TidBITS#1003/09-Nov-2009
========================
  Issue link: <http://db.tidbits.com/issue/1003>

  Just before press time (whatever that means in the Internet age), 
  Apple released Mac OS X 10.6.2, fixing a slew of bugs and providing 
  a vast number of security fixes; we have some initial coverage. 
  Despite what some other publications seem to believe, email isn't 
  going away any time soon, and Adam explains why. He also looks into 
  how the 100,000 apps in the iPhone App Store stack up against the 
  competition, and why size may be the App Store's biggest challenge. 
  Joe Kissell reports from Paris on the opening of the first Apple 
  Store in France and reduced pricing for the Backblaze online backup 
  service. Glenn Fleishman notes the new Google Dashboard service for 
  displaying what Google knows about you, and goes in depth on the new 
  2D barcode trend. Be sure to enter our DealBITS drawing for a copy 
  of BeLight Software's Labels & Addresses too! Notable software 
  releases this week include Viewfinder 1.0, Captain FTP 6.2, 
  MacSpeech Dictate 1.5.6, BBEdit 9.3, Sandvox 1.6.5, Kaspersky 
  Anti-Virus For Mac 1.0, DiscLabel 6.1, BusyCal 1.0.3, Parallels 
  Desktop 5, and TweetDeck 0.31.3.

Articles
    Backblaze for Business Offers Flat-Rate Online Backups
    Mac OS X 10.6.2 Addresses Myriad Bugs and Security Issues
    Apple Opens First Retail Store in France
    Google Shows You What It Knows about You
    DealBITS Drawing: Win a Copy of Labels & Addresses 1.3.3
    App Store Size: Comparisons and Challenges
    Why Email Remains the King of Internet Communications
    Tag, You're in 2D!
    TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Updates for 9 November 2009
    ExtraBITS for 9 November 2009
    Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk for 9 November 2009


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Backblaze for Business Offers Flat-Rate Online Backups
------------------------------------------------------
  by Joe Kissell <joe@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10715>

  Online backup provider Backblaze is now offering Backblaze for 
  Business, which lets business users back up an unlimited amount of 
  data for an annual fee of $50 per computer. That is to say, the 
  company is now providing their services to businesses at the same 
  price they already offered to individuals. Although that may sound 
  unremarkable at first blush, competitors - notably Mozy's MozyPro 
  service - charge a flat rate for individuals but a per-gigabyte fee 
  for businesses, potentially increasing their customers' costs 
  dramatically (and unpredictably).

<https://secure.backblaze.com/business.htm>
<http://mozy.com/pro/>

  The Backblaze software, which runs on Mac OS X and Windows, 
  automatically and continuously backs up all data files (but can be 
  configured to exclude particular files or file types). Backblaze for 
  Business customers can also deploy and manage the software for an 
  entire company from a central location.

  I applaud this move in that it will be a big help for small 
  businesses on a budget, but I'd also like to see Backblaze offer 
  something along the lines of CrashPlan's Family Unlimited Plan, 
  which applies flat-rate pricing to any number of computers in a 
  single household. (As someone with, at the moment, five Macs within 
  arm's reach, I find per-computer backup subscriptions to be 
  unreasonably pricey.)

<http://www4.crashplan.com/consumer/>

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Mac OS X 10.6.2 Addresses Myriad Bugs and Security Issues
---------------------------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10740>
  1 comment

  Apple has released Mac OS X 10.6.2, a sizable update to Snow Leopard 
  that touches on many areas of the operating system. The changes are 
  too numerous to chronicle: read Apple's About the Mac OS X 10.6.2 
  Update page for a list of changes. Also note the page detailing the 
  security improvements in this update.

<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT3874>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT3937>

  A few important items do jump out:

* The update fixes the Guest account deletion bug that would delete 
  one's own user directory when you logged back in after a Guest login 
  session was complete (see "Apple Acknowledges Guest Account Data 
  Loss Bug, 13 October 2009).

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10642>

* You can now open multiple downloaded files via the Finder reliably, 
  a problem we covered in "Snow Leopard Bug Prevents Opening Groups of 
  Files," 3 November 2009.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10712>

* Apple's discussion forums have been active recently with reports of 
  video playback and performance issues on the latest iMacs released a 
  few weeks ago (21.5-inch and 27-inch models), which apparently is 
  tied to having AirPort turned on; the update addresses it.

* The problem recognizing two-line URLs in Preview has changed 
  somewhat, so although some two-line URLs are recognized correctly, 
  many others are not (see "Two-Line URLs Broken in Snow Leopard's 
  Preview," 1 September 2009). From our perspective, this bug remains 
  outstanding.

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

* Apple notes "Safari plug-in reliability," which we take to mean 
  "handles Flash better" since the company has identified Flash items 
  as the leading cause of crashes in Safari.

  Apple didn't note whether or not it fixed the problem with Snow 
  Leopard screen sharing in which remote screens appear all black 
  until the quality setting (View menu) is toggled or reselected (see 
  "Fix Snow Leopard's Screen Sharing Black Screen Bug," 4 November 
  2009). We haven't yet been able to confirm whether a repair was put 
  in place.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10717>

  On the downside, Snow Leopard's bug affecting Apple Events (which 
  Matt Neuburg identified in "Tracking Down Snow Leopard's Apple 
  Events Bug," 13 October 2009) is still present. Also, Mac OS X 
  10.6.2's screen saver seems to take a very long time to build a list 
  of files to display when pointed at a folder or folder hierarchy 
  containing more than a few thousand images. This stands in stark 
  contrast to numerous previous versions of Mac OS X.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10643>

  Mac OS X 10.6.2 is available via Software Update or as two 
  standalone downloads: the Mac OS X 10.6.2 Update is 473 MB and the 
  Mac OS X 10.6.2 Update (Combo) is 479 MB. Typically, the Combo 
  update would update Mac OS X 10.6.0 and higher, while the regular 
  update would cover only Mac OS X 10.6.1. Presumably, the small size 
  difference is related to the fact that Mac OS X 10.6.1 was an 
  extremely small update.

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL958>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL959>

  Also, the size of the update via Software Update can vary widely, 
  depending on your computer. My 2.33 GHz MacBook Pro, released in 
  2006, required a 499.9 MB download, while my Mac mini from earlier 
  this year needed a 157.7 MB download as was a colleague's Mac Pro 
  from early 2008.

  Apple also released Security Update 2009-006 Client (143 MB) and 
  Security Update 2009-006 Server (231 MB) for Mac OS X 10.5.8, which 
  include the numerous security enhancements in Mac OS X 10.6.2, 
  linked above. As ever, the issues addressed patch vulnerabilities 
  exploited by maliciously crafted files or Web sites.

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL963>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL962>

  Snow Leopard Server also receives numerous fixes for problems 
  synchronizing Portable Home Directory content, using the iCal Web 
  interface within certain time zones, creating images with the System 
  Image Utility, server-side filtering of incoming mail messages, 
  preventing brute force password attacks, and more. See Apple's About 
  the Mac OS X Server 10.6.2 Update page for more details. The delta 
  update from Mac OS X 10.6.1 weighs in at 496 MB; the Combo update is 
  503 MB.

<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT3875>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL960>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL961>

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Apple Opens First Retail Store in France
----------------------------------------
  by Joe Kissell <joe@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10732>
  1 comment

  Paris, which has been my home since mid-2007, has pretty much 
  everything anyone could want in a world-class city: outstanding 
  restaurants, famous museums, striking architecture, fantastic public 
  transportation, and a rich history that stretches back thousands of 
  years. Besides being the capital of France, it's a cultural and 
  commercial nexus where one can find the very latest and best in 
  fashion, entertainment, and technology. 

  There's been just one serious lacuna, in my estimation: the absence 
  of an Apple Store. Sure, lots of retail stores here sell Macs, and 
  there's no shortage of authorized resellers and repair outlets. But 
  there's been no outlet where you're guaranteed to find the new 
  hardware and software Apple has just started shipping, and where 
  you're assured of getting service (or even just advice) from an 
  actual Apple employee.

  Until now, that is: on November 7th, Apple finally opened its first 
  (and much-rumored) retail store in France, and it just happens to be 
  within walking distance of my apartment. The store is located in the 
  Carrousel du Louvre, a high-end shopping mall located underneath the 
  massive courtyard in the center of the Louvre Museum. If you get 
  tired of old paintings, sculptures, and artifacts, you can walk over 
  and surround yourself with extremely modern art, without ever 
  stepping outside.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2009-11/Apple_Store_Paris.jpeg>
<http://www.apple.com/fr/retail/>
<http://www.carrouseldulouvre.com/>

  I would gladly have lined up with the thousands of other Parisian 
  Mac fans for the grand opening on Saturday at 10:00 AM, but I had a 
  prior commitment across town and couldn't make it to the store until 
  about 6:00 PM. Even eight hours after opening time, though, dozens 
  of black-uniformed security guards were corralling people into a 
  line outside the store, and inside customers were densely packed. As 
  people were allowed to enter in groups, we were filtered through a 
  short hallway lined on both sides with smiling, cheering Apple Store 
  staff members.

  Other than the fact that all the signage and other documentation was 
  in French, the store looked pretty much like every other Apple Store 
  I've visited. I was a bit surprised at how much of the floor space 
  was devoted to iPhones and iPods, and how little to accessories and 
  third-party products, but I guess that shows where the money is. (I 
  did manage to pick up a Magic Mouse and a case for my new 13-inch 
  MacBook Pro, but case and peripheral choices were much smaller than 
  I'm accustomed to at Apple Stores.) The massive Genius Bar was 
  humming, checkout service was speedy and efficient despite the 
  crowds, and the atmosphere oozed all the polish and efficiency one 
  would expect.

  Given the size and style-sensitivity of this city, and the 
  popularity of this particular location, I fully expect this store to 
  be perpetually crowded, so for more leisurely shopping I'll continue 
  to rely on the online French Apple Store. (Another advantage of 
  shopping online: you can get a new Mac - even a laptop - with your 
  choice of French, U.S. English, or International English keyboard.) 
  But I'm sure I'll appreciate this store the next time one of my Macs 
  needs servicing, I'll happily pop in to buy software, iProducts, or 
  accessories, and I hope this is just the first of many Apple Stores 
  in Paris and throughout France. (Apple's second store in France 
  opens in Montpellier on November 14th, and another Paris location is 
  reportedly due to open in mid-2010.)

<http://store.apple.com/fr>
<http://www.apple.com/fr/retail/odysseum/>

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Google Shows You What It Knows about You
----------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10725>

  With the new Google Dashboard, Google has taken another step towards 
  transparency about how it uses all the information it collects about 
  you and which you give it to store. The single location shows a 
  summary of data stored for most services Google operates associated 
  with a particular account of yours (I have two for structural and 
  historical reasons).

<https://www.google.com/dashboard/>

  Each service shows a summary of top-line information, such as the 
  various email addresses associated with a Google Account or settings 
  for your Google calendar, and then links to management features and 
  the privacy and/or security policies for the service.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2009-11/google_dashboard_details.jpg>

  While this doesn't address all the issues about the mammoth amount 
  of data collection and storage Google undertakes, it's a nice way to 
  see at a glance what we've let the company do - and, with a few 
  clicks, wipe some of that information off its books.

  ----
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DealBITS Drawing: Win a Copy of Labels & Addresses 1.3.3
--------------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10738>

  Last year, when TidBITS Managing Editor Jeff Carlson started in on 
  his Christmas cards, he ran into problems, because Apple's Address 
  Book, while it may do fine at storing data and displaying it on the 
  Mac and iPhone, is seriously wanting when it comes to printing 
  mailing labels. The problem is simple - while Address Book really 
  wants you to create one entry per person, mailings like Christmas 
  cards often need to be sent to couples or to entire families, and 
  Address Book has no facility for merging spouses into a single 
  label, or creating a family label.

  The solution Jeff found was BeLight Software's Labels & Addresses, 
  previously known as Mail Factory (see "Labels & Addresses Restores 
  Holiday Card Sanity," 12 December 2008). It provides significantly 
  more-capable label creation tools than Address Book and can also 
  create labels that bundle spouse names together or use just the 
  family name. More generally, Labels & Addresses makes it easy to 
  bring in address data from a wide variety of sources; create custom 
  labels, postcards, envelopes with formatting and bar codes; and 
  print to all sorts of standard and label printers. Labels & 
  Addresses can even do things like create and print unique serial 
  numbers and raffle tickets.

<http://www.belightsoft.com/products/labelsaddresses/overview.php>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9939>

  This week we're giving away three copies of the Snow 
  Leopard-compatible Labels & Addresses 1.3.3, worth $49.95, so be 
  sure to enter at the DealBITS page. All information gathered is 
  covered by our comprehensive privacy policy. Remember too, that if 
  someone you refer to this drawing wins, you'll receive the same 
  prize as a reward for spreading the word.

<http://www.tidbits.com/dealbits/labels-addresses/>
<http://www.tidbits.com/about/privacy.html>

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App Store Size: Comparisons and Challenges
------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10716>
  9 comments

  Apple has announced that the App Store now has over 100,000 titles 
  available, making it the largest application store in the world. 

<http://www.apple.com/pr/library/2009/11/04appstore.html>

  In verifying that claim, I checked into the app stores of the 
  iPhone's main competitors: Android-based smartphones from various 
  sources, RIM's BlackBerry, Nokia's smartphones, and the Palm Pre and 
  Pixi. Here's how they compare:

* iPhone App Store: 100,000 apps (November 2009)

<http://www.apple.com/iphone/apps-for-iphone/>

* Android Marketplace: 12,000 apps (November 2009)

<http://www.android.com/market/>

* Nokia's Ovi Store: 2,600 apps (November 2009)

<https://store.ovi.com/#/applications>

* BlackBerry App World: 2,000 apps (July 2009)

<http://na.blackberry.com/eng/services/appworld/?>

* Palm App Catalog: 314 apps (November 2009)

<http://www.palm.com/us/products/software/mobile-applications.html>

  Clearly, Apple's App Store is far and away the largest, at roughly 8 
  times the size of the Android Marketplace and vastly larger than the 
  rest. 

  It's difficult to determine exact numbers for Nokia's Ovi Store, 
  since it groups apps by which mobile phone they support, and no 
  model I checked had more than 750 apps and 450 games available. 
  However, in its "Any Phone" category, there were 1,384 apps and 
  1,232 games - clearly there are some compatibility issues that 
  prevent any given phone from accessing all available apps.

  The number of apps for the Palm Pre and the forthcoming (on 15 
  November 2009) Palm Pixi seems limited, but access to the Palm App 
  Catalog has been restricted during a beta phase that ends in 
  December 2009. At that point, Palm plans to open access to the Palm 
  webOS developer program, and the number of apps in the Palm App 
  Catalog should increase significantly.

<http://investor.palm.com/releasedetail.cfm?releaseid=413826>

  Of course, size isn't everything. The real test of Apple's model for 
  the iPhone and the App Store will come once these other app stores 
  are fully mature and developers can determine which platforms 
  provide the most return on investment. Apple may have 100,000 apps 
  in the App Store and can boast of well over 2 billion downloads, but 
  many of those apps are hardly ever downloaded, and of those that 
  are, only about 1 percent garner a long-term audience, according to 
  Pinch Media's statistics. 

<http://www.pinchmedia.com/appstore-secrets/>

  Will these other platforms offer a higher return on investment to 
  developers? Right now, the App Store is suffering in that 
  department. Alan Oppenheimer of Open Door Networks, co-developer of 
  the shockingly popular Envi Web-image slideshow apps, told me, "The 
  App Store is sort of like the traffic paradox: the roads are so 
  crowded that no one wants to drive on them."

<http://we-envision.com/>

  Apple may crow about the App Store's size, but size is also the App 
  Store's greatest challenge. It can be nearly impossible to find apps 
  within the App Store, and although Apple has put some effort into 
  the problem, organization and discoverability haven't improved all 
  that much since the App Store's launch. 

  Even now, for instance, searching for "race timer" in the App Store 
  app on the iPhone returns just two hits, whereas the same phrase 
  used via iTunes on the Mac returns 22 hits, including an app called 
  "RaceTimer" that didn't show up in the iPhone app's results. Or, for 
  more giggles, just try searching for apps using the word "dog" in 
  iTunes and see how many hits you get (roughly 800). Then compare to 
  a search on "dogs" (maybe 150 or so).

  Categorization remains troublesome, and, if anything, has become 
  even more obscure with iTunes 9 and the new iTunes Store interface, 
  which seemingly tries to hide what little organization the App Store 
  has. The trick is to hover over the App Store "button" at the top of 
  the iTunes Store window; a downward-pointing triangle appears, 
  indicating that the button is actually a menu, and clicking it 
  reveals the 20 different categories. Of those categories, only Games 
  offers sub-categories (19 of them, including Action, Adventure, 
  Arcade, Board, etc.). But you'd think that the Travel category, 
  which contains over 7,000 apps, could be broken up more as well.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2009-11/iTunes-App-Store-categories.png>

  Apple does ask developers for keywords describing their apps, but 
  exactly how that information is used remains unclear and highly 
  controversial. Some developers even report having downloads of their 
  apps drop precipitously after entering keywords, and I've heard that 
  Apple may be changing how the App Store's search engine uses 
  keywords on a regular basis, making it difficult to come up with 
  functional strategies.

<http://nephilim.blogspot.com/2009/10/keywords-in-apple-app-store.html>
<http://www.onlinemarketingrant.com/app-store-keywords-choose-wisely>

  Regardless of how Apple uses keywords now, they're clearly not 
  exposing this to users in a helpful fashion. I could imagine a 
  progressively navigable tag cloud, where clicking one tag (dog) 
  would display another tag cloud built from tags held in common by 
  the apps sharing the selected tag (training, pictures, whistle, 
  health), and so on. That particular suggestion may prove cumbersome, 
  but it's not like the App Store is anything but cumbersome now, and 
  Apple would do well to start exposing whatever additional metadata 
  it has to users.

  Honestly, I don't see Apple letting the App Store collapse under its 
  own weight, but with all these other app stores coming online and 
  gaining momentum, Apple needs to solve these problems sooner rather 
  than later.

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Why Email Remains the King of Internet Communications
-----------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10700>
  7 comments

  The most recent "email is on its way out" meme started with an 
  article in the Wall Street Journal by Jessica Vascellaro entitled 
  "Why Email No Longer Rules... And what that means for the way we 
  communicate." The article makes the obvious point that an increasing 
  number of people - particularly the young - prefer to use Facebook 
  and Twitter and instant messaging and text messaging instead of 
  email. 

<http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970203803904574431151489408372.html>

  But like so many articles predicting the death of (or even 
  eulogizing) email, this one misses some important points about why 
  email won't disappear in the foreseeable future (and why it's not 
  even waning now).

  It all comes down to two simple facts: email is based on open 
  standards, and it's the lowest common denominator for Internet 
  communication. Any communication system that wishes to supplant 
  email will need to offer both openness and ubiquity, and nothing 
  available today comes even close.


**Open Standards** -- Email has been around since the very earliest 
  days of the Internet, and even before that, with some claiming the 
  first intra-computer email system originating at MIT in 1965 and Ray 
  Tomlinson of BBN receiving credit for the first inter-computer email 
  system in 1972. Since its inception on the Internet, the basic email 
  standards have evolved some, but honestly, not all that much. 
  Instead, most of the evolution in email has been improving 
  performance and scalability, while continuing to adhere to the basic 
  interoperability standards.

  Open standards are important because they allow any programmer to 
  write a new email server or client (in the jargon, a "mail transport 
  agent" or "mail user agent"). Hundreds of email servers and clients 
  have been developed over the years for every operating system known, 
  and while slight compatibility troubles have always existed, the 
  adherence of these programs to the open standards that define 
  Internet email means that any client can work with any server, and 
  all servers can communicate with one another. Interoperability is 
  key.

  (To be fair, both Facebook and Twitter have open APIs that enable 
  programmers to write applications that work with the services, but 
  very much in a subservient way. No one can write their own Twitter 
  or Facebook server, though there is an open source attempt to 
  recreate Twitter, called StatusNet.)

<http://status.net/wiki/Tour>

  By relying on a healthy ecosystem of clients and servers 
  communicating using open standards, email gains two huge advantages 
  over Twitter and Facebook.

  First and most important, businesses and government organizations 
  need to control their own communications, with as few intermediaries 
  as possible to prevent confidential communications from being seen 
  by outsiders. Can you imagine Apple engineers discussing the next 
  iPhone via Facebook? Why do I suspect that's a firing offense?

  Second, an ecosystem based on open standards has no single point of 
  failure. Twitter suffers downtime regularly, though less frequently 
  than in the past, and although I get the impression that Facebook 
  has fewer reliability troubles, it has certainly been inaccessible 
  at times too. 

  The single point of failure worry exists at the corporate level too. 
  Twitter has no proven business model, much less profits, and while 
  Facebook makes money from display advertising, the company has just 
  crossed into being cash-flow positive, a step on the way to making a 
  profit. Businesses will bet on large, profitable companies sticking 
  around - witness the increased use of Google Apps in the business 
  world - but no company in its right mind will hand essential 
  communications services over to a partner that's not only 
  unprofitable, but also lacks a proven business model.

  That said, with Facebook boasting 300 million regular users and 
  Twitter serving another 30 million or so, I'd be shocked if either 
  company were to disappear entirely - some deep-pocketed megacorp 
  like Google or Microsoft would be more than happy to snap them up 
  were they to fail to generate sufficient revenue to survive.

  In short, proprietary services are susceptible to all sorts of 
  troubles that simply can't affect more than a small subset of users 
  of an open standard like email.


**Lowest Common Denominator** -- Let's look one step deeper. Email's 
  open standards, and the ecosystem that has grown up around email 
  because of them, mean that email is the lowest common denominator 
  for one-to-one and one-to-many communication on the Internet today. 
  In contrast, Twitter and Facebook and their ilk are entirely 
  proprietary services.

  A basic truism of communication is that any two parties 
  communicating must find a common channel before any significant 
  communication can take place. Whether it's two individuals 
  determining which common language they share or a pair of modems 
  negotiating the fastest common protocol they share (remember those 
  screeching tones before the connection was established?), setting up 
  a shared communication channel is key.

  So when it comes to Internet communications, Facebook may have 300 
  million users, but that's only a fraction of the 1.4 billion people 
  who have Internet access. Heck, just the big four email systems - 
  Yahoo Mail, Hotmail, Gmail, and AOL - may have as many as 650 
  million users, and I suspect that email usage is a long tail 
  phenomenon, with many more users total at smaller systems. 

  In essence, everyone who pays for Internet access or receives it 
  from a school, business, or governmental organization has an email 
  address. The main exception I can think of would be kids who use 
  their parents' Internet connection. Email being the lowest common 
  denominator of Internet communications means five things. 

* Nearly all business-to-consumer communication on the Internet is 
  done via email. If you buy something on the Internet, you get a 
  receipt via email. Official communications from your bank, your 
  telephone company, and other organizations with whom you do business 
  all happen via email. Younger people can get away with not using 
  email as much because they communicate largely with friends, rather 
  than with the business world. That changes with age.

* Nearly all business-to-business communication on the Internet also 
  takes place via email, and a significant aspect of that is email's 
  capability to transfer not just text, but also attachments. 
  Businesses live and die by email. Email attachments can be 
  troublesome, but even most systems that attempt to solve the 
  problems with attachments (YouSendIt, MobileMe iDisk, StuffIt 
  Connect, etc.) rely on email to communicate a link to the file in 
  question.

* Your email address is, generally speaking, your Internet identity. 
  Obviously, this use of email is problematic, since people have and 
  use multiple email addresses, and it's entirely common to switch 
  from one to another when moving, graduating from college, or 
  changing jobs. But isn't it telling that you must have an email 
  address even to sign up for both Twitter and Facebook?

* Email messages can be archived and accessed much later easily, which 
  is increasingly required by law for certain types of business 
  communications. Though neither Twitter nor Facebook specifically 
  delete old posts, neither has a data retention policy that I'm aware 
  of, nor any built-in facility for exporting posts from the system.

* Finally, email is the Internet communications method of last resort, 
  as shown by the fact that if you forget your password on nearly any 
  Web site - Facebook and Twitter included - you can receive a new one 
  only via email. And for many casual Facebook users, Facebook's email 
  notifications are the only way they know that they've received 
  messages on Facebook.

  I'm not saying that email is the best imaginable solution in each of 
  these situations, merely that it is the best and most ubiquitous 
  tool we have to solve them today. And realistically, Twitter and 
  Facebook aren't likely to fade away any time soon either. New and 
  old technologies usually coexist happily for a very long time unless 
  one can completely replace the other. Email and SMS text messaging 
  have eliminated the need for many phone calls, but no one's 
  suggesting that phone calls will stop happening entirely.


**Improving Email** -- While I am arguing that email won't fade away 
  in the foreseeable future, I also think that Internet communications 
  systems need to evolve to graft the key aspects of email with the 
  lessons learned from Facebook and Twitter, while working to 
  eliminate problems that have long dragged down email. 

  The main way Twitter and Facebook differ from email is that they 
  evolved largely from the concept of blogging. Email is essentially a 
  bidirectional communication medium in which you have a pretty good 
  idea who reads what you write, whereas blogging is a publishing 
  medium in which your audience is largely unknown to you.

  The genius of Facebook and Twitter is that they combine publishing 
  with bidirectional communication - in both you can post something 
  that all your friends or followers can read, or you can direct a 
  message at a specific person or group of people (the latter is 
  trickier in Twitter, but is possible; that's another article).

  And in fact, the particular genius of Twitter over Facebook is that 
  it better honors the publishing model of blogging by allowing 
  asymmetric following. That is, I can follow bike racer Lance 
  Armstrong because I'm interested in what he has to say, but Lance 
  doesn't have to follow me back. 

<http://twitter.com/lancearmstrong>

  That's a far more comfortable relationship approach than on 
  Facebook, where people who want to follow what I have to say 
  automatically have to be my "friends," and by allowing them to read 
  what I write easily, I have to open myself up to what they write as 
  well. The fact that Facebook has had to add the capability to hide 
  updates from particular people and applications is a hint that their 
  system doesn't map well to the way relationships work in the real 
  world.

  The closest we have today, I'd argue, is Google's Gmail, which 
  attempts to rethink what email is all about. Gmail's Web interface 
  treats email as a constantly connected stream of information, and 
  its constrained text-editing environment encourages the kind of 
  quick, concise responses that you see on Facebook and Twitter. Plus, 
  its approach of grouping messages in the same conversation provides 
  the same sort of historical context as Facebook posts with their 
  comments, and with the generally weak threading provided within some 
  Twitter clients. 

  Obviously, Gmail is a service and suffers from lack of control and 
  somewhat from the single point of failure problem, but because it 
  also supports email's open standards, you can at any time switch to 
  a different client or even use a different ISP. And at least Google 
  is a large, profitable company that can't disappear without warning.

  Although it isn't yet available to everyone, Google Wave is 
  attempting an even more significant rethinking of how we communicate 
  on the Internet. The question is, will Google make Google Wave 
  sufficiently generic and open that it could possibly approach the 
  ubiquity of email? Or perhaps Google Wave will absorb classic email, 
  layering its new ideas on top of the older protocols for backward 
  compatibility?

<http://wave.google.com/help/wave/about.html>

  No matter what, the other huge challenge that email systems have at 
  best swept under the rug is spam. The extreme openness of email has 
  allowed it to be abused in ways that are either difficult to 
  replicate via Facebook and Twitter, or which programmers at those 
  services have been able to stop, thanks to their complete 
  programmatic control over the system. Spam filtering software at 
  both the server and client levels has improved to the point where 
  it's possible to avoid seeing much spam in your Inbox, but it's 
  still common to lose the occasional legitimate message to an 
  overenthusiastic spam filter.

  Will email systems evolve to meet these needs? Or will we simply 
  keep patching the old protocols, servers, and clients because we 
  don't have the willpower to force a major change that would disrupt 
  everyday email communications across the Internet? My money is on 
  the latter, which is a shame, because as much as I don't see email 
  disappearing any time soon, I would like to see it improve and learn 
  from more-modern services like Facebook and Twitter.

  Oh, and that Wall Street Journal article predicting the end of 
  email's reign as the king of Internet communications? The most 
  telling part comes at the end, in the byline, which makes the 
  ultimate case for why email isn't going away any time soon. How else 
  would you contact Wall Street Journal reporters?

    -Ms. Vascellaro is a staff reporter in The Wall Street Journal's San Francisco bureau. She can be reached at [redacted]@wsj.com

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10700#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/10700>


Tag, You're in 2D!
------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10616>
  14 comments

  Look up to the right of the banner on an article page on the TidBITS 
  Web site, and you will see a matrix of boxes and dots. That's a 
  two-dimensional barcode, which combines the past and the future. 
  This computer-readable code acts as glue to connect things we see 
  with actions we want to perform on a computer or mobile device. For 
  instance, you could take a photo of the 2D barcode on one of our 
  articles using a special iPhone app as a way of getting the 
  article's URL into your iPhone.

  A 2D barcode, more appropriately called a 2D "tag" or "code" or even 
  "matrix," encodes a relatively large amount of information, and is 
  typically used - often by taking a photo - to trigger an online 
  action like displaying a Web site or revealing text. The most 
  popular open formats, QR Code (which we use) and Data Matrix, encode 
  text or a URL in their 2D tags. Anyone can generate codes in these 
  formats without paying royalties. (These formats' owners have 
  pledged to not levy fees, but reserve their respective intellectual 
  property rights.)

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2009-09/terrific_barcode.png>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2009-10/quickmark_2d_tag_scan.jpg>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2009-10/quickmark_2d_tag_text_reveal.jpg>
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/QR_Code>
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_Matrix>

  The more area a tag takes up, the greater quantity of text it can 
  encode - up to thousands of characters with a large code. Make it 
  small, and it can still encapsulate a short URL or an MMS number. 
  Varying amounts of error correction - the amount affects the 
  ultimate area occupied by the code - can be specified to deal with 
  distortions in printing or in a somewhat fuzzy image captured by a 
  low-resolution camera. Codes can be printed large or small, too, but 
  not so small that the information content drops beneath a cheap cell 
  camera's resolution.

  Other proprietary formats from Scanbuy, Microsoft (Microsoft Tag), 
  and JagTag encode a number which is looked up in a database operated 
  by the company, then turned into an action, such as loading a Web 
  page or image, adding a calendar item, or sending an MMS to the 
  user. Because only a single number is encoded, these proprietary 
  tags need to represent far fewer bits of information, and can thus 
  use less area and are more resilient to bad photographic conditions.

<http://scanbuy.com/web/>
<http://www.microsoft.com/tag/>
<http://www.jagtag.com/>

  2D tags are starting to pop up all over - in Sports Illustrated, on 
  the Swiss train system, and on some drink cans - and we want to be 
  part of the action, to see whether it's a useful addition. While 
  there are multiple ways of getting a URL to a TidBITS article from 
  your Mac to your iPhone, snapping a photo of the 2D tag from one of 
  our articles to open the page on your iPhone seems efficient to me. 
  We'll see what you think.

  Astute readers may recall the CueCat and think, "Isn't this just the 
  latest incarnation of an embarrassing failure?" But the CueCat was a 
  fixed system, attached to a computer, that was focused primarily on 
  advertising and print publications. CueCat also used 1D bar codes, 
  in which only line thickness conveys information. 2D tags may be 
  used in many more situations, have vastly greater 
  information-carrying capacity, and don't necessarily require 
  permission of a corporation to create or use. 

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

  The CueCat also required a dedicated device to be distributed at 
  relatively high cost to potential users. Just about everyone in the 
  developed world with a cell phone sold in the last five years has a 
  built-in camera.

  Let me cut to the chase and start with how you can use 2D tags with 
  the iPhone and other mobile phones, and then provide a little 
  background about its history and future. (You can also read an 
  article I wrote for The Economist that has more business and 
  technical detail.)

<http://www.economist.com/sciencetechnology/displaystory.cfm?story_id=14257721>


**Use a 2D Tag** -- To use our QR Code, you need a phone that can load 
  a software package from one of several companies. All major 
  smartphone platforms, as well as many simpler phones running J2ME 
  (Java) and Brew, have one or more available applications. You need a 
  camera in your phone, too, of course, as well as a data plan to 
  access the Internet. 

  The camera in the phone needs to be able to focus reasonably well at 
  a tag at close distance so that there are enough pixels in the 
  captured image to analyze the edges of the boxes and lines that make 
  up a tag. The original iPhone and iPhone 3G are quite poor at 
  capturing 1D barcodes, because they cannot focus at short enough 
  range, but they can often recognize 2D codes. The iPhone 3GS is good 
  at both 1D and 2D codes, thanks to its improved camera.

  Scanbuy offers software that can read its own code as well as 
  popular open formats. The firm provides detailed instructions or 
  downloads to install its software on dozens of phones and all major 
  smartphone platforms. The software is free.

<http://www.scanlife.com/us/appdownload.html>

  QuickMark offers a ton of inexpensive tag reading software for many 
  platforms. I purchased the company's iPhone package, which can read 
  1D barcodes, such as are found on products and books, and a variety 
  of 2D formats. It's currently on sale for $0.99 at the App Store. 
  Its regular price is $2.99.

<http://www.quickmark.cn/En/basic/>
<http://itunes.com/apps/quickmark/>

  One of the firms that sparked the Japanese revolution described 
  below, 3GVision, and which provides software to most of the 
  currently enabled phones worldwide, just released its own iPhone 
  app, available at no cost. The i-nigma software looks like a bad 
  Windows Mobile port, but recognizes popular 1D and 2D open formats.

<http://itunes.com/apps/i-nigma/>

  You can also create your own 2D tags by hand. QuickMark has a site 
  that lets you create codes in several popular formats, and the 
  QuickMark iPhone software can generate tags from contact information 
  or data you type in. Kaywa, a Swiss consultancy that specializes in 
  2D tags, also has a QR Code generator. (Kaywa's various sites are 
  great ways to learn more about and follow developments in 2D tags.)

<http://www.quickmark.cn/En/diy/?qmLink>
<http://qrcode.kaywa.com/>

  Microsoft's nifty colorful entry into 2D tagging can encode 
  information more densely and more beautifully than other formats. 
  The company's tag can be read only by its software, which is free 
  and available for Windows Mobile, iPhone, BlackBerry, and Symbian 
  S60, as well as Java (J2ME) phones. 

<http://www.microsoft.com/tag/content/download/>

  Microsoft Tag isn't widely used yet, but the Redmond giant is 
  offering use of its tags at no cost. The tiny size of Microsoft Tag 
  and the ability to integrate it into a full-color design may make it 
  more appropriate for attaching to products.


**The Coming Code Surge?** 2D tags became a big deal in Japan in the 
  early 2000s, when mobile companies - eager to push more use of 
  phone-based Internet browsing - worked with handset makers and 
  advertisers to deploy a full system. Phones were shipped with 
  cameras and software that could easily scan such tags, and 
  advertisers made use of the systems in calls to action. 

  In Japan, a recent study showed about 50 million cell phones users 
  were aware of and had used 2D tags for one or more activities. If 
  you're reading a newspaper article or magazine, spot information on 
  a billboard or advertisement, or even spot someone with a cool tag 
  on their T-shirt or scarf, you snap a picture and you're connected 
  to whatever information that represents. One magazine, which appears 
  to be defunct now, was comprised entirely of 2D tags that linked to 
  free stuff, like ringtones and retail product coupons.

  A typical use outside of advertising and coupons in Japan is for 
  someone reading an article on a desktop computer who needs to leave 
  mid-article. She snaps the 2D tag, which opens the page on her 
  mobile phone, and then leaves to read the article on the train home. 
  2D tags can also be used for adding URLs to a mobile bookmark list.

  In Europe and the Americas, 2D tag use has lagged because carriers 
  weren't as interested in pushing mobile Web use in the same way, and 
  no consortia created the ecosystem. Also, phones in Japan were 
  generally smarter earlier than those elsewhere, which has now 
  changed; AT&T told me that they now activate as many smartphones as 
  simpler, "feature" phones.

  Scanbuy recently scored a deal in Spain that puts its software in 
  all the major carriers' handsets. Spanish advertisers committed to 
  use Scanbuy's codes, which will drive familiarity - especially if 
  you can get a discount on a popular product, like Coke, as a result. 
  Scanbuy also has a deal that puts its software on most phones in 
  Denmark, an emerging relationship with major Mexican carriers, and a 
  partnership with Sprint that's resulted so far in just one phone 
  with the software preloaded.

  Scanbuy's software can recognize its own format, as well as - at the 
  carriers' discretion! - open formats like QR Code. Scanbuy also lets 
  individuals register a fairly large number of codes for personal 
  use, and charges only businesses for large-scale usage. (It's 
  unclear whether carriers will ask to have QR Code and Data Matrix 
  code reading disabled, but it's up to the carrier. If you install 
  Scanbuy's software yourself, the open formats can be read.)

  Outside of Japan, uses of 2D tags are just starting to pop up, more 
  as an exception or test than in any broad manner. The new collection 
  of xkcd comics sports some 2D tags scattered throughout.

<http://store.xkcd.com/>

  2D tags can be used on the output side, too: you might have seen 
  coupons in 2D format that you can cut out and bring into a store, or 
  that you can bring up on a smartphone's display and have scanned at 
  a supermarket or other store. 

  In commercial applications, 2D tags are already widespread around 
  the world. You can see a 2D tag on almost any medical bill, as part 
  of a UPS delivery label, making up USPS metered postage, and in 
  place of or supplementing a 1D EAN product code in retail stores. In 
  closed-loop systems, companies can build end-to-end support for 2D 
  tags.


**Worthwhile or Just a Fad?** There's a lot of technology that the 
  Japanese use on a routine basis that those of us in the rest of the 
  world don't quite understand. But recall how text messaging seemed 
  entirely foreign to Americans until phones made access to the 
  feature easier, and carriers agreed to interchange messages among 
  networks. Once pricing fell into place, texting made as much sense 
  in the United States as it did in Japan and Europe. A trillion text 
  messages will be sent worldwide in 2009; will cell phones scan a 
  trillion 2D tags in 2010?

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10616#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/10616>


TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Updates for 9 November 2009
------------------------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10736>

**Viewfinder 1.0** -- Do you find looking for images for use in 
  presentations or publications a frustrating experience? To address 
  that, Connected Flow has released the first version of its Flickr 
  search utility Viewfinder. The software enables you to search the 
  Flickr archives by keyword, and then filter the results by image 
  size and license type (to facilitate finding images that can you can 
  use legally). Found images can be viewed with Quick Look, 
  downloaded, set as the Desktop image, or sent directly to Keynote 
  '08 and later. Viewfinder 1.0 requires Mac OS X 10.6 or later. 
  (€15 introductory price, €19 regularly, 1.7 MB)

<http://connectedflow.com/viewfinder/>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2009-11/Viewfinder.png>


**Captain FTP 6.2** -- Xnet Communications has updated Captain FTP, 
  its full-featured file transfer client. Along with Snow Leopard 
  support, the latest version adds a few under-the-hood improvements: 
  support for Growl, a new XML parser library, and a new SQLite 
  library. Also, several bugs have been fixed, including those related 
  to SFTP connections, the Transfer Manager, remote file editing, and 
  saving tabs. ($29, $19 upgrade, 11.8 MB)

<http://www.captainftp.com/cftp/>


**MacSpeech Dictate 1.5.6** -- MacSpeech has released a maintenance 
  update for the speech recognition utility MacSpeech Dictate. The 
  latest version adds a Dictation Preferences pane that lets users 
  enable or disable the Auto Cache Document feature for TextEdit and 
  Microsoft Word. Other changes in recent updates include a contextual 
  menu for the Available Commands window, proper display of Selection 
  Commands in the Status window under the Recognized Text area, and 
  disabling of Email Commands if Address Book contains more than about 
  900 entries to avoid resource issues. Also, menu mapping is now 
  compatible with the latest versions of applications bundled with 
  Snow Leopard, an issue that caused documents to crash when caching 
  or closing has been fixed, and a bug that caused crashes when 
  editing with a mouse has been addressed. Full release notes are 
  available on MacSpeech's Web site. ($199 new, free update for 
  purchases since 1 April 2009, $54.95 upgrade for earlier versions)

<http://www.macspeech.com/>
<http://www.macspeech.com/pages.php?pID=131#1.5.6>


**BBEdit 9.3** -- Bare Bones Software has released a significant 
  update to the powerful text editor BBEdit. The latest version adds 
  the capability to include saved Finder searches in Projects, 
  improves support for non-text files in Projects, enables users to 
  use Quick Look to preview files in Projects and disk browsers, and 
  enables users to set language-specific tag files to store common 
  completions. Also, a new utility, called bbfind, has been added to 
  provide command-line access to BBEdit's multi-file searching 
  feature. Finally, the Clippings feature has been enhanced to provide 
  easier access in mixed-language files, a New button that enables new 
  folders and files to be created directly in the browser has been 
  added to the FTP/SFTP browser, and various bugs have been fixed. 
  Full release notes are available on the Bare Bones Web Site. ($125 
  new, free update, 16.1 MB)

<http://www.barebones.com/products/bbedit/>
<http://www.barebones.com/support/bbedit/arch_bbedit93.html>


**Sandvox 1.6.5** -- Karelia Software has released a maintenance 
  update to Sandvox, their template-based Web site creation tool. The 
  latest version improves support for uploading to certain SFTP and 
  WebDAV servers, and improves Snow Leopard compatibility for the 
  iMedia Browser component. In addition to the update, Karelia 
  Software is offering a promotion until the end of November wherein 
  Mac users get a free license to Sandvox Pro by purchasing a year's 
  worth of Web hosting from either A2 Hosting or Server Logistics. 
  ($57 Regular/$97 Pro, free update, 26.8 MB)

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


**Kaspersky Anti-Virus For Mac 1.0** -- Internet security company 
  Kaspersky has unveiled its first product targeted at Mac users, 
  Kaspersky Anti-Virus for Mac. The software is mainly aimed at 
  preventing Mac users from unknowingly acquiring Windows-specific 
  viruses and then passing them on to Windows-using contacts whose 
  machines could be affected. Features include real-time download and 
  attachment scanning, minimal CPU usage, automatic updating, and the 
  inclusion of the latest Kaspersky antivirus technology. Although we 
  do find a new entrant in the Macintosh antivirus world interesting, 
  we don't recommend antivirus software for most Mac users (see 
  "Should Mac Users Run Antivirus Software?," 18 March 2008). ($59.95 
  new, 49.4 MB)

<http://www.kaspersky.com/kaspersky-anti-virus-for-mac>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9511>


**DiscLabel 6.1** -- SmileOnMyMac has released a maintenance update to 
  the CD and DVD label design software. Changes in DiscLabel 6.1 
  include support for Flickr accounts, the capability to delete items 
  by dragging them into the gray area outside the design element, and 
  cut marks that remain visible beyond the first cut when working with 
  Plain Paper output. Also, layer tab sizing has been improved when 
  working with many layers, it is now easier to show or hide layers, a 
  keyboard shortcut has been added for bringing up the Inspector 
  palette, and various unspecified bugs have been fixed. ($35.95 new, 
  free update, 23.2 MB)

<http://www.smileonmymac.com/DiscLabel/>


**BusyCal 1.0.3** -- BusyMac has released a maintenance update to the 
  iCal-inspired desktop calendar with built-in sharing capabilities, 
  BusyCal. The latest version adds the capability to attach alarms to 
  events on the Birthday calendar; text in read-only fields can now be 
  selected and copied; and the Dock icon now displays the current 
  date. Also, a number of bugs have been fixed, including one related 
  to the Alarm menu, one related to Daylight Saving Time, and several 
  crashing bugs that occurred when hitting Undo, fixing duplicate 
  entries, and editing Sticky Notes.  A full list of changes is 
  available on BusyMac's Web site. ($40 new, free update, $10 upgrade 
  for BusySync users, 4.5 MB)

<http://www.busymac.com/>
<http://www.busymac.com/busycal/releasenotes.html>


**Parallels Desktop 5** -- Hot on the heels of VMware's release of 
  Fusion 3 (see "VMware Fusion 3," 28 October 2009) comes a new 
  version of Parallels Desktop for Mac. Parallels 5 fully supports 
  Windows 7, and is reportedly up to 300 percent faster than the 
  previous version of Parallels (with even greater gains in 3D 
  graphics performance). It now lets you run 64-bit versions of 
  Windows and Snow Leopard Server as guest operating systems, and lets 
  you assign up to eight virtual cores to virtual machines. 
  Compatibility and performance gains are among over 70 new features, 
  including a MacLook Theme, which gives Windows windows the 
  appearance of Mac windows; Crystal Mode, which extends Coherence 
  view by eliminating the Parallels menus and putting the Windows 
  Start menu in the Mac OS X menu bar; support for the Apple Remote 
  and gestures on multi-touch trackpads; improved copy-and-paste and 
  drag-and-drop features; and expanded support for multiple displays. 
  A free trial version is available, and Parallels now offers a $49.99 
  competitive upgrade price to owners of VMware Fusion. ($79.99 new, 
  $49.99 upgrade, 219 MB)

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10694>
<http://www.parallels.com/products/desktop/>
<http://www.parallels.com/products/desktop5/features/all/>
<http://www.parallels.com/products/desktop5/popup/vmwarecustomers/>


**TweetDeck 0.31.3** -- Iain Dodsworth has released the latest version 
  of his Adobe AIR-based Twitter client, TweetDeck. Changes include a 
  revised notification system with a new pop-up preview window, 
  support for keyboard shortcuts, an added Followers column, and the 
  capability to set notification preferences per column. Also, several 
  bugs have been fixed, including one that caused the spell checker to 
  be unavailable for some users, one that prevented certain URLs from 
  being automatically shortened, and one that prevented entering 
  messages longer than 140 characters (messages must then be edited to 
  no more than 140 characters). A full list of changes is available on 
  Dodsworth's Web site. (Free, 2 MB)

<http://tweetdeck.com/>
<http://support.tweetdeck.com/forums/60010/entries/68664>



ExtraBITS for 9 November 2009
-----------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10735>

**Apple TV 3.0 Disappearing Content Flaw Fixed in 3.0.1** -- A flaw in 
  the recently released Apple TV 3.0 software can make all your 
  available content appear to be missing until you re-sync to iTunes. 
  Apple strongly recommends updating to 3.0.1 to fix this problem.

<http://support.apple.com/kb/TS3116>


**Fortune Names Jobs CEO of the Decade** -- Fortune Magazine has named 
  Steve Jobs CEO of the Decade. Why Jobs? Fortune says in the past 10 
  years he has "radically and lucratively reordered three markets - 
  music, movies, and mobile telephones - and his impact on his 
  original industry, computing, has only grown."

<http://money.cnn.com/2009/11/04/technology/steve_jobs_ceo_decade.fortune/>


**UPS Creates Free App for iPhone** -- If you're an iPhone user who 
  regularly ships or receives packages via UPS, download the free UPS 
  Mobile app for the iPhone and iPod touch. It lets you track 
  shipments, create shipping labels, find nearby UPS locations, and 
  estimate shipping costs for different services.

<http://www.ups.com/iphone/>


**Turn an iPod classic or iPod nano into an Ebook Reader** -- A beta 
  service called Notescasts.com promises to provide users of the iPod 
  classic, iPod nano, and 5th generation iPod with an online store for 
  downloading free and inexpensive ebooks. It's a gutsy move, given 
  all the attention devoted to the iPhone and iPod touch and the App 
  Store, but will enough users of the supported iPod models notice?

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


**Mini Video Seminars for Panorama 5.5** -- Jim Rea of ProVUE 
  Development has started producing short video training seminars for 
  the company's Panorama 5.5 database program (which we use for Take 
  Control order tracking and royalty databases). If you're a Panorama 
  user, watch the first video about Live Clairvoyance (ignore the 
  Windows interface elements, since the feature works identically on 
  the Mac). Panorama has a ton of capabilities that most users never 
  find; hopefully Jim's videos will expose more of them.

<http://www.provue.com/Panorama/blog/files/Nov_4_2009_mini_seminars.html>



Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk for 9 November 2009
----------------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10739>

**Computer Workstation Madness** -- Does the new larger iMac create a 
  bad viewing angle? Should computer workstations position computer 
  monitors so you have to look down on the screen, like you're reading 
  a book? (10 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2947>


**Flash Downloader** -- A reader asks if there are any utilities for 
  downloading streaming Flash video files. (2 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2948>


**Finder: 'select all' is inconsistent** -- Selecting all messages in 
  column view doesn't select what a reader expected, which led to his 
  Mac launching 200 apps. (4 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2949>



$$

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