. Note that I'm not only an "I" ("introverted") in 
  Myers-Briggs terminology, but also a "J" ("judging"), which 
  apparently makes me the personality type least amenable to 
  multitasking!)

<http://www.bizwatchonline.com/Archive/August_2001/multitasking_personality_type.htm>

  Another typical introvert trait is wanting to compose one's thoughts 
  carefully before sharing them (either verbally or in writing). Once 
  again, while this doesn't prevent me from carrying on verbal 
  conversations at a normal speed, it makes rapid-fire online textual 
  conversations rather unnerving. For me, interacting with other 
  people in real time online is just as draining as interacting with 
  other people in person. So my feelings about participating in, say, 
  a lively multi-person chat are about the same whether we're talking 
  about iChat or a party. I can hold my own in the conversation and 
  it's generally fine, but because it takes a lot of energy I prefer 
  not to do it very often.

  Although I can't speak for every introvert in the world, I can say 
  that I genuinely enjoy connecting with other people. I like to know 
  what my friends are up to and I like for them to know what's going 
  on in my life. But when modes of communication like IM and Twitter 
  become the default way of sharing this information, that leaves us 
  introverts in a pickle. If we're never logged in to iChat or rarely 
  post on Twitter, our friends and colleagues may assume we're 
  avoiding them, or that we aren't interested in their lives. In fact, 
  nothing could be further from the truth. The disconnect manifests 
  itself by way of technology, but the reasons behind it are much 
  deeper.


**Quiet - I'm Thinking** -- The introvert trait of not dealing well 
  with interruptions comes into play in a couple of different ways 
  with IM. First, naturally, is the whole notion of something popping 
  up on one's screen demanding an immediate conversation. Let me give 
  you a personal perspective on this. Unlike many people, when I'm in 
  front of my computer, I'm working, which means I'm concentrating on 
  something. I'm writing an article, or a book, or an email message, 
  trying to come up with exactly the right way to phrase some sentence 
  or express a certain point. Or I'm programming, trying to solve some 
  logic problem. Or I'm reading an article. Whatever the activity, 
  it's something to which I am predisposed to devote my entire 
  attention. If the phone rings, or my wife asks me a question, or an 
  iCal alarm goes off, it breaks my concentration in a way that's 
  frustrating to recover from. I lose my mental place, and it takes me 
  a long time to get back into that same train of thought and finish 
  whatever I was working on. I'm not saying I need to write an entire 
  book without any interruptions, but when my mind is actively 
  juggling information, I need to complete that particular thought (or 
  block of code, or paragraph) before moving on to something else.

  This is why I love email as a mode of communication. I get many 
  dozens of messages every day, but I can answer them whenever I want. 
  I don't have to look at them right in the middle of this paragraph; 
  I can wait five or ten minutes - it doesn't matter (though in 
  practice, I usually answer email very quickly). Voicemail can make 
  handling phone calls similarly convenient. But instant messaging 
  isn't like that. If my status shows that I'm online, then people 
  expect an immediate response, and even though I could choose not to 
  respond, I'd still have the blinking, bouncing, or beeping 
  notification interrupting my train of thought - it isn't an 
  improvement for me.

  So in terms of IM status, I never consider myself "available" in the 
  sense of "interruptible." Ever. There is no time of any day, under 
  any circumstances, when I think to myself, "I really don't mind 
  being interrupted _now_." If I'm not at my computer, then most 
  likely a phone call or a knock at the door won't seem like an 
  interruption. But if I am at my computer, I'm concentrating, which 
  means I'm not "available" - I do mind being interrupted. And if my 
  status shows that I'm unavailable, as it invariably does when I'm 
  logged into iChat, most people will refrain from trying to start a 
  conversation - meaning I might as well be entirely offline. (Of 
  course, an "unavailable" status does convey some information, but 
  I'll return to this in a few moments.)

  (As an aside, if you guessed from the foregoing that I'm also not 
  the kind of person who is constantly making and receiving cell phone 
  calls, you're exactly right. I do own a cell phone, but I spend 
  maybe 10 minutes a month talking on it. I don't follow the typical 
  mobile urban lifestyle - I don't have a commute and dislike being 
  considered "on call" when I'm not in my home office. Sure, I'd love 
  to have an iPhone for the remote Web browsing, email, and all the 
  rest, but I've come to accept the twin sad facts that I can't 
  justify the cost of an iPhone given the amount of calling I do, and 
  that I'm unwilling to carry around both a cell phone and an iPod 
  touch. Oh well.)


**Can I IM You Now?** However, even though I'd theoretically prefer 
  never to be interrupted, there are certainly urgent situations in 
  which interruptions are not only acceptable but absolutely 
  necessary, and IM may be the handiest way to get someone's attention 
  in a hurry. Being perpetually unreachable can irritate your 
  coworkers and lead to misunderstandings. Unfortunately, current IM 
  software - and iChat in particular - hinders me from making myself 
  provisionally available for "just in case of emergency" 
  interruptions. Let me explain.

  I've tried using iChat's security features to grant or deny access 
  to certain people - for example, letting only important colleagues 
  see when I'm online. That prevents interruptions from random people 
  who just want to make small talk, but it forces me to keep iChat 
  updated with my status, and that's a real problem. Some people 
  manually change their iChat status constantly - you can be sure that 
  it always reflects not only their availability but the exact task 
  they're working on at the moment. I've tried doing this myself, but 
  invariably I either forget to change my status after a few hours or 
  simply get fed up with having to keep telling my computer what I'm 
  doing. I can't be bothered to inform iChat of my current mood or 
  activity over and over throughout the day.

  Of course, iChat can automatically change my status from "Available" 
  to "Away" when my computer is untouched for a certain period of 
  time. But I never want to advertise myself as being "available," so 
  that doesn't help. iChat can also indicate that I'm "idle" after a 
  period of inactivity, but only if my status was previously 
  "Available" - so that's no help either. I could create a custom 
  "Away" message (say, "Busy") and stay logged in all the time with 
  that status. But because "Busy" never changes to "Idle," my status 
  then provides no clue as to whether I'm at my computer - it only 
  says that my computer is turned on and iChat is logged in, which 
  could be the case 24 hours a day. If I always logged out or put my 
  computer to sleep when I stepped away, a "Busy" status would provide 
  more information, but once again, that forces me to do extra tasks 
  that I wouldn't ordinarily do and will in all likelihood forget.

  Apple (or perhaps an enterprising third-party developer) could solve 
  this problem for me by making the "Away" setting behave the same way 
  as "Available" - automatically switching to "idle" after a few 
  minutes without input. That way, I could stay logged in all the time 
  - with my red-badged "Don't Disturb Unless Absolutely Necessary" 
  status - but colleagues would still be able to tell whether I'm 
  actually at my computer without my having to update iChat manually 
  every time I get up.

  (Adam Engst also addressed part of this issue in his article "iChat 
  Status Report" (2004-03-29) - namely, the fact that iChat offers too 
  few options for setting one's status. Alas, Leopard's iChat is in no 
  way improved in this regard.)

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/7606>


**A Little Birdie Told Me** -- So far I've been talking about status 
  in the simplistic sense of "Am I interruptible?" But even though 
  many people use their iChat status to indicate things like their 
  mood or what they just ate for lunch, that isn't the best tool for 
  the job. Enter Twitter, which makes it very easy to supply your 
  friends with exactly those sorts of brief "what I'm up to" updates. 
  Other TidBITS staffers have voiced varying opinions about the 
  service. Adam Engst didn't like Twitter at first ("Visions of the 
  Sublime and the Inane," 2007-06-18) but, after seeing how it was 
  used at the C4 conference, he came around to thinking it was useful 
  after all, as he explained in "Confessions of a Twitter Convert," 
  2007-10-07). Tonya quickly followed suit, though she uses it 
  somewhat differently ("Twitter Turns Out to be Fun and Useful," 
  2007-08-24). Glenn Fleishman liked it but then decided it was too 
  overwhelming ("Conversions of a Twitter Revert, 2008-01-02) - and 
  then got sucked in yet again, as a way of maintaining some social 
  interaction after officemate Jeff Carlson started spending more time 
  at home with his new daughter.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9013>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9135>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9228>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9375>

  Twitter is a way of learning what other people are thinking and 
  doing (and telling them the same about yourself) with a minimum of 
  effort. Unlike IM, receiving a tweet in Twitter doesn't obligate you 
  to carry on a conversation, so even if, say, Twitterrific is running 
  in the background and pops up every time someone I'm following has 
  something to say, I find it much less intrusive and bothersome than 
  IM. I don't always read the tweets, but I often do, and I learn some 
  interesting things that way.

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

  However, when it comes to the flip side - posting my own stuff on 
  Twitter - my introverted nature causes problems again. For one 
  thing, being the inward-focused type that I am, the very thought of 
  constantly telling the world what I'm thinking or doing makes me 
  tired and gives me the vague sense of not having enough solitude and 
  privacy. I like feeling as though I'm snug in my comfy cave, minding 
  my own business and getting my work done. Having to (virtually) poke 
  my head out at regular intervals to announce what I'm up to requires 
  too much energy. It also feels like a self-imposed interruption, and 
  like all interruptions, it breaks my train of thought. Needless to 
  say, no one has to post every hour or even every day, and in 
  practice I generally lurk with quite infrequent posts, but then that 
  defeats the purpose of the system by not letting the people who are 
  following me know anything useful on a regular basis.

  I realize, of course, that Twitter's 140 character limit strikes 
  most people as being so brief that it requires essentially no 
  thought or effort at all to post a tweet. How can that be an 
  interruption? For me, it's not the number of characters that's the 
  problem, it's the need to mentally shift gears and add another task 
  to my list - "Decide what to say." You'll recall that introverts 
  like to choose their words carefully and deliberately, and so for 
  me, even a one- or two-sentence tweet requires thought and 
  consideration. That ends up being another task on my already full 
  schedule, so it happens infrequently.

  Two years ago, none of my friends or coworkers would have expected 
  these sorts of frequent glimpses into my mental state throughout the 
  day, because Twitter didn't exist. But now its use as a networking 
  and community-building tool has become so common that some people 
  have worried that I don't like them if I don't interact with them 
  regularly on Twitter! This troubles me - of _course_ I still like 
  you! - but it's tricky to solve the problem in a way that respects 
  the needs of both "innies" and "outies."


**The View from the Other Side** -- To this point, I've been saying 
  that introversion is a normal, healthy state for a great many 
  people, and that it could help to explain why some of us find 
  otherwise useful technologies - IM and Twitter - uncomfortable or 
  even distasteful. The implication is that all the introverts of the 
  world should (quietly) stand up (in a corner) for their rights and 
  insist (in a carefully and kindly worded letter) that the other half 
  cut us a break and lay off all the beepy flashy instant messages. 
  (Or, to put it less kindly, "Hey, _we_ don't need to change - _you_ 
  change!") Well, it's not necessarily that simple.

  Several people I discussed this issue with expressed dismay at 
  having had relationships deteriorate due to an unwillingness on 
  another person's part to adapt to changing technology. For example, 
  people who don't use email don't get evites, and so they end up 
  being excluded from parties. Once someone has adapted to a new mode 
  of communication, it becomes harder to communicate with people who 
  use the previous standard, so more often than not, we won't make the 
  effort. (How many personal letters did you write on paper and send 
  in the mail last year?) For better or worse, the wave of technology 
  sweeps us all forward, so if you avoid assimilation - no cell phone, 
  or no IM, or no whatever-the-next-thing-is, you'll find yourself 
  left out, and perhaps misunderstood. And for certain tasks, 
  regardless of your issues with a particular technology, there just 
  isn't another suitable way to get the job done. (Try getting a pizza 
  delivered to your home without using a telephone or a Web browser.)

  Without a doubt, there will be times when even the most introverted 
  among us has to just suck it up and deal with the unpleasantness for 
  a higher good - say, maintaining a relationship or keeping a job. 
  And almost certainly today's versions of IM and Twitter will be 
  greatly improved, or replaced by entirely new paradigms, within a 
  few years, so perhaps the problem will improve on its own. But in 
  the meantime, I'd like to suggest that the decision is not merely 
  "you do it my way or I'll do it your way." Introverts and extroverts 
  (or let's say, more broadly, those who think IM is icky and those 
  who think it's great) can meet in the middle.


**Suggestions** -- Despite my complaints about instant messaging from 
  my viewpoint as an introvert, I don't refuse ever to use iChat. In 
  fact, I find it a wonderful tool for doing certain tasks, not the 
  least of which is giving remote presentations (see "Using iChat 
  Theater for Remote Presentations," 2008-02-20). But for my own 
  sanity and well-being, I can't be logged in whenever I'm using my 
  computer, and I can't keep my status constantly updated. Similarly, 
  I do use Twitter, just not in the way that some people expect. If 
  you're an introvert struggling with IM, here are some things I've 
  tried that you might try as well.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9468>

* Get It Out in the Open: If someone is expecting you to communicate 
  via IM or Twitter and you're struggling with it, talk the problem 
  over. If you feel that the reason you're uncomfortable derives from 
  introversion, say so. It's nothing to be ashamed of, and you can 
  help to educate your extroverted friends about what communication 
  feels like to a large segment of the population. Point them to this 
  article, or to one of the books or Web sites mentioned above.

* Ping Then IM: Speaking only for myself - not for introverts as a 
  whole! - I don't consider email messages interruptions, because I 
  can put off looking at them until my brain is ready to switch gears. 
  In practice, I'm usually very speedy about replying to email. (I 
  believe in keeping an empty Inbox, so I can virtually guarantee that 
  messages won't go hours or days without being read, assuming I'm 
  awake and in physical proximity to my computer.) Chances are I'll 
  come to a convenient stopping point in whatever I'm working on 
  within a few minutes and look at any email that has recently 
  arrived. So for me, one way of addressing the IM problem is simply 
  to say to those who might wish to use iChat with me: if you need to 
  discuss something with me in a hurry, send me an email message 
  asking me to go online and chat with you or give you a call. In real 
  life, this will probably result in a delay of a few minutes beyond 
  the instant reaction you'd expect with IM, but only a few - and 
  you'll be doing an introvert a tremendous favor. If I don't respond 
  quickly, that most likely means I'm genuinely unavailable. And if 
  even that brief delay is unacceptable given the urgency of what you 
  have to discuss with me, call my cell phone. I have plenty of 
  minutes left! (Obviously, the person on the other end can't know for 
  sure how quickly I'll respond if they can't see my status - and this 
  would not be a good suggestion at all for someone who's slow 
  answering email - but this is at least a step toward compromise.)

* Schedule Chats: If I've scheduled a chat with someone in advance 
  (whether "advance" means minutes or months ahead of time), then I'll 
  be happy to be online at the designated time and devote my full 
  attention to the conversation. See if your friends and coworkers 
  will extend you the courtesy of scheduling chats, or at least of 
  setting aside certain times of the day during which you can be 
  safely offline without incurring anyone's wrath.

* Keep Chats Self-Contained: I've participated in chats involving half 
  a dozen TidBITS staffers that have gone on, in fits and spurts, for 
  hours. That means every time anyone posts something, I hear a sound 
  or see a visual alert of some kind, and I have to redirect my 
  attention to the iChat window to see what was said. This may happen 
  hundreds of times over the course of a few hours. If I ignore the 
  messages for a while, I have to scroll back to see what I missed - 
  invariably including several questions directed at me. So 
  practically speaking, if a chat is open, that has to be the _only_ 
  thing I'm doing. Switching back and forth doesn't work for me. The 
  moral of the story: if I participate in a chat, I need to be clear 
  that I'm going to have a conversation and then leave. Open-ended 
  chats, especially with multiple people, are a recipe for 
  unhappiness.

* Use Twitter to Announce Blog Posts: On those infrequent occasions 
  when I post a tweet, it's usually with a link to a post I've just 
  written on one of my blogs - killing two birds with one tiny stone. 
  (I happen to know that lots of people who follow me on Twitter don't 
  subscribe to the RSS feeds of all the blogs where I post.) If you 
  prefer the slightly more ponderous schedule of blogging, use Twitter 
  to bridge the gap with people who like more instant updates.

* Think Local, Act Mobile: My lifestyle doesn't involve texting or 
  chatting on the go, and it's possible that if I spent more time away 
  from my computer, I'd feel differently about IM and Twitter - and 
  use them in a different manner. Having an iPhone, BlackBerry, or 
  other always-online gadget in one's pocket can be convenient, and 
  can enable some people to spend their time more efficiently by, for 
  example, taking care of correspondence on the bus or train. But it 
  can also be extremely tiring for introverts to feel as though 
  they're perpetually involved in a conversation. Unless your 
  profession requires you to be reachable by anyone at any time, make 
  the Off button your friend - take deliberate breaks from being 
  connected to gather your thoughts and recharge.

  The discussions I've had with other TidBITS staffers while working 
  on this article have made it clear to me that the question of how 
  personality types affect the ways one communicates is a complex one; 
  it's a topic that tends to produce strong but mixed feelings. I 
  don't pretend to have all the answers, or even an entirely 
  satisfactory solution for myself. And, of course, I can't prove that 
  my theories about why I feel and behave the way I do are correct. 
  But what I hope to have done is shed at least some light on an 
  increasingly common source of grief. If you have opinions or 
  experiences of your own you'd like to share, I invite you to discuss 
  this topic on TidBITS Talk. Just remember: introverts may be in the 
  minority, but then, so are Mac users. There's no reason we can't all 
  get along!

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/webx?50@@.3cc0cd3b>


TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 07-Apr-08
---------------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9542>

* QuickTime 7.4.5 offers fixes that plug numerous security 
  vulnerabilities, improve compatibility with third-party 
  applications, and enhance reliability. Different versions are 
  available for Leopard, Tiger, Panther, and Windows. (Free, ~50 MB)

<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/quicktime745forleopard.html>
<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/quicktime745fortiger.html>
<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/quicktime745forpanther.html>
<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/quicktime745forwindows.html>

* Keynote 4.0.3 improves the performance and stability of the 
  application when working with large documents. Keynote 4.0.2 must be 
  installed to install version 4.0.3. (Free, 20.5 MB)

<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/keynote403.html>

* AirPort Admin Utility for Graphite and Snow 4.2.5 brings 
  compatibility with Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard to the administration 
  utility for Graphite and Snow (Dual Ethernet) AirPort base stations. 
  (Free, 6 MB)

<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/airportadminutilityforgraphiteandsnow425.html>

* iTunes 7.6.2 "provides bug fixes to improve stability and 
  performance." (Free, 45 MB)

<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/itunes762.html>

* Front Row 2.1.3 provides improved iTunes 7.6.2 compatibility. (Free, 
  20.5 MB)

<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/frontrow213.html>

* Things 0.9.1.1 from Cultured Code adds enhanced printing 
  capabilities to the Getting Things Done-inspired task manager. This 
  release also fixes some bugs with repeating items and quitting 
  Things before closing an edited item. (Free while in preview, 2.2 
  MB)

<http://culturedcode.com/things/>

* Default Folder X 4.0.3 from St. Clair Software brings to the Open 
  and Save dialog enhancement utility a new contextual menu that 
  enables you to rename, compress, and delete files and folders 
  directly from within Open and Save dialogs. Also improved is 
  compatibility with Microsoft Office, Adobe Creative Suite, 
  QuarkXPress, and other Carbon-based applications. The utility also 
  now uses significantly less processor time when idle. ($34.95 new, 
  free upgrade for recent purchases, $14.95 upgrade for purchases 
  before 01-Jun-07, 9.2 MB)

<http://www.stclairsoft.com/DefaultFolderX/release.html>

* NetworkLocation 2.3 from Centrix.ca adds new features and MacBook 
  Air support to the network automation utility for Mac OS X 10.5 
  Leopard. NetworkLocation senses changes in network configuration 
  (such as when moving from home to work networks) and based on 
  particular locations can change numerous settings, such as the 
  desktop picture and desired screen saver, the iChat status message, 
  the time zone, the system volume, what iTunes playlist is selected, 
  AirPort and Bluetooth availability, whether or not the keychain is 
  locked, the default printer, and more. Version 2.3 adds the 
  capability to run shell commands in Terminal, can check that network 
  connectivity is available before running other tasks, and more. ($25 
  new, free upgrade, 2.7 MB)

<http://networklocationapp.com/>

* YummySoup 1.6.7 from HungrySeacow Software adds support for 
  importing recipes from more sites to the recipe management software 
  (Andy Affleck's second-favorite contender in "Cook from Your Mac: 10 
  Recipe Tools Compared," 2007-09-21). Drag-and-drop recipe import is 
  now supported from BBCGoodFood.com, KraftFoods.com, and 
  Williams-Sonoma.com, in addition to AllRecipes.com, Epicurious.com, 
  FoodAndWine.com, FoodNetwork.com, MarthaStewart.com, MyRecipies.com, 
  MachaelRayMag.com, VegetarianTimes.com, and Yum-O.org. ($20 new, 
  free upgrade, 5.5 MB)

<http://hungryseacow.com/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9198>

* MacSpeech Dictate 1.0.1 from MacSpeech brings to the new speech 
  recognition system better documentation, easier license key 
  handling, and enhanced AppleScript support, including the capability 
  to create commands. Version 1.0.1 also includes a number of bug 
  fixes. Registered users can get it by using the Check for Updates 
  feature within the program. ($199 new (or more, depending on 
  headset), free upgrade)

<http://www.macspeech.com/pages.php?pID=53>

* Daylite 3.7.2 from Marketcircle adds to the productivity management 
  software the capability to merge letters with Word 2008 and Excel 
  2008 files, offers interface enhancements for previewing calendar 
  appointment details and scrolling daily appointment details in month 
  view, and provides a law template that establishes Daylite workflow 
  and tips for the legal profession. Daylite provides integrated 
  project, calendar, and contact management, plus integration with 
  Apple Mail ($49 extra) and iSync, along with connectors to 
  FileMaker, the MoneyWorks accounting package, and the LightSpeed 
  sales system. ($149 new, free upgrade, 47 MB)

<http://www.marketcircle.com/daylite/>


Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk/07-Apr-08
------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9549>

**Apple Becomes First Victim in Hacking Contest** -- A MacBook Air was 
  the first hacked computer at the Pwn2Own contest, but was it because 
  Mac OS X was more vulnerable, or because the Air was a more 
  attractive prize? (8 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1928>


**Security Update 2008-002 spells end to Zend Optimizer** -- The 
  latest security update causes problems with PHP applications that 
  use Zend Optimizer. (1 message)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1929>


**An overabundance of drives** -- What's the best way to allocate data 
  across four drives to ensure data integrity? (4 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1930>


**Anyone tried the Online Passport application system?** A reader 
  encounters difficulty renewing a passport online using Safari. (3 
  messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1931>


**Mac friendly Uninterruptible Power Supply** -- A reader solicits 
  opinions on which UPS to buy that can be managed from a Mac, 
  following the fiery demise of his previous unit. (11 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1933>


**Literature on Internet** -- After getting online via a 56K modem, a 
  reader is finally making the jump to broadband Internet access, but 
  is looking for more information on hardware required and other 
  issues. (2 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1935>


**Instant Messaging for Introverts** -- Readers respond to Joe 
  Kissell's article about his aversion to instant messaging (and the 
  reasons behind it). (8 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1936>


**SoSueMi** -- Apple is opposing an apple-shaped trademark used by New 
  York City's travel and tourism agency due to potential confusion 
  with the computer maker's iconic logo. (6 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1937>


$$

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

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

Copyright 2008 TidBITS: Reuse governed by Creative Commons license.

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





