TidBITS#965/16-Feb-09
=====================
  Issue link: <http://db.tidbits.com/issue/965>

  When you go on vacation, don't you wish you could leave your laptop 
  at home? Oliver Habicht reviews the compact Photo Safe II, which 
  stores photos and videos from your camera without a portable 
  computer. Elsewhere in this issue, Rich Mogull looks at what has 
  changed in Apple's recent important security updates, Adam 
  highlights a problem in the Finder that could lead to data loss and 
  notes free POP3 Hotmail access in the United States, Glenn informs 
  us about the new Web-based collaborative text editor EtherPad, and 
  Joe Kissell examines the long-delayed capability to share files from 
  one's MobileMe iDisk. By the way, what were you doing on Friday the 
  13th? Adam has declared every Friday the 13th (another one is coming 
  up in March) as International Verify Your Backups Day. We also note 
  the release of Ted Landau's "Take Control of Your iPhone, Second 
  Edition" and a pair of new Macworld Superguides. This week's TidBITS 
  Watchlist includes Simon 2.5, PasswordWallet 4.4.4, VMware Fusion 
  2.0.2, Chax 2.2, and Nisus Writer Express 3.2.

Articles
    Apple Releases Wide-Ranging Security Updates
    Apple Adds iDisk Sharing Feature to MobileMe
    International Verify Your Backups Day
    Free Hotmail POP3 Access Now Available in U.S. Too
    'Take Control of Your iPhone, Second Edition' Offers Key Advice
    New Macworld Superguides Cover Mac Security and Mobile Computing
    Finder Inconsistency Could Lead to Data Loss
    Photo Safe II Offers Worry Free Travel Backups
    EtherPad Brings Simultaneous Writing to the Web
    TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 16-Feb-09
    ExtraBITS for 16-Feb-09
    Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk for 16-Feb-09


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Apple Releases Wide-Ranging Security Updates
--------------------------------------------
  by Rich Mogull <rich@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10069>

  Apple has released the first general Mac OS X security update of 
  2009, patching a series of serious vulnerabilities that could allow 
  an attacker to take over your Mac. Security Update 2009-001 affects 
  both Mac OS X client and server, and all users are advised to update 
  their systems immediately. A complete list of changes is found in 
  the official security note on Apple's support site. Apple also 
  released a separate security update for Java for Mac OS X, and a 
  standalone update for Safari for Windows.

<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT3438>

**Safari RSS Fix** -- The most notable vulnerability patched (although 
  not necessarily the most serious) is a flaw in how Safari handled 
  links for RSS feeds that could allow an attacker to run arbitrary 
  code on your system. Programmer Brian Mastenbrook initially 
  disclosed the nature of this vulnerability on his blog without 
  exposing the details (see my article "Protect Yourself from the 
  Safari RSS Vulnerability," 2009-01-14). Mastenbrook provided some 
  initial workarounds to help users protect themselves that turned out 
  to be ineffective, and then posted a more complex workaround that 
  was both problematic for most users to implement, and sometimes 
  resulted in system problems. 

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10003>

  Mastenbrook has now posted further information on his blog 
  describing why he released his workaround before Apple issued a 
  patch. Mastenbrook stated he notified Apple six months before making 
  aspects of the flaw public, and revealed the information out of 
  concern that Apple was not patching the flaw and that the 
  vulnerability would be easy for someone else to discover and 
  exploit. The nature of the flaw does appear to be straightforward, 
  and his release of minimal information and a workaround likely 
  resulted in reduced risk for Safari users.

<http://brian.mastenbrook.net/display/28>

  The Safari fix is included in Security Update 2009-001 for Mac OS X 
  users, and is available as a separate download for users of Safari 
  on Windows. 


**Other Fixes** -- Security Update 2009-001 also patches a mix of 
  other security issues, including a few that potentially allow an 
  attacker to run any code on your system, or escalate their rights to 
  an administrative user (circumventing an important security feature 
  of Mac OS X). Some of these vulnerabilities are remotely exploitable 
  over the Web should you visit a malicious Web site.

  This update also includes some important fixes for users of Mac OS X 
  Server. One vulnerability, in the ClamAV package used by Mac OS X to 
  filter viruses out of email, could allow a remote attacker to 
  execute arbitrary code on the server (which is security-speak for 
  "take over your server").

  As with many Apple security updates, the fixes apply to a range of 
  Apple software and open source tools that are included in Mac OS X, 
  such as ClamAV, file sharing servers, and programming languages.


**Getting the Update** -- There are three separate updates: one for 
  Mac OS X, another for Java for Mac OS X, and a third for Safari 3.2 
  for Windows. 

  Security Update 2009-001 is available via Software Update or as a 
  standalone download for Mac OS X 10.4.11 and Mac OS X 10.5.6 client 
  and server. Separate downloads are available for Mac OS X Server 
  10.4.11 Universal (213 MB), Mac OS X Server 10.4.11 PowerPC (141.76 
  MB), Mac OS X Server 10.5.6 (46.54 MB), Mac OS X 10.4.11 PowerPC (74 
  MB) and Intel (164.23 MB), and Mac OS X 10.5.6 (43.4 MB).

<http://support.apple.com/downloads/Security_Update_2009_001__Server_Universal_>
<http://support.apple.com/downloads/Security_Update_2009_001__Server_Tiger_PPC_>
<http://support.apple.com/downloads/Security_Update_2009_001__Server_Leopard_>
<http://support.apple.com/downloads/Security_Update_2009_001__Tiger_PPC_>
<http://support.apple.com/downloads/Security_Update_2009_001__Tiger_Intel_>
<http://support.apple.com/downloads/Security_Update_2009_001__Leopard_>

  The Java update is also available via Software Update or as 
  downloads for Java for Mac OS X 10.4, Release 8 (1.6 MB) and Java 
  for Mac OS X 10.5 Update 3 (3 MB).

<http://support.apple.com/downloads/_Java_for_Mac_OS_X_10_4__Release_8>
<http://support.apple.com/downloads/Java_for_Mac_OS_X_10_5_Update_3_>

  Safari 3.2.2 for Windows is also available as a direct download.

<http://www.apple.com/safari/download/>


Apple Adds iDisk Sharing Feature to MobileMe
--------------------------------------------
  by Joe Kissell <joe@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10070>

  Apple has announced, through their MobileMe News blog, a new iDisk 
  feature that had been demonstrated, but then pulled, before the 
  release of MobileMe in July 2008. You can now easily share any file 
  on your iDisk with others, via email or the Web, with just a few 
  clicks. I complained about the absence of this feature on page 80 of 
  "Take Control of MobileMe," so it's nice to see that it has finally 
  appeared.

<http://www.apple.com/mobileme/news/2009/02/sharing-large-files-with-idisk.html>
<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/mobileme?pt=TB965>

  The example Apple gives to explain why this feature is interesting 
  is when you need to send a large file via email. If you want to send 
  someone a file larger than a few megabytes, you have to determine 
  whether both your email provider and the recipient's provider can 
  accommodate such large attachments - and even if they do, you might 
  worry because some email programs choke on large files. (MobileMe 
  limits email attachments to a maximum of 20 MB, and anything over 5 
  MB may have trouble getting through to other ISPs.) The old way of 
  working around this problem using MobileMe was to put the file in 
  your iDisk's Public folder and then email the recipient instructions 
  on how to access it there - a multi-step process even for Mac users, 
  and slightly more complicated on Windows. (Of course, there have 
  always been other ways to accomplish this without MobileMe - for 
  example, using the free Pando service or others of its ilk.)

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

  With the new sharing feature, here's what you do instead. First, put 
  the file you want to share anywhere on your iDisk - it need not be 
  in your Public folder. Next, log in to your account at www.me.com 
  and click the iDisk icon to display all the files on your iDisk in 
  your Web browser. Select the file you want to share and click the 
  new Share File button. MobileMe generates a unique, private URL 
  pointing to that file and displays it in a dialog. In this same 
  dialog you can optionally fill in one or more email addresses and a 
  message to send the URL to others; you can also choose whether the 
  URL expires after a period of time (the default is 30 days) and add 
  a password if you want. Click Share, and the file becomes available 
  at the new URL. (You can also, after the fact, modify the file's 
  expiration and password settings.) A Web-based tutorial walks you 
  through the whole process, but it's pretty self-explanatory.

<http://www.me.com/>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2009-02/iDisk-Sharing.png>
<http://www.apple.com/mobileme/tutorials/#idisk-share>

  If, during the sharing process, you opted to send an email 
  announcement, the recipient gets a message showing the file's name, 
  icon, and size, with a large, friendly Download button that 
  downloads the file in the user's default Web browser.

  As a number of commentators have already pointed out, with varying 
  levels of cynicism, Dropbox already offers the same capability, only 
  easier (see "Dropbox: A Collaborator's Dream," 2009-02-03), as does 
  SugarSync (see "SugarSync Sweetens Online Syncing," 2008-08-30). So 
  one way of looking at Apple's announcement is that they're once 
  again behind the curve in their online service offerings, only 
  belatedly (and partially) catching up with competitors that have 
  long since surpassed MobileMe in other respects.

<http://www.getdropbox.com/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10048>
<http://www.sugarsync.com/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9751>

  What's my take on it? I'm happy to see that Apple has finally made 
  good on an earlier promise, and I hope this signals that the company 
  is serious about expanding and enhancing MobileMe. For people who 
  already use MobileMe - especially those who don't want to bother 
  signing up for yet another service or installing another piece of 
  software - this new feature is huge. It will make a common activity 
  easier, more reliable, and less of a hassle. Could it be easier 
  still? Absolutely. (In particular, I sure wish I could do this 
  sharing directly from the Finder, without having to log in to my 
  account in a Web browser - and I wish I could share an entire folder 
  in this way, not just individual files.) But I can say for sure that 
  I'll use this feature often - in fact, it's likely to become my 
  default method for sending drafts of Take Control books to my 
  editors. 


International Verify Your Backups Day
-------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10071>

  I'm not a superstitious sort, though I admit to preferring a 
  particular jersey and shorts when I'm racing. But for many people, 
  Friday the 13th is an inauspicious day, long reputed to be unlucky.

<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Friday_the_13th>

  So I propose that we fight back against both superstition and the 
  forces of entropy that constantly tear down all those works we labor 
  so hard at creating. 

  The best defense against entropy is a good backup strategy. To quote 
  a long-ago ad campaign from backup software maker Dantz Development, 
  "To go forward, you must back up." 

  But as those of us who have had to rely on our backups in the past 
  know, the act of backing up is only the first small step in the full 
  equation - it's being able to _restore_ that really matters.

  Some psychiatrist friends with their own practice once ran afoul of 
  this in a serious way. Their bookkeeper had religiously been making 
  backups of all their invoicing and billing records as she worked, 
  but she had never tried restoring from those backups until her hard 
  disk died. When she went to restore from her carefully prepared 
  backups, she was aghast to discover that they hadn't been working. 
  Months of data was lost, and it was a huge problem both for the 
  bookkeeper and for my friends.

  Therefore, I humbly submit that Friday the 13th, whenever it rolls 
  around, should be considered International Verify Your Backups Day. 
  (The United Nations is welcome to make this official, and if someone 
  wants to add it to the Wikipedia page linked above, that would 
  undoubtedly help spread the word.) In 2009, Friday the 13th arrives 
  in February, March, and November. If you're reading this article on 
  some other day, I'd encourage you to verify your backups right away 
  and then continue with the Friday the 13th schedule.

  Take a few minutes to identify some critical files and see if you 
  can restore them successfully from your backups. If a bootable 
  backup is part of your backup strategy, make sure you can actually 
  boot from it. (If you don't have a good backup from which you can 
  restore right now, allow me to recommend two of our most popular 
  ebooks, Joe Kissell's "Take Control of Mac OS X Backups" or "Take 
  Control of Easy Backups in Leopard.")

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/backup-macosx?pt=TB965>
<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/leopard-easy-backup?pt=TB965>

  That's it. No costumes are necessary, there's no obligatory 
  greeting, and you aren't expected to make a special meal. If you 
  feel the need to honor your successful verification, well, a little 
  celebratory imbibing of your favorite beverage is never 
  inappropriate. 

  But do tell your friends, relatives, and colleagues about 
  International Verify Your Backups Day. Because losing data is not a 
  question of _if_, but of _when_, and good backups from which you can 
  restore reliably will protect you from unexpected losses small and 
  large alike.


Free Hotmail POP3 Access Now Available in U.S. Too
--------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10063>

  Thanks to Tech Night Owl Live host Gene Steinberg for alerting me to 
  the fact that Hotmail (officially known as Windows Live Hotmail) is 
  now offering POP3 access for free. That may seem 
  oh-so-twentieth-century, but for the gazillions of Hotmail 
  subscribers, it's a welcome way to read messages sent to Hotmail in 
  a desktop email client like Apple Mail, Microsoft Entourage, 
  Mailsmith, PowerMail, or Eudora. More interestingly, POP3 access to 
  Hotmail lets you combine multiple Webmail accounts (since you could 
  have Gmail pick up email from Hotmail via POP, for instance), or it 
  could let you access Hotmail via your iPhone's or Blackberry's 
  native mail client.

  Until recently, POP3 access was limited to paying Hotmail Plus 
  subscribers. But on 14-Jan-09, Microsoft announced the phased 
  rollout of free POP3 access for Hotmail users in the UK, Canada, 
  Australia, France, Japan, Spain, Germany, Italy, and the 
  Netherlands. Support for POP3 access in the United States and other 
  countries was promised for future phases, but no dates were given.

<http://windowslivewire.spaces.live.com/Blog/cns!2F7EB29B42641D59!32413.entry>

  Gene noticed that POP3 access worked in his U.S.-based Hotmail 
  account, and when I signed up for a Hotmail account and tested it, 
  it worked fine for me as well. It may not be universally available 
  yet, but it's also likely that Microsoft simply hasn't pushed out an 
  announcement. If POP3 access isn't yet available for your account, 
  you can reportedly fool Hotmail into enabling it by changing your 
  country temporarily.

<http://www.mydigitallife.info/2009/01/22/hack-to-enable-hotmail-pop3-and-smtp-support-instantly-for-all-countries/>

  Two notes. I'm sure Microsoft's Web services take an insane level of 
  attack, but the CAPTCHA required to sign up for a Hotmail account is 
  the least readable one I've ever seen. It took me multiple tries to 
  get one I could even guess at correctly. Also, when I configured 
  Apple Mail to pick up mail from Hotmail, it marked as spam the only 
  two messages in the account - the welcome message from Hotmail and a 
  simple test message I'd sent myself. I recommend additional 
  attention to your spam filter while it learns about the kind of mail 
  that comes in through Hotmail. 

  Although the basics of setting up POP3 access to Hotmail in your 
  email client are easy, be careful when entering the settings. I 
  couldn't connect until I realized I was supposed to use the full 
  Windows Live email address as my user name. The configuration 
  details are:

* Incoming Mail Server: pop3.live.com (Port 995)

* POP SSL Required? Yes

* User Name: Your Windows Live ID, for example, yourname@hotmail.com

* Password: The password you usually use to sign in to Hotmail or 
  Windows Live

* Outgoing Mail Server: smtp.live.com (Port 25)  

* Authentication Required? Yes (use your POP user name and password)

* SSL/TLS Required? Yes

  Although Hotmail isn't represented nearly as highly on the TidBITS 
  subscription list as MobileMe (over 7,000 mac.com addresses, only 
  about 150 me.com addresses), Gmail (over 2,700 entries), AOL (over 
  2,200), EarthLink (over 2,100), Yahoo (1,800), Comcast (1,700), or 
  Road Runner (1,000), we still have over 800 Hotmail subscribers. 

  Oh, and before you ask, I tried setting up IMAP access and pointing 
  my account at imap.live.com, but no luck. 


'Take Control of Your iPhone, Second Edition' Offers Key Advice
---------------------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10068>

  It's been a while since we've announced a new ebook, but we've been 
  hard at work and are pleased to let you know that Ted Landau's "Take 
  Control of Your iPhone, Second Edition" is now available, and it is 
  up-to-date for the latest iPhone 2.2.1 software release. Ted's a 
  writing machine, and he has pumped out a 183-page compendium (plus 
  additional online resources) of the most useful information about 
  the iPhone, with a particular focus on helping you work more 
  effectively, avoid trouble, and fix any existing problems. The book 
  normally costs $15, but as a limited time introductory discount, you 
  can get it for $10 with this link (follow the link, click the Buy 
  Ebook button, and your discount should appear in the first screen of 
  the shopping cart).

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/iphone?cp=CPN005590211DIS&pt=TB965>
<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/iphone?cp=CPN005590211DIS&pt=TB965>

  Taking the Murphy's Law approach that if something can go wrong, it 
  probably will, Ted explains how your iPhone figures out where in the 
  world it is, how it connects to the Internet and cellular data 
  networks, and how it communicates with your Mac. You'll learn key 
  details of syncing with iTunes and via MobileMe, how to manage your 
  apps, and ways you can share files with your Mac. The ebook helps 
  you get the most life from your iPhone battery and connect a 
  Bluetooth headset, and it provides tricks for typing more quickly 
  and accurately. You'll find a cornucopia of advice for making the 
  most of the main built-in iPhone apps, including iPod, Phone, Mail, 
  Maps, and Safari. But that's not all - extensive problem-solving 
  sections help you solve network problems, resolve sync conflicts, 
  avoid crashes, and, if necessary, restore an ailing iPhone from 
  backup.

  The ebook covers the iPhone from a Macintosh point of view, though 
  most of the information is useful even if you connect your iPhone to 
  a Windows PC. The ebook also covers the iPod touch; we just couldn't 
  figure out a clever way to work "iPod touch" into the title.

  For those who have the preview version of the second edition "Take 
  Control of Your iPhone," click the Check for Updates button on the 
  cover to access your free update. And if you own the first edition 
  of the ebook, also use Check for Updates to look for a 
  50-percent-off discount on the upgrade. We've also sent email to 
  these groups with details.


New Macworld Superguides Cover Mac Security and Mobile Computing
----------------------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10067>

  Keeping up with our own Take Control authors is hard enough, but 
  with our friends at Macworld putting together Superguides too, well, 
  we fell behind in the end-of-year crunch in 2008. We now have 
  Macworld's two most recent Superguides in our catalog. The "Macworld 
  Mac Security Superguide" is particularly interesting, thanks to its 
  real-world advice to help you maintain your privacy online, protect 
  your sensitive data, and keep your Mac safe from both malicious 
  software and intruders. The ebook also helps you lock down your home 
  wireless network, set up a firewall, and secure your data when 
  computing in public. $9.99

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/mw-security?pt=TB965>

  And for those who are ditching the desk chair for a 
  coffeehouse-based office for the first time, taking that first 
  laptop to college, or switching to a job that requires tons of 
  travel, the "Macworld Mobile Mac Superguide" helps you pick the best 
  laptop for your needs, find Internet connectivity wherever you go, 
  share files with your Macs at home, keep your data backed up while 
  on the road, and work through common problems when you can't easily 
  call anyone for help. $9.99

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/mw-mobile-mac?pt=TB965>

  The author lists for these ebooks again include numerous TidBITS and 
  Take Control contributors - yes, it's a small industry, and we work 
  with the best.


Finder Inconsistency Could Lead to Data Loss
--------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10062>

  Consultant Scott Rose has isolated a potentially dangerous problem 
  in Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard that could cause data loss for people who 
  rely on the Dock or the Apple menu's Recent Items submenu as a 
  launcher for in-progress documents. The steps to reproduce the 
  problem aren't likely to bite careful users, but it's easy enough to 
  see someone accidentally stumbling into the situation, as did one of 
  Scott's clients.


**The Problem** -- Assume you drag frequently used documents to the 
  Dock for quick access, and once in the Dock, you use those Dock 
  aliases exclusively for opening documents. Or, imagine that you use 
  the Apple menu's Recent Items submenu or applications' Open Recent 
  submenus to access your in-progress documents. Further assume that 
  for some reason, perhaps accidentally, you move one of these 
  important files to the Trash. 

  Normally, if you double-click a file in the Trash, the Finder 
  refuses to open it, telling you to remove it from the Trash first. 
  The warning makes perfect sense, since it would be all too easy to 
  empty the Trash while working and lose your file. 

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2009-02/Finder-Trash-warning.png>

  However, if you open a trashed document via the Dock, the Recent 
  Items submenu, or an application's Open Recent submenu, some 
  applications allow you to open the document, make changes, and save 
  your changes, all without the slightest warning. Were you to empty 
  the Trash, your data would be lost, and you'd be left with no 
  recourse short of a therapeutic bout of cursing. (And yes, this 
  would definitely fall into the category of "user error," but if 
  Apple is going to prevent people from double-clicking files in the 
  Trash, the least they can do is be consistent about other ways of 
  opening files in the Trash.)

  In a quick spot check of applications I use, programs that allowed 
  editing of files in the Trash include Microsoft Word 2004 (but not 
  2008), Microsoft Excel 2008, and BBEdit 9.1.1. Scott Rose also tells 
  me that he's verified the problem in FileMaker Pro (any version), 
  Quicken 2007, and Final Draft 7.

  On the other side of the spectrum, Apple's own TextEdit, Preview, 
  Pages '09, and Numbers '09 alert you that the file is stored in the 
  Trash and require you to save it elsewhere. Microsoft Word 2008 
  presents a clear dialog telling you to move the document out of the 
  Trash or use Save As. Adobe Photoshop CS3 lets you open the file and 
  make changes, but when you try to save, it forces a Save As without 
  any explanation. On my first test with Adobe InDesign CS3, it 
  crashed; subsequent tests merely closed the document without warning 
  or explanation as soon as I opened it.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2009-02/Word-2008-save-warning.png>

  Testing would be required to determine how any given program will 
  react to this situation, so if you rely on the Dock, Recent Items, 
  or Open Recent as a launcher for in-progress documents, you may wish 
  to check the applications you use. I haven't tested Mac OS X 10.4 
  Tiger with regard to opening trashed documents, but I'd guess that 
  the problem exists in that version as well.

  Exacerbating the problem is the fact that Leopard's Time Machine 
  doesn't back up files once they're in the Trash. It may have a 
  backup of the file before it was moved to the Trash, but that could 
  be significantly out of date, were you to empty the Trash and then 
  look to Time Machine to restore the most recent backup.


**Who's Responsible?** From the varying results in my testing, it's 
  clear that responsibility _currently_ lies with application 
  developers to notice that an open file is located in the Trash and 
  to prompt the user appropriately. Apple's own programs appear to do 
  that, and I strongly encourage developers to perform that check on 
  either open or save, preferably open. 

  More generally, though, and the reason I think Apple should modify 
  Mac OS X to eliminate this possibility of data loss, is that the 
  Finder and the Dock behave differently in exactly the same 
  situation, and the Finder itself displays inconsistent behavior. 
  Double-click a file in the Trash, and the Finder forces you to move 
  it before opening it. The Finder also warns you appropriately if you 
  put a document in the sidebar or toolbar, trash the file, and then 
  try to open it. But open a trashed file by clicking it in the Dock 
  or from the Recent Items submenu, and... it just works (which is a 
  bad thing, in this case). 

  For the sake of both consistency and safety, the Dock, the Recent 
  Items submenu, and the Open Recent submenu in applications should 
  refuse to open any file that's stored in the Trash. And, ideally, 
  the Finder should offer to move the offending file to the user's 
  Desktop, rather than just presenting an error dialog. That would 
  just be polite. 

  Plus, although fixing this bug would address the issue of opening 
  files in the Trash, I believe that Time Machine _should_ back up the 
  contents of the Trash, just like everything else, since it's all too 
  easy to create a file and trash it within the hour-long time frame 
  that Time Machine operates, thus preventing Time Machine from ever 
  seeing that file.

  I've reported this problem to Apple, and with luck, it will be 
  addressed in Snow Leopard.


  [Thanks to reader Matt Strange for suggesting that I investigate the 
  behavior of Recent Items and Open Recent as well. Based on those 
  results, I recast the article so it doesn't focus so much on the 
  Dock, since the problem obviously exists in other areas of Mac OS X 
  as well. -Adam]


Photo Safe II Offers Worry Free Travel Backups
----------------------------------------------
  by Oliver Habicht <oh10@cornell.edu>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10064>

  Recently my family took a three-week vacation overseas, and having 
  left my computer at home (hey, it was a family vacation!), I needed 
  a convenient way to store all the photos and videos that we were 
  taking. Adam had written about this topic a few months ago (see 
  "Backing up Photos While Traveling", 2008-08-11 and "More Photo 
  Backup Options While Traveling", 2008-08-12) and since he had 
  received a Digital Foci Photo Safe II for review after those 
  articles appeared, he asked me to give it a real-world test. 

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9728>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9732>
<http://www.digitalfoci.com/photo_safe.html>

  The Photo Safe II is a lightweight (0.6 lb/272 g) portable photo 
  storage device and memory card reader, and it proved a welcome 
  traveling companion. With it, I was able to back up all our photos 
  and videos as the trip progressed, copying them from our camera's 
  memory card every few days. I even had enough storage space to back 
  up all the photos taken by the relatives who were traveling with us. 
  And, although I didn't use it to add data in this way, it can also 
  work as a normal USB external hard disk (that's how you move data 
  from it to your Mac).

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2009-02/Photo-Safe-II.jpg>

  The Photo Safe II offers nearly foolproof backups. This is due to a 
  variety of features, and assisted by the excellent Quick Start Guide 
  which provides well written instructions, useful diagrams, and 
  anticipates many user questions. Perhaps the most important of its 
  features is that you can only delete photos from the device when 
  it's connected to a computer, effectively eliminating the risk of 
  accidentally wiping out your entire trip's pictures with the push of 
  a button.

  Further lessening that risk is the fact the Photo Safe II has only 
  two buttons. One turns it on or off when held down, or, when pressed 
  and released, toggles between pre-selecting the copy and delete 
  functions. The second button then executes either copying (all) 
  files from memory card to the device, or deleting (all) files from 
  the memory card. The latter action is somewhat safeguarded by 
  requiring you to hold down the button for three seconds. And again, 
  once photos are loaded onto the Photo Safe II, there's no way to 
  delete them using only the device's controls.

  Complicating things just a bit is the fact that the two buttons 
  offer a few other context-dependent functions. These include 
  recalculating the available space and displaying information (the 
  number of files copying and the target folder number) following a 
  copy. The former is clearly displayed, making it easy to know just 
  how much room you have left. That said, depending on how you're 
  using the Photo Safe II, you may find you don't need to check it 
  often. With the (now-discontinued) 80 GB model, even after I copied 
  several thousand photos and short videos to it, it still had over 56 
  GB available at the end of my trip. Of course, if you're also using 
  the device as an external hard disk, a more capacious model might be 
  required.

  It's important to realize that each time you ask the Photo Safe II 
  to copy a memory card, it does a _complete_ copy of the card and 
  puts the data in a completely new, top-level, sequentially numbered 
  directory, prefaced with the card type. Also important to realize is 
  that the copy action copies everything, not just photos and videos, 
  but all directory structures as well. 

  If you have one memory card, and you choose to make backups during 
  your trip without deleting files from the card, the last file copy 
  will contain the entire contents of your card. You can then ignore 
  all the previous copies. 

  However, if you're copying more than one memory card of the same 
  type, you need to compare the contents of the device's sequentially 
  numbered folders to make sure you get the correct data (since 
  they'll all have similar folder names). Apparently it's possible to 
  pre-create partitions on the device's hard drive, thus permitting 
  you to separate the data coming from different cards of the same 
  type, though I didn't try this. 

  However, I did successfully use the Photo Safe II with a wide 
  variety of point-and-shoot and SLR cameras that utilized the 
  following memory cards: SD (normal and HC), Sony Memory Stick Pro 
  MagicGate (High-speed), xD, and Compact Flash. The Photo Safe II 
  also has slots for many other types, such as CF Type I (including 
  Sandisk Extreme III, IV), MMC, SD/HC, miniSD, MS, MS PRO, MS Duo, MS 
  PRO Duo, and xD.

  During the trip, I connected the Photo Safe II to a PC running 
  Windows Vista (someone else's, of course) and it performed admirably 
  as an external hard drive. In fact, I even took the opportunity to 
  make a full copy of all our card copies to create yet one more 
  backup of everyone's photos and videos!

  The Photo Safe II can also copy data from MS/SD/MMC/xD memory cards 
  to a Compact Flash card. This would allow the risk-averse to create 
  yet another level of backup. One could perhaps then mail full 
  Compact Flash cards back home, or simply have enough peace of mind 
  to delete the photos on the camera's primary memory card.

  The Photo Safe II can be powered with its included rechargeable 
  battery, via the included AC adapter (sporting a small and 
  lightweight wall plug that's compatible with 100 to 250 volt power 
  mains), or via USB. Additionally, both the AC adapter and USB can be 
  used to recharge the battery within the unit, something that's 
  lacking in most cameras (sorry, just a pet peeve there). Included in 
  the package is an unusual forked USB cable. One end has a mini-USB 
  connector for connecting to the Photo Safe II, and the other end has 
  a both normal USB connector for transferring data to a computer, and 
  a second USB connector for delivery of even more power to the 
  device, presumably to speed charging. Ingenious!

  After a lengthy opportunity to explore the Photo Safe II, I'm left 
  with only a handful of quibbles: When the device was connected to my 
  Mac, I couldn't see the data within the inserted memory cards, only 
  the data on the device's hard drive itself. However, according to 
  the documentation, it's supposed to function as a memory card 
  reader. 

  Also, when powered by AC, I couldn't get it to recognize the memory 
  card. I had to pull the AC, turn it on with battery power, insert 
  the memory card which would be recognized, and only then could I 
  plug the AC in again and be fine thereafter. 

  Finally, and perhaps this was just an anomaly, at one point the 
  device's power indicator showed a single flashing bar when I was 
  using just the battery, indicating a low battery. When I turned it 
  off, and then back on, it indicated a full charge for quite some 
  time.

  Despite these minor quirks or aberrations, I highly recommend the 
  Photo Safe II as the worry free means of backing up on the go. The 
  Photo Safe II is currently available in 160 GB ($149), and 250 GB 
  ($199) models, and can be purchased from Digital Foci's Web site.

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


  [Oliver B. Habicht is an IT director in the Cornell University 
  Library. He's still looking for a tiny and quick point-and-shoot 
  digital camera that can charge via USB.]


EtherPad Brings Simultaneous Writing to the Web
-----------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9869>

  I like to write with others just about as much as I like to write by 
  myself. SubEthaEdit has long been one of our primary tools at 
  TidBITS for collaborating simultaneously among editors and writers. 
  The program lets us write in the same virtual document while seeing 
  each other type. We can quickly produce a lot of text and edit each 
  other's work, all the while checking in (sometimes through an iChat 
  backchannel) on changes as we make them.

<http://www.codingmonkeys.de/subethaedit/>

  Simultaneous writing might seem like the authorial equivalent of the 
  four-way intersection car crash in Steve Martin's "L.A. Story." 
  Instead, we find it makes it possible for us to write faster 
  (especially under deadline during real-time events) and to speed up 
  editing, as well.

<http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0102250/>

  EtherPad treads on SubEthaEdit's turf. The software, now available 
  for general use, is a free, hosted Web application with many of 
  SubEthaEdit's key collaboration features, while also being freed 
  from many of SubEthaEdit's desktop application constraints. 
  (EtherPad was originally released in a form of public beta, which 
  went private due to so much use. It opened on 03-Feb-09 to all 
  comers.)

<http://etherpad.com/>

  Let's take a look at the two.


**Compare and Contrast, in Real Time** -- SubEthaEdit (from Coding 
  Monkeys, 30-day trial, 29 euros or US$38) requires one writer to 
  host a document and others to connect over the Internet or using 
  Bonjour on a local network. Once the document has been announced and 
  unlocked, other writers who have been given read/write permission 
  are automatically assigned a unique color, and can begin editing at 
  once. Text appears color-coded by author as soon as a character is 
  typed or deleted on all participants' open copies of the document. 
  (Deletions aren't shown or retained. You can use Undo to revert back 
  through your own edits, however.)

<http://www.codingmonkeys.de/subethaedit/images/sessionbig.png>

  EtherPad (from AppJet, free) does away with many of these 
  constraints, although its first release is nowhere near as mature as 
  SubEthaEdit. But let's be fair: SubEthaEdit has been under 
  development for years, and EtherPad is just as impressive as 
  SubEthaEdit (then called Hydra, for obvious reasons) was when it 
  first showed up as something close to a student programming project 
  in 2003.

<http://etherpad.com/static/img/oct/pageshot.png>
<http://blog.appjet.com/>
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lernaean_Hydra>
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SubEthaEdit>

  EtherPad opens up editing to any platform with support for one of 
  several major browsers: Internet Explorer (version 6 or later), 
  Safari (3 or later), and Firefox (2 or later). Other browsers may 
  also work. This means that iPhone users can (tediously) participate 
  as well as our friends suffering through Windows or enjoying their 
  own unique blend of GNU/Linux.

  Because the service is hosted as a Web application, EtherPad does 
  away with the requirement for one user to have a publicly reachable 
  IP address. This has bedeviled us many times, sometimes requiring us 
  to open a SubEthaEdit document on a Mac OS X Server system to all 
  who participate. Many features, like color coding of each 
  participant's changes, will be familiar to SubEthaEdit users.

  EtherPad provides revision saving coupled with restoration from 
  stored versions, something not found in SubEthaEdit. EtherPad also 
  centralizes storage of the current document and revisions on 
  AppJet's servers. Both editors lack auto-save, a feature we've 
  wanted for years, but EtherPad's capability to save a version trumps 
  SubEthaEdit's simple Save command, which overwrites the previously 
  stored version. (You can use third-party programs to add an 
  automatic saving option and version tracking to SubEthaEdit, but 
  this should be a piece of core functionality, especially considering 
  that one of the authors of SubEthaEdit, Martin Ott, puts together 
  the Mac OS X installer of the Subversion version control system.) 

  Centralized storage means that any participant always has access to 
  the current state of the document or previous revisions. With 
  SubEthaEdit, users other than the host can save a copy at any point, 
  but aren't assured of having the last version of the document unless 
  they save and the host immediately closes before any other edits 
  take place.

  SubEthaEdit was designed, in part, for Extreme Programming, which 
  includes the principle of pairing programmers to work on the same 
  code at the same time. Some studies have shown that multi-person 
  programming actually improves efficiency by reducing errors and 
  producing more readable code in fewer lines. 

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

  As such, SubEthaEdit includes a long list of syntax coding options 
  for popular programming languages, where code elements are colored 
  for better recognition and to avoid making errors in spelling a 
  name. Help in ensuring paired, nested parentheses and braces is also 
  found in SubEthaEdit. (Nearly all non-collaborative SubEthaEdit 
  features appear in BBEdit.)

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

  Only JavaScript syntax coding appears in this first EtherPad 
  release, which isn't odd given the developers. The folks who wrote 
  EtherPad developed AppJet, a JavaScript-driven Web application 
  engine that they had to revise substantially to make EtherPad work.

<http://etherpad.com/ep/blog/posts/etherpad-and-appjet>

  EtherPad even throws in chat among participants in a document, 
  providing chronological archived discussion alongside the live space 
  in which everyone is editing. This works remarkably well, since 
  there's often backchannel discussion about what's being written that 
  doesn't belong in the document itself.


**Competition Improves Collaboration** -- I look forward both to more 
  developments in EtherPad, and the response from Coding Monkeys. For 
  many years, I've wanted to have a tool that's a bit easier to use - 
  especially freed from the storage and public IP requirement - for 
  less-technical friends and colleagues. And Windows users have 
  previously been left out in the cold.

  Competition should help spark innovation, but EtherPad will 
  certainly allow more unfettered communication. We know from history, 
  more communication either leads to better understanding or a 
  complete breakdown. I hope for the former.


TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 16-Feb-09
---------------------------------------------------------
  by Doug McLean <doug_mclean@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10066>

  Simon 2.5 from Dejal Systems is a significant update to the Internet 
  monitoring tool. Changes include an SMS notifier plugin that enables 
  Simon notifications to be sent as text messages to your mobile 
  phone. The update also adds SMART Status and Drive Status services 
  that monitor the health of local hard disks. Minor bugs have also 
  been repaired, including one that could cause new default services 
  and notifiers to disappear after relaunching if no changes were made 
  manually after updating. The full list of changes is available via 
  Dejal's Web site. ($29.95 to $195, free update, 11.7 MB)

<http://www.dejal.com/simon/>
<http://www.dejal.com/simon/release/>

  PasswordWallet 4.4.4 from Selznick Scientific Software is a minor 
  update to the longstanding password protection utility. The update 
  "simplifies iPhone synchronization for new users, adds Japanese 
  translation, and addresses some usability issues." The company has 
  also released Password Wallet 4.4.5 for the iPhone with a number of 
  cosmetic and usability tweaks. ($20, free update, 5.0 MB)

<http://www.selznick.com/products/passwordwallet/>
<http://www.selznick.com/products/passwordwallet/iphone/>

  VMware Fusion 2.0.2 from VMware is a maintenance update to the 
  popular Windows virtualization software. New to this version is the 
  capability to import Windows virtual machines from both Parallels 
  Desktop 4.0 and Parallels Server for Mac, support for mounting 
  unencrypted .dmg files as CD/DVD disk images, support for Mac OS X 
  10.5.6 as a host operating system, support for Ubuntu 8.10 as a 
  guest operating system, and more. ($79.99, free update, 286 MB)

<http://www.vmware.com/download/fusion/>
<http://www.vmware.com/support/fusion2/doc/releasenotes_fusion_202.html>

  Chax 2.2 from Kent Sutherland is a minor update to the iChat 
  enhancement and extension utility. Changes include a new Send Camera 
  Snapshot feature that enables users to send pictures from their 
  cameras as inline images, support for multi-touch gestures capable 
  of switching chat tabs, an added option to confirm before ending AV 
  chats, and improved display options for the Message History. The 
  update also fixes several minor bugs. (Free, 1.3 MB)

<http://www.ksuther.com/chax/>

  Nisus Writer Express 3.2 from Nisus Software is the latest version 
  of the streamlined word processor. The update features added backup 
  options, editable document properties, and the capability to select 
  the default file format for new documents. Also new is a Services 
  menu that enables users to create a Nisus Writer document from 
  selected content in another application. Numerous bugs have also 
  been fixed, all of which are listed, along with other smaller 
  changes and features, within the extensive release notes. ($45 new, 
  free upgrade, 59 MB)

<http://nisus.com/Express/>
<http://nisus.com/Express/releasenotes.php>


ExtraBITS for 16-Feb-09
-----------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10075>

**10 Ways Microsoft's Retail Stores Will Differ from Apple's** -- PC 
  World offers this tongue-in-cheek countdown of 10 ways that 
  Microsoft's forthcoming retail stores will differ from Apple's. Our 
  favorite: "Stores will be named Microsoft Live Retail Store with PC 
  Services for Digital Lifestyle Enthusiasts." (Posted 2009-02-13)

<http://www.pcworld.com/article/159521/10_ways_microsofts_retail_stores_will_differ_from_apple_stores.html>


**Jeff Carlson Talks iMovie '09 with Macworld** -- Jeff Carlson chats 
  with Chris Breen on this week's Macworld Podcast to talk about what 
  he likes and dislikes about iMovie '09, and whether it's worth 
  upgrading or if people should jump to Final Cut Express instead. 
  (Posted 2009-02-11)

<http://www.macworld.com/article/138772/2009/02/mwpodcast153.html>


**John Siracusa Examines Past, Present, and Future of Ebooks** -- John 
  Siracusa at Ars Technica turns his attention to ebooks in this 
  lengthy piece, bemoaning the slow state of adoption at the 
  mainstream level and making the oft-missed distinction between 
  ebooks and ebook readers. (Posted 2009-02-11)

<http://arstechnica.com/gadgets/news/2009/02/the-once-and-future-e-book.ars>


Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk for 16-Feb-09
----------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10074>

**Steve Wozniak** -- Fire up the TiVo, because Apple co-founder Steve 
  Wozniak is going to be a contestant on "Dancing with the Stars"! (3 
  messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2450>


**File Sharing** -- A reader wants to create a file that can be shared 
  with multiple people but edited only by one. Is Google Docs the 
  answer? (4 message)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2451>


**More Ebooks Available for the iPhone/iPod touch** -- If Amazon were 
  to sell ebooks for the iPhone, would that channel run counter to 
  Apple's developer guidelines? (4 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2452>


**Google Sync for the iPhone** -- Google announced the capability to 
  sync contacts and events to the iPhone, but what's the benefit of 
  doing so? (1 message)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2453>


**Dock Bug Could Lead to Data Loss** -- Readers debate the severity 
  and likelihood that someone could fall prey to a bug in the Mac OS X 
  10.5 Leopard Dock. (10 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2454>


**The Phoenix Lander on Mars tweets** -- The Phoenix Lander (or, more 
  accurately, someone at NASA who communicated in the first person) 
  used Twitter to send out regular updates while it was active. (7 
  messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2455>


**Mouse-click via AppleScript?** It's possible to use AppleScript to 
  create a mouse click, though not straightforward. The question is, 
  why? (11 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2456>


**Multiple boot versions of OS X?** For testing purposes, a reader 
  wants to know the best way to keep multiple versions of Mac OS X at 
  hand. Separate hard drive partitions? Virtualization? (5 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2461>


**24" iMac Solid Gray** -- A problematic external hard drive or bad 
  RAM could be the cause for a new iMac to display only a solid gray 
  screen. (5 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2462>


**Dropbox: A Collaborator** -- Should Apple buy Dropbox and 
  incorporate it into MobileMe? Its features seem more advanced than 
  Apple's offerings. (3 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2463>


**Alternatives to iDisk** -- What other options exist for backing up 
  critical data online? (13 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2464>


**Apple Adds iDisk Sharing Feature to MobileMe** -- Apple's newest 
  iDisk feature invites comparisons to Dropbox, and suffers from the 
  fact that you can share only a file, not a folder. (2 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2466>


**Gmail Adds Move To and Label Menus to Toolbar** -- Want to know how 
  to tell if your ISP is filled with incompetent monkeys? Read on. (2 
  messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2468>


**Macs and AVCHD files** -- A reader wants information about HD 
  camcorders that shoot AVCHD format, and how that's edited on the 
  Mac. (4 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2469>


$$

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