TidBITS#1011/25-Jan-2010
========================
  Issue link: <http://db.tidbits.com/issue/1011>

  Most of our news revolves around the Mac this week, as a reminder 
  that we'll know what Apple is going to announce on Wednesday when 
  they announce it, and not before. Most notably, Apple announced 
  record sales and profits today, selling more Macs (and iPhones) than 
  ever before. Also, Mozilla has shipped a notable - though not 
  entirely in a good way - new version of Firefox, Apple has finally 
  updated Boot Camp to support Windows 7, and much of the community 
  buzz of late surrounds a grassroots movement to create an email 
  client for power users. Joe Kissell contributes an extensive look at 
  why photos from Photoshop Elements can look so much worse on the 
  Web, and Adam covers Amazon's futile attempt to steal Apple's 
  thunder by opening the Kindle up to developers. Notable software 
  releases this week include Phone Amego 1.1.9, Firmware Restoration 
  CD 1.8, Things 1.2.9, Spell Catcher 10.3.3, TextWrangler 3.1, Mac 
  Pro EFI Firmware Update 1.4, Xserve EFI Firmware Update 1.2, and 
  Security Update 2010-001.

Articles
    Grassroots Movement to Create New Letters Email Client
    Apple Reports Record Sales and Profits for Q1 2010
    Amazon Opens Kindle to Developers, Changes Royalties
    Firefox 3.6 Adds Trendy Shiny Stuff (But Is Still Good)
    Apple Updates Boot Camp for Windows 7
    Solving the Photoshop Elements Color Shift Problem
    TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 25 January 2010
    ExtraBITS for 25 January 2010


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Grassroots Movement to Create New Letters Email Client
------------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10946>

  Consider yourself a power user when it comes to email? Frustrated by 
  your current email client? You're not alone. Although the Mac is 
  home to numerous email clients - Mail, Entourage, Thunderbird, 
  Eudora, Mailplane, Mailsmith, GyazMail, PowerMail, MailForge, 
  Outspring Mail, and more - it's almost a given that a power user 
  will have a set of desires that can't be met in a single program. 

  That may change, thanks to a grassroots project initiated by a blog 
  post from NetNewsWire developer Brent Simmons. Within days, the 
  Email Init mailing list that Simmons set up for discussion of just 
  what such an email program would entail had received many hundreds 
  of messages, and debate raged on topics ranging from whether or not 
  the program should allow multiple instances of a single three-pane 
  window to the best ways of handling conversation threading. An 
  initial vision document written by Simmons lays out some of the 
  decisions made in those early days; presumably subsequent 
  discussions will generate revisions and refinements.

<http://inessential.com/2010/01/16/email_init>
<http://lists.ranchero.com/listinfo.cgi/email-init-ranchero.com>
<http://pastie.org/785269>

  In the meantime, the likelihood of the project actually completing 
  something increased with the election of John Gruber of Daring 
  Fireball fame as president of the informal group. (Gruber has now 
  taken over the group's Twitter account, if you want to follow in a 
  low-bandwidth way.) Gus Mueller of Flying Meat Software (makers of 
  Acorn and VoodooPad) will serve as the technical lead, but as an 
  open source project, the assumption is that many people will 
  contribute.

<http://twitter.com/lettersapp>
<http://github.com/ccgus/letters>

  Having seen (and initiated) roughly similar projects in the past 
  that never went anywhere, I'd say that Letters faces an uphill climb 
  to meet the needs of the people who are the most fired-up about it 
  now. Developing professional level software isn't easy, and although 
  email often seems simple, it's an ecosystem that suffers from a vast 
  number of edge cases, thanks to compliance problems among the many 
  email servers and clients, and of course due to the massive abuse 
  from spammers. 

  That said, much as I don't think shipping a sufficiently functional 
  Letters 1.0 will be easy, I do think it's likely to happen, because 
  enough of the people involved understand the challenges and have the 
  necessary experience and skills to make it happen. It won't be quick 
  though, since Gruber noted in a recent thread that Letters 1.0 may 
  require Mac OS X 10.7, about which Apple has said nothing in public.

  So if you have skills to contribute, or even just carefully 
  considered opinions about how to improve upon the standard email 
  experience, I encourage you to subscribe to the Email Init mailing 
  list and see how you can help.

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10946#comments>
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Apple Reports Record Sales and Profits for Q1 2010
--------------------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10950>

  Apple posted financial results for the company's first fiscal 
  quarter of 2010 today, racking up revenue of $15.68 billion and a 
  quarterly profit of $3.38 billion, or $3.67 per diluted share. 
  However, it's important to note that this is the first quarter in 
  which the results incorporate the revenue from the current quarter's 
  iPhone sales, instead of spreading the income over the device's 
  expected two-year lifespan, as the company has done in the past.

<http://www.apple.com/pr/library/2010/01/25results.html>

  Oh, who are we kidding? Apple still made a huge amount of money on 
  record sales of Macs and iPhones, marking another best quarter ever. 
  The year-ago figures - which are particularly relevant because Q1 is 
  Apple's holiday sales quarter - were $11.88 billion in sales and 
  $2.26 billion in profit, meaning that sales revenue increased by 32 
  percent and profit increased by 50 percent. Sales to the education 
  market were up an impressive 16 percent year over year, setting new 
  December records. The company ends the quarter with $39.8 billion in 
  cash and securities, an increase of $5.8 billion over the previous 
  quarter.

  While 2009 did not witness such dire worldwide economic conditions 
  as 2008, consumers dramatically retracted their spending, businesses 
  restricted information technology budgets, and small businesses 
  found it difficult to obtain routine financing. Computer sales took 
  an unprecedented dip with negative growth, making Apple's increase 
  in sales even more remarkable. 

  Apple was also able to increase, not just maintain, its overall 
  profit margin, making a 40.9 percent gross return last quarter 
  compared to 37.9 percent a year ago. Margin is a good measure of 
  desirability: Apple can hold its prices while reducing cost of 
  manufacture and see sales actually increase. Most computer makers 
  have suffered from the race to the bottom for commodity computer 
  gear, which has led to ever-shrinking margins.

  During a conference call with analysts following the release of the 
  quarterly results, Apple Chief Operating Officer Tim Cook was both 
  coy and playful when analysts asked questions trying to tease out 
  more detail about Apple's planned announcement in San Francisco 
  later this week. "I wouldn't want to take away your joy of surprise 
  on Wednesday when you see our latest creation," Cook said in 
  response to one question.


**Mac Sales** -- The iPhone may be getting more attention than the Mac 
  these days and account for a larger percentage of Apple's sales, but 
  don't count the Mac out yet. In Q1 2010, Apple sold 3.36 million 
  Macs, which was up 33 percent from the 2.5 million that Apple sold 
  in the year-ago quarter. That's once again a record number of sales, 
  and it is twice the market rate, according to Cook. He also noted 
  that half of Mac buyers in Apple's retail stores are purchasing a 
  Mac for the first time.

  Although laptops continue to outsell desktops (accounting for 63 
  percent of all Mac sales), the new iMac models that appeared in late 
  2009 increased the desktop percentage from 28 percent in the 
  year-ago quarter to 37 percent now. On the downside, the net sales 
  per Mac sold dropped by 6 percent, from $1,412 a year ago to $1,324 
  in this quarter, which means that Apple is earning less per Mac than 
  they did last year.

  Mac sales are also strong internationally, with increases of 100 
  percent in China; 40 percent or more in France, Italy, Switzerland, 
  and Spain; and 70 percent in Australia.

  The Mac accounted for $4.45 billion of Apple's sales, compared to 
  $3.34 billion for the iPod and a whopping $5.58 billion for the 
  iPhone. The iTunes Store and other music-related products and 
  services added $1.16 billion to the bottom line; peripherals and 
  other hardware contributed $469 million; and software and services 
  chipped in $631 million. 


**iPhone and iPod Sales** -- Apple sold 8.7 million iPhones during the 
  quarter, up from 7.4 million during the previous quarter, and double 
  the 4.3 million iPhones sold in the year-ago quarter. Cook and Peter 
  Oppenheimer (Apple senior vice president and chief financial 
  officer) noted that 70 percent of Fortune 100 companies are 
  currently deploying or testing deployments of the iPhone, a blatant 
  rebuff to analysts who claim that the iPhone isn't suited for 
  corporate environments.

  Following a trend of the past several quarters, the total number of 
  iPods sold, 21 million, declined 8 percent compared to the year-ago 
  quarter. However, despite the company not breaking out revenue or 
  unit sales of specific models, Apple did say that sales of the iPod 
  touch were _up_ 55 percent from the previous year, and that the iPod 
  still boasts 70 percent of the market share of MP3 players.

  Our guess is that the iPod has reached a point where many of those 
  likely to buy an iPod already have one, and the technology (in the 
  core iPod line) hasn't changed enough to cause people to replace 
  older models. That said, the iPod touch is clearly the bright spot 
  here, causing Apple's net sales per iPod sold - dollars per unit - 
  to increase to $162 from $148 in the year-ago quarter. 

  The biggest change regarding iPhone sales - which also affected the 
  Apple TV - is a change by the U.S. Financial Accounting Standards 
  Board that establishes practices in how firms record and report 
  revenue and expenses. The old standards required that revenue from 
  the initial price of products with expected routine software 
  upgrades be accounted for on a subscription basis. 

  Under the old standards, instead of the sale being recognized and 
  included in a report for the quarter in which an iPhone or Apple TV 
  was purchased, Apple divvied up the revenue and associated costs 
  over 24 months or 8 quarters. The standards change allowed Apple to 
  assign a dollar value to the value of the software upgrades - $25 
  for the iPhone and $10 for the Apple TV - and account for all 
  revenue and expense except that amount in the quarter in which a 
  device was sold.

  Apple filed revised statements with the SEC for previous years back 
  to Q1 2007 in order to provide - sorry - apples-to-apples 
  comparisons for year-over-year differences that use the same 
  underlying financial assumptions.

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

  This doesn't change the amount of money made by Apple at the end of 
  each day, but it does make it easier to read Apple's quarterly 
  filings and understand how much the firm made on current products 
  sold. Apple also said it would no longer release a separate set of 
  numbers - called non-GAAP (Generally Accepted Accounting Principles) 
  - because the GAAP numbers are now good enough.

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10950#comments>
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Amazon Opens Kindle to Developers, Changes Royalties
----------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10940>
  2 comments

  Amazon has announced that it is opening the Kindle - until now 
  essentially just an ebook reading device - to software developers to 
  create what Amazon is calling "active content." Developers can learn 
  more about the Kindle Development Kit now and sign up to be notified 
  when the beta starts next month. "Active content" will be available 
  for free, as one-time purchases, and as subscriptions. Royalty rates 
  weren't given, but are likely to be comparable with what Apple pays 
  for iPhone apps.

<http://phx.corporate-ir.net/phoenix.zhtml?c=176060&p=irol-newsArticle&ID=1377349&highlight>
<http://www.amazon.com/kdk/>

  Amazon is likely beating around the bush to avoid the term "app" 
  because the Kindle's E-Ink screen is simply too slow for much of 
  what we - and most others - would consider an "app." Apple may not 
  own the term for software running on the iPhone and iPod touch, but 
  it has certainly set a minimum standard for what an app must be 
  capable of, and the Kindle isn't up to that bar.

  I can't imagine that Kindle apps will be capable of much more than a 
  refreshable Web page; perhaps acceptable for something like the 
  Zagat guide mentioned in Amazon's press release or a crossword 
  puzzle, but not much more. Worse, the Kindle's input mechanisms - a 
  few buttons and a tremendously awkward keyboard, plus a roller bar 
  on the original Kindle and a stubby joystick on the Kindle 2 and 
  Kindle DX for making selections - won't lend themselves to much 
  interactivity. It's unclear how the Kindle's free Whispernet 3G 
  networking will be made available to developers, given the 
  15-cent-per-MB delivery cost Amazon quotes for books.

  Lastly, the capabilities of the Kindle Development Kit seem 
  questionable to me, given that Amazon itself hasn't yet been able to 
  create a decent Web browser, and the Kindle ebook display code can't 
  even handle HTML tables.

  While I don't doubt that Amazon had the idea of opening up the 
  Kindle to developers early on, as Ian Freed, vice-president for 
  Kindle at Amazon, told the New York Times, it seems clear that the 
  timing of the announcement is aimed directly at stealing some of the 
  thunder away from Apple's upcoming announcement of what is widely 
  expected to be a tablet device. Although we won't know until 
  Wednesday if Amazon's move is likely to have a dampening effect on 
  Apple's news, we're not betting on it.

<http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/21/technology/21reader.html?pagewanted=all>

  Amazon also announced that it would be changing the royalty 
  structure for authors and publishers who use the Kindle Digital Text 
  Platform to publish ebooks. For books whose list price is $9.99 or 
  less, Amazon will offer a royalty rate of 70 percent of list price 
  (after a delivery charge that Amazon says averages about 6 cents per 
  book). Books whose list price is higher than $9.99 or that don't 
  meet other requirements of Amazon's new royalty structure will still 
  fall under the standard royalty, which is 35 percent of list price.

<http://phx.corporate-ir.net/phoenix.zhtml?c=176060&p=irol-newsArticle&ID=1376977&highlight=>

  As with the announcement of the Kindle Development Kit, the new 
  royalty structure seems to be a response to Apple's 70 percent 
  royalty for iPhone apps, perhaps because Amazon is worried about 
  traditional publishers jumping ship for whatever Apple announces 
  next week. Let's hope that if Apple's announcement does encompass 
  publishing, individual authors and small publishers like TidBITS 
  Publishing are allowed in, just as the App Store has been open to 
  all developers.

  Had Amazon shipped the Kindle with the Kindle Development Kit and 
  offered a 70 percent royalty back in November 2007 (see "Comparing 
  Amazon's Kindle to the iPhone and Sony Reader," 19 November 2007), 
  well before Apple had opened the iPhone up to developers, it might 
  have made more of a splash. As it is, these changes are merely 
  fighting a rearguard action, although they will be welcome to 
  authors and publishers who can now double their revenue from Kindle 
  ebook sales.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9327>

  ----
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Firefox 3.6 Adds Trendy Shiny Stuff (But Is Still Good)
-------------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10943>
  17 comments

  For the record, I like Firefox. I like the way you can type anything 
  in the address bar and get good results, I like the way it can 
  automatically reopen tabs after being quit, and I like the fact that 
  its searches look inside textarea fields in Web apps. It's my main 
  Web browser.

  So when Firefox 3.6 was released last week, I happily went looking 
  for release notes, hoping to find something that would make Firefox 
  even more useful to me. The good news is that Mozilla claims that 
  Firefox 3.6 is 20 percent faster than 3.5, form autocomplete now 
  lists items in order based on a combination of frequency and 
  recentness, and tabs opened from links can (but don't have to) 
  appear next to the current tab. I'll have to see if this final 
  feature is worthwhile, but when you have a lot of tabs open, having 
  a new one appear way off to the right-hand edge of the tab list can 
  be awkward. Nice stuff, but not game changing.

<http://www.mozilla.com/firefox/>
<http://www.mozilla.com/en-US/firefox/3.6/releasenotes/>

  A couple of features should make Firefox 3.6 more secure, most 
  notably the program's capability to alert you to out-of-date and 
  insecure plug-ins. (Plug-ins, not to be confused with extensions or 
  themes, make it possible for Firefox to display an otherwise 
  unsupported type of data, like QuickTime movies, or communicate with 
  external hardware, like the Garmin Forerunner GPS watch.) When you 
  click Find Updates from the Plugins view of the Add-ons window, 
  Firefox sends you to the Plugin Check page, which displays the 
  status of your plug-ins. The only problem is that Firefox was unable 
  to determine the version of six of my ten plugins, even though three 
  of them had the version number in the name, rendering it relatively 
  useless. And although it claimed the other four plug-ins were up to 
  date, two of them (Silverlight and Shockwave Flash) actually had 
  minor updates available when I clicked the Up to Date button. My 
  confidence is not inspired.

<https://www.mozilla.com/en-US/plugincheck/>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-01/Plugin-Check.png>

  Other changes are aimed at Web developers, who can now indicate that 
  scripts should run asynchronously to speed up page load times, and 
  can now specify downloadable Web fonts using the new WOFF font 
  format. Firefox 3.6 also includes support for new CSS attributes 
  such as gradients, background sizing, and pointer events; plus 
  support for the new DOM and HTML5 specifications. Those last two 
  should enable Web apps to incorporate both drag-and-drop and access 
  to the local filesystem, further blurring the line between Web and 
  desktop applications. Finally, Firefox 3.6 eliminates a legacy 
  method that third-party software could use to tie into the program 
  to reduce the incidence of crashes caused by that software.

<http://hacks.mozilla.org/2009/10/woff/>

  Then there were changes that I'm sure someone will appreciate, but 
  which I personally can't see myself using, such as Full Screen mode, 
  which might be useful in kiosks. Ogg/Theora videos can now be viewed 
  full-screen as well, though I'm not sure I've ever run across one of 
  those. And while I guess it's nice that the private browsing feature 
  now removes TEMP files, that seems largely of utility on public and 
  shared systems.


**Personas** -- All of these features probably sound pretty minor, and 
  indeed they are. But Mozilla apparently decided it needed something 
  sexier for the Firefox 3.6 release, and so came up with "personas." 
  As you may or may not know, Firefox supports themes, a way of 
  changing the visual appearance of the program. In Firefox 3.5 and 
  earlier, finding and installing themes worked much like finding and 
  installing extensions - you had to find the theme somewhere on the 
  Web (possibly in Mozilla's add-on directory), click an install 
  button on the page, and restart Firefox. User-friendly it wasn't.

  So with Firefox 3.6, Mozilla has introduced personas, which, as far 
  as I can tell, are simply a graphic that replaces the standard gray 
  background behind toolbars, tabs, and other window dressing at the 
  top of the Firefox window. Personas appear to be minimal themes; you 
  can manage them in the Themes view of the Add-ons window, but they 
  don't modify Firefox's button types or dialogs, which themes can do. 
  And where full themes still require that you jump through the 
  install/restart hoop, personas can be previewed simply by moving 
  your cursor over a thumbnail and don't require that you restart 
  Firefox (presumably because it's really easy to change the look of a 
  window, but much harder to modify buttons and the like).

  Now, I don't want to come off as a complete fuddy-duddy, but after 
  previewing 30 or 40 personas, I can't see anyone who relies on 
  toolbar buttons and tabs using them. Mozilla advertises that there 
  are over 30,000 designs in the Personas Gallery, but a few minutes 
  of testing makes it clear that it's nearly impossible to find a 
  persona that looks good without obscuring text in toolbar buttons 
  and tab titles. Awkwardly, many personas need the vertical height 
  afforded by additional toolbars showing - I have the 1Password and 
  Google toolbars - but all that extra text offset against an image 
  just exacerbates the readability problem.

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

  For example, the Fractal Elemental persona, which is an undeniably 
  cool image, renders the text on my toolbars nearly unreadable. And 
  the Martin Luther King Day "Keep Climbing" persona is barely visible 
  at all if I turn off my Bookmarks, 1Password, and Google toolbars. I 
  didn't have to search hard for examples that fail; these two were 
  both featured on the main page of the Personas Gallery.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-01/Unreadable-persona.png>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-01/Too-large-persona.png>

  The Personas Gallery reports how many people are using each persona, 
  and some of them are quite popular, with thousands of active users. 
  (The most popular persona had 208,000 users when I first drafted 
  this article, and the next one had 54,000 users; three days later, 
  those numbers have fallen to 176,000 and 46,000, and the overall 
  popularity numbers drop off fast from there.) Regardless, the 
  massive usability problems caused by personas make painfully clear 
  just why Apple has never embraced themes in Mac OS X. I'm not saying 
  there couldn't be good personas, or even that there aren't, among 
  the 30,000 that are available. But the fact that there are so many 
  thousands of personas guaranteed to cause visual conniptions shows 
  just why professional interface designers can find jobs.

<http://www.getpersonas.com/gallery/All/Popular>

  My advice? Feel free to try out some personas, but unless you 
  quickly hit on one that's both attractive with whatever vertical 
  space your toolbar choice affords while not horribly obscuring 
  toolbar and tab text, give the feature a pass. 

  Otherwise, Firefox 3.6 seems like a fine update to an already 
  capable Web browser, and if you already use it, I see no reason to 
  put off upgrading. (Well, as is always the case with Firefox, a new 
  version will require some extensions to be updated, so if you rely 
  on a particular extension that hasn't yet been updated, like Google 
  Gears, you might want to wait for that.) But Firefox 3.6 is 
  certainly nothing so special to make a happy Safari user want to 
  switch. Personally, I'm running Firefox, Safari, and Chrome all 
  simultaneously now, and you know what? They're all pretty much fine, 
  with minor strengths and weaknesses but no glaring differences.

  Firefox 3.6 for Mac OS X is a 17.6 MB download, at least in the 
  English (US) version, and it requires Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger or later.

  ----
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Apple Updates Boot Camp for Windows 7
-------------------------------------
  by Joe Kissell <joe@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10947>

  After many months of beta testing, Microsoft finally shipped Windows 
  7 on 22 October 2009. Just days later, Apple stated that their Boot 
  Camp software (which allows Intel-based Macs to boot into either Mac 
  OS X or Windows) would be updated to support Windows 7 by the end of 
  the year. Up to that point, Boot Camp supported only Windows XP (SP2 
  or later) and Windows Vista, and although some people had limited 
  success installing Windows 7, a number of bugs and compatibility 
  issues were reported. Apple has finally made good on the promise of 
  Windows 7 support in Boot Camp - albeit a few weeks late and with a 
  number of caveats.

  First, before you can even download the updated software, you must 
  decide whether you'll run the 32-bit or 64-bit version of Windows 7 
  - Apple offers a different Boot Camp update for each. Boot Camp 3.1 
  for Windows 64 bit is a mere 275 MB download, whereas Boot Camp 3.1 
  for Windows 32 bit weighs in at 381 MB. Either version lets users 
  install the Home, Premium, or Professional edition of Windows 7 on a 
  separate partition of their Mac's internal hard disk. In addition, 
  the updates resolve unspecified issues with the Apple trackpad, add 
  support for the Apple wireless keyboard and mouse, and disable the 
  red digital audio port LED on notebooks when it's not in use.

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL979>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL996>

  Second, for reasons Apple hasn't explained, not all Intel-based Macs 
  can run Windows 7 in Boot Camp; those that can't are still limited 
  to Windows XP or Vista. Apple's list of unsupported models includes 
  certain iMacs, MacBook Pros, and Mac Pros introduced in 2006; all 
  newer Macs should be able to run Windows 7 just fine.

<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT3986>

  Third, users who previously had Vista installed in Boot Camp and now 
  want to upgrade to Windows 7 must install the new Boot Camp Utility 
  for Windows 7 Upgrade (_after_ the Boot Camp 3.1 upgrade but 
  _before_ installing Windows 7). Without this update, the Mac volume 
  (which appears as read-only under Vista) may fail to unmount during 
  the upgrade, resulting in an obscure error message.

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL977>

  And finally, certain Macs need one or two additional updates to work 
  with Windows 7 in Boot Camp (which must also be applied _before_ 
  installing the new operating system):

* Owners of a late-2009 21.5-inch or 27-inch iMac must download and 
  install the iMac Late 2009 Windows 7 Drivers, which prevent the 
  screen from turning black during the installation of Windows 7 
  because the system lacks the necessary graphics and Bluetooth 
  drivers. The update is 104 MB, and is available either via Software 
  Update or as a stand-alone download. But note that installation is 
  unusually tricky. Users must download the update, copy it to an 
  MS-DOS-formatted USB device, and insert that device into the 
  computer's USB slot before installing Windows 7. More information 
  regarding this update is available via Apple's Web site.

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL995>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/TS3173>

* Owners of iMac models with the Nvidia GeForce 7300 or 7600 GT 
  graphics cards, or Mac Pro models with Nvidia GeForce 7300 GT or 
  Quadro FX 4500 cards, must install the Graphics Firmware Update 1.0 
  (iMac and Mac Pro). Apple doesn't say exactly why, or what this 
  update does, but it's only 1.2 MB.

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL978>

  Of course, none of these updates are necessary if you want to run 
  Windows 7 using virtualization software such as VMware Fusion, 
  Parallels Desktop, or VirtualBox. Given the convenience of running 
  Windows this way - no reboot required to switch operating systems - 
  virtualization is increasingly the more logical technique.

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10947#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/10947>


Solving the Photoshop Elements Color Shift Problem
--------------------------------------------------
  by Joe Kissell <joe@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10862>
  8 comments

  Numerous users of Adobe's Photoshop Elements have had the 
  frustrating experience of editing a photo, saving it, and uploading 
  it to a Web site, only to discover that the colors - which look 
  great in the original image - appear mysteriously washed out when 
  the photo is viewed in a browser. I spent a great deal of time 
  trying to track down this problem's cause and solution, and in the 
  process learned tons of things I never imagined I'd need to know 
  about color profiles, browser variations, and the peculiarities of 
  Photoshop Elements' various methods of saving files. (And, to cut to 
  the chase, I also learned that Elements itself can't actually solve 
  this problem effectively, but that the less-expensive 
  GraphicConverter can, if you know exactly what you're doing.)

<http://www.adobe.com/products/photoshopelmac/>

  If you've ever encountered this problem - or if you never realized 
  you did, but do once I show you what to look for - I believe I can 
  offer you some helpful advice. If you're in a hurry and don't want 
  to read about French pastries and the nitty-gritty details of how 
  color profiles work, you can skip ahead to "How You Can Actually 
  Solve the Problem (with Caveats!)," but if you stick with me for 
  some background information, I think you'll find it worthwhile. 
  There are a lot of words here, but once you get everything set up as 
  I describe, you can do the actual conversion of files into a working 
  format in about two seconds, with as little as one click. You don't 
  have to go through any sort of long process every time, but I think 
  the more you understand what you're doing, the better you'll be able 
  to adapt if and when things don't work just as you expect.


**Cookshop Elements** -- Long before I moved to France, I was a 
  regular reader of David Lebovitz's blog. For a number of years, 
  David was a pastry chef at the famous Berkeley restaurant Chez 
  Panisse, founded by the legendary Alice Waters. Then he moved to 
  Paris, where he has been writing books about desserts, giving 
  chocolate tours, and blogging about his experiences in France (with, 
  of course, an emphasis on food). And, being an intelligent and 
  sophisticated person, he's naturally a Mac user.

<http://www.davidlebovitz.com/>
<http://www.chezpanisse.com/>

  Given our common interests in food (especially dessert), Macs, and 
  Paris, I was keen to meet David, but for some reason I didn't manage 
  to do so until this past summer, by which point I'd been here about 
  two years. I went to a book signing David held at a local cookbook 
  store, picked up an autographed copy of "The Sweet Life in Paris," 
  and had a nice chat with him. When I mentioned what I do for a 
  living, he immediately said, "Oh, then maybe you can help me with a 
  Photoshop Elements problem I've been having." I assured him that I'd 
  do my best - I'm an Elements user myself, my colleague and TidBITS 
  Managing Editor Jeff Carlson has written books about it, and I would 
  consider it a professional failure if I couldn't help solve some 
  common technical issue with the program. I gave him my email 
  address, and he later sent me details of the problem.

<http://www.amazon.com/dp/0767928881/?tag=tidbitselectro00>
<http://www.amazon.com/dp/0321684109/?tag=tidbitselectro00>

  The problem he described to me - supplemented with sample photos and 
  a long list of URLs pointing to online discussions among other 
  Elements users having similar difficulties - amounts to the 
  following. You have some great photo that you've retouched to 
  perfection in Photoshop Elements (or another image editing program). 
  The color looks lovely and vivid on your camera's display, in 
  iPhoto, in Elements, and even in Preview. But by the time it gets 
  onto the Web and appears in a browser, something has happened. 

  Compare the photo on the Web side-by-side with the original on your 
  Mac and you can see that it has acquired a dull, flatter appearance. 
  As you'll understand soon, the effect is a bit tricky to replicate 
  in some setups, but I can offer an example image that shows the 
  problem - the color as intended on the left side, and as it appears 
  in Firefox 3.0 on the right. (Note that I say "as intended" rather 
  than "original" because I deliberately altered the original photo to 
  emphasize the problem.)

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2009-12/PSE_color_example.png>

  Now, depending on what sorts of photos you take and how you use 
  them, this effect - if you even notice it - may not bother you at 
  all. Furthermore, the effect doesn't occur with all cameras or file 
  formats, and may depend on if or in what way you've processed the 
  photo in Photoshop Elements or another program. But if you're, say, 
  a professional food writer and you want to make sure your blog 
  readers can see just how beautiful those ripe tomatoes or peaches 
  are, it's a pretty big deal.

  David had a hunch that he might not have been saving photos 
  correctly - Elements has both Save As and Save for Web commands, 
  which behave differently from each other, though both offer many 
  options that can be puzzling for the average citizen. Fiddling with 
  his saving procedure didn't help, though. After many hours of 
  Googling, trying tips people had suggested on discussion forums, and 
  contacting Adobe directly - the company claimed that Elements wasn't 
  doing anything wrong and offered no further help - David was getting 
  mighty frustrated and hoped I could find a solution for him.

  At the beginning of my investigations, I had no idea what was 
  causing this problem. David suspected Photoshop Elements was doing 
  something wrong, but also thought the problem could have something 
  to do with Flickr (where his photos were hosted), with the uploading 
  process, or with his blogging software. So I first read what I could 
  find about the issue on the Web and then did lots of experiments, 
  starting with one of the photos in exactly the form it came from his 
  camera. I processed it in various ways, saved and uploaded it in 
  various ways, and displayed it in various browsers. Once I was able 
  to replicate the washed-out appearance, I did quite a few more 
  experiments to see if I could figure out what caused the problem and 
  if there was some way to avoid it.


**How Color Profiles Do (and Don't) Work** -- As I discovered during 
  my tests, the problem has to do with something called a "color 
  profile" - which to that point I had only the vaguest notion of. Let 
  me summarize some facts about color profiles that I gleaned from 
  reading the various discussions of this problem David told me about.

  The original JPEG image from David's camera (and from many other 
  cameras) contains not only the raw data of an image - this pixel is 
  this color, that pixel is that color - but also a chunk of metadata 
  called a "color profile," put there by the camera, that specifies 
  how a viewing program should interpret the colors. (The particular 
  profile David's camera adds to its pictures tells programs viewing 
  them to increase the saturation, among other things, so that colors 
  look brighter and richer than what the raw image data would produce. 
  Other cameras' profiles may behave differently.) Photoshop - regular 
  or Elements - can read that profile just fine (it also lets you 
  switch among various profiles, or remove a profile from a photo 
  altogether), and so can Preview and Safari, so the colors look the 
  way you expect them to when you're looking at the original image in 
  any of those programs.

  In addition, if you adjust an image in Photoshop (Elements or 
  otherwise) and choose just the right combination of settings when 
  using either Save As or Save for Web, you can make sure your saved 
  or exported graphic also has an appropriate color profile, so that 
  it'll again look perfect in all programs that correctly read the 
  profile.

  All this means that if you and the other people looking at your site 
  always use Safari (which supports color profiles), the solution 
  would be simple, because the only necessary step would be to make 
  sure you have the right things checked or unchecked with whichever 
  sort of save you happen to do. Then the color profile gets embedded 
  in the saved image, and it looks the same in a Web page as it does 
  in Photoshop Elements on your Mac.

  But, of course, not everyone uses Safari. Firefox 3.5 (though not 
  earlier versions of Firefox) is also supposed to read these 
  profiles, although in my experiments it didn't do so consistently. 
  (I haven't had any problems with the just-released Firefox 3.6, for 
  what it's worth.) Meanwhile, Internet Explorer on Windows and most 
  other browsers appear to ignore the profiles altogether. So, except 
  for Safari users and a few other lucky souls with smart and 
  up-to-date browsers, it wouldn't ultimately matter if you did all 
  the right things to make sure the right profile is preserved and 
  included when you save the image.

  In short, although color profiles are a dandy idea in theory, and 
  they're just fine as long as you stay within the camera/Mac/Safari 
  universe, they may not help you at all when you step outside those 
  bounds. No matter what you do, if you're relying on a profile to 
  make an image's colors look the way you expect them to, and you view 
  that image in a program that doesn't respect the profiles, they 
  won't look right.


**How One Should Be Able to (but Can't Really) Solve the Problem** -- 
  So, if you can't rely on a color profile, because a lot of programs 
  just ignore it, then how do you get images to look like they should 
  if the profile were being honored?

  In principle, the solution is simple. Your photo editing software 
  should _remove_ the profile, but then modify the raw pixel data to 
  give the colors the same boost that they would have received if the 
  profile had been present and used. If this process were carried out, 
  and it worked correctly, then the result would be that the image 
  would look the same in any program. The image wouldn't have a 
  profile, but it also wouldn't need one, because all the information 
  provided by the profile would be merged into the original image. 
  That way it would be irrelevant whether a browser ignored the 
  profile.

  Any reasonable person would assume that part of Photoshop Elements' 
  Save for Web feature would do exactly this - merge the color profile 
  into the image itself. But, it absolutely does not do so - and it's 
  unclear whether it's not doing so because it wasn't designed to do 
  that, or because it's broken. Either way, it doesn't happen.

  Various Web sites proposed an assortment of occult procedures one 
  can allegedly perform in Elements to persuade it to merge the color 
  profile. I tried them all. I burned the incense, sacrificed to the 
  appropriate gods and devils, bowed and prayed toward Mountain View, 
  and also employed highly geeky trickery that wasn't even hinted at 
  by any of those sites, but Elements staunchly refused to merge the 
  profiles.

  The full version of Photoshop has lots of extra thingies that, I'd 
  been led to believe, might possibly fix the problem for real. But I 
  don't have the full version of Photoshop to try it out, and anyway 
  by this point I was fed up with Adobe and their uncooperative 
  programs, and David had said he didn't want to shell out the cash 
  for the full version of Photoshop anyway. So I started exploring 
  other paths.

  I tried several other image editors, including (of course) iPhoto 
  and the spiffy Acorn, but they all behaved exactly the same as 
  Elements. In fact, I even read that Apple's Aperture and Adobe's 
  Lightroom have this problem! Technically, none of the programs is 
  doing anything _wrong_ - I mean, they leave the color profile in 
  place if there is one, under what would in normal situations be the 
  logical assumption that any program that needed to use the profile 
  would do so. So, Adobe isn't _exactly_ lying when they say there's 
  no problem. Elements isn't removing any data or changing the image, 
  it's just that it's failing to (offer to optionally) do something 
  that's obviously necessary in the majority of real-world situations. 
  And so is nearly every other photo editor. Thus, any of the above 
  developers could make the argument that they're simply following 
  industry standard behavior, although to do so would be to 
  demonstrate oblivious indifference to their customers' needs.

<http://flyingmeat.com/acorn/>
<http://www.apple.com/aperture/>
<http://www.adobe.com/products/photoshoplightroom/>


**How You Can Actually Solve the Problem (with Caveats!)** -- Well, I 
  kept looking and experimenting, and I eventually found one Mac 
  program, Lemkesoft's venerable GraphicConverter ($34.95), that not 
  only offers an explicit "Merge Color Profile" feature, but which, 
  shockingly, actually works! I tested it a bunch of different times 
  in numerous different configurations, and every time, it worked 
  correctly. I could view an image in Safari, or Firefox, or whatever, 
  and it always looked exactly like the original - bright colors and 
  all. Yay!

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

  In case you're unfamiliar with GraphicConverter, despite its name, 
  it's actually a full-featured photo editor, with a range of features 
  comparable to Photoshop. I told David he could stop using Elements 
  and start using GraphicConverter if he wanted to, and could probably 
  get the desired end result. However, I suspected he may react as I 
  did, which was to look at the program's weird, and rather 
  anachronistic, user interface, and go "Ack!" It's just not pretty. 
  In fact, I find it rather obtuse once you get into anything slightly 
  outside the norm. If you don't mind the interface and the learning 
  curve, that's fine, but many people (quite understandably) prefer 
  Photoshop's more modern and (usually) elegant approach.

  The good news is that - going back to what the program's name 
  suggests - you can set it up (after a fashion) to do drag-and-drop 
  file conversion. So, you do whatever you usually do in iPhoto, 
  Elements, or whatever, but then, after saving the file in Elements 
  but before uploading it to your Web site, you drop it on an icon, 
  let GraphicConverter do its thing (which takes about a second), and 
  it spits out a file that looks exactly like the original but has the 
  color profile merged into the image itself.

  In just a bit, I'll explain both techniques: doing 
  GraphicConverter's version of a Save As command that merges the 
  profile, and setting things up so that you can just do the 
  drag-and-drop conversion.


**A Brief Detour: Making Sure Elements Saves Your Profiles** -- For 
  the process I'm about to explain to work, your photos must still 
  have their color profiles. (The fact that an image looks right in 
  Elements doesn't necessarily mean the profile is still intact, 
  because Elements can apply its own version of a color profile behind 
  the scenes when an image doesn't already have one. Grrrr.) If you've 
  opened an image in Elements and done whatever you want to do to it, 
  you must be sure to save it in a way that keeps the profile intact. 
  You can do that with either Save As or Save for Web, but either way, 
  make sure you do it. (And, if you've already accidentally saved an 
  image without a profile, skip to the end of this detour for a 
  solution.)

  To keep a profile using Save As:

  1. With an image open in Elements, choose File > Save As.

  2. Make sure the Embed Color Profile box is checked and Format is 
  set to JPEG. Make whatever other changes you want (name, location, 
  etc.) and click Save. Set your preferred JPEG options and click OK.

  To keep a profile using Save for Web:

  1. With an image open in Elements, choose File > Save for Web.

  2. In the Preset area in the upper right corner, make sure JPEG 
  shows in the pop-up menu of formats. Below that, make sure the ICC 
  Profile box is checked. Then (this is the highly non-obvious part) 
  click the little button, which looks like a triangle in a circle, 
  that's just to the left of the Help button (not the similar one in 
  the upper right corner of the Preset area) and make sure there's a 
  check mark next to Use Document Color Profile. If not, select that. 
  Then make whatever other changes you want and click OK.

  All of this assumes that the photo you're dealing with still has a 
  profile embedded in it. What if a photo has already lost its 
  profile? The actual pixels are no different, and it might look fine 
  in Elements, but if you want the image to retain its appearance when 
  it's viewed in most Web browsers, you must first reapply a profile 
  and then perform a few other steps. Unfortunately, I don't know how 
  to reapply the _original_ profile from your camera. But, you can 
  apply a different profile that's probably quite close, and that'll 
  at least get you in the ballpark. Here's how:

  1. With an image open in Elements, choose Image > Convert Color 
  Profile > Apply sRGB Profile (not "Apply Adobe sRGB Profile"!). 
  Note: If that menu command is unavailable, choose Remove Profile 
  first, and then it'll be re-enabled.

  2. Save the image in either of the above ways.


**The "Save As" Method** -- Allrighty. On to using GraphicConverter to 
  merge profiles.

  1. Open a photo (either one that's fresh off your camera, or one 
  you've dragged from iPhoto, or one you've already messed with in 
  Elements) in GraphicConverter. (The first time you open it, it'll 
  prompt you to install a bunch of extra stuff, which you can either 
  do or not. It doesn't matter, for our purposes. And, if you're 
  running the demo version, without having paid for a license, you 
  have to wait until a counter runs out before you can actually use 
  the program.) If you feel like doing any further fiddling with the 
  graphic, do so now.

  2. Choose File > Save As.

  3. From the Format pop-up menu, choose JPEG/JFIF (*.JPG, *.JPEG).

  4. Check the "Merge color profile into image (for web usage)" box. 
  Leave the other checkboxes as they are.

  5. Name the file and navigate to wherever you want to save it, as 
  usual.

  6. Click Save.

  7. In the dialog that appears, move the Quality slider to whatever 
  you want, which is probably all the way to 100. Leave everything 
  else set the way it is. Click OK.

  8. Lather, rinse, repeat with any additional images.


**The "Drag and Drop" Method** -- This method requires some weird 
  initial setup, but after that, it's just drag and drop.

  The one-time-only setup:

  1. In GraphicConverter, choose File > Convert & Modify.

  2. The pop-up menu at the top should say Convert. If it doesn't, 
  make it so.

  3. Choose JPEG/JFIF (*.JPG, *.JPEG) from the Dest. Format pop-up 
  menu.

  4. Check the WWW Ready box if it isn't already checked.

  5. Click the Options button. Drag the slider to the quality you 
  want, probably 100. Click OK.

  6. Check the Use Batches box if it isn't already checked, which it 
  probably isn't.

  7. Click the Edit Batches button. In the Batch window that appears, 
  scroll down in the Possible Functions list on the left to Merge 
  Profile into Image. Select that and click Add. Then, go back to the 
  Possible Functions list, select Change Format, and click Add again. 
  Now select Change Format in the Batch Table list, and a new Format 
  pop-up menu appears at the bottom of the window. Choose JPEG/JFIF 
  (*.JPG, *.JPEG) from this menu too. Click the Save button, type in 
  the name "Merge", do _not_ touch anything else, and click Save. Then 
  click OK.

  8. Close the Convert & Modify window.

  9. Download an AppleScript droplet I wrote, "Merge Profiles," and 
  put it in some convenient place, such as your Applications folder or 
  your Desktop. (If it's still zipped - i.e., "Merge Profiles.zip" - 
  double-click it first to unzip it.) This droplet tells 
  GraphicConverter to use the "Merge" batch function you created in 
  Step 7 to convert whatever files are dropped on it.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2009-12/Merge%20Profiles.zip>

  The actual use:

  1. Drop one or more photos in need of a merged profile onto the 
  "Merge Profiles" icon.

  2. GraphicConverter will launch if it's not already running, and a 
  dialog will pop up asking whether you want to rename or overwrite 
  the file(s). Assuming you want to modify the actual files you 
  dropped, click Overwrite for each one.

  3. There is no Step 3. Your photo(s) have been converted.

  Note that I could have written the script differently - so that, for 
  example, it never even thinks about touching your originals and 
  instead just copies the converted photos to another folder at the 
  location of your choice. Then you'd be able to skip Step 2, but 
  you'd have two copies (before and after) of each graphic, which may 
  or may not be what you want. If you'd like something like that, you 
  can of course modify the AppleScript droplet yourself - I leave the 
  details as an exercise for the reader.


**How to Prove to Yourself that this Whole Thing Is Working** -- When 
  all is said and done, you don't want to go through all this hassle 
  only to find that you're still not getting the results you expect. 
  So I suggest trying this quick test first just to verify that 
  everything is working.

  1. Take some original image from your camera that clearly shows the 
  problem. (It seems to be most noticeable with bright reds.)

  2. Open the image in Photoshop Elements and do whatever sorts of 
  things you'd normally do to it.

  3. Save the file (using either Save As or Save for Web - but being 
  sure to include the profile, as described above).

  4. Upload the file to Flickr (or your favorite Web-accessible 
  location).

  5. Open two browsers: Safari and Firefox 3.0.x (or any other browser 
  that doesn't deal correctly with color profiles). Go to the Flickr 
  page showing your newly uploaded image in both browsers, side by 
  side.

<http://www.mozilla.com/en-US/firefox/all-older.html>

  6. You should see that the colors are correct in Safari but dimmer 
  in Firefox.

  7. Now take that same file you saved in Step 3 and drop it on Merge 
  Profiles.

  8. Upload the modified file to Flickr, and now open that image in 
  both Safari and Firefox. You should find that they look the same.


**Digestif** -- After going through this elaborate effort of learning 
  about profiles and developing this solution, I explained to David 
  what I'd discovered. Understandably, he was perturbed that he 
  couldn't get Elements - which he otherwise liked a great deal - to 
  just do what it ought to do, and also disappointed that he'd have to 
  pay for, install, and use yet another program. While I have nothing 
  but sympathy for all those annoyances, my proposed solution was the 
  best I could come up with.

  A couple of months later, I ran into David again and he was excited 
  to tell me that his problem had gone away - although not, alas, 
  thanks to my solution. He'd decided to install the full version of 
  Photoshop, and without changing anything in his workflow, he found 
  that the problem no longer occurred (or, at least, was not nearly as 
  noticeable).

  This was a bit anticlimactic for me; I was glad he'd solved his 
  problem, and although I didn't particularly care whether he used my 
  solution or not, I still don't know what the full version of 
  Photoshop does differently that apparently ameliorates the problem - 
  or why that capability, whatever it is, is absent in Elements. 
  Still, I got to cross "Meet David Lebovitz" off my 2009 to-do list, 
  and learned quite a bit about graphics, so I count the whole 
  undertaking as a success. And, if my discoveries can help anyone 
  else with the same problem, that is, as they say, the icing on the 
  cake.

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10862#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/10862>


TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 25 January 2010
---------------------------------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10945>

**Phone Amego 1.1.9** -- Sustainable Softworks has issued some minor 
  feature improvements and bug fixes in the latest release of Phone 
  Amego, the utility that enables you to control a Bluetooth mobile 
  phone (including the iPhone) from a Mac (for more details, see 
  "Phone Amego: the Macintosh/iPhone Mind Meld," 3 September 2009). 
  Version 1.1.9 now supports Caller ID with Linksys/Sipura VoIP phone 
  adapters, improves phone number formatting by following Address Book 
  conventions, displays any Google Voice "number to ring" in both the 
  main window and tooltip, and enables users to send SMS messages 
  without leaving the keyboard (you can now tab over to the Send 
  button). Also, bugs related to Call Waiting Caller ID, dialing 
  international number formats, and calls that lack Caller ID 
  information have been addressed. ($20, free update, 2 MB)

<http://www.sustworks.com/site/prod_phoneAmego_help/PhoneAmegoHelp.html>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10529>

  Read/post comments about Phone Amego 1.1.9.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10948#comments>


**Firmware Restoration CD 1.8** -- In keeping with past efforts, Apple 
  has released a Firmware Restoration CD for early 2009 Mac Pro and 
  Xserve models. The CD can be used to restore your computer's 
  firmware in the event of an unsuccessful or interrupted update, 
  though if that's already happened, you'll need to download the disc 
  image and create a CD on another computer or bring your machine to 
  an Apple Store or Apple Authorized Service Provider. The CD can be 
  made on any Mac, but can be used only on the supported models. 
  (Free, 22.5 MB)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL976>

  Read/post comments about Firmware Restoration CD 1.8.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10937#comments>


**Things 1.2.9** -- Victims of buggy behavior will be thankful for the 
  latest release of Cultured Code's popular task manager Things, which 
  fixes a number of irritating issues. Version 1.2.9 addresses a 
  regression related to a sync conflict issue with the Today list, 
  fixes lingering issues with a bug that occasionally caused Things to 
  open with a blank window and remain unresponsive, and resolves a 
  problem wherein searching for tags with subtags returned blank 
  search results. The update also enables users to empty the Trash 
  immediately by holding down the Option key while choosing the Empty 
  Trash menu command, fixes unspecified issues with the French and 
  Japanese localizations, and prevents to-do titles from having 
  multiple lines. ($49.95, free upgrade, 8.4 MB)

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

  Read/post comments about Things 1.2.9.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10942#comments>


**Spell Catcher 10.3.3** -- It's been some time since we last checked 
  in with Rainmaker Research's system-wide spell-checking utility 
  Spell Catcher X, but the longstanding program is alive and well, 
  having recently been updated to version 10.3.3. Changes include 
  compatibility with Snow Leopard, support for 64-bit applications, 
  expanded import capabilities, additional preference settings, a new 
  German localization, and auto-save capabilities for reference 
  documents. Version 10.3.3 also includes the latest Proximity 
  Linguistic System (which ensures the program is drawing from 
  up-to-date spelling databases), enhances DirectCorrect and program 
  launch performance speeds, and tweaks the program code to improve 
  handling of documents and error reports. A full list of changes is 
  available on Rainmaker's Web site. ($39.95 new, free update, 22 MB)

<http://www.rainmakerinc.com/>
<http://www.rainmakerinc.com/products/spellcatcherx/whatsnew10_3.html>

  Read/post comments about Spell Catcher 10.3.3.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10930#comments>


**TextWrangler 3.1** -- While it can't compete with its older and more 
  powerful sibling BBEdit, TextWrangler from Bare Bones Software 
  continues to provide cash-strapped users with a solid text editor. 
  The latest version, 3.1, has hit the Internet's shelves with a long 
  list of improvements and fixes. At the top are a new Unix command 
  for searching across multiple files from the command line, the 
  capability to create new files and folders on remote servers from 
  within the embedded FTP/SFTP browser, and a new Unlearn Spelling 
  command for when misspellings have accidentally been added to the 
  dictionary. Also, many minor bugs have been fixed, including a 
  handful of crashing bugs related to reading certain gzip files, 
  opening the Multi-File Search window, and closing the Multi-File 
  Search window after selecting certain search sources. The full and 
  lengthy list of changes is available on the Bare Bones Web site. 
  (Free, 12.1 MB)

<http://www.barebones.com/products/textwrangler/>
<http://www.barebones.com/support/textwrangler/current_notes.html>

  Read/post comments about TextWrangler 3.1.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10931#comments>


**Mac Pro EFI Firmware Update 1.4** -- Apple has released a firmware 
  update that addresses a handful of issues on early 2009 Mac Pros. 
  The update improves "compatibility with virtualization products 
  utilizing VT-d, storage performance under Windows XP for Boot Camp 
  users, and system reliability during the boot process." To install 
  the update, follow the instructions in the updater application that 
  launches automatically after the installer has closed 
  (/Application/Utilities/MacPro EFI Firmware Update.app). More 
  information regarding installing a firmware update on an Intel-based 
  Mac is available on Apple's Web site. The update is available via 
  Software Update and the Apple Support Downloads page. (Free, 1.96 
  MB)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL989>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT1557>

  Read/post comments about Mac Pro EFI Firmware Update 1.4.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10932#comments>


**Xserve EFI Firmware Update 1.2** -- Apple has also released a 
  firmware update for early 2009 Xserve models that improves 
  "compatibility with virtualization products utilizing VT-d and 
  system reliability during the boot process." More information 
  regarding installing firmware updates on Intel-based Macs is 
  available on Apple's Web site. Instructions for updating a headless 
  (i.e. without monitor) Xserve are also available. (Free, 1.81 MB)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL990>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT3962>

  Read/post comments about Xserve EFI Firmware Update 1.2.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10934#comments>


**Security Update 2010-001** -- Apple has reset the counters on 
  security updates for 2010, releasing Security Update 2010-001, with 
  fixes for a small number of specific vulnerabilities. Most notably, 
  the Flash Player plug-in is updated to version 10.0.42 to address 
  multiple vulnerabilities, the most serious of which could lead to 
  arbitrary code execution when viewing a maliciously crafted Web 
  site. Several other fixes block vulnerabilities that could have been 
  exploited by malicious TIFF images, DNG images, and MP4 audio files. 
  Also resolved is a potential denial-of-service attack directed 
  against CUPS (the Common Unix Printing System that underlies Mac OS 
  X's print architecture). Finally, OpenSSL is vulnerable to a 
  man-in-the-middle attack that could enable an attacker to capture 
  data or change the operations performed in an SSL-protected session; 
  although the problem hasn't been resolved within OpenSSL, Security 
  Update 2010-001 disables renegotiation within OpenSSL as a 
  preventative measure.

<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT4004>
<http://www.adobe.com/support/security/bulletins/apsb09-19.html>
<http://www.phonefactor.com/sslgap>

  Security Update 2010-001 is available via Software Update and in 
  standalone form for Mac OS X 10.6.2 Snow Leopard (21.9 MB download), 
  for Mac OS X 10.5.8 Leopard (159.58 MB download), and for Mac OS X 
  10.5.8 Leopard Server (248.11 MB download).

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL994>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL993>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL992>

  Read/post comments about Security Update 2010-001.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10929#comments>



ExtraBITS for 25 January 2010
-----------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10944>

  As we desperately try to ignore all the pointless speculation about 
  what Apple may or may not announce this week, we found ourselves 
  reading somewhat more broadly than usual. Google is updating 
  high-resolution satellite images of Haiti to aid relief efforts, the 
  White House has released an iPhone app, GigaOM collected lots of App 
  Store stats into a single infographic, and the Stanford Hospital is 
  using a cutting edge (from the 19th century) networking technology 
  to move lab samples around the building.


**Google Updates Satellite Images of Haiti** -- In the wake of Haiti's 
  recent earthquake, Google has updated its Google Maps satellite 
  photos of the country's capital, Port-au-Prince. The new images, 
  gathered on 17 January 2010, present a humbling view of the city's 
  destruction. Google made the images available in part to "assist 
  relief efforts including those by many UN organizations and the 
  Center for Interdisciplinary Geospatial Information Technologies." 
  We hope the images will also persist as reminders of Haiti's need 
  for support during its long road to recovery.

<http://google-latlong.blogspot.com/2010/01/new-imagery-of-port-au-prince.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10941#comments>


**White House Releases iPhone App** -- The White House, contributing a 
  memorable moment to the history of mobile computing, has released 
  its first-ever iPhone app. The free app gives users an easy way to 
  keep up with the White House Blog, hear the latest from the Briefing 
  Room, check out behind-the-scenes photos, and, most notably, watch 
  live streaming video of speeches, press briefings, and special 
  events. Amusingly, the app is available before the mobile-enabled 
  version of the WhiteHouse.gov Web site.

<http://www.whitehouse.gov/blog/2010/01/19/whitehousegov-anywhere>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10939#comments>


**App Store Facts Get a Face Lift** -- Like any other certifiable 
  success, the iTunes App Store has become a hot topic of discussion; 
  the stats revolving in its orbit have been endlessly reported on and 
  analyzed. For those tired of parsing regular graphs and summaries, 
  take a moment to check out GigaOM's infographic "The App Store 
  Economy," which brings a little visual zest to the familiar data.

<http://gigaom.com/2010/01/12/the-apple-app-store-economy/>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10933#comments>


**It Really Is a "Series of Tubes"** -- No, we're not talking about 
  former Senator Ted Stevens's clumsy description of the Internet; 
  this article from the Stanford School of Medicine Web site instead 
  describes the wildly cool pneumatic tube system used by Stanford 
  Hospital staff to send lab samples around at speeds up to 25 feet 
  (7.6 m) per second - that's roughly 18 miles (30 km) per hour. 
  Pneumatic tube systems were cutting edge communication technology 
  way back in the 19th century, but when it comes to transporting 
  physical objects, they retain their utility even in today's 
  networked age.

<http://med.stanford.edu/ism/2010/january/tubes-0111.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10922#comments>



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