TidBITS#1018/15-Mar-2010
========================
  Issue link: <http://db.tidbits.com/issue/1018>

  We have plenty of variety for you this week, starting with Glenn 
  Fleishman reporting on Apple COO Tim Cook's $22 million bonus and 
  Verizon's sneaky plan to woo Wi-Fi-only iPad buyers with their neat 
  MiFi 3G portable hotspot. Glenn also contributes a look at T-Mobile, 
  including an explanation of why the iPhone and iPad won't work well 
  on T-Mobile's network in the United States; Matt Neuburg reviews 
  C-Command's EagleFiler snippet keeper; and Adam explores how the 
  Internet has changed the playing field for businesses like 
  newspapers and record labels that sell arbitrary bundles of content. 
  Finally, if you run a client-based business, check out our DealBITS 
  drawing this week for ProfitTrain. Notable software releases this 
  week include VMware Fusion 3.1 Beta, Things 1.3, MainStage 2.1.1, 
  LogMeIn Pro2, Safari 4.0.5, and TextExpander 3.0.

Articles
    Tim Cook Gets $22 Million for Filling Steve Jobs's Shoes
    Verizon to Woo iPad Buyers with MiFi
    DealBITS Drawing: Win a Copy of ProfitTrain
    EagleFiler Turns a Finder Folder Into a Snippet Keeper
    Can T-Mobile's 3G Speed Overcome Its Frequency Limitations?
    The Fall and Rise of Bundle-Based Businesses 
    TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 15 March 2010
    ExtraBITS for 15 March 2010


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Tim Cook Gets $22 Million for Filling Steve Jobs's Shoes
--------------------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11076>
  1 comment

  Those of us who have had regular jobs know the joy of the bonus, a 
  reward for working hard and producing results. Apple Chief Operating 
  Officer Tim Cook found a little something extra in his pay envelope 
  on 10 March 2010: $5 million plus 75,000 restricted shares of stock 
  worth $17 million at today's prices.

  Cook was rewarded for "outstanding performance in assuming the 
  day-to-day operations of the Company for the period in fiscal 2009 
  during which Mr. Jobs was on medical leave of absence," according to 
  an SEC filing by Apple. The stock grants are in two even pieces that 
  can't be sold for one and two years as long as Cook is still 
  employed on those dates.

<http://phx.corporate-ir.net/phoenix.zhtml?c=107357&p=irol-SECText&TEXT=aHR0cDovL2NjYm4uMTBrd2l6YXJkLmNvbS94bWwvZmlsaW5nLnhtbD9yZXBvPXRlbmsmaXBhZ2U9NjgyOTU0MSZhdHRhY2g9T04mc1hCUkw9MQ%3d%3d>

  Many executives at companies large and small are compensated far 
  beyond the value to investors. I'm a great fan of Nell Minow, who 
  has for the last 11 years documented at Corporate Library excessive 
  and secret corporate payouts to underperforming leaders.

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

  But Cook seems to deserve this one (I'm not a shareholder, and so 
  the disbursement doesn't affect me directly). Cook was in charge of 
  Apple for the first half of 2009, and the company didn't appear to 
  suffer at all, despite handwringing by pundits who thought Jobs had 
  the golden product-laying goose in his carry-on luggage.

  The stock was around $100 per share near the end of 2008 and into 
  2009; it closed at $224.84 on the day Cook's shares were awarded. 
  Company revenue and earnings were remarkable in the fiscal quarter 
  ending in January 2010 (which included the holiday season). Apple 
  increased revenue 32 percent over the year-ago quarter, and profit 
  was up 50 percent. Apple has $40 billion in cash and short-term 
  investments.

  The company's market capitalization - stock price multiplied by 
  shares outstanding - is over $200 billion, which means shareholders' 
  stake in the firm has grown by about $115 billion in the last 14 
  months. Cook's bonus is two-tenths of one percent of that increase.

  The restricted stock is also a tiny set of handcuffs to keep Cook at 
  the company, and could be worth much more than the $17 million the 
  shares would sell for today. Two years ago, Cook exercised 300,000 
  options and sold them for around $140 per share, reaping about $40 
  million. Records show he retained just 14,000 shares in the company 
  before this new, restricted grant.

<http://biz.yahoo.com/t/15/6289.html>

  ----
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Verizon to Woo iPad Buyers with MiFi
------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11073>
  4 comments

  Engadget posted a leaked photo of a Verizon Wireless marketing 
  campaign that's being prepared to lure early iPad buyers into 
  choosing Verizon over AT&T for 3G service. How so? Verizon offers 
  the MiFi, a wireless router that connects to the Internet over 
  Verizon's 3G network, and then allows up to five devices to 
  piggyback over Wi-Fi. 

<http://www.engadget.com/2010/03/09/eternal-optimist-verizon-calls-ipad-launch-an-opportunity-to-s/>

  The MiFi is a nifty device, fitting in a shirt pocket, working off a 
  fully charged internal battery for four hours or indefinitely via an 
  AC adapter. 

<http://www.verizonwireless.com/b2c/mobilebroadband/?page=products_mifi>

  The problem is the service plan. Verizon requires a two-year 
  commitment from MiFi buyers for either a $39.99 per month plan for 
  250 MB of combined upstream and downstream usage (and 10 cents per 
  MB above that), or $59.99 per month for 5 GB of combined usage (and 
  5 cents per MB for overages).

<http://www.verizonwireless.com/b2c/mobilebroadband/?page=plans>

  That's far more expensive than the 3G-enabled iPad, which requires 
  no contract commitment, and offers two monthly plans: $14.99 for 250 
  MB usage per month and $29.99 for unlimited usage. There are no 
  overage charges; instead, the iPad pops up alerts when the 250 MB 
  limit is coming up and offers the user the option of upgrading to 
  the unlimited plan for the rest of that month, a thoroughly rational 
  approach.

<http://www.apple.com/ipad/3g/>

  Still, it's smart of Verizon to seize the opportunity to show 
  alternatives. I've heard great things about the MiFi because of its 
  flexibility and portability, and the way it gives users a single 3G 
  data plan and hardware device that works with all Wi-Fi-capable 
  laptops and handhelds.

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11073#comments>
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DealBITS Drawing: Win a Copy of ProfitTrain
-------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11087>

  Several years ago, we ran a DealBITS drawing for a then-new 
  time-tracking and invoicing program for freelancers and small 
  businesses called Billable from indie software house Clickable Bliss 
  (see "DealBITS Drawing: Billable," 29 January 2007). Clickable 
  Bliss's Mike Zornek has been hard at work on the program in the 
  intervening years, and along with adding oodles of features to the 
  2.0 version, he has renamed the program ProfitTrain. It now supports 
  multiple businesses, lets you create invoices based either on 
  completed tasks or line items that you enter manually, stores 
  recurring services and products to add to invoices, allows bidding 
  via an "estimate" invoice status, tracks expenses to be included in 
  invoices, provides for full or partial payment, includes built-in 
  reports, and much more. ProfitTrain is definitely worth a look for 
  any Mac user who runs a client-based business.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8829>
<http://clickablebliss.com/profittrain/>

  This week we're giving away four copies of ProfitTrain 2.0, each 
  worth $49.95, so if you need a better way to track your hours and 
  invoice your clients, be sure to enter at the DealBITS page. All 
  information gathered is covered by our comprehensive privacy policy. 
  Remember too, that if someone you refer to this drawing wins, you'll 
  receive the same prize as a reward for spreading the word.

<http://www.tidbits.com/dealbits/profit-train/>
<http://www.tidbits.com/about/privacy.html>

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11087#comments>
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EagleFiler Turns a Finder Folder Into a Snippet Keeper
------------------------------------------------------
  by Matt Neuburg <matt@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11040>
  2 comments

  In nearly two decades of experimenting with ways of storing and 
  retrieving text and other snippets of information, largely 
  documented in the "Conquer Your Text" series of articles, I've found 
  that most applications take a fairly heavyweight approach, requiring 
  me to hand my data completely over to their care, keeping it in a 
  specific place or (even more often) in a document and format 
  specific to the application. That's why I was intrigued by the 
  lighter touch of EagleFiler, from C-Command (the development house 
  of Michael Tsai, who also writes SpamSieve (see "Tools We Use: 
  SpamSieve," 17 February 2003) and other utilities I wouldn't want to 
  be without).

<http://db.tidbits.com/series/1196>
<http://c-command.com/eaglefiler/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/07076>

  EagleFiler's chief document type is called a "library." You can have 
  as many libraries as you like, and each library is just an ordinary 
  folder in the Finder, containing files that are your data; each 
  snippet is simply a file in a standard data format. A library also 
  contains some housekeeping files maintained by EagleFiler. So you do 
  have to make a conscious decision to keep particular snippets in a 
  particular folder - the snippets can't be scattered all over your 
  hard disk - and you do need, in general, to refrain from altering 
  the contents of that folder directly, interacting with them through 
  EagleFiler instead. But all the same, there are your snippets just 
  sitting there, ordinary files in an ordinary folder, completely 
  visible and accessible in the Finder. You can search your snippets 
  within EagleFiler, but you can also search them with system-level 
  Spotlight. You can open them directly in the Finder. If the world 
  were suddenly struck by mysterious cosmic rays that destroyed 
  EagleFiler, none of your data would be lost, because your data are 
  just normal files in folders.

  In the distant past, one might have criticized this scheme for 
  wasting space. Even a tiny text file occupies a minimum logical 
  space on your hard disk - typically 8 KB. So, while 100 snippets of 
  10 bytes of text data apiece sum to about a kilobyte, 100 files of 
  10 bytes apiece require nearly a megabyte. However, in the modern 
  scheme of things, where a hard disk will typically have dozens of 
  gigabytes of free space, a few extra megabytes are hardly 
  problematic.


**Window on the World** -- Since EagleFiler's data are just files in a 
  folder, its chief value lies in its presentation of those files, and 
  how it lets you annotate and search them. I'll start by describing 
  the library window. The basic layout is reminiscent of Mail's 
  tripartite window. At the top is a list of files in the library 
  (called "records"). At the bottom are the contents of the record 
  currently selected in that list. And on the left is a sidebar where 
  you can select to specify the subset of records you want listed at 
  the top.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-02/eaglefiler.png>

  The sidebar has three sections. First comes a hierarchical list of 
  folders. Here you can make new folders, put folders within folders, 
  and organize records into folders; these folders are real, 
  reflecting and controlling the actual folder hierarchy within the 
  library folder in the Finder.

  The second sidebar section is smart folders. As in Mail or the 
  Finder, a smart folder is a saved set of search criteria; clicking 
  one performs the search, determining which records are listed at the 
  top. You can construct (through an excellent interface) some 
  powerfully complex search criteria.

  The third sidebar section is tags. You can create tags at will, and 
  assign any number of them to a record; and tags can be structured 
  hierarchically.

  So, the sidebar is itself a search mechanism, because you can select 
  any combination of folders, smart folders, and tags to determine 
  what's listed in the top half of the window. In addition, at the 
  very top of the window (in the toolbar) is a search field. 
  EagleFiler's search really shines; it's based on Spotlight (so it 
  can index any file that Spotlight knows how to index), but it uses 
  its own index (making it super-fast) and its own straightforward 
  Boolean syntax.

  There is also a secondary Info (or Inspect) window. Here, among 
  other things, you can read and edit a record's "note." A note is an 
  RTF file, associated with a record, that EagleFiler stores for you 
  in a separate Notes folder within the library folder. Thus, you can 
  attach text to a record in addition to its title and contents. And 
  once again, if EagleFiler weren't present, you could still read all 
  your notes, as they are normal RTF files openable in TextEdit.


**A World of Data** -- EagleFiler can import any kind of file. Within 
  EagleFiler, you can edit a file's title (which is displayed in the 
  upper part of the window), and, in the case of RTF and text files, 
  even its contents. You can ask EagleFiler to open any record via the 
  Finder, but this is often unnecessary, since EagleFiler can display 
  the contents of many file types, and some file types receive special 
  treatment of other kinds. Perhaps the best way to give you some idea 
  of this is to describe some of my own various EagleFiler libraries.

* Notes. This is a large miscellaneous library of text and RTF files. 
  They are vaguely categorized using tags ("Ruby", "Cocoa") but in no 
  other way; I search on them mostly by title or contents.

* Scans. I got tired of saving all my old paper warranties, 
  instruction booklets, receipts, and so forth, so I scanned them all. 
  These files are just images, so they have no internal data; 
  therefore I've given them titles and notes that are descriptive and 
  flexible, for the sake of searchability. The files are JPEGs, and 
  EagleFiler's display of their contents is usually quite sufficient 
  when I need to examine one.

* Orders. When I buy something over the Web, I save a PDF of the 
  browser's receipt page in this library. (This save can be performed 
  in a single move, using the Save PDF to EagleFiler command that 
  appears in every application's Print dialog.) Tags let me specify 
  the stage the order is at ("ordered", "shipped", "received").

* Mail Archive. I use Entourage, which keeps its mail in one gigantic, 
  all too easily corrupted database. So every once in a while I export 
  an Entourage "folder" that's no longer active to EagleFiler and 
  delete those messages from Entourage. EagleFiler keeps each "folder" 
  as an mbox file, but it displays the messages individually using the 
  subject line as the title, and it knows (and displays) a message's 
  From, To, and Date information. All embedded attachments are 
  maintained. Naturally, messages are searchable by contents.

* Bookmarks. This is a massive hierarchy of URL files.

  These have all proven to be splendid uses of EagleFiler, except for 
  my Bookmarks library (which is not working out, for reasons I'll 
  discuss in the next section).


**Conclusions** -- EagleFiler combines ease of use with an underlying 
  ingenuity that makes it feel simple, fast, and lightweight. It's 
  packed with too many clever touches for me to list. The range of 
  things you can import, of ways you can perform an import, and of 
  smart things EagleFiler can do in response, is quite astounding (and 
  you can use AppleScript to extend its powers even further); read the 
  manual online if you want to know more. To give just one example: 
  Suppose EagleFiler isn't even running; well, every library folder 
  contains a To Import folder, and whatever you place there will be 
  imported into that library automatically the next time EagleFiler 
  opens that library. Brilliant.

<http://c-command.com/eaglefiler/manual>

  At the same time, I've occasionally encountered problems with 
  EagleFiler's interface. In fact, over several weeks in 2009, when I 
  was first giving EagleFiler a serious try, I reported many interface 
  issues. Most were small and were quickly fixed, such as a text field 
  that refused to accept a space character, windows opening at the 
  wrong time, a window that forgot what text field I was working in 
  when I returned to it, that sort of thing. On the other hand, 
  EagleFiler still starts up unbelievably slowly, and its Help menu is 
  still extremely slow to pop down when you click it, apparently due 
  to EagleFiler's being written with the PyObjC framework.

<http://pyobjc.sourceforge.net/>

  And, while EagleFiler is excellent for storage of an occasional URL 
  file, it can't substitute for a full-fledged bookmark repository. 
  The hierarchical display of folders in the sidebar lacks the 
  organizational power of a true outliner. You can't edit an imported 
  URL, so if a Web address changes, you can't change the corresponding 
  listing within EagleFiler - you have to delete and replace the 
  existing URL file. And, while there are various ways to import a Web 
  URL - as a bookmark file, a text file, a PDF, or a Web archive - 
  there's no interface for picking an option at import time: you have 
  to specify it beforehand in the application's overall preferences. 
  (However, you can use a cool browser bookmarklet to overcome this 
  limitation.) 

<http://c-command.com/eaglefiler/bookmarklets>

  But I've been very happily using EagleFiler otherwise. I'm probably 
  not using it to its full potential, and yet it has already replaced 
  several other snippet keepers in my arsenal. And it's a whole lot 
  better than using the Finder alone! If you already have a folder 
  full of related things, and you _still_ can't readily find the right 
  one, that folder is a candidate for being turned into an EagleFiler 
  library. In fact, that's how I really think of EagleFiler - it's a 
  Finder folder on steroids.

  EagleFiler requires Mac OS X 10.4 or later, with 10.5 or later 
  recommended. It costs $40, and you can download and try it for 30 
  days for free.

  ----
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Can T-Mobile's 3G Speed Overcome Its Frequency Limitations?
-----------------------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11064>
  1 comment

  Do you remember car-rental firm Avis's ads: "We're number two; we 
  try harder"? Hertz was the big dog, and Avis used this campaign to 
  explain why its service was better, because it had to be.

  T-Mobile is in the same boat, except it's number four. Verizon 
  Wireless, AT&T, and Sprint Nextel, in that order, are bigger than 
  T-Mobile in terms of subscribers, revenue, and 3G coverage. But the 
  plucky number four is trying to catch up. 

  I've been following T-Mobile closely because the company is trying 
  to build the fastest and most robust 3G network in the United 
  States, all while keeping its pricing structure competitive with and 
  more flexible than the three dominant carriers. It's in the process 
  of dramatically increasing its already fast network, too, far ahead 
  of its competitors.

  T-Mobile may be poised to be an alternative to AT&T, because both 
  firms use the same worldwide GSM standard and the 3G flavors that 
  have emerged from it; Sprint and Verizon chose CDMA, although both 
  are migrating to different technology in future networks. 

  But T-Mobile has a technical disadvantage that has kept it from 
  being a true alternative from AT&T for the iPhone (jailbroken or 
  unlocked) and that will prevent it from being a choice for the iPad 
  with 3G. (Although it's technically legal to unlock an iPhone, the 
  Digital Millennium Copyright Act seems to make it impossible in fact 
  to unlock one legally.)


**T-Mobile's 3G Network** -- T-Mobile acquired the spectrum necessary 
  to build a nationwide 3G network only a few years ago, and launched 
  coverage in its first city in early 2008. The company now claims 
  that over 200 million people spread across nearly 300 cities could 
  use its 3G offering. Its three national competitors claim somewhat 
  greater 3G coverage that's available to between 233 and 280 million 
  people out of the total 307 million U.S. residents. (Several smaller 
  carriers, such as MetroPCS, U.S. Cellular, and Cricket Wireless have 
  only regional markets covering several million.)

  But by starting from scratch so recently with 3G, T-Mobile hopes to 
  have an advantage. Because the demands on 3G networks were already 
  being understood as T-Mobile planned its build out, the company says 
  it has developed more-robust backhaul - the link from cell towers to 
  the rest of the network. Where AT&T has struggled, T-Mobile claims 
  to have the links in most places at the scale needed to serve the 
  fastest 3G that will be out this year.

  AT&T and T-Mobile have both deployed HSPA (High Speed Packet 
  Access), and both started with the 3.6 Mbps downstream flavor and 
  have moved to 7.2 Mbps downstream (often called HSPA 7.2). In 
  contrast, Sprint and Verizon's 3G service uses EVDO Rev. A, which 
  tops out at 3.1 Mbps downstream. (These are the highest possible 
  throughput over the air, and users on average see 20 to 50 percent 
  of that rate with higher bursts.)

  But AT&T, despite having put in the software update to make HSPA 7.2 
  possible, said it's not yet actually offering the higher speed 
  because of limited backhaul. The company plans to roll HSPA 7.2 out 
  on a city-by-city basis as it upgrades base station sites with 
  additional backhaul capacity. In contrast, T-Mobile says it's ready 
  now; some reports claim T-Mobile has fiber and wireless links that 
  provide as much as 20 Mbps per site, which is enough to cover 
  multiple separate channels of 3G in the same location. 

  This backhaul capacity might give T-Mobile bragging rights. Its 7.2 
  Mbps network was announced only a few weeks ago, and the latest 
  PCWorld tests conducted by Novarum - a firm I rely on for accurate 
  data about wireless rates - were completed in January 2010.

<http://www.pcworld.com/article/189592/atandt_roars_back_in_pcworlds_second_3g_wireless_performance_test.html>

  Where T-Mobile suffers is in the frequencies it uses for 3G. Cell 
  phones come with radio chips that enable them to operate over many 
  different frequencies, because different bands (ranges of 
  frequencies at various points in the radio spectrum) are available 
  to different companies and in different countries.

  The iPhone 3GS, for instance, supports several bands for worldwide 
  compatibility without Apple having to create different models: 850, 
  1900, and 2100 MHz are available for 3G, and 850, 900, 1800, and 
  1900 MHz for 1G (plain GSM) and 2G (EDGE).

<http://www.apple.com/iphone/specs.html>

  Here's the problem. T-Mobile wasn't able to acquire any of the 1900 
  MHz band, and uses the 1700 MHz band instead. Further, phones 
  designed for the T-Mobile 3G network send transmissions using 1700 
  MHz and receive data from the network using 2100 MHz. T-Mobile is 
  nearly unique worldwide in using the 1700 MHz band at all.

  AT&T uses either 850 MHz or 1900 MHz for 3G, and sends and receives 
  in the same band. This means that a GSM 3G phone or data device 
  compatible with any other carrier cannot work on T-Mobile's network, 
  and devices intended just for T-Mobile's network won't work on 
  nearly any other network worldwide.

  EDGE frequencies are compatible, however. If you buy a 3G iPad and 
  want to use it on T-Mobile's network, and T-Mobile starts producing 
  micro-SIM cards, you could use the network at EDGE speeds, which are 
  typically no faster than about 200 Kbps.

  That's a bummer for consumers and T-Mobile, as it means we don't 
  have the compatibility necessary for true unlocked competition 
  between the two GSM carriers in the United States. In most other 
  countries with multiple 3G carriers, frequencies are harmonized, and 
  this won't be an issue.


**T-Mobile USB Modem** -- That's all technical background, but I gave 
  T-Mobile's USB webConnect modem a workout on a recent trip: my 
  travels to California for the Apple iPad launch. I figured this 
  would be the perfect circumstance, since Verizon, AT&T, and Sprint 
  mobile broadband modems would clog up those networks; T-Mobile was 
  likely to be free and clear.

<http://www.t-mobile.com/shop/phones/Cell-Phone-Detail.aspx?cell-phone=T-Mobile-webConnect-USB-Laptop-Stick>

  The modem, made by Huawei, is an attractive stick with support for 
  Mac OS X 10.4 and later, along with several flavors of Windows. It 
  costs $129.99 retail, or $19.99 with a two-year contract. The modem 
  requires a simple software installation of unobtrusive - if not 
  particularly attractive - connection software.

<http://www.huawei.com/mobileweb/en/products/view.do?id=1300&pageId=null>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-03/tmobile-webconnect-connected.jpg>

  I pre-tested the extent to which it would drain my 2008 MacBook's 
  battery before the trip to the iPad launch to see whether I could 
  get through a two-hour event on a full charge; it looked like I 
  could just squeak through, which turned out to be the case. (I get 
  about the same battery life with Wi-Fi turned on and active, too.)

  The USB stick performed admirably during Steve Jobs's talk, while I 
  heard grumbles all around me from users of other 3G networks that 
  were failing under the collective load. Score one for diversity. In 
  testing, I didn't see the faster HSPA 7.2 rates - I tested mostly in 
  January and early February 2010 - but I frequently saw speeds well 
  over 1 Mbps downstream.


**T-Mobile's 3G Data Plans** -- T-Mobile just put a twist in its 
  service plans on 11 March 2010. It used to charge the same for its 
  highest-level usage plan as its three competitors: $59.99 per month 
  gets you up to 5 GB in combined upload and download usage. 
  Additional megabytes on T-Mobile cost 20 cents each (that works out 
  to $200 per GB), which is substantially higher than competitors.

  T-Mobile also offers a lower, lighter-weight usage plan: 200 MB for 
  $29.99 per month, with the same additional per-megabyte fee. 
  Competitors charge $5 or $10 more per month for the same or slightly 
  more data. As I wrote in "Can You Get By with 250 MB of Data Per 
  Month?" (2 February 2010), it's hard to figure out how much data you 
  wind up using. Laptop usage tends to be far higher than the 
  smartphone usage I was tracking. You can check usage directly from 
  within the connection software.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10971>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-03/tmobile-webconnect-bandwidth-usage.jpg>

  But T-Mobile now charges those monthly rates only if you accept the 
  company's subsidized 3G hardware; those plans also require a 
  two-year contract.

  If you pay the $129.99 retail price for its USB modem, a $110 
  difference from the subsidized price, T-Mobile will let you have a 
  month-by-month 5 GB plan for $49.99 each month, and a 200 MB plan 
  for $19.99 each month. Over two years, that's a $240 price 
  difference on either plan, and you retain the flexibility of not 
  paying for the service when you don't need it.

  Unmetered Wi-Fi usage at all of T-Mobile's own and roaming partner 
  hotspots is included with all plans.

  T-Mobile also recently became the first carrier to offer a lower 
  monthly data price for the Google Nexus One phone when purchased 
  outright; AT&T and others charge you the same monthly rate whether 
  you own the phone or got a subsidy by signing a two-year contract, 
  while T-Mobile drops the price $20 per month. That's $480 over two 
  years, far more than the difference between the subsidized and 
  unsubsidized rate.

<http://www.nytimes.com/2010/02/25/technology/personaltech/25smart.html>

  Virgin Mobile Broadband has an interesting alternative to T-Mobile's 
  month-to-month possibility. Despite being owned by Sprint Nextel, 
  Virgin has a distinctly original broadband approach. Buy its $99.99 
  USB modem (which requires Mac OS X 10.4 or later), and purchase 
  units of access from its Broadband2Go plan. Rates are $10 for use of 
  up to 100 MB within 10 days, or, with a 30-day expiration, pay $20, 
  $40, or $60, for up to 300 MB, 1 GB, or 5 GB, respectively. There 
  are no overage fees; you just buy more units of service.

<http://www.virginmobileusa.com/mobile-broadband>

  T-Mobile now beats Virgin Mobile for an unsubsidized plan at the 5 
  GB level, but Virgin Mobile (using Sprint's network) still has more 
  coverage area. However, T-Mobile charges its 20-cents-per-MB overage 
  for extra usage during any billing period: another 5 GB would be 
  $1,000 on T-Mobile but just $60 with Virgin.


**Faster Speeds Ahead** -- T-Mobile says it has just begun in its move 
  towards higher speed. In early February 2010, the company announced 
  the commercial rollout of HSPA+, an update to HSPA 7.2 that will 
  offer raw data rates as fast as 21 Mbps. 

  The company isn't promising specific downstream speeds, but it will 
  likely be possible to get the same range as Clearwire's WiMax 
  service, which, in the limited markets currently served, pumps 3 to 
  6 Mbps downstream with higher burst rates. Clearwire aims for 120 
  million people covered by the end of 2010.

  For now, T-Mobile's HSPA+ service is available just in Philadelphia, 
  with the upgrades to both coasts coming as we move into spring and 
  summer, and most of T-Mobile's national footprint by the end of 
  2010. A new HSPA+ modem, the Rocket, was released on 14 March 2010 
  for $99.99 with a two-year contract (or $199.99 without the 
  contract).

  HSPA+ puts T-Mobile at the top of the speed heap, and possibly with 
  the best backhaul among 3G operators. Only further testing will 
  tell. Verizon's next-generation LTE (Long Term Evolution) service - 
  fourth generation or 4G - can deliver 5 to 12 Mbps downstream, but 
  won't be ready until later in 2010. Initial LTE devices will be 
  limited to data adapters; smartphones may not appear until 2012.

<https://www.lte.vzw.com/AboutLTE/VerizonWirelessLTENetwork/tabid/6003/Default.aspx>

  Verizon says it will light up 25 to 30 metro areas with LTE in 2010, 
  covering 100 million users, with the rest of its footprint covered 
  by 2013. AT&T will also deploy LTE, but its timetable extends 
  further into the future, with 2011 seeing its first commercial 
  deployment.

  The real question will be whether T-Mobile can deliver a service 
  that's enough faster, better, and cheaper than its more heavily used 
  competitors. If so, it could rise from its fourth position to 
  challenge the top contenders.

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11064#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/11064>


The Fall and Rise of Bundle-Based Businesses 
---------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11030>
  8 comments

  In 2003, when we came up with the idea for the Take Control 
  electronic book series, one guiding principle was that individual 
  books should be relatively short, such that they could function like 
  chapters in an über-book. Our thought was that shorter books would 
  be faster to write (and thus quicker to market), easier to update, 
  and less expensive. They could also be simultaneously more focused 
  and more detailed than traditional books. In aiming to break apart 
  the traditional computer book into its component chapters (albeit 
  with more depth than a book chapter would have space for), we were 
  channeling the bundle-busting trend. 

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

  Some years later, we would repeat the process with TidBITS itself, 
  taking our traditional email newsletter with its collection of 
  articles written over the previous week and breaking it apart into 
  its constituent pieces (see "Designing a Modern Web Site for 
  TidBITS," 10 September 2007). In this new approach, instead of 
  articles appearing fully formed in each email issue, we would write 
  and post each article on our Web site as it was done, collecting 
  them back into the issue each Monday. 

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9168>

  We made this change to enable coverage of breaking news, spread out 
  our writing and editing effort throughout the week, bring our 
  publishing approach in line with how readers interacted with our 
  content, and, honestly, to modernize what was seeming like an 
  increasingly quaint publication model. (The irony of ironies is that 
  when we started TidBITS in 1990, our use of Internet distribution 
  meant that we were more timely than the lumbering monthly magazines 
  and even than the edgy weeklies, with their printing and mailing 
  delays.)


**Bundling Breaks Down** -- Outside of our little world, 
  bundle-busting was going full tilt. In 2003, Apple introduced iTunes 
  with the innovation of selling each individual song on an album for 
  $0.99, side-by-side with complete albums for $9.99 (some songs 
  weren't available individually, and some larger albums had higher 
  prices, even before 2009, when Apple agreed to different pricing 
  levels). Even before iTunes, newspaper and magazine publishers 
  starting moving online in a big way, essentially untethering their 
  articles from the bundled pieces of paper that made up a daily, 
  weekly, or monthly issue. 

  All this unbundling happened due to customer demand and because new 
  technology, largely the Internet, made it possible. After all, who 
  hasn't felt slightly cheated after buying an album and discovering 
  that some of its songs are far less appealing than others, or 
  realizing that none of the articles in a magazine were compelling 
  enough to read? This shouldn't be surprising: enabling each member 
  of a family to order a completely different meal in a restaurant has 
  long been seen as "better" than a home-cooked meal where everyone is 
  forced to share the same dishes, whether or not they are equally 
  well liked. Unbundling promotes choice, and, within reason, people 
  like choice.

  To understand why the Internet enabled so much unbundling, it's 
  worth considering briefly why bundling happened in the first place. 
  It comes down, as so often happens, to the essential awkwardness of 
  atoms. Before the Internet, it was certainly possible to write and 
  publish a single article, or record and distribute an individual 
  song, but it wasn't significantly more expensive, once the words or 
  notes became instantiated on a physical medium, to publish 100 
  articles, or to distribute an album containing 12 songs. 

  In other words, bundling came about because of economies of scale, 
  but the Internet, and perhaps more aptly, the all-you-can-eat 
  pricing schemes that have grown up around the Internet, have 
  radically changed the game. The economic advantage of publishing a 
  bundle - a newspaper or an album - is no longer significant.


**Bundle-Based Businesses** -- All this unbundling sounds like a good 
  idea, but let's change gears for a moment and consider the benefits 
  of bundling from a business perspective. There are many ways to set 
  prices for a product, but in the end, the economists tell us, Adam 
  Smith's invisible hand will cause prices to settle at a point where 
  customers are willing to buy and where producers can turn a profit. 
  It's worth noting that there is always a floor below which prices 
  cannot drop, regardless of other factors, because of the cost of 
  collecting payments. One of the advantages of the digital 
  revolution, and the Internet in particular, was to reduce the cost 
  of collecting payments, which in turn dropped that price floor.

  It seems to be a truism that people place relatively little value on 
  content, whether it's writing, music, or video, perhaps because we 
  intuitively know that the very same content can be sold to many 
  people. Whether you're reading an article in the New York Times, 
  listening to your favorite artist's latest hit single, or watching a 
  TV show, you know that hundreds of thousands of people, if not more, 
  are enjoying the exact same content. In other words, content isn't 
  scarce, and we value scarcity, which is why we're happier to pay for 
  one-on-one training from a consultant or a live concert.

  But we also place value on volume, so while we may not be willing to 
  pay $1.00 for an article in a newspaper, we have much less problem 
  paying $1.00 for the entire newspaper, containing tens or hundreds 
  of articles. And while $10 feels wrong for a single song, it's not 
  unreasonable for an entire album.

  So publishers and record companies figured out that they could take 
  advantage of the economies of scale and bundle multiple articles or 
  songs or whatever into physical products - newspapers, magazines, 
  some books, music albums, VHS and DVD sets of old TV episodes, and 
  so on - that could then be sold for a sufficiently high price to 
  turn a healthy profit while still offering enough value to customers 
  that they didn't complain too much about prices.

  But then came the Internet, and it didn't take long before people 
  realized that bundling was largely artificial, that there was too 
  often no real relationship between the different articles in a 
  newspaper. And even when the bundle was less arbitrary, as in a 
  themed magazine or a well-conceived album, the irritation of paying 
  for content that you didn't want to read or listen to contributed to 
  the decline of the bundle.


**Babies and Bundle-Based Bathwater?** Alas, bundle-busting doesn't 
  come for free, and bundle-based businesses like newspapers and the 
  recording industry have come upon harder times. (It's hard to blame 
  all woes purely on the breakdown of the bundle, but at least Anita 
  Elberse's research into unbundling controls for illegitimate copying 
  in the recording industry still points to unbundling as the cause of 
  the industry's declining profits.)

<http://hbswk.hbs.edu/item/6312.html>

  Bundles may have boosted profits for those industries beyond what 
  would have been possible without bundling, but those profits made 
  certain things possible. Although we're proponents of the Internet 
  enabling small publishers and individual writers to publish content 
  that wouldn't have survived in a large publisher's newspaper or 
  magazine, it's absolutely true that some of the serious reporting 
  and journalism we've become accustomed to requires the significant 
  investment only a well-heeled company - bolstered by bundle-based 
  profits - can afford.

  There's no question that these bundle-based companies will have to 
  change, but we can hope that the bundle-busting trend doesn't 
  eliminate content that is socially worthwhile, even if it cannot 
  compete on its own in the marketplace.


**Will Bundles Survive?** This desire to create socially useful works 
  that cannot earn their keep is one reason the iPad (and to a lesser 
  extent, the Kindle before it) is seen in some circles as the next 
  great hope for bundle-based publishers. It will be devilishly hard 
  to stuff the genie of unbundled (and free) content back into the 
  Internet bottle, but the iPad offers a blank slate on which 
  newspaper and magazine publishers can once again bundle content and 
  charge for a subscription to the entire collection. And if that 
  gives great content a business model on which it can survive, that's 
  a good thing.

  Even as the iPad inches closer to the time when we'll see if it can 
  fulfill these grandiose rescue fantasies, it seems clear that the 
  bundle, as many businesses are accustomed to it, is on the way out. 

  That pronouncement should not cause undue distress. Breaking apart 
  bundles can provide all sorts of benefits, not just to customers, 
  but to producers.

  Here's where we come full circle, since the unbundling movements we 
  made when creating the Take Control ebook series were as much about 
  improving the business side of things as they were about meeting 
  customers' needs for detailed discussions of highly focused topics. 
  Unbundling the book helps us and our readers. 

  Similarly, changing the unit of publication from a full TidBITS 
  issue to the individual article helped us speed up production, 
  increase Web-based revenues, and attract new readers, but it also 
  gave our readers more timely articles, an article-based forum for 
  discussion, and more accurate articles (as we integrate new 
  information and address reader comments). Again, everyone wins.

  At the same time, we're still bullish on bundles made for the right 
  reasons. One of those is price; if you're going to sell lots of 
  products that don't have individual production costs (any sort of 
  digital content), bundling multiple items together at a discount 
  increases overall revenues for the publisher even as it reduces 
  individual unit costs for the purchaser. 

  Looking forward, even as we think about ways of further unbundling 
  our content (is there that much difference between an article and a 
  book chapter?), we're simultaneously exploring ways of bundling that 
  content together in ways that at least some customers will 
  appreciate. After all, what's a subscription but a bundle of 
  somewhat related items sold at a significant discount in exchange 
  for guaranteed revenue flow for the publisher?

  So yes, bundles will survive, but those that do will survive for the 
  right reasons, and those reasons have to do with meeting customers' 
  needs and desires more than facilitating economies of scale and 
  higher price points. That in turns means that companies relying on 
  bundled products need to figure out business models that serve both 
  the bundled and the unbundled product. Otherwise they'll eventually 
  slide into unbundled oblivion.

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11030#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/11030>


TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 15 March 2010
-------------------------------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11086>

**VMware Fusion 3.1 Beta** -- VMware has released a new public beta of 
  the company's virtualization software for the Mac, VMware Fusion. 
  Version 3.1 Beta significantly improves graphics performance via 
  OpenGL 2.1 support for Windows 7 and Windows Vista, along with 
  performance improvements for both DirectX 9.0 SM3 and Windows Aero. 
  Additionally, it makes it easier to connect USB devices to your 
  virtual machine with the new EasyConnect feature, extends support 
  for virtual hard disks up to 2 TB, resolves an issue that created 
  multiple Boot Camp entries in the library of the virtual machine, 
  and displays your migration status when migrating from a PC. The 
  update, whose release notes are available from VMware's Web site, 
  also fixes over 200 bugs.

<http://communities.vmware.com/community/beta/fusion>
<http://communities.vmware.com/docs/DOC-12165>

  Keep in mind that this is beta software and is thus prone to buggy 
  behavior; you may want to avoid using it for any essential tasks. 
  Also note that downloading version 3.1 will overwrite your current 
  version; reverting to an earlier version of Fusion will require 
  reinstallation.

  Read/post comments about VMware Fusion 3.1 Beta.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11083#comments>


**Things 1.3** -- Busy people take notice: the latest version of 
  Cultured Code's popular task manager Things is now available and 
  comes with a big functionality boost. Version 1.3 brings a new Mixed 
  Projects feature, enabling users to work with projects that have 
  active, inactive, and scheduled to-dos all at once, something that 
  wasn't previously possible. In addition to lending the program 
  greater flexibility, the Cultured Code blog notes that Mixed 
  Projects was added with an eye towards cloud-syncing capabilities in 
  the future. The update also addresses an issue that could cause 
  Things to launch with a blank interface, fixes a bug that prevented 
  Help menus from being displayed, and makes several minor 
  improvements to unspecified localizations. ($49.95, free upgrade, 
  8.7 MB)

<http://culturedcode.com/things/>
<http://culturedcode.com/things/blog/2010/03/things-1-3-brings-support-for-mixed-projects.html>

  Read/post comments about Things 1.3.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11084#comments>


**MainStage 2.1.1** -- Gigging musicians will be pleased to hear that 
  Apple has updated MainStage, the live performance program that's 
  part of Logic Studio. Version 2.1.1 provides over 40 minor bug fixes 
  and performance tweaks, including enhanced support for 32-bit Audio 
  Unit Bridge plug-ins, improved stability when changing or removing 
  audio devices, and the resolution of a bug that caused audio output 
  loss when the user enabled "Display audio engine overload" messages. 
  The update also improves screen controls in several areas, increases 
  the reliability of number keys acting as command triggers, and 
  restores proper behavior to several aspects of the Loopback plug-in. 
  The lengthy release notes are available in a Knowledge Base article 
  on Apple's Web site. The hefty update is available via Software 
  Update and Apple's Support Downloads page. (Free, 207 MB)

<http://www.apple.com/logicstudio/mainstage/>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/ts2566>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1011>

  Read/post comments about MainStage 2.1.1.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11079#comments>


**LogMeIn Pro2** -- It has been several years since LogMeIn first 
  brought its remote control software LogMeIn Free to the Mac (see 
  "LogMeIn for Mac Released," 4 December 2007). While LogMeIn Free 
  remains available, the company has recently released LogMeIn Pro2 
  for the Mac with significant additional features. LogMeIn Pro2 adds 
  secure file transfer and sharing capabilities, folder 
  synchronization, desktop sharing on demand, and remote-to-local 
  printing.  It also expands browser support to include 64-bit Safari, 
  improves access to remote control settings, and enhances performance 
  speeds (these secondary features are also now available in the free 
  version). ($69.95 per year, multi-computer discounts available)

<https://secure.logmein.com/US/home.aspx>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9345>
<https://secure.logmein.com/US/products/pro2/>

  Read/post comments about LogMeIn Pro2.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11085#comments>


**Safari 4.0.5** -- Apple has released Safari 4.0.5, an update for Mac 
  OS X and Windows that addresses several items. On the surface, the 
  new version improves performance of the Top Sites feature; improves 
  stability when running third-party plug-ins and Web sites with 
  online forms and SVG (Scalable Vector Graphics) images; and now 
  works to configure settings of some Linksys routers that were 
  problematic. Under the hood, Safari 4.0.5 addresses lots of security 
  issues, mostly adjusting WebKit to deal with malicious Web sites, 
  but also processing images under Windows. The update requires Mac OS 
  X 10.6.1 or later, Mac OS X 10.5.8, Mac OS X 10.4.11, or Windows 7, 
  Vista, or XP. (Free, 30.52 MB for Snow Leopard, 38.59 MB for 
  Leopard, 26.78 MB for Tiger, 30.18 MB for Windows)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL877>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT4070>

  Read/post comments about Safari 4.0.5.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11082#comments>


**TextExpander 3.0** -- Want to use a text expansion utility to save 
  typing cumbersome phrases but dislike switching programs to create 
  snippets? The new TextExpander 3.0 from SmileOnMyMac adds a hotkey 
  combination that opens a quick entry window for snippet creation, 
  and another hotkey lets you edit the last-expanded snippet, making 
  it easier to update one that's no longer quite right. Other new 
  features in TextExpander include "fill-in" snippets that can prompt 
  you for additional text to be entered manually, new options for 
  finding snippets in your collection, and snippet syncing via both 
  MobileMe and Dropbox. Minor changes include the capability to insert 
  Tab and Return characters in snippets, correction of accidental 
  double-capitalizations at the start of sentences, automatic updates 
  via Sparkle, and more. Finally, TextExpander 3 is now a full-fledged 
  application rather than a preference pane. ($34.95 new, $15 upgrade, 
  free for those who purchased after 1 November 2009, 4.5 MB)

<http://www.smileonmymac.com/TextExpander/>

  Read/post comments about TextExpander 3.0.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11071#comments>



ExtraBITS for 15 March 2010
---------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11080>

  Our extracurricular reading this week was all about Apple, with the 
  New York Times examining the Apple/Google rift, the EFF taking a 
  close read on Apple's iPhone Developer Program License Agreement, 
  and usability guru Jakob Nielsen criticizing how iTunes handles app 
  updates.


**New York Times Examines the Apple/Google Rift** -- The New York 
  Times has a lengthy article laying out the history of the 
  relationship between Apple and Google, which started close but has 
  now developed schisms due to the huge differences in corporate 
  approaches and increasingly competitive products. Apple prefers 
  proprietary systems and tight control over high margin products, 
  whereas Google's goal is to increase Web usage (and thus ad revenue) 
  via free services and open-source software. It's the iPhone OS 
  versus Android, Mac OS X versus Chrome OS, Safari versus Chrome, and 
  Apple's Quattro acquisition versus Google's AdMob buy. All that, and 
  the competition between the companies is just starting to heat up.

<http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/14/technology/14brawl.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11078#comments>


**EFF Examines iPhone Developer License Agreement** -- Alongside 
  Apple's undeniable success with the iPhone App Store have been the 
  near-constant stories of app rejections for dubious or entirely 
  bogus reasons (to be fair, most rejections are entirely legitimate). 
  But what gives Apple the right to reject or even remove apps? The 
  iPhone Developer Program License Agreement, to which all iPhone 
  developers must agree, that's what. The EFF has now acquired copies 
  of the agreement and analyzed some of the more troubling clauses. 
  Would they stand up in court? There's no way to know until someone 
  sues Apple.

<http://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2010/03/iphone-developer-program-license-agreement-all>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11069#comments>


**Jakob Nielsen Criticizes iTunes App Update Interface** -- Usability 
  guru Jakob Nielsen devoted his Alertbox post this week to showing 
  how interfaces can become confusing if elements like buttons and 
  checkboxes are too far away from the objects they act on, using the 
  iPhone app updating interface in iTunes as an example. Our take is 
  that the overall mistake here is that Apple is relying on iTunes for 
  too many unrelated tasks that call out for different interface 
  approaches.

<http://www.useit.com/alertbox/action-object-closeness.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11070#comments>



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