TidBITS#996/21-Sep-09
=====================
  Issue link: <http://db.tidbits.com/issue/996>

  As Snow Leopard and the iPhone OS 3.1 settle in, we have a practical 
  issue for you this week, thanks to guest writers Michael E. Cohen 
  and Lewis Butler. Michael explains how changes in the iPhone OS 
  could cause duplication when syncing calendar events, and Lewis 
  figures out how to improve Snow Leopard's autocorrection 
  capabilities. In other news, Adam explains how to watch Apple events 
  online; and Glenn Fleishman covers Google's acquisition of 
  reCAPTCHA, the introduction of the AT&T 3G MicroCell home cellular 
  base station, and the 802.11n chip buried in the new iPod touch. 
  Doug McLean also contributes a pair of features: a look at 
  widespread SuperDrive problems and an article about the plight of 
  real snow leopards (and what you can do to help!). Notable software 
  releases this week include Sandvox 1.6.4, Mellel 2.7, MercuryMover 
  2.0.6, Camera Raw 5.5, Lightroom 2.5, and Things 1.2.2.

Articles
    Watch Apple Events Online
    AT&T Reveals Details on 3G MicroCell Home Base Station
    Google Acquires CAPTCHA Service
    New iPod Touch Has 802.11n Chip
    Improve Snow Leopard's Autocorrection Capabilities
    Preventing Duplicate Calendar Events in iPhone OS 3.1
    Protecting Snow Leopard's Namesake Cats
    Exploring Widespread SuperDrive Problems
    TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 21-Sep-09
    ExtraBITS for 21-Sep-09
    Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk for 21-Sep-09


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Watch Apple Events Online
-------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10557>
  3 comments

  A friend recently asked if there was any place he could download the 
  video from Apple's September 9th special event announcing iTunes 9, 
  the new iPod nano, and the iPhone OS 3.1. He knew all about the 
  liveblogging done by the likes of Macworld and Ars Technica, but he 
  wanted to see the real deal, complete with Steve Jobs and the 
  musical performance by Norah Jones. 

<http://www.macworld.com/article/142674/2009/09/appleevent.html>
<http://arstechnica.com/apple/news/2009/09/liveblog-rock-and-roll-apple-ipod-event.ars>

  The easiest way to tune in - albeit a day or so afterwards - is to 
  subscribe to the Apple Keynotes podcast in iTunes. You may need to 
  update the podcast manually every so often, since new episodes 
  appear only every few months, so iTunes may decide you aren't 
  listening sufficiently often to continue with automatic downloads. 
  An added benefit of this for people like me is that I can keep the 
  videos around to see what Apple _really_ said at some time in the 
  past in case I suspect that a story is changing.

<http://itunes.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewPodcast?id=275834665>

  Readers Ben Wheeler and Michael Schmitt informed me of two other 
  ways you can reliably find the video of an Apple event, either later 
  that day or the next day. Ben pointed out that the Apple home page 
  will usually have a link (one of the boxes at the bottom) to the 
  video of the event, though that will disappear once Apple has 
  something more timely to replace it with. 

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

  Michael noted that Apple provides an Apple Events page in its 
  QuickTime Guide that lists recent events; this is probably the most 
  reliable place to find events after the fact if you don't want to 
  subscribe to the Apple Keynotes podcast. The other advantage of this 
  page is that you can choose among different formats, including full 
  HD.

<http://www.apple.com/quicktime/guide/appleevents/>

  ----
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AT&T Reveals Details on 3G MicroCell Home Base Station
------------------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10575>
  7 comments

  AT&T has launched a Web site with details about its 3G MicroCell, a 
  home cellular base station that provides enhanced coverage in your 
  home for regular AT&T 3G mobile phones (including the iPhone), 
  routing calls over a broadband connection. Such _femtocells_, as 
  they are called in the industry, use licensed frequencies owned by 
  cellular companies to improve signal strength and thus voice call 
  quality.

<http://www.wireless.att.com/learn/why/3gmicrocell/>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2009-09/3gmicrocell.png>

  Details slipped months ago about AT&T's plan for such a home base 
  station, which AT&T has been testing with an unknown number of 
  customers and its own employees. The Web site requires a ZIP code to 
  check for availability, and AT&T said - according to Engadget - that 
  only Charlotte, N.C., residents are currently eligible. Still, this 
  marks a transition into commercial availability.

<http://www.engadget.com/2009/09/21/atandt-3g-microcell-and-its-pricing-structure-are-in-public-tria/>

  These tiny base stations support voice and data connections via any 
  3G-capable phone that can work on AT&T's cellular network. This is 
  distinct from T-Mobile's longstanding unlicensed mobile access (UMA) 
  service, which uses ordinary Wi-Fi for the local connection, but 
  requires one of a dozen or so specially designed dual-mode handsets 
  and smartphones offered by the company. (T-Mobile's UMA handsets now 
  typically cost no more than regular 2G and 3G phones.)

  Femtocells require a GPS receiver, and typically come with extremely 
  long antennas. The GPS provides emergency E911 call location to 
  operators, but also confirms the location of a femtocell, necessary 
  to ensure that a carrier employs only the frequencies for which it's 
  licensed in a given geographic area - and that the base station 
  isn't used illegally outside the United States.

  InformationWeek reported that the 3G MicroCell will cost $150, but 
  that AT&T will provide a $100 rebate for customers who sign up for a 
  calling plan. Engadget reproduced a price sheet that shows AT&T 
  offering unlimited calling with the base station at $9.99 per month 
  for AT&T landline and broadband subscribers, and $19.99 per month 
  for all others. Engadget relayed news from AT&T that the price is in 
  testing, too.

<http://www.informationweek.com/news/mobility/3G/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=220100343>
<http://www.engadget.com/2009/09/20/atandts-3g-microcell-does-unlimited-calling-but-it-aint-cheap/>

  Sprint and Verizon both offer femtocells. Sprint charges $99.99 for 
  the base station, $4.99 per month for its use in improving coverage, 
  and an additional $10 per month for unlimited calls on an individual 
  or family plan. Verizon charges $249.99 for the base station, with 
  no monthly fee but has no calling plans available. With AT&T's 
  pricing options, the company is essentially offering both kinds of 
  services: for $150 flat, you get better coverage; for $50 and a 
  monthly fee, you get coverage and unlimited calling.

  Sprint and Verizon offer only 2G voice calling with their 
  femtocells. The AT&T 3G MicroCell, as one might guess from its name, 
  works with 3G voice _and_ data. While 3G smartphones from AT&T 
  almost all include Wi-Fi for the data side of the equation, the 
  cheaper, so-called "feature phones" with 3G support commonly lack 
  Wi-Fi, although that's starting to change with newer models.

  Carriers love femtocells because they shift traffic (and the expense 
  of moving calls and data) from their expensive-to-operate, 
  capital-intensive cellular networks to cheap broadband - broadband 
  that the customer has installed and paid for separately.

  However, cell subscribers may grow to love in-home base stations for 
  a similar reason: they've already paid for the broadband, and the 
  additional load of voice and data calls is negligible, while the 
  reward of unlimited calls - without paying significantly higher 
  monthly fees - and better reception seems of high value.

  ----
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Google Acquires CAPTCHA Service
-------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10568>

  The reCAPTCHA service that helps Web sites tell humans and computers 
  apart has been acquired by Google. Started by Carnegie Mellon 
  University computer science professor Luis von Ahn, the company 
  feeds out millions of distorted images a day that deter malicious or 
  commercially motivated automated behavior. Von Ahn and colleagues 
  came up with the term CAPTCHA (a contrived acronym for "Completely 
  Automated Public Turing test to tell Computers and Humans Apart"), 
  wrote an early paper on the topic, and have continued to advance the 
  academic and practical elements.

<http://recaptcha.net/>
<http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2009/09/teaching-computers-to-read-google.html>

  A CAPTCHA is a puzzle that humans can solve relatively easily but 
  that stymies computers; it's used as a type of Turing test. Alan 
  Turing's famous test involved two parties, one a computer, 
  attempting to convince a human interlocutor of their respective 
  humanity. With CAPTCHAs, an automated system feeds out what are 
  typically hard problems in artificial intelligence - still mostly 
  centered on machine vision and text recognition - to ferret out faux 
  folk.

<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CAPTCHA>
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turing_test>

  The reCAPTCHA approach is particularly interesting, because it 
  relies on a large base of scanned words that have failed separate 
  attempts at optical character recognition by two different systems. 
  The source scans include a commercial project for The New York Times 
  to turn its vast archives into text. Such OCR-resistant words are 
  perfect puzzles for humans, and they're helpful for fixing what are 
  called "suspect" words in OCR. reCAPTCHA currently processes five to 
  seven million words a day through nearly 40 million CAPTCHAs.

  (The secret of how reCAPTCHA gets machines to act as arbiters of 
  human intelligence? The system always provides two words, one of 
  which is known and drawn from a huge database. The unknown word is 
  shown to several people, most of whom must provide the same 
  response, before the word is deemed solved.)

  Google uses CAPTCHAs to prevent automated creation of accounts, 
  automated comment spam in Blogger, and general havoc. TidBITS uses 
  CAPTCHAs to protect email addresses of authors and restrict TipBITS 
  submissions to real people. (Our comment verification process relies 
  on email to determine whether or not the submitter is a person.)

  I recently wrote an extensive article for The Economist about 
  CAPTCHAs, focusing on reCAPTCHA. The reason for a spotlight on its 
  efforts, even as I described the scope of the field, was that 
  reCAPTCHA is widely admired for having come up with a clever and 
  still-functional method of finding things humans do well. There are 
  many other such categories, but OCR resistance is low-hanging fruit.

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

  The use of reCAPTCHA at Google will be, von Ahn says in his 
  inaugural Google Blog post, "not only to increase fraud and spam 
  protection for Google products but also to improve our books and 
  newspaper scanning process."

  That's right! We're all going to have a hand in Google's book 
  conversion project, one word at a time.

  ----
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New iPod Touch Has 802.11n Chip
-------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10558>
  2 comments

  The folks at iFixit, who disassemble and examine new hardware, found 
  a Broadcom chip that uses single-stream 802.11n in the new, faster 
  iPod touch models released last week. Does that mean the iPod touch 
  is suddenly much zippier on the network? Not quite.

<http://www.ifixit.com/Teardown/iPod-touch-3rd-Generation/1158/2>

  The 802.11n standard - finally ratified by the IEEE engineering 
  group on 11-Sep-09 - sped up Wi-Fi network throughput by several 
  factors. Apple started putting a relatively compatible version of 
  802.11n in all its new computers in October 2006, and in all its new 
  router models in January 2007.

  However, 802.11n hasn't appeared in any major handheld devices, such 
  as the iPhone or other smartphones - at least, until now. I checked 
  a new iPod touch, and Apple's AirPort Utility shows it connecting 
  only via 802.11g on an 802.11n network. Apple may have plans to 
  enable it through firmware and driver upgrades later. Back in 
  October 2006, Apple started shipping 802.11n chips within Macs, but 
  didn't release an enabler until February 2007. It's barely possible 
  that Apple used the chip for cost and integration reasons, but has 
  no plans to enable 802.11n.

  The lack of 802.11n before now was partly due to some basic design 
  principles. The flavor of 802.11n that's in nearly every computer 
  adapter and base station shipped to date uses at least two antennas, 
  and has the equivalent of two separate radios inside for each of the 
  two common unlicensed radio bands. (802.11n devices can use either 
  2.4 or 5 GHz, but aren't required to use one over the other, nor 
  support both. Newer base stations, including Apple's, can broadcast 
  simultaneously over both bands; such base stations have, in the 
  simplest terms, four radios, two each devoted to each band.)

  The radios and antennas work together in a system called "multiple 
  in, multiple out" (MIMO) that takes advantages of wireless signal 
  reflection. Each radio carries a unique stream of data, and 
  different power levels sent to each antenna steer the stream's beam 
  so that a receiver can separately distinguish and decode both 
  streams.

  Fitting two radios, two or more antennas, and the necessary chips 
  into a handheld is pretty much impossible. That led to the 
  development of single-stream 802.11n, which uses one radio stream 
  and one antenna. Single-stream has the advantage of faster encoding 
  than its predecessor, 802.11g, giving it a baseline improvement in 
  speed. 

  Chipmakers also worked to drop the power requirement. Single-stream 
  802.11n is likely more efficient than 802.11g in battery use, in 
  fact. The Broadcom chip integrates an FM receiver and a Bluetooth 
  radio, which also contributes to a reduction in battery use. (Oddly, 
  the Wi-Fi-less iPod nano is the model that publicly gained an FM 
  tuner, while the iPod touch hasn't enabled that function on its 
  chip.)

  The better battery usage means that a handheld can use 802.11n, and 
  putting 802.11n into a mobile device lets a unit like the iPod touch 
  send and receive 50 percent more data in the same period of time - 
  maybe a net throughput of roughly 30 Mbps instead of 20 Mbps. (For 
  far more technical detail, read my Wi-Fi Networking News article, 
  "Does the iPhone Need 802.11n?" I wasn't prescient; there was a lot 
  of chatter early this year about single-stream chips, and I thought 
  what turned out to be the iPhone 3GS was a likely first use.)

<http://wifinetnews.com/archives/2009/03/iphone_80211n_necessity.html>

  That higher speed would make it possible to stream movies or 
  transfer data at far higher rates, but would have little practical 
  impact on routine activities. This might be the precursor to iTunes 
  over-the-air sync (via something like the new Home Sharing feature) 
  for media with the iPhone and iPod touch.

  But there's also a "good neighbor" part of single-stream N that 
  improves network efficiency, and makes, say, other video streaming 
  or transfers on the network perform better.

  Single-stream 802.11n can be bad for a network, because each packet 
  transferred takes the space of at least two multiple-radio packets. 
  However, there's a clever way around that called "space-time block 
  coding" (STBC).

  Without getting into any of the gory details, STBC lets a base 
  station transmit separate data streams to single-stream devices, one 
  per radio in the base station. Devices with a single-stream chip are 
  more likely to consume data than produce it (most of the time, at 
  least), and thus this effectively restores network throughput 
  instead of halving it when multiple single-radio 802.11n devices are 
  using the network. (STBC isn't yet built into Apple's base stations, 
  but it could be as simple as a firmware update.)

  The other advantage of Broadcom's chip is that it allows the use of 
  either the 2.4 or 5 GHz bands. While 2.4 GHz has greater range, it's 
  far more crowded, and you're less likely to get anywhere near the 
  full possible throughput with even 802.11g. 

  Signals sent at 5 GHz can travel shorter distances (using the same 
  signal power), but because of a dramatically lower level of use and 
  more available spectrum, the odds are much better you'll get 
  something close to the highest possible throughput.

  Chipmakers have been pushing single-stream 802.11n to sell new chips 
  at higher profit margins, of course, but also because they want to 
  encourage users to buy newer base stations!

  But Apple's move may spell a greater interest in moving media on and 
  off the iPod touch and (possibly shortly) the iPhone 3GS. Far higher 
  throughput makes it much easier for an iPod touch to act as a media 
  outpost on a local network.

  ----
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Improve Snow Leopard's Autocorrection Capabilities
--------------------------------------------------
  by Lewis Butler <lbutler@covisp.net>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10567>
  2 comments

  Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard includes a number of new text-related 
  features, including automatic spelling correction and text 
  substitution. These features are supported in Apple-supplied 
  applications like Apple Mail, Safari (in text areas), TextEdit, and 
  AppleScript Editor, along with independent applications that use the 
  appropriate Apple technology - relatively few at the moment, but 
  more are undoubtedly on the way. 

  (One tip: The automatic spelling correction is seldom enabled by 
  default. To turn it on, make sure the insertion point is somewhere 
  where text can be entered, and either choose Edit > Spelling and 
  Grammar > Correct Spelling Automatically or, if the Edit menu's 
  submenu doesn't have what you need, Control-click where you're 
  typing and choose Spelling and Grammar > Correct Spelling 
  Automatically from the contextual menu that appears. The latter 
  approach is particularly likely to be necessary in Safari and other 
  WebKit-based applications, like Mailplane. Text substitution doesn't 
  need to be turned on.)

  The automatic spelling correction compares what you type with words 
  in Mac OS X's internal dictionary, automatically replacing mistakes 
  with what it believes you meant to type. The text substitution 
  feature relies instead on replacement pairs - a specific mistake 
  coupled with a specific replacement. 

  As a result, although the automatic spelling correction can fix 
  mistakes that no one would have anticipated, it can also guess 
  incorrectly. In contrast, the text substitution feature knows only 
  about the mistakes you've taught it, but it will always do the right 
  thing when you make a known mistake.

  So here's the problem. Let's say you type the text "wth" because you 
  want to enter the word "with". Snow Leopard's automatic spelling 
  correction replaces "wth" with "wt." for some reason, causing you 
  more work than if it had done nothing at all.

  Luckily, Snow Leopard's text substitution feature overrides the 
  automatic spelling correction, so if you create a replacement (in 
  the Text view of the Language & Text pane of System Preferences) 
  that replaces "wth" with "with", that mistake will be corrected 
  properly in the future.

  Unfortunately, Apple's replacement dictionary has very few entries 
  and adding them is tedious, so I set out to find where and how they 
  are stored, enabling me to bolster them with the public domain 
  TidBITS AutoCorrect Dictionary initially created for use with Eudora 
  (see "An ATypoKill Eudora Hack," 2000-09-04). (Subsequently, the 
  TidBITS AutoCorrect Dictionary has been made available for 
  Typinator, TextExpander, and TypeIt4Me, which also offer many other 
  capabilities beyond Snow Leopard's.)

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/6103>
<http://www.macility.com/products/typinator/>
<http://www.smileonmymac.com/TextExpander/>
<http://ettoresoftware.com/EttoreSoftware/About_TypeIt4Me.html>

  [Editor's Note: Testing the automatic spelling correction feature in 
  Snow Leopard has been extremely frustrating. It doesn't seem to work 
  all the time when you intentionally type misspelled words, and it 
  doesn't always kick in instantaneously. The feature is certainly a 
  help in general, but right now, the connections feel a little loose. 
  -Adam]


**The Basics** -- After a little digging, I found that Apple stores 
  the replacement pairs in an invisible file at 
  ~/Library/Preferences/.GlobalPreferences.plist, and the pairs have a 
  data structure that looks like this:

    <dict>
        <key>on</key>
        <integer>1</integer>
        <key>replace</key>
        <string>wth</string>
        <key>with</key>
        <string>with</string>
    </dict>

  Next, I took the TidBITS AutoCorrect Dictionary, reformatted it to 
  the appropriate structure, and pasted it into the 
  .GlobalPreferences.plist file. To test it, I typed a few of the 
  typos in the file into TextEdit, and watched them be replaced. 

  The only question is if putting over 2,700 replacement pairs into 
  the .GlobalPreferences.plist file will impact performance, 
  particularly on slower Macs. In initial usage on several machines, 
  including a Mac Pro (Early 2008) and a 2009 MacBook Pro, it has 
  seemed fine, though there was a bit of a slowdown on a Mac Pro 
  (Early 2006). Leave a comment if you see any performance problems 
  after adding all these entries to your .GlobalPreferences.plist.


**Do It Yourself** -- If you would like to try this out yourself, 
  TidBITS has made my reformatted TidBITS AutoCorrect Dictionary 
  available for download. 

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2009-09/TidBITS-AutoCorrect-Dict-SL.zip>

  Once you've downloaded and expanded the file, follow these 
  step-by-step instructions using either BBEdit or the free 
  TextWrangler, also from Bare Bones Software. (The 
  .GlobalPreferences.plist file is saved as a compressed plist, so a 
  program like TextEdit or vim/nano won't be able to read it properly 
  without additional steps.) 

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

  1. Open the Language & Text preference pane.

  2. Click the Text button to switch to the Text view.

  3. Click the + button and add a new replacement. I suggest "teh" and 
  "the".

  4. Open the reformatted TidBITS AutoCorrect Dictionary in BBEdit or 
  TextWrangler, select all (Command-A), and copy the text to the 
  clipboard.

  5. In BBEdit, choose File > Open Hidden.

  6. Navigate to your home folder, then Library, then Preferences and 
  select the .GlobalPreferences.plist file.

  7. In that file, find the replacement pair you added (search for 
  "teh").

  8. Select the entire dictionary entry (from dict to /dict).

  9. Paste the contents of the linked file from before over the "teh" 
  dictionary entry.

  10. Save the .GlobalPreferences.plist file.

  11. Log out and log in again, or restart. (This may not be 
  necessary, but be sure to do it if the replacements don't seem to 
  work.)

  Voila! From now on the replacement pairs in the TidBITS AutoCorrect 
  Dictionary will be used in favor of the automatic spelling 
  correction feature's potentially incorrect guesses.

  (Another tip: If the automatic spelling correction repeatedly 
  changes something you're intending to type, such as replacing "foo" 
  with "of", create a replacement pair in the Language & Text 
  preference pane's Text view that replaces "foo" with "foo". 
  Hopefully that will keep the automatic spelling correction off your 
  case.)


**If Things Go Awry** -- If you find that adding more than 2,700 
  entries causes typing performance in Apple Mail or TextEdit to be 
  too slow, you can always go back to the Language & Text preference 
  pane and click the Restore Defaults button to revert to the minimal 
  list that Apple provides.


  [Lewis Butler is a longtime Unix system admin, postmaster and Mac 
  geek. He is a frequent contributor to a large number of mailing 
  lists under his "LuKreme" alias.]

  ----
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Preventing Duplicate Calendar Events in iPhone OS 3.1
-----------------------------------------------------
  by Michael E. Cohen <lymond@mac.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10572>
  5 comments

  The calendar syncing capabilities of the iPhone (and its sibling, 
  the iPod touch) have been evolving quickly, and in many ways for the 
  better, but the latest enhancements to these capabilities can create 
  an unexpected problem for users. Specifically, calendar syncing 
  using iPhone OS 3.1 (the most recent version, as of this writing) 
  can all too easily lead to duplicate calendar events on your device. 
  Since these changes threw a bit of a monkey wrench into my 
  in-progress update to "Take Control of Syncing Data in Leopard," I 
  wanted to share what I've discovered.

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/leopard-syncing?pt=TB996>

  The underlying cause for these duplicate events is complicated, 
  involving MobileMe, iTunes, and how read-only subscribed calendars 
  in iCal sync to your shiny handheld device. To understand what's 
  going on, you need to know something about how calendar syncing on 
  the iPhone/iPod touch has changed over time.

  Also, keep in mind that I'm talking about two types of calendars 
  here:

* Read-write calendars you created in iCal and populated with your own 
  events. These are by far the most common.

* Read-only calendars from some remote source to which you've 
  subscribed in iCal. These calendars might be shared from a service 
  like Google Calendar, or found on iCalShare or Apple's list of iCal 
  calendars. Many people have never subscribed to a public calendar in 
  iCal before, but it's easy: either choose Calendar > Subscribe and 
  enter a URL to a shared calendar or download a .ics file from 
  iCalShare or Apple (Calendar > Find Shared Calendars in iCal).

<http://www.google.com/calendar/>
<http://icalshare.com/>
<http://www.apple.com/downloads/macosx/calendars/>


**iPhone OS 2.x** -- In iPhone OS 2.x, you could sync your iCal 
  calendars with your device in two ways:

* iTunes with a USB connection: This syncing method let you sync any 
  combination of your iCal calendars - both those you created in iCal 
  and those read-only calendars to which you subscribed in iCal. Using 
  the iTunes syncing interface, you could pick which calendars you 
  wanted to sync with your device, and which ones not to sync.

* Over the air with MobileMe: With this method you could sync all the 
  calendars that you created in iCal over the air, bypassing the 
  USB/iTunes connection; as a bonus, you gained instant push updating 
  between the calendars on your device and those in iCal on your Mac 
  (as long as your Mac was turned on and connected to the Internet, of 
  course). However, MobileMe syncing did not sync any of your 
  subscribed read-only calendars. Nor, if you chose this method, could 
  you pick which of your iCal calendars to sync; MobileMe always 
  synced all of your iCal-created calendars, willy-nilly. 

  Therefore, if you wanted to choose which calendars to sync with your 
  device, or if you wanted any subscribed read-only calendars from 
  iCal on your device, you had to sync the device using iTunes - and 
  lose the benefits of push syncing.


**iPhone OS 3.0** -- Apple's next major update to the iPhone OS 
  eliminated the either/or choice between MobileMe and iTunes syncing 
  and allowed you to sync your device using both methods. To 
  accommodate this enhancement, changes were made in how the iPhone 
  and iPod touch displayed calendars, as follows:

* iTunes with a USB connection: When you used this syncing method, 
  each of the calendars that you synced ended up in a calendar 
  collection on your device labeled "From My Mac."

* Over the air with MobileMe: With this method, all of your 
  iCal-created calendars ended up in a calendar collection on your 
  device labeled with the name of your MobileMe account. Note, 
  however, that you still couldn't sync read-only subscribed calendars 
  from iCal to your device using MobileMe.

  This was a significant improvement because it allowed you to do the 
  following: 

* You could see your self-created iCal calendar events on your device 
  by looking in the MobileMe collection.

* You could see your subscribed read-only calendar events by looking 
  in the From My Mac collection.

* You could see all of your events by viewing All Calendars in the 
  Calendar app on your device.

  However, there was also the possibility of duplicate event 
  confusion, because you could choose to sync the same calendar _both_ 
  with MobileMe and with iTunes. When you did that, a version of the 
  calendar ended up both in the From My Mac collection and in the 
  MobileMe collection. When you viewed All Calendars on your device, 
  you would see events from that doubly synced calendar twice: one 
  from each of the two collections. 

  So, if you synced with MobileMe, you had to make sure not to sync 
  any of your self-created calendars with iTunes and only use iTunes 
  to sync the calendars that MobileMe didn't sync. (Moral: with great 
  power comes great responsibility. I'm sure I've heard that somewhere 
  before.)


**iPhone OS 3.1** -- The just-released iPhone OS 3.1 finally syncs 
  your read-only subscribed calendars directly from MobileMe, 
  eliminating the need to use iTunes syncing to get read-only 
  subscribed calendars on your device. 

  (Note that read-only subscribed calendars have always synced with 
  MobileMe from one Mac to another, but iPhone OS 3.1 can now access 
  this information directly from MobileMe. Some might argue that the 
  iPhone and iPod touch should have been able to do this all along.) 

  Unfortunately, you still can't choose which calendars are included 
  when you sync with MobileMe - it remains an all-or-nothing 
  proposition. However, now "all" includes all of your read-only 
  subscribed calendars from iCal as well as all the calendars you have 
  created in iCal. As a result, if you want to pick which calendars to 
  sync, you have to return to the same solution that you used with the 
  iPhone 2.x firmware. That is, you need to choose to sync your device 
  only with MobileMe (and sync all of your calendars) or only with 
  iTunes (and choose which of your calendars to sync).


**The Hidden Gotcha** -- Sounds reasonable, right? Not so fast, 
  seeker: there's a hidden gotcha lurking in the current 
  implementation of calendar syncing. This problem affects iPhone and 
  iPod touch users who have previously synced their calendars using 
  iTunes but who now want to sync only with MobileMe.

  Here's the gotcha: when you turn off calendar syncing in iTunes to 
  switch to MobileMe, those calendars that were in the From My Mac 
  collection on your device are not deleted from your device. Instead, 
  they are moved to an On My iPhone collection (this collection has a 
  different name on the iPod touch, but serves the same purpose). 

  As a result, when you look at All Calendars on your device, you 
  still see duplicate events: those events from the old calendars in 
  the On My iPhone collection, as well as those events that reach your 
  device over the air from MobileMe. Nor is there currently a way to 
  delete the calendars in the On My iPhone collection. Curses!


**Kludging the Gotcha** -- Luckily, I've figured out a workaround, 
  albeit a clumsy one, that can eliminate such duplicates:

  1. In iCal, create a new empty calendar (give it an obvious name, 
  like "Empty Calendar"). 

  2. In iTunes, sync _only_ that empty calendar with your device (if 
  you have turned off iTunes syncing, you have to turn it back on, of 
  course, for this step). When you sync, the From My Mac collection 
  will now contain only that empty calendar.

  The MobileMe collection on your device will still list the empty 
  calendar, of course, but, since it contains no entries, you won't 
  see any duplicate entries when you view the All Calendars collection 
  on your device. Later, if you turn off calendar syncing in iTunes, 
  the empty calendar will move to the On My iPhone collection, where 
  it will still be harmless.

  (Note that if you have turned syncing off in iTunes so that you have 
  an On My iPhone calendar collection, turning iTunes syncing back on 
  replaces the On My iPhone collection with From My Mac. This From My 
  Mac collection now contains the set of calendars you are currently 
  syncing with iTunes.)

  Maybe someday, if some future version of iTunes or the iPhone OS 
  provides the capability to delete calendars from the On My iPhone 
  collection, you can eliminate this empty placeholder calendar. 
  However, even if that feature never appears, at least you won't be 
  seeing misleading duplicate events on your device.

  ----
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Protecting Snow Leopard's Namesake Cats
---------------------------------------
  by Doug McLean <doug_mclean@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10570>
  3 comments

  By now you've probably gotten a glimpse at the big cat Apple has 
  been touting as the face of its new operating system, Snow Leopard. 
  But did you know that the real snow leopard is a highly endangered 
  species? With dwindling population numbers in the wild estimated to 
  be between 3,500 to 7,000, this native of Central Asia is facing 
  extinction.

<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Snow_Leopard>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2009-09/snow_leopard_cat.jpg>

  The snow leopard is a beautiful cat with big paws, a thick fur coat, 
  and a long tail used for balance in its mountainous roaming. Bearing 
  the moniker _Spirit of the Himalayas_, its natural habitat 
  encompasses the mountains of central and south Asia including parts 
  of Mongolia, India, Pakistan, China, and other countries. Solitary 
  animals, snow leopards usually live 15 to 20 years in the wild.

  Since 1972, the snow leopard has been identified by the 
  International Union for Conservation of Nature as an endangered 
  species - right up there with the panda, the blue whale, and the 
  albatross. Today, their habitat continues to be encroached upon by 
  agricultural needs; they're poached for their pelts; and they're 
  killed by farmers looking to protect their livestock. 

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

  Fortunately, other people are looking out for the snow leopard.


**Conservation Groups** -- Two main groups are currently devoted 
  solely to the snow leopard's plight. Founded in 1981, the Snow 
  Leopard Trust is one of the world's leading authorities on the study 
  and protection of the snow leopard. With a large staff spread over 
  five snow leopard range countries, the Trust is attempting to affect 
  change at the country level. In 2008, the Trust also began a 
  long-term research project that seeks to gain a stronger grip on the 
  issues facing snow leopards by better understanding their living 
  habits. 

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

  The Snow Leopard Trust's short term conservation goals include 
  expanding the number of Mongolian communities participating in 
  conservation efforts (Mongolia is home to the second-largest snow 
  leopard population) and initiating a pilot program in China, which 
  has the largest snow leopard population. The Trust's primary long 
  term goal is to help the snow leopard reach healthy and 
  self-sustainable population numbers in the wild.

  The Snow Leopard Conservancy is the other main source of snow 
  leopard conservation efforts. The Conservancy focuses on enhancing 
  the stewardship of alpine ecosystems within communities that provide 
  habitat (and easy prey via livestock) for snow leopards. The 
  Conservancy's stated challenge is to seek "ways of helping local 
  people regain their willingness to co-exist with large predators."

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


**What Could Apple Do?** While it is by no means Apple's 
  responsibility to take part in the efforts to protect its latest 
  operating system's namesake, the company has a great opportunity to 
  help a worthy cause. Given Apple's recent efforts to become a 
  greener enterprise, embracing the snow leopard as its current-day 
  mascot and supporting efforts to save the snow leopard from 
  extinction would help underscore other green efforts like 
  eliminating BFRs, PVC, and mercury from its iPods and computers. The 
  financial planning company Pacific Life provides a good role model 
  of a company giving back to its brand icon, which in their case is 
  the humpback whale.

<http://www.pacificlife.com/About+Pacific+Life/General+Information/The+Humpback+Whale.htm>

  Most simply, Apple could just help raise awareness of the issue with 
  an educational box on its Snow Leopard page. Given that many people 
  don't even know the snow leopard is endangered, even a simple effort 
  like this would go a long way. 

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

  Apple could also make a donation to the Snow Leopard Trust and/or 
  the Snow Leopard Conservancy. Better yet, Apple could involve the 
  Mac community in the effort by offering to match donations made by 
  Mac users. The Snow Leopard Trust already has such a donation 
  matching program in place with another donor. Through 31-Oct-09, if 
  the organization can raise $25,000, any donation you make will be 
  met by the Geyer Trust. 

  "That means doubling the impact for your gift," Brad Rutherford, 
  Executive Director of the Snow Leopard Trust, told me via email. 
  "Gifts big and small are important to us. $5 is enough for us to 
  track a snow leopard for one day using GPS technology, and $1,000 is 
  what it takes to protect one snow leopard in Kyrgyzstan for one 
  year.

  Some Mac-related organizations have already stepped up to the plate. 
  Apple resellers Tekserve in New York City and Monterey Bay Computer 
  Works in California have already contributed to the Snow Leopard 
  Trust's fundraising program. Tekserve donated the proceeds from the 
  first 100 copies of Snow Leopard it sold. Select ASMC (Apple 
  Specialist Marketing Co-op) retailers are also helping out by 
  promoting snow leopard "adoptions" in their stores. It would be 
  great to see Apple join these Apple resellers and take an active 
  role in encouraging and promoting the protection of the snow 
  leopard. 

<http://www.tekserve.com/products/1543/Upgrade_to_Snow_Leopard>
<http://www.mbcw.com/>
<http://applespecialist.com/specialist.php?page=SL-Adoptions.php>


**What Can You Do?** Don't feel you have to wait for Apple to make a 
  move, because there's plenty you can do right now to help snow 
  leopards. Aside from making an individual donation to one of the 
  organizations mentioned above, you could "adopt" a snow leopard (via 
  either the Trust or Conservancy), donate your old car to raise 
  funds, or purchase crafts made by people living in the snow leopard 
  habitat to help alleviate the economic pressures that lead herders 
  to forcibly protect their livestock (the craftsmen must abide by 
  jointly negotiated conservation agreements that protect the cats and 
  their key prey).

<http://www.snowleopardconservancy.org/clunker.htm>
<http://www.snowleopard.org/shop/>

  Additionally, if you really want to get involved, consider 
  volunteering for either the Trust or the Conservancy. The Trust in 
  particular has noted that it needs volunteers to help expand their 
  social network presence, develop presentations, write and distribute 
  press releases, and host fundraising events. 

  And though it may seem small, simply spreading the word about the 
  snow leopard's endangered status - whether by conversation, email, 
  or Twitter (I recommend linking to this obscenely cute video of snow 
  leopard kittens at Seattle's Woodland Park Zoo) - can have a real 
  impact. (And if you go to Woodland Park Zoo yourself on the right 
  day, you might even get to see TidBITS Managing Editor Jeff Carlson 
  and his daughter Ellie masquerading as snow leopards.)

<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8CzlhZtunNc>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2009-09/j_e_snowleopards.jpg>

  Brad Rutherford was up front about the possibilities. "Support from 
  Apple, its retailers, and Mac users has the potential to make a 
  huge, immediate difference in protecting snow leopards," he said. 

  So next time you boot up Snow Leopard, take a moment to think about 
  those big cats prowling around the Himalayas, and hopefully, they'll 
  still be with us long after Apple has moved beyond big cat operating 
  systems.

  ----
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Exploring Widespread SuperDrive Problems
----------------------------------------
  by Doug McLean <doug_mclean@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10562>
  13 comments

  TidBITS reader Jim Griffiths recently tipped us off to a widespread 
  issue with SuperDrives: the inability of some drives to read or 
  write to discs. In his particular case, a MacBook Pro began having 
  difficulty reading all kinds of optical discs shortly after its 
  warranty expired. This led him to start a thread describing the 
  problem in the Apple Support Discussion forums. 

<http://discussions.apple.com/thread.jspa?threadID=1918925&tstart=0>

  As of this writing, that thread now contains over 225 messages and 
  has been viewed over 30,000 times. Those are big numbers for the 
  forums - and in fact a similar thread has garnered more than 19,000 
  views - and indicate that Jim is far from the only one experiencing 
  this problem.

<http://discussions.apple.com/thread.jspa?threadID=1684759&tstart=0>

  While combing through the posts reveals an unusually high number of 
  failing SuperDrives, the symptoms, causes, and solutions offered 
  don't add up to a clear picture of the situation.


**Symptoms and Variables** -- These SuperDrive-related problems evince 
  a few common symptoms: at some point, a user's optical drive fails 
  to mount optical discs, usually ejecting a disc after a short period 
  of attempting to read it. However, the systems affected, discs 
  affected, and timing of the symptoms' arrival differ among users. 

  According to discussion forum posts, affected systems include the 
  MacBook, MacBook Pro (13-, 15-, and 17-inch), MacBook Air, iMac and 
  Mac Mini. The systems range in age from early 2006 to late 2009. 

  Specific optical disc drives that have been identified on the forums 
  include:

* HL-DT-ST DVDRW GSA-S10N (the most commonly listed)

* HL-DT-ST DVDRW GWA-4080MA

* MATSHITA DVD-R UJ-85J

* MATSHITA DVD-R UJ-846

* MATSHITA DVD-R UJ-857E

* MATSHITA DVD-R UJ-857D

* MATSHITA DVD-R UJ-867

* MATSHITA DVD-R UJ-868

* MATSHITA DVD-R UJ-875

  Affected disc types vary: some users are able to mount DVDs but not 
  CDs; other users, vice versa. Some are able to mount commercial CDs 
  and DVDs, but not blank CDs and DVDs, and vice versa. Some are able 
  to mount everything but blank CD-Rs, while others are able to mount 
  everything but blank DVD-Rs. Some are unable to mount any disc of 
  any kind. Some find the issue is intermittent, while others find it 
  constant.

  When these problems start happening for users varies as well. Some 
  users noticed problems with their SuperDrives from the start, others 
  say things started going screwy after a couple months, many others 
  complain symptoms didn't appear until just after the 1-year warranty 
  expired, and still others claim problems appeared only after Snow 
  Leopard had been installed.

  This breadth of dates, affected drives, and related disc types makes 
  isolating the problem extremely difficult. It's possible - even 
  likely - that the problem is actually a variety of problems. Or it 
  might be a single problem with a variety of triggers, leading to 
  variable symptoms and start dates.

  Unfortunately, it's devilishly hard to pin anything down based on 
  anecdotal reports from users, especially in this case. For example, 
  the reported timing of a problem's arrival is dependent on the 
  user's awareness of the problem. For instance, if a user's 
  SuperDrive was dodgy from day one, but wasn't used with a 
  problematic disc type until a year later, the user might report the 
  latter incorrect date as opposed to the correct date as the 
  problem's origin. 

  Similarly, the great disparity over which discs can or can't be read 
  may point to different problems, one problem with inconsistent 
  symptoms, or inconclusive testing by users. If a user tries only 
  commercial CDs and DVD-Rs, he may report that those discs don't work 
  and make assumptions about other discs or simply not report on them 
  - skewing, or at least complicating, the data.


**Causes Offered** -- Given these symptoms, users have been putting 
  their heads together, talking with Apple Geniuses, and consulting 
  with other knowledgeable techies to arrive at some possible causes. 
  As you might imagine, there are a variety of suggestions. 

  The basic debate seems to boil down to whether we're looking at a 
  hardware issue or software issue. Some users believe the problem is 
  simply rooted in faulty optical drives, while others are convinced 
  problems were prompted by a recent firmware or security update. 

  A smaller group of users on the forums believe the installation of 
  Snow Leopard is to blame, though many others are quick to point out 
  that these problems have existed long before Snow Leopard. 

  Those arguing against faulty hardware as the underlying cause point 
  to the fact that a wide variety of Macs and drives are affected. 
  Supporters of a software-based theory are also usually convinced 
  that their specific problems began only after a major software 
  update (though there's no consensus regarding which update might 
  have caused the problem). A common argument is that it's possible a 
  faulty update could have lowered the operating system's tolerance to 
  dirt or dust on a disc. 

  Another user argued in support of a software cause when he found he 
  was unable to mount a disc on his Mac even when using an external 
  optical drive. When he moved the same external drive to a Windows 
  machine, it worked fine.

  As both symptoms and the arrival of the symptoms seem to vary, the 
  efforts to pinpoint a single underlying cause haven't gotten far.


**Solutions Offered** -- Despite ongoing debate over the causes of the 
  problems, many solutions have been proposed. Below is a list of 
  fixes suggested by forum users, all of which offer unpredictable 
  degrees of success or failure.

* Purchase and employ a DVD/CD drive cleaning disc. These discs are 
  designed to remove dirt, dust, and static buildup from your optical 
  drive. Alas, most users who tried this solution found that the 
  cleaning disc would be ejected before it could do any good.

* Use a can of compressed air to blow inside your computer's optical 
  disc slot and clear away any built-up dust. While several users 
  found this solution helpful, others claimed it didn't eliminate the 
  problem, and at least one user found it actually made the problem 
  worse - rendering him unable to insert a disc at all.

* One user recommended tapping right above the disc drive as it begins 
  to slow down its reading prior to ejecting the disc. While this one 
  user swore by this solution, others found it had no effect and, 
  frustrated, suggested that tapping with a hammer might relieve more 
  stress.

* Several users found that repairing permissions in Disk Utility and 
  resetting PRAM/NVRAM cleared up their issues, though many others 
  said this produced no positive effect for them.

* One user, whose discs weren't being ejected but instead simply 
  weren't mounting, found success by changing the default system 
  behavior for when a disc is inserted in the CDs & DVDs pane of 
  System Preferences.

* Several users said that opening Disk Utility prior to inserting a 
  disc solved their problem, though again, success with this solution 
  wasn't widespread.

* Most - but not all - users who had their SuperDrives replaced - 
  either under warranty from Apple, by paying out-of-warranty fees to 
  Apple, or by doing it themselves - found their problems went away. 
  Some reported needing multiple replacements or even a logic board 
  replacement before the problem disappeared.

* For users whose machines are out of warranty, buying an external 
  optical drive is a cheaper option than replacing the internal drive. 
  Though, as mentioned above, at least some users found that they were 
  unable to read discs even when using an external drive.


**Summary** -- While the symptoms and solutions for these issues vary 
  widely, they all revolve around the SuperDrive. If you are 
  experiencing issues similar to the ones described above, consider 
  adding your experiences to the ongoing forum thread linked at the 
  start of this article or contacting Apple (either online, or by 
  working with an Apple Genius at a retail store) to voice your 
  concerns. We'll continue to monitor this issue, and we hope that 
  Apple will take steps to correct it.

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

  ----
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TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 21-Sep-09
---------------------------------------------------------
  by Doug McLean <doug_mclean@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10569>

  Sandvox 1.6.4 from Karelia Software is a compatibility and 
  maintenance update to the template-based Web site creation tool. The 
  latest version adds full support for Snow Leopard and a Brazilian 
  Portuguese localization. Also, the latest version provides an 
  important update to its Amazon List Pages and Pagelet code in 
  response to a recent change in Amazon's API. ($57 Regular/$97 Pro, 
  free update, 27.2 MB) 

<http://www.karelia.com/sandvox/>

  Mellel 2.7 from RedleX is a feature update to the increasingly 
  powerful word processor. Changes include added support for 
  wraparound text and floating images, Snow Leopard compatibility, a 
  new object palette that enables users to control image attributes, a 
  new setup selection pop-up menu, and an option in auto-title flows 
  to "List Separately in TOC." Also, auto-titles can now span more 
  than six lines, and the Page palette and dialog have been improved. 
  A full list of changes, improvements, and bug fixes is available on 
  RedleX's Web site. ($49 new, $19 upgrade, 31.8 MB)

<http://www.mellel.com/>
<http://www.mellel.com/releasenotes.html>

  MercuryMover 2.0.6 from Helium Foot Software is a compatibility and 
  maintenance update to the keyboard shortcut utility for moving and 
  resizing windows. The latest version includes support for Snow 
  Leopard and fixes a bug that prevented MercuryMover from finding the 
  bottom edge of a taller and top-aligned secondary display. ($20, 
  free update, 2 MB)

<http://www.heliumfoot.com/mercurymover/>

  Camera Raw 5.5 and Lightroom 2.5 from Adobe add raw file support for 
  five new cameras, including the Nikon D300s, Nikon D3000, Olympus 
  E-P1, Panasonic DMC-FZ35 and Panasonic DMC-GF1. Camera Raw 5.5 also 
  fixes "the demosaic algorithms in the raw conversion process for 
  Bayer sensor cameras with unequal green response." (Free updates for 
  existing Photoshop and Lightroom users, 46.7/86.6 MB)

<http://www.adobe.com/support/downloads/detail.jsp?ftpID=4577>
<http://www.adobe.com/support/downloads/detail.jsp?ftpID=4569>

  Things 1.2.3 from Cultured Code is a maintenance update to the 
  Getting Things Done-inspired task manager. Changes since 1.2.1 
  include the capability to disable Spotlight indexing, to enable or 
  disable either of the two Quick Entry keyboard shortcuts 
  independently, and to drag multiple cards from Address Book or email 
  messages into a to-do's notes section. Also, the items in the 
  General pane have been reorganized, support for Japanese input 
  methods has been improved, the French localization has been 
  enhanced, and fixes have been made to the plug-in syntax. A full 
  list of changes is available on Cultured Code's Web site. ($49.95 
  new, free update, 8.0 MB).

<http://culturedcode.com/things/>
<http://culturedcode.com/things/wiki/index.php/Release_Notes>

  ----
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ExtraBITS for 21-Sep-09
-----------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10576>

**Latest Apple Teardown: A Macintosh Portable** -- It's become common 
  for companies such as iFixit to buy Apple's latest hardware, strip 
  it down to its bare parts, and opine on what's inside. Benj Edwards 
  at Technologizer is a bit late with his latest entry - exactly 20 
  years late, in fact. He tears apart a Macintosh Portable, which 
  celebrates its 20th anniversary this week, exposing cutting-edge 
  technology for the time. (Posted 2009-09-21)

<http://technologizer.com/2009/09/20/inside-the-macintosh-portable/>


**Adam Ponders SuperDrive Reliability on Tech Night Owl Live** -- Adam 
  recaps recent TidBITS content in this discussion with Tech Night Owl 
  Live host Gene Steinberg, talking about SuperDrive reliability 
  problems, the New York Times Web site being compromised, and more. 
  (Posted 2009-09-18)

<http://www.technightowl.com/radio/podcast/now-playing-september-17-2009-adam-engst-daniel-eran-dilger-and-oliver-mauss/>


**Your Company? There's an App for That** -- Jason Kottke looks at how 
  the iPhone (and similar smartphone devices; be sure to read the 
  first footnote) is upsetting business models that you wouldn't 
  expect to be impacted. My favorite quote: "We tend to forget that 
  the iPhone is still from the future in a way that most of the other 
  devices on the list above aren't. It will take time for device 
  makers to make up that difference." (Posted 2009-09-17)

<http://kottke.org/09/09/your-company-theres-an-app-for-that>



Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk for 21-Sep-09
----------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10580>

**New York Times Web Site Compromised** -- Readers discuss the recent 
  malware attempt that appeared at the New York Times site. (2 
  messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2862>


**Wireless Keyboard and Mouse** -- A reader asks for wireless keyboard 
  suggestions to set up an old iMac for kids. (3 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2863>


**Word 2008 gives Disk Full error - Again** -- A long-simmering bug in 
  Microsoft Word keeps coming back, potentially leading to lost data. 
  (17 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2864>


**Gray screen on boot** -- Could faulty hard drives lead to a problem 
  booting a Power Mac G5, or is the machine itself at fault? (8 
  messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2865>


**Turning OFF system-wide spell checking (10.4.11)** -- Reinstalling 
  Mac OS X turned the built-in spelling checker on, but how does one 
  turn it off in Tiger? Curiously, in Snow Leopard it appears you 
  can't. (4 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2867>


**Dragon Naturally Speaking** -- Readers compare notes about running 
  this speech-recognition software under Parallels or Fusion on the 
  Mac, with some suggesting a Mac solution: MacSpeech Dictate. (6 
  messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2868>



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