TidBITS#1004/16-Nov-2009
========================
  Issue link: <http://db.tidbits.com/issue/1004>

  The holiday season looms large, and we're easing into it by 
  soliciting suggestions for the annual TidBITS Gift Guide and by 
  passing on news of free Wi-Fi hotspot access during holiday travel. 
  In the iPhone world, we have a pair of new ebooks that will help you 
  get more from your iPhone or iPod touch, news of a digital FM tuner 
  for the iPhone, and links to several App Store rejection stories. On 
  the Mac side of things, Matt Neuburg isolates a Finder-copying bug 
  in Snow Leopard, and Adam passes along news of a workaround to a 
  screen saver bug introduced in Mac OS X 10.6.2. Finally, Adam 
  reviews the ViBook+ USB-based video adapter, explains how you can 
  put Wikipedia in your pocket with the WikiReader, and looks at 
  Waveboard, a WebKit wrapper around Google Wave. Notable software 
  releases this week include Safari 4.0.4, Yojimbo 2.1, Wireless 
  Keyboard Update 2.0, Freedom 0.5.1, Default Folder X 4.3.3, 
  Microsoft Office 2008 12.2.3 Update, and Firefox 3.5.5.

Articles
    Submit Ideas for the 2009 TidBITS Gift Guide
    Free Wi-Fi Abounds with Holiday Sponsorships
    New Ebooks about the iPhone and iPod touch
    HD Radio Comes to iPhone via Adapter
    DealBITS Discount: Save 30% on Labels & Addresses
    Fix 10.6.2's Broken Slide Show Screen Saver
    Catch a Google Wave with Waveboard
    WikiReader Puts Wikipedia in Your Pocket
    A Finder-Copying Bug in Snow Leopard
    Put More Pixels on Your Desktop with ViBook+
    TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 16 November 2009
    ExtraBITS for 16 November 2009
    Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk for 16 November 2009


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Submit Ideas for the 2009 TidBITS Gift Guide
--------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10759>

  We may not be quite up to Thanksgiving here in the United States, 
  but all the stores have been displaying their Christmas decorations 
  and displays since Halloween was over. We don't entirely approve of 
  starting the holiday season so early, but we need the time to 
  collect all the reader-driven gift suggestions into our annual gift 
  guide.

  I'm sure economists would appreciate a little consumer spending to 
  prop up the global economy, and while it may no longer be possible 
  to pick up an ailing investment bank or bankrupt country for that 
  special someone, Apple aficionados everywhere will still appreciate 
  gift suggestions from the TidBITS community.

  Here's how it works. Readers contribute ideas through November 27th, 
  then everyone gets to vote for their favorites in an online survey 
  through December 4th, and we'll publish the top-ranked suggestions 
  on December 7th.

  We've started threads for some broad categories in TidBITS Talk 
  where you can share your ideas for great presents, or feel free to 
  post your gift ideas in the comments for this article. If you 
  subscribe to TidBITS Talk via email, just reply to a message in the 
  right thread. If you read TidBITS Talk via the Web, you can post via 
  the Web too; scroll down to the bottom of the window in the 
  appropriate thread.

* Hardware Gift Ideas

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2963>

* Software Gift Ideas

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2964>

* Game Gift Ideas

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2965>

* Computer-Related Miscellaneous Ideas

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2966>

* Non-Technical Ideas for the Macintosh-Minded

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2966>

  Please suggest only one product or idea per message, give the reason 
  why you're recommending it, make sure to include a URL, and 
  recommend only others' products. 

  To get your creative juices flowing, check out last year's "2008 
  TidBITS Gift Guide" (8 December 2008) and the "2007 TidBITS Gift 
  Guide" (10 December 2007). To refresh your memory on what readers 
  have suggested previously, also see the last three full gift issues 
  from 2006, 2005, and 2004. Thanks in advance!

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9920>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9352>
<http://db.tidbits.com/issue/858>
<http://db.tidbits.com/issue/808>
<http://db.tidbits.com/issue/758>

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Free Wi-Fi Abounds with Holiday Sponsorships
--------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10742>
  1 comment

  The twinkle of the holiday season is already upon us as companies 
  are climbing over each other to pick up the tab for Wi-Fi access at 
  hotspots that typically charge a fee, including two of the most 
  expensive venues: on planes and at airports.

  In unrelated sponsorship deals, eBay, Google, Microsoft, and Yahoo 
  are providing free access to various networks and services over the 
  next few weeks and months.

* Free airport Wi-Fi from Google. Google is sponsoring network access 
  at 47 airports from 10 November 2009 to 15 January 2010, although a 
  few of these airports already provide free service. On top of the 
  sponsorship, Google offers a photo contest and up to $250,000 in 
  matching donations for cash gifts made to selected charities through 
  Google Checkout at the airport.

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

* Free Wi-Fi access on all Virgin America flights from Google during 
  the same period.

* Free Delta in-flight Wi-Fi via eBay. From 24 November 2009 to 30 
  November 2009, eBay is sponsoring free Wi-Fi on Delta flights; Delta 
  has about 250 Wi-Fi-equipped planes in its fleet.

<http://adage.com/article?article_id=140315>

* MSNBC recently rounded up a number of other, more limited free or 
  discounted deals, too, including a 2-for-1 deal from AirTran (buy 
  one session, then get the next free).

<http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/33621055/>

* Free airport and hotel access from Microsoft Bing. To promote the 
  Bing search service, Microsoft partnered with JiWire - a firm for 
  which I've worked and consulted - to offer sponsored access to hotel 
  and airport hotspots. A Bing search is required to get the free 
  service. The specific hotspots aren't being disclosed, 
  unfortunately, but you'll know it when you see the promotion.

<http://www.mediapost.com/publications/?fa=Articles.showArticle&art_aid=117007>

* Times Square in New York City from Yahoo. Yahoo is underwriting a 
  year's worth of free outdoor Wi-Fi in Times Square starting 10 
  November 2009, just in time for holiday shopping and festivities.

<http://wifi.yahoo.com/timessquare/>

  Other travelers may already have free access at many for-fee 
  hotspots in the United States, including subscribers to AT&T DSL, 
  fiber (U-Verse), and laptop 3G services; Cablevision (its coverage 
  area only); Qwest (via AT&T's hotspots); and most T-Mobile phone 
  data subscribers. AT&T iPhone subscribers also get free Wi-Fi at 
  AT&T hotspots, but only via the iPhone.

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New Ebooks about the iPhone and iPod touch
------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10752>

  For anyone who is perplexed by their iPhone or iPod touch, or who 
  feels that they'd get more out of it if only they understood it 
  better, two new Take Control ebooks are now available and ready to 
  help. 

  Much as we wanted to release these ebooks shortly after Apple 
  released iPhone OS 3 and the iPhone 3GS in June 2009, it took time 
  to give these ebooks the depth and polish that we require. Luckily, 
  during that time, Apple updated the iPhone OS several times, plus 
  Snow Leopard and iTunes 9, so we were able to incorporate those 
  changes as we worked. And so we are extremely pleased to announce 
  the release of two very up-to-date ebooks: Jeff Carlson's "Take 
  Control of Your iPhone Apps" and Ted Landau's "Take Control of 
  iPhone OS 3."

  You can buy either ebook separately or purchase them together in a 
  discounted bundle:

* "Take Control of Your iPhone Apps," by TidBITS Managing Editor Jeff 
  Carlson, teaches you iPhone app basics and offers numerous clever 
  tips based on Jeff's real-world experiences with using the iPhone 
  for work, photography, and fun since its initial release. Apps that 
  Jeff covers with the eye of a professional tech writer include 
  Calendar, Camera, Compass, Contacts, iPod, Mail, Maps, Messages, 
  Phone, Photos, Remote, and Safari (and, for iPod touch owners, the 
  Music and Video apps). He also provides pointers to independent apps 
  that further expand the iPhone's capabilities. This is Jeff's first 
  Take Control ebook, though he has written numerous books for 
  Peachpit Press; contributes regularly to TidBITS, Macworld, and the 
  Seattle Times; and has even edited various Take Control titles. We 
  are pleased to have him on board as an official Take Control author, 
  and we have particularly enjoyed his clear, concise text and 
  illustrative screenshots. The 122-page ebook costs $10.

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/iphone-apps?pt=TB1004>

* "Take Control of iPhone OS 3," by troubleshooting guru Ted Landau, 
  helps you deepen your iPhone and iPod touch knowledge by exploring 
  the operating system and hardware. Ted takes you under the hood to 
  clear up mysteries about many topics including backups, batteries, 
  Bluetooth, buying and managing third-party apps, damage control, 
  jailbreaking, Location Services, MobileMe, networking, passwords, 
  ringtones, root access, security, SIM cards, syncing, tethering, 
  voice control, and volume control, among much else. And, if you run 
  into trouble, you'll find a cornucopia of advice on handling 
  freezes, crashes, and buggy behavior, as well as on solving problems 
  with Safari, syncing, and your network connection. Ted also 
  discusses how to determine if a recalcitrant iPhone might need a 
  hardware repair. The 202-page ebook costs $15. 

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/iphone?pt=TB1004>

  If you already own Ted's previous Take Control ebook about the 
  iPhone - "Take Control of Your iPhone" - note that this is 
  effectively the third edition of that ebook. You should have already 
  received an email message with update information; if not, if you 
  bought the second edition after 1 May 2009, get in touch with us. 
  Otherwise, open your PDF of that ebook and - on page 1 - click the 
  Check for Updates button.

  If you would like to purchase both ebooks, you can do so at a 
  discount; look on the left side of either of the book pages linked 
  above for a 20-percent discount on both, or a 30-percent discount if 
  you want additional ebooks that cover related topics.

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HD Radio Comes to iPhone via Adapter
------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10741>
  1 comment

  Radio Shack has brought digital FM to the iPhone through an external 
  adapter. But is it necessary? The $79.99 iPhone adapter, called - 
  deep breath - the Gigaware In-Line Control with HD Radio for iPhone, 
  tunes in HD Radio, known generically as "in-band on-channel" (IBOC). 
  Digital radio is broadcast alongside analog signals by about 2,000 
  U.S. stations, largely major commercial chains and public radio. 

<http://www.radioshack.com/product/index.jsp?productId=3734241&tab=summary>
<http://rsk.imageg.net/graphics/product_images/pRS1-6503994w345.jpg>
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/In-band_on-channel>
<http://www.ibiquity.com/press_room/fast_facts/hd_radio_broadcasting_fact_sheet>

  Pairing an HD Radio receiver with the iPhone makes for strange 
  company, because the iPhone has so many options for listening to 
  streaming and downloaded audio of all forms through free and 
  commercial apps. It seems redundant with an unlimited data 
  subscription to pay for and manage an accessory that streams a 
  signal you can just tune in via an iPhone app. Or, you might simply 
  start playing a podcast, which would likely have the same or higher 
  quality as HD Radio, with the advantage of controlling when you 
  listen.

  I suppose this adapter makes HD Radio portable; most people who 
  listen to digital FM tune in using a car stereo receiver. But you're 
  still reliant on receiving a strong broadcast signal and wanting to 
  listen to what's on the limited number of digital stations in your 
  area - if you live in a major market with any digital signals at 
  all. (For more on listening to HD Radio with a car receiver, see 
  "Tag Radio Songs for Later Purchase While You Drive," 19 June 2009.)

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

  Apple offers built-in analog FM reception in just a single device: 
  the revised iPod nano. The iPhone and iPod touch lack radio 
  features, but you can use a variety of free and commercial Internet 
  radio apps over cell and Wi-Fi connections, or simply download and 
  then listen to podcasts offline. (For more background on the nano's 
  radio features, see "iPod nano Delivers Static in Radio Interface 
  and Features," 28 September 2009).

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

  The Gigaware device description makes no mention of AM tuning or 
  analog AM or FM reception. Only a handful of AM stations offer 
  digital broadcasts for a variety of technical and regulatory 
  reasons.

  The only portable media device that has HD Radio tuning built in is 
  Microsoft's Zune HD. I tested the Zune HD after its release and 
  found its tuning features poor - just as bad as Apple's tuning 
  features for the iPod nano - but it was capable of picking up 
  Seattle's digital FM stations.

  The Gigaware adapter supports iTunes Tagging, which lets you mark 
  songs that you're listening to for later purchase via the iTunes 
  Store. But only Clear Channel currently supports the over-the-air 
  tag format required by Apple to identify songs, so it's of little 
  utility at the moment. 

  A separate, free application is needed to operate the Gigaware 
  adapter, which works like an external radio in many ways. The 
  adapter has external controls for volume, play/pause, rewind, and 
  fast forward, as well as a Tag button. Details aren't available 
  about how its pause feature works.

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DealBITS Discount: Save 30% on Labels & Addresses
-------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10758>

  Congratulations to Bill Gruber of mac.com, Louis Mendelowitz of 
  pobox.com, and Paul Gould of maya.com, whose entries were chosen 
  randomly in the last DealBITS drawing and who received a copy of 
  Labels & Addresses 1.3.3, worth $49.95. But don't fret if you didn't 
  win, since BeLight Software is offering a 30-percent-off discount on 
  Labels & Addresses 1.3.3 to all TidBITS readers through 9 December 
  2009. Thanks to the 698 people who entered this DealBITS drawing, 
  and we hope you'll continue to participate in the future!

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10738>
<http://www.belightsoft.com/products/labelsaddresses/overview.php>
<https://usd.swreg.org/cgi-bin/s.cgi?s=31176&p=31176-311765260&v=3&d=0&q=1&a=tidbits>

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Fix 10.6.2's Broken Slide Show Screen Saver
-------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10746>
  2 comments

  After I upgraded to Mac OS X 10.6.2, I had to step out for an 
  appointment. When I returned to my Mac, its screens were black, 
  other than the dreaded spinning pizza of death. I realized the 
  screen saver had crashed, but had to shut the Mac down forcibly 
  since no other method I tried would give me control back.

  I quickly isolated the problem to the Slide Show screen saver that's 
  bundled with Mac OS X (see "Mac OS X 10.6.2 Addresses Myriad Bugs 
  and Security Issues," 9 November 2009). It's used to display a slide 
  show of pictures, either from a folder or from iPhoto. In the past, 
  it has handled very large numbers of images with aplomb, which is 
  necessary, since many thousands of images are necessary to prevent 
  image-based screen savers from becoming boring.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10740>

  After upgrading to 10.6.2, however, the Slide Show screen saver 
  (tested via the preview in the Desktop & Screen Saver preference 
  pane) took minutes to scan folders that it previously could scan in 
  seconds. And with too many photos, the Slide Show screen saver would 
  just hang, requiring a force quit of System Preferences. Folders 
  containing a relatively small number of images worked fine. With no 
  free time to investigate further, I just made sure the Slide Show 
  screen saver wouldn't be used.

  Kudos to Ernst Mulder, who also experienced this and figured out a 
  workaround that he posted on Apple's Support Discussions forum (and 
  thanks to TidBITS reader Judson Dunn for the pointer!). Ernst 
  believes that the new version of Slide Show does a file-by-file scan 
  of the available images (presumably for randomizing) instead of 
  using a Spotlight search. As such, rebuilding the Spotlight index, 
  reinstalling 10.6.2 using the Combo updater, and testing from a 
  clean user account made no difference.

<http://discussions.apple.com/thread.jspa?messageID=10556386>

  Then Ernst figured out that he could work around the problem by 
  replacing a key component of the Slide Show screen saver package 
  with one from 10.6.1. I've replicated his suggestion, and it does 
  appear to work, though of course you need access to a Mac running 
  10.6.1 to be able to perform the fix. The file you need to replace 
  is deeply nested, and you'll need to authenticate in order to copy 
  it into the new location. It is:

    /System/Library/Frameworks/ScreenSaver.framework/Versions/A/Resources/Pictures Folder.saver/Contents/MacOS/Pictures Folder

  Note that to look inside "Pictures Folder.saver" you must 
  Control-click the file and choose Show Package Contents from the 
  contextual menu that appears; then you can navigate the rest of the 
  way down to the necessary "Pictures Folder" file. It's probably 
  worth making a backup of that file in 10.6.2 before replacing it 
  with the file from 10.6.1, just in case.

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Catch a Google Wave with Waveboard
----------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10701>
  3 comments

  I'm a big fan of Mailplane, Uncomplex's WebKit wrapper for Gmail, 
  because it maintains Gmail's clever interface tricks while adding 
  integration with Mac-specific capabilities like drag-and-drop 
  attachments, Growl notifications, and a built-in screenshot 
  capability. Even better, Mailplane extracts Gmail from the 
  overwhelming morass of open tabs in my Web browser, which is key - I 
  think of email and Web browsing as entirely different tasks, and 
  want them in different applications on the Mac.

<http://mailplaneapp.com/>

  So when I heard that a new application called Waveboard promised to 
  provide the same sort of magic for Google Wave, for which I'd 
  recently gotten an invite, I jumped at the chance to download the 
  Mac version of Waveboard. 

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

  Written by Dirk Holtwick, Waveboard 0.9 is at the moment a rather 
  simple application, since all it really does is display the Google 
  Wave Web page and tie into various system resources. But as with so 
  many Mac applications, it's the little touches that make it 
  successful. To wit:

* Most important for keeping you thinking about Google Wave, Waveboard 
  provides notification of updates. If you don't know you have 
  something to read in Google Wave, you may go days without checking 
  in. Waveboard offers three optional notification methods: Growl, a 
  count in the Dock icon badge, and a count in a system status menu. 
  This count reflects the number of changes, not changed waves, and 
  can thus be quite high. To reset it, you have to mark a wave as 
  read, or use the Space bar to jump to each change, marking it read 
  and moving on.

<http://growl.info/>

* Although Google Wave offers its own keyboard shortcuts, Waveboard 
  translates some of those into Mac-specific shortcuts, so you can 
  stick with your Command key-based muscle memory.

<http://www.google.com/support/wave/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=162330>

* Waveboard offers an option to open the waves that were open as of 
  the last time you quit, which makes it a bit easier to orient 
  yourself each time you come in to Google Wave.

* With the addition of Google Gears, Waveboard provides drag-and-drop 
  support for files you want to attach to a wave. The official version 
  of Google Gears isn't yet available for Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard 
  (it is Leopard-compatible), but Uncomplex has made a patched version 
  of Google Gears that does work in Snow Leopard. This patched version 
  works only with 32-bit applications like Mailplane and Waveboard, 
  and basically just removes the Mac OS X version check.

<http://gears.google.com/>
<http://mailplaneapp.com/download/google_gears/>

* If you want to share a link to a wave with someone via email or 
  iChat, Waveboard provides a Copy Wave ID command that loads that 
  particular wave when clicked. Of course, it works only if the 
  recipient also has Waveboard, which registers itself as the helper 
  application for wave: URLs.

* Though I can't say that I see wanting to do this often, Waveboard 
  makes it easy to print an entire wave, something that's impossible 
  in normal Web browsers, which don't understand how to present the 
  entire wave as its own document.

  I can't pretend to be an expert on Google Wave yet. But as various 
  TidBITS staffers get on, we're playing with it more to see how it 
  fits into the Internet communication and collaboration space. If 
  you're also trying to wrap your head around what Google Wave makes 
  possible, give Waveboard a try, since it makes integrating Google 
  Wave into your everyday life significantly easier.

  Waveboard requires Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard or later, and it's a 915 KB 
  download. The program is free; Dirk Holtwick hasn't said whether he 
  plans to charge for it in the future as far as I've seen.

  Dirk has also released a $0.99 iPhone version of Waveboard that lets 
  you work with Google Wave without Safari's browser controls taking 
  up any screen space. A yet-to-be-approved version of the iPhone app 
  will add push notification and an option to see a read-only list of 
  the most recent waves as soon as the app launches.

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WikiReader Puts Wikipedia in Your Pocket
----------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10650>
  8 comments

  I haven't been able to lay my hands on one of Openmoko's cute 
  WikiReader devices yet, but given my 10-year-old son Tristan's 
  proclivity for reading Wikipedia over nearly everything else there 
  is to do on the Internet, I may be checking one out in person for a 
  Christmas present.

<http://thewikireader.com/>

  The concept is simple - embed all of Wikipedia in an inexpensive 
  handheld device. Designed by Thomas Meyerhoffer, a former Apple 
  designer, the WikiReader measures 3.9 inches (9.9 cm) square and 0.8 
  inches (20 mm) thick, and weighs in at 4.5 ounces (127 g). That's 
  about the size of a squared-off iPod touch, and although it's twice 
  as thick, it's half as heavy.

<http://thewikireader.com/media/pictures/wr_hand2_small.jpg>

  For viewing, the WikiReader features a scratch-resistant glass 
  touchscreen. It's grayscale, but I haven't yet been able to 
  determine the resolution or how many shades of gray it can display. 
  As far as I can tell, there's no backlight, so it won't work in the 
  dark.

<http://thewikireader.com/about.html>

  Most of what you'll do - scrolling, entering search terms, clicking 
  links - happens on the touchscreen, but there are three physical 
  buttons that do exactly what you'd expect: Search, History, and, for 
  a little serendipitous browsing, Random. WikiReader reportedly uses 
  only open software and Openmoko will be posting their source code 
  shortly.

  Power comes from a pair of standard AAA batteries, which can run the 
  WikiReader for - get this - about a year of normal usage. It's such 
  a joy to hear about a device that doesn't need constant recharging.

  Of course, the reason for the miserly power usage is that the 
  WikiReader has no connectivity at all. Instead, all three million 
  articles of the English-language Wikipedia are stored on a microSD 
  card - presumably 8 GB in size. Users with microSD card readers will 
  be able to download updates for free, but since the updates are over 
  4 GB in size right now (and will only be growing), Openmoko also 
  offers a $29-per-year update service that mails you a new microSD 
  card every six months.

<http://thewikireader.com/update.html>

  The downside of this update mechanism is twofold. Wikipedia evolves 
  constantly, correcting mistakes and adding new articles, whereas the 
  WikiReader can show only a snapshot in time. Also, Wikipedia 
  provides numerous links out to original sources on the Internet; you 
  won't be able to follow those. 

  But of course, eliminating the need for connectivity enables extreme 
  battery life, ensures that the WikiReader works anywhere, and 
  eliminates much of the concern some parents have with letting 
  children browse the Web unattended. Apparently, WikiReader includes 
  additional parental controls as well, since there are certainly bits 
  of Wikipedia that some parents might not want their kids to read.

  There's no question that an iPhone or iPod touch with a Wikipedia 
  app will provide a more up-to-date and colorful experience than a 
  WikiReader, but Openmoko may have hit a sweet spot with the 
  WikiReader's price, size, and lack of flexibility that will make it 
  perfect for kids of a certain age.

  Although the WikiReader is available only in English at the moment, 
  if it proves sufficiently popular, Openmoko could come up with 
  versions that include other languages. Or, perhaps an international 
  version could embed an even more capacious microSD card that could 
  hold all Wikipedia articles regardless of language.

  The WikiReader is available for $99 directly from Openmoko.

<http://thewikireader.com/store.html>

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10650#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/10650>


A Finder-Copying Bug in Snow Leopard
------------------------------------
  by Matt Neuburg <matt@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10743>
  14 comments

  Here's a bug in Snow Leopard that I've isolated. I haven't seen it 
  reported elsewhere (not in precisely this form, at least), so I'll 
  describe it and let you reproduce it for yourself. You'll need two 
  computers, one of them running Snow Leopard.


**Preparation** -- Let's call the machines A and B. Machine A must be 
  running Snow Leopard. I don't much care what Machine B is running; 
  I've tested with Machine B running either Leopard or Snow Leopard, 
  and it makes no difference. Machine B must have File Sharing turned 
  on. Once that's done, you will work entirely at Machine A.


**Performance** -- To see the bug, perform (on Machine A) the 
  following steps:

  1. Mount Machine B on Machine A (via File Sharing). So, you're still 
  working at Machine A, but in Machine A's Finder you can see Machine 
  B's folders.

  2. Download The Omni Group's OmniDazzle, using this link. (The bug 
  likely has nothing to do with Omni's applications per se, but many 
  of them demonstrate the bug, so I've picked a small one that does.)

<http://www.omnigroup.com/download/latest/OmniDazzle.dmg>

  3. If it hasn't automatically opened and mounted, open the 
  downloaded .dmg file. Accept the legal agreement. You are now 
  looking at the OmniDazzle application on the mounted OmniDazzle 
  volume.

  4. Drag the OmniDazzle application from the mounted OmniDazzle 
  volume to a folder of Machine B to copy it. You can't do it; the 
  Finder puts up a dialog reporting Error -36. That's the bug.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2009-11/Finder-copy-error.png>


**Further Details** -- The bug has nothing to do with the fact that 
  the OmniDazzle application is initially on a mounted .dmg image. I 
  just had you start with the mounted .dmg image for the sake of 
  simplicity. If you copy OmniDazzle to Machine A (say, to the 
  Desktop) and then try to copy that copy to Machine B, you'll still 
  get the bug.

  The bug is unidirectional. You can't copy OmniDazzle from Machine A 
  to Machine B, but you can copy it from Machine B to Machine A 
  (assuming you are working at Machine A).

  The bug seems to affect only applications, but I'm not entirely sure 
  about that. Moreover, it doesn't affect every application; as I said 
  before, it affects most of Omni's applications, so I'm using one of 
  them for demonstration purposes.

  The bug has to do with File Sharing. If Machine A and Machine B are 
  connected in some other way - for example, if Machine B is mounted 
  in FireWire Target Mode on Machine A - there's no problem.

  The bug has to do with Snow Leopard. If Machine A is running 
  Leopard, there's no problem.

  The bug has to do with the Finder. If you perform the copy using the 
  Unix cp command in the Terminal, the copy succeeds. (A sample 
  Terminal command is provided below; don't do this, though, unless 
  you already understand cp, because the syntax here is tricky and 
  there is some danger if you make a mistake.) 

    cp -a /Volumes/OmniDazzle/OmniDazzle.app /Volumes/mattleopard/Desktop/

  When using cp in this way, some error messages do appear in the 
  Terminal, but they don't seem to be fatal: the whole application is 
  copied, and will run successfully on the remote machine. In fact, I 
  wonder whether these error messages have something to do with the 
  Finder's error message. Perhaps some reader who understands extended 
  attributes and symbolic links better than I do can explain what's 
  going on here.

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10743#comments>
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Put More Pixels on Your Desktop with ViBook+
--------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10755>
  1 comment

  Earlier this year, Jeff Carlson reviewed the ViBook, a $129 device 
  that enables you to add an additional monitor to any Mac (or PC 
  running Windows) via USB (see "My Three Screens, via ViBook", 29 May 
  2009). Although Apple's desktop Macs now all support at least two 
  monitors, and you can add oodles of them to a Mac Pro with the 
  appropriate video cards, Apple's laptops are limited to a single 
  additional monitor.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10308>

  "Now," you might ask, "why would you want even two monitors on a 
  Mac?" Productivity, my friends, productivity. Spaces is all fine and 
  nice, but nothing beats having more screen real estate. I've been 
  running multiple monitors on my Macs since my SE/30 in 1990, and I 
  wouldn't use a single-monitor Mac for my work.

  "Fine," you say, "but why would you want three monitors on a MacBook 
  or MacBook Pro? Isn't that just gilding the lily?" Not really, and 
  although I can't give statistics on this, my experience over the 
  years is that two monitors that match in size and screen resolution 
  (and ideally, manufacturer), positioned side-by-side, are better 
  than two mismatched monitors. 

  Normally, on my 13-inch MacBook, I can connect one 24-inch display 
  running at 1900 by 1200, but attempting to line that up with the 
  MacBook's own 1280 by 800 display is awkward at best, and 
  ergonomically evil at worst. Call me greedy, but if I were to use a 
  MacBook or MacBook Pro as my only Mac, I'd want a pair of 24-inch 
  displays, plus the laptop's own display.

  A year ago, toward the end of 2008, when I bought my 13-inch unibody 
  MacBook, I desperately wanted to make this work, but I just 
  couldn't, because the ViBook at the time couldn't drive a display 
  larger than 1680 by 1050. After researching all sorts of hacks, I 
  finally gave up and bought a Mac Pro to run a pair of Dell 24-inch 
  displays (which aren't as good as Apple's, but which do standard DVI 
  instead of Mini DisplayPort and which cost about half as much). At 
  the time, I was starting a new edition of my "iPhoto '09: Visual 
  QuickStart Guide" in InDesign, and I needed all the screen space I 
  could get.

  Undeterred by the resolution limitation, though, Jeff Carlson gave 
  the ViBook a try, and although he found that it worked, he ran up 
  against a number of issues, including lack of 3D acceleration, an 
  inability to color-calibrate the display, and relatively slow 
  performance. These limitations meant it couldn't be used for iPhoto 
  slideshows or Keynote presentations, or iMovie at all. And although 
  video and games did work, their performance was often such that it 
  wasn't worth using the ViBook-driven display for those purposes.

  So when Harmonic Inversion Technology - VillageTronic's U.S. dealer 
  - contacted us again to tell us about the $139 ViBook+, I jumped at 
  the chance to test it. That's because the ViBook+ can drive monitors 
  at resolutions up to 1920 by 1200, making it compatible with my 
  24-inch displays (it works with up to 28-inch monitors), and it uses 
  a new DisplayLink chip that reportedly improves performance. 
  Otherwise, and with the exceptions noted below, it's nearly 
  identical to the unit Jeff reviewed earlier this year (so be sure to 
  read his review if you're considering purchasing one).

<http://www.vibook.it/eng/>

  The ViBook+'s installation CD didn't ship with a Mac driver, instead 
  requiring a download, and there's only a beta driver available for 
  Snow Leopard (scroll down to get the latest version), but it 
  installed fine, and my MacBook immediately recognized the 24-inch 
  monitor plugged into the little ViBook box. The Displays preference 
  pane had no trouble seeing the ViBook-driven display and let me 
  arrange it with the directly connected 24-inch monitor and the 
  MacBook's built-in screen.

<http://villagetronic.com/vibook/downloads.html>
<http://displaylink.org/forum/showthread.php?p=146#post146>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2009-11/Triple-monitor-setup.jpg>

  Although my beta driver didn't include any new release notes, I 
  discovered that some of the compatibility issues Jeff had 
  encountered had disappeared, though others had taken their place. 
  iMovie launched, and appeared to work on the ViBook-connected 
  monitor, though I don't use it enough to know if there might be 
  further gotchas. iPhoto slideshows worked fine, though, strangely, 
  editing did not.

  Performance was totally satisfactory. I could tell, by grabbing a 
  window and moving it up and down quickly, that the ViBook couldn't 
  keep up with the MacBook's internal graphics controller, but it 
  wasn't troublesome in normal usage. YouTube videos played acceptably 
  in their normal window with only the occasional stutter, but 
  expanding them to full screen failed miserably, with the video 
  quickly losing sync with the audio. I don't play games, but I 
  suspect full-screen games would suffer as well.

  Luckily, these performance issues shouldn't really be a problem in 
  most cases, since you can always just move the offending program to 
  a built-in or directly connected monitor.

  I'll note that although you can attach up to four ViBook+ adapters 
  to a Mac, my experience is that unless your vision is extremely 
  good, much more than two 24-inch displays side-by-side may prove 
  hard to use. My eyes simply can't focus much further to either side.

  Put simply, the ViBook+ is the product I wanted a year ago, and 
  which I would have bought in favor of my Mac Pro. At $139 from 
  Harmonic Inversion Technology, it's an inexpensive way to add 
  additional monitors to any Mac, and as long as you go into the 
  purchase understanding its limitations, you won't be disappointed.

<https://www.harmonicinversion.com/index.php?page=shop.product_details&flypage=shop.flypage&product_id=176&category_id=4&manufacturer_id=0&option=com_virtuemart&Itemid=34>

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10755#comments>
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TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 16 November 2009
----------------------------------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10757>

**Safari 4.0.4** -- Apple has released Safari 4.0.4, a maintenance and 
  security update for Mac OS X 10.4, 10.5, 10.6, and Windows. Changes 
  include improved JavaScript performance; improved full history 
  searching in particularly large history folders; and enhanced 
  stability for third-party plug-ins, Yahoo Mail, and the search 
  field. 

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL877>

  The update also addresses a number of security issues, including one 
  related to a vulnerability in libxml2 which could lead to crashing 
  when parsing maliciously crafted XML content, and another related to 
  a vulnerability in the way Safari initiates navigation via the "Open 
  Image in New Tab" option that could disclose local information. Also 
  fixed are three other vulnerabilities related to how WebKit 
  implements Cross-Origin Resource Sharing, handles FTP directory 
  listings, and behaves when encountering an HTML 5 Media Element that 
  points to an external resource. The update is available via Software 
  Update or from the Apple Support Downloads page. (Free, 28 MB)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT3949>


**Yojimbo 2.1** -- Bare Bones Software has released the latest version 
  of the information organizer Yojimbo. In Yojimbo 2.1, the Drop Dock 
  feature is now available in Exposé's Show Desktop mode; Speech and 
  Transform commands are now available from the Edit menu; and Snow 
  Leopard support for spell checking, text substitution, and data 
  detectors has been added. A number of bugs have been fixed as well, 
  including a crashing bug that could kick in when clearing or closing 
  the Downloads window. Full release notes are available on the Bare 
  Bones Web site. ($39, free update, 6 MB)

<http://www.barebones.com/products/yojimbo/>
<http://www.barebones.com/support/yojimbo/arch_yojimbo21.html>


**Wireless Keyboard Update 2.0** -- Apple has released a firmware 
  update, Wireless Keyboard Update 2.0, to enable users to take 
  advantage of its 2009 wireless keyboard's special features. While 
  the release notes do not specify what those features are, they 
  likely include function keys that provide single-touch access to 
  system features such as Exposé and Dashboard. Users must be running 
  Mac OS X 10.5.8 or later to install this update, which is available 
  via Software Update or the Apple Support Downloads page. Users who 
  have already installed Mac OS X 10.6.2 needn't worry about 
  installing this update separately as it is included in the operating 
  system update. (Free, 10.95 MB)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL957>


**Freedom 0.5.1** -- Seeking asylum from your own procrastinating 
  Internet habits? I certainly have in the past (see "Minimize Desktop 
  Distractions," 4 December 2008), and always keep my eyes peeled for 
  new applications designed to keep me on top of my work. If you're in 
  the same boat, consider trying the latest version of Fred Stutzman's 
  Internet-blocking application Freedom. Changes in the most recent 
  update include increased support for applications that require some 
  share of network access, better support for remote filesystems, and 
  enhanced stability. Also, an unspecified bug related to Microsoft 
  Word has been fixed. (Free, 771 KB)

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9908>
<http://macfreedom.com/>


**Default Folder X 4.3.3** -- St. Clair Software has released a 
  maintenance and stability update to the Open/Save dialog enhancement 
  utility Default Folder X. Version 4.3.3 fixes a number of 
  compatibility issues with earlier versions of Mac OS X, including a 
  bug that caused Default Folder X to use excessive amounts of CPU in 
  Leopard, and a bug that prevented Default Folder X from working in 
  Carbon applications under Tiger. Also, the installer now 
  automatically starts the program after installation, and the Shift 
  key now properly reverses the order of menu items in Finder Windows, 
  Disks, and Favorites. ($34.95 new, $14.95 upgrade, free update for 
  owners of version 4.x or 3.x owners who purchased their copy after 1 
  June 2007, 10.7 MB)

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


**Microsoft Office 2008 12.2.3 Update** -- The Microsoft Office 2008 
  12.3.3 update contains a critical security fix, as well as 
  significant improvements in stability, according to Microsoft's 
  release notes. Office 2008 apparently contained a flaw that could be 
  exploited to gain control of a computer remotely. An attacker would 
  have to create a specially crafted Word or Excel file that a user 
  opened. No reports of this attack, labeled by Microsoft as privately 
  reported, have been heard of in the wild.

<http://support.microsoft.com/kb/976828>

  The hefty update also improves stability of all the Office 2008 
  applications. For those of us who work on Take Control ebooks, 
  seeing the note that in Word 2008, stability is improved when "you 
  accept tracked changes in a document" is music to our ears - we use 
  change tracking constantly while editing documents and have seen 
  regular crashes during revisions. (Free update, 349.5 MB)


**Firefox 3.5.5** -- Mozilla has released a minor stability update to 
  its popular Internet browser Firefox. The release notes are terse, 
  saying only that the update fixes "several stability issues." A 
  closer look at the bug list indicates several crashing bugs have 
  been fixed, including one related to a GIF decoder and another 
  related to startup. (Free, 17.6 MB)

<http://www.mozilla.com/en-US/firefox/personal.html>
<https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/buglist.cgi?quicksearch=ALL%20status1.9.1%3A.5-fixed>



ExtraBITS for 16 November 2009
------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10756>

**Jeff Carlson Takes Control of Your iPhone Apps on MacVoices** -- 
  It's difficult work controlling everyone's iPhone apps, but if Chuck 
  Joiner of MacVoices says I'm taking control of your iPhone apps, I 
  must oblige. Actually, I had a great talk with Chuck about my new 
  ebook "Take Control of Your iPhone Apps," why the built-in apps are 
  overlooked in favor of the 100,000 third-party apps available in the 
  iTunes App Store, and how you can learn to use them better, whether 
  you're using an iPhone or an iPod touch.

<http://www.macvoices.com/wordpress/macvoices-9117-jeff-carlson-takes-control-of-your-iphone-apps/>


**Rogue Amoeba Suffers Latest App Store Idiocy** -- The latest in a 
  long series of embarrassments for the iPhone App Store has been 
  described by long-time Mac developer Rogue Amoeba. In short, it took 
  over 100 days to get a 1.0.1 update to the already-approved Airfoil 
  Speakers Touch app approved because the app displays "Apple-owned 
  graphic symbols" that are provided by a public function in Mac OS X 
  expressly for this purpose. Shameful.

<http://www.rogueamoeba.com/utm/2009/11/13/airfoil-speakers-touch-1-0-1-finally-ships/>


**Macworld Suffers App Store Approval "Process"** -- Our friends at 
  Macworld found themselves deep in the surreal world of Apple's App 
  Store approval process - if it can be called that - during their 
  attempt to publish an iPhone app version of their "Macworld iPhone & 
  iPod touch Superguide" ebook. Once again, negative publicity turned 
  out to be the eventual solution. When will Apple learn?

<http://www.macworld.com/article/143677/2009/11/iphone_superguide_iphone.html>


**Jailbroken iPhones Susceptible to Worm** -- TUAW reports on a worm 
  that changes the background wallpaper of jailbroken iPhones whose 
  users failed to change the default password after installing SSH. 
  It's not much of a hole, since few people jailbreak their iPhones, 
  and hopefully most of those who do are sufficiently aware to change 
  the default SSH password. But it's a reminder that if you leave the 
  door open, someone just might come in and do something unpleasant.

<http://www.tuaw.com/2009/11/07/jailbreak-worm-rickrolls-the-unsecured/>

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10756#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/10756>


Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk for 16 November 2009
-----------------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10760>

  This week's TidBITS Talk discussions cover several new topics. On 
  the troubleshooting front, readers diagnose why Microsoft AutoUpdate 
  is repeatedly pushing a conversion utility, why Magic Mouse tracking 
  isn't as good when connected to a Mac Pro, and whether something is 
  wrong with an iMac's FireWire bus. Suggestions are also offered for 
  building a Mac help desk for a school, previewing photos on a 
  virtual wall, and obtaining early versions of the Mac OS. We also 
  look at the end of the Apple v. Psystar case and the ongoing costs 
  of using Macs in the office versus Windows PCs.


**Open XML File Format Converter for Mac 1.1.3** -- A bug with 
  Microsoft's Mac AutoUpdater application could cause repeated notices 
  of new updates. (5 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2952>


**Magic Mouse tracking** -- Using the new Magic Mouse with a Mac Pro 
  appears to result in tracking problems, but other Macs aren't 
  affected. (7 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2953>


**Building a Better IT Help Desk** -- A reader is building a new IT 
  help desk to support 1,000 Macs in a school, and is soliciting 
  suggestions for best practices. (9 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2955>


**Hanging photos in a virtual room** -- To aid in designing a wall of 
  photos, a reader is looking for software that would allow him to 
  preview the look before implementing it. (3 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2956>


**Apple v. Psystar - Apple Wins** -- To no one's surprise, Psystar has 
  lost its lawsuit against Apple. Readers discuss how the company 
  stumbled. (4 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2957>


**SheepShaver** -- After reading Matt Neuburg's article about this 
  application that emulates the Classic Mac OS, a reader realizes he 
  needs system install disks earlier than Mac OS 9.1. (2 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2958>


**iMac FireWire conundrum** -- Is an EyeTV hogging the resources of an 
  iMac's FireWire bus? (3 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2959>


**Office Machines** -- Companies often don't consider Macs for their 
  businesses because of the higher initial cost compared to cut-rate 
  Windows PCs, but readers point out numerous other factors that go 
  into a corporate purchasing decision such as buying anti-virus 
  software, paying for service calls, and so on. (7 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2962>



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