TidBITS#1010/18-Jan-2010
========================
  Issue link: <http://db.tidbits.com/issue/1010>

  We didn't have anything to add to the news of Google deciding not to 
  censor search results in China last week, but practical aspects of 
  using Google do feature in this week's issue, thanks to the 
  announcements that Gmail now defaults to encrypted sessions and 
  Google Docs will be adding the capability to store any file type. 
  Glenn Fleishman also passes on the news of Citrix shipping a version 
  of the GoToMyPC remote control software for the Mac, we announce the 
  release of "Take Control of Running Windows on a Mac, Fourth 
  Edition," and Adam both shares the news of Apple's upcoming media 
  event (Tablet? What tablet?) and unravels the mystery of why 
  connecting an iPod touch to a Mac would launch iPhoto. Doug McLean 
  runs down how the technology world is helping the relief efforts 
  following Haiti's devastating earthquake, and guest contributor 
  Steve McCabe debuts in TidBITS with an enjoyable look at how 
  unlimited Internet access isn't a basic right, especially in New 
  Zealand. Notable software releases this week include Logic Pro 9.1, 
  Main Stage 2.1, Radioshift 1.5.2, Apple Remote Desktop 3.3.2, and 
  Typinator 3.7.

Articles
    Apple Confirms January 27th Media Event
    Tech-Based Help for Haiti
    Google's Gmail Defaults to Encrypted Sessions
    Google Docs Now Stores All File Types
    Citrix Ships Mac Version of GoToMyPC Remote Control Software
    New Ebook Offers Up-to-Date Details about Running Windows on a Mac
    Prevent the iPod touch from Launching iPhoto
    Paying by the Bit: Internet Access in New Zealand
    ExtraBITS for 18 January 2010
    TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 18 January 2010
    Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk for 18 January 2010


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Apple Confirms January 27th Media Event
---------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10927>
  6 comments

  Apple has confirmed a rumored media event scheduled for Wednesday, 
  27 January 2010, at the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts in San 
  Francisco by sending email invitations to media outlets, including 
  TidBITS. As usual, the invitation gives no details as to what will 
  be announced, merely providing the time, place, and directions along 
  with the phrase, "Come see our latest creation" under a 
  paint-splattered graphic.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-01/Apple-invite.jpg>

  Most people we've spoken with expect Apple to announce some sort of 
  tablet-sized device, though speculation has run so rampant that it's 
  impossible to say anything more than that with any confidence. But 
  Apple has surprised in the past, and it could happen again, with 
  something entirely unexpected.

  Needless to say, the timing of this announcement is either ironic, 
  coming as it does between the time when Macworld Expo was 
  traditionally held in early January and the new date in 
  mid-February, or intentionally scheduled to emphasize the level to 
  which Apple can manufacture its own media attention rather than 
  piggybacking on a large trade show.

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10927#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/10927>


Tech-Based Help for Haiti
-------------------------
  by Doug McLean <doug_mclean@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10915>
  1 comment

  It's difficult to wrap one's mind around the horrific damage caused 
  by Haiti's recent earthquake, and it's a challenge compounded by the 
  fact that most of us consume news of the destruction thousands of 
  miles away, in the comfort and safety of our homes and workplaces. 
  But that distance needn't render us passive or apathetic, with the 
  networked world making it easier than ever to become active 
  participants in supporting rescue efforts. Here are a few of the 
  more prominent ways we've found to help out.


**AT&T** -- AT&T cell phone users - including nearly all U.S. iPhone 
  users - can make $10 donations to the Red Cross International Relief 
  Fund simply by sending a text message. To donate, text the word 
  "HAITI" to the number 90999, and respond with the word "Yes" to the 
  confirmation message to finalize your donation. 

  As of the writing of this article, this method has raised more than 
  $10 million. Jenifer Snyder, director of the mGive Foundation (the 
  company working with Red Cross and AT&T to route the donations), 
  says, "It's the largest mobile donation event that we have ever 
  seen." And no, mGive isn't taking a cut; 100 percent of all 
  donations is passed on to the Red Cross. Just think of the relief 
  funds that would be generated if every iPhone user participated. 

<http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/att-supports-text-messaging-donations-to-aid-haiti-quake-victims-81348902.html>
<http://www.mgive.com/>

  Sprint, T-Mobile, and Verizon also support the text donation 
  campaign (and donations from their customers are included in that 
  $10 million number), so you can still get involved even if you 
  aren't an AT&T customer (use the same approach, sending "HAITI" to 
  90999).


**Yele Haiti Foundation** -- In 2005 the musician Wyclef Jean, himself 
  born in Haiti, created the Yele Haiti Foundation to provide student 
  scholarships. In response to the earthquake, the foundation has set 
  up a text-message donation program similar to the one run by the Red 
  Cross. To make a $5 donation, text the word "Yele" to 501501. Yele 
  Haiti also provides an online donations page for those wishing to 
  make larger contributions.

<http://www.yele.org/>
<https://co.clickandpledge.com/advanced/default.aspx?wid=23093>


**Doctors Without Borders** -- Directing all donations to 
  "support[ing] emergency medical care for the men, women, and 
  children affected by the earthquake in Haiti," Doctors Without 
  Borders has an easy online donation page accepting amounts between 
  $35 and $10,000.

<https://donate.doctorswithoutborders.org/SSLPage.aspx?pid=197&hbc=1&source=ADR1001E1D01>


**Amazon** -- Amazon, working with Mercy Corps, has set up an easy 
  donation page on its site. Donations will help provide the most 
  basic necessities needed on the ground now: "The greatest priority 
  for Mercy Corps and its humanitarian partners is providing survivors 
  with food, shelter and other supplies." Donations over $250 will be 
  provided with a receipt for deducting the donation on your taxes.

<http://www.mercycorps.org/>
<http://www.amazon.com/b/ref=haitirelief_tw?node=1297795011>


**Google** -- In the wake of this disaster many news organizations 
  have developed people-finder systems, enabling those with loved ones 
  in Haiti to find information, and giving those with information 
  about individuals a means of distributing it. Despite the best of 
  intentions on the part of these organizations, the proliferation of 
  these sites is actually making it more difficult to find or release 
  information. Since the sites aren't connected in any way, if you're 
  looking for information on a contact in Haiti you'd have to check 
  numerous systems - and even doing so wouldn't guarantee that you had 
  tried all possible avenues. 

  A team of engineers at Google, working under the project name Google 
  Crisis Response, is attempting to address this problem by collecting 
  and connecting all the available information on persons in Haiti in 
  an embedded Web app. The streamlined page invites you to either 
  provide or inquire about information on a specific individual. 
  Hopefully, as other IT groups and news organizations add to the data 
  set, the Google app will become a centralized clearinghouse for 
  information and simplify a particularly difficult aspect of the 
  search and rescue process.

<http://haiticrisis.appspot.com/>

  Google has also created a great one-stop donations and information 
  page for those interested in assisting earthquake relief efforts. 
  The page enables users to make easy donations to UNICEF and Care 
  (via Google Checkout), provides information regarding the 
  text-message donation plans, and links to a slew of other aid 
  organizations that are also accepting donations.

<http://www.google.com/relief/haitiearthquake/>
<https://secure.unicefusa.org/site/Donation2?df_id=6680&6680.donation=form1>
<https://my.care.org/site/Donation2?5000.donation=form1&df_id=5000>


**iTunes** -- While Apple hasn't, as far as we're aware, made a 
  donation itself to relief efforts in Haiti, the company has gotten 
  involved by creating a page in the iTunes Store where users can 
  contribute (in amounts ranging from $5 to $200) to the American Red 
  Cross. As one would expect, Apple takes no commission on the 
  donations, so the entire amount goes straight to relief efforts. 

<https://buy.itunes.apple.com/WebObjects/MZFinance.woa/wa/buyCharityGiftWizard>


**Mac Developers** -- Through the end of January 2010, Mike 
  Piatek-Jimenez, the developer behind Gaucho Software, is donating 
  100 percent of sales of Seasonality (an excellent weather 
  application) to Haiti relief efforts. Purchasing a copy of the 
  program means you'll essentially be donating to the aid organization 
  Partners In Health.

<http://www.gauchosoft.com/Software/Seasonality/>
<http://www.standwithhaiti.org/haiti>

  Inspired by such Gaucho Software's actions, Justin Williams of 
  Second Gear Software is coordinating a day of indie Mac developer 
  sales devoted to support relief efforts. With the sale tentatively 
  scheduled for 20 January 2010, Williams hopes to offer companies a 
  financially feasible way of participating in sales donations, and to 
  give Mac consumers an event that makes donating a no-brainer. If 
  you're interested, more information about how to participate is 
  available on Williams's blog. A placeholder Web site has been set up 
  until the companies and sale date are finalized.

<http://www.secondgearsoftware.com/>
<http://carpeaqua.com/2010/01/14/a-days-sales-for-haiti/>
<http://www.indierelief.com/>


**Thanks, and Beware** -- As our thoughts go out to the millions of 
  people affected by this devastating natural disaster, we encourage 
  you to considering donating to one of these relief funds, and to 
  spread the word to others about how they can help. Also, sad as it 
  is, scammers do take advantage of such waves of charity, so avoid 
  following donation links received in email, read URLs carefully, and 
  be careful if donating through unfamiliar organizations.

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10915#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/10915>


Google's Gmail Defaults to Encrypted Sessions
---------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10911>

  Google has announced that all Gmail sessions are now secured using 
  SSL/TLS by default, rather than as a choice each individual user had 
  to make in configuration settings. The previous default setting 
  encrypted user logins to Gmail - as Google secures all logins - but 
  left the content of sessions in the clear. The default encryption 
  may be manually disabled.

<http://gmailblog.blogspot.com/2010/01/default-https-access-for-gmail.html>
<https://mail.google.com/>

  Problems with offering in-the-clear webmail sessions were clear 
  years ago, because your messages could be intercepted on public 
  networks, such as Wi-Fi hotspots. The ante was raised in 2007, 
  however, when a security researcher showed that the token that 
  Google placed in a browser cookie to identify the user after login 
  could be "sidejacked": intercepted by a local user, and used to take 
  over a Gmail session. (See "Sidejack Attack Jimmies Open Gmail, 
  Other Services," 27 August 2007.)

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9129>

  There was a workaround to use SSL at that time, where you could 
  enter a different URL, but Google didn't expose this option, and 
  average users would have been unaware of the consequences. In 
  mid-2008, Google added an option to use SSL/TLS as the default, but 
  each user had to make this setting change to activate it. (See 
  "Google Gmail Adds Secure Session Option," 28 July 2008.)

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9710>

  Finally, in mid-2009, many prominent security experts asked Google 
  in an open letter to secure all sessions for Web applications to 
  avoid sidejacking, interception, and other issues that could allow 
  identity theft and access to private information. (See "Security 
  Experts Urge Google to Secure All Sessions," 19 June 2009.)

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10364>

  Google said then that it was concerned about latency (the delay in 
  handshaking of transactions before data is actually sent) and 
  additional overhead for people who don't have broadband. Apparently, 
  Google has now tweaked its system to balance the need for speed for 
  some users with security for all.

  ----
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Google Docs Now Stores All File Types
-------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10910>

  Google has announced that Google Docs, which could formerly store 
  only online versions of its own word processing, spreadsheet, and 
  presentation documents, will be gaining the capability to store any 
  type of file that you can upload from your computer. Google is 
  rolling this feature out over the next few weeks; look for a 
  notification in the Google Docs header when it's available for your 
  account.

<http://docs.google.com/>
<http://googledocs.blogspot.com/2010/01/upload-and-store-your-files-in-cloud.html>

  Files can be up to 250 MB in size, and Google provides 1 GB of 
  storage space for free. The 1 GB of storage is consumed only by 
  files that are not converted to be native Google Docs files. You can 
  purchase more Google storage for $0.25 per 1 GB per year; the 
  smallest amount you can buy is 20 GB for $5 per year. That 
  additional storage is shared among Google Docs, Gmail, and Picasa.

<https://www.google.com/accounts/purchasestorage>

  When used with the relatively new shared folders feature of Google 
  Docs (see "Google Docs Adds Shared Folders for Easier 
  Collaboration," 13 October 2009), uploaded files can be shared with 
  collaborators. Until the feature is enabled for my account, I can't 
  tell if that sharing goes beyond simple downloading to a group, or 
  if it's possible to make files available to the public as well.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10646>

  Google does say that if there's excessive bandwidth use, they may 
  limit access for a period of time, much as does Dropbox. 

  Speaking of Dropbox, although this new capability of Google Docs is 
  welcome, it's not nearly as interesting as Dropbox, which 
  synchronizes files between computers in near-time, provides online 
  backup and versioning, offers an iPhone client, and makes it easy to 
  email links to large files. Now if only Dropbox would add the 
  capability to share any folder, rather than only folders within the 
  special Dropbox folder.

<https://www.getdropbox.com/referrals/NTU3NDMzNjk>

  ----
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Citrix Ships Mac Version of GoToMyPC Remote Control Software
------------------------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10913>
  1 comment

  Citrix has extended its GoToMyPC software to offer Mac OS X support. 
  Macs can now control other computers running any supported operating 
  system - which includes various Windows, Unix, and Linux flavors - 
  and those platforms can now access Macs as well. The software costs 
  $19.95 per month or $179.40 per year for each computer on which it's 
  installed, with discounts for two or more computers under a single 
  license. A Web browser and a downloadable plug-in are required for 
  remote access.

<https://www.gotomypc.com/tr/affil/2009_Q4/Globe_600X554/g25af_stnddLMlp?target=mm/g25af_stnddLMlp.tmpl&AID=10284348&PID=1989299>

  GoToMyPC joins several existing services and software offerings for 
  remote screen control. It enables a computer that has a private 
  network address - one that's assigned via network address 
  translation, typically - to be reachable from elsewhere on the 
  Internet. Along with remote control, GoToMyPC lets you hear audio 
  played from a remote computer on the machine that's controlling it, 
  as well as print from a remote computer to a local printer.

  The closest competitor is LogMeIn, which offers a free flavor for 
  Mac users that includes just screen sharing; a Pro version with a 
  monthly fee has long been available for Windows and is in beta 
  testing for the Mac (see "LogMeIn for Mac Released," 4 December 
  2007). While GoToMyPC has mobile software, it does not yet offer an 
  iPhone client, while LogMeIn offers Ignition (see "LogMeIn's 
  Ignition for iPhone Provides Sleek Remote Access," 29 December 
  2008).

<https://secure.logmein.com/products/free/mac/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9345>
<https://secure.logmein.com/products/ignition/iphone/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9967>

  Unlike LogMeIn, GoToMyPC doesn't offer a free version, although 
  there's a 30-day trial. GoToMyPC includes file transfer and 
  synchronization, while LogMeIn's free flavor lacks those options. 
  Both programs use a Web browser instead of a standalone application 
  to manage remote control sessions.

  GoToMyPC also competes with Back to My Mac, a Mac OS X feature 
  introduced in Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard that requires a paid MobileMe 
  account to enable remote file transfer and screen sharing. Back to 
  My Mac can be quirky to get working in networked situations where 
  I've found LogMeIn functions perfectly, which is in part why I wrote 
  "Take Control of Back to My Mac." I haven't yet had an opportunity 
  to test GoToMyPC.

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/back-to-my-mac?pt=1010>

  While Timbuktu Pro has a similar feature set to GoToMyPC, the 
  product doesn't punch through firewalls and gateways, relying 
  instead on tunneling via Skype application services.

<http://www.netopia.com/software/products/tb2/>

  ----
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New Ebook Offers Up-to-Date Details about Running Windows on a Mac
------------------------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10928>

  Now that running Windows on an Intel-based Mac has become 
  commonplace, you might think that it has also become easy. Alas, the 
  gods of technology have yet to make it so, and getting Windows to 
  run smoothly can still make you want to rip your hair out. This fact 
  also keeps Mac writers like Joe Kissell busy, and, thanks to Joe's 
  unstoppable curiosity about all things related to virtualization, 
  we've just released his latest ebook, "Take Control of Running 
  Windows on a Mac, Fourth Edition," with coverage of the latest 
  versions of VMware Fusion, Parallels Desktop, VirtualBox, and Boot 
  Camp, along with updated information for the recently released 
  Windows 7 joining the details for Windows XP and Vista.

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/windows-on-mac?pt=TB1010>

  The 178-page ebook helps you figure out which virtualization 
  software makes sense for you, round up the necessary hardware and 
  software, make any obligatory preparations (like partitioning with 
  the right format - FAT32, anybody?), and get it all working right 
  with hardware drivers installed, printers printing, anti-virus 
  software patrolling the perimeter, and so forth. Joe also gets into 
  the details of sharing files between Mac and Windows installations, 
  making the most of the snazzy new features in the latest versions of 
  Parallels Desktop and VMware Fusion, creating functional backups of 
  your Windows installation, and generally getting on with your life 
  while using Windows. To make the $10 ebook even more valuable, it 
  comes with coupons for $10 off VMware Fusion and 10% off Parallels 
  Desktop.

  While discussing running Windows on a Mac, we'd be remiss if we 
  didn't mention that Joe's "Take Control of VMware Fusion 3" is 
  available for free, thanks to a sponsorship from VMware. If you 
  definitely want to use Fusion, then you should download "Take 
  Control of VMware Fusion 3" first, although "Take Control of Running 
  Windows on a Mac" will still be useful if you need more help than 
  the free VMware Fusion book provides in deciding which version of 
  Windows to install, setting up Boot Camp to work with VMware Fusion, 
  or solving Boot Camp problems. You can download "Take Control of 
  VMware Fusion 3" from the Take Control Web site or pick up a free 
  copy of the (slightly experimental) iPhone app version from the 
  iTunes App Store.

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/vmware-fusion-3>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/take-control-vmware-fusion-3/id344544709?mt=8>

  If you already own a previous edition of "Take Control of Running 
  Windows on a Mac," be sure to check your email for a discount update 
  offer, or find the offer by opening the ebook and clicking the Check 
  for Updates button on the first page. 

  ----
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Prevent the iPod touch from Launching iPhoto
--------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10916>
  3 comments

  Reader Warren Newman wrote to me with a perplexing problem. Every 
  time he connected his iPod touch to his Mac, iPhoto would launch, 
  showing the iPod touch's Settings app. 

  Although the cause of Warren's problem may seem obvious to anyone 
  who has taken a photo with an iPhone, the iPod touch's lack of a 
  camera muddied the issue for him. What happened is that Warren 
  inadvertently pressed the iPod touch's Sleep/Wake and Home buttons 
  simultaneously while in the Settings app, which takes a screenshot 
  of whatever is showing onscreen.

  Just like photos on the iPhone, screenshots on the iPod touch are 
  stored in the Photos app, though in an album called Saved Photos 
  (instead of Camera Roll on the iPhone). Whenever an item exists in 
  Saved Photos, plugging the iPod touch into the Mac causes iPhoto to 
  launch, since it assumes you want to copy the image to your Mac for 
  safekeeping.

  The solution is easy. Open the Photos app on the iPod touch, tap the 
  Saved Photos album, tap the screenshot, tap the trash button in the 
  lower right corner, and tap the big red Delete Photo button that 
  appears. Alternatively, if you want to save the screenshot, import 
  it into iPhoto when prompted, and allow iPhoto to delete the photo 
  after the import.

  As several people have pointed out, there's another way of thinking 
  about this problem. Perhaps you want screenshots on your iPod touch 
  to remain there, without launching iPhoto at all. To accomplish 
  that, connect your iPod touch to your Mac, launch the Image Capture 
  application from the Applications folder, and select your iPod touch 
  under Devices. Then, at the bottom left of the screen, choose No 
  Application from the "Connecting this iPod opens" pop-up menu. Quit 
  Image Capture and no photo-related program should open in the future 
  when you connect your iPod touch. (Obviously, this works with the 
  iPhone too, though it seems more likely you'd want some application 
  to import your iPhone photos regularly.)

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-01/Image-Capture-for-iPod-touch.png>

  It's a minor mystery, to be sure, but if you're completely not 
  thinking about your iPod touch as a source of photos, one that could 
  be rather baffling.

  ----
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Paying by the Bit: Internet Access in New Zealand
-------------------------------------------------
  by Steve McCabe <steve@stevemccabe.net>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10917>
  23 comments

  For reasons that would take too long to explain here, I moved to New 
  Zealand about six months ago. I brought my life with me, including, 
  among goods and chattels more varied than I had realized, my trusty 
  Mac mini, which has been doing sterling duty as a Web and mail 
  server for a year or more. My life also includes a wife and 
  daughter, and they, not surprisingly, came with me too. 

  This has been an almost entirely unqualified success. The people in 
  New Zealand are friendly, the food is astonishing, and the wine is 
  spectacular. But, even in God's Own Country, not everything is 
  perfect. New Zealand is a truly splendid place to live in many, 
  indeed almost all, regards. But for a techie - and I am, quite 
  unashamedly and unabashedly, one of that number - there are definite 
  quibbles, of which by far the largest is bandwidth, or the lack 
  thereof. 

  When I lived in America, I was undeniably spoiled, as many Americans 
  tend to be. Life, however shallow it may have been in other regards 
  when one lives in Florida, was certainly easy from a connectivity 
  point of view. My home office had a broadband connection with - as I 
  simply took for granted, took for my birthright - unlimited data. I 
  could slurp down, and throw up, all the data I wanted. The Internet 
  was mine, all of the time. 

  But when we signed up for our New Zealand connection, we were 
  stunned - stunned, I say! - to discover that the Internet, in New 
  Zealand, is a highly limited and finite resource. We went from "all 
  you can download" to "you get 20 GB a month, you'll pay $100 a 
  month, and you'll be grateful for it" in the time it takes to fly 
  from Los Angeles to Auckland (which is, now that I come to think 
  about it, a horrendously long time). This was a most atrocious 
  imposition for the Internet junkies that my wife and daughter had 
  become (not me, though, of course - I was far too virtuous, too 
  self-restrained). For all that New Zealand had to offer, the 
  narrowness of its Internet pipes was simply intolerable. 

  We opted for the "double your data" option (and the additional $30 
  per month that wasn't optional), but we still find ourselves limited 
  by 40 GB per month. I check the online usage meter every few days 
  (using, in the process, a few more precious bytes; oh, the cruel, 
  vicious, bitter irony!) and issue imprecations to Wife and Daughter, 
  reminding them that Facebook is a luxury, not an absolute necessity; 
  they, as addicts always do, try to justify their endless 
  status-checking as being entirely reasonable, indeed essential. I 
  calculate the bandwidth usage of Skype and of YouTube; I flinch when 
  I see Daughter download another Mary-Kate and Ashley movie from 
  iTunes (that's not really a bandwidth issue; that's just on general 
  principles - I'd cringe if that were happening if we had a free and 
  entirely unlimited T3 connection direct to the trans-Pacific 
  backbone). I have developed new and careful Internet habits: I use 
  the "Open link in new window" option if I think there's any 
  possibility that I might want to visit a second link from the same 
  page, to avoid potentially having to load the original page a second 
  time, and Apple Mail no longer checks automatically every minute - 
  each check uses several dozens of bytes, I'm sure, and they all add 
  up. I even avoid visiting Japanese and Chinese sites, conscious of 
  two-byte character sets using more than their fair share of 
  bandwidth.

  I check my Google Analytics numbers with conflicted emotions: every 
  page view for our various blogs and online presences is, on the one 
  hand, a cause for celebration - more visits, more revenue, more 
  Internet fame and glory. On the other hand, those page views are 
  also an occasion for more hand-wringing, since they were served up 
  from my Mac mini, over my desperately and mercilessly limited 
  Internet connection. I post photographs of the beautiful country we 
  now call home, but wince when I see that I've had visits to my site. 
  Even the very act of visiting the Google Analytics Web site eats up 
  a handful of kilobytes that I can scarce afford. And even writing 
  this article has been a painful experience; while the catharsis of 
  venting about the primitivity of our connection is undeniably 
  therapeutic, every adjective, every atom of invective, every single 
  character I devote to letting the world know how abjectly deprived 
  we are is one fewer byte that can be used elsewhere. 

  The reason for this caution is simple. As soon as we reach our 
  allocated 40 GB - think about that for a second; it's only a gig and 
  a third per day, and the lovely and talented Mrs. McCabe, with whom 
  I share everything, including my bandwidth, is a Web designer - a 
  Gollum-like finger, somewhere in a dungeon buried deep in darkest 
  Auckland, reaches out in the gloom, flicks a switch, and says, "It's 
  dial-up for you. Your bandwidth is mine, it's mine, my precioussss." 
  And that's it. We're reduced to an Amish connection, one so slow it 
  would be more efficient to hand-write packets of data and strap them 
  to the legs of carrier pigeons. Web pages load - if they load - in 
  minutes, rather than seconds. YouTube is a pipe dream. Downloads... 
  well, downloads don't. There has been much discussion around the 
  blogosphere in the last month about when the first decade of the 
  21st century will end. Here in New Zealand that discussion is 
  academic - we're still, at least in terms of Internettery, stuck 
  back in the 1990s. My connection today is so slow that I half-expect 
  to hear the dolphin-screech of a modem actually dialing in to 
  Vodafone as I try to connect, and I'm grateful that I'm not on 
  deadline for this article. Looking at the cave paintings of Lascaux 
  would represent a faster data transfer than the one I'm hobbled with 
  right now. 

  I have, I would like to stress, been more than diligent in my 
  attempts to figure out where our precious data might be going.  My 
  first thought was Skype, given that Daughter spends much of her time 
  video-chatting with friends back in the Northern Hemisphere. I 
  installed iStat Menus; as far as I could tell, a two-way video 
  conference was using only around 120 KBps. But Vodafone's (for they 
  are our current Internet provider) online "check your usage" tool 
  was reporting that there were days when we used as much as 6.5 GB of 
  data. The day we reached this number (our record so far, by the way) 
  was a school day - I doubt, then, that Daughter's Skyping can be the 
  culprit (she would have needed 15 hours of non-stop chatting, and 
  while she's good, even she's not that good). 

<http://www.islayer.com/apps/istatmenus/>

  I suspected that it might be my server. I was reluctant to give up 
  running my own server after moving to New Zealand because I've 
  localized a handful of my domains - mccabe.net.nz, threelions.co.nz, 
  astralgraphics.co.nz - and it's hard to find U.S.-based hosting 
  services that handle .nz domains. I host my personal site, 
  stevemccabe.net, as well as my clients' sites, through a European 
  hosting-and-reselling service, but they don't offer anything in the 
  Kiwi domain space, so I've bought my domains through GoDaddy. I've 
  become familiar with GoDaddy's DNS setup system, and so, frankly, 
  it's just convenient to register with them and then host myself. 
  That said, GoDaddy's pricing structure for hosting is Byzantine 
  beyond belief (I've had clients in the past want me to set up their 
  sites on GoDaddy - oh, the power of advertising, especially if it 
  involves scantily clad ladies with large chests - and I now make it 
  a condition of service that I provide hosting as well as design) and 
  life was so much easier when I knew that I had all the Internet 
  connectivity I wanted. 

  So I looked at the traffic stats on my server. This was a 
  bittersweet experience because on the one hand, no, I wasn't 
  ploughing through my data, which was good, but on the other hand, 
  this meant that my sites weren't getting the traffic I would have 
  liked. Still, at least that was another possible culprit struck from 
  the list. 

  I issued the sternest of imprecations to my girls, and, to all 
  intents and purposes, stopped using the InterWebs. But no matter how 
  much we cranked back our usage, we still found that we were using - 
  or, at the very least, we were being reported as using - at least 
  several hundred megabytes a day. 

  It was time to talk to Vodafone. I contacted them several times, and 
  received several different bogus explanations: I had viruses (ahem, 
  my network is Apple-only), I had moochers (WPA2 password, a house 
  built of brick, a large garden) - basically, they claimed it was my 
  fault, one way or another. It certainly couldn't be Vodafone's 
  fault. I pushed a little further. I was told to install a data 
  tracker - I was even sent Vodafone's recommended monitor, 
  SurplusMeter. I installed it across my network, and it reported that 
  I was using monstrous amounts of data. The reason was simple - it 
  meters not only wide-area, but also local-area network traffic. My 
  iMac, for example, was pushing through megabyte after megabyte, even 
  though I had no applications open at all. Well, none that would use 
  the Internet. 

<http://www.skoobysoft.com/utilities/utilities.html>

  Except iTunes. But I wasn't downloading anything. What I was doing 
  was streaming music to my AirPort Express. SurplusMeter was 
  recording every last packet that went out of the data port it was 
  charged with monitoring - in this case, my AirPort card. I called 
  Vodafone again, and explained that the numbers SurplusMeter was 
  reporting were meaningless. They said I should shut down my local 
  network for a day and see what my numbers were like. I did - and on 
  that day my wife's iMac managed not to report a single bit going in 
  or out. Not bad for a Web designer who telecommutes between New 
  Zealand and Florida. 

  Vodafone's next suggestion was that we had a line fault. This is a 
  real possibility - I live in a very old house (we think it's 
  pre-war, but we're not sure which war; my money's on the Boer War) - 
  and one of the call-centre people I spoke to noticed that, while a 
  DSL modem typically reconnects four or five times a day, mine had 
  already reconnected over a dozen times - and I still hadn't finished 
  my first cup of coffee. They assured me that they would look into 
  this, but in the meantime I'd need to disconnect my phone line (a 
  service, mind you, that I pay for) for a day in case there was a 
  problem with my DSL filters. This may, or may not, have been the 
  problem; I have no way of knowing. Maybe they're still running 
  tests. At the very least, they haven't replied. 

  Finally, I wrote to Russell Stanners, CEO of Vodafone NZ, at the end 
  of last month. A week or so later, I got a phone call from Vodafone, 
  and, after a long chat, the rep who called me (also called Russell; 
  hmmm...) agreed to waive the $199 early termination fee and release 
  me from the one-year contract that we would have been bound to until 
  June 2010. 

  We're switching to TelstraClear. I'm not doing this because they're 
  particularly brilliant, but because they do one thing that Vodafone 
  doesn't - instead of dialing us back to 
  pecking-out-bits-on-a-Morse-code-tapper speeds, they'll keep on 
  selling us more gigabytes. I'm willing to pay for a service 
  (especially a service that I actually receive), but the idea that I 
  only get my 40 gigabytes, and, regardless of whose fault it is, 
  that's it, I'm cut off like a naughty schoolboy, well, that really 
  chafes. 

  So now we're waiting. Our Internet connection went back to 
  last-millennium speeds after only a fortnight this month, so we're 
  struggling - some evenings we can't tell whether we're offline, or 
  just _really_ slow. And although I signed up to TelstraClear over a 
  week ago, I just had a phone call from one of their reps letting me 
  know that, because of the Christmas and midsummer holiday backlog, 
  they won't flip our switch for another week. 

  I'll be emailing this article off to TidBITS World Headquarters 
  shortly. I have no idea when they may get it. The Word document that 
  contains this piece is 41 KB, which, at my current Internet speeds, 
  could take until March to send. It might be quicker for me to save 
  it to a CD, swim to California with the disc between my teeth, walk 
  across the country, and hand it to Adam personally.


  [Bio: Steve McCabe is a Mac consultant, tech writer, and teacher who 
  moved, for reasons that have but the most tangential connection to 
  this article, to New Zealand in April 2009. He writes about his 
  adventures in New Zealand, he blogs about technology, and he is 
  currently rebuilding his personal Web site.]

<http://www.mccabe.net.nz/>
<http://www.threelionstech.com/blog>
<http://www.stevemccabe.net/>

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10917#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/10917>


ExtraBITS for 18 January 2010
-----------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10918>

  We were busy this week, and didn't read much that was worth passing 
  on, other than Macworld's coverage of AT&T's price drop for the 
  unlimited iPhone voice and data plan. That said, if you're 
  interested in ebook technology and publishing, be sure to listen to 
  Tonya's MacNotables podcast.


**AT&T Reduces iPhone's Unlimited Plan Price** -- Macworld reports 
  that AT&T has reduced the price of the iPhone's unlimited voice and 
  data plan, down from $100 for voice and $30 for data (for a total of 
  $130) to $100 for both voice and data combined. The unlimited Family 
  Talk plans also dropped in price (now $180 for two phones), but text 
  messaging plan pricing remains unchanged.

<http://www.macworld.com/article/145747/2010/01/att_pricing.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10923#comments>


**Tonya Opines on Ebook Technology in MacNotables** -- In this 
  MacNotables podcast, Tonya talks with host Chuck Joiner about gizmos 
  available at CES, how hardware ebook readers are breeding like 
  bunnies, and where she thinks ebooks may be going in the future. She 
  also speculates about the mythical Apple tablet.

<http://www.macnotables.com/wordpress/macnotables-1003-tonya-engst-on-the-state-of-ebook-publishing-and-what-it-needs-to-evolve>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10912#comments>



TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 18 January 2010
---------------------------------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10919>

**Logic Pro 9.1** -- Apple has released the latest version of its 
  flagship audio recording program Logic Pro, jumping from version 
  9.0.2 to 9.1 - a version increase justified by a long list of fixes 
  and improvements. The main features of this update are added support 
  for working in 64-bit mode and added compatibility with 64-bit Audio 
  Unit plug-ins. Other significant changes include the capability to 
  create file names longer than 32 characters, improved behavior when 
  mapping samples using the EXS editor's Contiguous Zones option, and 
  the resolution of a crashing bug related to adjusting parameters in 
  Sonnox Oxford plug-ins. A full and lengthy list of changes, most of 
  them minor tweaks, is available on Apple's Web site. Running the 
  program in 32-bit mode requires Mac OS X 10.5.7 or later; 64-bit 
  mode requires Mac OS X 10.6.2 or later. The update is available via 
  Software Update or the Apple Support Downloads page. ($499 new, free 
  update, 191.14 MB)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL987>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/ts2565>

  Read/post comments about Logic Pro 9.1.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10925#comments>


**Main Stage 2.1** -- In concert with its release of Logic Pro 9.1, 
  Apple has released Main Stage 2.1, updating the live performance 
  program that's part of Logic Studio with a long list of 
  improvements. The main changes include added support for 64-bit 
  mode, added compatibility with 64-bit Audio Unit plug-ins, reliable 
  syncing for Multiple Playback plug-ins that are grouped together, 
  increased compatibility with documents created in Main Stage 1.x, 
  and improved recording with the Loopback plug-in. Also, two crashing 
  bugs have been fixed, including one that was triggered by using 
  Command-N to create a new concert when a Save dialog for a previous 
  concert was still open, and another that occurred occasionally when 
  closing or quitting the program. A full list of mostly minor changes 
  is available on Apple's Web Site. Running the program in 32-bit mode 
  requires Mac OS X 10.5.7 or later; 64-bit mode requires Mac OS X 
  10.6.2 or later. The update is available via Software Update or the 
  Apple Support Downloads page. ($499 new, free update, 210.91 MB)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL988>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/ts2566>

  Read/post comments about Main Stage 2.1.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10926#comments>


**Radioshift 1.5.2** -- Rogue Amoeba's Radioshift 1.5 snuck out at the 
  very end of 2009, and has subsequently been followed by a pair of 
  bug-fix updates. Major new features in Radioshift 1.5 include 
  support for thousands of previously unsupported streams (including 
  ones previously available only to Web-based players), better 
  error-handling with faulty streams, easier installation of 
  third-party players, an overhauled interface, independence from 
  crashes in external audio playback engines, and auto-wake support 
  for FileVault-protected home folders. Fixes in 1.5.1 and 1.5.2 
  resolve a problem with live listening of programs from the guide, 
  properly preserve the listening history between launches, and 
  address a number of cosmetic issues. Full release notes are 
  available. ($32 new, free update, 11.2 MB)

<http://www.rogueamoeba.com/radioshift/>
<http://www.rogueamoeba.com/radioshift/releasenotes.php>

  Read/post comments about Radioshift 1.5.2.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10921#comments>


**Apple Remote Desktop 3.3.2** -- Apple Remote Desktop has received 
  updates to both the Apple Remote Desktop Client software (enabled in 
  the Sharing pane of System Preferences) and the Apple Remote Desktop 
  Admin application that's used to control and administer remote Macs. 
  Most of the fixes that Apple details in the 3.3.2 updates are fairly 
  minor, addressing incorrect reporting, improving performance when 
  clients are controlled by RealVNC viewers, and dealing better with 
  clients behind NAT gateways. Reliability has also been improved in a 
  variety of situations, such as when copying via drag-and-drop 
  (something that's always been flaky); when authenticating new client 
  computers; and when controlling systems with dual graphics 
  processors, dual displays, or that are using certain resolutions. 
  ($299 new, free update, 4.21 MB client/51.41 MB admin)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL985>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL986>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT3900>

  Read/post comments about Apple Remote Desktop 3.3.2.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10924#comments>


**Typinator 3.7** -- The latest version of Ergonis Software's 
  auto-typing and auto-correcting utility Typinator includes several 
  interface changes sure to speed up your workflow. Chief among these 
  is the capability to set keyboard shortcuts for pausing and resuming 
  Typinator's text expansion activity, a faster method to access text 
  snippets, and overall enhanced performance speed. Also, version 3.7 
  includes a streamlined installation process, a new Check for Updates 
  function, and a reorganized Preferences window. A slew of minor 
  issues have been addressed, ensuring better compatibility with Snow 
  Leopard, Mail, Safari, Google Chrome, SubEthaEdit, and Eudora. A 
  full list of changes can be found on Ergonis's Web site. (€19.99 
  new, free update for purchases within 2 years, 3 MB)

<http://www.ergonis.com/products/typinator/>
<http://www.ergonis.com/products/typinator/history.html>

  Read/post comments about Typinator 3.7.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10914#comments>



Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk for 18 January 2010
----------------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10920>

  In this week's TidBITS Talk discussions, readers chat about syncing 
  files between Macs; solve a color display issue using the Universal 
  Access preference pane; ponder why MobileMe doesn't work with some 
  versions of Internet Explorer; consider using the iPhone as an 
  infrared remote; share resources for low-vision users; and, at least 
  for one reader, prepare to travel to another country to save money 
  buying a new MacBook Pro.


**Syncing Files Between Multiple Macs** -- Readers suggest many ways 
  to keep one's important files synced between two Macs. (34 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/3026>


**Accessing MobileMe with Internet Explorer on Windows** -- Apple 
  limits MobileMe on older versions of Internet Explorer, which can be 
  inconvenient when accessing the service using public computers. (2 
  messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/3027>


**13" MacBook Pro - box dimensions** -- A reader plans to purchase a 
  new MacBook Pro in another country, because even with airfare the 
  cost will be less than what Apple will sell it for in his country. 
  (5 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/3028>


**A baffling colour issue** -- Perplexing color display on a reader's 
  iMac turns out to be caused by the Enhance Contrast slider in the 
  Universal Access preference pane. (20 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/3029>


**iPhone Remote** -- Is there really a market for turning the iPhone 
  into an infrared remote? (9 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/3031>


**Mac Accessibility for Low Vision Users** -- Readers share resources 
  for Mac users with limited vision. (3 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/3035>



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