TidBITS#973/06-Apr-09
=====================
  Issue link: <http://db.tidbits.com/issue/973>

  The news was a bit light this week, allowing us to focus on 
  more-practical topics. Glenn Fleishman reports on the new VeriSign 
  Identify Protection app for the iPhone, Matt Neuburg passes on ten 
  somewhat unusual tasks he performs with BBEdit, and guest 
  contributor Jeff Merron explains the utility of the iBagz to anyone 
  who worries about rain damaging an iPod or iPhone. Also this week, 
  Doug McLean continues on his search for utilities to help him avoid 
  distraction, this week focusing on SelfControl, which blocks entire 
  Internet domains for a user-specified amount of time. In the TidBITS 
  Watchlist, we look briefly at the releases of iTunes 8.1.1, Default 
  Folder X 4.2, VMware Fusion 2.0.3, Camino 1.6.7, NeoOffice 3.0, 
  Fetch 5.3.1, WireTap Studio 1.0.9, and Panorama 5.5.2.

Articles
    SelfControl Blocks Internet Time Bandits
    VeriSign Brings Authentication Tokens to iPhone
    iBagz Keeps Your iPod Dry
    Ten Surprising Uses of BBEdit
    TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 06-Apr-09
    ExtraBITS for 06-Apr-09
    Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk for 06-Apr-09


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SelfControl Blocks Internet Time Bandits
----------------------------------------
  by Doug McLean <doug_mclean@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10192>

  Many of us rely on the Internet for work, and are at the same time 
  incredibly distracted by it. Sometimes it's not enough to promise 
  yourself you'll stay away from your favorite blogs  or social 
  networking sites - sometimes you need an intervention.

  As a fairly distractible person, I'm big on applications that help 
  focus my attention (see "Minimize Desktop Distractions", 
  2008-12-04). You may recall me writing in that article:

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9908>

    I also considered taking measures to block my Internet roaming - a principal offender in my time wasting - but decided I'd probably ignore anything that told me how much time I was wasting or turn off whatever was keeping me from where I wanted to go. 

  I still agree with this statement. The trouble with many Internet 
  blocking programs and methods is twofold. First, there's the typical 
  all-or-nothing ideology: I constantly need to check Web sites, 
  gather information, and fact-check my work. So implementing a 
  blanket no-Internet solution, such as disabling my AirPort 
  connection, inevitably results in my needing to abandon it and get 
  back online, and thus back in the realm of distraction. This brings 
  us to the second issue: given the capability to disable whatever is 
  keeping me off the Internet, I will almost inevitably do so. What I 
  need is a flexible program that enables me to select the sites I can 
  block, and then prevents me from turning it off.

  Thankfully, this is exactly what SelfControl, a new customizable 
  domain-blocking application designed by artist Steve Lambert and 
  developed by Charlie Stigler, does. Recently, I had begun following 
  Lambert on Twitter, interested mainly in his tweets in regards to 
  contemporary art. (Lambert is also responsible for the popular 
  Add-Art Firefox plug-in which replaces Internet ads with art.) Thus, 
  it was a delight to discover that he also develops extremely useful 
  real-world apps like SelfControl.

<http://visitsteve.com/work/selfcontrol/>
<http://visitsteve.com/>
<http://www.charliestigler.com/>
<http://visitsteve.com/work/add-art-art-replaces-ads/>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2009-04/SC_interface.png>

  The open-source SelfControl is a streamlined application with a 
  simple but effective interface and set of controls. Launching the 
  application brings up an interface displaying a slider that sets the 
  amount of time your blacklisted domain names will be blocked (you 
  can block access for anywhere between 1 minute and 12 hours), a 
  button that enables you to edit and view your blacklist, and a 
  button that begins the blocking. Blacklisting domain names blocks 
  access to them through your Web browser (both Firefox and Safari are 
  supported), as well as through applications that communicate with 
  the sites directly. For example, blacklisting twitter.com prevents 
  Twitterrific from receiving updates or allowing me to post through 
  it.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2009-04/Blacklist.png>

  Clicking SelfControl's Start button brings up an authorization 
  prompt - requiring the user account password (a much-appreciated 
  feature that shows forethought on the part of the developers - 
  picture your friend repaying that April Fools prank with a 12-hour 
  embargo on Internet access). A timer displays the remaining time you 
  have left before access is restored.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2009-04/Timer.png>

  Once begun there is no easy way to disable SelfControl. Even 
  quitting the application, switching user accounts, or rebooting the 
  Mac will not disable the domain blocking, since SelfControl works 
  its magic by using Mac OS X's built-in firewall to block traffic to 
  the desired sites at the system level. It might be possible to 
  disable SelfControl's domain-blocking by tweaking firewall rules 
  manually, but it's probably easier simply to let the timer expire 
  than to delve into the guts of ipfw configuration files.

  SelfControl does have some kinks. Sometimes you need to relaunch 
  your Web browser after initiating SelfControl to activate the domain 
  blocking. Also, some sites seem more resistant to being blocked than 
  others, and it may take a few minutes before access to them is 
  denied, due to caching. Finally, on a couple occasions my blocked 
  access has continued for a minute or two past the timer's duration. 
  Hopefully, we'll see these issues ironed out in future versions.

  All in all, SelfControl is an excellent little tool for blocking out 
  Internet distractions without sacrificing access to sites on which 
  you rely. I highly recommend that anyone wrestling with Internet 
  time bandits try it out. SelfControl 1.1 requires Mac OS X 10.4 or 
  later, and is a 1.7 MB download.


VeriSign Brings Authentication Tokens to iPhone
-----------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10180>

  VeriSign has released an iPhone app that lets you supplement a user 
  name and password login at several Web sites with a well-regarded 
  and cryptographically robust method of confirming your identity. 
  AOL, eBay, and PayPal are notable among current sites supporting the 
  system.

  The free VIP Access for Mobile application relies on a unique 
  credential created for your iPhone based on its phone number, and 
  confirmed with an SMS message sent to that number. Once the 
  credential is confirmed with this looped-back process, the program 
  generates a unique 6-digit token every 30 seconds using an algorithm 
  that's uniquely derived from the credential. (VIP stands for 
  VeriSign Identity Protection.)

<http://itunes.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewSoftware?id=307658513&mt=8>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2009-03/verisign_vip.png>

  iPod touch devices can't use VIP Access because of the lack of an 
  out-of-band method of confirming a unique identity, at least in the 
  current system design. VeriSign has released this application 
  previously only for mobile phones, including the BlackBerry and 
  other platforms. 

  When using this system you're much less likely to experience account 
  theft, even if there's a breach of login data at a Web site or if 
  you're scammed out of your login credentials. Because VeriSign 
  separately controls and authenticates its own tokens, a cracker 
  can't get in, even if he has your user name and password. A site 
  would have to suffer an internal security flaw that allowed token 
  entry to be disabled or bypassed. (Passwords are always encrypted 
  and protected at any well-designed site, but a data breach could 
  allow crackers to pair account information with commonly guessed 
  passwords or passwords assembled from other sources that are then 
  matched up by email or other data.)

<https://vipdeveloper.verisign.com/vip/home.jsp>

  At sites that support VeriSign's system, you log in the first time 
  with your current user name and password, and then enter the 
  credential from VIP Access to activate two-factor authentication 
  (one factor is your regular login; the other, the token). From then 
  on, you must have the phone and the current token to supplement your 
  regular login to use that site.

<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Two-factor_authentication>

  The convenience of having this second factor on your phone can't be 
  overstated: we iPhone users generally have our phones with us most 
  of the time, and when we're using a computer, it's likely on our 
  person or nearby. And it's a single device that many Web sites can 
  support. I currently have key fobs from eBay/PayPal and Etrade. I 
  use those sites regularly but not frequently, and I'm always rooting 
  around to find the key fob.

  The security of a second factor is that a thief needs two parts to 
  abuse your information, and it's hard to obtain both parts at once. 
  If someone obtains your credential number, the current token can't 
  be reverse engineered from it. If someone glances at your current 
  token or obtains it in some other fashion, it's no good after less 
  than 30 seconds. Note that I include a token in the screen capture 
  above from my iPhone, which was good for only 30 seconds from when I 
  took it.

  Even if a thief steals your phone, as long as you haven't stored 
  your account names and passwords for sites you're using with VIP 
  Mobile, having the token generator won't do the thief any good.

  A phishing attack is still possible. Imagine that you are convinced 
  you are visiting a secure site that uses a VIP token, and enter your 
  login name, password, and the current token. If the site is 
  malicious and enters the same credentials at the real site within a 
  few seconds, a phisher could gain access. 

  This makes it extra important that you note tell-tale signs that the 
  secure site you think you are at is actually the correct site: check 
  the domain name, look for _https_ in the URL (location field), and 
  make sure a lock icon appears in the browser - Safari in the upper 
  right, and Firefox in the lower right.

  Participating sites pay what the New York Times reported is $3 to 
  $10 per year per customer to gain this login with extra confirmation 
  of a user's identity; customers pay nothing.

<http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/03/31/whats-the-password-only-your-iphone-knows/>

  This is a great deal on both sides. Customers get the assurance that 
  their accounts are safe at the price of a little inconvenience - 
  although most of us are always carrying our phones with us. And site 
  operators get the additional security of not having to deal with the 
  cost and complexity of having accounts hacked.


iBagz Keeps Your iPod Dry
-------------------------
  by Jeff Merron <jmerron@gmail.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10149>

  One afternoon after school, back in the pre-Gore-Tex days, my friend 
  Tim and I set off on what we thought would be an easy six-mile run. 
  Nothing but a routine maintenance workout on a relatively mild New 
  Jersey day. Chilly - maybe 40 degrees - very cloudy, and with just a 
  little drizzle, so we were wearing standard school-issue sweats.

  At the two-mile mark, the drizzle turned to rain. We figured it 
  wouldn't get worse, so we kept on. At mile three, our halfway point, 
  the skies opened. Within minutes, our shoes were soaked through and 
  our sweats had become noticeably heavier. Our typical constant 
  chatter had come to a halt. We were running on a heavily trafficked 
  back road with no shoulder, so we focused entirely on avoiding both 
  puddles and cars. It was a true loop, so the fastest way back was to 
  finish the course. By the fourth mile, I remember my sweatpants 
  sinking lower and lower, as the sheer weight of the water began to 
  drag them down. My socks and shoes had devolved into unified 
  spongeballs.

  We slogged our way back to the locker room, and were able to joke 
  about the experience for weeks to come, but I had no idea that it 
  would become an unforgettable episode, a lifelong cautionary tale. 
  It had been - and remains - the worst training run I've ever taken. 
  Worse than running in 26 degrees below zero, one winter Wisconsin 
  morning. Worse than a foot of unplowed snow (that was actually kind 
  of fun). In the 30 years since, even as Gore-Tex and spandex have 
  made bad-weather running much more comfortable, the only kind of 
  weather that can genuinely alter my workout routine is cold rain. I 
  hate it, hate it, hate it.

  Meanwhile, over the past six or seven years, I've become reliant on 
  my iPod as a training partner. Music and the measurement 
  capabilities of the Nike+iPod system eventually evolved from valued 
  companion to necessity. Some days the first five "American Idiot" 
  tracks get me through a quick workout I never really wanted to do. 
  Other days, the prospect of listening to an entire Beatles album 
  uninterrupted inspires me to set off on a longer run.

  Cold rain, my old nemesis, attacked me again about a year ago. I was 
  about two miles away from home and running with an iPod nano 
  protected with a silicon skin. But that thin covering was no match 
  for the heavy, windswept sheets that arrived suddenly and continued 
  until I reached home. My iPod stopped playing near the end of the 
  run, and although I hoped it would dry out and recover, it never 
  did.

  This past weekend in North Carolina we've received an uninterrupted 
  drenching of cold rain. Between the caution with which I now treat 
  an iPod in the wet weather, and my own reluctance to run in these 
  conditions, I've had every excuse to stay home and give my legs a 
  rest.

  But, about three months ago, I ordered a hard plastic case for my 
  new iPod touch. And for some reason, the online store I bought it 
  from offered an iFrogz iBagz for only an extra buck or two (it 
  normally retails for $11.99). The iBagz is a thick plastic pouch 
  with plenty of space for an iPhone or iPod touch. But it's not just 
  a glorified baggie. Running through a seal in the pouch is a 
  headphone connector; on the inside is the male end, which plugs 
  perfectly into my iPod's headphone jack. On the outside is the 
  female end, which seals solidly with my Koss SportaPro headphones.

<http://ifrogz.com/products/bagz.php>
<http://www.koss.com/koss/kossweb.nsf/p?openform&pc^pt^SportaPro>

  Thanks to this connector, I can completely seal my iPod inside the 
  waterproof and transparent iBagz. Near the top of the iBagz, there 
  are three Ziploc-style seals that close with a reassuring snap 
  sound. The top of the bag then folds down, three times, after which 
  you secure the enclosure with a strip of Velcro.

  This may sound like a clunky, heavy, and perhaps overly complex 
  solution, but here's the thing: it's not. It's easy to see your iPod 
  after it's sealed in the bag, and almost equally easy to access all 
  of the iPod's controls, both on the exterior and on the touch 
  screen.

  After a few short light-rain trial runs with the iBagz, from which I 
  emerged with a perfectly dry iPod, I began to have real trust in it. 
  Yesterday, after two days and two runs that I delayed and cut short 
  because of cold rain (I used the iBagz both times and it performed 
  flawlessly), I decided to give the iBagz its toughest test yet: an 
  hour of running on a muddy trail in a constant downpour.

  I wanted to run, but I was unenthused, to put it mildly. So I 
  promised myself to take it long, slow, and relaxing - no pressure. I 
  put on the Beatles' compilation album "Love," and I ran. There was 
  no way around some of the puddles, which resembled nascent fishing 
  ponds, and my socks and shoes were soaked through within 15 minutes. 
  While my water-resistant gear made the hour-long outing immensely 
  more comfortable than my unforgettable sweatsuit slog of decades 
  past, it couldn't prevent me from becoming mud-splattered and 
  drenched by the midway point.

  But the Beatles - protected, without any worry on my end, by the 
  iBagz - kept me keeping on. There was a stretch in my run when I had 
  a chance to cut it short. I was passing by my car, which I had 
  driven to the trail. I was faced with about two miles to finish the 
  run I had planned, or two minutes to be ensconced in complete warmth 
  and dryness. And then "Help" kicked in - the symbolism didn't escape 
  me.

  Neither did the great dependability and utility of the iBagz. After 
  my soggy struggle, as I plugged my iPod in to sync, I put the 
  plastic pouch next to my iBook and promised myself that I would 
  write about it. "An ode to a plastic bag," I thought. Silly, in a 
  way, but it's helped me through some tough workouts, and if you like 
  to exercise while listening to your iPod, and have avoided doing so 
  because of rain, I highly recommend you try it. Even if you aren't a 
  runner, the iBagz would be worthwhile for anyone who spends enough 
  time outside to risk a soaking, perhaps at a summer festival or 
  while walking home from work. The iBagz may be one of the simplest 
  iPod accessories I own, but it's also the one I treasure most.


  [Jeff Merron is a freelance writer and editor. He lives in North 
  Carolina.]


Ten Surprising Uses of BBEdit
-----------------------------
  by Matt Neuburg <matt@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10142>

  Although BBEdit, from Bare Bones Software, is not my primary text 
  editor, I've recently observed myself using it a great deal anyway 
  for various tasks, some which don't have all that much to do with 
  editing text. Here, in no particular order, are the ten primary 
  things that I do with BBEdit.

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

  1. Search for text in multiple files. BBEdit can do batch file text 
  searches; in particular, you can designate a folder and tell BBEdit 
  to search inside all text files within that folder, at any depth. 
  This arises especially when I'm programming. I remember that I've 
  used a particular function before, but I can't remember where. All 
  my code is in just a few folders, so BBEdit can search it all for 
  me, very quickly. It totally beats Spotlight, which indexes only 
  individual words, can't do regular expression searches, and (on 
  Tiger) doesn't even index code files.

  2. Change text file encoding. I receive a text file containing 
  non-ASCII characters, but it's in Windows encoding. This means that 
  most Mac OS X applications, which default to opening text files as 
  UTF-8 or MacRoman, can't interpret the file correctly. With BBEdit, 
  I can open the file, switch it to Unicode encoding (and fix the line 
  endings), and save it again.

  3. Edit invisible or privileged text files. Mac OS X is Unix, and 
  Unix is chock full of configuration files. When you want to change 
  one, it can be a big pain, because the file is invisible or hidden 
  in a package or a folder whose contents the Finder doesn't display, 
  or because the file is protected by special privileges and can be 
  edited only by the superuser. For example, let's say I want to 
  change the Leopard Help Viewer to be a normal application (so that I 
  can switch to it and away from it using Command-Tab). Instead of 
  issuing a bunch of tricky Terminal commands, I use BBEdit's Open 
  Hidden command to open the relevant file and edit it directly; 
  BBEdit asks for my password when I open the file, and maintains the 
  correct ownership and privileges when I save it.

<http://www.macosxhints.com/article.php?story=20080601072810282>

  4. Edit remote files. I maintain several Web sites. Let's say I want 
  to tweak a file at one of these sites. I could download the file, 
  edit it, and upload it again; but BBEdit lets me do this so 
  transparently that it looks like I'm editing the file in place, 
  remotely, within its Web site. I can use BBEdit's Open from FTP 
  Server command, or I can enlist the aid of another of my favorite 
  utilities, Interarchy. Either way, the file opens for editing in 
  BBEdit, and when I save, the changes are automatically propagated 
  right up to the remote file on the Web.

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

  5. Compare text files. I maintain various text files cooperatively: 
  that is, I edit them, but someone else gets to edit them too. (This 
  has mostly to do with code that I maintain together with some other 
  programmer, but TidBITS articles also work this way.) So, in one of 
  these text files, what did the other person change since the last 
  time I edited it? BBEdit has a wonderful Find Differences command 
  that displays both versions of the file and a list of places where 
  they differ.

  6. Use remote version control. Text files that I work on are often 
  maintained on a remote computer that serves them through a version 
  control system such as CVS or SVN. BBEdit has CVS and SVN menus that 
  permit me to work with these systems. For example, TidBITS articles 
  live in a remote Articles folder, so I choose Update Working Copy 
  from BBEdit's SVN menu and presto, my copy of the Articles folder is 
  updated to match it. Also, this feature is integrated with the 
  previous one. Perhaps I want to compare versions of a file, before 
  and after someone else edited it, to see what changes were made. To 
  do so, I don't need physical copies of the file; BBEdit puts up a 
  Compare Revisions dialog that lets me select versions from the 
  remote version control server, and then it downloads them 
  transparently and presents its text file comparison interface.

  7. Compare entire folders. This is an even more powerful take on 
  file comparison. I maintain the online documentation for several 
  applications. The documentation is effectively a Web site, a folder 
  full of interlinked HTML and CSS files. I send this off to the 
  application developers, and they make changes and send it back to 
  me. What changes did they make? To find out, I point BBEdit at my 
  version of the folder and at the version of the folder that the 
  developers just sent back to me, and use the Find Differences 
  command. BBEdit tells me whether one folder has files that the other 
  lacks, and also tells me which files are in both but differ; in the 
  latter case, the interface becomes the "compare text files" 
  interface and I can easily see exactly what was changed.

  8. Check HTML validity. I maintain several Web sites as well as 
  online documentation that takes the form of a Web site (did I 
  mention this already?). I generate such a Web site, either editing 
  by hand or using some cool Web site generation tool, and now I want 
  to make sure the HTML is valid. BBEdit's Markup menu has a Check 
  Document Syntax command that lets me validate a single file, and a 
  Check Folder Syntax command that lets me validate all the files in a 
  site folder.

<http://www.apeth.com/RubyFrontierDocs/>

  9. Wrangle individual characters. From the massive world of entire 
  Web sites, let's jump down to the miniature world of individual 
  characters. BBEdit provides a number of utilities that assist me 
  when things go mysteriously wrong with characters. For example, as a 
  programmer, I copy some sample code from a Web page, paste it into a 
  text file, try to run it, and it fails with a weird error message. 
  The code looks right, but something seems to be wrong with the text. 
  BBEdit helps me find out what's up. For example, its Hex Dump 
  command lets me examine the file not as text but as numeric codes; 
  sometimes this reveals that the file contains "null" characters, 
  zero bytes that are completely invisible and undetectable in a text 
  editor, but which wreck the code's ability to execute, or shows that 
  it has the wrong kind of end-of-line characters. Or, BBEdit's Show 
  Invisibles command can reveal the presence of incorrect whitespace 
  characters, such as a non-breaking space (Option-Space). Or, I can 
  select an individual character and use BBEdit's ASCII Table palette 
  window to ask, "Just what character is this?" Also helpful when 
  reformatting text copied from some other source is BBEdit's Convert 
  to ASCII command.

  10. Rewrap lines. Finally, from the sublime to the mundane. Line 
  wrapping: how boring is that? But it comes up a lot. Email often has 
  hard-wrapped lines, so if you want to paste an email message into a 
  word processing context, you need to turn those into true 
  paragraphs. Just the other way round, sometimes I want to paste 
  email-style "quoted text" into a text field in my browser (when 
  posting to an online forum, for example), so I need to take 
  continuous text, break it up into shorter lines, and put a 
  greater-than sign in front of each line. BBEdit has simple commands 
  that make all of those things a snap.

  There are undoubtedly other ways to do any or all of these things; 
  all I'm reporting here is that I've noticed myself reaching for 
  BBEdit to do them, even though, as I say, BBEdit isn't my choice for 
  editing text. At $125, BBEdit is pricey for just these tasks, and 
  I'm not recommending a purchase for these reasons alone. But if you 
  _do_ have it, some of these uses might not have occurred to you. 

  Finally, note that BBEdit's freeware little brother, TextWrangler, 
  gives you almost all the same abilities. It can't do #6 (it has no 
  version control interface), but you can use its text file comparison 
  interface as an SVN external "diff" helper. It also can't do #8 (it 
  has no Markup menu), but there are other perfectly acceptable 
  validators (such as Robert Crews's freeware Validator).

<http://www.barebones.com/products/textwrangler/>
<http://homepage.mac.com/rcrews/software/validator/>


TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 06-Apr-09
---------------------------------------------------------
  by Doug McLean <doug_mclean@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10189>

  iTunes 8.1.1 from Apple "adds support for renting HD movies and 
  provides a number of bug fixes, including addressing issues with 
  VoiceOver and syncing with iPhone or iPod touch." (Free, 68 MB)

<http://support.apple.com/downloads/iTunes_8_1_1_for_Mac>

  Default Folder X 4.2 from St. Clair Software is a maintenance and 
  stability update to the Open and Save dialog-enhancement utility. 
  Changes include support for OpenMeta tags in the Spotlight window 
  below Save As dialogs and in the Info window below Open dialogs, a 
  new AppleScript command that clears the list of recently used 
  folders from the currently active folder set, added compatibility 
  with the development builds of Mac OS X Snow Leopard, and a number 
  of minor bug fixes. A full list of changes is available from St. 
  Clair Software's Web site. ($34.95 new, free update, 10.2 MB)

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

  VMware Fusion 2.0.3 from VMware is a maintenance update to the 
  popular Windows virtualization software. The latest version 
  reinstates support for driverless printer sharing, a feature that 
  had stopped working for users who had installed Security Update 
  2009-001 while running Mac OS X 10.5.6. Plus, the update provides 
  experimental support for Mac OS X Snow Leopard Server as a guest 
  operating system. ($79.99, free update, 284 MB)

<http://www.vmware.com/products/fusion/>

  Camino 1.6.7 from The Camino Project is a security and stability 
  update to the Mac-focused, Gecko-based Web browser. Changes include 
  the addition of the latest Mozilla Gecko rendering engine, which 
  brings with it critical security and stability fixes, improved ad 
  blocking, and a bug fix that stops cookies without valid names from 
  preventing the display of stored cookies. Also fixed are two 
  crashing bugs, one related to quitting Camino while the pop-up 
  blocker is visible and the other to selecting an item from a context 
  menu after its window has closed. (Free, 15.3 MB for English-only or 
  18.7 MB for multilingual)

<http://caminobrowser.org/releases/1.6.7/>

  NeoOffice 3.0 from NeoOffice updates the open-source productivity 
  suite with features aimed at better mimicking the functionality of 
  OpenOffice.org, the program on which NeoOffice is based. The latest 
  version now includes almost all of OpenOffice.org's features (with 
  the exception of Mac OS X Universal Access support), as well as some 
  additional ones such as support for the Media Browser, trackpad 
  gesture support, image import capabilities for scanners and cameras, 
  floating tool windows, and grammar checking under Mac OS X 10.5 
  Leopard. A full list of new features is available on the NeoOffice 
  Web site. (Free update, 160 MB)

<http://www.neooffice.org/>
<http://www.openoffice.org/>
<http://www.neooffice.org/neojava/en/features.php>

  Fetch 5.3.1 from Fetch Softworks is a minor update to the 
  longstanding file transfer software. According to the company's Web 
  site, "This is a minor update that fixes a few bugs in the check for 
  update and purchasing code." Fetch Softworks has also reduced the 
  price for upgrading from Fetch 4 to Fetch 5. The upgrade is now $10, 
  down from $15. ($25 new, free update, 16 MB)

<http://fetchsoftworks.com/>

  WireTap Studio 1.0.9 from Ambrosia Software is a maintenance update 
  to the tool for recording and editing audio on your Mac. The update 
  fixes issues with LivePreview playback performance, Editor playback 
  controls such as playback needle-tracking and file management, and 
  settings being lost during recording. AAC recording stability has 
  also been enhanced.  ($69 new, free update, 30.8 MB)

<http://www.ambrosiasw.com/utilities/wiretap/>

  Panorama 5.5.2 from ProVUE is a minor update to the company's 
  flagship database application, fixing a number of undisclosed minor 
  bugs. In addition to the update, ProVUE has also developed a new 
  credit card gateway for use from directly within the application. 
  The gateway collects credit card information within Panorama and 
  securely transmits it to Authorize.Net, and can be set up as an 
  automated or button-activated process. ($299 new, updates from 
  $89.99, 17.2 MB)

<http://www.provue.com/Panorama/Update55/>


ExtraBITS for 06-Apr-09
-----------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10191>

**Monoprice Offers Mini DisplayPort to HDMI Adapter** -- Looking for a 
  way to hook up your Mini DisplayPort-equipped Mac to an HDTV? Ars 
  Technica reports that accessories wholesaler Monoprice is offering a 
  $14 Mini DisplayPort to HDMI Adapter. Most interestingly, the 
  HDCP-compliant adapter enables playback of protected HD content on 
  your Mac - such as you might buy from the iTunes Store - to be 
  displayed on an HDTV, something that isn't possible on many 
  monitors. (Posted 2009-04-06)

<http://arstechnica.com/apple/news/2009/03/mini-displayport-to-hdmi-adapter-available-hdcp-compliant.ars>


**Stanford's iPhone Development Class Available Online** -- Want to be 
  an iPhone developer but don't know where to start? You can now sit 
  in on the Stanford University School of Engineering's iPhone 
  development class for free. Stanford will be posting all 10 weeks of 
  the course's lectures on iTunes U, as well as on the CS 193P course 
  Web page. The class, taught by several Apple employees, is normally 
  harder to get into than Studio 54, with 150 students competing for 
  only 60 spots this semester. (Posted 2009-04-06)

<http://www.stanford.edu/class/cs193p/>


**Peter Cohen Tees off on MacHeist Twitter Spam** -- Peter Cohen of 
  Macworld does an excellent job laying out the case for why MacHeist 
  inducing their customers to tweet an ad for the MacHeist software 
  bundle constitutes spamming. Twitter Commandment #7: Thou shalt not 
  tweet in my name. (Posted 2009-04-03)

<http://www.macworld.com/article/139830/2009/04/macheist.html>


Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk for 06-Apr-09
----------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10190>

**Apple's release notes** -- Would submitting bug reports to Apple 
  about the lack of information in release notes actually help? (3 
  messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2559>


**App Store's effect on pricing** -- The App Store is driving down 
  prices for iPhone apps, but is this an indication of a sweeping 
  change in software pricing? (3 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2560>


**Macworld Expo Moves to Mid-February** -- Readers react to the news 
  that Macworld Conference and Expo will take place next February 
  instead of January. (19 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2561>


**iMovie New Features** -- The Apple TV can play 720p HD video, but 
  only at 24 frames per second, which means iMovie's new HD export 
  feature is constrained with typical 30 fps video. (4 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2562>


**Mobile Me sync problems** -- A reader is experiencing duplicated 
  messages and other problems syncing to MobileMe. (2 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2563>


**Skype coming to iPhone** -- Readers discuss difficulties with 
  Skype's for-pay options. (2 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2564>


**Apple Releases General Support Update 2009-001** -- Maybe Apple will 
  release the update next year. (7 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2567>


**OmniWeb 5.9.2 Adds Gopher Support** -- Seriously, The Omni Group did 
  add Gopher support to OmniWeb. And you thought everything posted on 
  April 1st was suspect. (4 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2570>


**Time Machine Backup Over a Network** -- Although making a network 
  Time Machine backup (compared to using a Time Capsule) is possible, 
  performance seems to vary widely in real-world use. (6 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2573>


**Safari 4 Beta problem** -- The SnapBack button in the Address Bar is 
  gone in the latest Safari beta, but there's a way to get it back. 
  Will Apple remove it for good in the release version? (4 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2574>


**Whatever happened to... FWB Software?** A question about a shuttered 
  software company elicits an insider's look at the software industry 
  in the 1980s and 1990s. (2 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2575>


**Keyboards** -- Readers join Matt Neuburg in singing the praises of 
  Unicomp keyboards. (2 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2576>


$$

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