TidBITS#995/14-Sep-09
=====================
  Issue link: <http://db.tidbits.com/issue/995>

  Apple dominated the news again last week, releasing a snazzy new 
  iPod nano and minor updates to the rest of the iPod line, along with 
  iTunes 9 and iPhone OS 3.1. And if that weren't enough, two days 
  later the company pushed out Mac OS X 10.6.1 and a raft of security 
  updates for Tiger and Leopard. We have all the details on those 
  releases, along with coverage of the New York Times Web site being 
  compromised and AT&T's announcement of which cities would get faster 
  cellular connectivity first. In fact, lots of other stuff happened 
  last week too, so check the Bonus Stories for links to more content 
  on our Web site. Finally, Snow Leopard continues to drive software 
  releases, including Default Folder X 4.3.1, Phone Amego 1.0.3, 
  PDFpen 4.2.1, PhoneValet Message Center 6.0.3, Simon 2.5.3, Airfoil 
  3.3.3, Audio Hijack Pro 2.9.3, Cocktail 4.5, ConceptDraw Updates, HP 
  Printer Drivers for Mac OS X 10.6, iMac Graphics Firmware Update 
  1.0.2, Apple RAID Card Firmware Update, Firefox 3.5.3, QuickTime 
  7.6.4, and Suitcase Fusion 2.v13.2.

Articles
    Apple iPod Refreshes Add Storage, Tweak Prices
    iPod nano Morphs into Video Camera, Pedometer, Radio
    New York Times Web Site Compromised; How to Stay Safe
    Security Update 2009-005 Fixes Tiger, Leopard Vulnerabilities
    AT&T Selects Six Cities for Speed, Adds Preferred Callers
    iTunes 9 Refines Crowdsourcing and Sharing Features
    iPhone OS 3.1 Update Refines iPhone Usage
    Tiny Mac OS X 10.6.1 Update Fixes Some Bugs
    TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 14-Sep-09
    Bonus Stories for 14-Sep-09
    ExtraBITS for 14-Sep-09
    Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk for 14-Sep-09


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Apple iPod Refreshes Add Storage, Tweak Prices
----------------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10547>
  3 comments

  While the big news on the iPod front at last week's announcement was 
  the iPod nano, Apple also tweaked prices, performance, and capacity 
  on the iPod touch, iPod shuffle, and iPod classic. None of the 
  changes are in any way earth-shaking, but they, along with the 
  significantly updated iPod nano (see "iPod nano Morphs into Video 
  Camera, Pedometer, Radio," 2009-09-09) put the iPod line in a strong 
  position for the upcoming holiday feeding frenzy.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10548>

  Noting that $199 is a "magic price point in the iPod market," Phil 
  Schiller, Apple senior vice president of worldwide product 
  marketing, said that's now the price of the new 8 GB iPod touch. A 
  new 32 GB version is $299, and a whopping 64 GB model costs $399.

<http://www.apple.com/ipodtouch/>

  The 32 GB and 64 GB models will be 50 percent faster than the 8 GB 
  iPod touch, Schiller said, and can use the OpenGL ES2.0 technology 
  that's part of the iPhone 3GS.

  We were surprised and disappointed that the iPod touch still lacks a 
  camera, even as video was added to the iPod nano. With its large 
  screen and iPhone OS, one would think adding a camera to the iPod 
  touch would be both easy and obvious. In an interview with the New 
  York Times, Apple CEO Steve Jobs said the company is positioning the 
  iPod touch as a gaming platform and also keeping it as inexpensive 
  as possible.

<http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/09/09/in-qa-steve-jobs-snipes-at-amazon-and-praises-ice-cream/>

  The iPod classic, the only remaining iPod with a hard drive, remains 
  priced at $249, but now contains a 160 GB drive instead of 120 GB. 
  It's Apple's answer for those people who have huge music or movie 
  collections that they need with them at all times.

<http://www.apple.com/ipodclassic/>

  The iPod shuffle comes in two models, now priced at $59 (2 GB 
  capacity) and $79 (4 GB). The latest versions are also available in 
  new colors: silver, pink, green, blue, and black. A special edition 
  4 GB model will have a case of polished steel and will sell for $99.

<http://www.apple.com/ipodshuffle/>

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iPod nano Morphs into Video Camera, Pedometer, Radio
----------------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10548>

  The inexpensive handheld camcorder market just underwent a major 
  shift with Apple's debut of a major revision to the iPod nano. The 
  new version adds video and audio recording, a pedometer that syncs 
  with Nike+, and an FM tuner. The 8 GB price remains unchanged at 
  $149; a 16 GB version costs $179. Both models are available 
  immediately.

<http://www.apple.com/ipodnano/features/>

  Apple's entry into this market isn't strange, given the engineering 
  work it did to add video to the iPhone 3GS, but it's another example 
  of the company's hard-to-anticipate strategies: instead of 
  introducing a new product or adding it to the iPod touch (which 
  seemed more obvious), Apple grafted video onto an existing model 
  line. CEO Steve Jobs said that the iPod nano is one-fifth the 
  thickness and one-tenth the volume of a Flip camcorder, and the 8 GB 
  iPod nano has twice the memory of a $149 Flip model.

  Flip pioneered small but easy-to-use video recorders with decent 
  quality, capturing a double-digit percentage of camcorder sales, and 
  spurring Kodak and other firms to jump in. The Flip cameras also 
  contributed to the growing prevalence of solid-state memory for 
  capturing video. Recording directly to memory enabled the devices to 
  shrink dramatically in size, making the Flip and successive devices 
  truly pocketable. Cisco acquired Flip for $590 million in March 
  2009.

  The iPod nano's camera records video in H.264 VGA resolution - 640 
  by 480 pixels - and at rates up to 30 frames per second; audio uses 
  the AAC format. These are the same specs offered by the iPhone 3GS, 
  which produces acceptable, but not stellar, video output. The iPod 
  nano will let you apply 15 real-time effects, such as sepia or 
  motion blur - but you need to specify the effect before you record, 
  making it a permanent addition to your footage.

  Video recorded on an iPod nano can be synced to iPhoto on a Mac, or 
  to a Windows video folder. Apple advertises the notion that the 
  video is just the right size for Facebook, MobileMe, and YouTube, 
  but of those, iPhoto can upload movies only to MobileMe at this time 
  (we expect more video support in the next version of iPhoto, but 
  then again, we've been anticipating that for years). The iPod nano 
  also includes a voice-recording feature, and somehow manages to 
  shoehorn in a speaker for playback.

  Oh, yes: it's still an iPod, too.

  The inclusion of a pedometer is an extension of Apple's existing 
  efforts to tie in the Nike+ system, but adding an FM tuner at this 
  point in the game seems slightly bizarre. Apple has never included 
  FM tuning in any of its iPods, and has sometimes ridiculed the very 
  notion. More recently, Microsoft replaced its Zune models with the 
  Zune HD, which offers FM tuning for analog FM radio signals and the 
  HD Radio (which doesn't stand for "high definition") digital format 
  used by about 15 percent of radio stations in the United States as a 
  supplement to their main broadcasts.

  The iPod nano's FM radio function acts a bit like a TiVo for radio, 
  storing up to 15 minutes of broadcasts and allowing rewind and 
  pause, although you can't save stored audio for later listening. The 
  iPod nano can read and display information embedded in analog 
  broadcasts by radio stations that reveal artist and song details. 

<http://www.apple.com/ipodnano/features/fm-radio.html>

  Apple uses this data with iTunes Tagging, a system it designed to 
  work with HD Radio receivers. When you tag a song on an iPod nano 
  (just as you can with supported radio receivers), that song's 
  information is retrieved when you sync the iPod via iTunes. iTunes 
  then displays a Tagged category in the iTunes Store list in the 
  sidebar that shows the song, if it's recognized. (See "Tag Radio 
  Songs for Later Purchase While You Drive," 2009-06-19, for more 
  about iTunes Tagging.)

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10362>

  Apple offers the new iPod nano in nine colors, including black and 
  silver. The company touted a number of environmentally sensitive 
  features, such as the device's highly recyclable nature, and the 
  absence of BFRs, PVC, and mercury, as well as the inclusion of 
  arsenic-free glass.

  Apple also released a minor software update for the VoiceOver 
  feature that enables users to control playback on the iPod nano by 
  speaking artist names and songs. The VoiceOver Kit for iPod 1.2 
  fixes bugs, adds variable playback rates for spoken word media, and 
  includes support for this new iPod nano, the fifth generation.

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New York Times Web Site Compromised; How to Stay Safe
-----------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10563>

  Over the weekend, numerous visitors to the New York Times Web site 
  were greeted with pop-ups that warned about a virus and promoted 
  antivirus software that was itself Windows-based malware - an attack 
  technique known as "scareware." The Times has released a statement 
  saying that the pop-ups likely came from an unauthorized 
  advertisement. In a more detailed Gadgetwise blog post, Riva 
  Richmond of the Times explains more of the situation and offers 
  suggestions for what to do if you see such a pop-up.

<http://blogs.zdnet.com/security/?p=4297>
<http://www.nytimes.com/2009/09/13/business/media/13note.html>
<http://gadgetwise.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/09/14/what-to-do-if-you-saw-an-antivirus-pop-up-ad/>

  In short, if you're using a Mac, don't worry much about this 
  particular one (see the screenshot on the Random Mutters blog), 
  since it attempts to get you to download Windows malware, which 
  won't have any effect on a Mac. We don't recommend that Mac users 
  run antivirus software under normal circumstances ("Should Mac Users 
  Run Antivirus Software?," 2008-03-18).

<http://www.abirdman.com/2009/09/new-york-times-website-compromised.html>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9511>

  Of course, if you're using Windows, make sure you're running 
  antivirus software with all updates applied, and if at all possible, 
  use a current Web browser, since older browsers have fewer 
  protective features and may suffer from security vulnerabilities.

  That said, these attacks often propagate too quickly for antivirus 
  companies to keep up, so even a fully updated antivirus program may 
  not be able to detect such malware and protect you from it. 

  Even though Macs are safe from the actual Windows malware that was 
  the payload of this particular attack, there are Web-based attacks 
  (including this one, from what I can tell from reader reports) that 
  essentially take over your Web browser once activated. It's 
  important in such situations to quit the Web browser using Mac OS 
  X's native mechanisms (Control-click the Web browser's Dock icon and 
  choose Quit) in order to circumvent any parts of the user interface 
  that the attacker may have compromised (buttons within the Web 
  browser itself may not do what you expect).

  If you're using Firefox or another browser that automatically 
  restores your session after relaunching, I recommend force-quitting 
  the browser (Control-Option-click its Dock icon and choose Force 
  Quit). If you're using Firefox, force-quitting puts Firefox into a 
  recovery mode in which it asks if you want to restore your session, 
  thus letting you avoid reloading the offending page.

  In Windows, right-clicking the Web browser in the Task Bar and 
  closing it from there should be a safe way to quit; you can also 
  force quit by pressing Control-Alt-Delete and ending the task from 
  the Task Manager.

  If you're interested, Troy Davis has posted an analysis of how this 
  particular attack works on his Inputs & Outputs blog. In essence, 
  the attackers inserted an IFRAME into a third-party advertisement, 
  and that IFRAME contained a series of redirects and a fake page that 
  displays the pop-up with the link to the actual malware.

<http://troy.yort.com/anatomy-of-a-malware-ad-on-nytimes-com>

  The important lesson to take away is that this attack relies largely 
  on the user taking specific actions, and it's entirely possible that 
  a future attack could target Mac users with Mac OS X-specific 
  malware. So be cautious, and if you're presented with an extremely 
  unusual pop-up in your Web browser, don't click its buttons, and 
  quit immediately.

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Security Update 2009-005 Fixes Tiger, Leopard Vulnerabilities
-------------------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10555>

  We presume that Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard included numerous 
  security-related fixes, since Apple has now released Security Update 
  2009-005 to bring them to Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger and Mac OS X 10.5 
  Leopard, both the desktop and server versions. Not all the fixes 
  apply to all versions of Tiger and Leopard, but since they're all 
  bundled together, the best advice we can give is to download and 
  install.

  Most of the bugs were discovered by Apple, which is good to hear, 
  since it could imply that the company is performing more security 
  auditing than in the past (for more suggestions, see Rich Mogull's 
  "Five Ways Apple Can Improve Mac and iPhone Security," 2009-06-03).

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10321>

  Areas receiving attention include the Alias Manager, CarbonCore, 
  ClamAV, ColorSync, CoreGraphics, the CUPS printing system, ImageIO, 
  Flash Player plug-in, Launch Services, MySQL, PHP, SMB, and the Wiki 
  Server; you can read more about the fixes in this KnowledgeBase 
  article. 

<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT3865>

  I was amused at this bug: "Viewing a maliciously crafted PixarFilm 
  encoded TIFF image may lead to an unexpected application termination 
  or arbitrary code execution." Could there be some animosity between 
  Pixar and Apple? I mean, who else would maliciously craft a 
  PixarFilm-encoded TIFF file?

  We recommend using Software Update to get Security Update 2009-005 
  for simplicity's sake, but if you must download, there are numerous 
  versions:

* Security Update 2009-005 (Leopard): 93.14 MB

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL935>

* Security Update 2009-005 Server (Leopard): 93.14 MB

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL936>

* Security Update 2009-005 (Tiger PPC): 77.95 MB

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL931>

* Security Update 2009-005 (Tiger Intel): 169.75 MB

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL932>

* Security Update 2009-005 Server (Tiger PPC): 132.53 MB

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL934>

* Security Update 2009-005 Server (Tiger Intel): 132.53 MB

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL932>

* Security Update 2009-005 Server (Tiger Universal): 206.43 MB

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL933>

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AT&T Selects Six Cities for Speed, Adds Preferred Callers
---------------------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10551>

  AT&T will install its faster mobile broadband technology, which it 
  calls HSPA 7.2, in six cities by the end of 2009, and in 25 of the 
  top 30 markets by the end of 2010, the firm said today. Those cities 
  are an odd mix of large and medium: Charlotte, Chicago, Dallas, 
  Houston, Los Angeles and Miami. The company will cover 90 percent of 
  its current 3G footprint by 2011's close.

<http://www.att.com/gen/press-room?pid=4800&cdvn=news&newsarticleid=27068>

  AT&T's 3G network currently uses a 3.6 Mbps flavor of HSPA for 
  downstream access, and either a 1.4 or 1.9 Mbps version for upstream 
  transfers. The iPhone 3G and 3GS support only the older UMTS 
  standard for upstream traffic and therefore max out at 384 Kbps. 

  The iPhone 3GS is capable of using 7.2 Mbps HSPA but needs an 
  enabled network. Several European networks operate at the faster 
  HSPA rate. 

  HSPA 7.2 operates at 7.2 Mbps, including all the network overhead; 
  individual users could typically expect to see between 1 and 4.5 
  Mbps of downstream speed, depending on a whole pile of factors.

  AT&T is in the middle of spending tens of billions of dollars to 
  upgrade its network, details about which it released in May of this 
  year, and which I discussed in depth at my Wi-Fi Networking News 
  site in "Hunk of Network Upgrade News from AT&T."

<http://wifinetnews.com/archives/2009/05/att_network_upgrades.html>

  In unrelated news, AT&T is adding unlimited calling to numbers you 
  pick at no extra charge, so long as you have a high-enough value 
  subscription plan. Starting 20-Sep-09, A-List lets you pick five 
  numbers on an individual calling plan of $60 or more (exclusive of 
  data, tax, and other charges), or 10 numbers on a family plan of $90 
  or more. Numbers must be in the United States, but may be landline 
  or cellular with any carrier.

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iTunes 9 Refines Crowdsourcing and Sharing Features
---------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10546>
  6 comments

  At the special Rock and Roll media event last week, Apple unveiled a 
  new version of the near-ubiquitous media application iTunes. The 
  latest version introduces a variety of features, including some that 
  respond to user requests and others that are clearly just what Apple 
  (or Steve Jobs, who was back on stage with a much younger liver) 
  wants to see.

<http://www.apple.com/itunes/>

  As usual, Apple touted the success of the iTunes Store, boasting 
  about how it's now available in 23 different countries and hosts 
  over 100 million iTunes accounts. Those users have purchased 8.5 
  billion songs so far, making iTunes one of the largest stores on the 
  Web, and the top music retailer in the world.

  It will take some time with the software to wrap our heads around 
  the new features in iTunes, since Apple's demo of them was 
  relatively brief, but they include the following:

* Genius Mixes: With the Genius feature of iTunes having processed 54 
  billion songs from 27 million libraries, Apple has accumulated a 
  massive database of user information. The company has now tapped 
  that information to create Genius Mixes, a feature that creates up 
  to 12 endless mixes of songs that go well together. It may be as 
  close as you get to being like author Stephen King and owning your 
  own radio station that plays only music you like.

<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stephen_King#Radio_stations>

* Improved Syncing: The revamped Music tab that appears when you 
  connect an iPhone or iPod lets you choose playlists, artists, or 
  genres for automatic syncing. Previously, that required setting up 
  smart playlists. Plus, the Photos tab lets you sync events and faces 
  from iPhoto.

* App Arranging: Tired of dragging icons around on your iPhone or iPod 
  touch? Us too. Luckily, that won't be necessary anymore, since 
  iTunes 9 enables you to arrange apps - and entire screens - on your 
  Mac, where it's a more fluid environment. About time!

* Home Sharing: Here's another potentially major feature that will 
  require some exploration. In the past, iTunes has allowed you to 
  "share" libraries with other users on your network, but that sharing 
  involved only the streaming of music. You couldn't copy songs 
  around, rate them, add them to playlists, or anything else useful. 
  The new Home Sharing feature does away with those limitations for up 
  to five computers on your local network. Most notably, you'll be 
  able to copy songs, movies, TV shows, and even iPhone apps from 
  other computers on your network. An automatic option to copy items 
  between computers can keep their libraries in sync, but it applies 
  only to music purchased from the iTunes Store.

* iTunes LP: Luckily, the TidBITS audience understands what an LP is, 
  so we won't have to offer a history lesson like all the fanboy 
  sites. The point of the iTunes LP feature is to provide lyrics, 
  photography, liner notes, and more - all the sorts of things that 
  artists did for record albums because they had the physical space. 
  Those details diminished with smaller CDs, and have fallen almost 
  entirely by the wayside with digital music. The question is whether 
  the iTunes LP content will be compelling for customers, or if it's 
  more designed to involve artists in the iTunes Store - bringing them 
  more into the Apple orbit. Plus, because iTunes LP content is 
  available only with album purchases, it may help assuage artist 
  concerns about iTunes selling mostly individual tracks, rather than 
  entire albums.

* iTunes Extras: Where iTunes LP brings extra album content to music, 
  iTunes Extras brings additional materials to movies. This may enable 
  iTunes to compete better with DVDs from Netflix, for instance, for 
  those people who enjoy watching all the extra content.

* Redesigned iTunes Store. We seldom comment on the design of the 
  Apple Web site, and similarly, the design of the iTunes Store 
  doesn't feel like the sort of thing that requires coverage and 
  analysis. Apple says they've improved navigation; created an overall 
  cleaner layout; and made new artist pages, new movie pages, and new 
  TV show pages. 

  As always, iTunes 9 is free, and is available now as a 82.8 MB 
  download or via Software Update. It requires Mac OS X 10.4.11 or 
  later, although the iTunes LP and iTunes Extras features need Mac OS 
  X 10.5 or later. It does work on older PowerPC G4- and G5-based 
  Macs, but with some limitations for video playback. 

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

  Apple also still offers iTunes 8.2.1 for PowerPC G3-based Macs; it's 
  a 77.3 MB download.

<http://www.apple.com/downloads/macosx/apple/ipod_itunes/itunes821forg3.html>

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iPhone OS 3.1 Update Refines iPhone Usage
-----------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10549>
  4 comments

  The iPhone OS 3.1 release provides incremental improvements for all 
  iPhone and iPod touch models, the most significant of which is the 
  addition of app recommendations. The release also adds the 
  capability to buy ringtones directly from an iPhone, enables you to 
  organize and lock where applications appear, fixes security holes, 
  and lets you lock your phone remotely via MobileMe.


**Programming Genius** -- With over 75,000 applications in the iPhone 
  App Store, finding new apps can be daunting. Apple has used the 
  iPhone OS 3.1 release to expand its Genius music and video 
  recommendation feature to offer app suggestions within the device's 
  App Store app. Unlike "Staff Suggestions" or "Hot Picks," these 
  recommendations are based on the apps installed on your device and 
  the app libraries of other users with similar tastes. 

  The Genius feature for music also expands, adding support for the 
  new Genius Mixes from iTunes 9 (see "iTunes 9 Refines Crowdsourcing 
  and Sharing Features," 2009-09-09). The device supports up to 12 
  Genius Mixes from iTunes - automatically generated playlists based 
  on the contents of your music library.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10546>

  Although the iPhone has long supported purchased and custom 
  ringtones, you had to manage and synchronize the files via iTunes. 
  Users can now directly purchase and download ringtones on the iPhone 
  through the iTunes app for $1.29 each. 

  Apple announced that over 30,000 ringtones are available from all 
  four major music labels. You can still create your own custom 
  ringtones from any DRM-free song or audio on your Mac using 
  GarageBand and other applications, but you'll need to sync them 
  manually through iTunes.


**Remote Lockout** -- The iPhone OS 3.1 update also adds a feature 
  that folks who suspect their iPhone or iPod touch has been stolen 
  are going to love: a remote lock feature via MobileMe.

  iPhone OS 3.0 brought the Find My iPhone feature that plots the 
  location of your stolen or missing device on a Google map using GPS, 
  Wi-Fi, and cellular positioning - whatever is available (see "Find 
  Your Lost iPhone or iPod touch with iPhone OS 3.0," 2009-06-17).

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10359>

  Find My iPhone also lets you display a message on the remote phone 
  or wipe its contents. But there was a flaw: wiping the original 
  iPhone or the iPhone 3G could take hours; the iPhone 3GS with 
  hardware encryption takes just seconds. Thus, the new remote lock 
  feature.

  Via MobileMe's Settings view, you can enable a passcode on your 
  phone. Select the Settings view, then click Find My iPhone. 
  Underneath a map of your device's location (if available), a new 
  Remote Passcode Lock section appears (only for devices updated to 
  iPhone OS 3.1). Click Remote Lock, and a dialog appears in which you 
  enter a passcode. Enter it twice and then the device is immediately 
  updated and locked.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2009-09/mobileme-passcode.png>

  To use the missing iPhone or iPod touch, you must enter the new 
  code, which overrides any previous code you had set. With such a 
  security code in place, a thief would be unable to use the phone or 
  access stored information. His or her only option would be to power 
  the phone off to disable the Find My iPhone feature.

  Paired with this new feature, fortunately, is a security fix. 
  Earlier iPhone OS software had a flaw that could allow a cracker to 
  bypass a security code with relative ease. Rich Mogull wrote about 
  this problem in "iPhone 3GS Hardware Encryption Easy to Circumvent," 
  2009-08-07; Apple's iPhone OS 3.1 security notes say that this 
  problem has been fixed.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10468>


**Pin Apps on the Screen** -- The last major improvement in the iPhone 
  OS 3.1 update is support for the new app organization feature in 
  iTunes 9. This long-awaited enhancement finally lets you organize 
  your iPhone and iPod touch applications within iTunes, then 
  synchronize them with the device. 

  All of us with more than a few screens of applications issued a 
  collective sigh of relief with the realization that we'll no longer 
  have to battle our phones to keep our applications where we'd like 
  them.


**Tiny Gems and Security Fixes** -- iPhone OS 3.1 also introduces a 
  collection of smaller improvements, including:

* Synchronization updates to support iTunes 9 changes

* The capability to save videos from Mail and MMS into the Camera Roll 
  (which, for those of us in the United States, will be more useful 
  once AT&T enables MMS on 25-Sep-09)

* The option to save trimmed video clips as new clips in the Camera 
  Roll, a much-requested feature because trimming otherwise overwrites 
  the original clip

* Support for Voice Control over Bluetooth headsets

* The capability to paste phone numbers into the keypad; in the 3.0 
  software you could copy a phone number, but you couldn't paste it 
  into the Phone app

* Support for Safari's anti-phishing features to reduce the chances 
  you'll visit a malicious Web site

* The option to use the Home button to turn on accessibility features 
  on the iPhone 3GS

* Improved Microsoft Exchange calendar syncing and meeting invitation 
  handling

* Improved iPhone 3G Wi-Fi performance when Bluetooth is also turned 
  on

* Support for redemption of iTunes gift cards, codes, and certificates 
  in the App Store and iTunes Store, with display of your iTunes 
  account credits

* iTunes U content organization

  This iPhone OS update also includes several security fixes, such as 
  the already noted passcode problem, the elimination of the "SMS of 
  Death" (an SMS message that could break network connectivity), and a 
  problem with lookalike characters making a malicious domain look 
  legitimate, among other repairs.


**Worth an Upgrade** -- Although many of these updates are primarily 
  to support the new features of iTunes 9 (and to sell you more apps 
  and ringtones), iPhone OS 3.1 appears to be a worthy upgrade with a 
  collection of much-appreciated usability enhancements.

  The iPhone OS 3.1 upgrade is free for iPod touch owners with 3.0 
  software and all iPhone owners. While the upgrade from any version 
  to 3.0 used to cost $10, Apple has lowered that price to $5 for iPod 
  touch owners who haven't yet updated.

  iPhone OS 3.1 is available only via iTunes, where it's a 302 MB 
  download, and it requires a lengthy installation process, so set 
  aside some time before updating. For unknown reasons, the update is 
  numbered 3.1.1 for the iPod touch.

  ----
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Tiny Mac OS X 10.6.1 Update Fixes Some Bugs
-------------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10556>
  12 comments

  Hewing to the traditional two-week lag between a major release of 
  Mac OS X and the first bug-fix update, Apple has now released Mac OS 
  X 10.6.1. The quick release shouldn't be surprising: software 
  engineers start working on .1 releases of software as much as four 
  to eight weeks before a .0 release ships.

  Oddly, the release is tiny - only 9.8 MB via Software Update on some 
  Macs and about 70 MB on others. The version Apple posted on the 
  Support Downloads site weighs in at 71.47 MB, a fraction of what 
  we've become used to with updates to Mac OS X.

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL930>

  Network administrators also get to join in the fun with the release 
  of Mac OS X Server 10.6.1 Update, a 71.57 MB download that appears 
  to address the same issues covered below as well as offering 
  improved reliability of services using Grand Central Dispatch and 
  fixing a problem with duplicate serial number alerts on servers with 
  multiple network interfaces.

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL929>

  We suppose it's possible that architectural changes to Snow Leopard 
  allow Apple to ship much smaller updates, but it seems more likely 
  that Mac OS X 10.6.1 was pushed out quickly to address only a small 
  number of particularly egregious bugs.

  We're pleased that Apple continues to provide some useful detail 
  about software updates, a change that kicked in several months ago. 
  Now, we'd like to encourage them to hire short-story writers and 
  humorists to flesh out some of the more obscure bullet points. 
  (We've made a pass ourselves.)

  The 10.6.1 release notes are brief, calling out only nine specific 
  improvements in a KnowledgeBase article:

<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT3810>

* Improves compatibility with some Sierra Wireless 3G modems. These 
  modems are used for mobile broadband connections, and it's not 
  surprising that the initial version of Snow Leopard had problems 
  with them. "I gazed across the room, thick from the smoke of too 
  many netbook batteries dying smoldering deaths. The light on her USB 
  dongle was blinking. 'It's...Snow Leopard,' she said. I took a deep 
  breath. 'I have the answer,' I whispered. 'Download 10.6.1.'"

* Addresses an issue in which some printer drivers might not appear 
  properly in the Add Printer browser. This is a broad statement, and 
  it's not clear what was specifically changed. We've received a 
  number of complaints about some printers not being supported in Snow 
  Leopard. One reader escalated a support call to HP through multiple 
  levels until someone finally told him that the 10.5.3 drivers for 
  his HP Color LaserJet 2600n would work in Snow Leopard, even though 
  the printer was not listed as being compatible with Snow Leopard. 
  Since most of the industry expected Snow Leopard to ship at the end 
  of September, anecdotal reports indicate that printer manufacturers 
  especially seemed unprepared for the release. (We threw in the towel 
  and reverted to ASCII art and dot-matrix printing during the last 
  two weeks.)

<http://h20000.www2.hp.com/bizsupport/TechSupport/SoftwareIndex.jsp?prodNameId=446154&prodTypeId=18972&prodSeriesId=446153&swLang=8&taskId=135&swEnvOID=219>

* Addresses an issue that might cause DVD playback to stop 
  unexpectedly. People still watch movies on DVD when it's so much 
  easier (and quieter - no drive noises!) to rip the files to hard 
  disk and watch from there?

* Addresses an issue that might make it difficult to remove an item 
  from the Dock. We suspect this had to do with someone spilling 
  Mountain Dew in the source code.

* Resolves an issue in which the Command-Option-T keyboard shortcut 
  would sometimes bring up the special characters menu in applications 
  such as Mail and TextEdit. Also, pressing Command-Shift-Option-Left 
  arrow while dancing no longer causes milk to come out of our noses.

* Addresses instances in which auto account setup in Mail might not 
  work. This is likely related to the next bullet point, or it could 
  have been Mail just being snarky. "Mail won't set up right / A 
  thousand notes are unsent / Snow Leopard Mail FAIL."

* Resolves issues when sending mail with certain SMTP servers (see 
  "Apple Mail Sending Issues in Snow Leopard," 2009-09-03). Apple 
  changed the order in which Mail tried to connect to outbound SMTP 
  mail servers; Apple described this in a KnowledgeBase article as 
  changing the order in which ports are tried. The article provided 
  some help, but this update should resolve the problem for anyone who 
  left the settings as they were, or who upgrades to Snow Leopard from 
  now on. (The technical issue: Some mail servers use port 587 for 
  authenticated outbound connections, and port 25 doesn't support 
  authentication. If Mail tried to communicate with port 25, 
  authentication would fail, and messages would not be sent. In other 
  words, someone in the mailroom was paying more attention to Facebook 
  than to distributing mailbox keys.)

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10534>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/TS2998>

* Addresses an issue in which Motion 4 could become unresponsive, a 
  bug that was fixed by Apple's special irony SWAT team. [Editor's 
  note: Tonya gets 100 points for correct use of the word irony.]

* Includes an update to the Adobe Flash Player plug-in version 
  10.0.32.18. (The 10.6.0 installer installed an earlier version of 
  Flash Player.) Various earlier versions of Flash Player have 
  exploitable flaws, and Snow Leopard overwrote user-installed updates 
  of newer versions. This update gets everyone back into parity. (For 
  more about Flash Player and 10.6.0, read John Gruber's rundown at 
  Daring Fireball.) As Gruber wrote in a followup, "Hard to believe we 
  survived without it."

<http://daringfireball.net/2009/09/more_snow_leopard_flash>

  That said, there are clearly other changes. In our use of 10.6.1, 
  we've already found that a number of minor inconveniences have been 
  removed:

* The "black screen" problem with screen sharing that appeared for 
  some users and not others appears to be solved on some systems. With 
  four remote systems that previously displayed a black screen, and 
  required "jiggling" the View menu to get an image, the remote screen 
  appeared immediately or with a 1-second delay. On another computer, 
  the problem remained. (See "Solve Snow Leopard's Screen Sharing 
  Bug," 2009-09-07.)

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10542>

* In iChat, we found that at least a couple of us couldn't send files 
  back and forth. With 10.6.1, that problem has gone away. Good to 
  know that we can let the carrier pigeons take a break after pressing 
  them into service under 10.6.0.

  On the downside, some bugs remain, including this one:

* Preview's handling of multi-line URLs is still broken (see "Two-Line 
  URLs Broken in Snow Leopard's Preview," 2009-09-01). In fact, since 
  we published that article, we've learned that the problem is worse 
  than previously realized. There are some URL formats, the permanent 
  links to TidBITS articles included, that Preview doesn't recognize. 
  So, if you saw http://db.tidbits.com/article/10519 in a PDF (one 
  that has a proper PDF link box on top of the URL), clicking any part 
  of the URL before "article/" would take you to 
  http://db.tidbits.com/article/, which isn't a valid page on our 
  site. Clicking the article number, because Preview doesn't recognize 
  it as part of the URL and thus honors the PDF link box, works 
  properly. Given how much the Take Control ebooks rely on URLs 
  working, we can't find anything amusing to say about this bug.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10519>

  And at least one new bug was introduced (and reported):

* For Glenn, the 10.6.1 updater wiped out nearly all his login items, 
  including those set automatically by software that adds daemons or 
  agent startup scripts and those he had added manually. Other TidBITS 
  staffers did not experience this problem.

  All in all, we recommend that you take a screenshot of the Login 
  Items view for your user account before you install the update. That 
  way, if your login items are toasted, you'll at least remember what 
  they were. (If you can't recall your screenshot keyboard shortcut, 
  check the Keyboard Shortcuts view in the Keyboard system preference 
  pane. In Snow Leopard, your screenshots are no longer named "Picture 
  1," "Picture 2," etc.; instead look for a file on your Desktop 
  called "Screen shot 2009...".) Once your screenshot is in place, you 
  too can share in the spills and thrills of the Mac OS X 10.6.1 
  update.

  ----
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TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 14-Sep-09
---------------------------------------------------------
  by Doug McLean <doug_mclean@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10550>
  1 comment

  Default Folder X 4.3.1 from St. Clair Software is a maintenance 
  update to the Open/Save dialog enhancement utility. Changes include 
  the capability to sort files and folders by date or name in the 
  Recent Folders submenus, support for Safari plug-ins that launch 
  Open/Save dialogs, and capability to view contextual menus in 
  Open/Save dialogs in Snow Leopard as columns, icons, and lists. Also 
  several problems have been addressed including an issue that caused 
  a white square to appear in the Snow Leopard menu bar in place of 
  Default Folder X's icon, a performance issue that led to the Get 
  Info command to launch very slowly, and a window management issue 
  that affected primarily Final Cut Pro, QuickTime Player 7, and other 
  applications that use QuickTime to export files. ($34.95 new, free 
  update, 10.6 MB)

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

  Phone Amego 1.0.3 from Sustainable Softworks is a maintenance update 
  to the software that enables users to control a Bluetooth mobile 
  phone from a Mac. Changes include an added Hang Up item in the main 
  menu, display of phone numbers in the Address Book format, 
  Command-clicking the close button to dismiss the call status window 
  without terminating the call, improved recovery capabilities when 
  rfcommChannel closes, an additional AppleScript command to intercept 
  phone numbers before dialing, support for dial prefix, and faster 
  Bluetooth connection opening on startup. Also, Yahoo Search is 
  consistently enabled from the call status window, call information 
  is logged when Google Voice reports a failed call, and users can now 
  Option-click a Google Voice forwarding number from the menu to 
  select which number will ring. ($20, free update, 963 KB)

<http://www.sustworks.com/site/prod_phoneAmego_help/PhoneAmegoHelp.html>

  PDFpen 4.2.1 and PDFpenPro 4.2.1 from SmileOnMyMac are the latest 
  versions of the company's PDF editing utilities. The updates fix 
  several Snow Leopard-related issues including problems with opening 
  PDF documents, Quartz filters, click selection behavior, and issues 
  with filling some IRS forms. Also, the Combine PDFs and Split PDF 
  scripts no longer require Rosetta. ($49.95/$99.95, free updates, 
  11.9 MB/12.1 MB)

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

  PhoneValet Message Center 6.0.3 from Parliant is a compatibility 
  update to the Mac OS X-based hardware/software telephone management 
  package. The latest version adds Snow Leopard compatibility and 
  64-bit support. ($169.95 per line, free update for 6.x users)

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

  Simon 2.5.3 from Dejal Systems updates the Internet monitoring tool 
  with Snow Leopard compatibility. Other changes include an updated 
  iPhone Report Template which improves the Back button's behavior, a 
  new hidden preference that outputs debug information from the E-mail 
  plug-in, a hidden preference for the E-mail plug-in that uses the 
  recipient's SMTP server instead of the sender's, and a Japanese 
  localization. ($29.95 to $195, free update, 11.8 MB)

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

  Airfoil 3.3.3 and Audio Hijack Pro 2.9.3 from Rogue Amoeba are Snow 
  Leopard compatibility updates to the wireless audio distribution 
  tool and all-around audio recording utility. With these updates the 
  company's entire software line is now fully compatible with Mac OS X 
  10.6. ($25/$32 new, free updates, 10.1/6.2 MB)

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

  Cocktail 4.5 from Maintain is a significant update to the general 
  purpose maintenance utility. Changes include added compatibility 
  with Snow Leopard, 64-bit support, speed enhancements to Pilot, 
  updated Automator actions, revised help files, and refreshed Sparkle 
  software update framework. ($14.95, free update, 2.0 MB)

<http://cocktail.maintain.se>

  ConceptDraw Updates from CS Odessa bring Snow Leopard compatibility 
  to the company's line of brainstorming, project management, and 
  business graphics and diagramming software. Updated products include 
  ConceptDraw Office, ConceptDraw Pro, ConceptDraw Mindmap, and 
  ConceptDraw Project. (Free updates for current ConceptDraw product 
  owners)

<http://www.conceptdraw.com/en/>

  HP Printer Drivers for Mac OS X 10.6 from Apple "includes the latest 
  HP printing and scanning software for Snow Leopard." A list of 
  supported printers, as well as additional installation information, 
  is available on Apple's Web site. The update requires Mac OS X 
  10.6.1, and is available via Software Update or the Apple Support 
  Downloads page. (Free, 381.5 MB)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL907>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT3669>

  iMac Graphics Firmware Update 1.0.2 from Apple improves system 
  stability in iMacs running Mac OS X 10.5.2 or later with an ATI 
  Radeon HD 2600 Pro or ATI Radeon HD 2400 XT graphics card installed 
  by updating the graphics card firmware. The update is available via 
  Software Update or the Apple Support Downloads page. (Free, 850 KB)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL938>

  Apple RAID Card Firmware Update from Apple improves boot and power 
  fail recovery reliability, enhances battery handling and reporting, 
  addresses an unspecified issue with rebuilding a degraded RAID 5, 
  and fixes an issue that caused the on-board flash file system to be 
  filled. The update is recommended for all Mac Pro and XServe systems 
  (Late 2006 or Early 2008) with the Apple RAID card. To install the 
  update, follow the instructions in the updater application that 
  launches automatically after the installer has closed 
  (/Application/Utilities/Apple RAID Card Firmware Update). The update 
  is available via Software Update or the Apple Support Downloads 
  page. (Free, 26.12 MB)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL937>

  Firefox 3.5.3  from Mozilla is a security and stability update to 
  the popular Web browser. The update addresses several critical 
  security issues that could lead to attackers executing arbitrary 
  JavaScript with elevated privileges, preventing users from seeing 
  the URL of a malicious site, crashing a user's browser and 
  subsequently corrupting memory and executing arbitrary code. The 
  latest version also introduces an automatic 
  check-for-Flash-Player-updates feature, which ensures users are 
  running the most recent version of Flash Player and are thus 
  protecting themselves from potential security threats. (Free update, 
  17.6 MB)

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

  QuickTime 7.6.4 for Leopard from Apple is a security, stability, and 
  compatibility update to the multimedia software. Changes include 
  support for iTunes 9 and enhanced audio-device support under Windows 
  Vista. Security vulnerabilities that have been addressed include 
  application crashes or arbitrary code execution when opening or 
  viewing maliciously crafted MPEG-4 videos, H.264 movies, or FlashPix 
  files. The update is recommended for all QuickTime 7 users, and is 
  available via Software Update or the QuickTime Downloads page. (The 
  update apparently does not apply to Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard users 
  who have installed QuickTime 7 as an option.) (Free, 59.4 MB)

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

  Suitcase Fusion 2.v13.2 from Extensis is a maintenance and 
  compatibility update to the popular font management utility. The 
  latest version adds support for Snow Leopard, Adobe plug-ins powered 
  by Font Sense technology for InDesign and Illustrator CS2, and 
  support for True Type collection fonts. ($99.95 new, $49.98 upgrade, 
  31.4 MB)

<http://www.extensis.com/en/products/suitcasefusion2/>

  ----
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  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/10550>


Bonus Stories for 14-Sep-09
---------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10564>

**Exploring Widespread SuperDrive Problems** -- An attempt to track 
  down reports of widespread defective SuperDrives via Apple user 
  forums reveals the difficulty in assessing these sorts of 
  large-scale issues, yet also confirms the existence of some kind of 
  significant problem at play. (Doug McLean, 2009-09-14)

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10562>


**New iPod Touch Has 802.11n Chip** -- Apple slips in a single-stream 
  802.11n chip in the latest iPod touch, iFixIt discovers. Faster 
  networking? More likely, a better networked media player. (Glenn 
  Fleishman, 2009-09-12)

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10558>


**Watch Apple Events Online** -- If you aren't invited to Apple's 
  special events and want to see the real thing rather than reading 
  liveblog transcripts, subscribe to the Apple Keynotes podcast. (Adam 
  C. Engst, 2009-09-12)

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10557>


**Sprint Offers Unmetered Mobile Calling** -- Sprint has a new 
  unmetered plan that lets you call any other U.S. cell phone without 
  dipping into a minutes pool. The plan includes no preset limits on 
  text, data, video, MMS, and GPS navigation, too. (Glenn Fleishman, 
  2009-09-10)

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10553>


**Hack Microsoft Word's Page Up/Down Keys** -- If you're as irritated 
  as we are at Microsoft Word's habit of moving the insertion point 
  when you use the Page Up and Page Down keys (something most Mac 
  applications don't do), read on for a solution that requires no 
  additional software. (Pete Resnick, 2009-09-08)

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10545>


**Google Books Settlement Hits Snags** -- The proposed settlement 
  between Google and groups representing authors and publishers over 
  Google's past work in scanning in-copyright titles may be scuttled 
  over the advantages that such a settlement would confer on the 
  search giant. (Glenn Fleishman, 2009-09-07)

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10544>


**Solve Snow Leopard's Screen Sharing Bug** -- The screen sharing 
  feature in Snow Leopard has a significant bug: the remote screen is 
  blacked out or frozen when you connect. Fortunately, there's a 
  simple, though repetitive, fix. (Glenn Fleishman, 2009-09-07)

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10542>

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10564#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/10564>


ExtraBITS for 14-Sep-09
-----------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10561>

**Apple Releases Grand Central Dispatch as Open Source** -- Snow 
  Leopard's Grand Central Dispatch is a new technology aimed at 
  helping developers to create applications that take full advantage 
  of multi-core Macs. Apple has now made Grand Central Dispatch 
  available under an Apache open source license, encouraging Linux and 
  Unix developers to adopt it. MacResearch suggests that we might see 
  scientists using Grand Central Dispatch to parallelize code for use 
  on clusters and supercomputers. (Posted 2009-09-14)

<http://www.macresearch.org/grand-central-now-open-all>


**AT&T Drops Paging Instructions from Voicemail** -- The first victory 
  has been achieved in New York Times columnist David Pogue's "Take 
  Back the Beep" campaign to eliminate wasted seconds in voicemail 
  instructions. AT&T has now trimmed the "To page this person..." bit 
  from their instructions, saving a few seconds that just confused 
  everyone under the age of 45 anyway ("What's a pager, Mom?"). 
  (Posted 2009-09-11)

<http://pogue.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/09/09/att-relents-drops-paging-instructions-from-voicemail/>


**Subscription Music Comes to iPhone via Rhapsody** -- The 
  subscription-based Rhapsody music service from Real Networks is now 
  available as an app for the iPhone and iPod touch. The service lets 
  you listen to an unlimited amount of music from an 8-million song 
  library for $15 per month. The app only streams music; this version 
  can't even download songs temporarily. (Posted 2009-09-10)

<http://www.macworld.com/article/142733/2009/09/rhapsody.html>


**MacJury Podcast Discusses Apple Announcements** -- TidBITS editors 
  Glenn Fleishman and Jeff Carlson joined Chuck Joiner's MacJury with 
  Adam Christianson, Keith Lang, and Chuck La Tournous to talk about 
  all the news that emerged from Apple's music and iPhone OS 
  announcements. Among the topics covered in part one and part two, we 
  conclude that Norah Jones isn't "rock and roll." (Posted 2009-09-10)

<http://www.macjury.com/macjury-914-new-ipods-itunes-and-more-was-it-really-only-rock-roll-part-1/>
<http://www.macjury.com/macjury-915-new-ipods-itunes-and-more-was-it-really-only-rock-roll-part-2/>


**Minding the Line between Humans and Computer** -- TidBITS Editor 
  Glenn Fleishman penned this article for The Economist about the 
  state of CAPTCHA, those distorted text images you must enter to post 
  comments or buy tickets online. TidBITS relies on reCAPTCHA for 
  submitting tips and emailing authors. (Posted 2009-09-07)

<http://www.economist.com/sciencetechnology/tq/displaystory.cfm?story_id=14299700>



Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk for 14-Sep-09
----------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10565>

**Snow Leopard and the ZFS file system** -- Support for the ZFS file 
  system has apparently been removed in Snow Leopard, but readers 
  debate whether ZFS offers compelling benefits for users. (6 
  messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2851>


**Post Snow Leopard upgrade experiences** -- Have you installed Snow 
  Leopard? Read what others have experienced if you're having 
  problems. (47 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2852>


**Recovering iCal from backup** -- A reader gets advice about where to 
  find all the components for restoring iCal calendars from backup. (2 
  messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2853>


**AirPort wireless problems** -- A previously functional wireless 
  network setup fails inexplicably. Could the problem be cables gone 
  bad? (2 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2854>


**New External HD prior to new computer** -- Read this thread for 
  suggestions on purchasing a new external hard drive. (3 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2855>


**regarding the new iPod nano with video** -- A reader wonders if it's 
  possible to control the iPod nano's video recording feature from a 
  connected Mac, and how to access other USB commands. (3 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2858>


**iPhoto - Photo Book irregularity with framing Photos imported into 
  Books** -- iPhoto books generally assume a 4:3 aspect ratio, but you 
  can pan and zoom each photo within its slot. (4 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2859>



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