TidBITS#991/17-Aug-09
=====================
  Issue link: <http://db.tidbits.com/issue/991>

  We have a wide selection of Apple-related topics for you this week, 
  starting with Glenn Fleishman's look at Apple's latest Security 
  Update (don't worry, it's not something most people need to install 
  immediately). Glenn also looks in depth at the significant drop in 
  pricing for the CrashPlan Central hosted backup service. Meanwhile, 
  Doug McLean reports on the return of the matte screen option for the 
  15-inch MacBook Pro and compiles a list of his top ten favorite 
  Apple t-shirts. Finally, Adam covers Microsoft's announcement of the 
  forthcoming Outlook for Mac and other changes in Microsoft Office. 
  Notable software releases this week include Default Folder X 4.3, 
  PCalc 3.5, AirPort Client Update for MacBook and MacBook Pro, PDFpen 
  4.2, Safari 4.0.3, Cocktail 4.4.1, SubEthaEdit 3.5, and Audio Hijack 
  Pro 2.9.2.

Articles
    Security Update 2009-004 DNS Patch Applies to Few Systems
    Matte Screen Option Returns to 15-inch MacBook Pro
    Outlook for Mac Due with 2010 Office Release
    CrashPlan Central Slashes Hosted Backup Pricing
    Top Ten Apple T-Shirts 
    TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 17-Aug-09
    ExtraBITS for 17-Aug-09
    Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk for 17-Aug-09


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Security Update 2009-004 DNS Patch Applies to Few Systems
---------------------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10480>
  4 comments

  Security Update 2009-004, Apple's latest update to the domain name 
  service (DNS) software found in client and server versions of Mac OS 
  X 10.4 and 10.5, is critical - but affects only those people who 
  have manually enabled Mac OS X's DNS server.

  This includes system administrators using the DNS server in Tiger 
  Server or Leopard Server for name resolution where the DNS servers 
  can be reached in any fashion from outside a local network. It also 
  includes a very small number of people who like to monkey at the 
  command line and happened to enable DNS on regular Tiger or Leopard 
  systems.

  The flaw that the update fixes could disrupt a network by allowing a 
  remote attacker with no other access to a company's network to kill 
  a DNS server. It's likely that Apple servers represent a nearly 
  invisible fraction of all public-facing DNS servers worldwide, and 
  thus few attackers would try to exploit this now-patched problem.

  Security Update 2009-004 for Mac OS X and Mac OS X Server 10.4.11 
  and 10.5.8 has nothing to do with fundamental DNS flaws that Rich 
  Mogull and I wrote about in "Apple Fails to Patch Critical Exploited 
  DNS Flaw" (2008-07-24) and Adam Engst and I updated with "Apple 
  Finally Fixes DNS Flaw and ARDAgent Vulnerability" (2008-08-01).

<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT3776>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9706>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9720>

  DNS still suffers from a fundamental design flaw that last year's 
  patches ignored - the problem is enormously harder to exploit but 
  wasn't eliminated. DNS's security infrastructure has to evolve to 
  embed cryptography in such a way that a request to turn a 
  human-readable domain name into something else can't be spoofed by 
  an attacker.

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10480#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/10480>


Matte Screen Option Returns to 15-inch MacBook Pro
--------------------------------------------------
  by Doug McLean <doug_mclean@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10475>
  4 comments

  Apple has quietly reintroduced the antiglare matte display as a 
  premium option to the 15-inch MacBook Pro. Recently, and without 
  notice, the company updated its online store to offer the antiglare 
  display option for $50. The option had been available only for the 
  17-inch MacBook Pro. The 13-inch MacBook Pro and 13-inch MacBook 
  remain available only with a glossy display. 

<http://store.apple.com/us/configure/MC118LL/A?mco=NjcxMTU2OQ>

  In October 2008, Apple moved the unibody MacBook and MacBook Pro 
  lineup to glossy displays, doing away with an option for a matte 
  screen. The 17-inch MacBook Pro, released in January 2009, retained 
  the option for a matte display. (For details, see "On the Way Out: 
  FireWire and Matte Screens?," 2008-10-18.)

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9818>

  It's worth noting that Apple also brought FireWire back with the new 
  13-inch MacBook Pro, leaving the MacBook Air as the only Mac without 
  FireWire; see "Apple Refreshes MacBook Line at WWDC," 2009-06-08.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10332>

  The decision generated a thunderstorm of scorn from users who found 
  the glossy display's glare to be a distraction. Most people agreed 
  that the new displays were brighter, had deeper blacks, and offered 
  more saturated colors, but the inevitable glare that resulted in 
  brightly lit environments caused a divide among users. While many 
  found the glare easy enough to ignore - or at least worth the 
  trade-off for better colors and brightness, others found the 
  reflection to be too distracting.

  Underlining the vitriol was the fact that Apple had removed what 
  many felt was an essential option, rather than acknowledge differing 
  opinions on such a central design feature. While it's easy to see 
  why Apple would want to streamline options with consumer-level 
  systems, to do so for models targeted at working professionals was 
  insulting.

  Many MacBook Pro users are design and graphics professionals who 
  spend their days tweaking subtle visual details. If Apple expected 
  these users to continue buying premium systems, the company needed 
  to acknowledge that not everyone fits comfortably into the same box; 
  that's especially true with visual perception, where opinions on 
  what's best vary widely. Wasn't this the company that encouraged us 
  to Think Different?

  Given this context, Apple's reversal deserves some applause, as it's 
  apparent the cries of snubbed users have been heard. Yet there 
  remains the issue of the 13-inch MacBook Pro. If Apple truly sees 
  the smallest MacBook Pro model as appropriate for professional users 
  (and we think it is), why should it be denied the display options of 
  its larger brethren?

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10475#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/10475>


Outlook for Mac Due with 2010 Office Release
--------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10482>
  2 comments

  Entourage, the email client in Microsoft Office for Mac, will see 
  the end of its 10-year run late in 2010, when the next version of 
  Microsoft Office will replace it with a completely new version of 
  Outlook for the Mac (for our introduction to Entourage, see 
  "Entourage: The Grand Tour," 2000-10-09). 

<http://www.officeformac.com/blog/A-New-Outlook-for-Mac-Office>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/6139>

  Entourage is far more than an email client, of course, also 
  including a Usenet newsreader, contact manager, calendar, task 
  manager, and other features. Outlook for Windows offers all those 
  features and more, and works particularly fluidly in large 
  organization environments that use Microsoft Exchange Server for 
  shared messaging and collaboration. 

  We suspect the change from Entourage to Outlook for the Mac serves 
  three purposes:  

* It helps Microsoft emphasize the cross-platform compatibility 
  between Office for the Mac and Office for Windows. The differences 
  between Entourage and Outlook have long been a sore point in mixed 
  platform networks. 

* It makes for a clean break from previous limitations in Entourage. 
  Microsoft plans to write Outlook for Mac from the ground up as a 
  Cocoa-based application, giving it an entirely new content database. 
  Entourage was originally written using Carbon (since it predates Mac 
  OS X), which would prevent it from taking full advantage of Snow 
  Leopard's features. Also, Entourage's reliance on a single-file 
  database made it a non-starter for some people, who would go around 
  muttering about putting too many eggs in one basket that was 
  troublesome from a backup perspective. And, to be fair, catastrophic 
  corruption of the Entourage database, while extremely uncommon, is 
  not unknown.

* It may, by virtue of being a clean code base, make it easier to add 
  new features, such as Microsoft's Information Rights Management, 
  which helps restrict sensitive information for those who are 
  authorized to see it. 

  All this said, Microsoft said that Outlook for Mac won't just be a 
  clone of Outlook for Windows. Aside from being written from the 
  ground up using Cocoa, it will offer integration with Time Machine 
  and Spotlight.


**Entourage, Then and Now** -- This won't be the first version of 
  Outlook for the Mac. Office 98 for Mac came with Outlook Express 4.0 
  (related to Outlook mostly in name), and the Exchange Server group 
  within Microsoft developed Outlook 98 and Outlook 2001 for Mac to 
  provide Exchange Server compatibility on the Mac. 

  Entourage replaced Outlook Express in Office 2001 for Mac, but it 
  initially had no support for Exchange. Starting with Entourage X 
  10.1.4, Microsoft dropped Outlook for Mac and started adding 
  Exchange support to Entourage, continuing that through Entourage 
  2004, Entourage 2008, and the just-released Entourage 2008, Web 
  Services Edition.

<http://blog.entourage.mvps.org/2007/05/why_did_microsoft_replace_outl.html>
<http://www.microsoft.com/mac/itpros/entourage-ews.mspx>

  Entourage 2008, Web Services Edition has been in beta since January 
  2009, and offers the highest level of support for Exchange Server so 
  far, including:

* Enhanced Autodiscover service for setting up accounts automatically 
  and keeping them up to date

* Synchronization of Entourage 2008 Notes, Tasks, and Categories with 
  Exchange Server

* Use of attachments in Entourage for Exchange calendar events

* Name resolution when composing mail and invites while out of the 
  office without requiring a VPN connection

* Improved logging for troubleshooting purposes

  Entourage 2008, Web Services Edition is a free download for anyone 
  using Microsoft Office 2008 for Mac SP2, with all updates applied. 
  On the Exchange side, it can connect _only_ to Microsoft Exchange 
  Server 2007 Service Pack 1 RU4 or later. It runs on Intel-based Macs 
  as well as PowerPC-based Macs (G4s at 500 MHz or faster, and G5s), 
  and is a 64 MB download.

<http://www.microsoft.com/mac/downloads.mspx?pid=Mactopia_Office2008&fid=1c4ded5b-a992-490f-a8f8-db1b05b9e422#viewer>


**Office Editions Simplified** -- Microsoft also announced that, as of 
  15-Sep-09, it is simplifying the number of editions of Office for 
  the Mac available for sale. Currently, there are three versions of 
  Office, and after the change, there will be only two:

* Office 2008 for Mac Home & Student: This $149.95 version exists now 
  and will remain. It includes just Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and 
  Entourage.

* Office 2008 for Mac Business Edition: The $399.95 Business Edition 
  replaces both the $399.95 Standard Edition and the $499.95 Special 
  Media Edition. Along with Word, Excel, and PowerPoint, it will 
  include Entourage 2008, Web Services Edition and Microsoft Document 
  Connection for Mac, plus additional professional templates and clip 
  art, and more than 8 hours of Lynda.com training videos. It will not 
  include Microsoft Expression Media 2, which was part of the Special 
  Media Edition; I'm checking on the overall status of Expression 
  Media.

<http://www.microsoft.com/mac/products/expression-media.mspx>

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10482#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/10482>


CrashPlan Central Slashes Hosted Backup Pricing
-----------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>, Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10473>
  3 comments

  The price of Internet backups just dropped suddenly with CrashPlan's 
  change to fixed rates for family and individual backups to its 
  CrashPlan Central service. CrashPlan, like several other firms, 
  previously charged a recurring fee based on the amount of storage 
  you'd consumed. That has now changed.

  The new CrashPlan Central plans for personal use for two or more 
  computers costs $100 per year, which works out to $8.33 per month. 
  CrashPlan offers two- and three-year contracts for $150 and $180 
  ($6.25 per month and $5 per month, respectively). For a single 
  computer, CrashPlan's yearly $54 fee ($4.50 per month) is comparable 
  to several competitors, including Mozy.

<http://www.crashplan.com/consumer/store.vtl>

  Hosted backup software lets you transfer data from your computer to 
  a data center where your archives are stored in encrypted form. Most 
  backup services, including CrashPlan, store multiple or unlimited 
  older copies of changed files. 

  Bandwidth use after initial backups is kept as low as possible by 
  sending only "differentials" - the pieces of files that have changed 
  - instead of the entire file. This is also how older versions are 
  retained (and reassembled on restoration) without consuming 
  excessive space.

  Backblaze, Carbonite, and Mozy, which all offer unlimited storage as 
  well, each charge a per-computer price. For each computer, Backblaze 
  collects $5 per month or discounts the fee to $50 per year; 
  Carbonite charges $54.95 per year (no monthly option); and Mozy is 
  $4.95 per month, throwing in one month free with a year's payment 
  ($54.45 total). 

<https://www.backblaze.com/buy.htm>
<https://www.carbonite.com/Manage/purchasing/Purchase.aspx>
<https://mozy.com/registration/unlimited>

  For three home computers - as I have - paying a year at a time with 
  CrashPlan Central would save me $50 to $65 per year over the 
  equivalent service from the other three unlimited storage firms. For 
  one or two computers, the cost is comparable.

  Other firms like iDrive, Jungle Disk, and SpiderOak charge based on 
  total storage consumed by all computers backed up through a single 
  account. Prices for 50 to 100 GB of storage and two computers work 
  out to be about the same; higher levels of data start to rack up 
  costs much more quickly, however.

<http://www.idrive.com/>
<http://www.jungledisk.com/>
<https://spideroak.com/>

  Unlimited storage works as a practical business matter because 
  bandwidth has become exceptionally cheap, inexpensive hard drives 
  store vast amounts (and are getting vaster and cheaper all the 
  time), and most people won't consume hundreds of gigabytes of 
  storage.

  The factor working against those elements is that running a data 
  center that requires absolute perfection costs quite a lot. However, 
  many costs are relatively fixed for the data center as a whole, 
  while others increase as a small fraction for each additional user 
  or chunk of storage.

  CrashPlan's plan, therefore, relies on receiving significant 
  recurring revenue that lets them cover operational costs; more users 
  make it easier for those costs to be divided over a larger user 
  base, even as users potentially back up much more data. Some of 
  CrashPlan's competitors outsource data storage - such as Jungle 
  Disk, which uses Amazon S3 - which means their primary costs to pass 
  along are per-gigabyte transfer and storage fees, which decrease 
  only gradually with higher volume.

  Hosted backups rely on our confidence that companies will continue 
  to remain in existence to the point at which we may need to restore 
  a file. We at TidBITS recommend that you have at least two backups, 
  one of which could be an Internet-hosted backup. 

  Ideally, you'd have at least one local backup of your entire hard 
  disk for fast recovery and file restoration, and a remote backup of 
  your essential files; it's not necessary to back up applications or 
  the operating system over a relatively slow Internet connection. 
  Some of us use Time Machine or CrashPlan for one backup that 
  archives multiple versions of files, SuperDuper or Carbon Copy 
  Cloner for a bootable duplicate, and CrashPlan Central or another 
  Internet backup service for offsite backups.

<http://www.shirt-pocket.com/SuperDuper/SuperDuperDescription.html>
<http://www.bombich.com/software/ccc.html>

  This may sound excessive, but most of us have had to resort to 
  multiple backups at various times to deal with data corruption and 
  hardware failure. Without this breadth of backup, we would have lost 
  both critical current and important archival data and in-house 
  software.

  Adam Engst and Rich Mogull both use CrashPlan's peer-to-peer option 
  for Internet backups, having installed hard disks at local friends' 
  houses to host their backups. When used in this mode, CrashPlan's 
  offsite backups are entirely free, and they trust that a local 
  disaster will wipe out only one set of data, leaving the remote 
  backup unharmed.

  Our backup guru Joe Kissell prefers hosted storage like CrashPlan 
  Central because of the bandwidth and other requirements needed to 
  exchange data with friends. Since I live in an earthquake, flood, 
  volcano, and tsunami zone - Seattle - I assume that the worst case 
  could destroy data storage devices not just at my home and office, 
  but also at multiple other local locations. For more about backup 
  strategies and how CrashPlan fits into them see Joe's "Take Control 
  of Mac OS X Backups" and its more-focused sibling, "Take Control of 
  Easy Backups in Leopard."

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/backup-macosx?pt=TB991>
<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/leopard-easy-backup?pt=TB991>

  What sets CrashPlan apart from other backup services is that its 
  software can accomplish all three functions. The same software that 
  backs up to CrashPlan Central can also archive files to a local 
  drive or folder, to CrashPlan Central, and to a computer operated by 
  a friend also running CrashPlan. See "CrashPlan Adds Direct-to-Disk 
  Backups" (2008-12-15), for more background on CrashPlan's features.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9942>

  CrashPlan's one major limitation is an inability to choose different 
  backup sets for each destination. You must archive the same files to 
  local, remote, and peer storage.

  The basic version of CrashPlan is free and enables all the forms of 
  backup described. However, for constant backups, a higher level of 
  encryption, and data compression for local and peer-to-peer backups, 
  you need the $59.99 CrashPlan+. Computers backing up to each other 
  can use a mix of CrashPlan and CrashPlan+ software, however, making 
  CrashPlan also especially useful for backing up data from 
  non-technical friends and relatives.

<http://www.crashplan.com/consumer/features-compare.html>

  We expect CrashPlan's pricing may provoke a price war among 
  competing services, as the main differentiator between reliable 
  hosted backup systems is price and a preference for one software 
  package or another.

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10473#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/10473>


Top Ten Apple T-Shirts 
-----------------------
  by Doug McLean <doug_mclean@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10413>
  3 comments

  In his 1990 book, "The Macintosh Way," Guy Kawasaki draws a 
  flowchart depicting Apple's process for creating great products. The 
  first step in the order of operations? "Order t-shirt."

<http://www.amazon.com/dp/0673461750/?tag=tidbitselectro00>

  And so, as long as Apple has been around, there has been Apple 
  apparel to clothe its fans. To see what I mean, look no further than 
  Gordon Thygeson's "Apple T-Shirts: A Yearbook of History at Apple 
  Computer" ($40). The book is chock full of photos of over 1,000 
  memorable and rare Apple t-shirts from over the years. But the days 
  of great Apple tees are not gone, and there are still great Apple 
  shirts out there today! Here's a top ten list of my favorite Apple 
  t-shirts you can still add to your wardrobe.

<http://redlightrunner.com/ap.html>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2009-06/yearbook.jpg>


**1984 Mac Ad Homage** -- If you're of a certain age, you might 
  remember watching the iconic 1984 Super Bowl ad for the first 
  Macintosh in real time. For the rest of us, there's always YouTube. 
  This shirt, from FastMac, is a subtle homage to that advertisement. 
  With its boldly colored Anya Major silhouette, the design is a nod 
  to the Mac's emergence to those in the know, and an intriguingly 
  ambiguous image to those who aren't. ($9.99)

<http://store.fastmac.com/product_info.php?products_id=421>
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1984_%28television_commercial%29>
<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OYecfV3ubP8>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2009-06/1984.jpg>


**The Spinner** -- Imagine, every time you put on this shirt 
  displaying the famous Apple spinning gear, it's like you're powering 
  up! The simple abstract design from Bird Doctor will be instantly 
  recognized by Mac users, but should you want to hide your geek 
  credentials, this symbol will go undetected by those out of the 
  (Infinite) loop. ($22)

<http://shop.cafepress.com/design/7718429>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2009-06/spinner.jpg>


**da Vinci iPhone, Exploded** -- Leonardo da Vinci painted the Mona 
  Lisa, designed an ornithopter flying machine, and, according to this 
  shirt, created the iPhone. (Well, actually, the artist is Kevin 
  Tong, but let's pretend.) You can also find an exploded Mac shirt as 
  well, designed by Gary Booth, at Dion Briggs's site. ($20)

<http://www.isteamphone.com/>
<http://www.exploded128.com/>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2009-06/isteamphone.jpg>


**I'm a PC, Dying a Slow Blue Death** -- Take the Mac versus PC debate 
  into your own hands, in a subversive sorta way with this shirt from 
  Indie Tech. ($7.50)

<http://www.bluecollardistro.com/indietech/product_info.php?products_id=1720>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2009-06/im_a_pc.jpg>


**Keyboard Skull** -- This shirt, designed by Rubyred and available at 
  RedBubble, features a skull assembled from Apple keyboard keys. Yet, 
  it's only after close inspection that the Command key indicates the 
  keyboard's allegiance. How should one interpret the design's 
  meaning? It's your call, but at the very least, it's a good 
  conversation starter. ($26.13)

<http://www.redbubble.com/people/rubyred/t-shirts/3125274-3-key-skull>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2009-06/skull.jpg>


**Apple Retro Rainbow** -- What is there to say? This classic 
  throwback design from Geek/Science can even be printed on a faded 
  yellow shirt to nail that early 1980s look. ($11.99)

<http://www.tshirtbooth.com/Geek_Science/APPLE_RAINBOW_T_SHIRT>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2009-06/rainbow.jpg>


**The Apple Timeline** -- A brief history of Apple from Insanely Great 
  Tees: educate those around you, or simply remind yourself of where 
  the time has gone! ($19)

<http://www.insanelygreattees.com/shirt/timeline#>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2009-06/timeline.jpg>


**Crazy Light-Up Apple Logo Shirt** -- Winning the award for wackiest 
  concept, this shirt's Apple logo responds to audio input by lighting 
  up. Sure, you have to wear a battery pack, but the guaranteed 
  attention it garners for you will be worth it! Unfortunately, likely 
  for legal reasons, the shirt is no longer available at its original 
  online store. Luckily, you can still nab one on eBay! (Buy It Now 
  price: $31.99)

<http://www.gearfuse.com/retro-apple-t-shirt/>
<http://shop.ebay.com/?_from=R40&_trksid=m38&_nkw=apple+el+t-shirt>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2009-06/lightup.jpg>


**The Bomb** -- Experiencing an unrecoverable system error of a day? 
  Put on your Bomb shirt from Insanely Great Tees and keep your chin 
  up! Mac OS X's spinning pizza of death has nothing on the original 
  bomb symbol designed by Susan Kare. ($19)

<http://www.insanelygreattees.com/shirt/thebomb>
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bomb_%28symbol%29>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2009-06/bomb_detail.jpg>


**T-Shirt App** -- It seems like there's an app for everything, 
  including getting dressed. Beware, though, since you might get a few 
  unwanted icon taps on this shirt from Zazzle. ($33.75)

<http://www.zazzle.com/iphone_t_shirt_app-235485556282764733>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2009-06/Tshirt_app.jpg>


**Have I missed your favorite t-shirt?** While all lists must come to 
  a close, there are certainly many more Apple t-shirts out there, 
  hiding in dresser drawers around the world. If you've come across 
  any cool Apple-related shirts that weren't touched on here, I'd love 
  to hear about them. Happy shirt hunting!

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10413#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/10413>


TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 17-Aug-09
---------------------------------------------------------
  by Doug McLean <doug_mclean@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10474>

  Default Folder X 4.3 from St. Clair Software primarily adds full 
  support for the forthcoming Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard to the 
  Open/Save dialog enhancement utility. (Version 4.3 is necessary for 
  Snow Leopard; previous versions crash under 10.6.) It also reduces 
  CPU usage when displaying previews and fixes several compatibility 
  problems. Plus, a new expert setting enables users to resize Open 
  and Save dialogs to at least a user-specified minimum size. ($34.95 
  new, free update, 10.5 MB)

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

  PCalc 3.5 from TLA Systems brings the popular scientific calculator 
  into feature parity with the company's iPhone version. In particular 
  it adds new functions, can show additional functions with a "2nd" 
  key, supports multiple memories, offers optional HP48-style RPN 
  behavior, provides key click sounds, and allows use of the quote as 
  a thousands separator. ($19 new, free update, 3.4 MB)

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

  AirPort Client Update for MacBook and MacBook Pro from Apple 
  addresses an issue with wireless network performance when the 
  MacBook or MacBook Pro is running on battery power. The update 
  pertains only to users running Mac OS X 10.5.8 on one of the 
  following systems: the late 2007, early 2008, or late 2008 13-inch 
  MacBook; the early 2008 15-inch MacBook Pro; and the early 2008 or 
  late 2008 17-inch MacBook Pro. (Free, 1.68 MB)

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

  PDFpen 4.2 and PDFpenPro 4.2 from SmileOnMyMac are the latest 
  versions of the company's PDF editing utilities. The updates add 
  support for 128-bit AES encrypted documents, support for the 
  AppleScript enhanced print event, and other minor unspecified fixes 
  and improvements. ($49.95/$99.95, free updates, 12 MB/12.2 MB)

<http://www.smileonmymac.com/PDFpen/>
<http://www.smileonmymac.com/PDFpenPro/>

  Safari 4.0.3 from Apple is a security and stability update to the 
  Web browser. The latest version improves stability for Top Sites, 
  third-party plug-ins, and Web pages using the HTML 5 video tag, and 
  helps prevent arbitrary crashing and malicious code execution. The 
  update also fixes an issue that prevented users from logging into 
  iWork.com, and another that caused pages to be displayed in 
  grayscale instead of color. More details on the update's security 
  content are posted on Apple's Web site. The update is available via 
  Software Update or the Apple Support Downloads page. (Free, 40 MB/26 
  MB Leopard/Tiger)

<http://www.apple.com/safari/>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT1222>
<http://support.apple.com/downloads/Safari_4_0_3>

  Cocktail 4.4.1 from Maintain is a minor maintenance update to the 
  general purpose maintenance utility. The update fixes compatibility 
  issues with Firefox 3.5 and Flock 2.5, clears the latest RSPlug 
  Trojan Horse variants, adds updated Automator actions, provides 
  compatibility with Mac OS X 10.5.8, and addresses other minor 
  unspecified bugs. ($14.95, free update, 1.9 MB).

<http://www.maintain.se/cocktail/>

  SubEthaEdit 3.5 from TheCodingMonkeys is a major update to the 
  collaborative text editor. The latest version adds a code folding 
  feature that enables users to collapse nested bits of source code, a 
  document state persistence capability that saves document states 
  such as window positions, and new clickable URLs that make it easier 
  to open links while editing. Also the speed of AppleScript-based 
  text changes has been enhanced, triggers for a bug in the 
  mDNSResponder that caused high CPU loads when using AirPort base 
  stations have been reduced, and several crashing bugs have been 
  fixed, including one that would occur when opening files larger than 
  300 MB. A full list of changes is available via TheCodingMonkeys Web 
  site. (29 euros new, free update, 4.1 MB)

<http://www.codingmonkeys.de/subethaedit/>
<http://www.codingmonkeys.de/subethaedit/releasenotes.html#3.5>

  Audio Hijack Pro 2.9.2 from Rogue Amoeba is a maintenance update to 
  the all-around audio recording software. Changes include the use of 
  Instant Hijack 2.1.2, the capability to hijack the same application 
  in multiple sessions simultaneously, and improved saving 
  capabilities in the Recording Inspector. Also, several problems have 
  been fixed, including a bug that caused AAC recordings not to start, 
  an issue with the Add to iTunes script failing, and unresponsive 
  Quick Record hot keys. Finally, for users running Mac OS X 10.4, the 
  update will install the latest compatible version of Soundflower 
  1.3.1. ($32 new, free update, 7.4 MB)

<http://www.rogueamoeba.com/audiohijackpro/>

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10474#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/10474>


ExtraBITS for 17-Aug-09
-----------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10485>

**TomTom Releases iPhone Turn-by-Turn Navigation App** -- TomTom's 
  turn-by-turn navigation app costs $100 and comes with maps of the 
  United States and Canada. It requires an iPhone 3G or 3GS. There's 
  no monthly subscription fee, and add-on map packs for other 
  countries are available. A promised car-attachment kit with a better 
  GPS chip is still not yet out or priced. (Posted 2009-08-16)

<http://www.macworld.com/article/142305/2009/08/tomtomiphonerelease.html>


**Alltop Procrastinator's Clock** -- Silly, but potentially useful. 
  This Guy Kawasaki-inspired clock application intentionally runs 
  somewhere between 0 and 15 minutes fast, so you can't try to cut 
  things too close. Oops, gotta go! (Posted 2009-08-16)

<http://componentx.com/Alltock/>


**Sony Adopts EPUB Format for Electronic Books** -- Sony said that by 
  year's end it would switch to the EPUB set of standard formats for 
  electronic books for its online library and Reader devices. 
  EPUB-packaged books can still be wrapped in DRM, but are far more 
  portable among devices and software than proprietary formats. 
  Amazon's Kindle uses a proprietary book format for its titles, and 
  does not read EPUB packages. (Posted 2009-08-13)

<http://www.nytimes.com/2009/08/13/technology/internet/13reader.html>


**The Scoop on Google's Caffeine** -- Google Caffeine is Google's new 
  search engine architecture. It's designed to improve search speeds 
  and results for users, but may also have some unexpected results for 
  developers. PC World runs down answers to basic questions concerning 
  the forthcoming changeover. (Posted 2009-08-12)

<http://www.pcworld.com/article/170042/google_caffeine_faq_your_questions_answered.html>


**Fix for MacBook Pro Hard Drive Clicking in the Works** -- Some 
  MacBook Pro owners with 500 GB 7200 RPM hard drives have been 
  complaining of clicking sounds, followed by a short period of 
  stalled performance. The machines become responsive again after 
  roughly 10 seconds, and do not require rebooting. Apple spokesperson 
  Bill Evans has informed CNET that Apple is aware of the issue and 
  working on a fix, though no definite timetable has been set for its 
  release. (Posted 2009-08-12)

<http://news.cnet.com/8301-13579_3-10306301-37.html>


**Run-of-the-Mill Mac Trojan in the Wild** -- Nothing new here: Ars 
  Technica reports on a new trojan horse, disguised as a QuickTime 
  player update, that hijacks DNS requests, sending the victim to the 
  attacker's Web site of choice. Common sense helps you avoid 99 
  percent of trojans and this case is no different - if an untrusted 
  Web site instructs you to download and install some piece of 
  software, don't do it. (Posted 2009-08-12)

<http://arstechnica.com/apple/news/2009/08/new-trojan-that-hijacks-your-macs-dns-spotted-in-the-wild.ars>


**So You Found My iPhone** -- This modestly amusing video from Slate 
  about an iPhone developer who lost his iPhone picks up a bit at the 
  end. (Posted 2009-08-12)

<http://slatev.com/player.html?id=33392027001>



Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk for 17-Aug-09
----------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10486>

**What Notes Do You Keep on your iPhone/iPod Touch** -- Readers share 
  the types of information stored on mobile devices, ranging from 
  lists of books to read to copies of the U.S. Constitution. (4 
  messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2801>


**Apple Upgrade Pricing** -- With Snow Leopard around the corner, 
  discussion turns to Apple's lack of upgrade pricing for most 
  applications, especially iLife, and to the license agreements 
  included in the software. (32 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2802>


**Leopard for G4 DP 450mhz?** How does Leopard perform on an older 
  system? (7 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2804>


**Escaping from AT&T** -- Apparently, you can get out of your AT&T 
  contract without penalties if you move out of the United States and 
  can prove it. (6 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2805>


**Suggestions for iPhone SMS & Call Log monitoring?** What options are 
  available to keep track of an iPhone's text messages and phone calls 
  on the Mac?  (4 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2806>


**Mail server woes - LetterRip help sought** -- A reader using the old 
  LetterRip mailing list software needs help. (2 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2807>


**Wi-Fi connection problem** -- Is old AirPort hardware to blame for 
  problems connecting to a wireless network? (2 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2808>


**Worth It? See (feel) a Difference?** Readers respond to a question 
  of whether paying $300 to get the fastest MacBook Pro processor is 
  worth the money, or if it's better to improve performance in other 
  ways, such as a faster hard disk. (7 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2809>



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