TidBITS#1008/04-Jan-2010
========================
  Issue link: <http://db.tidbits.com/issue/1008>

  We launch into 2010 with not one, but two new ways to read TidBITS 
  while on the go. We're especially pleased to announce the free 
  TidBITS News app for the iPhone and iPod touch, and those who prefer 
  the Kindle can now subscribe to TidBITS on that platform as well. 
  And what to read? Jeff Carlson works around a bandwidth limitation 
  to install a specific printer driver from the Gutenprint collection, 
  Glenn Fleishman offers helpful tips on improving Wi-Fi performance 
  in the 5 GHz band, and Joe Kissell delves into the past and present 
  of right-clicking on the Mac (or is that Control-clicking?). Notable 
  software releases since our last issue in December include Things 
  1.2.8, WireTap Anywhere 1.0.6, 27-inch iMac Graphics Firmware Update 
  1.0, Keyboard Maestro 4.0.1, Mail Services Update 1.0, Firefox 
  3.5.6, Pro Tools 8.0.3, Hazel 2.3.5, Epson Printer Drivers 2.2 for 
  Mac OS X 10.6.1, and Lexmark Printer Drivers 2.2 for Mac OS X 10.6.

Articles
    Free TidBITS News iPhone App
    Subscribe to TidBITS on the Kindle
    Gutenprint Updates Printer Drivers without a Lot of Bandwidth
    Improve Wi-Fi Performance in the 5 GHz Band
    Clicking the Right Button
    TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 4 January 2010
    ExtraBITS for 4 January 2010
    Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk for 4 January 2010


------------ This issue of TidBITS sponsored in part by: --------------

* READERS LIKE YOU! Support TidBITS with a contribution today! 
  <http://www.tidbits.com/about/support/contributors.html> 
  Special thanks this week to David Everett, Glenn Mehrbach, 
  Donald Johnson, and Stephan Miller for their generous support!

* Fetch Softworks: Do your FTP or SFTP uploads quit on you? 
  Fetch 5.5 will keep going when other clients give up, to make 
  sure all your files arrive safely at their destination. 
  Download your free trial version! <http://fetchsoftworks.com/>

* WebCrossing Neighbors Creates Private Social Networks 
  Create a complete social network with your company or group's 
  own look. Scalable, extensible and extremely customizable. 
  Take a guided tour today <http://www.webcrossing.com/tour>

* Yojimbo 2.0 from Bare Bones Software: The effortless, 
  reliable information organizer for Mac OS X. 
  It will change your life, without changing the way you work. 
  Try it today! <http://www.barebones.com/products/yojimbo/>

* THE MISSING SYNC FOR iPHONE: Sync notes, tasks, files and 
  documents between your iPhone or iPod touch and a Mac. The 
  Missing Sync for iPhone provides two-way syncing over Wi-Fi. 
  Learn more - <http://www.markspace.com/bits>

* Microsoft's MacBU: Supporting Mac users with Office 2008. 
  Straighten up your Office with the latest updates to Word, 
  Excel, PowerPoint, and Entourage. Update today at Mactopia! 
  <http://www.microsoft.com/mac/downloads.mspx>

* Think it. Speak it. Create it with the all-new MacSpeech 
  Dictate 1.5. It better, faster, stronger with improved recognition, 
  new regional accents, vocabulary editor with word training. 
  Learn more: <http://www.tidbits.com/about/support/macspeech.html>

* StuffIt Deluxe 2010 gives you a free file-transfer service, built 
  right into your Mac! Introducing StuffIt Connect, the easiest way 
  to share large files online. Compress, secure, and send any file. 
  Only $39.99 until 17-Jan-10! <http://my.smithmicro.com/tidbits>

---------- Help support TidBITS by supporting our sponsors ------------


Free TidBITS News iPhone App
----------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>, Matt Neuburg <matt@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10876>
  4 comments

  It gives us great pleasure to ring in the new year by announcing the 
  availability of the free TidBITS News app for the iPhone and iPod 
  touch! This app, our first official foray into the brave new world 
  of iPhone OS development, was truly a team effort (a positive spin 
  on "Too many cooks make even the simplest app take forever to 
  write"), involving Cocoa code wrangling from Matt Neuburg, a special 
  behind-the-scenes RSS feed created by Glenn Fleishman, icons by Jeff 
  Carlson, and design assistance and input (a positive spin on 
  "nagging") from the rest of the staff. Now it's ready for you to 
  download from the App Store. And did we mention it's free?

<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/tidbits-news/id348629441?mt=8>

  Our primary goal with this first version of the TidBITS News app was 
  to create a simple, elegant app that provides access to the full 
  text of the most recent TidBITS articles while taking full advantage 
  of the elegant conventions of the iPhone OS platform. 

  To that end, the TidBITS News app has just two screens. On the 
  first, it displays the headlines and summaries of our 60 most recent 
  articles. Tap any item on the headline screen to see the second 
  screen, where you can read the full text of the article. 

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-01/TidBITS-News.png>

  In the article display screen, tapping a link within an article 
  loads the associated Web page in Safari. Tapping an article's title 
  loads the associated TidBITS Web page; if the item is an external 
  link article, however, it loads the original article that the 
  external link refers to. If there's an embedded YouTube video in the 
  article, tap it to watch the movie; clicking Done returns you to the 
  article. For articles we've recorded as a podcast, tap the Listen 
  button at the top to listen to the recording as streaming audio from 
  our Web site.

  Everything listed in the preceding paragraph requires an active 
  Internet connection, of course. But the TidBITS News app can also be 
  used without an Internet connection, because the articles themselves 
  are cached on your iPhone or iPod touch. So, for example, you might 
  launch the app in the morning, causing it to cache the latest 
  articles automatically, and then quit it; later on, you can launch 
  it again, even when offline, to read the articles that interest you 
  on the subway ride to work, or on an iPod touch that's out of range 
  of a Wi-Fi network.

  The app contains only three buttons. One, on the first screen, is a 
  Refresh button, which causes the app to go out to the Internet and 
  update the cache of articles. The cache is updated automatically 
  when you launch the app, but only if you were on the headline screen 
  when you last quit the app; if you quit the app while you were 
  reading an article, then when you launch the app again, you are 
  naturally returned to that screen so you can continue reading that 
  article, but the cache is not updated. So you need a manual way to 
  update the cache, and the Refresh button is it. When you tap the 
  Refresh button, it disables itself, because we don't want users 
  thrashing the RSS feed unnecessarily; one refresh per run of the app 
  is sufficient.

  The second button, on the article display screen, governs the 
  article font size. Tap it to cycle through five font sizes; after 
  you get to the largest one, it returns to the smallest, so you can 
  easily stop at the size that works best for your eyes. The third 
  button, also on the article screen, provides up and down arrows 
  that, when tapped, display the previous article or the next article 
  without forcing you to return to the headline screen.

  The app has no other buttons and no other options, which was a 
  deliberate choice. We wanted to keep things simple, and we wanted to 
  avoid wasting space on the iPhone's tiny screen. After all, this an 
  app in which you read text, so we wanted each screenful to hold as 
  much text as possible. By limiting ourselves to just one or two 
  buttons on each screen, we were able to place those buttons in the 
  navigation bar at the top, leaving the remainder of the screen free 
  for legible content.

  So if you have an iPhone or iPod touch, please give the TidBITS News 
  app a try. It's free, it's easy to use, and it's a great way to keep 
  up-to-date with everything we publish in TidBITS, on your schedule. 
  Those of us on the TidBITS team who have been testing the app for 
  some time have already found it an excellent way to read TidBITS 
  (for some, it has become our favorite way!); we hope you'll like it 
  too. If so, a kind rating and review on the App Store would be 
  extremely welcome, since we'd hope that the TidBITS News app might 
  attract new readers to TidBITS as well, and good ratings and reviews 
  in the App Store significantly improve app discoverability.

  Lastly, remember that this is only a 1.0 release. It's always 
  possible for us to create updates, and one of the nice things about 
  the App Store distribution system is that anyone who has downloaded 
  an app is automatically notified of any updates. So we'd like to 
  hear your ideas for ways we could improve and extend the app in 
  future versions. We have our own list, of course, but interest from 
  readers will make a difference in where we invest time and effort. 
  We're thinking about indicating an article's read/unread status, 
  providing access to comments, displaying linked articles within the 
  app instead of switching to Safari, tying into our full-text search 
  engine, and more. But do let us know in the comments what you'd like 
  to see!

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10876#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/10876>


Subscribe to TidBITS on the Kindle
----------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10879>

  Although it's likely that more TidBITS readers rely on an iPhone or 
  iPod touch for reading TidBITS, particularly now that we've released 
  a free TidBITS News app (see "Free TidBITS News iPhone App," 4 
  January 2010), we also have good news for Kindle users: you can now 
  subscribe to TidBITS on the Kindle.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10876>
<http://www.amazon.com/dp/B002AMVX8O/?tag=tidbitselectro00>

  Much as with the TidBITS News app for the iPhone, reading TidBITS on 
  the Kindle works through an RSS feed, which means it downloads new 
  articles whenever it can, and caches them for offline reading. It 
  supports basic text styles (bold and italic), and displays any 
  graphics. You can even follow links to external Web sites, though 
  only if Whispernet is turned on and available, and even then the 
  Kindle's experimental Web browser is mediocre at best.

  You can jump to any article from the Articles List, and you can 
  navigate to the next or previous article while reading (I'm using 
  the little joystick on the Kindle DX). Somewhat oddly, the Kindle 
  runs individual articles together one after another, so there's 
  never any white space between articles when you use the Next Page 
  button to page through our feed.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-01/TidBITS-on-Kindle.jpg>

  Due to limitations on the Kindle platform, embedded movies don't 
  appear and there's no option for listening to our podcast recordings 
  (though some Kindles have their own text-to-speech features). I 
  doubt either of these capabilities will ever become available, but 
  both are minor in the overall scheme of things.

  Reading TidBITS on the Kindle after a 14-day trial period isn't 
  free; Amazon requires a $0.99 per month fee, mostly to pay for the 
  free Whispernet wireless service over which the feed is updated. 
  Since we get 30 percent of all subscription fees, consider it a 
  loose-change way to support TidBITS.

  We've always tried to offer TidBITS in a variety of common formats 
  and on a variety of platforms, so we're pleased to add the Kindle to 
  the collection. We also hope the Kindle reading experience will 
  continue to improve.

  If you like reading TidBITS, and you like reading on your Kindle, 
  try mixing the two together for at least the 14-day free trial. Who 
  knows, maybe it will be like peanut butter and chocolate, and either 
  way, let us know what you think in the comments.

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10879#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/10879>


Gutenprint Updates Printer Drivers without a Lot of Bandwidth
-------------------------------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10875>
  11 comments

  Part of being a tech writer is that when major operating system 
  updates come along, I embark on a slow tour of visiting relatives 
  and updating their Macs. While staying with my mother recently, I 
  upgraded her iMac to Snow Leopard (and gave her a copy of my "Mac OS 
  X Snow Leopard Pocket Guide"), and also made sure her backups were 
  functioning well.

<http://www.amazon.com/dp/0321646894/?tag=tidbitselectro00>

  Although the upgrade to Snow Leopard itself went without issue, we 
  discovered a problem that was somewhat specific to her setup: she 
  needed a new printer driver for her HP Photosmart P1000 printer. 
  Software Update could download the update, but it was included in 
  the HP Printer Drivers for Mac OS X v10.6 update - which is a 
  whopping 387.44 MB.

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

  The problem was that my mom lives on a farm in rural California, so 
  her only broadband Internet access is via satellite. And in her 
  case, HughesNet imposes a daily bandwidth cap of 200 MB to (I 
  presume) prevent people from saturating the connection with large 
  file downloads (euphemistically called the Fair Access Policy). If 
  you go over the limit, Hughes automatically cripples your connection 
  to a trickle during a 24 hour "recovery period."

<http://consumer.hughesnet.com/faq/fair-access-policy.cfm>

  System and application updates continue to increase in size, 
  however, which can easily blow past that cap. The alternative is to 
  wait until 11:00 PM (Pacific Standard Time), when HughesNet lifts 
  the cap for a five-hour window. Unfortunately, Apple offers no 
  method of scheduling update times, so I've had to disable the 
  Download Updates Automatically option in the Software Update system 
  preference pane.

  Since I didn't want to stay up late to babysit a long download, and 
  didn't want to make my mother do it either, I looked for another 
  option. Fortunately, Apple pointed me in the right direction. Linked 
  from the HP Printer Drivers update page is an extensive list of 
  printer and scanner software for Mac OS X 10.6.

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

  Searching for "HP Photosmart P1000" in Safari (which is far easier 
  than scrolling through the list), I discovered that HP is using 
  Gutenprint v5.2.3 as the driver for that printer (and many others).

  Gutenprint is an open-source collection of drivers (formerly called 
  Gimp-Print) for a wide range of printers. Since I was already at 
  Apple's site, I searched for "Gutenprint" and located the Gutenprint 
  Printer Drivers for Mac OS X 10.6 installer - which is a mere 16.1 
  MB!

<http://gutenprint.sourceforge.net/>
<http://support.apple.com/downloads/Gutenprint_Printer_Drivers_for_Mac_OS_X_v10_6>

  After downloading and installing the update, I needed to set up my 
  mom's printer again using the Print & Fax preference pane in System 
  Preferences. After that, it printed just as it had before I 
  installed Snow Leopard.

  The Gutenprint driver offered by Apple is at version 5.2.3, even 
  though the installer text lists the version as 5.0. The most recent 
  version for Mac OS X offered through the Gutenprint site is 
  Gutenprint v5.2.4, but none of the recent changes affected her 
  printer, so I didn't bother installing the latest version.

<http://gutenprint.sourceforge.net/MacOSX.php>
<http://gutenprint.sourceforge.net/MacOSX.php#5.2.4>

  When I'm at home on my fast cable Internet connection, downloading 
  large updates isn't an issue, but I know firsthand that's not the 
  case everywhere, with folks in rural locations still often unable to 
  get high-speed access. I wish Apple and other companies would 
  acknowledge that updates that are hundreds of megabytes in size are 
  not convenient (or even possible) for many people. Instead, it's 
  good to know that a little poking around will often reveal better 
  options, and when that fails, a friend or relative with a high-speed 
  connection may need to put together a CD or DVD of downloads from 
  the Apple Support Downloads site.

<http://support.apple.com/downloads/>

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10875#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/10875>


Improve Wi-Fi Performance in the 5 GHz Band
-------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10849>
  2 comments

  A year or so ago, I rarely received email from TidBITS readers or 
  those who have read my "Take Control of Your 802.11n AirPort 
  Network" book detailing problems using Wi-Fi networking in the 5 GHz 
  band. This higher-frequency radio band is available in the United 
  States and many other countries worldwide, and was long seen as a 
  less-crowded alternative to the 2.4 GHz band that was Wi-Fi's 
  original home.

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/airport-n?pt=TB1008>

  Now I get a few messages a week about mysteries involving channel 
  selection in 5 GHz - normally an obscure option that most people 
  don't need to deal with. I have a few tips, which I'll share after 
  explaining what this is all about.


**A Band, a Plan, a Channel: New Crowding** -- The 5 GHz band was 
  allotted more than a decade ago in the United States, but usage was 
  sparse until it became cheap enough to put 5 GHz radios in cordless 
  phones and until 802.11n appeared on the scene. Before 5 GHz was an 
  affordable option, cordless phones, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and a bunch of 
  other competing uses were crowded into a sliver of bandwidth in the 
  2.4 GHz range. Competing uses lead to interference and signal 
  trouble.

  These 5 GHz channels were heavily underused because only the 802.11a 
  standard - introduced in 1999, at the same time as 802.11b - took 
  advantage of 5 GHz. But 802.11a never took off, because 802.11a gear 
  was initially expensive and not backwards compatible with 802.11b, 
  which used the 2.4 GHz band.

  It wasn't until the introduction of 802.11n, which could work over 
  either the 2.4 or 5 GHz spectrum range, that 5 GHz saw any real 
  employment outside of corporate networks that turned to 5 GHz often 
  just for reliable voice-over-Wi-Fi communications. 

  Then simultaneous dual-band 802.11n base stations, like Apple's 
  AirPort Extreme and Time Capsule revisions introduced in early 2009, 
  started to become popular and affordable. These devices allowed 
  users to retain legacy 2.4 GHz 802.11b and 802.11g hardware by 
  broadcasting on both 2.4 and 5 GHz bands simultaneously. 

  This capability enabled the increasingly common dual-band 802.11n 
  radios in computers and other devices to work at higher speeds over 
  5 GHz when close by and lower speeds over 2.4 GHz when further away, 
  while still retaining compatibility with older Wi-Fi adapters. (An 
  802.11n adapter can be designed for only one band, but most such 
  client hardware allows the choice of either band.)

  With 5 GHz gaining popularity, the danger of overcrowding increased. 
  While there are 23 possible distinct (or _non-overlapping_) channels 
  for use in 5 GHz in the United States, Apple and most consumer 
  equipment makers support only 8 of them in base stations. (Depending 
  on your country, the 2.4 GHz band has just 3 or 4 channels that 
  barely overlap, out of what is typically 11 or 14 channel 
  divisions.) 

  Manufacturers ignore 15 of the 23 channels to avoid limitations that 
  could be frustrating to users due to shared use with the military. 
  While military radar can overlap with these 15 channels, for it to 
  happen in the real world is rare, and even then it occurs only in 
  limited parts of the country. However, the rules are in effect 
  everywhere, and they can in theory lead to poor experiences, so 
  consumer firms avoided including those channels as options in their 
  base stations. (Apple and most other firms allow an adapter, such as 
  is built into Macintosh computers, to access those channels if they 
  are already in use by a base station, however.)

  Those eight widely used channels, however, are split into two 
  pieces: a lower band, called UNII-1 for the lowest band of the 
  Unlicensed National Information Infrastructure range, and an upper 
  band, UNII-3. The 15 other channels are in the UNII-2 range, split 
  between what's generally called the lower UNII-2, which has four 
  channels, and the upper UNII-2, which has 11 channels.

<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/U-NII>

  The lower four channels are numbered sequentially as 36, 40, 44, and 
  48. The upper four channels are likewise numbered as 149, 153, 157, 
  and 161. (The reason for the four-unit gaps is that the channels are 
  20 MHz wide, but channel numbers are assigned in 5 MHz increments.)

  I was reminded by Apple product managers a few months ago while 
  talking about AirPort issues that the lower band uses 1/20th the 
  power of the upper band. That's right: Choose channel 149, and your 
  base station broadcasts signals at 20 times the power of channel 36! 
  (The 5 GHz band, because of its shorter wavelength, requires more 
  power to send the same quantity of data the same distance as a 2.4 
  GHz device.)

  Power corrupts, however. The more power you use to broadcast a 
  signal, the more potential there is for that signal to interfere 
  with other networks, and to receive interference as well. 

  There's a second problem with the upper band: it's used for 5 GHz 
  cordless DECT phones. These phones use an entirely different 
  technology that can disrupt Wi-Fi performance without violating any 
  FCC rules.

  Finally, if you use so-called wide channels, which use 40 MHz of 
  bandwidth to double 802.11n throughput, you're down to just four 
  possible channels (36 or 44 in the lower band, or 149 or 157 in the 
  upper band).

  What to do? Read on.


**Tips for Better 5 GHz Performance** -- You can ameliorate or perhaps 
  solve your 5 GHz problems in different ways depending on what's 
  causing them.

  _Swap out your own 5.8 GHz DECT phones._ The problem of so-called 
  5.8 GHz or even inaccurately named "6.0 GHz" DECT cordless phones 
  can't be understated, as they tread all over the best 5 GHz Wi-Fi 
  channels due to their signal pattern.

  The solution is to switch to 1900 MHz DECT, a relatively recent 
  flavor that has better in-home coverage because of the lower 
  frequency employed. Lower frequencies typically penetrate objects 
  better because of longer wavelengths, which are absorbed and 
  reflected less well by seemingly solid objects. (That's why VHF TV 
  runs from 40 to 200 MHz. If you recall, the higher-frequency UHF 
  channels - from about 500 to 700 MHz - were always harder to pick up 
  and required a separate and different antenna.)

  I helped my in-laws get set up with the Panasonic DECT 6.0 Series, 
  which builds in a digital answering system and supports up to five 
  handsets, and we've all been generally happy with them. Amazon sells 
  a base station and two handsets for under $60.

<http://www.amazon.com/dp/B000LYA8UW/?tag=tidbitselectro00>

  _Switch to lower-numbered channels._ Buying a new set of cordless 
  phones is an expense, of course, so another option is to set your 
  base station to use lower-band 5 GHz channels from 36 to 48 (or just 
  36 or 44, if you want to use wide channels). This can work in cases 
  of interference from DECT cordless phones being used by nearby 
  neighbors.

  You change channels manually by launching Applications > Utilities > 
  AirPort Utility, selecting your base station, and clicking the 
  Manual Setup button. Click the Wireless tab. With a simultaneous 
  dual-band base station, you see the options Manual and Automatic in 
  the Radio Channel Selection pop-up menu. Choose Manual. Click the 
  Edit menu. You can set the 2.4 GHz band to Automatic, and then 
  select among the four lower-band (or four upper-band) channels for 5 
  GHz. Click Done, and then Update, which restarts the base station. 
  (For a walk-through, watch my video.)

<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jUAHspAMU-U>

  These lower channels, as noted above, are less likely to suffer 
  interference because Apple and all other base stations put out lower 
  power for that segment of the 5 GHz band, and because DECT and other 
  cordless phones don't work in the lower band.

  Because using the lower band substantially reduces the distance over 
  which a signal can carry, you're limiting the higher speed uses of 
  the 5 GHz band - it can top 100 Mbps in throughput with no other 
  devices in use - to within probably the same room as the access 
  point.

  _Try other upper-band channels, too._ If you're having trouble 
  making your network work, and examining the speed reported by 
  holding down the Option key while selecting the AirPort Menu shows 
  very low rates (below tens of megabits per second), you may need to 
  experiment with changing channels manually on your base station. 
  (For more on how to read the AirPort menu values in Snow Leopard, 
  see "AirPort Menu Improves in Snow Leopard," 27 August 2009.)

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10506>

  In numerous conversations, Apple product managers have recommended 
  letting the base station use automatic channel selection. But they 
  acknowledge that the selection scans for interference only when the 
  device is powered up, which won't help with DECT phones that are in 
  sporadic use.

  In Europe and some other regulatory domains, you will be unable to 
  select channels numbered above 48, because all those higher-numbered 
  channels have to use a process that avoids interfering with other 
  nearby users. The base station may select one of those channels, 
  however, when powering up or restarting.

  _Get a new base station._ One trend in favor of improving 5 GHz 
  interference is that Apple quietly updated its base stations for 
  better range in October 2009. A new AirPort Extreme Base Station or 
  Time Capsule base station now has two sets of three antennas instead 
  of two sets of two antennas. These additional antennas produce 
  better speed over greater range even using the lower band of 5 GHz 
  channels, among other improvements.


**Change the Channel** -- There's no Wi-Fi spec in common usage yet 
  that would allow all the adapters and the base station to agree to 
  move to a different channel if interference were detected. (There is 
  a standard from the IEEE for something like this, but it's not built 
  into consumer gear, and would require near-universal adoption to 
  make a difference.)

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10849#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/10849>


Clicking the Right Button
-------------------------
  by Joe Kissell <joe@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10859>
  49 comments

  I would like to share with you a tiny personal frustration in the 
  hope that by doing so, I can eventually eliminate it. The 
  frustration is that in nearly every Mac-related book and article I 
  write, the Powers That Be require me to add cumbersome extra words - 
  over and over again - to explain how to click one of the buttons on 
  your mouse (or trackball or trackpad).

  What I want to be able to say is, "right-click" (followed by 
  whatever it is you should right-click on, and what you should do 
  afterwards), but what my editors invariably make me say is 
  "Control-click (or right-click)" - that is, hold down the Control 
  key while clicking, or _alternatively_ click the right-hand mouse 
  button. Presumably they do this because of a belief that a large 
  percentage of Mac users don't know what a right click is, don't have 
  an input device that can perform a right click, or have deliberately 
  chosen not to enable this feature on their input device - meaning 
  the only guaranteed way to get the desired end result is to 
  Control-click. After all, for many years Macs had only one-button 
  mice, and to this day don't _require_ two-button mice, so to tell 
  someone to right-click - so the thinking goes - is to tell them to 
  do something that may be incomprehensible or even impossible.

  Except I don't buy that. It was true a decade ago, of course, but it 
  is far from true today. I am convinced that the vast majority of 
  people who read what I write about the Mac are sufficiently attuned 
  to modern ways to know exactly what I mean by right-clicking and 
  that no further explanation is necessary, even if they physically 
  lack a second mouse button. But for those few of you who are still 
  scratching your heads over the notion of a right click, I want to 
  not only clear things up once and for all but also persuade you that 
  a second mouse button (or its trackpad equivalent) is a true friend 
  that will, once you get properly acquainted, fill you with joy for 
  the rest of your days. I also have some other things to say about 
  that extra button that may be of interest to everyone, however 
  comfortable you may already be with a multi-button mouse.


**Hot Button Issue** -- By way of disclosure and background, you 
  should know that I spent five years (1997-2002) managing the 
  development of Kensington's MouseWorks software for both Mac and 
  Windows, which, among other things, enables users to define the 
  functions of all the buttons on certain Kensington input devices. 
  During my tenure at the company, we released a trackball with 11 
  buttons and a touchpad device called WebRacer with no fewer than 22 
  buttons! The software has apparently languished in recent years - I 
  don't know anything about that, so don't ask! - but I'm just saying 
  that my professional involvement with multi-button input devices 
  goes way back, and undoubtedly gives me a certain bias.

  I should also mention another bias here at the outset: I'm 
  right-handed. As my wife, who's left-handed, would be quick to point 
  out, the whole notion of a "right click" is a bit discriminatory, as 
  left-handed people tend to use their left index finger to click 
  their primary mouse button (on the right side of the mouse) and 
  their middle finger to click the secondary button (on the left side 
  of the mouse). So the neutral term - and the one Apple uses - is 
  "secondary click," but the nature of English is such that that 
  expression works well as a noun but less well as a verb. I can tell 
  you to "right-click" something, but it sounds awkward to 
  "secondary-click" something. So, with apologies to the lefties out 
  there, I follow the convention (long established in the Windows 
  world) of using "right-click" to mean "click the secondary button," 
  which is to say the _logical_ right button, even if it happens to be 
  physically located on the left (or top or bottom or elsewhere) on 
  your input device of choice.


**A Scroll Down Memory Lane** -- Let's zip back in time to 1984. The 
  Mac is brand new, and one of its nifty innovations (although not in 
  fact invented by Apple) is a little box called a mouse. The mouse 
  made the Mac's unique graphical interface possible, and introduced 
  an entirely new way for people to interact with computers. Instead 
  of having to memorize commands that you must type on a keyboard, you 
  could point at words and pictures on the screen, and by clicking 
  that big button on top of the mouse, tell it to take some action. At 
  the time, some people saw the mouse as superfluous and confusing - 
  everybody already understands keyboards, and they work just fine, 
  don't they? - but it caught on quickly enough and soon became a 
  normal way to operate a computer.

  The original Mac mouse had only one button, because the operating 
  system was designed to need just one. Apple wanted to make the 
  operation of the computer as simple and obvious as possible, and one 
  of their design principles was to make the user interface 
  "discoverable" - that is, it should be as easy as possible to figure 
  out what everything does and how to perform any operation, with 
  minimal dependence on documentation, labels, and other external 
  cues. As history has shown, that approach worked remarkably well, 
  and the single-button mouse was an important contributing factor to 
  the success of the Mac in particular, and of graphical interfaces 
  generally.

  Of course, the Mac's interface didn't remain unique for long. 
  Microsoft Windows 1.0, released in 1985, supported (but didn't 
  require) a mouse, as did graphical shells developed for various 
  versions of Unix, as well as a long list of other operating systems 
  that are no longer with us. What was different about the Windows 
  approach, however, was the assumption that your mouse would have (at 
  least) two buttons. (In much of the Unix world, three-button mice 
  were the norm, but I'm going to ignore that in this article.)

  So, why the extra button? Microsoft wanted to give users and 
  developers more flexibility. The left mouse button selected or 
  activated what you clicked on (just as on a Mac), whereas the right 
  button was available for developers to use as they saw fit, and in 
  the early years of Windows, the behavior of that button varied quite 
  a bit. Starting with Windows 95 (released in 1995), standard 
  behavior for the right mouse button in Windows was to display a 
  pop-up menu at the pointer location with a list of commands relevant 
  to whatever it was you clicked on. And that's what most people have 
  come to assume that "right click" means, at least on a PC.

  By late 1997, Apple had clearly seen the value of those contextual 
  pop-up menus, which could simplify activities such as copying, 
  pasting, or modifying whatever text, icon, or other object happened 
  to be under the mouse pointer. With the release of Mac OS 8, Mac 
  users finally got the capability that had been standard on Windows 
  for a couple of years, but because Mac mice still had only one 
  button, the way to access this capability was to hold down the 
  Control key while clicking that one button. That was the genesis of 
  the Control-click.


**Giving the Finger to the Right Button** -- Mac users immediately 
  noticed and complained about the fact that it required _two hands_ 
  to do this common activity that Windows users could perform with 
  _one finger._ But Apple's position was that Mice Have One Button - 
  period. The company steadfastly refused to complicate the elegant 
  Mac design by adding an extra, potentially confusing button. After 
  all, what is there about that second button to hint at its use? How 
  will people know what it's for? What if they click the wrong button 
  by mistake and get unexpected results? No, those things aren't 
  consistent with the smooth, uncluttered design of the Mac. Apple 
  wasn't merely saying Mac mice shouldn't have multiple buttons, but 
  implying that Mac users were wrong to want them. It wasn't the 
  Macintosh way.

  Of course, Apple wasn't the only company building mice and other 
  pointing devices that could work on a Mac, and other developers - 
  including Kensington, Logitech, and even Microsoft - were only too 
  happy to meet users' demands by selling multi-button Mac mice. These 
  invariably required custom driver software to connect the extra 
  button(s) to some activity, and in order to make the right mouse 
  button produce a contextual menu the same way the right button does 
  in Windows, the software simply emulated a Control-click. Mice with 
  more than two buttons let you assign other activities (such as 
  double-clicking, emulating menu commands, or typing text) to the 
  additional buttons.

  It wasn't until the release of Mac OS X in 2001 that Apple built 
  support for multi-button mice directly into the operating system. 
  You could plug any old 2-button USB mouse into a Mac running Mac OS 
  X 10.0, and that right button would magically pop up a contextual 
  menu - no extra software or Control-click emulation required! And if 
  your mouse had more than two buttons, Mac OS X understood them and 
  passed them along to the active application for processing in 
  whatever way it deemed fit.

  That development was a boon to users and a convenience to companies 
  making multi-button mice, but Apple persisted in its practice - 
  which by this point appeared rather bloody-minded - of selling only 
  single-button mice.

  But surely, you might be thinking, Apple had a valid point - two 
  buttons are indeed more complicated than one, right? To understand 
  why having two buttons can _reduce_ complexity rather than 
  _increase_ it, you have only to think of a digital clock. Have you 
  ever tried to set the time on a clock with just one button? You have 
  to hold it down until the right time cycles around - and if you 
  don't release it at the right time, you must wait for another cycle, 
  a real pain. With two buttons you can go at multiple speeds, or 
  forward/backward, depending on the clock's design. With three, maybe 
  you can toggle AM/PM with a single press rather than having to cycle 
  through 24 hours. And if the clock has a full keypad, it's simpler 
  still - just type in the exact time and you're done. So, multiple 
  buttons may look more complicated, but in fact they sometimes make 
  the user interface simpler because they reduce the complexity of the 
  action you must perform to accomplish some task. Multi-button mice 
  are the same way.

  (On the other hand, despite the fact that Windows had right-clicking 
  long before the Mac did, Microsoft made what I regard as a poor 
  design choice: they made some actions available _only_ via a right 
  click, which makes them harder to find. Apple's Human Interface 
  Guidelines, by contrast, stipulate: "Always ensure that contextual 
  menu items are also available as menu commands. A contextual menu is 
  hidden by default and a user might not know it exists, so it should 
  never be the only way to access a command. In particular, you should 
  not use a contextual menu as the only way to access an advanced or 
  power-user feature." Alas, Apple occasionally ignores their own 
  policy, as in the case of iPhoto's Detect Missing Faces and Rescan 
  for Location commands, but at least the principle is sound. One 
  other note: for better or worse, unlike Windows, Mac OS X has never 
  had a concept of right-click-and-drag, as you might do to create a 
  shortcut, for example.)

<http://developer.apple.com/mac/library/DOCUMENTATION/UserExperience/Conceptual/AppleHIGuidelines/XHIGMenus/XHIGMenus.html#//apple_ref/doc/uid/TP30000356-TPXREF113>


**Apple Gets It Right, Sort Of** -- Hell finally froze over in August 
  2005 when Apple introduced the Mighty Mouse (now called the Apple 
  Mouse due to a legal complication over the name). This new rodent 
  had physical sensors on both left and right sides of the top, a 
  switch that activated when you squeezed the mouse, and a sensor that 
  detected when the tiny trackball (for scrolling) was pressed down. 
  This made for a total of four logical buttons, even though the case 
  had no visible physical buttons (you press the entire top of the 
  case to click, and the left or right "button" registers depending on 
  which part of the case your finger is in contact with). Finally, 
  using a genuine Apple mouse, users could right-click properly - and 
  then some!

  Interestingly, though, the fact that the Mighty Mouse had the 
  equivalent of four buttons didn't seem to change Apple's official 
  stance. For one thing, the mouse's physical design meant Apple could 
  maintain the illusion that it still wasn't selling a multi-button 
  mouse (or in fact a mouse with any buttons at all). For another, the 
  default behavior of Mac OS X was to treat both the left and right 
  sensors on top of the mouse the same - as a standard click. That is, 
  out of the box, the Mighty Mouse was still a one-button mouse! Users 
  were now obligated to change a setting in System Preferences 
  explicitly to make the right "button" perform a right click.

  Apple's recent release of the Magic Mouse has continued this trend. 
  Now not only have the buttons disappeared but so has the scrolling 
  mechanism, replaced by a more-capable, but invisible, multi-touch 
  sensor. Unfortunately, the Magic Mouse has only two logical buttons 
  rather than four, which is a giant step backward in functionality.


**Tap Into the Power** -- The story regarding right-clicking on 
  laptops is a bit more complicated. No Apple laptop has ever had more 
  than one physical trackpad button, and current models have no 
  visible buttons at all - the entire trackpad is a button, and how it 
  behaves depends on the number, position, and motion of fingers 
  touching the pad.

  For a long time, the only way users of Mac laptops could display a 
  contextual menu was to hold down the Control key while clicking the 
  single trackpad button (or use an external pointing device). 
  Trackpads on Mac laptops introduced since January 2005 have the 
  option - if you enable it - of producing a right-click response when 
  you hold two fingertips on the trackpad and click the button (on 
  some models) or tap with two fingers at the same time (on others). 
  Even before that, one could use Raging Menace's $15 Sidetrack 
  software to "right-click" by tapping on the trackpad. And beginning 
  with the MacBook Air introduced in February 2008, Mac laptops began 
  using multi-touch trackpads that optionally produce a right click 
  response when you tap in a designated (lower left or lower right) 
  corner of the trackpad. With that configuration, it can literally be 
  a _right_ click, but in any case, laptop users have no longer needed 
  both hands to get at contextual menus for several years.

<http://www.ragingmenace.com/software/sidetrack/>


**Getting Right to the Point** -- As far as I can tell, Apple no 
  longer sells single-button mice at all. Your current choices are the 
  Apple Mouse (four logical buttons, wired) or Magic Mouse (two 
  logical buttons, wireless). Every desktop Mac model introduced in 
  October 2005 or later that included a mouse came with a multi-button 
  mouse, and every laptop Mac model introduced in January 2005 or 
  later has a trackpad that can produce a secondary click with one 
  hand. So everyone whose Mac is four years old or newer has the 
  capability to right-click, whether or not it's enabled in System 
  Preferences. Anyone running any version of Mac OS X with a 
  third-party multi-button mouse, trackball, or trackpad can also 
  right-click. And even users of Macs running System 7 can - with a 
  third-party input device and its accompanying software - perform a 
  right click.

  In short, Mac users who lack the hardware capability to right-click 
  are increasingly few and far between, and the vast majority of those 
  could remedy that situation, if they choose to do so, with nothing 
  more than a $5, two-button mouse.

  If you are one of those people without an input device that can 
  right-click - or if you have the capability but haven't enabled it - 
  I urge you to join the ranks of multiple clickers at your earliest 
  opportunity! To reiterate, the key advantage is that you'll be able 
  to display a contextual menu with one finger, rather than two hands. 
  Even if you normally keep both hands on the keyboard, you'll 
  probably find, with a day or two of practice, that right-clicking 
  requires less effort and coordination than Control-clicking - and 
  that it quickly becomes second nature.

  And if you don't yet use contextual menus at all, well, you don't 
  know what you're missing. Because that pop-up menu is right at your 
  pointer location, you needn't move the pointer across a (possibly 
  large) screen to access common menu commands such as Paste, 
  Duplicate, Label, and many others - depending, of course, on 
  context. Even if you prefer keyboard shortcuts to menu commands (as 
  I do most of the time), there are often cases in which you must 
  select something (with the mouse) before performing a command. When 
  you can select _and_ perform the command with one click, rather than 
  selecting first, returning your hand(s) to the keyboard, and then 
  pressing some keys, you save all sorts of effort.

  If I've persuaded you to give right-clicking a try and you have a 
  pointing device that supports it (which, I believe, should be pretty 
  much everyone reading this), you can turn on the feature somewhere 
  in System Preferences. The exact method depends on which version of 
  Mac OS X you're using, whether you have a wired or Bluetooth 
  pointing device, a trackpad, or some combination of these, and 
  whether or not your device is made by Apple. But in general, do one 
  of the following:

* For older Apple mice and third-party pointing devices without their 
  own software, open the Mouse pane of System Preferences. Choose 
  Secondary Button from the pop-up menu pointing to the button you 
  want to use for right-clicking.

* For the Apple Magic Mouse, open the Mouse pane of System 
  Preferences. Make sure Secondary Click is checked, and choose either 
  Left or Right from the pop-up menu to determine which side you 
  should press for a secondary click.

* For Mac laptops, open the Trackpad pane of System Preferences and 
  check either Tap Trackpad Using Two Fingers for Secondary Click or 
  Place Two Fingers on Trackpad and Click Button for Secondary Click.

* For third-party pointing devices with their own software, follow the 
  documentation included to assign a right (or secondary) click to the 
  button of your choice.

  And that's it. Point at something, click your secondary button 
  (typically with your middle finger), and notice what happens. Try it 
  again with other things - text selections in various programs, icons 
  in the Finder, graphics in a drawing application, and so on - and 
  take note of how the commands change. Once you've gotten into the 
  habit of performing common actions this way, you'll never want to go 
  back to a single-button mouse. And you'll know exactly what I mean 
  when I tell you to right-click!

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10859#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/10859>


TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 4 January 2010
--------------------------------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10878>

**Things 1.2.8** -- Cultured Code has released a minor update to the 
  popular task manager Things that fixes five bugs. The bugs fixed 
  could cause Things to open with a blank window and remain 
  unresponsive, to recreate Quick Entry dialog shortcuts that had been 
  removed by the user, to generate duplicates of certain file links 
  when opening their related to-do items, and to crash when running 
  version 1.2.5 with a 1.2.6 database. Also, this update fixes a bug 
  related to sync conflicts with the Today list, though the fix is 
  dependent on installing the latest iPhone version of Things 
  (1.3.12). Lastly, several minor localization issues have been 
  resolved. ($49.95 new, free update, 8.3 MB)

<http://culturedcode.com/things/>

  Read/post comments about Things 1.2.8.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10869#comments>


**WireTap Anywhere 1.0.6** -- Ambrosia Software has released a minor 
  maintenance update to its audio capture suite WireTap Anywhere. 
  WireTap Anywhere 1.0.6 includes an upgraded version of the 
  AmbrosiaAudioSupport kernel extension (version 3.2, which enables 
  proper loading for users running Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger on 
  PowerPC-based Macs), fixes a drawing problem on the input meters, 
  improves overall compatibility, and fixes a number of unspecified 
  bugs. ($129 new, free update, 12.5 MB)

<http://www.ambrosiasw.com/utilities/wta/>

  Read/post comments about WireTap Anywhere 1.0.6.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10867#comments>


**27-inch iMac Graphics Firmware Update 1.0** -- Apple has released a 
  much-needed firmware update for the 27-inch iMac that aims to 
  address that model's widespread display problems. The update is for 
  the ATI Radeon HD 4670 and 4850 graphics cards, and corrects issues 
  causing "image corruption or display flickering." Those issues have 
  been widely discussed in Apple's Support Discussion forums (see "New 
  iMac Screens Cracking and Flickering," 10 December 2009) in 
  conjunction with instances of shipped iMacs arriving with cracked 
  screens - still no word on that latter problem. Finally, take heed 
  of this important warning in Apple's release notes: "Do not disturb 
  or shut off the power on your iMac during this update. Loss of power 
  could result in your iMac failing to start up." The update is 
  available via Software Update and the Apple Support Downloads page. 
  (Free, 683 KB)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL984>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10829>

  Read/post comments about 27-inch iMac Graphics Firmware Update 1.0.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10865#comments>


**Keyboard Maestro 4.0.1** -- Stairways Software has released a minor 
  maintenance and stability update to the popular macro utility 
  Keyboard Maestro. Version 4.0.1 resolves an issue that caused slow 
  typing speeds when simulating keystrokes, fixes a bug that enabled 
  multiple engines to run at once, prevents simulating keys from 
  causing hot keys to trigger, and addresses a crashing bug that 
  affected users running Mac OS X 10.5. Also, support for Growling 
  macro execution has been added, the Remap Forward Delete macro is 
  now disabled by default, and a 10-second emergency timeout has been 
  added on trigger repeat. ($36 new, $18 upgrade from 3.x, free 
  update, 7.6 MB)

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

  Read/post comments about Keyboard Maestro 4.0.1.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10866#comments>


**Mail Services Update 1.0** -- Apple's Mail Services Update 1.0 for 
  Snow Leopard Server comes with brief release notes, stating only 
  that it addresses "issues affecting overall mail service reliability 
  and performance." Although Apple recommends the update for all users 
  running Mac OS X Server 10.6.2, there have been reports of it 
  causing problems, along with a possible solution outlined in an 
  Apple Discussions thread. It's available via Software Update or the 
  Apple Support Downloads page. Installation instructions for the 
  update are available on Apple's Web site. (Free, 20.59 MB)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL982>
<http://discussions.apple.com/thread.jspa?threadID=2269047>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT3975>

  Read/post comments about Mail Services Update 1.0.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10860#comments>


**Firefox 3.5.6** -- Mozilla has released a substantial security 
  update to the popular Web browser Firefox. While release notes are 
  terse, saying only that the update fixes "several stability/security 
  issues", the bug list indicates several critical vulnerabilities 
  have been addressed, including three that could be exploited to 
  crash the browser and run arbitrary code. (Free, 17.6 MB)

<http://www.mozilla.com/en-US/firefox/personal.html>
<http://www.mozilla.org/security/known-vulnerabilities/firefox35.html#firefox3.5.6>

  Read/post comments about Firefox 3.5.6.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10857#comments>


**Pro Tools 8.0.3** -- With version 8.0.3, Digidesign has brought Snow 
  Leopard compatibility to its professional audio editing software Pro 
  Tools, which also now requires an Intel-based Mac. In general, Pro 
  Tools 8 offers a refreshed interface, the capability to work with 
  three times as many audio tracks, an added Score Editor, a new MIDI 
  editor, an Elastic Pitch feature, and new track compositing 
  capabilities. (New purchase and upgrade prices vary widely.)

<http://www.digidesign.com/index.cfm?navid=354&langid=100&itemid=35911>

  Read/post comments about Pro Tools 8.0.3.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10858#comments>


**Hazel 2.3.5** -- Noodlesoft has released a maintenance update to the 
  file cleanup utility Hazel. Version 2.3.5 can sequentially renumber 
  files, reference the source folder in rules so as to be able to 
  mimic folder structures when copying and moving files, run 
  AppleScript bundles, and integrate with Yazsoft's Speed Download to 
  clean up incomplete and duplicate downloads. Also, a handful of 
  minor interface tweaks have been made, AppSweep now cleans out Growl 
  tickets and the Caches folder under /var/folders, and a number of 
  bugs have been fixed. The full release notes are available via 
  Noodlesoft's Web site. ($21.95, free update, 3.9 MB)

<http://www.noodlesoft.com/hazel.php>
<http://www.noodlesoft.com/releases.php>

  Read/post comments about Hazel 2.3.5.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10850#comments>


**Epson Printer Drivers 2.2 for Mac OS X 10.6.1** -- Apple has 
  released a driver update that "includes the latest Epson printing 
  and scanning software for Snow Leopard." More information on 
  supported Epson printers is available on Apple's Web site. The 
  update is available via Software Update and the Apple Support 
  Downloads page. (Free, 546 MB)

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

  Read/post comments about Epson Printer Drivers 2.2 for Mac OS X 
  10.6.1.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10856#comments>


**Lexmark Printer Drivers 2.2 for Mac OS X 10.6** -- Apple has 
  released a Snow Leopard driver update for Lexmark printers that 
  "includes the latest drivers for printers you have used on your 
  system." More information on supported Lexmark printers is available 
  from Apple's Web site. The update is available via Software Update 
  and the Apple Support Downloads page. (Free, 121 MB)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL901>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT3669#lexmark>

  Read/post comments about Lexmark Printer Drivers 2.2 for Mac OS X 
  10.6.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10855#comments>



ExtraBITS for 4 January 2010
----------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10877>

  Though we weren't writing much during our end-of-year vacation, we 
  were keeping up with what was going on in the Apple industry. Steve 
  Jobs was named the top CEO in the world, Microsoft was banned from 
  selling Microsoft Word (at least in theory), and Apple tablet rumors 
  continued to build. Also, MacTech is soliciting fun Mac stories, 
  David Pogue continued to browbeat cell carriers for usurious 
  business practices, Google donated millions to charity, and Apple 
  both apologized for iMac shipping delays and made it possible to buy 
  iTunes gift cards via Facebook. We also did a few podcast guest 
  appearances, and Glenn wrote a great article comparing nine GPS 
  navigation apps for the iPhone. 


**Apple Tablet Rumor Roundup** -- Apple's late-January booking of a 
  stage at the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts in San Francisco has 
  ignited yet another round of furious Apple tablet speculation. With 
  all the theories, assumptions, and stories kicking around, it's easy 
  to feel completely lost on the subject. To help you wrap your head 
  around the buzz, Gizmodo has compiled a summary of all the Apple 
  tablet rumors to date... or you could just wait until Apple's 
  announcement to see what happens.

<http://gizmodo.com/5434566/the-exhaustive-guide-to-apple-tablet-rumors>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10870#comments>


**Harvard Business Review Names Steve Jobs Top CEO** -- The Harvard 
  Business Review has named Steve Jobs the top-performing CEO in the 
  world. The article ranks almost 2,000 company leaders from around 
  the world by analyzing each company's performance over the CEO's 
  full tenure. Jobs, since returning to Apple in 1997, has increased 
  the company's market value by $150 billion and overseen an 
  industry-adjusted return of 3,188 percent.

<http://hbr.org/2010/01/the-best-performing-ceos-in-the-world/ar/1>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10874#comments>


**Court Bans Microsoft From Selling Word 2007** -- The Wall Street 
  Journal reports on a recent federal appeals court decision to fine 
  Microsoft $290 million and ban the company from selling copies of 
  Word 2007 after 11 January 2010. The plaintiff, a Canadian software 
  company named i4i Inc., sued Microsoft in 2007 for infringing on a 
  patent for technology that improves the handling of XML code. 
  Microsoft, while looking further into its legal options, has plans 
  to remove the contested code from future copies of Word 2007 and the 
  forthcoming Office 2010 - though the company notes it does not 
  expect shipments of the program to be disrupted.

<http://blogs.wsj.com/law/2009/12/23/ban-on-microsoft-word-290m-fine-to-hold-fed-cir-rules/>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10871#comments>


**MacTech Soliciting Best Mac Stories for 25th Anniversary** -- Our 
  friends at MacTech Magazine are kicking off their 25th anniversary 
  celebration by soliciting the Mac community's best Mac-related 
  stories, to be printed in upcoming issues of MacTech over the next 
  year. The first issue of MacTech came out in December 1984, after 
  which it was published as MacTutor for the next 7 years, before 
  eventually reverting back to the MacTech name.

<http://www.mactech.com/25thAnnivStories/>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10868#comments>


**Pogue Pursues Verizon Plundering** -- New York Times columnist David 
  Pogue is holding Verizon Wireless's toes to the fire regarding the 
  carrier's dubious pricing schemes. The profit centers in question 
  include doubling early cancellation fees for smartphones and 
  charging users $2 a pop for hitting those hard-to-miss arrow buttons 
  on the keypad. Despite the involvement of the FCC, which formally 
  asked Verizon for answers, Verizon continues to deny culpability. In 
  other words, the grass isn't always greener in other cellular 
  carrier pastures.

<http://pogue.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/12/21/verizon-responds-to-consumer-complaints/>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10863#comments>


**Instead of Holiday Gifts, Google Donates $20 Million** -- In recent 
  years, Google has sent holiday gifts to large AdWords purchasers and 
  AdSense publishers, but this year is instead donating $20 million to 
  a variety of charities. Kudos to Google for putting its money where 
  its "Don't be evil" mouth is, and for not adding to the world's 
  ever-increasing layer of cheap plastic crud.

<http://www.google.com/advertising/holiday2009/>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10864#comments>


**Apple Offers iTunes Gift Cards on Facebook** -- The holiday buying 
  season is over, but there are plenty of other gift-giving 
  opportunities throughout the year. If you're scrambling for a 
  last-minute gift idea and you and your recipient are Facebook users, 
  consider an iTunes Store gift card. You can now purchase virtual 
  iTunes gift cards through Facebook, without needing iTunes at all. 
  To purchase one, you must become a fan of iTunes on Facebook, then 
  click the iTunes Gifts tab to follow customization and purchase 
  instructions. The certificates come in $5 (which isn't available 
  normally via iTunes itself), $10, $15, and $25 values.

<http://arstechnica.com/apple/news/2009/12/apple-now-offers-digital-gift-cards-via-facebook.ars>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10861#comments>


**Apple Apologizes for iMac Shipping Delays** -- In a statement to 
  CNET, an Apple spokesperson has apologized for a two-week shipping 
  delay on all 27-inch iMacs that affected many people prior to 
  Christmas. While Apple isn't giving a specific cause for the delay, 
  other than implying the 27-inch's wild success has made filling 
  orders difficult, it would seem likely that the delay is related to 
  the recent reports of broken displays (see "New iMac Screens 
  Cracking and Flickering," 10 December 2009). The 21-inch iMac is 
  still shipping within 24 hours.

<http://news.cnet.com/8301-13579_3-10414512-37.html>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10829>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10851#comments>


**Head-to-Head Tests of Nine GPS Navigation iPhone Apps** -- TidBITS 
  editor Glenn Fleishman spent weeks driving aimlessly for Macworld, 
  where his overall look at GPS navigation for the iPhone appears, 
  along with reviews of nine apps and the TomTom car kit.

<http://www.macworld.com/article/144972/2009/12/gps.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10853#comments>


**MacJury Podcast Pages through Electronic Readers** -- Chuck Joiner 
  interviews a slew of electronic book authors about electronic book 
  readers, like the Kindle and Nook. Chuck talks to Michael Cohen, 
  Glenn Fleishman, Joe Kissell, Kirk McElhearn, and Matt Neuburg, all 
  Take Control authors who have strong opinions about print books, 
  too.

<http://www.macjury.com/macjury-921-the-macjury-deliberates-on-the-state-of-ebooks-and-ebook-readers>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10852#comments>


**Adam Recaps 2009 on the Tech Night Owl Live Podcast** -- It's hard 
  to remember everything that made Apple news in 2009, but Adam and 
  host Gene Steinberg roll through a variety of headlines from the 
  past year, talking about what Apple has done well and not so well.

<http://www.technightowl.com/radio/podcast/now-playing-december-17-2009-adam-engst-and-bob-dr-mac-levitus/>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10844#comments>



Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk for 4 January 2010
---------------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10880>

  This week's discussions cover a broad range: getting Mail and Gmail 
  to talk; pondering whether it's possible to use an iPhone as one's 
  sole computer; replacing an aging Power Mac; using OpenType fonts 
  between Mac and Windows environments; converting Eudora mailbox 
  archives; distributing the multimedia project If Monks had Macs; 
  keeping printer ink fresh when not in use; recording streaming 
  audio; and buying a scanner.


**IMAP, Gmail, and Apple Mail** -- What should one do when Apple Mail 
  stops syncing with Gmail? (3 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2999>


**G4 replacement recommendations** -- A reader needs to replace an 
  older Power Mac, but does he need all the power and expense of a 
  brand new machine? Would buying a faster PowerPC model suit his 
  needs? (36 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/3000>


**The iPhone Nomad - Is He or She Possible?** Travelers have wondered 
  if an iPhone is sufficient computing power to take when on the road, 
  but one reader is wondering if it's possible to use the iPhone as 
  one's only computer. (7 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/3002>


**OpenType .otf Fonts** -- It should be possible to use one set of 
  OpenType fonts for Mac and Windows, but experience suggests that 
  problems arise. (10 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/3003>


**Eudora archives to other email programs** -- Readers report success 
  with Emailchemy, a utility for converting Eudora's mailbox files for 
  use with other email programs. (2 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/3007>


**post-commercial software - best way to give my If Monks had Macs 
  away?** The author of the classic If Monks had Macs wonders how best 
  to distribute the massive multimedia project for free without paying 
  for a lot of bandwidth. The consensus: BitTorrent. (19 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/3009>


**Inkjet printer on several-month hiatus: ink dries out - solutions?** 
  Is toting ink cartridges from one place to another the best way of 
  ensuring that they don't dry out if not used for several months? Or 
  perhaps a cheap laser printer would be better? (16 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/3010>


**Anyone using Apogee One with WireTap Anywhere?** A reader looks for 
  assistance in recording incoming sounds such as Skype calls or 
  streaming music. (4 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/3011>


**Seeking advice on scanner to buy** -- Readers share their opinions 
  and experiences with scanners. (7 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/3017>



$$

This is TidBITS, a free weekly technology newsletter providing timely
news, insightful analysis, and in-depth reviews to the Macintosh and
Internet communities. Feel free to forward to friends; better still,
please ask them to subscribe!

Non-profit, non-commercial publications and Web sites may reprint or
link to articles if full credit is given. Others please contact us. We
do not guarantee accuracy of articles. Caveat lector. Publication,
product, and company names may be registered trademarks of their
companies. TidBITS ISSN 1090-7017.

Copyright 2010 TidBITS: Reuse governed by Creative Commons license.

Contact us at:	  <editors@tidbits.com>
TidBITS Web site: <http://www.tidbits.com/>
License terms:    <http://www.tidbits.com/terms/>
Full text search: <http://www.tidbits.com/search/>
Subscriptions:	  <http://www.tidbits.com/about/list.html>
Account help:	  <http://www.tidbits.com/about/account-help.html>





