TidBITS#1009/11-Jan-2010
========================
  Issue link: <http://db.tidbits.com/issue/1009>

  Roving correspondent Jeff Porten has once again shouldered the 
  Herculean task of covering the Consumer Electronics Show for 
  TidBITS, and he has reported back with several articles about the 
  new technology at CES. In other news, we've published the new "Take 
  Control of Easy Mac Backups" ebook; two Apple-focused documentaries 
  are now available for free streaming; a lawsuit against Apple 
  alleging iPod-related hearing loss was thrown out; the Kindle DX is 
  now available outside the United States; and the venerable 
  multimedia project "If Monks Had Macs" can now be downloaded for 
  free. Finally, Chris Pepper offers solutions to the problem of how 
  to download Apple software updates even if you don't have high-speed 
  Internet access all the time. Notable software releases this week 
  include Bonjour Update 2010-001, DocHaven 4.2, Firefox 3.5.7, 
  BusyCal 1.1.2, HoudahSpot 2.6.2, and Corel Painter 11.0.1.42.

Articles
    Mac Documentaries Showing Online and Off
    Quick, Reliable Backups with "Take Control of Easy Mac Backups"
    Kindle DX Goes International
    Apple Wins Appeal Over iPod Hearing Loss Lawsuit
    "If Monks Had Macs" Available for Free
    TidBITS License Plate Photo
    CrashPlan Joins Long-Term TidBITS Sponsors
    How to Schedule Software Update Downloads
    CES 2010: Blending the Future
    CES 2010: More ShowStopping Products
    TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 11 January 2010
    ExtraBITS for 11 January 2010
    Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk for 11 January 2010


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Mac Documentaries Showing Online and Off
----------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10899>

  Looking for some Mac-related movie viewing? Last year's 
  documentaries "MacHEADS" and "Welcome To Macintosh" were both 
  screened at Macworld Expo in January 2009, but, being small 
  independent films, haven't been shown in many theaters. However, if 
  you weren't at Macworld Expo, and haven't had a chance to see them 
  on DVD in the meantime, you're not out of luck. (And yes, I appear 
  in "MacHEADS" a couple of times, with lots of other familiar faces 
  from Macworld Expo).

<http://www.macheadsthemovie.com/>
<http://www.welcometomacintosh.com/>

  "MacHEADS" has aired a few times on CNBC, including repeat showings 
  this past weekend. "Welcome to Macintosh" also ran on CNBC this 
  month.

<http://www.macheadsthemovie.com/blog/?p=197>
<http://www.cnbc.com/id/34465282>

  If you didn't catch the movies on CNBC, SnagFilms, a site dedicated 
  to providing free streaming access to documentaries, now carries 
  both "MacHEADS" and "Welcome to Macintosh," so you can watch them 
  any time you want.

<http://www.snagfilms.com/films/title/macheads/>
<http://www.snagfilms.com/films/title/welcome_to_macintosh/>

  Similarly, the TV site Hulu has "MacHEADS," and Netflix subscribers 
  can also stream "Welcome to Macintosh."

<http://www.hulu.com/watch/94300/macheads>

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Quick, Reliable Backups with "Take Control of Easy Mac Backups"
---------------------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10894>

  To help you start the new year with the warm fuzzy feeling of a 
  solid backup strategy, we've just published "Take Control of Easy 
  Mac Backups," a new ebook from Joe Kissell that's aimed at helping 
  those whose backup strategy is non-existent, inadequate, or 
  confusing. This ebook is for people who want great backups but know 
  they won't spend much time on them. Joe explains just what you need 
  to know (and no more) to make effective backups that go beyond the 
  limited security of flipping the switch in Time Machine's system 
  preference pane. 

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/backup-easy-mac?pt=TB1009>

  This 108-page ebook, which discusses making backups in either Mac OS 
  X 10.6 Snow Leopard or 10.5 Leopard, is a little brother to Joe's 
  196-page "Take Control of Mac OS X Backups." It is also essentially 
  the second edition of the now-discontinued "Take Control of Easy 
  Backups in Leopard." (If you own "Take Control of Easy Backups in 
  Leopard," check your email for a discount offer or - if you 
  purchased after 1 August 2009 - a free update. If you didn't receive 
  an email message, open your ebook to page 1 and click "Check for 
  Updates" or contact us.)

  Joe has been writing about backups for Take Control for years now, 
  and his experience rings true as he walks you through picking out 
  the right hardware and software for your needs and budget, preparing 
  a hard drive for backups, setting up your backup software - he 
  provides specific directions for Time Machine and tips for 
  ChronoSync, CrashPlan, Data Backup, QRecall, and Retrospect - and 
  creating a bootable duplicate. Joe also discusses three strategies 
  for storing an extra backup offsite, and - most important! - he 
  explains how to restore from a backup.

  Common questions answered in the book include: 

* How can I get the maximum benefit from Time Machine? 

* Should I use a Time Capsule, Apple's Wi-Fi router and backup 
  appliance?

* What features should I look for in an external backup drive?

* Should I use an online backup service like Backblaze or CrashPlan?

* Should I use USB or FireWire to connect my backup drive?

* What's a versioned backup, and why should I care?

* Why is having a bootable duplicate important?

* How can I easily and effectively keep an offsite backup?

* Time Machine is acting strangely. What should I do?

* How do I migrate existing backups to a Time Capsule?

* What's the difference between an online sync and a backup?

  The ebook also comes with coupons for 10 percent off on the 
  CrashPlan online backup service and $30 off Data Backup.

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Kindle DX Goes International
----------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10887>

  Reuters is reporting that Amazon is now accepting pre-orders for an 
  international version of the larger-screen Kindle DX, due to ship on 
  19 January 2010 for $489, just 3 months after the  Kindle 2 was made 
  available in other countries. See "Amazon Extends Kindle Beyond 
  United States" (8 October 2009) for more details on Amazon's 
  international approach.

<http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE6050MN20100106>
<http://www.amazon.com/dp/B0015TG12Q/?tag=tidbitselectro00>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10631>

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Apple Wins Appeal Over iPod Hearing Loss Lawsuit
------------------------------------------------
  by Doug McLean <doug_mclean@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10883>

  Over three years ago we covered Apple's unofficial reaction to a 
  pending class-action lawsuit regarding potential hearing damage 
  caused by the iPod (see "iPod Update Offers Maximum Volume Setting," 
  3 April 2006). The case, Birdsong et al. v. Apple Inc., has recently 
  been reviewed by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. 
  The review affirmed an earlier appeal court's 2008 decision to 
  reject the suit and relieve Apple of responsibility for any possible 
  hearing loss caused by using an iPod. 

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8487>

  The plaintiffs, Joseph Birdsong and Bruce Waggoner, had claimed the 
  design of Apple's earbuds - intended to sit deeper in the ear canal 
  than traditional headphones that rest on the outer ear - combined 
  with a lack of volume meters or noise-isolating capabilities, posed 
  serious risks to a user's hearing. The court disagreed, ruling that 
  the plaintiffs failed to show the iPod is dangerous, or that they 
  had endured any serious hearing damage. 

  Judge David Thompson wrote in his opinion, "The plaintiffs do not 
  allege the iPods failed to do anything they were designed to do nor 
  do they allege that they, or any others, have suffered or are 
  substantially certain to suffer inevitable hearing loss or other 
  injury from iPod use... At most, the plaintiffs plead a potential 
  risk of hearing loss not to themselves, but to other unidentified 
  iPod users."

  Birdsong and Waggoner had sought for Apple to provide them with 
  financial compensation, research on hearing damage in iPod users, 
  overall improved safety of the iPod, and redesigned headphones. 

  Apple did in fact respond to the concern back in 2006 by releasing a 
  software update to the iPod that enabled users to set a maximum 
  volume for the device and by publishing a set of guidelines 
  regarding iPods and sound levels. 

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

  In the end, if the music is too loud, just turn it down. 

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"If Monks Had Macs" Available for Free
--------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10896>
  10 comments

  It's always sad when something comes to an end, but thanks to its 
  creator, Brian Thomas, the groundbreaking multimedia project "If 
  Monks Had Macs" that started 21 years ago will live on as a free 
  download. 

  We've written about "If Monks Had Macs" in several of our gift 
  issues in the past; rather than attempt yet another explanation of 
  something that seemingly tries to defy all description, I'll bring 
  forward what we wrote in the past.

  In 2003, Matt Neuburg described "If Monks Had Macs" like this: "I'm 
  not sure whether this counts as software, a game, a multimedia 
  experience, a book, or nostalgia. It's 'If Monks Had Macs,' which 
  started life as a HyperCard stack before I even knew HyperCard 
  existed, turned into a Voyager multimedia CD, and is now available 
  cross-platform, thanks to Runtime Revolution. If Monks (as we like 
  to call it) is impossible to describe. It's a truly visionary 
  hyperlinked collection of books, music, art, games, and activities, 
  plus several applications you can use separately, such as a 
  hyperlinked journal-writer and an ebook text reader that works with 
  Project Gutenberg files and other free online books. It's genuine 
  New Media - a multi-dimensional, quirky vision from the mind of an 
  eclectic thinker. If you've been wondering (and who hasn't?) what 
  Chesterton's Father Brown, Heart of Darkness, Schubert, Thoreau, and 
  the Kennedy assassination have to do with one another, this is your 
  chance to find out. I remember the earliest If Monks incarnations 
  with fondness, so this new version is on my wish list."

  And I wrote in 2004: "A word you seldom see applied to software is 
  'thoughtful,' and in this case, I mean it literally, as in 'full of 
  thought.' But I can think of no better label for Brian Thomas's 'If 
  Monks Had Macs,' an interactive multimedia CD-ROM title that defies 
  prosaic description. It's packed with original texts from the like 
  of Henry David Thoreau and G.K. Chesterton, highly readable essays 
  and critical analyses, a visual exploration of Pieter Bruegel the 
  Elder's Tower of Babel painting, a telling of the story behind an 
  underground newsletter called The White Rose from a student 
  resistance group in Nazi Germany, and far more. A playful 
  sub-current swirls through everything - there's an illustrated 
  medieval text adventure game (you're a monk, needless to say) in 
  which you find cards for a solitaire game. A journaling application 
  helps you record your impressions and musings as you meander through 
  the application's many byways. 'If Monks Had Macs' started out life 
  years ago as a HyperCard stack (now converted to Runtime Revolution, 
  supported by a separate ebook reader), and that retro aesthetic now 
  merely adds to the whimsy."

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-01/Tower-of-Babel-in-Monks.png>

  Brian Thomas isn't just shoveling old software onto the Internet; he 
  has worked to remake the Killing Time game (also available as a free 
  download, and it's only about 10 MB), and has added more recent 
  photos and essays to the main project. But as he told me, he's 
  returning to his roots as a photographer, and is leaving shortly for 
  Cambodia. Before he left, he wanted to make "If Monks Had Macs" 
  available for free download.

  But it's not quite as easy as it seems to distribute a 130 MB disk 
  image, and after some discussion on TidBITS Talk, Brian opted for 
  three disparate methods, all of which are free (to him and to 
  downloaders, which was important), but which all have their 
  limitations. They're outlined below for anyone else who is thinking 
  about distributing a very large file to the public. All three 
  download methods are linked from Brian's Web site.

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

* The first method uses a free Dropbox account, which will likely work 
  well over time, but Dropbox temporarily suspends downloads from 
  accounts that use unusual amounts of bandwidth, and for the moment, 
  the Dropbox links just won't work.

<http://dl.dropbox.com/u/2844786/MonksCD.dmg>

* The second method uses the file distribution service RapidShare, 
  which offers free downloads, but only when their servers are 
  sufficiently available. When I tried to download via RapidShare, I 
  was told their servers were overloaded and was encouraged to pay for 
  a premium account.

<http://rapidshare.com/files/330868981/MonksCD.dmg>

* The third method relies on the most obvious approach - shared 
  bandwidth via BitTorrent - and it worked well for downloading the 
  130 MB disk image. The problem with BitTorrent in the long term is 
  that someone has to continue to seed (make the file available for 
  retrieval) forever. Plus, downloading via BitTorrent requires a 
  BitTorrent client like Transmission, so it's a bit more of a fuss 
  for users. But if BitTorrent absorbs the bandwidth spike in the next 
  few days and weeks, the other methods should work from then on.

<http://rivertext.com/image_at-the-end/Monks_Mac_OS_X.torrent>
<http://www.transmissionbt.com/>

* There is one other approach, which is that if you can get your order 
  in by 18 January 2010, Brian will ship you an "If Monks Had Macs" CD 
  for only $10. He really is leaving the country, so he'll shut down 
  the online ordering once he (or his friends) can no longer fulfill 
  CDs.

<http://store.esellerate.net/s.asp?s=STR1739837108>

  I would strongly encourage people to download a copy of "If Monks 
  Had Macs" via BitTorrent soon, purely to make sure you have a copy 
  while it's definitely still available. And, if you have plenty of 
  bandwidth, leave your BitTorrent client running to seed the file to 
  other people, which will lighten the load for everyone. 

  Kudos to Brian Thomas for refusing to let "If Monks Had Macs" simply 
  fade away, and we wish him the best of luck.

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TidBITS License Plate Photo
---------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10908>
  5 comments

  Thanks to our friend Dave Marra for this photograph, which he took 
  on the road (we're assuming he was a passenger, of course) in 
  Pennsylvania. The question is: is the owner of this Volvo one of our 
  most loyal readers, given the TIDBITS license plate and the Apple 
  sticker, or is this just one heck of a coincidence?

<http://twitter.com/marrathon>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-01/TidBITS-license-plate.jpg>

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CrashPlan Joins Long-Term TidBITS Sponsors
------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10909>

  We're pleased to welcome Code42 Software, makers of the backup 
  software CrashPlan, to the coterie of long-term TidBITS sponsors. 
  Backup software is one of those topics near and dear to our hearts, 
  since a solid backup strategy has prevented us from losing essential 
  data (not to mention untold hours of work) on numerous occasions 
  over the last 20 years.

<http://crashplan.com/ref/tidbits.html>

  What sets CrashPlan apart, and why we're so happy to have Code42 
  Software as a sponsor, is that it not only makes offsite Internet 
  backup possible, it makes it possible for free. The neatest part of 
  the CrashPlan approach is that you can trade hard disks with a 
  friend who also has a high-speed Internet connection and then back 
  up to each other. Despite the massive amount of data most of us have 
  on our hard disks, this works because you can make your initial 
  backup locally (with the hard disk directly connected to your Mac) 
  and then swap with your friend. For all subsequent backups, 
  CrashPlan watches for changed files and transmits only the data that 
  has changed between the current version and the backed-up version, 
  also known as the "diff" or the "delta." Not only that, but the 
  basic CrashPlan software is free for personal use. 

  If you want to use CrashPlan in a commercial setting, or if you want 
  continuous real-time backup (the free version backs up only once per 
  day) and priority customer support, a CrashPlan+ upgrade costs 
  $59.99 per computer. And if you don't have a willing friend with a 
  high-speed connection, you can always pay for the CrashPlan Central 
  Internet backup service - it runs between $3.47 and $4.50 per month 
  for an individual unlimited plan or between $5.33 and $8 per month 
  for an unlimited family plan. Optionally, an additional $124.99 will 
  pay for a 1 TB drive to be shipped to you for your initial seed 
  backup (or restore!).

<http://www.crashplan.com/consumer/features-central.html>
<http://support.crashplan.com/doku.php/feature/seed_service>

  CrashPlan saved our bacon in one extremely unpleasant crash when 
  Time Machine failed, and even better, I've never even noticed 
  CrashPlan working behind the scenes, unlike Time Machine, which is 
  often quite noticeable when it starts scanning. That helps explain 
  why CrashPlan is recommended as part of a good backup strategy in 
  Joe Kissell's "Take Control of Mac OS X Backups" and the 
  just-published "Take Control of Easy Mac Backups." It's also 
  particularly useful for backing up the computers of relatives for 
  whom you provide tech support.

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/backup-macosx?pt=TB1009>
<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/backup-easy-mac?pt=TB1009>

  With this long-term sponsorship, Code42 Software joins a number of 
  other top companies in the Apple industry, including Bare Bones 
  Software (BBEdit and Yojimbo), Fetch Softworks (Fetch), Mark/Space 
  (The Missing Sync, SyncTogether), MacSpeech (MacSpeech Dictate), 
  Microsoft's Macintosh Business Unit (Microsoft Office), and VMware 
  (VMware Fusion). Running a serious Internet publication requires 
  non-trivial expenses for hardware, software, staff salaries, outside 
  development costs, travel, and more, and without the support of our 
  sponsors and direct contributions from readers, we wouldn't be able 
  to continue publishing TidBITS. Thank you, all!

<http://www.barebones.com/>
<http://fetchsoftworks.com/>
<http://www.markspace.com/>
<http://www.macspeech.com/>
<http://www.microsoft.com/mac/>
<http://www.vmware.com/products/fusion/>
<http://www.tidbits.com/about/support/contributors.html>

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How to Schedule Software Update Downloads
-----------------------------------------
  by Chris Pepper <pepper@reppep.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10895>
  7 comments

  After Jeff Carlson's article "Gutenprint Updates Printer Drivers 
  without a Lot of Bandwidth" (2 January 2010), readers suggested a 
  few alternatives to the core problem he ran into: the HughesNet 
  bandwidth cap during all but late-night hours. The solution is 
  obviously to schedule Software Update to download updates only 
  during the few unlimited hours that HughesNet allows during the 
  middle of the night - something that appears impossible using 
  Apple's Software Update preference pane. Here's an overview of 
  possible solutions in case you find yourself in a similar situation.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10875>


**Macworld's Suggestion** -- In an article in Macworld, Chris Breen 
  pointed out that when you click the Check Now button in System 
  Preferences > Software Update, the system automatically schedules 
  future checks to start at that time. So if you click the button at 
  11:10 PM, future automatic checks will also occur at 11:10 PM - 
  assuming the Mac is on and not sleeping.

<http://www.macworld.com/article/139860/2009/04/schedulesoftwareupdate.html>

  To avoid staying up late to retrain Software Update, just reset the 
  time appropriately in the Date & Time preference pane, and then 
  click the Check Now button in the Software Update preference pane, 
  as I've done in the screenshot. When you're done, reselect the "Set 
  date and time automatically" checkbox in Date & Time. Remember that 
  if you ever click Software Update's Check Now button manually at 
  some other time of day in the future, you'll have to repeat these 
  steps to retrain Software Update for its late-night checks.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-01/Software-Update-at-night.png>

  Note that on all current Mac models, the Energy Saver pane in System 
  Preferences includes a Schedule button, which you can click to bring 
  up an interface for configuring the Mac to turn itself on or wake up 
  automatically.


**The Command Line Answer** -- As a Unix user, I'd use Apple's 
  "softwareupdate" command in Terminal to download Apple's updates, 
  and the standard Unix cron tool to schedule when it runs. Every 
  minute the cron program checks a list of scheduled "cron jobs," and 
  executes any that match the current time. Wikipedia has full details 
  about cron, and Apple has several useful manual pages that will help 
  if you want to go this route.

<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cron>
<http://developer.apple.com/mac/library/documentation/Darwin/Reference/ManPages/man5/crontab.5.html>
<http://developer.apple.com/mac/library/documentation/Darwin/Reference/ManPages/man1/crontab.1.html>

  The command

    softwareupdate --download --all

  will download all outstanding updates, but not install them. This is 
  suitable for running nightly at 11:10 PM on a HughesNet connection, 
  as the download should be completed by 4 AM (when HughesNet 
  reactivates bandwidth caps). If the download fails, the Mac will 
  simply try again next time.

  If you're comfortable with Unix, you can simply use "crontab -e" (or 
  "EDITOR=nano crontab -e" if you dislike the default vi editor - 
  personally I use "EDITOR=bbedit"). Then add an entry like this to 
  download any outstanding updates at 11:10 PM daily (and skip sending 
  a status email each time):

    10 23 * * * /usr/sbin/softwareupdate --download --all >> /dev/null

  Each update appears in your default Downloads folder as a folder 
  containing a package and a ".dist" alias. Simply open the folder and 
  double-click the .dist file to run the updater.


**The Manual Option** -- Of course, you can also download updates 
  manually from Apple. A TidBITS reader wrote in to suggest 
  downloading required updates from the Apple Support Downloads page, 
  either with a Web browser or a scheduling downloader such as Speed 
  Download.

<http://support.apple.com/en_US/downloads>
<http://yazsoft.com/products/speed-download/information/>

  This approach is particularly useful if you're caring for multiple 
  Macs, since one installer can be used on all of them - as compared 
  to Software Update, which downloads each updater independently on 
  each Mac.

  Manually downloading updates also makes sense if you have a fast 
  connection (perhaps at work, at a friend's house, at a coffee house, 
  or at a public library; see "Find Free and Inexpensive Wi-Fi," 23 
  December 2009) and can easily burn CDs or DVDs for Macs with slow or 
  limited connectivity.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10872>


**In The End** -- Whether you choose to reschedule Software Update 
  from System Preferences, work through the command line, or install 
  updates manually, download caps imposed by certain service providers 
  needn't prevent you from keeping your Mac healthy and up-to-date.

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CES 2010: Blending the Future
-----------------------------
  by Jeff Porten <jporten@gmail.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10891>
  3 comments

  Here at the Consumer Electronics Show, the most amazing thing I've 
  seen so far is a blender. Don't get me wrong - there are some truly 
  cool technologies on display here, but this was one heck of a 
  blender.

  Tuesday and Wednesday were "press days" at CES, in advance of 
  Thursday's opening of the show floor. If you'll pardon some 
  discussion of inside baseball, it's worth mentioning what happens 
  here during press days. For the rest of the show, 110,000 of us 
  wander among 2,500 exhibitors clamoring for our attention, spread 
  out over several convention halls with a combined square footage 
  roughly the size of Los Angeles. (Perhaps that's a slight 
  exaggeration, but trust me, once you've walked it you'd agree.)

  During press days, however, approximately 70 exhibitors show their 
  wares to members of the press who arrive here early, and who are 
  liberally plied with buffets and open bars the entire time. This 
  intensifies the attention paid to exhibitors who table in the 
  advance space, and certainly affects the mix of coverage you read 
  from the show.

  Which is not to say that we've all been bribed and corrupted by free 
  food and alcohol - certainly, on the freebie spectrum, this doesn't 
  compare to the Google Nexus One phones being handed out to the press 
  at last week's event in California. But it's worth noting that other 
  companies have a much higher bar to hurdle in terms of attracting 
  media attention. I'll note in my coverage which gizmos I'm seeing on 
  the show floor, and which ones are packaged with perks for the 
  scribes.

<http://www.google.com/phone>

  The irony of covering CES is that anyone at home who can stay glued 
  to an RSS reader is going to hear about what's here far faster than 
  I will. So instead of reciting a litany of product announcements, 
  I'll focus on the releases which strike me as truly nifty - even if, 
  in some cases, impractical.

  First up in the nifty category are two handheld projectors that use 
  lasers instead of an ordinary bulb. Laser-projected images remain 
  sharp at any distance, so you just point them at a surface and off 
  you go. 

  The Microvision SHOWWX is a handheld projector, smaller than an 
  iPhone, which was demoed playing video from an iPhone and an iPod 
  nano (it can also connect to a Mac via a VGA adapter). You can make 
  the projected image as small or large as you like by changing the 
  distance to the wall, but at larger sizes the image eventually 
  becomes too dim to see. Microvision claims a maximum size of 200 
  inches (about 16.5 feet, or 5.1 meters) across diagonally; at 12-15 
  inches (30-38 cm) it was perfectly viewable under normal indoor 
  lighting.

<http://www.microvision.com/showwx/>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-01/SHOWWX-projector.jpg>

  Even more jaw-dropping was the Light Blue Optics Light Touch, which 
  projects a 10-inch (25 cm) display on any flat surface, _and_ turns 
  it into a touchscreen. Mount the Light Touch on any wall or table, 
  and it becomes a Microsoft Surface that you could actually use. 
  Light Blue Optics envisions this as being the infrastructure for 
  interactive store displays and bar games; honestly, I'm skeptical on 
  exactly how this technology will take over the market from 
  established touchscreen technology, but I'd like to see it succeed 
  purely to reward the innovation that went into it. [Editor's Note: 
  Also very cool is the company's Light Speed product, which projects 
  useful information on a car's windshield to help the driver focus on 
  the road. -Adam]

<http://lightblueoptics.com/products/light-touch/>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-01/LightTouch-touchscreen-projector.jpg>
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microsoft_surface>
<http://lightblueoptics.com/products/light-speed/>

  Outside of the projector category is the equally innovative, 
  Datawind Ubisurfer, though it might not appear so at first glance. 
  It appears to be a small, cheap netbook running Linux. The 
  innovation is in the pricing plan; in the UK, £159 buys you both 
  the hardware and 30 hours a month of included GPRS surfing over a 
  cellular network with no additional fees. It's like a Kindle for the 
  entire Internet. Hardware compression makes the older GPRS wireless 
  technology seem much faster; it didn't feel like 3G, but it wasn't 
  unbearably pokey either. Datawind is looking for a U.S. partner to 
  sell the Ubisurfer with the same pricing model to us Yanks.

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

  A few tables over, Compulab was demoing their fit-PC2. This computer 
  caught my eye because it makes a Mac mini look like it needs to sign 
  up for Weight Watchers. At 4 by 4.5 by 1 inches (10.1 by 11.4 by 2.5 
  cm), the fit-PC2 is smaller than my 4-port Ethernet router. Despite 
  the size, one model comes with 2 USB ports, 2 gigabit Ethernet 
  ports, and DVI video out (watch the unboxing video for a sense of 
  just how small it is). Plus there's a whole computer and hard drive 
  inside, and it runs on a meager 7 watts of power. Specs vary by 
  model. I'll be curious to see if this device joins the Hackintosh 
  community.

<http://www.fit-pc.com/>
<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=epWpPMS2bKo>

  Winning the "most insane technology" award by a country mile was the 
  Parrot AR Drone, largely because it actually can fly a country mile. 
  It's a toy hovercraft, controlled by an iPhone or iPod touch over 
  Wi-Fi; an onboard camera sends back a live image of whatever it sees 
  to your iPhone (you have to watch this video to believe it). Ramping 
  up the insanity level, Parrot released an API so third-party 
  developers can create augmented reality games: fly your Parrot 
  through a park, and you can theoretically shoot stormtroopers out of 
  the trees like Han Solo in "Return of the Jedi." The AR Drone is 
  scheduled for release at the end of 2010; pricing is not yet 
  determined. Buy this gizmo quickly after it comes out, because I 
  predict that after one whacks a toddler in the back of the head 
  it'll be off the market faster than lawn darts. And I'm sure the 
  ACLU will be just thrilled at the thought of remote-controlled 
  hovering cameras.

<http://www.parrot.com/parrot-ar-drone/en>
<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V3KrFV0-WFw>

  Finally, we come to the blender. It was a perfectly ordinary 
  blender, sitting on a black box. It whirred like all blenders do. 
  Then I noticed that _there were no wires_ attached to the blender. 
  It ran, like the toaster that sat next to it, on inductive power. 
  There have been inductive power pads around for a while for charging 
  low-power devices like cell phones, but blenders and toasters are 
  orders of magnitude more thirsty for electricity.

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

  The magic in the black box comes courtesy of Fulton Innovation's 
  eCoupled technology, which uses magnetic induction to create a 
  current in receiving devices. eCoupled electronics communicate with 
  the black box to tell it how much power it needs. Electronic devices 
  within range of the box which do not communicate with it are somehow 
  left out of the induction field. When I expressed concern that other 
  devices would burst into flames while the wireless power was active, 
  the presenter turned on the blender, put his cell phone down next to 
  it, and offered to let me make a call.

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

  I can't say that I have an engineer's understanding of electricity, 
  but I was under the impression that magnetic induction is an 
  all-or-nothing sort of thing. Fulton has apparently managed to 
  create a power supply which can feed kilowatts to intelligent 
  devices, without affecting other electronics within range. I think 
  he probably could have cloned a cat, à la Nikola Tesla in "The 
  Prestige," and I wouldn't have been any more surprised by the demo.

  Common implementation of ubiquitous wireless power would completely 
  change our relationship with technology. Picture a laptop with a 
  battery that never runs down, because it's constantly being charged. 
  There isn't a single electrical device that couldn't benefit from 
  this technology, and many would be transformed by it.

  I can't say whether Fulton will be the company that succeeds in 
  bringing inductive charging to the mass market, but it was 
  immediately clear to me that this technology is the future. 

  And that's why we come to CES.

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10891#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/10891>


CES 2010: More ShowStopping Products
------------------------------------
  by Jeff Porten <jporten@gmail.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10901>

  Internet troubles delayed my arrival on the CES show floor (see "CES 
  2010: Living in the Past," 8 January 2010), so this second roundup 
  comes from another one of the "wine and dine the media" events, this 
  time organized by ShowStoppers. These guys aren't affiliated with 
  CES (they have an event coming up at Macworld 2010), but another 100 
  or so of the CES exhibitors showed up here to take advantage of the 
  favorable exhibitor-to-press ratio that I mentioned in "CES 2010: 
  Blending the Future" (7 January 2010).

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10892>
<http://www.showstoppers.com/?page_id=226>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10891>

  Not all of the gadgets on display at ShowStoppers are new; much of 
  what I saw was announced in the past two or three months. There was 
  even a booth by MagicJack, the people who sell ridiculously cheap 
  VoIP phone service on infomercials at 2 AM. "What could be less 
  newsworthy than that?", I thought as I planned to open this article 
  with an amusing comment at their expense.

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

  So I have a bit of egg on my face from seeing their announcement 
  that they _are_ making news: they have a new product that 
  communicates with your GSM cell phone (i.e., anything from AT&T or 
  T-Mobile) and gives you unlimited talk time while you're within 
  range of your MagicJack home device. Your calls are routed through 
  the MagicJack, so your cell minute bucket is never touched. The 
  interesting bit: your cell phone uses licensed radio spectrum, and 
  unlicensed companies aren't allowed to use it. MagicJack claims it's 
  legal for them to use licensed spectrum within a private residence; 
  the cell phone companies beg to differ, and that cocking sound you 
  just heard was 1,000 lawyers arming for battle. We'll see what 
  happens.

  The jaw-dropping demo of the night award goes to Shapeways, a 3D 
  printing service based in the Netherlands. Shapeways allows you to 
  create a 3D model of pretty much anything you like and upload it to 
  their service, at which point they'll make it real in one of nine 
  materials, including metal, sandstone, and plastics. Or you can 
  customize existing models with your own designs or color imprints. 
  The range of items on display was impressive: vases made of custom 
  text spiraling to the base, bizarre metal creatures, and picture 
  frames of all descriptions. Shapeways pricing varies by model; 
  they'll ship it to you free. They also run a store where you can buy 
  3D objects modeled by others. 

<http://www.shapeways.com/>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-01/Shapeways-alien-model.jpg>

  [Editor's Note: If you're intrigued by the promise of 3D printers, 
  you must read Cory Doctorow's latest novel, "Makers," which, thanks 
  to Creative Commons licensing, can be downloaded and read for free; 
  there's even a neat iPhone/iPod touch-specific site for it at 
  wayner.org. -Adam]

<http://craphound.com/makers/>
<http://craphound.com/makers/download/>
<http://www.wayner.org/node/66>

  Plastic Logic was demoing their QUE ProReader: think Kindle with a 
  nearly 11-inch diagonal display. The QUE impressed me with its 
  lightweight all-plastic construction; Plastic Logic says that it's 
  almost unbreakable, unlike the glass screens used in other ebook 
  readers. The top-of-line model ships with 8 GB of memory, Wi-Fi, and 
  AT&T 3G service included in the price tag. It's pronounced "Q", but 
  you might be saying "¿Que?" after you hear that it will set you 
  back $799.

<http://www.que.com/>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-01/QUE-ProReader.png>

  If you have a teenager who has just started driving, two things are 
  certain: you fear for his safety, and you could use a good 
  passive-aggressive method of ruining his life for all the heartache 
  he's putting you through. Kill two birds with one stone with the 
  $299 Tiwi, which monitors his driving behavior and provides him with 
  voice alerts telling him when he's speeding, driving aggressively, 
  or generally allowing his hormones to steer. You get SMS alerts and 
  other updates. The best part: there's a grace period of allowable 
  bad behavior before it is reported to the parents. I'm impressed by 
  any technology which essentially says, "We know you're going to game 
  us, kid, so here's _exactly_ how much you can get away with."

<http://www.tiwi.com/family/>

  I'm shopping around for a new Twitter client while I'm here at CES, 
  and thanks to an effusive fan at the Seesmic Desktop booth, I'm 
  giving it a try. I was chatting with their Community Evangelist 
  trying to figure out what differentiated Seesmic from 1,000 other 
  Twitter clients, when a random marketing guy walked up to the CEO 
  and said, "Man, your software changed my life." (Later, to me: 
  "Really, I'm not a shill. I normally don't talk this way about 
  products I'm not pitching.") Seesmic runs on Macs as an Adobe AIR 
  application, but aside from some bizarro fonts, it looks more 
  Mac-like than most AIR apps.

<http://www.seesmic.com/>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-01/Seesmic-Desktop.png>

  I was impressed by the user interface on the L5 Remote, a hardware 
  dongle that adds an infrared remote to your iPhone or iPod touch. 
  You train it much like any other universal remote you'd buy in the 
  store, but then you drag only the buttons you actually use for that 
  remote onto a customized display. Remote interfaces are chosen from 
  a menu, which itself hangs off a menu of rooms in your house, 
  providing an intuitive way of getting to exactly the gadget 
  interface you need. The L5 remote costs $50, and is due out in 
  February 2010.

<http://www.l5remote.com/>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-01/L5-remote.jpg>

  On the other hand, if you prefer using your iPhone as your 
  entertainment device, you might want to check out Slacker Radio, 
  whose booth guy introduced the company to me by saying, "You know 
  Pandora? Well, we compete with them." Okay, then. Slacker adds a 
  nice feature: they're licensed to buffer your radio station in 
  advance on your iPhone or iPod touch, so you can listen to it even 
  when you're not connected to the Internet via cellular or Wi-Fi.

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

  I'd be tempted to listen to Slacker on JayBird's BlueBuds 
  headphones, which are exactly what they say they are: Bluetooth 
  earbuds on a head-sized wire connecting your ears (described only in 
  this PDF catalog for the moment). The earbud attachment bends around 
  your ear for a firm fit, and there's no wire dangling from your ears 
  to your iPod. BlueBuds will be available in April 2010 for $129; if 
  your iPod nano or touch isn't rocking Bluetooth yet, JayBird will 
  have a $69 adapter available in February 2010.

<http://www.jaybirdgear.com/>
<http://www.jaybirdgear.com/pdf/2010-JayBird-Catalog-20100102.pdf>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-01/Jaybird-BlueBuds.jpg>

  Falling on the line between cool and creepy (but leaning heavily 
  into creepy) is Intelius DateCheck for iPhone. With the charming tag 
  line of "lookup before you hookup," DateCheck gives you an 
  all-in-one interface to run a background check on a random stranger 
  you meet at a bar or online (once you've gotten to the real name 
  swapping stage). I agreed to let them run it on me; DateCheck says 
  I'm 46, and live with my parents and an aunt. I'm younger, my 
  parents are dead, the aunt doesn't exist, and I haven't lived at 
  that address since the Reagan administration. But at least now I 
  know, when I see my date pull out her iPhone, I'm probably toast.

<http://www.intelius.com/mobile>

  Last, and definitely least, falling squarely into the cruel joke 
  category for longtime Apple fans, I was attracted to a company named 
  Newton Peripherals. Unfortunately, instead of a memory card adapter 
  that would allow me to run Google's Chrome OS on my Newton 
  MessagePad 120, I found that they had only Bluetooth peripherals for 
  BlackBerrys. Feh.

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

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10901#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/10901>


TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 11 January 2010
---------------------------------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10903>

**Bonjour Update 2010-001** -- Apple has quietly released Bonjour 
  Update 2010-001 via Software Update, saying only that "This update 
  improves the reliability of connections between iTunes and Apple 
  TV." Previously known as Rendezvous, Bonjour is Apple's 
  implementation of the Zeroconf protocol for discovering network 
  services. Oddly, Bonjour Update 2010-001 hasn't yet appeared on the 
  Apple Support Downloads page. (Free, 959K)

  Read/post comments about Bonjour Update 2010-001.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10905#comments>


**DocHaven 4.2** -- Some time has elapsed since our last check-in with 
  Holy Mackerel Software's cross-platform document management software 
  DocHaven, but the program is still going strong, having recently 
  received a significant update. Version 4.2 lets users compress files 
  into Zip archives, add User or Client photos, and provide distinct 
  item descriptions for each Group, and it extends support for Ubuntu 
  9. Also, each Group now has a designated Administrator, a View 
  option has been added to the Find menu, and the Transfer window now 
  displays the estimated time remaining on the current transfer. The 
  latest version requires you are running Mac OS X 10.5 or later. Full 
  release notes are available on the Holy Mackerel Software Web site. 
  ($40 per user new, free update, 18.3 MB)

<http://www.holymackerelsoftware.com/DocHaven/DocHaven.html>
<http://www.holymackerelsoftware.com/OfficeHaven/History.html>

  Read/post comments about DocHaven 4.2.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10900#comments>


**Firefox 3.5.7** -- In a classic example of why we maintain the 
  Watchlist, Firefox 3.5.7 from Mozilla fixes a bug that could cause 
  users to miss notification of major updates to the popular Web 
  browser. The update also fixes an obscure DNS resolution problem 
  and, only for Windows users, a crash-inducing bug. (Free, 17.6 MB)

<http://www.mozilla.com/firefox>

  Read/post comments about Firefox 3.5.7.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10898#comments>


**BusyCal 1.1.2** -- Those with long-standing birthday events in 
  BusyMac's BusyCal will appreciate version 1.1.2, which now 
  calculates birthdays before 1940 correctly when running in 32-bit 
  mode. That's obscure, as is changing the Decade date range in List 
  View to 2001-2010, but more welcome are fixes for crashing bugs that 
  could bite when resizing events in the Week view, if an edit and 
  conflict occurred at the same time, and if a calendar didn't have a 
  name. Also improved is BusyCal's handling of deleted Google calendar 
  feeds.

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

  This release appeared shortly after BusyCal 1.1.1, which addressed a 
  number of issues with Google sync, including a "could not delete 
  entry" error, an error that caused calendars to be orphaned, and an 
  error that caused calendar titles to be displayed as UIDs. Also, 
  several other bugs have been fixed, including two that caused 
  crashes, one related to corrupted fonts, and one related to undoing 
  stacks. Bonjour and Google network efficiency has also been 
  improved. A full list of changes is available on BusyMac's Web site. 
  ($40 new, free update, 6 MB)

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

  Read/post comments about BusyCal 1.1.2.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10897#comments>


**HoudahSpot 2.6.2** -- Houdah Software has released a maintenance 
  update to HoudahSpot, the file search tool that provides an 
  alternate front end to Spotlight. Version 2.6.2 comes on the heels 
  of the more major 2.6 release which included new Add Group toolbar 
  items, Search Location service, the capability to narrow the search 
  scope, adjustable icon sizing in grid view, available contextual 
  menus in grid view, and improved integration with Mac OS X Services. 
  The latest version refreshes the Help book, simplifies the display 
  of file sizes, and fixes bugs related to column width. Full release 
  notes are available on Houdah Software's Web site. ($30 new, free 
  update, 2.3 MB)

<http://www.houdah.com/houdahSpot/>
<http://www.houdah.com/houdahSpot/release.php>

  Read/post comments about HoudahSpot 2.6.2.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10889#comments>


**Corel Painter 11.0.1.42** -- Corel has released a maintenance update 
  to its professional painting and illustration software Corel Painter 
  11. Changes include improved on-screen transformations when using 
  the transformation tool, better transformation rendering during 
  application, enhanced copy and paste capabilities, consistent sizing 
  when switching between the eraser and brush tools, and more accurate 
  color management when working on a second monitor. Also, color 
  profiles will now be maintained in clones and user-saved profiles in 
  the user folder, CPU load is less during idle times, and the 
  smart-stroke autopainting system has been enhanced. A full list of 
  changes is available on Corel's Web site. ($369 new, $169 upgrade 
  from earlier versions of Corel Painter, free update, 103 MB)

<http://www.corel.com/painter>
<http://www.corel.com/content/painter11/sp1/EN.htm>

  Read/post comments about Corel Painter 11.0.1.42.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10886#comments>



ExtraBITS for 11 January 2010
-----------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10902>

  Along with a pair of interviews - Adam on the OWC Radio podcast and 
  Joe Kissell talking about right-clicking on Tech Night Owl Live - we 
  found ourselves reading about a neat way to make it more likely that 
  a kind soul will return a lost camera, looking at magazine covers of 
  Steve Jobs over the years, noticing that you can now play samples of 
  iTunes Store tracks via the iTunes Preview Web site, and learning 
  that Apple has just purchased a mobile advertising firm.


**Clever Way to Recover a Lost Camera** -- Thanks to Photojojo for 
  turning us on to Andrew McDonald's amusing pictorial guide to how 
  you can increase the likelihood of recovering a lost camera. The 
  approach? Take a series of funny photos asking for your camera back, 
  making sure to include your email address, and then protect them 
  against deletion (most cameras offer this feature) from the media 
  card.

<http://www.andrewmcdonald.net.au/a-pictorial-guide-to-avoiding-camera-loss/>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10907#comments>


**Right-Clicking Revisited** -- Joe Kissell joins Gene Steinberg on an 
  episode of Tech Night Owl Live to discuss, among other things, Joe's 
  article about using and referring to the second button on a mouse, 
  and the considerable (and widely varied) feedback that article has 
  received.

<http://www.technightowl.com/radio/podcast/now-playing-january-7-2010-joe-kissell-paul-kent-and-rob-griffiths/>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10893#comments>


**Steve Jobs Magazine Covers Through the Ages** -- Kuo Design has 
  compiled a hefty collection of magazine covers featuring Steve Jobs. 
  The 87 covers span 28 years, from 1981 to 2009, and take you on a 
  stroll through Jobs's many professional ups and downs - as well as 
  some of his fashion hits and misses!

<http://www.kuodesign.com/pineapple/coverme/>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10884#comments>


**Apple Adds Samples to iTunes Preview Site** -- Apple has enabled 
  Web-based samples of music available in the iTunes Store via the 
  iTunes Preview Web site - prior to this, sample music was limited to 
  iTunes itself. Nevertheless, it seems that the overall goal is to 
  increase iTunes music discovery via Web search engines, all of which 
  are now indexing the iTunes Preview Web site. Despite the fact that 
  you can play samples in your browser, the iTunes Preview site pushes 
  you to iTunes whenever possible.

<http://www.apple.com/itunes/charts/songs/>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10890#comments>


**Adam Interviewed on OWC Radio** -- The Mac world has another podcast 
  - OWC Radio, from hardware retailer Other World Computing. Hosted by 
  Tim Robertson, founder of MyMac.com, the interview was a relaxed 
  conversation that included some stories from the early history of 
  TidBITS and Take Control, what's going on with Macworld Expo this 
  year, and Tim's probing questions into Adam's opinions on desktops 
  vs. laptops, Safari vs. Firefox, and... coffee vs. tea?

<http://blog.macsales.com/3602-owc-radio-interviews-tidbits-founder-adam-engst>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10888#comments>


**Apple Acquires Mobile Ad Firm Quattro Wireless** -- After reportedly 
  losing out to Google in an attempt to purchase mobile advertising 
  firm AdMob, Apple has now picked up AdMob competitor Quattro 
  Wireless. Advertising has never been part of Apple's business model, 
  but it seems that might be changing in the not-too-distant future.

<http://www.quattrowireless.com/mobile_insight/blog/happy_new_year_from_quattro_wireless/>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10873#comments>



Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk for 11 January 2010
----------------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10904>

  In this week's discussions, readers seek help with exporting movies 
  from iMovie, transferring all of one's data to a new Mac, and 
  hosting BitTorrent seeds of the venerable (and now free) "If Monks 
  had Macs" project. Also this week, is it acceptable to say 
  "right-click" when referring to the action that displays a 
  contextual menu, and what could be the cause of poor iPhone 
  reception in northern Virginia?


**Request Help: iMovie HD and 08 Export Problem** -- iMovie projects 
  in two different versions of the video editor are crashing on export 
  and reporting odd file sizes. (2 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/3018>


**Cloning a Mac?** When moving from a PowerPC Mac to an Intel-based 
  model, does Migration Assistant do a clean job, or are there other 
  ways to transfer one's data? (12 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/3019>


**Clicking the Right Button** -- Readers discuss the use of 
  "right-click" to describe the action that displays a contextual menu 
  on the Mac. (16 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/3020>


**If Monks had Macs FREE CD-ROM torrent SEEDers wanted** -- Now that 
  "If Monks had Macs" is becoming freely available, the developer is 
  looking for sources to host the BitTorrent download version. (9 
  messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/3023>


**iPhone in Northern VA?** A reader reports poor phone coverage with 
  new iPhones; is the problem AT&T, the location, or something else? 
  (5 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/3024>



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