TidBITS#970/23-Mar-09
=====================
  Issue link: <http://db.tidbits.com/issue/970>

  Two years ago, who would have thought there would be so much 
  excitement over copy and paste? Apple last week previewed the iPhone 
  3.0 software, highlighting new features and making iPhone developers 
  realize they won't be sleeping much until the new operating system 
  is released. This issue also focuses on interesting new products: we 
  look at the resuscitated EMC Retrospect 8 and Bare Bones Software's 
  clever WeatherCal. In other news, the latest AirPort firmware may 
  solve lingering Time Capsule problems, Sony receives 500,000 free 
  public domain ebooks from Google, Kodak starts charging for its free 
  service (which may not be as bad as it sounds, according to Glenn 
  Fleishman), and Adam points out Guy Kawasaki's new MyAlltop service. 
  Other software releases worthy of brief mention this week include 
  Espresso 1.0, PDFpen 4.1.1, and Apple's Mini DisplayPort to VGA 
  Firmware Update.

Articles
    MyAlltop Enables Personal News Aggregation
    AirPort Firmware May Resolve Time Capsule Disk Problems
    Sony Reader Gets 500,000 Free Public Domain Titles from Google
    Kodak Gallery Joins Parade of Free-with-Payment Services
    WeatherCal Inserts Updating Forecasts into iCal
    Apple Previews iPhone 3.0 Software
    EMC Ships Modernized Retrospect 8
    TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 23-Mar-09
    ExtraBITS for 23-Mar-09
    Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk for 23-Mar-09


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MyAlltop Enables Personal News Aggregation
------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10143>

  It's always interesting to see what ex-Apple evangelist Guy Kawasaki 
  is up to, something that's a bit easier now that he's become a 
  prolific user of Twitter. Over the last year, he's been focusing on 
  his news aggregation site Alltop, adding a vast number of categories 
  ranging from arthritis to zoology, from bacon to yoga. But as much 
  as the expansion has been great for making it easier for readers to 
  find blogs and publications that cover their favorite topics, it has 
  become a bit overwhelming - after all, do you really want to read 17 
  blogs about bacon? 

<http://twitter.com/guykawasaki>
<http://alltop.com/>

  So the latest addition to Alltop is one that will help users rely on 
  the site's category lists as a source from which to pick a 
  manageable number of sites to track. Once you create your own 
  MyAlltop account and log in, you can click a plus (+) link next to 
  each site listed in Alltop to add it to your own MyAlltop page. 
  Apart from the added capability to arrange the news feeds in 
  whatever order you desire, your MyAlltop page works just like any 
  other Alltop page, showing the five latest headlines and a snippet 
  in a pop-up window when you mouse over a headline. Clicking a 
  headline opens the page in a new tab or window. And, as a nice 
  touch, you can share MyAlltop pages, so you can see what your 
  friends are reading right now - see my MyAlltop page for an example.

<http://my.alltop.com/adamengst>


AirPort Firmware May Resolve Time Capsule Disk Problems
-------------------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10151>

  The 7.4.1 firmware update for all Apple 802.11n AirPort base 
  stations - any model released since 2007 - combined with Mac OS X 
  10.5.6 may fix Time Capsule disk corruption problems that some 
  people have experienced. Colleagues Shawn King (Your Mac Life) and 
  John Gruber (Daring Fireball) have recently explained to me problems 
  they had with Time Machine disk image integrity and kernel panics. I 
  also saw repeated disk image corruption in my testing last year.

<http://support.apple.com/downloads/Time_Capsule_and_AirPort_Base_Station_Firmware_Update_7_4_1>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT3466>
<http://www.yourmaclifeshow.com/>
<http://daringfireball.net/>

  While Apple provided no details on how or why corruption might occur 
  in disk images that Time Machine writes to a Time Capsule internal 
  or external drive, this update is designed to avoid problems that 
  led to such corruption. If that sounds overly circumspect, well, we 
  are talking about Apple here, but I was assured that a small number 
  of edge cases like mine should now be resolved. (Note that Apple 
  still officially supports only external drives connected to a Time 
  Capsule for Time Machine backups, not drives connected to an AirPort 
  Extreme Base Station.)

  One piece of advice if you've had problems in the past: Back up any 
  existing Time Machine disk images to an external disk using the 
  Archive feature in Disk Utility, erase them from the drive, and 
  start fresh with new Time Machine backups. 

  In some cases, mounting the Time Capsule volume via AFP, launching 
  Disk Utility, dragging the corrupted disk image into the program, 
  and then using the Disk First Aid > Repair Disk feature may correct 
  errors, although it could take many hours for a large backup disk. I 
  recommend the fresh start approach for most people, though.

  Time Machine works as an incremental backup system, writing all 
  files on a selected system to a disk image in a first pass, and then 
  creating only copies of files that have changed each hour while Time 
  Machine is active. 

  But Time Machine also creates what's effectively a snapshot of a 
  hard drive for each backup, which necessitates making vast numbers 
  of hard links, which reference any unchanged files. This can be 
  difficult to do reliably over a network and may have been part of 
  the trouble with corruption occurring over time.


Sony Reader Gets 500,000 Free Public Domain Titles from Google
--------------------------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10152>

  Google is further exposing some of the 7 million books it has 
  scanned from academic collections by making 500,000 titles with no 
  remaining copyright protection available to Sony for its electronic 
  book device, the Reader Digital Book. Reports indicate that only 
  books from 1922 or earlier are included, as 1922 is the latest date 
  for which public domain status is entirely clear. (Many works 
  published after 1922 are also in the public domain, but each work 
  must be researched individually to determine its status.)

<http://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/19/technology/19sony.html?partner=rss&emc=rss>
<http://ebookstore.sony.com/reader/>
<http://www.copyright.cornell.edu/public_domain/>

  Earlier this year, Google added an option to view but not download 2 
  million public domain books on the iPhone; see "More Ebooks 
  Available for the iPhone/iPod touch," 2009-02-09. That's more like a 
  Pandora stream than an iTunes song purchase.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10059>

  Google's program to scan books ran afoul of publishers' and authors' 
  concerns about the right to scan and archive titles, and the 
  legality of snippets being displayed from these scanned works. A 
  preliminary settlement between Google and various interested parties 
  should make millions of books available for viewing, printing, 
  download, and purchase in the coming months; these titles could also 
  wind up being available for the Reader Digital Book. (See "Authors 
  and Publishers Settle with Google Book Search," 2008-10-29.)

<http://www.authorsguild.org/advocacy/articles/settlement-resources.html>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9837>

  It would seem that Google has chosen to side with Sony instead of 
  Amazon in the nascent ebook reader world. The Wall Street Journal 
  notes Sony said its Reader Digital Book sales are at 400,000 and 
  reported that Citigroup estimated Amazon Kindle sales at 500,000. 
  That sales level seems quite good for a new category of consumer 
  device, but it's nowhere close to the 17 million iPhones and 13 
  million iPod touches that Apple has sold so far over a similar 
  period. (The original iPhone and Sony Reader were both introduced on 
  the same day in June 2007, the iPod touch in September 2007, and the 
  Amazon Kindle in November 2007.)

  The Kindle 2, introduced in February 2009, improves on the design of 
  the original device and has a faster screen refresh ("Kindle 2 
  Improves Design, Not Features," 2009-02-26). Amazon released Kindle 
  for iPhone shortly after the Kindle 2 hardware ("Amazon Releases 
  Kindle Software for iPhone," 2009-03-03). Amazon offers 245,000 
  books for sale along with subscriptions to dozens of magazines and 
  newspapers, and hundreds of blogs. The iPhone software can download 
  only books, not subscriptions. That may change with Apple's iPhone 
  3.0 software, which will enable in-application subscriptions and 
  purchases ("Apple Previews iPhone 3.0 Software," 2009-03-17).

<http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00154JDAI/?tag=tidbitselectro00>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10097>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10116>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10144>

  Lest we forget, the volunteers of Project Gutenberg have been 
  assiduously typing, scanning, and correcting out-of-copyright works 
  for many years. Project Gutenberg's catalog, now containing over 
  28,000 books, includes downloads in text and other formats, 
  including a DRM-free ePub format that both the Reader Digital Book 
  and Kindle 2 can handle. Affiliated and partner projects bring 
  Project Gutenberg's grand total to 100,000 titles.

<http://www.gutenberg.org/>

  While Project Gutenberg has a fraction of what Google has made 
  available, the quality should be higher, as works have been prepared 
  for accuracy instead of volume, and represent works more likely to 
  be interesting to a modern audience than just historians and 
  researchers.


Kodak Gallery Joins Parade of Free-with-Payment Services
--------------------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10156>

  My wife's United Airlines frequent flyer miles disappeared one day 
  without us noticing. The equivalent of several hundred dollars of 
  miles went poof because she hadn't flown on the airline or its 
  partners for a while, used her United Visa credit card, or engaged 
  in any commerce in which miles were transferred to or from her 
  account.

  Frequent-flyer programs have generally switched to an 
  expiration-without-activity policy, like United's, a change that's 
  sweeping across not just loyalty rewards but all services in which 
  something free is offered as an incentive. Companies realize that 
  some people simply aren't worth the disk space needed for their 
  accounts and information. 

<http://www.united.com/press/detail/0,6862,57394,00.html>

  It turns out that it may be more valuable to shed less-profitable or 
  no-revenue customers than to keep them on the books, instead 
  focusing on those who pay recurring fees. Free is for loyal 
  customers (who generate income in other ways), not for the casual 
  user. 

  Chris Anderson, Wired's editor-in-chief and the author of the 
  upcoming "Free!", wrote eloquently more than a year ago about why 
  free makes sense for businesses - but also when it does not. Free - 
  as a business model - typically makes sense when a company can 
  obtain value from users in other incremental ways, from advertising 
  to premium upgrades to subscription fees.

<http://www.wired.com/techbiz/it/magazine/16-03/ff_free?currentPage=all>

  Kodak Gallery (originally called Ofoto and later Kodak EasyShare 
  Gallery) has become the latest firm to tie strings to a previously 
  free service. The online photo-sharing and print-ordering service 
  sets no limits on the size of photos uploaded (it notes that 10 MB 
  is the highest size beyond which improved print detail won't be 
  seen), nor on what you store. (Sadly, the service also dropped its 
  film processing service that combined photo finishing and digital 
  scanning.)

  In the past, Kodak would store photos indefinitely at no charge. 
  Now, Kodak has imposed the equivalent of a yearly service fee made 
  through a purchase. Storage is free for 90 days after creation of an 
  account. For accounts with less than 2 GB of stored photos, you must 
  spend at least $4.99 over 12 months; for more than 2 GB, spend 
  $19.99.

<http://www.kodakgallery.com/TermsOfService.jsp>

  In regard to this policy, Kodak is out in front among well-known 
  photo sites. Shutterfly says it has never deleted a photo, offers 
  unlimited storage, and allows unlimited upload size per photo 
  (though it recommends 10 MB as the biggest file, too). In contrast, 
  Flickr's free mode is quite limited: 100 MB in uploads per month, 
  with only the most recent 200 shown, and resolution restrictions. 
  But Flickr (owned by Yahoo) doesn't delete photos; a Pro upgrade 
  makes an entire library available again. Kodak and Shutterfly have 
  no paid option for consumers; Flickr charges $24.95 per year for 
  unlimited uploads and storage (up to 20 MB per photo).

<http://shutterfly-2.custhelp.com/cgi-bin/helpfly.cfg/php/enduser/std_adp.php?p_faqid=521>
<http://www.flickr.com/help/limits/#65>

  This is another good reason to keep a set of all images and 
  documents you create on your own hard drive and to back them up 
  regularly. If you have photos stored only on a photo-sharing service 
  or a document stored only on Google Docs, you're tempting fate.

  It's inevitable that we'll see more of this sort of behavior. 
  Despite storage, processing power, and bandwidth becoming ever less 
  expensive, having a million customers who spend nothing isn't as 
  valuable as 50,000 who spend regularly. As Web advertising dollars 
  have shrunk from click fatigue and the declining economy, focusing 
  on the most loyal users may help companies shed overhead while 
  increasing the average revenue per user. A million ad impressions 
  sold at $10 per thousand views ($10,000) doesn't add up as fast or 
  come as easily as 1,000 subscribers at $10 per month.

  We're seeing this trend emerge from many directions, where free 
  services with the assumption of ad revenue aren't sufficient. 
  Newspapers and magazines, for instance, are increasingly interested 
  in charging for access, especially to a greater array of content and 
  customized services, after more than a decade of mostly giving 
  everything away.

  For instance, the Hearst newspaper chain recently stopped the 
  presses on the 136-year-old Seattle Post-Intelligencer's print 
  edition in favor of an online-only newsgathering and aggregation 
  operation with a fraction of the reporting staff. Hearst is 
  considering a move to a subscription service for the P-I and other 
  newspapers. Hearst is still trying to figure out, however, precisely 
  what it can offer that people will pay for. Likewise, cable operator 
  Cablevision bought New York Newsday last year and is considering 
  forgoing page views in favor of recurring subscriber revenue.

<http://www.seattlepi.com/>
<http://blogs.wsj.com/digits/2009/02/27/hearst-to-begin-charging-for-digital-news/>
<http://seekingalpha.com/article/123207-cablevision-s-newsday-to-lead-paid-content-charge-bad-move>

  This doesn't mean that the Internet will suddenly see the doors of 
  professionally produced big media sites slammed shut, nor will every 
  hosting service kick out their least-profitable customers. But it's 
  a change in the wind that's worth sniffing.


WeatherCal Inserts Updating Forecasts into iCal
-----------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10147>

  No, it doesn't do grep. Long-time developer Bare Bones Software has 
  branched out from feature-rich applications like BBEdit and 
  Mailsmith with the $10 WeatherCal, a System Preferences pane that 
  has a single purpose in life: to populate iCal with weather 
  forecasts so you can better plan for upcoming local events and trips 
  to far-off spots.

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

  WeatherCal's interface is minimal, letting users create calendars 
  for multiple locations by clicking the plus (+) button. You can find 
  locations by name, ZIP code, and airport code, but WeatherCal 
  automatically creates a default location by reading the location 
  from the entry you've designated as "My Card" in Address Book. You 
  can edit each location's name as desired, and deselecting a 
  location's checkbox removes its events from your calendar without 
  deleting the calendar itself. Removing a calendar entirely is merely 
  a matter of selecting it and clicking the minus (-) button.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2009-03/WeatherCal-pane.png>

  Once configured, WeatherCal creates a normal iCal calendar for each 
  location, displaying the current conditions for the current day and 
  a simplified forecast for the next five days. (Bare Bones tells me 
  that sometimes the weather feeds provide more than five days of 
  forecasts for U.S. locations, and sometimes less than that for 
  international locations.) As with all other iCal calendars, you can 
  set the color of the calendar by selecting it in iCal, pressing 
  Command-I, and choosing a new color from the pop-up menu. 

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2009-03/WeatherCal-in-iCal.png>

  Double-click one of WeatherCal's events and you'll see a URL that 
  will load the Weather Underground Web page for that location, making 
  additional information a mere three clicks and an application change 
  away.

  The calendars are rolling, meaning that you'll only ever see events 
  for the current day and the next five days; WeatherCal tidies up 
  after itself so you don't have past weather conditions cluttering 
  your calendar.

  Being normal iCal calendars, they'll also sync to your iPhone or 
  iPod, and will display with any iCal-savvy utilities like Second 
  Gear's Today, which provides an at-a-glance view of your events and 
  tasks in iCal.

<http://secondgearllc.com/today/>

  And well, that's it. WeatherCal is a one-trick pony, but it's a 
  clever trick, and a useful one to boot. With it, you can easily 
  tell, when making plans for next weekend, if the weather is likely 
  to be amenable for a picnic. And if the drivers in your area freak 
  out with a little rain or snow, knowing the forecast when making 
  plans for a meeting across town next week could save you from an 
  unpleasant traffic jam. Or, if you're planning a trip to Macworld 
  Expo next year, adding San Francisco to your calendar ahead of time 
  will give you a sense of how to pack.

  Obviously, there are a ton of ways to find weather information on 
  the Internet these days, but context is king, and having weather 
  information in your face while you're making plans is, in my mind, 
  worth 10 bucks. WeatherCal requires Mac OS X 10.5 or later, and is a 
  2.6 MB download.

  I'm a minor weather geek, to the point where I regularly check out 
  the Ithaca Climate Page on the Web and buy the Ithaca Weather 
  Calendar each year for its updated almanac information. From that 
  standpoint, I can see a few features Bare Bones could implement for 
  WeatherCal 2.0. iCal events have a Notes field that would be perfect 
  for textual forecast information, for instance. (Bare Bones said 
  that parsing that information in a reliable fashion is non-trivial.) 
  Plus, since WeatherCal knows current conditions, it could optionally 
  create another calendar in iCal with the high and low temperature 
  for each day, enabling users to go back to see what the weather was 
  like in the past. Nevertheless, these are trivial suggestions - 
  WeatherCal seems fully baked as it stands, and I look forward to 
  using it throughout the upcoming seasons.

<http://www.nrcc.cornell.edu/climate/ithaca/>


Apple Previews iPhone 3.0 Software
----------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10144>

  At a special press event at its headquarters, Apple previewed the 
  new iPhone 3.0 software, which adds the long-awaited push 
  notification capability, support for subscriptions and purchases 
  within applications, and copy and paste, among much else. 

  The software will be available this summer and will be free for 
  iPhone users, while iPod touch users will pay $9.95 for the upgrade. 
  Apple made a beta available to all those enrolled in the iPhone 
  developer program following its morning announcement. 


**iPhone Stats** -- With sales of 13.7 million iPhones in 2008, Apple 
  exceeded its goal of 10 million unit sales. That makes for a total 
  of 30 million iPhone OS devices sold to date, comprising 17 million 
  iPhones and 13 million iPod touches. 

  This is the first time Apple has broken out the iPod touch numbers, 
  which were previously only a matter of speculation. This news should 
  be reassuring to developers, as they can count on a much larger 
  universe of potential buyers. Applications that work best or only 
  over Wi-Fi also clearly have a significant audience.

  The App Store has been doing well too, and Apple says that it now 
  contains more than 25,000 apps (the number after subtracting 
  flashlight, calculator, and Twitter apps wasn't mentioned). Even 
  more impressive, 800 million apps have been downloaded in the 8 
  months that the App Store has been open, though the company didn't 
  enumerate the difference between paid and free apps.

  On the developer side, there are now 50,000 members in the paid 
  developer program, and the iPhone SDK has been downloaded over 
  800,000 times. Apple claimed that 60 percent of iPhone developers 
  are new to Apple platforms. Apple also made a point of noting that 
  the App Store is a meritocracy, serving big and small developers 
  alike. Although Apple has been improving the App Store of late (see 
  "App Store Reviews Now Distinguish Versions," 2009-03-12), many 
  developers still feel as though it's impossible to stand out among 
  so many applications. According to Apple, 96 percent of apps 
  submitted are approved, and 98 percent of those are approved within 
  7 days or less.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10135>


**App Store Changes** -- One frustration among iPhone developers has 
  been the rigidity of application sales models. For example, 
  publishers have asked for the ability to offer subscriptions. Scott 
  Forstall, Apple's senior vice president of iPhone software, gave as 
  an example a game that comes with 10 levels, with the option to 
  purchase additional levels separately. He continued, "Today we're 
  supporting all of these additional business models."

  In-App purchasing will enable renewable subscriptions, the purchase 
  of individual items (such as books in a bookstore or new levels of a 
  game), and other add-ons within programs distributed via the App 
  Store. iTunes will be used to handle the transaction, and Apple will 
  offer the same split on sales: 70 percent of fees collected for 
  In-App sales will go to the developer.

  However, only paid apps can charge for add-ons: a developer won't be 
  able to offer a free application and then charge for additional 
  content (which means we're likely to see even more $0.99 apps, but 
  the developers will have a greater opportunity to recoup development 
  costs). Several demos during the event showcased the capability to 
  add extras, such as a $0.99 rocket launcher for the first-person 
  shooter game LiveFire.


**Bluetooth and Bonjour** -- The iPhone 3.0 software adds 1,000 APIs, 
  the hooks that enable third-party software developers to tie into 
  functions in the operating system.

  The new iPhone 3.0 software will add peer-to-peer connectivity, 
  using automatic discovery via Bonjour and Bluetooth to find nearby 
  devices and services. This will allow for networked games, among 
  other uses. No pairing is required, which can be an irritating 
  process in Bluetooth.

  Peer-to-peer networking should also allow software that can exchange 
  files and enable forms of chat and whiteboard collaboration. 
  (SubEthaEdit for iPhone, anyone?) Although you almost certainly 
  won't be able to transfer music files across a peer-to-peer 
  connection, Apple said that music streaming would be possible.

  Programmers will also be able to talk directly to devices connected 
  to the iPhone dock connector, which will allow a host of additional 
  accessories that go beyond the passive audio-output and charging 
  options available today. Apple offered the example of a 
  blood-pressure cuff that could send live data through a network 
  connection, or customized equalizer controls for attached speakers. 

  Stereo Bluetooth support will allow the use of Bluetooth headphones. 
  This missing feature was rather peculiar, because the software, 
  connection, and processing components were already present in the 
  iPhone 3G. Apple may have felt that battery usage wasn't tuned 
  enough for the option until now. The original iPhone won't gain this 
  feature, unfortunately, presumably due to lacking necessary hardware 
  bits.


**Unfolding Maps** -- Maps, one of the most popular built-in apps, has 
  been made more ecumenical, with developers now offered hooks that 
  allow them to embed maps directly within their own apps. All the 
  standard map features will be available, such as pinch, zoom, and 
  location data, but developers will have to provide their own map 
  data, and won't be able to access the Google-derived Maps app. 
  However, Google offers a variety of licensing models for its map 
  data, and we suspect Google will provide an App Store developer 
  offering.

  Developers can also tap into reverse geocoding, which allows an 
  address to be derived from a point on a map, useful for navigating 
  strange cities or figuring out what address you're at when lost, as 
  well as tagging photos with more specific information than a set of 
  coordinates and a city name.

  Forstall also said that developers will be able to use location data 
  for turn-by-turn directions. Turn-by-turn data, according to those 
  who develop GPS hardware, requires a refresh of at least one new set 
  of location information per second, which the iPhone with GPS should 
  be capable of. Look for iPhone navigation apps from GPS companies 
  like Garmin, TomTom, and Magellan.


**Push Me, Pull You** -- Months after Apple's initial promise, push 
  notification capability will finally be available to developers. 
  With push notifications, programs can capture specific events and 
  display them much in the way the iPhone's built-in apps display SMS 
  messages and updates to the Contacts and Calendar apps.

  Forstall said that Apple had to redesign its entire push 
  architecture to achieve the miserly use of battery life that the 
  company desired. As originally explained a year ago, push 
  notifications require a developer to send messages through an Apple 
  server that then manages their distribution to individual iPhones. 
  Push requires customization for nearly each carrier Apple works 
  with, and that work is currently underway, Forstall said.

  Apple has not yet mentioned whether it plans to charge developers 
  for blocks of push messages, which would appropriately pair the 
  technology with subscription services or high-value applications.


**Other APIs** -- Additional APIs will give developers access to the 
  built-in proximity sensor that Apple uses to dim the iPhone display 
  when it's used against one's face for calling, access to the iPod 
  library, firewall tunneling for streaming audio and video 
  (corporations are going to love this), data detectors that identify 
  embedded data in Web pages, and voice-over-IP features.

  Apple has also added an email "sheet," which will enable developers 
  to have their software send email without quitting the active 
  application and launching the built-in Mail program.


**User Improvements** -- At last! Apple finally brings 1984 technology 
  to the iPhone with the addition of copy and paste. The feature works 
  through a sequence of taps and drags and will work across all 
  applications with a global clipboard. Or rather, it becomes 
  available for developers to add; initial comments from some 
  developers indicate that doing so may not be trivial in all 
  situations. When asked in a Q&A session following the announcement 
  why copy and paste took so long, Apple said it was hard to combine 
  simplicity, security, and cross-application support.

  Double-tapping a word brings up a pop-up menu with commands for Cut, 
  Copy, and Paste, while draggable icons let you make changes in the 
  selected text. Tapping twice in an empty area brings up a menu with 
  commands for Select, Select All, and Paste. Shaking the device 
  triggers an undo prompt.

  Content can be selected and copied in any enabled text area, as well 
  as from Web pages. Copy and paste also apparently extends to images 
  in the Photos application. You can select multiple images in a new 
  mode, and then copy and paste them into the Mail program.

  The iPhone 3.0 software will also collect all kinds of messages into 
  a new Messages app, including SMS text messages and new supported 
  MMS messages (Multimedia Messaging Service), MMS enables certain 
  forms of attachments to be sent over the iPhone's cellular 
  connection. Apple will use MMS to allow business card information, 
  location data, and other data to be transferred and stored. MMS is 
  typically pricey, and may be irrelevant for some users given Apple's 
  rich email support.

  Turning the iPhone on its side makes Safari switch to landscape mode 
  now, but in the iPhone 3.0 software, other Apple apps such as Mail 
  and Notes will also gain support for landscape mode. It will be 
  especially helpful in those two, since the wide landscape keyboard 
  is easier to type on than the portrait keyboard.

  A new Voice Memos app will let you record notes to yourself using 
  the built-in microphone or an external mic. Several third-party 
  applications previously added this feature to the iPhone with 
  varying levels of sophistication.

  Search capabilities have been added to a number of applications, 
  including Contacts, Mail (where it can search message headers, but 
  not message bodies), Calendar, iPod, and Notes. But Apple has gone 
  further, adding a Spotlight app that can search across all supported 
  apps, something that becomes more necessary as the number of apps on 
  an iPhone increases. 

  The new software adds what Apple described as "auto-login" for Wi-Fi 
  hotspots, which would appear to replace the functionality in 
  programs like Easy Wi-Fi from Devicescape. It's unclear whether 
  Apple has licensed and incorporated such software or if it has its 
  own approach, nor is it clear what the interface settings for such 
  logins will look like.

  Finally, although it was mentioned only in the Q&A session at the 
  end, tethering will apparently be supported in the iPhone 3.0 
  software. That will allow a MacBook, for instance, to access the 
  Internet using an iPhone's cell data connection. 


**Still Missing** -- Despite the significantly increased support for 
  Bluetooth, when questioned about the necessary Bluetooth "human 
  interface device" profile, which generically supports wireless 
  keyboards, mice, and other pointing devices, Apple said there was 
  nothing to announce. This lack has been a point of contention for 
  many iPhone and iPod touch users who would like to rely on the 
  diminutive device while traveling, but who need to be able to type 
  for real, not with the clumsy virtual keyboard. It's especially 
  galling because the necessary Bluetooth profile is built into Mac OS 
  X; if the iPhone is a complete "OS X," the profile is there and 
  turned off.

  Although push notifications will undoubtedly be welcome, Apple is 
  implementing them instead of allowing apps to run in the background, 
  claiming that tests with an instant messaging app running in the 
  background on BlackBerry and Windows Mobile devices reduced standby 
  time by 80 percent. In contrast, using push notifications reduced 
  standby time by only 23 percent. Plus, Apple claimed that background 
  processes could hurt overall performance. And while these criticisms 
  are all true, it's always a little depressing to see Apple basically 
  say, "It's too hard." instead of coming up with an innovative 
  solution to a problem that push notification won't fully address. 

  On the App Store side, although Apple made a point of discussing all 
  sorts of great new business models that will be available, no 
  mention was made of the desire on the part of developers to be able 
  to offer free demo versions that expire after a certain number of 
  uses or a particular time period. We can only hope that this was 
  merely an oversight during the presentation and that the support 
  actually is included given Scott Forstall's claim that Apple is 
  supporting "all these additional business models."

  Support for Adobe's Flash technology is still missing, and in the 
  Q&A session at the end, Apple merely said that there were no 
  announcements about Flash, but that there were plenty of alternative 
  methods of distributing video that don't require Flash. Many 
  analysts and developers have described Flash's heavy processor use 
  as being a battery drain, and Apple has attempted to bar uses that 
  would dramatically shorten typical battery life.


**Coming Soon** -- When will we be able to play with all this good 
  stuff? The developer beta of the iPhone 3.0 software is available 
  now, so all developers in the beta program can get started right 
  away.

  The rest of us will have to wait for the iPhone 3.0 software to ship 
  "this summer," which means June, July, or August. It's seldom wise 
  to assume the earliest possible date that counts as "summer." 

  The update will be free for all iPhone owners, including people who 
  bought the original iPhone, but once again, it will cost $9.95 for 
  the iPod touch. The original iPhone, although it can run the iPhone 
  3.0 software, won't be able to take advantage of all its features 
  due to hardware limitations. We'll see just how significant those 
  limitations are when it ships, and if it's incentive for owners of 
  the original iPhone to upgrade. Of course, by then, it's possible 
  Apple will have another revision of the iPhone hardware out as well.


EMC Ships Modernized Retrospect 8
---------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10159>

  I can't tell you how happy I am to hear that EMC has finally shipped 
  Retrospect 8. The previous version for the Mac, version 6.1, has 
  been crumbling around the edges, and I've restricted myself to using 
  it for only a few specific situations where it has continued to work 
  fine. But for my primary backups, I've switched to a combination of 
  Time Machine, CrashPlan, and Carbon Copy Cloner. Time Machine 
  provides quick recovery of unexpectedly corrupted files, CrashPlan 
  gives me offsite backups, and Carbon Copy Cloner makes identical 
  duplicates. But these programs haven't given me the warm fuzzy 
  feelings I used to have when Retrospect was in its prime. 

<http://www.retrospect.com/products/software/retroformac/>

  I liked Retrospect because it worked hard to ensure that every byte 
  of a backup was copied and verified, logging everything clearly so 
  you could tell exactly what was going on. Many years ago, Craig 
  Isaacs, then the vice president of sales and marketing for Dantz 
  Development, told me a story about a large company that complained 
  to Dantz because Retrospect had started reporting verification 
  errors in backing up. When Dantz investigated, it turned out that 
  the company had upgraded a Cisco router to new firmware, and that 
  there was a bug in the new firmware that would silently drop one out 
  of every million packets transferred through the router (when this 
  story happened, a million packets was a rather larger number than it 
  would be today). The problem went unnoticed until Retrospect started 
  reporting the errors. Even a single bit lost during copying of a 
  file could cause irretrievable corruption, and I always appreciated 
  the fact that Retrospect wouldn't allow that to happen to my data.

  When Dantz Development was bought by EMC, the Mac version of 
  Retrospect languished, receiving only minimal development for some 
  years. Cracks in Retrospect's architecture started to show during 
  the evolution of Mac OS X, and crashes in the main Retrospect 
  application and odd behavior in the Retrospect Clients used for 
  network backups became commonplace. Luckily, about a year ago, EMC 
  reformed the Macintosh development team, even luring some of the 
  ex-Dantz people back, and Retrospect 8 has been in active 
  development ever since. Now, at long last, EMC has released 
  Retrospect 8, a complete rewrite that will hopefully return 
  Retrospect to its former grandeur. Let's look at what's new in 
  Retrospect 8, but do note that this is not a review, merely an 
  overview of what EMC says is there with some comparison to what was 
  previously available in Retrospect 6.1.

<http://kb.dantz.com/display/2n/articleDirect/index.asp?aid=9710&r=0.3788721>
<http://kb.dantz.com/display/2n/articleDirect/index.asp?aid=9712&r=0.4124414>


**Architecture and Interface** -- Retrospect 8 introduces a new 
  tripartite architecture: a Retrospect engine that handles all the 
  actual backup work on a backup server Mac, a Retrospect console 
  application that provides the user interface, and a Retrospect 
  Client application installed on client computers. The goal is to 
  enable a network administrator to use the Retrospect console 
  application to control one or more Retrospect engines, wherever they 
  may be located on an organization's network.

  The Retrospect console application offers a completely new interface 
  designed from the ground up and using native Mac OS X interface 
  elements. This should make it easier for users unfamiliar with 
  Retrospect to get started, a criticism often leveled at the previous 
  versions.

  Other interface improvements include custom reports that 
  automatically update with current information and better email 
  notification of successful events, failed events, and media 
  requests. New assistants walk users through setting up immediate and 
  scheduled operations, and a redesigned rules interface makes it 
  easier to select specific files.


**Performance** -- One of the major problems faced by the previous 
  versions of Retrospect was that only a single task could execute at 
  once, meaning that an initial backup of a new Mac or a slow backup 
  over the Internet would block regular backups of other machines. 
  Plus, if you were in the middle of a backup, you couldn't restore a 
  file without first stopping the backup.

  Retrospect 8 eliminates those bottlenecks. It can now perform up to 
  eight backup, copy, and restore operations simultaneously, depending 
  on the amount of RAM available and your edition license (it's 
  available only for Retrospect Single Server and Multi Server, not 
  Retrospect Desktop - more on the editions shortly). 

  Retrospect 8 also supports multiple processors and multiple cores, 
  and features improved throughput to storage devices, which should 
  result in significantly faster performance on Intel-based Macs and 
  modern backup media.


**New Backup Capabilities** -- When previous versions of Retrospect 
  were designed, hard disks were relatively small, and tape was the 
  preferred backup media for even small office networks. Now that hard 
  disks provide by far the best cost per gigabyte, Retrospect 8 has 
  significantly improved its support for backups to hard disk. A new 
  Disk Media set lets you combine multiple volumes - including direct 
  and network-attached disks, removable cartridge drives, and even 
  flash media - into a single logical destination for backups. 

  In the other direction, you can also specify the amount of space on 
  a disk that can be used by a Disk Media set, and Retrospect 8 can 
  perform "disk grooming," which deletes older versions of files to 
  make room for new ones. You set how many older versions to save. 
  This is highly welcome, since in previous versions, the only way to 
  keep using a disk after it filled up was to delete its contents and 
  start over.

  Also new in Retrospect 8 are staged backups, which let you stage 
  backups first to fast hard drives and later copy them to other disks 
  or tapes for archival or offsite backups. Whether with normal or 
  staged backups, Retrospect copies only files that don't already 
  exist on the destination.

  Retrospect has always been able to verify files by re-reading files 
  and performing a byte-for-byte verification pass. But that's slow 
  and increases network traffic, so Retrospect 8 offers a new media 
  verification option that calculates MD5 checksums during backup and 
  uses them to verify that the data written matches the checksum 
  without having to re-read the source data. 

<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MD5>

  Retrospect 8 now offers five different levels of security for your 
  backed-up data, starting with a simple password with no encryption 
  and moving through increasingly strong encryption: SimpleCrypt, DES, 
  AES-128, and AES-256. The stronger the encryption, the slower your 
  backups will be.

  For larger installations relying on tape drives, Retrospect 8 can 
  now read and track tape barcodes for members of Tape Media sets, has 
  faster media slot scanning, and can schedule tape drive cleaning 
  automatically. It also supports more storage devices than previous 
  versions, and an add-on makes it possible to write to two tape 
  drives simultaneously.

  Finally, although Retrospect's basic approach of using a dumb client 
  to send data to a smart server application hasn't changed, 
  Retrospect 8 now offers Wake-on-LAN support for Mac clients (but not 
  yet Windows clients), so the Retrospect engine can wake up sleeping 
  Macs right before a backup is scheduled to start. Other improvements 
  include support for multiple network interfaces, advanced 
  preferences to adjust network timeout values, and automatic client 
  login.


**What's Missing** -- As much as these features are welcome, it's 
  clear that EMC has more coming, even in the very near term. Notable 
  among Retrospect 8's known limitations is lack of PowerPC support 
  for the Retrospect engine and console applications. EMC promises 
  this for an April 2009 release, and it will be extremely welcome, 
  since many companies and organizations prefer to use a somewhat 
  older Mac as a backup server. Even I can't do more than test 
  Retrospect 8 until it works with PowerPC-based Macs, since my backup 
  server is a Power Mac G5. 

  For those upgrading from previous versions of Retrospect, there's 
  essentially no connection between the two - Retrospect 8 does not 
  import your previous configuration or read the contents of older 
  backup sets. As such, you'll need to set everything up from scratch 
  and keep your old installation of Retrospect available for 
  restoration needs. Be sure to disable the older version's backup 
  operations so there's no conflict for a particular Retrospect 
  Client. Although the capability to read old backup sets is in the 
  works, I find that it's often a good idea to set things up from 
  scratch anyway, as a way of eliminating historical oddities.

  Also missing is support for backing up to a file stored on an FTP 
  server, which some people used as a way to move backups offsite. 
  Although EMC is promising this for a future update, I'd rather see 
  them put some effort into the kind of offsite backup that CrashPlan 
  enables. Then again, CrashPlan can do what it does only by comparing 
  versions of files and transferring just the bits that have changed, 
  which radically reduces the amount of data transferred. Since 
  Retrospect continues to copy entire files on each execution, it 
  would need to transfer far more data.

  Complete documentation isn't yet available for Retrospect 8, 
  presumably because EMC didn't wish to hold up the release of a 
  functional program while the manual was being completed.

  Finally, Retrospect Clients running on Mac OS X 10.2.8 and Mac OS 9 
  are not currently supported, although EMC is looking into what would 
  be necessary to support these older systems.


**Editions and Upgrades** -- Because Retrospect is used by 
  organizations ranging from the single user with multiple Macs all 
  the way up to massive companies, there are a number of different 
  licensing options that also vary based on whether you're buying new 
  or upgrading older versions. 

<http://www.retrospect.com/en/buy/buy_step1.dtml?platform=macintosh&family=retrospect>
<http://www.retrospect.com/upgrade/matrix/#mac>

* Retrospect Desktop 3 User: This edition is designed for individual 
  users and small offices, and comes with three licenses for 
  Retrospect Client. It costs $129 new, or $249 with one year of 
  support and maintenance. Owners of Retrospect Express 4.3 or 
  Retrospect Desktop 4.3 and later can upgrade for $59, or pay $179 
  for the upgrade and a year of support and maintenance.

* Retrospect Single Server: This edition is designed for small to 
  midsize organizations with a single backup server. With 20 licenses 
  for Retrospect Client, it costs $479, or $609 with a year of support 
  and maintenance. A version with unlimited clients and a year of 
  support costs $809. Upgrades from Retrospect Workgroup 4.3 or later 
  cost $279 for 20 clients; adding a year of support increases the 
  price to $409. An unlimited client upgrade costs $539.

* Retrospect Multi Server: This edition is designed for larger 
  organizations that need more than one server running Retrospect and 
  an unlimited number of clients. It costs $1,669 and includes a year 
  of support and maintenance. Upgrades from Retrospect Workgroup 4.3 
  or Retrospect Server 4.3 and later cost $939.

* Retrospect Client: Licenses for additional Retrospect Clients are 
  available at $39 for a 1-pack, $149 for a 5-pack, and $299 for a 
  10-pack. You can upgrade a previous 1-user client for $19, a 5-user 
  client pack for $69, and a 10-user client pack for $119.


**Let the Testing Begin** -- Although I'm heartened by the fact that 
  some of the original Dantz people are working on Retrospect 8, the 
  complete rewrite means that I won't have the same level of comfort 
  with Retrospect 8 as I had with previous versions until I've used it 
  successfully for some time in real world scenarios. Our backup 
  expert, Joe Kissell, will also be putting Retrospect 8 through its 
  paces for coverage in "Take Control of Mac OS X Backups," so we will 
  be reporting on our experiences in the future. 

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/backup-macosx?pt=TB970>

  But that caution aside, it's great to have Retrospect 8 back in the 
  Mac market, and the added competition can only encourage programs 
  like Time Machine, CrashPlan, and others to continue to 
  differentiate themselves and improve further.


TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 23-Mar-09
---------------------------------------------------------
  by Doug McLean <doug_mclean@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10148>

  Espresso 1.0 from MacRabbit is the first release of the company's 
  much-anticipated Web authoring application, which is designed to 
  provide an elegant workflow for Web developers and designers. 
  Espresso supports HTML, CSS, XML, JavaScript, and PHP, and can 
  publish to Web sites using FTP, SFTP, FTP/SSL, or Amazon's S3 
  service. It features quick editing, projects for handling full 
  sites, and live previews so you don't have to reload constantly. A 
  plug-in architecture may help users extend Espresso in the future. 
  (59.95 euros, 49.95 euros if you own CSSEdit 2, 8.8 MB)

<http://macrabbit.com/espresso/>


  PDFpen 4.1 and PDFpenPro 4.1 from SmileOnMyMac are the latest 
  versions of the PDF editing utilities. Both version updates feature 
  a number of undisclosed bug fixes and add support for Sparkle - the 
  open source Mac OS X framework designed to simplify distributing 
  software updates. ($49.95/$99.95, free updates, 13 MB/13.2 MB)

<http://www.smileonmymac.com/PDFpen/>
<http://www.smileonmymac.com/PDFpenPro/>
<http://sparkle.andymatuschak.org/>


  Mini DisplayPort to VGA Firmware Update from Apple addresses 
  longstanding performance and compatibility issues with the Mini 
  DisplayPort to VGA Adapter on Mini DisplayPort-enabled Macs. The 
  problems addressed include intermittent screen flickering and, in 
  some cases, no video output appearing at all. More information 
  regarding the update and steps to install it is available from 
  Apple's Web site. (Free update, 11.4 MB)

<http://support.apple.com/downloads/_Mini_DisplayPort_to_VGA_Firmware_Update>
<http://mjtsai.com/blog/2009/03/06/macbook-pro-mini-displayport-dual-link-dvi/>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT3492>


ExtraBITS for 23-Mar-09
-----------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10157>

**Safari Exploited in 10 Seconds in Security Contest** -- Security 
  researcher Charlie Miller has cut his time to "pwn" (take full 
  control of an operating system via an exploit) from 2 minutes to 10 
  seconds at the CanSecWest PWN2OWN contest. He was sitting on a 
  previously discovered exploit that he had pre-loaded onto a remote 
  Web site. When a fully patched Mac OS X system connected to the 
  site, he was in charge. He won $5,000 and the exploited MacBook. 
  Miller's find and two other Safari exploits will be turned over to 
  Apple without prior disclosure by TippingPoint, the firm that 
  sponsored the contest. (Posted 2009-03-20)

<http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&articleId=9129978&intsrc=news_ts_head>


**Mixing Older, Newer AirPort WDS Networks** -- Ted Landau went 
  through a lot of Option key pressing to figure out how to integrate 
  a new simultaneous dual-band AirPort Extreme Base Station with his 
  older mix of 802.11n (rectangular) and 802.11g (saucer) AirPort base 
  stations. He explains how at MacFixIt. (Posted 2009-03-20)

<http://www.macfixit.com/article.php?story=20090320130754107>


**HD Movies Now Available through iTunes** -- Apple is now offering 
  high-definition movies for purchase (but not rent) via iTunes. 
  Previously, only the Apple TV provided the means to watch rented 
  (with no option to purchase) HD movies. HD commands a $5 premium 
  over standard-definition purchases, with a little over a dozen 
  titles currently available. (Link goes to the iTunes Store.) (Posted 
  2009-03-19)

<http://itunes.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewCustomPage?name=pageHDMovies>


**AT&T to Offer Contract-Free iPhone** -- According to The Boy Genius 
  Report, AT&T will start offering the iPhone for sale without a 
  contract, starting 26-Mar-09. The commitment-free 8 GB and 16 GB 
  models will retail for $599 and $699 (that's $400 more than the 
  subsidized price!), and will be available only to existing customers 
  who wish to add a line, purchase a gift, or upgrade (presumably from 
  a different AT&T phone). (Posted 2009-03-19)

<http://www.boygeniusreport.com/2009/03/18/att-bringin-sexy-back-offering-iphone-3g-at-no-commitment-price-no-activation/>


**Apple Updates AirPort Design Guide** -- Apple has revised its guide 
  for planning and building Wi-Fi networks, formerly called "Designing 
  AirPort Networks." The new guide, "Apple AirPort Networks," is a 
  fairly in-depth effort at explaining with step-by-step instructions 
  how to configure Apple base stations for various kinds of networks 
  and tasks. (Posted 2009-03-18)

<http://manuals.info.apple.com/en_US/Apple_AirPort_Networks_Early2009.pdf>


**Cables: The Bane of Technological Existence** -- An elegant 
  graphical recounting of illustrator Christoph Niemann's 
  "can't-live-with-them, can't-live-without-them" relationship with 
  cables, in the New York Times. For anyone who wishes to differ, we 
  have a box of SCSI cables for you. (Posted 2009-03-18)

<http://niemann.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/03/16/my-life-with-cables/>


**iPhones Causing Courtroom Chaos** -- Jurors researching and sharing 
  trial information via the iPhone and other mobile devices is proving 
  to be a serious and widespread problem for many courts. Several 
  major cases have had to declare mistrials after jurors were 
  discovered to be posting trial information via Twitter and Facebook, 
  and looking up trial-related information via Google. While jurors 
  breaking rules via the Internet is nothing new, the widespread 
  adoption of devices like the iPhone has made it far easier and more 
  common. (Posted 2009-03-17)

<http://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/18/us/18juries.html>


Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk for 23-Mar-09
----------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10160>

**External Hard Drives** -- Readers solicit opinions on different hard 
  drive manufacturers in an attempt to find the best solution for 
  using Time Machine. (4 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2529>


**AirPort Problem** -- The recent AirPort firmware update has caused 
  problems for some readers, and the AirPort Express blinking lights 
  continue to cause confusion. (7 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2531>


**Locating original files in iTunes automatically** -- Has iTunes lost 
  track of many songs whose files haven't moved? SuperSync may be the 
  solution. (2 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2535>


**In Search of iTunes 8.1** -- Readers report problems with the latest 
  update to iTunes. (5 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2536>


**Windows to Mac software failures?** Companies that have tried to 
  port Windows applications to the Mac have had a mixed bag of 
  success. (52 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2538>


**AirTunes stutter with AirPort Express 802.11n optical out** -- 
  Playing music via AirTunes is problematic for some readers using the 
  latest version of iTunes. (2 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2541>


**iPhone 3.0 and Cut/Copy/Paste** -- Readers compare the 
  just-announced copy-and-paste functionality on the forthcoming 
  iPhone 3.0 update with the implementation on the Newton. (15 
  messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2542>


**WeatherCal Inserts Updating Forecasts into iCal** -- Readers take 
  Bare Bones Software's latest offering for a spin and discuss 
  alternatives. (11 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2543>


**SpamSieve** -- Isn't it great when the developer of software you use 
  is also a contributor to TidBITS Talk? A reader gets help with his 
  spam filtering software, straight from the source. (3 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2546>


$$

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