TidBITS#1015/22-Feb-2010
========================
  Issue link: <http://db.tidbits.com/issue/1015>

  We were a bit tardy in finishing this article, but we finally have 
  our list of realistic things we'd like to see Apple do in 2010. Also 
  this week, Rich Mogull looks at what enterprises will need to do to 
  prepare for the iPad; Doug McLean ponders why Greenpeace keeps 
  targeting Apple; and Glenn Fleishman covers news of a Skype client 
  on Verizon smartphones, Microsoft's new Windows Phone 7 Series 
  operating system, and an improvement in the MobileMe Web site. Plus, 
  we have video of three of our appearances at Macworld Expo! Notable 
  software releases this week include Firefox 3.5.8, TweetDeck 0.33.2, 
  VMware Fusion 3.0.2, and iStumbler 99.

Articles
    MobileMe Web Site Adds Some Mobile Safari Support
    Microsoft Revises and Renames Its Phone OS
    Verizon Dials in Skype
    TidBITS Staff Caught on Video at Macworld Expo
    Greenpeace Hitching Itself to Apple's Star?
    Four Changes We Want to See from Apple in 2010
    Prepare Your Enterprise for the iPad
    TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 22 February 2010
    ExtraBITS for 22 February 2010


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MobileMe Web Site Adds Some Mobile Safari Support
-------------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11017>

  It's ironic that MobileMe couldn't be accessed via Mobile Safari. 
  MobileMe's me.com Web site used to offer up an error page with a 
  link to information on how to set up an iPhone or iPod touch for 
  synchronization. Apple has now changed that welcome screen for its 
  mobile devices, alerting the world via a Knowledge Base note that we 
  found out about via Macworld.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2009-09/MobileMe-in-Safari.png>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/TS1673>
<http://www.macworld.com/article/146544/2010/02/apple_updates_mobileme_for_iphone.html>

  While requiring sync for email, contacts, and calendar might be 
  acceptable - even if I would like to have the option to use 
  MobileMe's Web apps on someone else's iPhone or iPod touch - Find My 
  iPhone/iPod touch couldn't be used via Mobile Safari. If your iPod 
  touch or iPhone were lost or stolen, you couldn't use someone else's 
  iPhone to find yours! (Adam Engst described a workaround in "Use 
  Find My iPhone from an iPhone," 30 September 2009.) I wonder if an 
  Apple executive discovered this lacuna when his or her phone was 
  missing.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10609>

  The revised Mobile Safari welcome screen for me.com is better 
  organized. The link to setup instructions for synchronization is 
  still there, but there are three additional buttons: Use Find My 
  iPhone, Install Gallery App (to access your MobileMe Gallery), and 
  Install iDisk App (for file access).

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-02/mobile_safari_me_main_screen.jpg>

  Tap the Use Find My iPhone button, and the browser presents the 
  standard full-screen desktop login window for me.com, not one 
  designed for Mobile Safari. It's awkward. (See "Find Your Lost 
  iPhone or iPod touch with iPhone OS 3.0," 17 June 2009, for more 
  details about that feature.)

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10359>

  When logged in, you see the full main interface for a moment, after 
  which you're redirected to the Find My iPhone/iPod touch page. That 
  page also isn't optimized and you have to zoom and expand to read 
  the page's contents or activate functions like wiping your phone 
  remotely or locking the phone with a four-digit PIN.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-02/mobile_safari_find_my_iphone.jpg>

  Apple should still improve this process, but making Find My 
  iPhone/iPod touch viewable via Mobile Safari is at least a step in 
  the right direction.

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11017#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/11017>


Microsoft Revises and Renames Its Phone OS
------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11014>
  2 comments

  Windows Mobile, Microsoft's version of Windows for smartphones and 
  other handhelds, is no more; "Windows Phone 7 Series" is the new and 
  wildly inelegant moniker for what looks to be a quite different 
  operating system from Microsoft. The name aside, Microsoft's revised 
  mobile operating system will emphasize being able to accomplish 
  multiple tasks at the same time, in sharp contrast with the iPhone.

<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MdDAeyy1H0A>
<http://www.microsoft.com/presspass/press/2010/feb10/02-15MWC10PR.mspx>

  The iPhone and iPod touch currently allow only one program to run in 
  the foreground while a variety of Apple-controlled processes perform 
  background tasks such as sending and receiving email, accepting and 
  displaying notifications, and playing music.

  But competitors keep pushing on the notion that multiple active 
  programs enable a smartphone to do more, while stating that quitting 
  and launching programs is a worse experience than changing context - 
  switching among multiple running programs. (Join in on a lively 
  discussion on this matter in the comments on Adam Engst's article 
  "Does the iPhone OS Need Multitasking?," 8 February 2010.)

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10989>

  Microsoft's approach to this putative problem is to create what it's 
  calling hubs, each of which organizes specific kinds of tasks and 
  applications. In one demo, the Start screen is split into square and 
  oblong tiles that show live information from each of these hubs, 
  such as updates from a social networking site like Facebook, or new 
  photos from a picture site.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-02/winphone7_startscreen.jpg>

  The demo shows a rather lovely and fluid approach to navigating 
  among Microsoft-provided applications, which display and update data 
  gathered from both Microsoft's own services and third parties.

  I spent a few weeks with a Zune HD last year, and was struck by how 
  the Zune user interface had actually brought something new and 
  attractive to the table. There were a few missteps, but using the 
  Zune HD was fluid and intuitive; it had much in common with the flow 
  of iPhone OS without looking or working like it in the least. It was 
  also, thank goodness, entirely unlike the far more clunky mobile 
  offerings by Microsoft. I liked using the Zune HD.

  Windows Phone seems to bring these Zune notions to a broader, 
  Internet-attached world. That could be great. Windows Mobile needs 
  to be retired, and Apple, Google, Nokia, and Research in Motion 
  could use serious competition, especially when they try relying on 
  an installed base to avoid improving their offerings.

  That said, the Windows Phone demo and surrounding details don't show 
  how third-party applications are integrated into the platform. Nor 
  do we see more than skin deep. One of Windows Vista's problems was 
  that while it improved in many ways on Windows XP, you could scratch 
  at the surface and XP dialog boxes - and even older cruft - were 
  still there beneath a thin UI layer, demanding attention.

  Windows Phone 7 Series won't be turned into hardware by Microsoft, 
  unlike its Zune, so we'll have to see how the firms that have 
  produced generations of Windows Mobile PDAs and phones manage this 
  new operating system. This is much more how Microsoft normally 
  operates, but it recalls the difference between Macs, where Apple 
  exercises tight control over the hardware and the operating system, 
  and Windows PCs, where overall usability is often hurt by each 
  manufacturer making different hardware design decisions.

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11014#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/11014>


Verizon Dials in Skype
----------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11015>

  The long-rumored Skype client for Verizon will be available for that 
  firm's smartphones in March 2010. But it's not quite the Skype we're 
  used to: the client will work only over 3G, not Wi-Fi - the opposite 
  of Skype for iPhone, which currently works only over Wi-Fi. The 
  Verizon client also won't call regular phone numbers in the United 
  States, instead connecting only Skype users to other Skype users. 
  Skype has over half a billion users worldwide, and Verizon has over 
  90 million subscribers. The Skype client is integrated with the 
  smartphone address book for simpler calling.

<http://phones.verizonwireless.com/skypemobile/>
<http://www.usatoday.com/tech/wireless/2010-02-16-skype-verizon_N.htm>

  The free software does allow Skype-to-Skype calls worldwide over 3G, 
  but Skype Out calls to the public switched telephone network may be 
  made only to numbers outside the United States. This cuts into the 
  atrociously high rates that Verizon and other carriers collect for 
  international calling, but also doesn't let you substitute data 
  calls for consuming minutes from your domestic plan. 

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-02/verizon_skype_client.jpg>
<http://about.skype.com/press/2010/02/verizon.html>

  It's unclear at this writing whether Skype In numbers, regular phone 
  numbers linked to a Skype account, will be routed to a Verizon 
  smartphone with the client.

  You can also use the client to send and receive instant messages and 
  see the Skype status of those other Skype users who allow you to see 
  their status. 

  The free Skype for iPhone software currently offers only calling 
  over Wi-Fi, but to any phone number, not just other Skype users. The 
  iPhone app also allows SMS messages, as well as Skype messaging. 
  Apple and AT&T agreed in 2009 to allow voice calls over 3G, and both 
  firms updated agreements to allow this.

<http://www.skype.com/download/skype/iphone/>

  However, the upcoming iPhone OS 3.2 is reportedly required to enable 
  VoIP over 3G. Skype recently explained that it plans a revised 
  version of its iPhone app after the 3.2 update ships but only when 
  it is satisfied with voice quality.

<http://share.skype.com/sites/en/2010/02/an_update_on_skype_for_iphone.html>

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11015#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/11015>


TidBITS Staff Caught on Video at Macworld Expo
----------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11029>

  Increasingly, even if you can't make it to Macworld Expo, you can 
  see some of what you missed via online video produced by the likes 
  of Macworld and MacVoices TV. We found ourselves in a number of 
  productions, and, honestly, they weren't all that different from the 
  kinds of conversations we had with lots of people at the show. So 
  tune in for a bit of that Macworld Expo experience without leaving 
  your desk, but keep in mind that these videos were possible only 
  because there was a Macworld Expo at which we could all come 
  together in person.

* TidBITS on MacVoices TV: At the end of the first day, MacVoices TV 
  host Chuck Joiner corralled Adam, Tonya, and Joe to talk about the 
  most interesting products we'd seen on the show floor. And yes, it 
  was difficult to stand still after a hard day on the floor.

<http://macvoices.tv/macvoicestv-1026-macvoicestv-at-macworld-adam-and-tonya-engst-and-joe-kissell-wrap-up-a-day-at-macworld-2010>

* MacJury on MacVoices TV: On the second day of the show, Tonya 
  participated in a MacJury panel discussion, along with Ted Landau, 
  Jeff Gamet, and Chuck La Tournous, to discuss what was different and 
  interesting about this Macworld Expo, and to predict what will be 
  special about Macworld Expo 2011.

<http://macvoices.tv/macvoicestv-1021-macvoicestv-at-macworld-the-macjury-holds-court-at-macworld-2010>

* Macworld 2010: TidBITS at Expo: In this video, shot on the final day 
  of the show, Macworld's Chris Breen interviewed Adam and Tonya about 
  the state of electronic publishing, where Take Control came from, 
  and what the iPad means to the publishing industry. Now we just have 
  to convince Chris to come write Take Control books for us!

<http://www.macworld.com/article/146428/2010/02/expo_tidbits.html>

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11029#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/11029>


Greenpeace Hitching Itself to Apple's Star?
-------------------------------------------
  by Doug McLean <doug_mclean@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10974>
  5 comments

  A few weeks ago, the environmental advocacy group Greenpeace 
  released its Guide to Greener Electronics, 14th Edition, a ranking 
  of 18 consumer electronics companies. The list rates major 
  electronics manufacturers - Apple, Microsoft, Samsung, Panasonic, 
  Lenovo, Dell, HP, Sony, Nokia, and others - on environmental goals 
  such as eliminating harmful chemicals in their products, offering 
  recycling programs, and publicly committing themselves to 
  environmentally friendly positions and goals. At first the report 
  seemed like standard Greenpeace fare, but given some time to mull it 
  over, I've begun to think it may not be serving Greenpeace's 
  long-term goals well.

<http://www.greenpeace.org/international/campaigns/toxics/electronics/how-the-companies-line-up>

  This year, Apple moved up four spots on the Guide to Greener 
  Electronics to claim fifth place. The climb results from a mere 0.2 
  point increase on its score (up to 5.1 from 4.9), combined with the 
  drop of a few companies like Samsung that failed to meet previously 
  set goals. Greenpeace continues to applaud Apple for the actual 
  removal of PVCs and BFRs from all its products (except for PVC-free 
  power cords in some countries that haven't yet approved them on 
  safety grounds), though it also continues to ding Apple for a lack 
  of public statements and commitments. (Like that's a surprise with 
  Apple!) Apple loses points for failing to provide information 
  regarding its supply chain, providing minimal information on future 
  chemical phase-outs, and for reducing information available on its 
  Web site.

<http://www.greenpeace.org/raw/content/international/press/reports/apple-guide-to-greener-electronics-14.pdf>

  The volatility present in the rankings largely results from 
  Greenpeace's emphasis on rewarding statements, promises, and public 
  positions - as opposed to concentrating on what a company has 
  actually done. This isn't a new critique of Greenpeace's 
  methodology; Steve Jobs himself said much the same thing at a 2007 
  shareholder meeting (see "Steve Jobs Addresses Greenpeace at 
  Shareholder Meeting", 14 May 2007).

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8986>

  However, a new rankings chart - appearing under the header "Which 
  companies really sell greener electronics" - introduced this year 
  gives new reason to question why Greenpeace ranks companies in the 
  manner it does. In this new list, Apple prominently takes the top 
  spot, earning four gold stars (the maximum) for having eliminated 
  hazardous chemicals in all of its products. Despite winning the blue 
  ribbon on this page, Greenpeace makes it clear elsewhere that Apple 
  is really in the middle of the pack overall.

<http://www.greenpeace.org/international/campaigns/toxics/electronics/how-the-companies-line-up/which-companies-really-sell-gr>

  So why, if eliminating harmful chemicals from manufacturing is only 
  one part of the equation, does only this particular aspect of being 
  green merit its own chart? If Greenpeace is interested in breaking 
  things down a bit, showing which companies do well in specific 
  areas, why isn't there another gold star chart evaluating how 
  energy-efficient a company's products are, or how much renewable 
  energy the company itself uses? It's telling, I think, that 
  Greenpeace has created a ranking that puts the spotlight on Apple, 
  of all the companies in the list.

  Perhaps Greenpeace is merely trying to appease Apple press and fans. 
  Greenpeace has taken legitimate heat for not giving Apple's actual 
  elimination of toxic chemicals enough credit, so maybe this chart is 
  a way of recognizing that achievement. But if that were true, it 
  would seem Greenpeace would be conceding its major point that 
  changing manufacturing processes is only part of the overall 
  picture.

  Another reason might be even less attractive, related as it is to 
  how one best markets a cause. Apple succeeds in large part due to 
  its public image - the mere mention of Apple can evoke the 
  surrounding culture (youthful, edgy creative types), the people that 
  embody the brand (Steve Jobs or Justin Long), and the products 
  themselves (the iPhone and iPad). The same can't be said of any of 
  the other companies on Greenpeace's list. Just consider the recent 
  fervor regarding the anticipated release of the iPad - you don't see 
  that with nearly any other company in the world.

  So what better company for Greenpeace to attach its message to? By 
  scolding Apple, as it has done in the past, Greenpeace garnered 
  attention for both its goals and itself as an organization. But 
  slamming Apple can generate press effectively for only so long 
  before everyone tunes out. But by placing Apple atop a list, 
  complete with shiny gold stars, Greenpeace was once again able to 
  attract some attention from the press and public. And this time, in 
  addition to grabbing the spotlight briefly, Greenpeace can also 
  claim that its past actions resulted in this new and improved Apple 
  (not that that's at all likely to be true). In this light, the 
  latest ranking says less about Apple's environmental citizenship 
  than about Greenpeace's maneuvering and manipulation of the media.

<http://www.greenpeace.org/international/news/green-apple-new-york151206>

  Having said all that, it's not as if Greenpeace's goal is a bad one. 
  We all place helping ensure the future of a human-friendly Earth on 
  the list of good causes. But might that cause be better served by 
  rankings based on verifiable actions instead of public puffery and 
  easily changed policies? 

  Beneath Greenpeace's easy-to-read rankings is - presumably - a lot 
  of research that attempts to determine the impact electronics 
  companies have on the environment and on policy decisions. In the 
  age of the sound bite it's understandable that Greenpeace feels a 
  need to dress this information up to attract readers who will 
  hopefully continue on to read the finer details. I'm not 
  unsympathetic to Greenpeace's need for attention, but I fear the 
  slippery manner in which it has been doing that may damage its long 
  term goals. If Greenpeace's public relations techniques impinge upon 
  its perceived integrity or reliability as a source on green 
  electronics, then the ends won't even have the opportunity to 
  justify the means. 

  A fierce independence and commitment to envisioning the future has 
  earned Apple its current celebrity. Greenpeace should take note, and 
  allow its own hard work to become the sole spokesman for its cause. 

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10974#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/10974>


Four Changes We Want to See from Apple in 2010
----------------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11026>

  Now that Apple has announced the iPad (much to our collective relief 
  after months of rumors and hype), we have the brain space to look 
  forward to what else Apple might do in 2010. 

  It's a good bet that we'll see speed bumps to much of the Mac line, 
  though it seems less likely that 2010 will bring major industrial 
  design changes. iPhone OS 3.2 is a sure thing, and version 4.0 also 
  seems likely, as does a mid-year update to the iPhone and iPod touch 
  hardware. iLife will probably receive a revision as well, though 
  just when during the year that will happen is anyone's guess. It's 
  also easy to predict small updates to Mac OS X, and if we're lucky, 
  the mid-year Worldwide Developers Conference will bring a glimpse of 
  features in the next big cat, itself probably not due until 2011.

  That was all blindingly obvious, wasn't it? Most industry 
  predictions are, since they're based largely on past performance. So 
  instead of attempting to predict what we expect Apple to do, we 
  instead want to share a few suggestions of what we'd like to see 
  Apple do this year. And unlike some wishlists, we're doing our best 
  to keep it real - all of these ideas are entirely within Apple's 
  capabilities and, we believe, within the realm of Apple's business 
  direction. 

  (We have plenty of wishes - from a revamping of Apple's App Store 
  policies to the open sourcing of the Cocoa framework - that stray 
  too far into the realm of fantasy to explore further here.)


**Better Home Media Sharing** -- Computing and communications devices 
  have long been moving from being shared to being personal. We have 
  our own Macs, our own iPhones, and our own iPods. And Apple 
  certainly wants to encourage that, since it's easier to sell 
  multiple products to a loyal customer than to acquire a new one. 

  But where Apple has fallen down badly is in acknowledging that 
  certain types of _data_ are shared property, all while paying loud 
  lip service to the concepts of networking and data sharing. From 
  iCal and Address Book to iTunes and iPhoto, sharing data within a 
  family is cumbersome at best, and often read-only. BusyMac's 
  BusySync solves the problem for iCal, and Address Book offers some 
  sharing capabilities for MobileMe users in Snow Leopard, but iTunes 
  and iPhoto remain troublesome, even with the addition of the rather 
  confusing Home Sharing feature in iTunes.

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

  The fact of the matter is that music and photos are absolutely 
  shared property within a household. Nothing - legal or physical - 
  prevents any one of us from playing any of the CDs we've purchased, 
  and nothing prevents any of us from looking at or working with our 
  physical photo albums from the days before digital photography. So 
  why do we have to jump through hoops to do this with our digitized 
  music and photos? Is Apple just kowtowing to the recording industry, 
  and if so, why should that affect iPhoto?

  In our ideal 2010, updates to iTunes and iPhoto would give them an 
  interface for creating a centralized data store with the option 
  either to share user-created collections like playlists, ratings, 
  albums, books, cards, and so on, or to keep them separate. Either 
  way, any user should be able to add information to the centralized 
  data store in any way and have it become available to all users.

  But we'll go a step further and suggest that Apple could turn this 
  crying need into a profit center as well, by releasing a Media 
  Capsule, a combination of the Apple TV and Time Capsule that would 
  combine Wi-Fi and Ethernet routing, network-attached storage, 
  networked backups, and shared media libraries, with the capability 
  of displaying photos and video on a TV set and playing music through 
  a stereo system. Such a device could include a terabyte of storage 
  for less than $400 given Apple's current Time Capsule and Apple TV 
  pricing.

  Another move Apple could make in this direction would be to allow 
  iTunes Store accounts to be collected together into a "family 
  account," much as you can have a master MobileMe account and various 
  sub-accounts. That could potentially eliminate legal concerns 
  surrounding sharing, since users would be agreeing that sharing was 
  purely for personal use.


**Family Support in MobileMe** -- Continuing the theme, although 
  MobileMe offers a family plan, it's merely an individual account 
  plus four additional family accounts (with reduced storage) at a 
  lower price. MobileMe has improved significantly over the past few 
  years, and Apple is missing a great opportunity to meet the needs of 
  the online-enabled family. 

  Family coordination has always been a daunting task, and never more 
  so than in this digital age. There are schedules to keep in sync, 
  photos to share, geographically separated grandparents to update, 
  and bodies to track. MobileMe already includes all the core 
  components of a service that would significantly appeal to families. 

  Calendar sharing is probably the most important element, and is 
  nearly non-existent today. With MobileMe you can currently publish a 
  calendar so others can see it, but you can't share a calendar and 
  allow anyone to change it. There are also no group calendars to 
  allow family members to share common appointments. 

  Adding calendar sharing and a family group calendar (showing 
  everyone's individual appointments, plus shared ones) would be a 
  huge help in coordinating everyone's doctor appointments and 
  after-school activities. Apple could even add to-do items, so chores 
  could be assigned and marked as done electronically.

  Unlike the current calendar publishing, Apple should also make 
  shared calendars secure and accessible only to invited members, and 
  continue to allow people to mark their own events as private, since 
  we all need a little break from the family sometimes.

  Aside from calendars, there are a number of other family-friendly 
  features Apple could add to MobileMe with various degrees of effort. 
  A family mailing list might make a nice replacement for notes stuck 
  on refrigerators or stuffed in lunchboxes. Enhancements to Find My 
  iPhone could allow parents to keep track of a distributed family 
  (and help sell a few more iPhones); cell carriers already offer 
  similar family-tracking services for less interesting phones. Shared 
  contacts could make those holiday cards or birthday party invites a 
  little easier to pull off. Apple could even centralize Parental 
  Controls management for all iPhones and Macs registered with the 
  family plan. A wiki-like service could allow an extended family to 
  share holiday wishlists without worrying about duplication. 

  And, finally, our previous suggestion about opening up media sharing 
  fits this model nicely, especially for maintaining photo galleries 
  shared with an extended family via MobileMe.


**MobileMe for Mobile Devices** -- While we're on the subject of 
  MobileMe, the lack of support for MobileMe in the mobile version of 
  Safari that's part of the iPhone OS is bewildering. Visit me.com 
  from Mobile Safari, and you're given just a few options: Set up 
  Mail, Contacts, Calendar (which leads to a single screen with 
  instructions on how to set up syncing using the built-in apps on the 
  iPhone or iPod touch); Use Find My iPhone (a recent addition - 
  finally! - as described in "MobileMe Site Adds Some Mobile Safari 
  Support," 18 February 2010); or given the options to install the 
  MobileMe Gallery app for viewing MobileMe galleries and the iDisk 
  app for file access.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11017>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/mobileme-gallery/id350223710?mt=8>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/mobileme-idisk/id320654497?mt=8>

  Google and many other firms have built highly usable Web front ends 
  to sites that were originally intended for desktop browsers, and 
  Apple also has some quite marvelous Web apps. Why not let people who 
  so choose access email, calendars, and other advanced MobileMe 
  features from within Mobile Safari instead of via sync? 

  You may need access when you're trying to reach MobileMe data from a 
  friend's or colleague's iPhone or iPod touch, or when you have an 
  account that you want to check, but not sync. This is especially the 
  case for business users who sync with work information, but still 
  need access to their personal data from the Web site. And while 
  Apple finally allowed access to Find My iPhone from an iPhone (after 
  we initially drafted this article, in fact), the current approach is 
  still just a bandage, not real support.


**Bluetooth Keyboard Support for iPhone/iPod touch** -- You knew we'd 
  make our way around to the iPhone eventually, didn't you? No one 
  would suggest that an iPhone or iPod touch is an ideal device on 
  which to write long documents, and we've all gotten used to the 
  "glass keyboard" that appears for data entry in the iPhone OS. 

  But despite Steve Jobs's disdain for hardware keyboards, such as 
  those found on major models from every other smartphone maker, Apple 
  took pains during the iPad introduction to feature the iPad Keyboard 
  Dock, and the iPad's support for Bluetooth-connected keyboards.

  We asked Apple employees at the iPad's introduction if that same 
  Bluetooth keyboard support would appear in updates to the iPhone and 
  iPod touch, but were told it wasn't planned for those devices. Why? 
  Is it purely to differentiate the iPad from the iPhone and iPod 
  touch?

  (To be fair, the iPhone OS 3.2 update, which is the version 
  demonstrated on the iPad, hasn't yet shipped, so it's entirely 
  possible that Apple may simply include Bluetooth keyboard support 
  for all iPhone OS devices when the software appears.)

  A highly technical Australian friend recently managed a four-week, 
  multiple-continent business trip with only an iPhone for email with 
  the office, Web access for looking up information, Skype for calling 
  home, and taking photos of his travels. Though he intentionally left 
  his laptop behind, he said a compact Bluetooth keyboard would likely 
  have eased the more text-intensive tasks, allowed improved 
  ergonomics, and prevented some neck and shoulder pain from excessive 
  iPhone use. The new restrictions and screening changes for 
  commercial air travel might make it even more desirable to avoid 
  carrying a laptop when possible.

  There is no good technical reason that Apple hasn't enabled this 
  support, which uses very little battery power compared to Bluetooth 
  calling and Bluetooth stereo audio. It seems like a control-freak 
  decision, not one rooted in technical causes or in the cause of 
  providing the best experience for users. A simple upgrade would flip 
  a switch and turn this feature on.


**Will these changes happen?** That's the big question. We've tried 
  hard to keep our wishes in the realm of things that fit within 
  Apple's overall direction and mindset, and that Apple has the 
  technical chops to accomplish. But do our desires align with Apple's 
  corporate direction? 

  Certainly, customer feedback never hurts, and we encourage you to 
  use Apple's Feedback page to register your opinions as well. But the 
  company is famously self-directed, and the main driving force for 
  such changes would have to come from within, if not from Steve Jobs 
  himself, then from Apple's own product managers, programmers, 
  testers, and tech support reps, all communicating up the line that 
  they themselves want more from Apple's products along the lines 
  we've outlined here. 

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

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11026#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/11026>


Prepare Your Enterprise for the iPad
------------------------------------
  by Rich Mogull <rich@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10972>
  11 comments

  The initial response from many industry analysts on the release of 
  the iPad was unsurprising, if disappointing. As expected, they cited 
  a litany of reasons Apple's latest creation is completely unsuitable 
  in the enterprise, firmly branding the iPad as nothing more than a 
  consumer toy. The usual complaints were trotted out: security 
  concerns, manageability, and lack of support for existing enterprise 
  applications. These criticisms rolled off their keyboards and 
  tongues as if from a well-rehearsed script.

  They are wrong.

  The iPad is a fundamentally transformative computing experience that 
  will meet the needs of many business users far more effectively than 
  their existing Macs or PCs do. Although initial business adoption 
  will start slowly due to some of Apple's design choices, adoption 
  will pick up over time, and businesses will find themselves 
  increasing both support and use of iPads to meet employee demand and 
  business needs.

  While I don't expect the iPad to displace the inventory of 
  enterprise laptops and desktops completely, it (and its eventual 
  derivatives) are well designed to fulfill certain business needs 
  underserved by existing solutions.


**Filling a Technology Gap** -- Although businesses often need some 
  sort of a mid-size device for their users, the offerings have never 
  really suited the requirements. Existing tablets either bolt a 
  tablet interface onto a desktop operating system, or expand a 
  PDA-based user interface onto a larger display. Tablets that use 
  desktop operating systems still suffer from the battery life and 
  usability problems of their desktop brethren, while the PDA-based 
  devices start instantly, work longer, and cost less, but with 
  severely limited displays and application performance. And neither 
  of these options is designed for the form factor and usage scenarios 
  they inhabit.

  Many organizations, especially larger ones, struggle to strike the 
  right balance for mobile computing. Certain types of users, such as 
  healthcare, service engineers, and other on-the-go job roles have 
  long sought a portable device to support their work in the field. 
  Having used, supported, and even designed some of these throughout 
  my IT career I can honestly say the vast majority are poorly suited 
  for field work. They are clumsy, non-intuitive, and often both slow 
  and unreliable. 

  There are also many business users who travel regularly, but who 
  don't need the full desktop computing experience when they are out 
  of the office. I rack up 50,000 to 100,000 air miles each year, but 
  on most of my trips I need access only to email, the Web, my 
  calendar, and a few productivity applications (the Microsoft Office 
  suite). It's also nice to have some video entertainment options and 
  a game or two to while away late nights in the hotel. Don't believe 
  me? Next time you are on a plane, in an airport, at a hotel, or in a 
  conference, take a quick look at the screens around you - it's 
  likely that 95 percent of what you see are email, movies or games, a 
  spreadsheet, a PowerPoint presentation, Microsoft Word document, a 
  Web browser, or perhaps a PDF file.

  But we road warriors have never really had a viable option other 
  than a full-sized laptop. Even with all the advances in mobile 
  computing design, we either have a full desktop user interface on a 
  netbook's tiny screen and cramped keyboard, or a larger, heavier 
  device you can't open and use comfortably (or safely, for the 
  device) in the cramped seats of major airlines (in the United States 
  at least). And neither laptops nor netbooks can get you through a 
  full day unless you're on one of the few airlines with power outlets 
  in economy class.

  While it's always risky to speculate before a device is actually 
  released, the iPad seems well positioned to meet needs of both the 
  field user and the business traveler - at least eventually. Its 
  size, simplicity, flexible user interface, and likely reliability 
  are an excellent match for vertical and field applications, while 
  its weight, battery life, and application support are well aligned 
  for a certain class of business traveler. It's the first tablet 
  that's _designed as a tablet_.

  But notice I said, "eventually." As is often the case with Apple, 
  the iPad needs a few tweaks before we'll see it formally supported 
  in wide business use.


**The Apple Adoption Cycle** -- Apple has always had a tepid 
  relationship with the enterprise. Apple is first and foremost a 
  consumer electronics company, and, unlike Microsoft or major PC 
  manufacturers like Dell, has deliberately avoided many of the 
  requirements to sell into the enterprise. Rather than dealing with 
  the sales and support overhead, Apple adds just enough features to 
  their products so they'll work in an enterprise, rather than 
  building out enterprise-specific solutions. 

  Instead of aiming for the corporate procurement office's 
  specifications, Apple focuses most features on the needs of everyday 
  users, while understanding that certain enterprise-class features, 
  like Microsoft Exchange and Active Directory support, are essential 
  for consumers to be able to use their devices at work. Apple's 
  enterprise strategy is to reduce barriers to entry and then appeal 
  directly to the users, avoiding the tremendous overhead of selling 
  directly to a budget-constrained IT department.

  Thus, nearly every Apple technology follows a typical adoption cycle 
  that starts with high-end consumers, then business travelers and 
  specific vertical markets (education, creative professionals), and 
  finally expanded verticals (healthcare, financial services). 
  Initially IT departments ban or fight the adoption of Apple's 
  technologies before testing pilot support and eventually offering 
  broad support. 

  Requests to support the iPad in the enterprise are inevitable, from 
  both individual users and business units with particular needs. It's 
  also inevitable that users will bring iPads to work even if they 
  aren't supported. Although it isn't my place to tell you whether or 
  not to support the iPad, it's important to understand that if you 
  work in IT you _will_ see these requests, and you should have a plan 
  in place to handle them, especially once your CEO plays with one at 
  the next executive conference.

  As with the iPhone, the pressure will start slowly and increase over 
  time. Since the iPad is a new product category, and not tied to the 
  normal 18 to 24 month cell phone refresh cycle, adoption will start 
  slowly over the first year or so, eventually ramping up with the 
  second and third revisions of the iPad platform. The timing might be 
  different, and could possibly be slower, but it will eventually 
  follow the same cycle as other Apple technologies. It's a matter of 
  when and how loudly, not if, users will start asking for iPad 
  support.


**Security and Management** -- Assuming the iPad includes the same 
  base feature set as the iPhone (and that is an assumption, since 
  Apple hasn't yet released full details), security issues will be 
  similar. The iPhone OS is relatively secure, and far more secure 
  than any desktop operating system. It supports strong passwords, 
  code signing, VPNs, remote wipe, basic encryption, and wipe on 
  passcode failures. Despite all the theoretical attacks out there, 
  the iPad is likely more secure out of the box than any existing 
  laptops.

  The more difficult problem is that the iPhone does not support 
  security and management software. Although there aren't any iPhone 
  viruses, corporate compliance requirements may still mandate 
  additional security controls like antivirus, real device encryption 
  (it's trivial to circumvent iPhone encryption), and user monitoring. 
  This isn't often an issue on the iPhone, since, for better or worse, 
  compliance policies don't treat phones the same as laptops. But the 
  iPad is a new device class and may be subject to more stringent 
  requirements. It's an open question, and one that your IT, security, 
  compliance, and risk departments will need to work out... possibly 
  in cooperation with your auditors.

  You may be able to mitigate some of these concerns by managing 
  support for the iPad; specifically by allowing access only to 
  certain applications and services. For example, you could support 
  connections to Microsoft Exchange (where all email messages can 
  still be scanned for viruses), and limited corporate Web 
  applications. (Again, this assumes that the iPad has the same 
  Exchange support as the iPhone, which may not prove to be true.)

  Until some new attack appears, the biggest security risk is that of 
  a lost device. Unless you purchase and enable 3G connectivity on all 
  iPads, remote wiping will be far less reliable than with an iPhone. 
  Although the iPad is likely encrypted using hardware, if it uses the 
  same technique as the iPhone 3GS, it will be extremely vulnerable to 
  even a moderately skilled attacker with physical access to the 
  device. Hopefully Apple has plugged this hole, but if not, the iPad 
  will represent a slightly higher level of risk than an unencrypted 
  smartphone. We'll need to evaluate this vulnerability closely when 
  the iPad is released.

  In terms of management, you don't have many options, just as with 
  the iPhone. Apple supports over-the-air or tethered (via iTunes) 
  deployment of configuration profiles for security and other 
  settings, including application restrictions, and we can expect to 
  see these on the iPad. The biggest issue is the requirement for 
  iTunes for all system updates, although Apple does support 
  restricted iTunes deployments so users can't use it as media 
  management software. 

  As the iPad increases in popularity we may see additional management 
  tools appear that support iPad management with other enterprise 
  endpoints, especially those that currently offer iPhone support. 
  Most of these tools leverage the same configuration profiles that 
  Apple supports, but until Apple allows alternative update 
  mechanisms, we're still beholden to iTunes, an awkwardly repurposed 
  consumer media management tool.


**Application Support** -- One of the biggest obstacles to deploying 
  any Apple device in the enterprise is application support. Even if 
  we ignore custom desktop applications, there is still a massive base 
  of Web-based corporate applications that requires Internet Explorer 
  with ActiveX controls enabled. Worse yet, many of these applications 
  require Internet Explorer 6, making migration even to current 
  versions of Microsoft products difficult.

  In practice, this shouldn't hinder potential iPad deployments since 
  we are not trying to replace employee PCs, but instead want to add 
  an additional device option. I highly doubt we'll see any 
  organization rip out the sales team's laptops in exchange for iPads 
  any time soon. 

  Unless you plan on banning iPads, those of you in IT might want to 
  start testing to see which major applications work before your users 
  start trying them out themselves. Even if you don't plan to offer 
  formal support, publishing a list of usable applications will reduce 
  support calls. The key is to manage expectations; because the iPad 
  lacks Flash, Java, and ActiveX support, it simply won't be able to 
  access many enterprise applications initially, no matter how much 
  you might want to support it.

  The other big issue is productivity applications, where Apple has an 
  answer now: iWork. Based on the information on the iPad Web site, 
  iWork will be able to read Microsoft Office file formats, but output 
  only PDF or iWork files, which is clearly unacceptable for many 
  business users. 

  Apple also hasn't released many details on file management, which 
  may require an iTunes-enabled Mac or PC to place iWork files on the 
  iPad (and possibly to manage file conversions). I use iWork heavily 
  in my company (the advantage of being the CEO), and although it does 
  a reasonable job of working with basic Office files, it's still 
  fairly limited in complex situations. This could be a deal breaker, 
  for example, for the sales executive who needs to manage expenses in 
  an Excel spreadsheet with macros enabled. 


**Broadening the Application Horizon** -- So far we've discussed only 
  translating the existing enterprise application ecosystem to the 
  iPad, which ignores the potential for completely new applications 
  written for the device. 

  Years ago, when designing an electronic medical records application 
  to enable doctors to collect patient data more easily during exams, 
  my biggest struggle was creating a user interface to fit the 
  physician's workflow. Existing touchscreen computers and laptops 
  were poorly suited for the task, and all competing applications were 
  clumsy and non-intuitive. Around the same time I faced the same 
  form/function issues while working with a major hardware vendor to 
  design a mobile application to support field service engineers at 
  client sites. In both cases the iPad would easily have bested 
  existing options, thanks to its physical form factor, battery life, 
  multitouch support, and user interface. 

  As apps like SalesForce Mobile and Cisco WebEx Meeting Center show, 
  the iPhone OS platform is capable of supporting major enterprise 
  applications. Some sacrifice feature completeness to improve 
  usability based on the deployment circumstances. In others, 
  especially some of the medical examples we've seen during Apple's 
  announcement events, the multitouch user interface enables 
  application interactions previously difficult or impossible on a 
  full workstation operating system. 

<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/salesforce-mobile/id281826146?mt=8>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/cisco-webex-meeting-center/id298844386?mt=8>

  The best enterprise iPad apps won't merely translate the Web or 
  desktop client user interface to a slightly smaller screen but will 
  take full advantage of the new user modalities and the device's 
  portability to increase employee productivity. Key opportunities 
  include customer relations management, sales and service support, 
  expenses and billings, and vertical applications like my foray into 
  healthcare applications. 


**Deployment Options** -- There are four ways you can manage iPads in 
  the enterprise. 

* Ban the iPad. Offer no support, and do not allow access to the 
  corporate VPN, wireless, or email servers. If necessary, block the 
  iPad from connecting to corporate workstations via USB using a port 
  control solution.

* No support, but no ban. Allow users to connect their iPads to 
  corporate workstations to synchronize contacts and calendar entries, 
  but don't offer direct Exchange support, assuming the iPad supports 
  it at all. Allow connections to a wireless guest network, but only 
  if the user figures it out. 

* Pilot or limited support. Allow advanced users to enroll in a pilot 
  program, and use them as your test group. Enable Exchange support, 
  VPN connectivity, and wireless access as possible. Depending on your 
  environment you can require full device management using the iPhone 
  Configuration Utility (assuming it's updated for the iPad), or allow 
  users to self-manage devices. Require iTunes on their day-to-day 
  computer, and send out reminders to keep them updated with the 
  latest security patches.

* Full support/adoption. Allow any user to bring an iPad into work and 
  connect with enterprise systems. Formally support device 
  registration and management. Write corporate iPhone apps for use on 
  employee iPads and iPhones.

  The one thing you can't do is underestimate the iPad's appeal and 
  assume users won't start bringing them to work. It's also key that 
  you not treat the iPad like a small Mac or a large iPhone - it's a 
  new class of device that shares characteristics of its bigger and 
  smaller family members, but one with a unique (for now) set of 
  design elements and use cases.

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10972#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/10972>


TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 22 February 2010
----------------------------------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11025>

**Firefox 3.5.8** -- Despite the fact that Firefox 3.6 is available, 
  those who haven't yet upgraded should pay attention to the 
  just-released Firefox 3.5.8, which addresses a handful of critical 
  security vulnerabilities, all of which could lead to memory 
  corruption and the running of arbitrary code. These issues include 
  several JavaScript-related crashing bugs, a vulnerability that 
  existed in the way Firefox's Web Workers handled various data types 
  when processing posted messages, and a problem with how the HTML 
  parser freed used memory. Detailed information regarding the 
  update's security content is available on Mozilla's Web site. (Free, 
  19 MB)

<http://www.mozilla.com/en-US/firefox/all-older.html>
<http://www.mozilla.org/security/known-vulnerabilities/firefox35.html#firefox3.5.8 >

  Read/post comments about Firefox 3.5.8.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11028#comments>


**TweetDeck 0.33.2** -- The 0.33.2 release of Iain Dodsworth's Adobe 
  AIR-based Twitter client, TweetDeck, comes on the heels of a more 
  substantial update. Changes first introduced in version 0.33 include 
  an increased API call limit, a new Column Navigator, and support for 
  media previews within TweetDeck of content from YouTube, Posterous, 
  Flickr, Mobypicture and Twitgoo. The update also enables you to make 
  changes to your search columns (rather than having to delete and 
  recreate them), adds a new Help section that improves support and 
  troubleshooting features, and addresses a long list of minor issues. 
  Versions 0.33.1 and 0.33.2 each fix a few small bugs. (Free, 2 MB)

<http://www.tweetdeck.com/>
<http://support.tweetdeck.com/entries/107246-what-s-new-in-tweetdeck-v0-33>
<http://support.tweetdeck.com/entries/113395-tweetdeck-v0-33-1-available-to-download-now>
<http://support.tweetdeck.com/entries/114664-v0-33-2-available-to-download-now>

  Read/post comments about TweetDeck 0.33.2.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11027#comments>


**VMware Fusion 3.0.2** -- VMware has released a small, but important, 
  maintenance update to the company's virtualization software for the 
  Mac, VMware Fusion. Version 3.0.2 corrects a compatibility issue 
  that prevented VMware Fusion from running on servers running Mac OS 
  X 10.6 Server. ($79.99 new, free update from 3.0, 407 MB)

<http://www.vmware.com/products/fusion/>

  Read/post comments about VMware Fusion 3.0.2.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11018#comments>


**iStumbler 99** -- iStumbler is an easy way to scan for information 
  about the Wi-Fi environment around you, as well as see available 
  Bluetooth devices, and which Bonjour services are available on the 
  local network. The latest version, release 99, works only with Mac 
  OS X 10.6.2 or later, adds support for the 5 GHz band used by 
  802.11a and 802.11n, and takes advantage of the coordinate-based 
  location feature in Snow Leopard to allow GPS-like tracking as the 
  application scans. (Free, donation requested, 1.1 MB)

<http://istumbler.net/>

  Read/post comments about iStumbler 99.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11016#comments>



ExtraBITS for 22 February 2010
------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11024>

  After hours on our feet at Macworld Expo 2010, we let our fingers do 
  a lot of walking last week, reading articles about free registration 
  for Macworld Expo 2011, Apple secrecy, dealing with newbies, 
  streaming TV from HBO, an extension to a MacBook repair program, 
  Nuance's acquisition of MacSpeech, the EFF's guide to ebook readers' 
  rights, the approval of the SlingPlayer iPhone app, a forthcoming 
  Steve Jobs biography, and Google's admission of inadequate testing 
  of Google Buzz.


**Free Registration for Macworld Expo 2011** -- If you found Macworld 
  Expo useful this year, or if you're regretting having missed it, you 
  can register for a free pass for next year's show (January 25th 
  through 29th, 2011). The offer is good until 8 March 2010.

<https://register.rcsreg.com/r2/macsf2011/ga/index2.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11008#comments>


**Reuters Explores Apple's Secrecy in Manufacturing** -- We're all 
  aware of how Apple refrains from talking about unannounced products, 
  but this Reuters article gives a sense of just how far Apple also 
  goes to maintain secrecy with manufacturing suppliers like Foxconn. 
  The picture it paints of Apple's approach is simultaneously entirely 
  understandable and a little chilling.

<http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE61G3XA20100217>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11023#comments>


**HBO Launches GO Service** -- Joining networks like NBC, ABC, CBS, 
  and FOX, HBO has dipped its toes into the waters of Web television 
  with its new GO service - sort of. While the other aforementioned 
  networks enable anyone with a computer hooked up to the Internet to 
  access content, HBO's GO will be available only to customers 
  currently signed up for its regular cable service. For those folks, 
  Web access to over 600 hours of premium shows and movies is free; 
  for everyone else, there isn't even an option to pay a fee - at 
  least not yet. It will be interesting to watch how HBO develops this 
  service and its audience in the coming year.

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

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11021#comments>


**Apple Extends MacBook Repair Program** -- Apple has recently 
  announced an extension on its repair program for certain MacBook 
  models produced between May 2006 and December 2007. Qualifying 
  machines display a flashing question mark on the screen when turned 
  on and are eligible for a free hard drive replacement. Customers 
  with symptomatic MacBooks should bring them to an Apple Authorized 
  Service Provider or an Apple Store within 3 years from their 
  original date of purchase or until August 15, 2010 (whichever is 
  longer). Apple also said it will reimburse users who paid 
  out-of-pocket to fix this now-covered issue.

<http://www.apple.com/support/macbook/hd/repairextension/>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11020#comments>


**Toward a Grand Unified Theory of n00bs** -- Computer veterans often 
  joke about "newbie" users who have trouble understanding basic 
  computing concepts, but it's not funny when you're attempting to 
  help a friend understand something online or if you're dealing with 
  customer support questions. ShoveBox developer Dan Grover writes 
  about the divide between how computers work and the expectations of 
  those who use them, with suggestions for how to improve the 
  experience.

<http://dangrover.com/?action=view&url=toward-a-grand-unified-theory-of-n00bs>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11019#comments>


**EFF Offers Guide to Readers' Rights with Ebooks** -- The Electronic 
  Frontier Foundation has published what it calls a checklist of 
  digital rights for ebooks, designed to provoke thought and 
  discussion about what rights readers should have when purchasing 
  electronic books.

<https://www.eff.org/wp/digital-books-and-your-rights>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11013#comments>


**MacSpeech Acquired by Nuance** -- MacSpeech has been acquired by 
  Nuance, the firm from which MacSpeech licensed the voice-recognition 
  engine that powers MacSpeech Dictate. MacSpeech had built its own 
  interface and processing wrapper around the engine, which was 
  somewhat different and not yet as full featured as Nuance's Dragon 
  NaturallySpeaking. Nuance also offers a set of iPhone apps.

<http://www.nuance.com/news/pressreleases/2010/20100216_macspeech.asp>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11012#comments>


**Apple Approves SlingPlayer with 3G Support** -- The expected update 
  to SlingPlayer that allows 3G video streaming has appeared on the 
  App Store. SlingPlayer is an iPhone OS app that lets you stream 
  media over a network or the Internet from a Slingbox digital video 
  recorder. The new version allows you to view video while connected 
  via 3G or Wi-Fi, and is the first app to permit 3G video streaming 
  under new guidelines from AT&T.

<http://www.slingbox.com/go/iphone>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11011#comments>


**Google Admits to Inadequate Buzz Testing** -- Google tested Google 
  Buzz only internally, the product manager told the BBC, which is 
  obvious, because only engineers working 80-hour weeks would think 
  that people wouldn't mind having all of their most common email and 
  chat contacts exposed for the world to see.

<http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/8517613.stm>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11010#comments>


**A Jobs Biography with His Cooperation** -- Steve Jobs will cooperate 
  with best-selling biographer Walter Isaacson on his biography, the 
  New York Times reports. While the article relies on anonymous 
  sources, it's obvious Jobs would be happy to be in the company of 
  Benjamin Franklin and Albert Einstein, the subjects of former Time 
  manager editor Isaacson's previous biographies.

<http://www.nytimes.com/2010/02/16/technology/companies/16apple.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11009#comments>



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