TidBITS#999/12-Oct-09
=====================
  Issue link: <http://db.tidbits.com/issue/999>

  Much of this week's issue revolves around cellular communications, 
  with Glenn Fleishman covering Vonage's odd apps for the iPhone and 
  iPod touch and Microsoft's data-destruction debacle for T-Mobile 
  Sidekick users. Glenn also explains why AT&T's recent about-face 
  with regard to allowing voice-over-IP apps to work over cellular 
  data connections makes business sense for the company. TidBITS 
  contributor Kirk McElhearn also rejoins us after a long hiatus with 
  an in-depth look at the forthcoming international version of 
  Amazon's Kindle ebook reader. But we also have two articles about 
  the Mac from guest writers: Lewis Butler explains Mac OS X's hidden 
  single-application mode, and Christian Voelker relates his 
  experiences getting an old Apple LaserWriter 630 Pro working via 
  Snow Leopard. Notable software releases this week include Epson 
  Printer Drivers 2.1 for Mac OS X 10.6.1, iPhone OS 3.1.2, and Nisus 
  Writer Pro 1.3.1.

Articles
    Vonage Releases Apps for International Calling
    Cloud Data Blown Away for Sidekick Users
    VoIP over Mobile Broadband a Smart Move for AT&T
    Amazon Extends Kindle Beyond United States
    Make Old Apple Printers Work in Snow Leopard
    Revealing Mac OS X's Hidden Single-Application Mode
    TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates through 12-Oct-09
    Bonus Stories for 12-Oct-09
    ExtraBITS for 12-Oct-09
    Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk for 12-Oct-09


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Vonage Releases Apps for International Calling
----------------------------------------------
  by Doug McLean <doug_mclean@tidbits.com>, Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10622>
  3 comments

  The Internet telephony service Vonage has released mobile 
  applications for the iPhone and iPod touch, which is less like a 
  modern voice-over-IP (VoIP) program than an automated method of 
  using a calling card to avoid a carrier's international charges. 
  Vonage uses Wi-Fi for handling calls for the iPod touch and iPhone, 
  and can also place calls over an iPhone's cellular connection.

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

  Vonage's normal hardware-based Internet telephony service routes all 
  calls over a broadband connection, lets you assign one or more phone 
  numbers for incoming calls, and allows calls to any phone number in 
  the world. Vonage also makes a "soft phone" - a computer VoIP client 
  - with similar features.

  The free Vonage mobile apps are far more limited. No inbound calls. 
  No connection to an existing Vonage account. And no domestic calling 
  over Vonage's network, even on the iPod touch, which has no cellular 
  option. The app is currently available only to U.S. iPhone 
  customers; it's unclear whether the company will expand availability 
  to Canada and the UK, where it also operates its Internet telephony 
  business.

  This is in stark contrast to Skype for iPhone and iPod touch, which 
  currently works only over Wi-Fi. The Skype app allows incoming calls 
  and can place calls to any public switched telephone network (PSTN) 
  number in the world - domestic or international - or to other Skype 
  users. (See "Skype Coming to iPhone," 2009-03-30.)

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10175>

  The difference appears to be because Skype relies only on Wi-Fi, 
  while Vonage can work in a strange but seamless way over a cellular 
  voice connection, too. 

  Limitations in both Skype and Vonage Mobile may disappear shortly, 
  however, with the formal word from AT&T on 05-Oct-09 that the firm 
  has dropped its policy of not allowing VoIP calls over its 3G data 
  network via the iPhone. (See "VoIP over Mobile Broadband a Smart 
  Move for AT&T," 2009-10-09.) However, any changes resulting from the 
  new policy are in the future. Here's how the Vonage apps work today. 

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10636>

  For domestic calls, the iPod touch doesn't work at all. This is odd, 
  as one might expect that Apple wouldn't restrain its own 
  non-carrier-attached product, but it has. (An iPod touch also needs 
  a microphone, by the way - either Apple's iPhone Stereo Headset or 
  another product.)

  Domestic calls on the iPhone are simply shunted to the iPhone's 
  built-in call system by the Vonage app. Vonage doesn't actually 
  touch these calls, but Apple has allowed Vonage to use its front-end 
  to provide the call interface. This would seem to violate Apple's 
  principle that apps can't duplicate native functionality.

  For international calls, Vonage Mobile uses Wi-Fi where available; 
  it's the sole option for the iPod touch, of course, and frequently 
  available on an iPhone. 

  However, if an iPhone has only a cellular connection available, the 
  Vonage Mobile app places a normal call - invisible to the user - to 
  a local Vonage access number, and then completes the international 
  call through that connection. That means that iPhone subscribers 
  incur per-minute charges as with any normal phone call. In some 
  cases, a subscriber might also face roaming charges.

  International calls are supported to more than 60 countries, and, 
  however they are placed, are subject to Vonage's per-minute calling 
  rates, which are far cheaper than most standard carrier rates. You 
  must preload money into your Vonage Mobile account to place calls; 
  Vonage puts $1 of credit into U.S. accounts to let you try the 
  service. You can also set your account to add funds from a credit 
  card whenever you drop below a preset value.

<http://www.vonagemobile.com/rates/>

  This per-minute charge is quite different from Vonage's 
  landline-replacement service, where the company's standard monthly 
  fee includes free non-metered calls to the United States, Canada, 
  and landlines (but not mobile numbers) to those same 60 countries. 
  Vonage says a flat-rate subscription with the same countries will be 
  available before year's end.

  But it's annoying that there's absolutely no integration with 
  existing Vonage accounts; the company has several million 
  subscribers who might appreciate a single bill and unified call 
  history, at minimum, not to mention discounted calling. Skype 
  considers its users to have a single account, and all its 
  applications on smartphones, computers, and even a few standalone 
  handsets tie into that same account's call services.

  The limitation on placing domestic calls and receiving any calls 
  might be Vonage's way to avoid Google Voice's fate, a program that 
  Apple says is on indefinite review for approval, and that Google 
  says Apple rejected from the App Store. The FCC is investigating the 
  situation (see "FCC Queries Apple, AT&T, and Google about Google 
  Voice App," 2009-08-03). 

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10453>

  Google Voice allows free domestic calls and voicemail, and ties 
  together telephony, text messaging, voicemail, and call forwarding. 
  On the Android platform, installing Google Voice replaces the 
  built-in calling system, using whatever data network is available to 
  route calls.

  AT&T's recent decision to allow VoIP over its 3G data network might 
  mean the release of Google Voice, along with notable revisions to 
  both Skype and Vonage Mobile. We'll see if those choices appear, but 
  the near future could bring a lot of competition for helping your 
  fingers do the walking.

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10622#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/10622>


Cloud Data Blown Away for Sidekick Users
----------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10638>
  9 comments

  T-Mobile and Microsoft may have had carnal relations with the 
  proverbial canine, thanks to a massive failure followed by apparent 
  permanent loss of personal contact, calendar, and other data with 
  the Sidekick, a phone sold by T-Mobile and powered by 
  Microsoft-acquired Danger. I saw the initial phase of this problem 
  first hand a week ago.

  We had just returned home with a high school buddy of my wife's 
  after attending a performance of the touring show of Wicked when her 
  friend tried to check his T-Mobile Sidekick smartphone, on which his 
  business depends. No dice.

  We tried charging the phone, restarting it, logging in via the Web - 
  all to no avail. It quickly came out that there was a complete 
  outage of services from Danger, the Microsoft-acquired firm that 
  runs the back-end servers for the Sidekick.

  Unlike many smartphones, Danger-based phones store data in a cloud - 
  servers located hither and yon that you don't manage, but are 
  imagined to be universally and continuously accessible. These phones 
  retrieve information as necessary and _cache_ a temporary copy on 
  the phone, a copy that's not intended to be a permanent set of 
  stored records. The data also isn't intended to be synced to a 
  computer as with a BlackBerry, iPhone, Android, or other smartphone, 
  but accessed via a Web site or a phone. 

  It sounds more like the Sidekick data lives on something akin to an 
  IMAP server: you can have some local copies, but the server is 
  master. With IMAP, the copies persist even after a computer or phone 
  restarts, of course, just as you might expect. But in the Danger 
  approach, locally cached data is erased on restart or if the battery 
  runs out of power.

  Our friend had his service restored the next day, although some 
  Sidekick users were out of luck for days, or apparently suffered a 
  separate outage. (The reports talk about an outage on 06-Oct-09, 
  while our friend's was down on 03-Oct-09.)

  Now the kicker - or the sidekicker: any personal data that's not 
  still on your Sidekick is likely gone forever due to server 
  problems, T-Mobile said in a statement on 10-Oct-09.

<http://forums.t-mobile.com/tmbl/board?board.id=Sidekick_LX_2009>

  It is frankly breathtaking that there's any conceivable way in which 
  one could run a service in 2009 - or 1999 for that matter - where 
  some form of server problem would take down not just live data for 
  customers, but - as far as T-Mobile has said - any previous copies 
  as well. 

  T-Mobile advises customers who have cached data still in their 
  Sidekicks to avoid running out of power, restarting, or shutting 
  down their Sidekicks, lest the last chance of recovery be lost.

  I can't imagine the aftermath of this event. T-Mobile is already the 
  distant fourth cellular carrier by subscriber numbers in the United 
  States, and, like Sprint Nextel, has no landline phone or broadband 
  business with which to pair its offerings.

  Having a massive, unprecedented data loss - even if this turns out 
  to be entirely Danger's fault - will likely mean an exodus of 
  high-value customers, who will certainly not be obliged to pay - or 
  will sue to not pay - any contract cancellation fees. 

  Are other smartphone platforms immune? Why, yes, they are, as a 
  general statement. iPhone (and iPod touch) users who sync via 
  MobileMe wind up with their data stored in many places, and only 
  some corrupted sync operations, coupled with the deletion of 
  automatic backups could wipe contacts, calendars, email, and other 
  data. In other words, as far as we know, it's difficult to imagine a 
  situation in which Apple could make an operations-related mistake 
  that would destroy all iPhone data for a significant percentage of 
  users.

  Android users synchronize via Google services, and unless an Android 
  user destroyed his or her Google account or manually deleted all 
  contacts, calendar events, and other data, there would still be 
  copies available elsewhere. Since Google services are easily synced 
  to computers, it's likely that copies would be accessible in Address 
  Book and iCal as well (or comparable programs in other operating 
  systems). 

  BlackBerry users may be at some risk, because Research in Motion 
  (RIM) relies on centralized servers for push email and other 
  features, but RIM doesn't use a cloud to store data for customers, 
  and BlackBerries have locally stored address books, email, and other 
  data. And, again, it's possible to sync BlackBerries with computers, 
  providing yet another copy.

  With these three platforms, unless you wiped your data everywhere, 
  or synced after wiping or losing data in such a way that it synced 
  an empty set everywhere (and there was no local hard drive backup, 
  too), you'd still be able to restore everything, or at least nearly 
  everything.

  Windows Mobile, the Nokia-backed Symbian platform, and Palm's webOS 
  have no monolithic central storage system, so smartphones based on 
  these three platforms can't suffer from such problems.

  Generally speaking, the Sidekick data loss disaster appears as 
  though it's unique to a cloud-oriented mobile service company. And 
  so, the moral of the story is, be wary of services that store 
  essential information in a cloud without options for making local 
  backups, preferably in an automated fashion.

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10638#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/10638>


VoIP over Mobile Broadband a Smart Move for AT&T
------------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10636>
  4 comments

  AT&T, under pressure from the FCC to explain precisely why the 
  iPhone can't place VoIP calls over 3G when its other smartphones 
  can, reversed its previous policy. Apple will be updating its App 
  Store rules to let developers run VoIP connections over any 
  available network medium, not just Wi-Fi.

<http://www.att.com/gen/press-room?pid=4800&cdvn=news&newsarticleid=27207>

  This change is a big one for AT&T, which I'm sure wrestled with 
  lawyers, spreadsheets, and customer surveys before implementing the 
  move - a move which could have been forced on the firm by the 
  government, potentially along with other rules and restrictions that 
  AT&T might have wanted to avoid.

  Despite the potential loss of revenue, the change should be a good 
  one for AT&T. Why? Because it's yet another tool to improve customer 
  loyalty for a company whose 3G network has delivered sub-par 
  performance. 

  I've been generally satisfied with AT&T's service, but I don't live 
  in areas of weak coverage, and I don't travel extensively. However, 
  on two recent trips across rural and highway portions of Oregon and 
  Washington, AT&T's network was generally satisfactory, no matter 
  whether I was on 2.5G (EDGE) or 3G.

  In fact, AT&T turning on 850 MHz base stations in Seattle has 
  distinctly improved my iPhone voice and data experience, especially 
  in my house. Before adding 850 MHz service, made available after 
  AT&T disabled a first-generation network in 2008, AT&T was limited 
  to 1900 MHz. The lower 850 MHz frequencies travel further at the 
  same power level, and penetrate buildings and homes far better.

  The move to allow VoIP over cell data means that future versions of 
  Skype, Vonage Mobile, and other programs will likely allow iPhone 
  users to drop to cellular subscription plans with fewer minutes, 
  relying instead on VoIP apps for domestic calling. (See "Vonage 
  Releases Apps for Non-Domestic Calling," 2009-10-06.)

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10622>

  (I'm ignoring here the issue of iPhone subscribers outside the 
  United States, whose carriers have all kinds of different policies 
  and charges. A commenter on this article noted, for instance, that 
  Rogers in Canada doesn't offer nationwide roaming, charging for 
  long-distance calls within the country; Rogers also caps iPhone 
  usage at 5 GB in its heaviest usage plan, unlike AT&T's unlimited 
  smartphone service. And there's also the issue of using an 
  AT&T-connected iPhone outside the United States. AT&T has 
  international data roaming plans, and it might wind up being cheaper 
  to use VoIP over a data plan than to pay the crazily high call 
  charges when roaming.)

  But if you look at subscription trends, this change in policy isn't 
  as disruptive as it looks. I have no idea how many people pay AT&T's 
  wireless international rates; perhaps billions of dollars are spent. 
  However, the per-minute calling costs are so high without a special 
  plan that I have to believe that most people are motivated to use 
  calling cards or other solutions, which have included VoIP over 
  Wi-Fi with Skype on the iPhone. (AT&T does have calling plans for 
  calling and roaming outside the United States, but these plans are 
  still ludicrous even on the cheap end. For $4.99 per month, AT&T 
  will let you call either Canada or Mexico from the United States at 
  the rate of 9 cents per minute, versus 2 cents per minute with Skype 
  or Vonage Mobile.) 

<http://www.wireless.att.com/learn/international/roaming/affordable-world-packages.jsp>

  AT&T's plainest domestic plan with 450 included minutes already 
  offers rollover minutes, huge quantities of evening and weekend 
  minutes (5,000 per month), and free mobile-to-mobile calling.

<http://www.wireless.att.com/cell-phone-service/cell-phone-plan-details/?q_sku=sku3830290&q_planCategory=cat1370011>

  For new iPhone customers, AT&T gets a minimum of $70 per month for a 
  single line, or $110 per month for a family plan of two lines. (The 
  breakdown is $40 for voice, $30 for data; text messaging is extra, 
  paid per message or with a plan starting at $5 per month. Multi-line 
  plans start at $40 for voice, $10 for an extra line, and $60 for two 
  data plans, with text messaging on top of that.) 

  But AT&T's voice plan income maxes out at $100 per month, where the 
  company offers unlimited voice service. That's likely the biggest 
  competition for the firm: the $60 difference between a 
  limited-minutes $40 plan and unlimited $100 plan.

  However, we must never ignore the cost of customer churn and 
  acquisition (and re-acquisition), which is exceptionally high in the 
  cellular industry. A company can rack up hundreds of dollars per 
  customer between advertising, new phone subsidies ($200 or more per 
  iPhone), and company stores or commissions to independent stores. 
  T-Mobile once offered me the cash and service equivalent of $500 to 
  switch from AT&T at a walk-up kiosk when I was returning equipment I 
  had purchased for testing. 

  With the pro-rated cancellation fees now offered by AT&T and other 
  carriers - AT&T drops the $175 fee by $5 per month over the contract 
  period - customers now have far less financial motivation to stay 
  with a carrier after a year or so.

  If AT&T ups its iPhone customer retention rate by a measurable 
  amount, the company likely saves more than the losses from carrying 
  VoIP traffic over their cellular data network, and achieves better 
  economies of scale, too. 

  Also remember that time spent talking via a VoIP app over Wi-Fi 
  doesn't further load AT&T's cellular network, and when a VoIP call 
  passes over 3G it consumes roughly the same bandwidth that AT&T 
  would use for a voice call. Both Wi-Fi- and 3G-based VoIP calling 
  bring with them none of the responsibility for call completion, 
  billing, fee settlement, or customer support that's present with 
  normal cellular calls. 

  In short, AT&T may actually benefit quite a bit from this change in 
  policy, which may be why it didn't opt for prolonged legal action.

  The change also helps builds an audience for AT&T's next service, 
  LTE (fourth-generation or 4G mobile broadband), in which voice will 
  be much likely more like a service embedded inside a high-bandwidth 
  data offering. Happy iPhone 3GS customers may easily transition into 
  being happy iPhone 4G customers.

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10636#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/10636>


Amazon Extends Kindle Beyond United States
------------------------------------------
  by Kirk McElhearn <kirk@mcelhearn.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10631>
  1 comment

  When Amazon released the Kindle ebook reader, it was available for 
  purchase only to those in the United States. Amazon had made a deal 
  with only a U.S. phone company to provide 3G wireless connectivity, 
  and, most likely, Amazon hadn't managed to work out the licensing 
  issues related to selling U.S. ebooks in other countries. 

  As of 19-Oct-09, an international version of the Kindle 2 will be 
  available for $279 - $20 more than the U.S.-only Kindle 2 - plus 
  shipping and duties (it's shipped from the United States). So 
  readers in 100 countries will be able to purchase English-language 
  books, as well as various magazines and newspapers, for display on 
  the Kindle. The larger Kindle DX, which can display PDFs, has no 
  international version as yet, although Amazon has promised such a 
  device sometime in 2010.

<http://www.amazon.com/dp/B0015T963C/?tag=kirkmcelhearn>
<http://blogkindle.com/2009/10/international-release-of-kindle-2/>

  At the moment, those books, magazines, and newspapers must be 
  purchased from the U.S. Amazon store, but this is an improvement; 
  until now, you had to have a U.S. account and address even to use 
  Amazon's Kindle app on the iPhone and iPod touch. Now, users of 
  those devices who are outside the United States have access to 
  Kindle ebooks as well, but at a higher price.


**International Availability** -- As noted, all Kindle books must be 
  purchased through U.S.-based Amazon.com, rather than Amazon's 
  international Web stores. Even customers of Amazon UK must buy their 
  Kindle books from Amazon's U.S. store, though the company says it 
  will soon offer direct UK purchases.

  Wired's Steven Levy extracted the detail from Amazon head Jeff Bezos 
  that publishers are paid based on the "territory of purchase." A 
  non-U.S. publisher with the rights in a given country or region gets 
  the royalties instead of a U.S. publisher.

<http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2009/10/international-kindle/>

  Because of this complicated rights issue, not all Kindle books are 
  available internationally; many, but not all publishers have agreed 
  to Amazon's terms. The Amazon Web site says, "Due to copyright 
  restrictions, certain Kindle Titles are not available everywhere. 
  Kindle Titles that are available in your country or region will be 
  displayed." Amazon touts a total of 350,000 books in the United 
  States, but readers in other countries will have access only to 
  160,000 to 290,000 titles, depending on country.

  In particular, no mention is made on Amazon's French store of future 
  plans for French-language books. My guess is that Amazon is 
  negotiating with publishers in major countries.

  Canadians are also out of luck in purchasing a global Kindle at all. 
  The Toronto newspaper The Globe and Mail couldn't get Amazon to 
  explain why.

<http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/technology/why-you-cant-get-the-kindle-in-canada/article1316081/>


**Book Pricing** -- Several points regarding pricing: First, Kindle 
  books generally sell for $9.99 in the United States; internationally 
  - at least for European purchasers - this base price is $13.79. 

  Second, a number of the titles that currently top the bestseller 
  list for U.S. Kindle books are unavailable to me in France: "The 
  Lost Symbol" by Dan Brown, "Last Song" by Nicholas Sparks, books by 
  Steig Larsson, and many more. 

  So Europeans pay a $3.80 premium and lack access to many popular 
  books. That's troubling.

  To be fair, this price includes VAT (in France, VAT on ebooks is a 
  whopping 19.6 percent, though paper books are taxed only 5.5 
  percent; in the UK, it's 15 percent on ebooks but no surcharge on 
  paper books), and shipping books from the United States is more 
  expensive, so the $13.79 price is still substantially cheaper than 
  the equivalent hardcover with shipping.

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

  But since shipping a digital book costs nearly nothing, this price 
  hike seems excessive. Looking at the prices of a few paperbacks - 
  Stephen King's "Dark Tower" series, for instance - shows similar 
  abusive pricing. For a book that costs $7.99 in the United States 
  ("Dark Tower VII"), Amazon is charging $11.49 to Europeans. 

  Granted, the U.S. dollar is quite weak these days, so the paperback 
  for the same book costs roughly the equivalent amount in euros from 
  Amazon's French store, but it's enough to make me think twice. And 
  it's certainly not the VAT that explains the $3.50 difference; at 
  the current exchange rate, VAT for that $7.99 paperback would be 
  only $0.44.


**Newspapers and Magazines** -- The pricing for newspapers is 
  surprising as well. The New York Times, sold in the United States to 
  Kindle users for $13.99 a month, costs $27.99 here in Europe. Even 
  the International Herald Tribune, which is actually published in 
  France, is more expensive here: $9.99 in the United States compared 
  to $19.99 for Europe. 

  There's no reason to charge twice as much for European customers; 
  after all, one of the Internet's major advantages is that distance 
  doesn't matter. I thought newspapers were trying to survive, but if 
  the Kindle is their big chance, it looks like they're going to blow 
  it.

  As far as magazines are concerned, there are only a total of 34 
  available to European customers, so far. And worse, as with 
  newspapers, many magazines cost twice as much when purchased by 
  European Kindle customers. Asimov's Science Fiction runs $5.99 per 
  issue in Europe, but only $2.99 in the United States, and the 
  Atlantic Monthly is $2.49 per issue compared to just $1.25 in the 
  United States.


**International Roaming Fees** -- One final gripe: Kindle users in the 
  United States are happy that many classic titles - in the form of 
  public domain books - are available for free from Amazon. These same 
  books, here in Europe, are sold - yes, sold - for $2.30.

  Interestingly, when using the international Kindle, U.S. customers 
  must pay $1.99 for every download they make when roaming outside the 
  United States. Newspaper, magazine, and blog subscriptions will cost 
  $4.99 per week to access when roaming. (U.S. users who travel a lot 
  internationally can purchase the international Kindle to have access 
  to Kindle content when overseas; the U.S.-only Kindle cannot 
  download new content when outside of the United States.) $1.99 seems 
  a high price to pay to download a file, closer to text messaging 
  rates than cellular data rates.

  Speculation on the Internet suggests that this "roaming fee" is what 
  Amazon is paying AT&T to use AT&T's worldwide data network, rather 
  than using individual cell phone networks in the countries where the 
  device works. (Previously Amazon worked solely with Sprint in the 
  United States, but an AT&T spokesman told Ars Technica that the 
  international version of the Kindle also uses AT&T's network in the 
  United States. AT&T and Sprint use incompatible cellular standards; 
  AT&T uses GSM, which is the dominant flavor worldwide.)

<http://arstechnica.com/gadgets/news/2009/10/kindle-now-259-available-worldwide-with-wireless-delivery.ars>

  This roaming fee could explain the difference in book prices I 
  mentioned above. If I take the $9.99 base price for a book, add the 
  $1.99 roaming fee and France's 19.6 percent VAT, I come to $14.22, 
  which isn't much higher than the $13.79 price for most books. And 
  $1.99 plus 19.6 percent works out to $2.38, right about the cost of 
  those public domain titles.

  While this roaming fee may explain the higher cost of the books - 
  and may explain why "free" books are not free when downloaded 
  outside of the United States - it seems ludicrous that international 
  Kindle buyers must pay a hidden delivery fee for every title. After 
  all, you can download Kindle books to your computer and then 
  transfer them to the device via USB; obtaining these books from 
  sites with public domain books in Kindle-compatible formats is 
  therefore the best way to get such titles. Perhaps Amazon should 
  offer a lower price for computer downloads, and make people pay the 
  full price only for wireless shopping.


**The Future of Books** -- I'm convinced that ebooks are the future of 
  books in general (they won't supplant them, but will replace 
  dead-tree books for many people), and I'm glad that Amazon has 
  finally managed to release a Kindle for use in other countries. 

  I've used the Kindle app on my iPod touch and have been very pleased 
  with the experience (see my hands-on review and further thoughts 
  blog posts). Still, I'm very tempted by the international Kindle 
  itself, and I may spring for one. 

<http://www.mcelhearn.com/?p=530>
<http://www.mcelhearn.com/?p=551>

  However, I'm hesitant because I feel its content costs too much and 
  with all the rumors about Apple's tablet coming out soon, I'm afraid 
  that I wouldn't use the Kindle for long. After all, if Apple's 
  tablet uses the iPhone OS or something similar, Amazon's Kindle app 
  will work on it, and that experience will likely be better than 
  using the Kindle device itself. Or, maybe Apple is preparing its own 
  ebook distribution system using the iTunes Store. We can only wait 
  and see.

  [Kirk McElhearn loves books. He has just created a new Web site 
  about his favorite author, Henry James.]

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

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Make Old Apple Printers Work in Snow Leopard
--------------------------------------------
  by Christian Voelker <c.voelker@gmx.net>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10626>
  21 comments

  One of the lesser-known changes in Snow Leopard is the removal of 
  the old AppleTalk networking protocol, which Apple has deprecated 
  for years. But even though most networking devices stopped 
  supporting AppleTalk long ago, largely due to improvements in other 
  areas, one area where AppleTalk has long been used is in printers. 

  Not new printers, of course. But many older printers - the 
  workhorses of the 1990s - are still humming along fine. Although 
  it's become more difficult to find replacement toner cartridges, and 
  they're quite expensive when you do need to buy them, if the printer 
  works well and does what you need (and if you don't print a lot), 
  it's hard to justify junking it.

  That was the case for my beloved LaserWriter Pro 630, which I've 
  used since 1994, but which I wasn't able to print to once I upgraded 
  to Snow Leopard. After quite some effort, I was able to bring it 
  back online and use it via Snow Leopard. Although people with other 
  old Apple printers may not be able to follow my path exactly, I hope 
  my basic approach will help point in the right direction.

  Oddly, Apple claims that Snow Leopard includes the necessary 
  software to print to the LaserWriter Pro 630, but the company 
  doesn't say how to work around the removal of the AppleTalk support 
  necessary to communicate with the printer.

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


**Back to Basics** -- I started by considering what makes up a 
  LaserWriter Pro 630. It has a Canon EX print engine, a hardware 
  PostScript Level 2 interpreter and a print server that can use only 
  EtherTalk as a means of transport. (EtherTalk is AppleTalk over 
  Ethernet, and is the weak link in this scenario.)

  The LaserWriter Pro 630 predates the graphical Web browser, so Web 
  configuration and the Internet Printing Protocol (IPP) clearly 
  weren't options, and even TCP as transport layer wasn't going to be 
  available. So it was clear that I had to forget about the printer's 
  Ethernet port and the communication capabilities behind it. But then 
  how could my Mac talk to the PostScript interpreter and the print 
  engine?

  Since these older printers had to work with computers other than 
  Macs (and because they were often based on hardware used by other 
  cross-platform printer manufacturers), they often had other 
  communication ports as well. This particular printer has four 
  possibilities beyond Ethernet:

* LocalTalk port (RS-422): This network port would seem to be a 
  possibility, with the addition of an Ethernet-to-LocalTalk bridge 
  from a manufacturer like Asante (look for the Asante FriendlyNet 
  Ethernet to LocalTalk Bridge; for more discussion, see the old and 
  likely obsolete article "Printer Sharing and Print Spooling in Mac 
  OS X," 2003-03-31). They're not made any more, but if you have one 
  around, it could be worth trying. However, there are two problems 
  with using the LocalTalk port. First, since it hails from the same 
  era as the printer's Ethernet port, it likely won't work with Snow 
  Leopard's modern networking and printing technologies, and second, 
  with a throughput of only 230.4 Kbps, it might be awfully slow.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/7129>

* Centronics-style parallel port. Parallel ports used to be 
  commonplace for connecting printers to PCs. It was almost 
  unthinkable that anyone would ever use this port to print from a 
  Mac, but what if I could find a parallel print server that would 
  plug into the printer and which I could connect to via Ethernet?

* Serial port (RS-232): Serial ports were less commonly used than 
  parallel ports for printing, but if I couldn't find a parallel port 
  print server, perhaps I could get a serial print server that would 
  meet the same needs, if at a slower speed than the parallel port.

* SCSI port. Although it's a communication interface, SCSI on printers 
  was used almost entirely for connecting a hard disk that would store 
  downloadable fonts or commonly used background art. 


**Do Parallel Ports Ever Meet?** I first looked for "parallel print 
  server" on eBay and bought a widely used but now discontinued D-Link 
  DP-301+. Beware of this model, which sounds good when you read about 
  it online. It, like all of these small parallel print servers, has a 
  severe design flaw. It lacks an external reset button, so once 
  configured (as most used units would be), you can't reset it without 
  using its built-in Web interface. In this case, it is not only 
  difficult to find the device's IP address, but it remains 
  inaccessible unless you have the proper password. Unfortunately, the 
  seller didn't know the password, since a former friend of his had 
  configured it, and I was happy to return it.

<http://www.dlink.com/products/?pid=322>

  After some more searching, I bought a new Netgear Mini Print Server 
  PS101 parallel print server. It is also quite common, even smaller 
  than the D-Link unit, and from a company I like. It was a bit more 
  expensive, but easier to set up. If there was a password on the 
  device, you would need a Windows machine (or possibly VMware Fusion 
  or Parallels Desktop) to run the Windows software that's required 
  for resetting, but at least there is such an option. 

<http://www.netgear.com/Products/PrintServers/WiredPrintServers/PS101.aspx>

  The Netgear PS101 gets its IP address via DHCP, so you can figure it 
  out by scanning for devices on your LAN using the Angry IP Scanner 
  utility (scan once before you plug in the PS101, and once 
  afterwards, and look for the new device). With an AirPort base 
  station, you can also use the DHCP Clients tab in AirPort Utility 
  (Advanced > Logs and Statistics > DHCP Clients) to monitor a new 
  client being added. Once you've found the PS101, you can connect to 
  its Web interface via a browser. There's not much to configure in 
  the Web interface; just finding the IP address is the key.

<http://www.angryip.org/w/Home>

  Once I had the IP address of the print server, I was ready to go... 
  or so I thought. I opened the Print & Fax preference pane on my Mac 
  and started to add a new printer. But what exactly to enter? 
  Selecting the IP button was fairly obvious, but which protocol is 
  right? The default LPD? The modern IPP? The proprietary but widely 
  supported Jetdirect? I could tell from a port scan in Network 
  Utility that the Netgear print server used port 515 and 9100, and a 
  quick Google search showed that 515 was used for LPD and 9100 was 
  used for Jetdirect.

  I added a printer for both of these protocols, but to no avail. Both 
  printer connections showed up with a green light in the Print & Fax 
  preference pane's printer list, but with LPD, printing a page timed 
  out after more than a minute. Jetdirect was slightly more promising, 
  printing a lot of garbage, indicating that at least there was 
  communication taking place.

  Initially, I thought the problem might be PostScript 3 code being 
  sent to a PostScript 2 printer, but that turned out not to be the 
  issue. I had overlooked one last thing to configure on the printer - 
  how to tell it to communicate properly with the parallel port. Time 
  to read the manual. As if I still had that around after 15 years...

  Luckily, Apple provides manuals for older products online. I found 
  and downloaded the manual for my LaserWriter Pro 630, but it was 
  entirely in Courier, with no styles or graphics. Lest you think I'm 
  complaining about aesthetics, the problem was that the information I 
  needed was in a table in Appendix C (page 60), and it took me nearly 
  an hour to figure out how to interpret the mass of monospaced text. 
  (Line numbers are missing, but each setting corresponds to four 
  lines, each of which describes one communication method, so I looked 
  at the Parallel line for each setting.)

<http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=50128>

  On the left rear top of the LaserWriter Pro 630, above all the 
  connectors, there is a tiny wheel that offers 10 settings. 
  Unfortunately, the LaserWriter Utility application is not available 
  any longer under Mac OS X. With it, I could have enabled a setting 
  that would print a configuration page when the printer turned on, 
  and that page would have displayed the current communication 
  settings. 

  But reading the table in Appendix C gave the clues I needed. The 
  wheel was set to 0 to start with, which corresponded to a "Normal" 
  connection and "PostScript" as the Control Protocol Mode. I knew 
  those values didn't work via the parallel port, which also 
  eliminated settings 2, 4, 5, 6, and 7. Settings 1 and 3 used "Raw" 
  as the connection and "HP PCL 4" as the Control Protocol Mode, 
  whereas setting 9 used "BSP" as the connection and "PostScript" as 
  the Control Protocol Mode. 

  Since I knew I wanted the printer to interpret PostScript and not 
  HP's PCL (Printer Command Language), I chose setting 9 even though I 
  have no idea what connection type "BSP" involves, and printed a test 
  page. It worked! My LaserWriter Pro 630 had returned to the land of 
  the living without being savaged by Snow Leopard!

  It gets better. Because my FritzBox Wi-Fi gateway doesn't route 
  AppleTalk between the Wi-Fi and Ethernet segments of my network, I 
  previously couldn't print from my MacBook unless I plugged the 
  MacBook into my Ethernet network. Because this new setup doesn't use 
  AppleTalk, I can now print wirelessly from my MacBook, sans Ethernet 
  cable.


**Extrapolating to Other Printers** -- Although I'm pretty sure this 
  approach will work fine for those with a LaserWriter Pro 630, other 
  old Apple printers may lack a parallel port or may have an entirely 
  different method of changing the parallel port's connection mode.

  But if your printer has a parallel port and perusal of the original 
  manual implies that you can tweak the connection settings with a 
  hardware switch (rather than the LaserWriter Utility), give the 
  Netgear PS101 print server a try. There are also plenty of other 
  parallel and even serial print servers, some with Wi-Fi, that might 
  work.

  I do wish Apple would give more hints about how to continue using a 
  theoretically supported Apple printer under Snow Leopard. 
  Suggestions for Ethernet-to-parallel/serial print servers and an 
  explanation of what Normal, Raw, and BSP mean with respect to 
  connection types would be welcome.

  Unless - I won't say "until" - they do, however, I hope my attempt 
  here at explaining how I brought my LaserWriter Pro 630 back into 
  service under Snow Leopard will help others keep their perfectly 
  functional old printers humming along.


  [Christian Voelker works as a network admin in an advertising agency 
  in Hamburg, Germany, and specializes in archival solutions based on 
  DuraSpace and DSpace. His long term pet project is a local history 
  archive for citizens of Hamburg.]

<http://stadtteilgeschichten.net/>

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Revealing Mac OS X's Hidden Single-Application Mode
---------------------------------------------------
  by Lewis Butler <lbutler@covisp.net>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10624>
  27 comments

  Having returned from an archeological dig into the dark history of 
  Mac OS X, I've unearthed a feature that could change the way you 
  interact with your applications, enabling you to focus on one or two 
  more easily than in the past.

  Back in 1999, when Steve Jobs first showed off the new Finder in Mac 
  OS X, it ran in a single-application mode, where switching from one 
  application to another caused the first application to minimize 
  (this was the original demo of the Genie effect). This was intended 
  to be the default behavior, but it was so widely reviled that Apple 
  quickly changed the default to the familiar multi-application mode 
  that shows multiple applications on the screen at the same time. 

  Mac OS X's multi-application mode differed from how previous 
  versions of the Mac OS worked in that it interleaved all open 
  windows without regard to which application they belonged to, a 
  feature that annoyed a lot of long-time Mac users.

  In Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard, Apple has made significant 
  improvements to the Dock, including improved Expose integration and 
  minimizing windows invisibly, among much else. As a result, people 
  who are starting to use the Dock seriously for the first time are 
  discovering that clicking an icon in the Dock brings all its windows 
  to the foreground. This interface behavior isn't new in Snow 
  Leopard, of course, but it's an example of how Apple has never 
  really given up the desire to make users focus on a single 
  application at a time. 

  Single-application mode is how the iPhone works, of course, and on 
  the Mac, almost all Apple applications - think about Mail, iTunes, 
  and iPhoto - rely on a single window that can easily take over the 
  entire screen. When an application needs a second window, such as 
  for keywords or editing in iPhoto, it is generally a palette that 
  disappears when the application is not in the foreground.

  But it goes further. Lurking in the scary bowels of Mac OS X for all 
  these years has been this little command, which brings back 
  single-application mode. (Go ahead and try it - it's easily 
  reversed.)

    defaults write com.apple.dock single-app -bool true

  For single-application mode to take effect, you have to relaunch the 
  Dock with this second command.

    killall Dock

  That's right, the original single-application mode in pre-release 
  versions of Mac OS X is still with us. Although it was always 
  intended as a simple option for people who are not computer experts, 
  it turns out to be an interesting option for the power user.

  The most important fact to realize is that single-application mode 
  is tied exclusively to the Dock. This means that if you click an 
  application's icon in the Dock, it immediately hides all the other 
  applications, including the Finder. 

  However, if you switch applications through any other method, 
  including clicking another visible application's window and the 
  Command-Tab application switcher, Mac OS X's normal 
  multi-application approach remains in effect, and nothing will be 
  hidden. 

  You can thus combine methods of switching between applications. 
  Click Mail in the Dock, then use Command-Tab to switch to Safari, 
  and you'll end up with both Mail and Safari on screen, and nothing 
  else. If you later want to hide Safari again, click Mail's Dock icon 
  (or just Option-click on Mail's window).

  If you think about this for a minute, you'll start to see the 
  possibilities. Enabling single-application mode means that you can 
  quickly and easily build a custom list of visible applications, and 
  that list is dynamic. In other words, you can achieve a lot of what 
  you might use Spaces for, without having to switch between spaces or 
  manage which applications show in which spaces.

  The main advantage to this single-application mode is that clicking 
  an application in the Dock has always, as I mentioned earlier, 
  brought all that application's windows to the foreground. So, when I 
  click Terminal's icon in the Dock, not only do all other 
  applications immediately disappear from view, I see the window for 
  my local shells, the window for the remote shells on my mail server, 
  and the window for the remote shells on my primary DNS server. These 
  windows are exactly where I want them on the screen and there are no 
  other windows cluttering up the view. However, if I need to 
  reference a Web page at the same time, I simply use Command-Tab to 
  bring up Safari, giving me its window _and_ Terminal's windows all 
  on one screen.

  With Spaces, I kept all my Web browser windows in one space, but 
  that meant a lot of swapping back and forth, or moving a browser 
  window to another space temporarily. With single-application mode I 
  always have the applications I want in the foreground visible and 
  everything else is hidden from view.

  The primary downside is that single-application mode doesn't play 
  nicely with Expose. When you activate Expose, it shows only windows 
  for visible applications. I was hoping that it would treat the 
  hidden applications' windows as minimized windows, but that was not 
  the case.

  For me there is also an issue with full-screen video. If I am 
  watching something with VLC or QuickTime Player on my second monitor 
  and I click an icon in the Dock, the video is hidden from view. 
  That's not surprising, but it's not what I want since I think that a 
  full-screen video should stay full-screen no matter what. It's 
  something to be aware of if you tend to watch video while doing 
  other work, as I do.

  There may be other issues I haven't encountered in the few days I've 
  been using single-application mode, but getting back to the normal 
  multi-application mode is easy. Just paste this first command into 
  Terminal and then restart the Dock with the second command.

    defaults delete com.apple.dock single-app
    killall Dock

  In the end, the main thing that I've noticed in the last few days is 
  that it is much easier for me to concentrate on a single task when I 
  can quickly hide all unrelated applications and show just the one or 
  two that I need right now. I'm finding that this method works better 
  for me than Spaces, and I am a big fan of Spaces. 


  [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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TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates through 12-Oct-09
-------------------------------------------------------------
  by Doug McLean <doug_mclean@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10629>

  Epson Printer Drivers 2.1 for Mac OS X 10.6.1 from Apple provides 
  the latest Epson printing and scanning software for Snow Leopard. A 
  full list of Snow Leopard-supported printers is available on Apple's 
  Web site. The update is available via Software Update or the Apple 
  Support Downloads page. (Free, 288.8 MB)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL900>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT3669>

  iPhone OS 3.1.2 from Apple is a maintenance and stability update to 
  the iPhone and iPod touch operating system software. The update 
  fixes several issues, including one that prevents the iPhone from 
  waking from sleep, one that interrupts cellular network services 
  until the iPhone is restarted, and a crashing bug that is 
  occasionally triggered by video streaming. The update is available 
  only via iTunes. (Free, 306.2 MB)

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

  Nisus Writer Pro 1.3.1 from Nisus Software is a compatibility and 
  maintenance update to the increasingly powerful word processor. The 
  latest version addresses a number of compatibility issues with Snow 
  Leopard, including the inability to resize document windows, the 
  failure to import .doc files, and poor spelling checker performance. 
  Also fixed is a problem with drag-and-drop when dropping text into 
  an empty text area, a crashing bug triggered by the Page Setup 
  dialog in the French localization, the inability to change default 
  leader tab settings, and an issue that caused images to be inverted 
  when files with cropped or resized images were exported as HTML. The 
  full list of changes is available on Nisus Software's Web site. ($79 
  new, free update, 133 MB)

<http://nisus.com/pro/>
<http://nisus.com/pro/releasenotes131.php>

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Bonus Stories for 12-Oct-09
---------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10640>

**New Processor Promises Improved Camera GPS Support** -- The 
  integration of GPS into digital cameras for geotagging - attaching 
  coordinates to images - hasn't gone well. Cameras aren't well suited 
  for rapidly acquiring signals nor updating precompiled satellite 
  location lists. A new module from chipmaker CSR may help provide 
  better results. (Glenn Fleishman, 2009-10-09)

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10637>


**The Best Camera Evangelizes iPhone Photography** -- Professional 
  photographer Chase Jarvis has recently released a new iPhone photo 
  app called The Best Camera that can take pictures, add effects, and 
  upload photos to sharing sites, all in one fell swoop. (Doug McLean, 
  2009-10-09)

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10635>


**Tag, You're in 2D!** -- With the right software, a matrix of 
  rectangles and dots turns into a URL, a piece of text, or an action. 
  Welcome to 2D barcodes, courtesy of TidBITS. (Glenn Fleishman, 
  2009-10-08)

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10616>


**iPod nano Delivers Static in Radio Interface and Features** -- 
  Colleagues seem alarmed by Glenn's antipathy to the iPod nano's 
  analog FM radio tuning. By failing to leverage data in the radio 
  stream, Apple delivers a typical and irritating experience - 
  compared to what it could have been. (Glenn Fleishman, 2009-10-12)

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10605>


**Find My (Wife's) iPhone** -- While Tonya trained for a 100-mile bike 
  ride this summer, Adam monitored her location from afar via Find My 
  iPhone. Privacy breach? No, just making her feel more comfortable 
  about being all alone many miles from home. (Adam C. Engst, 
  2009-10-12)

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10589>



ExtraBITS for 12-Oct-09
-----------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10639>

**Bruce Tognazzini Rethinks iPhone Home Screen** -- In his "Ask Tog" 
  column, human interface designer Bruce Tognazzini offers suggestions 
  for how the iPhone home screen could be redesigned to scale fluidly 
  to the large number of apps that many people have. His ideas are 
  good, but also interesting are proposals that the iPhone should have 
  an optional home screen that displays scrolling information from 
  apps. (Posted 2009-10-09)

<http://www.asktog.com/columns/080Springboard.html>


**iPhone Scores Highest in Smartphone Survey** -- The J.D. Power and 
  Associates research firm found Apple had the highest ranking in a 
  survey that weighted a number of usage factors among both business 
  and personal owners: 811 on a scale of 1,000 for personal use, and 
  803 for business. The big surprise? LG beat out BlackBerry's RIM for 
  2nd place for personal use (776 to 759). Over 3,200 smartphone users 
  were surveyed. (Posted 2009-10-08)

<http://www.jdpower.com/corporate/news/releases/pressrelease.aspx?ID=2009224>


**Presentation Secrets of Steve Jobs** -- CIO.com interviews Carmine 
  Gallo, author of "The Presentation Secrets of Steve Jobs: How to Be 
  Insanely Great in Front of Any Audience." We haven't seen the book, 
  but the interview makes a number of excellent points that will help 
  you give better presentations and understand why Apple presentations 
  work well. (Posted 2009-10-08)

<http://www.cio.com/article/503993/>
<http://www.amazon.com/dp/0071636080/?tag=tidbitselectro00>


**Cell Industry Backs USB for Charging, 3.5mm Jack for Audio** -- The 
  U.S. cell industry trade group CTIA says it officially supports 
  standardizing the charging/sync and audio ports on handsets. Handset 
  makers are now urged to use the micro-A or micro-AB USB formats (AB 
  accepts either micro-A or micro-B plugs) for data transfer and 
  charging, and the 3.5mm audio jack for headsets, earbuds, and 
  microphones. This supplements a July 2009 pledge for uniform USB 
  jacks by the GSMA, a trade group representing the majority of 
  carriers worldwide and a host of major handset makers. (Posted 
  2009-10-06)

<http://www.businesswire.com/portal/site/google/?ndmViewId=news_view&newsId=20091007005413>


**Apple Leaves U.S. Chamber of Commerce over Climate Policy** -- The 
  New York Times Green Inc. blog reports on Apple's resignation from 
  the United States Chamber of Commerce over the chamber's opposition 
  to efforts from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to limit 
  greenhouse gases. Apple isn't alone in disagreeing with the chamber 
  - three large utilities have resigned in recent weeks, and Nike 
  withdrew from the chamber board, all for the same reason. (Posted 
  2009-10-06)

<http://greeninc.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/10/05/apple-resignes-from-chamber-over-climate/>


**Software Sold or Licensed? Court Says Sold** -- An intriguing court 
  decision found that a man re-selling legitimate licenses to 
  Autodesk's expensive CAD software was acting legally under the 
  first-sale doctrine that enables used book and music sales in the 
  United States. The court said that while Autodesk says it licensed 
  its software, the license walks and talks like a sale, and thus the 
  software can be resold. Many software makers restrict or bar sales, 
  and that may now not hold. Autodesk will appeal the ruling. (Posted 
  2009-10-05)

<http://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2009/10/it-s-still-duck-court-re-affirms-first-sale-doctri>



Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk for 12-Oct-09
----------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10641>

**iPhone recording app** -- A reader solicits suggestions for voice 
  recording applications that record files his secretary can easily 
  open and transcribe. (9 message)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2898>


**FTP issues with Snow Leopard** -- Is anyone else running into 
  problems setting up an FTP server under Snow Leopard? (3 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2899>


**Continual aggravations with Snow Leopard** -- Could Snow Leopard 
  problems stem from a bad hard disk? Readers compare notes. (3 
  messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2900>


**iZard** -- Who needs an expensive iPhone holder when you can make 
  one from paper or appropriate a toy lizard? (6 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2901>


**Retrospect Alternative?** Readers looking for folder synchronization 
  find Retrospect overwhelming. Other options are offered. (16 
  messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2902>


**AT&T International Roaming Charges** -- If you're traveling with an 
  iPhone and haven't reviewed the roaming charges for voice and data 
  on your plan, be sure to read this thread. (13 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2905>


**Locating Software** -- Apple has discontinued its little-known 
  Macintosh Products Guide. Is the Apple Downloads page an acceptable 
  substitute? (3 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2906>


**iPhone Failure** -- When a reader's iPhone dies during travel, a 
  hard reset might be the key to resuscitating it. (4 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2910>



$$

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