TidBITS#1019/22-Mar-2010
========================
  Issue link: <http://db.tidbits.com/issue/1019>

  It's another issue with something for everyone. Adam leads off with 
  the sad news of Now Software's demise and anchors the issue with a 
  detailed criticism of Google Wave. Also this week, Matt Neuburg 
  reviews the GTD-inspired Things application, Doug McLean examines 
  the spate of Time Capsule failures, Mark Anbinder provides an 
  overview of what's new in FileMaker Pro 11, and Glenn Fleishman 
  covers Amazon's release of the Kindle software for Mac OS X and the 
  confusion caused by incomplete coverage of Apple's iPad battery 
  replacement policies. Finally, we have a discount on the invoicing 
  software ProfitTrain for those who didn't win a copy in last week's 
  DealBITS drawing. Notable software releases this week include 
  BusyCal 1.2.3 and Phone Amego 1.1.14.

Articles
    Now Software Shuts Down
    Amazon Releases Kindle for Mac and Explains iPad Plans
    FileMaker Pro 11 Promises Welcome Enhancements
    iPad Battery Replacement Coverage Causes Confusion
    DealBITS Discount: Save 20% on ProfitTrain
    Time Capsule Failures: When They Happen and What to Do
    Things, a Nimble, Flexible To-Do List Application
    Why Google Wave Needs a Major Overhaul
    TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 22 March 2010
    ExtraBITS for 22 March 2010


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Now Software Shuts Down
-----------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11101>

  We're tremendously sorry to report that Now Software, makers of the 
  Now Up-to-Date & Contact software and its Now X replacement, has 
  suspended day-to-day operations. Company head John Wallace has set 
  up a site to provide support for existing Now Software customers; it 
  offers downloads to those who need copies of already licensed 
  software along with user forums for technical support.

<http://nowsoftware.org/>

  On the site, John has also posted a farewell letter to the Now 
  Software community, explaining that the company essentially bit off 
  more than it could chew with its next-generation contact and 
  calendar management software, Now X, which spent years in 
  development under the codename NightHawk. 

  Now Up-to-Date & Contact was based on an extremely old code base, 
  and the Now Software developers knew they had to rewrite it entirely 
  to move beyond the basic Mac OS X compatibility they were able to 
  achieve with the original code. But calendaring software is 
  devilishly difficult to do well, especially when it's designed to 
  offer sharing among members of widely dispersed workgroups, and Now 
  X needed to shoehorn both calendaring and contact management in a 
  single program.

  That task took years longer than anticipated, leading to a situation 
  where Now Software wasn't earning much from the elderly Now 
  Up-to-Date & Contact, but still needing significant resources to 
  devote to Now X development. Although Now X officially shipped in 
  August 2009, it had numerous rough edges and many Now Up-to-Date & 
  Contact users had already switched to other programs. Apparently, 
  sales of Now X weren't sufficient to bring the company back from the 
  brink.

  We moved to BusyMac's BusySync and iCal (see "Converting from Now 
  Up-to-Date to iCal and BusySync," 12 December 2008), and then to 
  BusyCal, which is amusing because that brought us back to the work 
  of Now Up-to-Date's original creators, Dave Riggle and John Chaffee. 
  We also use Address Book, though not entirely happily.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9936>
<http://www.busymac.com/>
<http://busymac.com/about.html>

  This was actually the second incarnation of Now Software. The first 
  company, which I remember forming around the Now Utilities 
  collection of updated shareware utilities in the early 1990s, was 
  purchased by Qualcomm in 1997, when Now Software was reportedly the 
  71st-largest software company in the United States, with nearly 2 
  million users (at the time, Qualcomm boasted 18 million users of 
  Eudora; how things have changed). The acquisition was seemingly 
  aimed at bringing Now Software's expertise in contact and calendar 
  management to Eudora users in the form of a program called Eudora 
  Planner. It wasn't a success, and utility company Power On Software 
  acquired the rights to Now Contact and Now Up-to-Date and Eudora 
  Planner in 1999.

<http://www.qualcomm.com/news/releases/1997/11/10/qualcomm-incorporated-announces-acquisition-now-software>
<http://www.eudora.com/uptodate/>

  Three years later, Power On Software revived the Now Software name 
  as a division of the company (see "Macworld Expo New York 2002 
  Superlatives," 29 July 2002), and eventually renamed the entire 
  company to Now Software, dropping all of Power On Software's 
  previous utilities to focus on the bundled Now Up-to-Date & Contact. 
  For a number of years, Now Up-to-Date & Contact remained one of the 
  most capable contact and calendaring solutions for workgroups, 
  particularly given iCal's abysmal approach to sharing and Address 
  Book's complete lack of sharing capabilities until recently. In 
  2006, we worked with Now Software to produce the free "Take Control 
  of Now Up-to-Date & Contact" ebook, which remains available for 
  download.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/6885>
<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/nudc?TB1019>

  It's always sad to see a company upon whose products you have 
  depended disappear, and that's all the more true for us with Now 
  Software, since even before we worked with them professionally on 
  the Take Control title, we'd known John and Sheila Wallace, along 
  with a variety of other Now Software employees, from various 
  MacHacks and Macworld Expos. We wish them the best of luck, and look 
  forward to whatever they end up doing next.

  ----
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Amazon Releases Kindle for Mac and Explains iPad Plans
------------------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11092>
  6 comments

  Our colleagues at The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) were tipped by 
  a reader that Amazon has finally released its Kindle application for 
  Mac OS X. The Kindle for iPhone app appeared a year ago, and a 
  Windows version followed last November (see "Amazon Releases Kindle 
  Software for iPhone," 3 March 2009). The free Mac OS X software is 
  currently numbered 1.0.0 Beta 1.

<http://www.tuaw.com/2010/03/17/amazon-stealthily-releases-kindle-app-for-mac-os-x/>
<http://www.amazon.com/gp/kindle/mac/download/ref=amb_link_151329822_1?pf_rd_m=ATVPDKIKX0DER&pf_rd_s=center-1&pf_rd_r=1NKN438TQPXXSDN0Q5YW&pf_rd_t=1401&pf_rd_p=1250062022&pf_rd_i=1000464931>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/kindle-for-iphone/id302584613?mt=8>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10116>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-03/kindle_for_mac_osx.jpg>

  Amazon also released screen captures and details of its plans for an 
  iPad app. Apple told developers last week that iPad apps submitted 
  by March 27th would be considered for release in the App Store on 
  the April 3rd iPad ship date. Amazon seems ready for this.

<http://www.amazon.com/gp/feature.html?docId=1000490441>
<http://www.macworld.com/article/147240/2010/03/ipad_apps.html>

  Amazon coyly names its iPad product page "Kindle Apps for Tablet 
  Computers," followed in smaller type by "Including the iPad." The 
  app sounds quite similar to the Mac OS X and iPhone apps with 
  additional controls. (The language Amazon is using may be part of 
  negotiation with Apple about including iPad details, or its own way 
  of stressing independence from Apple's hardware.)

  Both the Mac OS X program and iPad app let you read and retrieve any 
  books that you have purchased via the Kindle Store or from a Kindle 
  device using the same Amazon account. Subscriptions to newspapers, 
  magazines, and blogs - available on Kindle hardware - aren't 
  included, which is true of the Windows and iPhone software as well.

  Both the Mac OS X and iPad app let you adjust a book's display to a 
  greater degree than the iPhone app. The Mac OS X program lets you 
  choose among 10 type sizes, although only in the Georgia typeface. 
  You can also control the column width to aid in legibility, but not 
  the vertical space between lines, which is set in lockstep with type 
  size. 

  The iPad app will let you adjust the background color and set 
  backlighting brightness in the app in addition to vaguely described 
  "font size" customization. The app will also use a page-turning 
  animation (which can be disabled) that resembles what we saw in 
  Apple's iBooks app at the iPad launch.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-03/amazon-ipad-app-preview.jpg>

  The iPad app will let you set or remove bookmarks, highlight text, 
  and create notes, just as the iPhone app does. The Mac OS X software 
  lets you manipulate bookmarks, but only view notes and highlights. 
  Amazon said in its press release that a "near future" update would 
  enable note creation and highlighting.

<http://www.amazon.com/gp/help/customer/display.html/ref=hp_ipland_uanno?nodeId=200298480&#managing>
<http://phx.corporate-ir.net/phoenix.zhtml?c=176060&p=irol-newsArticle&ID=1403552&highlight=>

  Amazon's Whispersync service works with all its software, tracking 
  and restoring where you left off reading, as well as keeping 
  annotations, notes, and bookmarks up to date. 

  No mention was made of text-to-speech in the Mac program, which is a 
  feature (and minor selling point) of the Kindle 2 and Kindle DX, but 
  which proved rather controversial (see "Why the Kindle 2 Should 
  Speak When Permitted To," 2 March 2009). In theory, it should be 
  easy to implement on the Mac, using Mac OS X's built-in speech 
  synthesis capabilities. Neither the iPhone app nor the preview of 
  the iPad app mention text-to-speech, either.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10107>

  A little secret of the Kindle Store is that publishers make quite a 
  few books available at no cost, which lets you test out the software 
  for reading (as well as get some great titles for free). This link 
  will show you all Kindle books sorted by lowest price first, which 
  starts at $0.00. You can then click into subject categories from the 
  left navigation bar to narrow the search.

<http://www.amazon.com/gp/search/ref=sr_ex_n_1?rh=n%3A133140011%2Cn%3A!133141011%2Cn%3A154606011&bbn=154606011&sort=price&ie=UTF8&qid=1268890870>

  ----
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FileMaker Pro 11 Promises Welcome Enhancements
----------------------------------------------
  by Mark H. Anbinder <mha@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11090>
  4 comments

  Apple subsidiary Claris brought FileMaker Pro 1.0 on the market 20 
  years ago, but even that 1.0 version was years into the story of 
  FileMaker, the quintessentially Mac-like database tool that gave 
  ordinary computer users an easy interface for making and maintaining 
  databases. FileMaker Inc.'s recent release of its FileMaker Pro 11 
  suite of products marks the addition of welcome capabilities while 
  retaining the software's trademark elegance.

<http://www.filemaker.com/products/filemaker-pro/>

  I'll start with the welcome news that FileMaker Pro 11 for Mac is 
  finally a purely Cocoa-based application, rather than the Carbon and 
  Cocoa hybrid of FileMaker Pro 10 and the Carbon architecture of a 
  few versions before that. This change sounds fairly geeky, and 
  indeed it's one of those under-the-hood things most users will never 
  notice, but it offers the potential for better performance, 
  stability, and compatibility with future versions of Mac OS X. (The 
  company simultaneously released Windows versions of the 
  cross-platform FileMaker Pro products, but I'll leave discussing 
  those to others.)

  FileMaker Pro 11 also ships with a larger variety of premade 
  templates to get users started. And FileMaker Pro 11 Advanced, 
  geared more toward developers, offers an improved custom menu 
  interface and improved script debugging. 

  Four new capabilities in FileMaker Pro 11 that caught my attention 
  are a new charting feature; a scriptable QuickFind tool that acts 
  like the search capabilities of iTunes and Mail; a "Snapshot Link" 
  means of handing another user a particular view of your data; and 
  automatic recurring import, perfect for working with external data 
  that might change.

<http://www.filemaker.com/products/filemaker-pro/whats-new.html>


**Charts** -- One feature with broad appeal is the new charting 
  capability built into FileMaker Pro 11. Charting has long been 
  largely limited to spreadsheet applications, which means that, until 
  now, FileMaker users have had to export their data and import it 
  into Excel in order to produce even a simple pie chart. FileMaker 
  Pro 11's new charting and reporting features work throughout the 
  application; a chart that's always based on the latest data can be 
  added to any layout, and it can feature information from any data 
  field or take full advantage of FileMaker's calculation engine.


**QuickFind** -- It's hard to remember a time before iTunes, Mail, and 
  every Web browser on the planet gained that ubiquitous search field 
  in the top right corner of its window, but previous versions of 
  FileMaker Pro still required the user to specify an individual field 
  to search. Now, this QuickFind search field helps users search 
  throughout the database.


**Snapshot Link** -- I'm intrigued by the countless potential uses for 
  this feature, which enables FileMaker Pro 11 users to send a 
  colleague a specific view of the database, displaying specific 
  selected records in a particular layout, for example. While it's 
  long been possible to send a colleague a PDF showing data in a 
  specific format, this new Snapshot Link feature is actually a view 
  of the database itself, and recipients with sufficient privileges 
  can update the live data, modify the search, and so on. Unlike with 
  a PDF, of course, the recipient won't be able to view the data if he 
  or she isn't both online and authorized to access the database.


**Automatic Recurring Import** -- This new "recurring import" 
  capability allows FileMaker Pro 11 to work with the contents of an 
  external file, such as a separate database or a spreadsheet, and 
  automatically recognize any changes to that data. The example the 
  FileMaker folks gave me was an external spreadsheet of county sales 
  tax rates; a customer invoice database could refer to that 
  spreadsheet to look up the sales tax rate for a given customer each 
  time an invoice is created. Since sales tax rates can change, 
  keeping this data separate works well.


**Pricing and Upgrades** -- The software is available now, at $299 for 
  FileMaker Pro 11, $499 for FileMaker Pro 11 Advanced, $999 for 
  FileMaker Server 11, and $2,999 for FileMaker Server 11 Advanced. 
  Upgrade pricing is available for licensed users of Filemaker 9 and 
  10, and, for those still using FileMaker 8 and 8.5, through 23 
  September 2010. Upgrades cost $179 for FileMaker Pro, $299 for 
  FileMaker Pro Advanced, $599 for FileMaker Server, and $1,799 for 
  FileMaker Server Advanced.

<http://www.filemaker.com/purchase/store/promos_upgrade.html>

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iPad Battery Replacement Coverage Causes Confusion
--------------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11089>
  8 comments

  The iPad hasn't even shipped yet, but the discovery by AppleInsider 
  of a battery-replacement FAQ entry covering the iPad has led to a 
  spate of articles about the topic. Instead of replacing the battery 
  in an iPad which can't hold a sufficient charge, Apple wants you to 
  replace the entire iPad with a new unit - potentially a refurbished, 
  previously owned model.

<http://www.appleinsider.com/articles/10/03/13/apple_to_replace_ipads_in_need_of_new_battery_for_99.html>
<http://www.apple.com/support/ipad/service/battery/>

  But the stories imply that any weakness in the battery is your 
  problem. You pay $105.95 for the swap ($99 for the hardware and 
  $6.95 to cover shipping in both directions; tax is extra where 
  required). This New York Times blog entry, for instance, doesn't 
  mention an important factor: included and extended warranty 
  coverage.

<http://gadgetwise.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/03/15/the-price-of-a-dead-ipad-battery-99/>

  Adding to the confusion is language found in the basic iPad 
  warranty, which you can download as a PDF, included with its 
  purchase price. That warranty states:

<http://images.apple.com/legal/warranty/docs/NA_iPad_Warranty_v20.pdf>

    This warranty does not apply: (a) to consumable parts, such as batteries, or protective coatings designed to diminish over time unless failure has occurred due to a defect in materials or workmanship...

  That contrasts with the language in the AppleCare Protection Plan's 
  contract, which is a bit difficult to find. Purchasing an AppleCare 
  contract for $99 extends the one-year hardware coverage included 
  with the iPad to two years and provides more explicit language. (It 
  also increases the 90 days of telephone support that's free with an 
  iPad purchase to a full 2 years.)

  If you visit the online Apple Store, click through to pre-order an 
  iPad, and then expand the AppleCare section's Learn More link, you 
  see the following linked as a footnote to the Apple Hardware 
  Coverage list:

<http://store.apple.com/us/configure/MB292LL/A?mco=MTcyMTgwODM>

    Service coverage is available for battery depletion of 50 percent or more from the original specification.
    
  Similar text is found in the actual AppleCare Terms and Conditions 
  PDF: 

<http://www.apple.com/legal/applecare/appforipad.html>

    Apple will, at its option, repair or replace the affected Covered Equipment, if (i) during the Repair Coverage Period there is a defect in the Covered Equipment's materials or workmanship or, (ii) during the Coverage Period, the capacity of the Covered Equipment's battery to hold an electrical charge has depleted fifty (50%) percent or more from its original specification, (after being fully charged and the Covered Equipment playing audio or video with all settings reset).

  Now, could all this be interpreted to mean that, within one year of 
  purchase with a regular warranty, a battery that fails to hold 50 
  percent of its original charge would still be considered to be 
  functioning properly? That's hard to imagine, and we've already seen 
  that Apple is ready to replace poorly charging iPhone and iPod touch 
  batteries within the regular warranty period. 

  The AppleCare offer seems to go beyond normal malfunction though, 
  and provide for replacement when a battery doesn't hold up to heavy 
  use within 2 years. 

  Apple PR hasn't yet shed any light on what the warranty covers in 
  response to our request for clarification. However, it doesn't seem 
  likely, given the statements about defects and the fact that 
  individual U.S. states enforce warranty conditions, that Apple would 
  try to be cute about this. The firm went through enough battery 
  lawsuits, negative publicity, settlements, and extended-repair 
  programs with iPods and MacBooks, I would think.

  Friend-of-TidBITS Jeff Porten writes over at Macworld that he 
  estimates 400 to 500 recharge cycles before an iPad battery starts 
  to show degradation based on information provided by Apple - about 
  three years of significant use. 

<http://www.macworld.com/article/147080/2010/03/ipad_battery.html>

  That degraded level might start to be noticeable when the iPad holds 
  just 80 to 90 percent. It could be years more before the iPad gets 
  to the warranty-supported 50 percent level, at which point you would 
  be well out of even AppleCare coverage.

  At that point, $105.95 (if that's still the charge) to refresh the 
  iPad's utility may not seem like a horrible price to pay, although 
  there's no question that Apple would prefer that you buy a new iPad, 
  which would likely offer worthwhile new features as well.

  As with the iPhone, I suspect that most problems with the sealed 
  battery will occur well within the first year of use. The fears 
  surrounding non-user-swappable batteries appear to have far exceeded 
  the reality of problems.

  ----
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DealBITS Discount: Save 20% on ProfitTrain
------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11097>

  Congratulations to Ralph Richardson at gmail.com, Loren Celentano at 
  verizon.net, Clarence Ching at gmail.com, and David Weingart at 
  pobox.com, whose entries were chosen randomly in the last DealBITS 
  drawing and who received a copy of ProfitTrain 2.0, worth $49.95. 
  But don't fret if you didn't win, since Clickable Bliss is offering 
  a 20-percent-off discount on ProfitTrain 2.0 to all TidBITS readers 
  through 5 April 2010; enter "tidbits2010" in the Coupon Code field 
  of Clickable Bliss's online store to get your discount. Thanks to 
  the 281 people who entered this DealBITS drawing, and we hope you'll 
  continue to participate in the future!

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11087>
<http://clickablebliss.com/profittrain/>
<https://store.clickablebliss.com/>

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Time Capsule Failures: When They Happen and What to Do
------------------------------------------------------
  by Doug McLean <doug_mclean@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11091>
  7 comments

  All hardware fails at some point, but we generally withhold coverage 
  until a pattern appears, until the problem appears to affect 
  relatively large numbers of people, or when the manufacturer ignores 
  seemingly obvious proof.

  Editors at TidBITS have heard anecdotally for many months that users 
  were experiencing failures with Apple's Time Capsule base 
  station/backup appliance units that were relatively new, but outside 
  the warranty period. But with an unknown number sold - it may be 
  hundreds of thousands or even millions, for all we know - it was 
  impossible to determine whether these failures were commonplace or 
  statistical outliers.

  TidBITS reader Dean Lombard recently brought this issue back to our 
  attention. He described his experiences with a defective Time 
  Capsule, which died after a short period of use, and pointed to 
  several spots on the Web where other Time Capsule owners were 
  commiserating over their busted backup devices. 

  The reason we're writing about this now? In late 2009, Apple quietly 
  started acknowledging the problem and replacing certain affected 
  models. And those whose Time Capsules appear to be working properly 
  can do a few things to protect against failure and keep the devices 
  functional.


**Symptoms and Suspicions** -- Widespread failure apparently began in 
  September 2008, roughly 18 months after the first units were sold. 
  The primary symptom was a failure of the Time Capsule to power up. 
  Users from all over the world - the United States, the UK, China, 
  Australia, and elsewhere - have reported untimely Time Capsule 
  deaths. The average lifespan of Time Capsules registered on a site 
  tracking this problem is 19 months and 20 days; hardly acceptable 
  for what is designed to be a _backup_ device, and well outside the 
  one-year warranty.

<http://timecapsuledead.org/stats.html>

  Heat is the most likely culprit for these premature deaths. Or, 
  rather, poor heat management leading to overheated capacitors. User 
  Ray Haverfield, having looked closely at the issue and modified Time 
  Capsule hardware to resolve it, posits on his site, "The power 
  supply is well made with good quality components, capacitors etc. 
  [The Time Capsule] is simply dying due to elevated temperatures, as 
  the lifespan of components is greatly reduced running at such a high 
  temperature. Lifespan of electrolytic capacitors is particularly 
  sensitive to temperature." 

<http://sites.google.com/site/lapastenague/a-deconstruction-of-routers-and-modems>

  Haverfield points out that while these devices do have a built-in 
  fan, the fan largely circulates hot air within the casing. He also 
  says that the rubber base of the Time Capsule likely acts as an 
  insulator, worsening the problem.

  Since it appears the problem lies mainly with the power supply, as 
  opposed to the hard disk, there is a good chance that information 
  trapped on a dead Time Capsule is retrievable.


**The Solution** -- The efforts on the part of the Apple user 
  community to organize and publicize the problem have been 
  particularly noteworthy. After being told by Apple that his Time 
  Capsule was past warranty and he was out of luck, user Pim van 
  Bochoven decided to forgo complaining in the usual Apple Discussion 
  Forums and began The Time Capsule Memorial Register in October 2009. 

<http://timecapsuledead.org/>

  On that site, he collected, tracked, and analyzed data from 2,500 
  Time Capsule owners whose devices had died in a similar manner and 
  time frame, creating a persuasive argument that this was a 
  widespread design flaw that Apple should rectify. (Again, we don't 
  know what percentage of units sold that 2,500 number represents, but 
  it's a large number in itself, and must be a small fraction of all 
  Time Capsule failures given that only a portion of those whose 
  device died would register its loss.)

  In November 2009, Apple posted an internal Knowledge Base article 
  instructing employees to begin checking serial numbers of any dead 
  Time Capsules brought to them by customers; Time Capsules falling 
  into a specific (but as yet undisclosed) serial number range would 
  qualify for a replacement. On 15 February 2010, The Time Capsule 
  Memorial Register site reached 2,500 registered failures and closed, 
  having accomplished its mission of gaining attention for the problem 
  and generating an official response from Apple.


**Tactics for Replacement and Recovery** -- If you own a dead Time 
  Capsule, you have a few options. First, you can try to have your 
  Time Capsule replaced at no cost by Apple. According to the Time 
  Capsule Memorial Register, Apple will replace your Time Capsule for 
  free if you have a 3-year AppleCare contract on any device; have 
  purchased a computer within the last year (which comes with a 1-year 
  warranty that can be cross-applied to the Time Capsule); or have a 
  Time Capsule whose serial number falls within a specific range. 

<http://timecapsuledead.org/now_what.html>

  To pursue this path, call Apple Support or visit your local area 
  Apple Store or Apple Authorized Dealer. Note that if you decide to 
  have your Time Capsule replaced, you will have to send Apple your 
  dead Time Capsule, and its hard disk will be erased. While data 
  recovery is thus not a possibility, your data is also unlikely to 
  end up in anyone else's hands as Apple has assured users it does 
  indeed erase all data. Attempting to rescue your data by removing 
  the hard disk, copying the data off, and then reinstalling it voids 
  your basic warranty, and could be grounds for Apple to refuse your 
  replacement. So if data retrieval is a paramount concern, this might 
  not be the best option for you.

<http://www.apple.com/support/contact/phone_contacts.html>
<http://www.apple.com/buy/locator/service/>

  For those looking to salvage data, a second option is to find 
  someone to repair the blown capacitors without replacing or removing 
  the hard disk. If you have Ray Haverfield do the job (most 
  appropriate for users in Australia), expect to pay about $100 plus 
  shipping for a power supply repair and fan modification (to better 
  vent the unit). $130 gets your Time Capsule fitted with an external 
  power supply, and the fan modification. Ray also graciously lists 
  some other repair people elsewhere in the world, should you want to 
  shop around. Remember though, there are no guarantees with these 
  repairs; these people are not Apple employees and their work will 
  certainly void your Apple warranty.

<http://sites.google.com/site/lapastenague/a-deconstruction-of-routers-and-modems/apple-time-capsule-repairers>

  A third option, should you want to salvage your Time Capsule's data, 
  have some experience with electronic repairs, and not feel 
  comfortable entrusting your device and its data to a stranger, is to 
  repair your device yourself. Haverfield's Web site offers several 
  sets of instructions for performing a power supply repair (see this 
  one, this one, and this one.)

<http://sites.google.com/site/lapastenague/a-deconstruction-of-routers-and-modems/apple-time-capsule-repair>
<http://sites.google.com/site/lapastenague/a-deconstruction-of-routers-and-modems/apple-time-capsule-repair/apple-time-capsule-repair-type2>
<http://sites.google.com/site/lapastenague/a-deconstruction-of-routers-and-modems/apple-time-capsule-repair/repair-type3>

  If you do decide either to have a third party repair your Time 
  Capsule, or to perform a self repair, take a moment to let Apple 
  know you've had issues with your Time Capsule.

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


**Final Notes** -- If your Time Capsule is still working well, 
  consider backing up your data using the Archive function in the Time 
  Capsule view of AirPort Utility. You need a second drive with at 
  least as much storage as has been consumed with backups on the 
  internal drive. Attach the drive to the Time Capsule via USB, then 
  launch Applications > Utilities > AirPort Utility. Select the Time 
  Capsule unit in the list at left, and click Manual Setup at the 
  bottom. In the Disks view, select the drive in the list at left, 
  then click Archive. (You can read more about this process and other 
  Time Capsule and AirPort Extreme hard drive configuration issues in 
  Glenn Fleishman's "Take Control of Your 802.11n AirPort Network.") 
  Backups are especially important if you're storing data other than 
  Time Machine backups on the Time Capsule.

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/airport-n?pt=TB1019>

  You should also examine your Time Capsule location and venting. You 
  might elevate it off the surface it's on, or position it on its 
  side. The Time Capsule's antennas are designed to work with its 
  broad side flat on a surface, so tipping it may adversely affect 
  Wi-Fi coverage. But modern hard drives can work in horizontal and 
  vertical positions. (Some users on forums have reported noise when 
  the Time Capsule is long side vertical, but that may be related to 
  the fan.)

  Replacing the drive with a "green" drive that produces less heat 
  could also help, but may not be worth doing unless you have other 
  reasons to replace the drive. Reports indicate that Apple may have 
  addressed the heat problem in newer Time Capsule units by using 
  drives that run cooler. And of course, adding something like 
  CrashPlan to your backup strategy would give you an entirely 
  independent backup that could also be offsite, if you locate your 
  backup drive at a friend's house.

<http://www.applefritter.com/node/23907>
<http://db.tidbits.com/search/CrashPlan>

  Kudos to Pim van Bochoven for the creation of The Time Capsule 
  Memorial Register site, where users were able to transform their 
  individual complaints into a larger, more organized, and more 
  powerful force that encouraged Apple to take action. While it's 
  unfortunate that getting Apple to address a widespread problem 
  required such arm-twisting, it's great to see the user community 
  band together and create momentum for their cause. 

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11091#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/11091>


Things, a Nimble, Flexible To-Do List Application
-------------------------------------------------
  by Matt Neuburg <matt@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11051>
  6 comments

  In recent years, I've tried some applications dedicated to the 
  elaborate Getting Things Done (GTD) model of organizing your to-do 
  list, such as Thinking Rock (see "Get a Piece of the Thinking Rock," 
  9 October 2006) and OmniFocus (see "OmniFocus Willing, But Not Quite 
  Ready, To Help Get Things Done," 30 April 2008). I also use a 
  calendar program, Remember? (see "Remember? Not Forgotten," 30 June 
  2003), that tells me when an event is upcoming, and is smart about 
  events that repeat at regular intervals. I've also used some utterly 
  simple to-do list programs, such as Ambrosia Software's ToDo! desk 
  accessory. (ToDo! doesn't run on Mac OS X, and I bet most of you 
  don't even remember what a "desk accessory" was; you can get a 
  notion of ToDo!'s simple, clean interface from the screenshots of 
  Omicron's ToDo X, which is modeled after it.)

<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Getting_Things_Done>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8703>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9594>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/7249>
<http://www.nomicro.com/Products/ToDo/screenshots.html>

  The nice thing about Things, from Cultured Code (a development house 
  based in Stuttgart, Germany), is that it combines aspects of all of 
  these. Its interface is bright, clean, and simple. It understands 
  due dates and has a very good notion of repeating events. It can be 
  used in the very simplest way, with the most basic organization, 
  like assigning a task a priority value or a vague target date. But 
  it can also implement something very like a full-fledged GTD system. 
  And that flexibility is the whole point: Things gives you a few 
  elementary tools, and you combine them the way _you_ want to.

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


**Things Descriptive** -- A task in Things is minimally just a word or 
  phrase specifying what you want to accomplish. It has a checkbox so 
  you can mark it completed, and you can drag it around in the Things 
  window. And that's basically all! But if you want to, you can attach 
  further information, such as:

* A note. This is longer text describing the task. You can't use 
  styled text, but you can drag a file from the Finder (or a URL, or a 
  message from Mail) into the note area to get a hyperlink that opens 
  it.

* A due date. You can enter this as text or using a month-based 
  calendar display. A task can also be made repeating, which basically 
  means it will generate a copy of itself, either at some regular 
  interval or after a copy is completed; the interface for making and 
  editing a repeating date is impressive.

* Tags. A tag is an arbitrary word. Tags can be hierarchical, so a 
  task that is assigned a child tag also implicitly is assigned that 
  tag's parent. A task can have any number of tags.

  On the left side of the window is a sidebar containing "levels of 
  commitment" to which a task can be assigned:

* Inbox is a holding tank for new tasks without assigning a level of 
  commitment yet.

* Someday is for tasks you're not ready to worry about yet.

* Scheduled is a way of postponing concern about a task to a definite 
  date; when that date arrives, the task will automatically be 
  highlighted or, if you prefer, moved to Today. (Repeating tasks are 
  also implemented through a master copy that lives in Scheduled.)

* Next is for active tasks.

* Today is for active tasks you really want to focus on; a task in 
  Today is also automatically in Next.

  A task that isn't in the Inbox must be in Someday or Scheduled or 
  Next, and a task in Next either is or is not also in Today; that 
  basic fact is one of the few Things fundamentals that must actively 
  be grasped in order to use the program effectively.

  The sidebar can also display "areas of responsibility." These are 
  arbitrary categories, rather like tags; and at first you might not 
  see why you'd use areas of responsibility as opposed to tags. One 
  reason is that it's nice to have a way of seeing tasks that's 
  independent of levels of commitment. For example, I have a 
  "Programming" area of responsibility, just to have a place in the 
  sidebar where _all_ programming-related tasks live, regardless of 
  their status. You can actually combine areas and tags: every task in 
  an area of responsibility automatically acquires any tags assigned 
  to that area.

  Some tasks are complex, and need to be broken down into simpler 
  sub-tasks, providing you with a clear sense you're getting somewhere 
  even though you haven't yet completed the whole task; a task like 
  that should be a "project." A project is itself a task, with a few 
  special features. For example, a project's tags are automatically 
  assigned to its sub-tasks. Most important, if a project is in Next, 
  just its first few uncompleted sub-tasks are displayed there. This 
  keeps a project from becoming overwhelming, and keeps you focussed 
  on the sub-tasks in order. (A project cannot have sub-projects.)

  To focus on a set of tasks, click something in the sidebar; this 
  limits the main display to the contents of what you clicked. For 
  example, to see the Next tasks, click Next. Then, at the top of the 
  window, there's a region called the "filter bar," which lets you 
  focus still further. This region appears only if it's needed, and it 
  contains only buttons relevant to what's being displayed in the 
  window. So, if some tasks displayed in the window have due dates, 
  the filter bar appears, with an alarm-clock button in it; click that 
  button to see _only_ the tasks with due dates (in date order). If 
  the window is showing some tasks that have tags, the filter bar 
  appears, with buttons representing those tags; click one (or more) 
  to see _only_ the tasks with those tags. There's also a search field 
  at the bottom of the window, so you can limit what you're seeing to 
  tasks whose title, note, or tags contain certain characters.

  Things has some additional features that I haven't tried, such as 
  synchronization with iCal or the Things iPhone app (which I also 
  haven't tried). And there are some other features, such as the Add 
  Teammate menu item, whose purpose is not clear to me.

  [Adam here... I've used the iCal and iPhone app synchronization, and 
  both work well (look for their controls in the Things preferences 
  window). Syncing bidirectionally with iCal requires choosing which 
  levels of commitment you want to sync -  Today or Next - and which 
  iCal calendar tasks in those levels of commitment should appear in. 
  A Custom option adds syncing of Someday, and lets you sync specific 
  areas with particular calendars. Since iCal synchronization works 
  via Sync Services, programs like BusyCal can read and write those 
  tasks too. Syncing with the Things app for iPhone or iPod touch 
  occurs via Wi-Fi once you've paired your device with Things, and any 
  time you launch the app while Things is running on your Mac, the two 
  sync any changes. The Things app faithfully converts the program's 
  Mac interface to the iPhone; the main lack is an equivalent of the 
  filter bar. The Add Teammate menu item? It's described, briefly, in 
  a blog post, but without sharing of tasks between networked users, 
  it's hard to consider using it in favor of a site like Manymoon.]

<http://culturedcode.com/things/iphone/>
<http://culturedcode.com/things/blog/2009/05/things-11-brings-a-new-model-for-working-with-delegated-tasks.html>
<http://www.manymoon.com/>


**Things Judgmental** -- In general, I like Things quite a lot. It 
  doesn't adhere strictly to any prefabricated philosophy; rather, it 
  provides a small number of fairly simple features and leaves it up 
  to you how to use them. It has remarkably few menu items; yet it 
  packs a lot of power. I'm not terribly fond of the non-standard 
  interface - to my mind, it wastes space, plus I find myself clicking 
  and double-clicking rather frantically, trying to get things to 
  expand or collapse, or lose or gain focus - but I can live with it.

  Sometimes the interface seems a bit _too_ simple, though. For 
  example, the filter bar lets me limit my view to tasks that have a 
  certain tag; but there's no way to see only tasks that _don't_ have 
  a certain tag. To see why this might be needed, consider a tag whose 
  meaning is negative ("on hold" or "waiting"); it's still in Next, 
  but you can't actually perform it right now, so you need to hide it 
  in order to pick something you _can_ do.

  Similarly, there is no view in which you see _all_ your tasks: you 
  must select just _one_ level of commitment in the sidebar, and then 
  you see _only_ the tasks in that level. Similarly, the pending 
  arrival of an item's due date isn't magically signalled; you have to 
  deliberately look in Next and deliberately filter/sort by due date. 
  As a result, as soon as I have more than a few tasks, I tend to 
  become confused about what's where; I have to keep poking around, 
  looking at various lists, trying to get an overall picture of the 
  situation.

  But those are minor quibbles compared to the lack of decent 
  documentation. What documentation there is feels like an 
  afterthought; indeed, until fairly recently the best explanation of 
  Things was a user's online video, not even hosted at Cultured Code's 
  site! There's online help (which appears in Apple's dreaded Help 
  Viewer), but it's sketchy and uninformative, not to mention 
  downright incomplete: for example, you'd never know from the online 
  help that you can drag files into a tag's Note, or what the 
  mysterious Add Teammate menu item is for. Similarly, Things is 
  scriptable with AppleScript, and there's a PDF Things AppleScript 
  Guide; but this isn't mentioned in the online documentation, and the 
  download doesn't include the Guide, so how on earth are you supposed 
  to find out about it? Cultured Code has a habit of describing a 
  feature on their blog or their wiki and leaving documentation to 
  catch up a year or two later; but not everyone wants to search the 
  Web for basic facts about what an application does.

<http://culturedcode.com/things/blog/>
<http://culturedcode.com/things/wiki/index.php/Welcome>

  The online help is also inconsistent, using different terms for the 
  same concept in different places (is it a "task," an "item," or a 
  "to-do"?). The application's interface terminology has the same 
  problem. The Add Teammate menu item creates a sidebar section called 
  People (not Teammate) - two terms for one thing. "Levels of 
  commitment" (per the documentation) are also called "Focus" (in the 
  sidebar). When a task is selected, a certain menu item reads Move to 
  Someday or Move to Next; when a project is selected, the very same 
  menu item reads Make Inactive or Make Active, and does exactly the 
  same thing - a clear candidate for Occam's Razor. My prescription 
  is, as usual, that Cultured Code should hire an experienced teacher 
  and documentation writer to rewrite the online help, provide a PDF 
  manual, and straighten out the interface terminology. 

  Despite my reservations, I think that Things is an eminently 
  _usable_ application, which, ironically, is just what you want when 
  what you're really after is not to use the application at all, but 
  rather, to get things done. The price seems a little steep, but that 
  hasn't damped the enthusiasm of users on Culture Code's forum, who 
  are vociferously telling Cultured Code how they _really_ use this 
  program. That's a healthy sign; another is that Cultured Code is 
  fairly open about what new features they're working on.

<http://culturedcode.com/forums/list.php?7>
<http://culturedcode.com/status/>

  Things requires Mac OS X 10.4.11 or later. It costs $49.95 ($74.95 
  for a five-user, one-household "family pack"), and the download is 
  fully functional without a license for 15 days.

<http://culturedcode.com/things/download/?e=3102>

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11051#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/11051>


Why Google Wave Needs a Major Overhaul
--------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11074>
  6 comments

  I really wanted to like Google Wave. But after several months of 
  attempting to use it in a variety of ways, I've come to the 
  conclusion that the current incarnation of Google Wave is too 
  fundamentally flawed to be useful. That said, Google has made it 
  very clear that Google Wave is still in preview release, so I hold 
  out hope that Google will radically revamp the service. I think 
  Google is aware of these issues, since a Feedback survey link just 
  appeared in Google Wave itself, and many of the questions seem to 
  acknowledge that users are wildly unhappy.

<http://wave.google.com/help/wave/about.html>
<https://survey.googleratings.com/wix/p3916139.aspx>

  Here are the things I attempted to do in Google Wave, all with some 
  level of frustration and relatively little overall success.


**Basic Communication** -- Google Wave is often put forth as a 
  rethinking of Internet communication, a mashup of email, instant 
  messaging, and more. It's difficult to test Google Wave in this way, 
  however, for the simple reason that it's not email, and it's not 
  instant messaging. Everyone with whom you want to communicate must 
  have a Google Wave account, and although those with Google Wave 
  accounts are given invitations to hand out to friends and 
  colleagues, the fact remains that most of the people you're likely 
  to want to communicate with are not using Google Wave now. As a 
  result, you'll never think of using Google Wave as a way of 
  contacting someone.

  Worse, my experience is that even tech-savvy people like those I 
  work with seem generally dubious of Google Wave, and that's even 
  before they've gotten into the system. Getting someone signed up 
  with Google Wave is often an exercise in hair-pulling frustration 
  requiring multiple back-and-forth email messages as you send an 
  invitation, request their Google Wave account information (which is 
  a pseudo email address @googlewave.com, not any other Google account 
  or email address), add them to a wave, and explain some of the 
  basics of using Google Wave. And again, these frustrations occurred 
  when working with some extremely savvy tech writers and programmers, 
  not everyday users.

  The next problem, also related to the fact that people aren't 
  already using Google Wave in a big way, is that essentially no one 
  checks their Google Wave account regularly for new waves or replies. 
  So you can't guarantee that anyone will even notice communication 
  happening in Google Wave. For a while, I worked around that with an 
  extension that people could use to request email-based notifications 
  of changes; now Google has announced that it's building email 
  notifications into Google Wave itself.

<http://googlewave.blogspot.com/2010/03/help-test-email-notifications.html>

  The other workaround is to use a program like Waveboard (see "Catch 
  a Google Wave with Waveboard," 30 October 2009), which adds a 
  variety of local notification methods, including Growl, Dock icon 
  badges, and more. But still, convincing someone to use Waveboard and 
  keep it running all the time for Google Wave is an exercise in 
  futility.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10701>

  One last concern - although you can mark waves as being public and 
  thus available for anyone with a Google Wave account to see and 
  comment on, that struck me as just weird. I can't see Google Wave as 
  a publishing system like a blog or even Twitter; it seemed too 
  random for that since there isn't the context of a blog, which 
  generally revolves around a topic or a person or an organization, or 
  the implied personal context of Twitter, where people follow those 
  who have interesting things to say. Neither email nor instant 
  messaging have this concept of public posting to an entirely random 
  audience, and without some major changes, Google Wave's approach is 
  inherently confusing and unsatisfying.


**Group Planning** -- At Macworld Expo in San Francisco last month, I 
  moderated a panel on email clients. For that, I needed to explain to 
  all my panelists what the panel would be about, how I was planning 
  to organize it, and what I expected of them, besides their usual 
  scintillating conversational skills. Such discussions normally take 
  place in email, but in my experience, they often quickly derail, 
  such that one aspect of the discussion receives disproportionate 
  attention, and the rest are largely ignored. Also, because the 
  conversation happens months in advance, as the date approaches, it 
  can be difficult to recall what was decided.

  So I decided to hold the conversation in Google Wave, figuring that 
  it would serve as a semi-permanent record of what was said, 
  presenting all my points at all times, rather than letting my 
  panelists focus on one thing to the exclusion of all others.

  This was perhaps the most successful of my Google Wave experiments, 
  since everyone got in there and read what I wrote, at least at 
  first, and there was some discussion that helped me refine my 
  approach to the session. But after the initial chatter died down, no 
  one but me visited it again, which emphasizes Google Wave's 
  notification problems, and perhaps points to my desire for a 
  semi-permanent record not being as important as I thought. And, as 
  the date came very close, I still ended up having face-to-face 
  discussions about the session with each panelist individually to 
  make sure we were all on the same page.

  In the end, this task could have been handled in email just as well, 
  if not better.


**Document Collaboration** -- This is a topic near and dear to my 
  heart, since I do an awful lot of collaborating on TidBITS articles, 
  both as a writer and as an editor. The basic approach was simple - 
  I'd start a new wave, paste in the draft of an article, invite 
  reviewers, and then respond as they made comments. At the end of the 
  process, I'd copy the text out of Google Wave (since there's nothing 
  useful you can do with it otherwise).

  The theoretical benefit of Google Wave for document collaboration is 
  that everyone in the wave could either make changes directly in the 
  text or could leave comments that could turn into discussions with 
  other reviewers. The concept was great, but it didn't work well in 
  practice.

  Although you can edit any part of any wave by double-clicking it and 
  clicking the Edit button in the Reply/Edit lozenge that appears, 
  it's difficult for other people to see the changes you've made. If 
  they're watching in real time as you edit, it's possible to see 
  changes happening, and the other approach is to use Google Wave's 
  playback feature, which steps through the changes each person makes. 
  But that's horribly clumsy, since you have to take a step in the 
  playback, scroll through the document looking for highlighted 
  changes, and then take another step. Since the playback records 
  replies separately from edits, when one reviewer would make some 
  edits, then insert a reply, and then some more edits, and so on, it 
  resulted in many different steps in the playback to consider.

  As a result, Google Wave worked acceptably only when the textual 
  changes were minor. If more significant development editing was 
  necessary, its text-handling and author-marking tools simply weren't 
  up to the task. In one case I found myself pulling text out to 
  EtherPad where it was obvious who was making what change.

  The replies were troublesome too. If you double-click in the 
  document and click the Reply button in the Reply/Edit lozenge, 
  Google Wave sometimes inserts the reply in the middle of sentences, 
  or between a bullet and its text. The only way to guarantee that a 
  reply follows a paragraph or comes at a certain point is to select 
  some text, double-click the selected text, and then click Reply. I 
  found that I had to explain that technique to everyone I invited to 
  a wave, or risk a significantly more confusing layout.

  Another problem with replies is that it's difficult to control 
  whether or not they were hierarchical to one another. In general, if 
  you reply to some text in the initial blip (an excellent name for 
  the units of text in Google Wave, by the way), your reply is 
  indented under that blip, unless your reply comes at the very end of 
  the blip. Replying to a reply generally does not indent your reply, 
  unless you selected some text in the reply first. And it's 
  tremendously easy to create a reply when you don't mean to, or in an 
  incorrect location, forcing you to delete the just-created blip.

  The fact that Google Wave shows you when others are typing sounds 
  cool, but was generally irritating, since I could tell what someone 
  was going to say before they finished typing. I ended up responding 
  before they finished, which I'm sure was annoying, but I just 
  couldn't resist. iChat's approach of indicating that someone is 
  typing without actually showing it works better, since then you 
  respond to fully formed thoughts.

  Switching back and forth between editing and replying is also 
  cumbersome. There is a keyboard shortcut (Shift-Return) that lets 
  you avoid scrolling to the bottom of a long blip to click the Done 
  button, but even still, switching between editing and replying modes 
  requires conscious thought that's not necessary in most programs 
  that allow editing and commenting, even long-standing ones like 
  Microsoft Word.

  Finally, there is no good way to mark replies as having been viewed, 
  so you could avoid seeing them in the future, or to hide them 
  entirely so you could look at the document without them. Once again, 
  Microsoft Word's change tracking and commenting features put others 
  to shame, even if it has no collaboration capabilities at all.

  One unexpected positive about using Google Wave for document 
  collaboration was that when I selected the text of an original blip 
  and copied it out to BBEdit, I got only the text of my now-edited 
  draft, not all the interspersed replies. That's what you'd want, of 
  course, but you would have no idea that it's possible without trying 
  it. And, although this worked for me, one other person was 
  completely unable to copy text out at all for reasons we never 
  determined.

  In the end, Google Wave proved far more frustrating for document 
  collaboration than Google Docs or EtherPad (now owned by Google too, 
  see "EtherPad Open-Sourced after Google Acquisition," 4 December 
  2009), or even the venerable QuickTopic Document Review. In Google 
  Docs, editing is much easier, but commenting and discussions are 
  extremely clumsy, and change tracking and versioning aren't great. 
  In EtherPad, change tracking and versioning are generally well done, 
  and discussions can take place outside the document in a separate 
  chat pane. And in QuickTopic Document Review, which we rely on for 
  Take Control ebook technical reviews, commenting is easy, but 
  there's no way to edit at all.

<http://docs.google.com/>
<http://etherpad.com/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10809>
<http://www.quicktopic.com/documentcollaboration>


**Project Management** -- My next attempt was to use Google Wave for 
  project management for our forthcoming account management system. 
  Email was working poorly because if someone disappeared on a 
  different project for a few days, they often had trouble remembering 
  what tasks remained for them to do, or forgot discussions that had 
  taken place much earlier in my project. Plus, as with my group 
  planning experiment, I wanted to create a system where discussions 
  could become detailed on one topic without losing track of others.

  To this end, I created a wave shared with Glenn Fleishman, our 
  technical guru, and Adam Khan, our freelance ExpressionEngine 
  developer, and I outlined all the tasks. The idea was that I could 
  create a task and spec out its associated feature in a blip. Then, 
  if Adam or Glenn had questions or comments, they could reply inside 
  that task blip, and I could reply back as well, keeping all the 
  discussion together and coherent. 

  By this time I had the email notification add-on working, so we 
  could all be alerted when there were changes, which helped keep us 
  all on track. But even with that, I found myself resorting to email 
  to ask how things were going, since there was no way to know if the 
  others were seeing my changes.

  The real problem, though, was in overload. The wave ended up with 
  nearly 200 messages by the time we abandoned it, and as you can 
  imagine, there could be many replies under each item. That was fine 
  at first, but as tasks were completed, there was no good way to hide 
  them and their associated discussion. You can delete blips in Google 
  Wave, and you can see the deleted ones in the playback, so they're 
  not lost forever, but since you would be deleting other people's 
  words, it felt wrong to do so. Plus, it was unclear if it would be 
  easy to find something again, once deleted. You can also collapse a 
  thread of replies, but Google Wave wouldn't retain that collapsed 
  state the next time you come in.

  And more to the point, there is no real way to assign a task to a 
  particular person (we used initials at the start of the task 
  description), no coherent way to see what needed attention, and no 
  real way to mark a task as completed (we used a checkmark in front 
  of the initials). In other words, it worked, but proved only 
  slightly better than a straight text document in Google Docs. (We've 
  done that too; it's also awkward and painful.)

  In the end, we moved the project to a project collaboration site 
  called Manymoon, which has features roughly similar to the popular 
  Basecamp project collaboration site, but which can be used for small 
  stuff like this for free. Manymoon makes it easy to create tasks, 
  assign them to particular people, leave comments on the task (the 
  most important feature, in my experience), notify all members of the 
  project of changes and comments via email, view tasks by user and 
  status, and mark them as done once completed. If you're looking for 
  a project collaboration site, Manymoon is definitely worth a look.

<http://www.manymoon.com/>
<http://basecamphq.com/>

  During this process, I tried using Google Wave to manage several 
  other projects where I thought there might be a fair amount of 
  discussion, but in each case, it basically became a roach motel 
  where I stored information and everyone else took one look and 
  ignored it afterwards. Those projects will also be moving to 
  Manymoon at some point; I'm not worried about losing what I did in 
  Google Wave, but I simply can't (and don't want to) force all the 
  parties involved to use it.


**Anti-Network Effect** -- All things considered, the main problem 
  with Google Wave was that it wasn't compelling enough to create a 
  network effect, where the fact that some people were using it was 
  enough to lure others to use it. In nearly all the cases where I 
  invited someone to a wave, I got some level of pushback, whether or 
  not the person already had a Google Wave account. Since TidBITS 
  relies largely on persuasion rather than commands from on high, the 
  consistent (and considerable) lack of enthusiasm was an 
  insurmountable obstacle.

  It seems as though Google may be aware of this problem from the way 
  in which they introduced Google Buzz as part of Gmail, which ensured 
  that Buzz would have vast numbers of users from the beginning. 
  Unfortunately, Google went too far in that direction, since lots of 
  people didn't want Buzz turned on, and vastly more had no idea what 
  it was. 

  Google should listen to the developers of the recently acquired 
  EtherPad, which did a good job of eliminating the need for accounts, 
  making for a very lightweight system (in EtherPad, the creator of a 
  pad simply shares a URL to the pad via email or instant messaging or 
  any other medium). The ideal middle ground for any system like 
  Google Wave or Google Buzz is to make it dead simple to join without 
  doing anything special or signing up for anything else (just because 
  I might want to use Buzz doesn't mean I want a full Google account) 
  while at the same time making the service sufficiently compelling 
  and viral that people want to sign up in droves. That has worked for 
  Twitter and Facebook, and countless other systems that rely on the 
  network effect. I realize Google Wave is a slightly special case, 
  since it's designed as a protocol and server that could be run by 
  any organization, but even still, it has to be lightweight for 
  adoption to occur.

  I'm almost hesitant to make concrete recommendations for Google 
  Wave, since it has seen so few significant changes since its 
  introduction that I wonder if Google isn't working on a major 
  revision behind the scenes. But I think my criticisms above should 
  lend some insight into the kind of changes that would help. Other 
  thoughts:

* Invitations to a wave should be by URL, sent via email or instant 
  messaging or any other means, and if Google wants to make it easier, 
  invitations should tie into your existing contact list.

* Google Wave shouldn't require an account for those invited to join a 
  wave, and if someone wants to create an account, it should for now 
  be associated with existing Google accounts, and not be entirely 
  separate.

* For those who already use Gmail, Google should think about 
  non-intrusive ways of integrating Google Wave into Gmail to 
  eliminate the notification problem and create a bit more of a 
  network effect. For those not using Gmail, email notification is a 
  must.

* Though seeing people typing in real time can be useful, the feature 
  should be optional, to allow people to finish a thought before 
  others reply or comment on it.

* The interface for switching between editing and replying needs to be 
  both more obvious and faster, and the constant creation of 
  inadvertent replies should be eliminated.

* Google Wave should remember if you have collapsed a blip and not 
  show it again unless it gets new traffic, or even collapse replies 
  after they're read, just like an email conversation in Gmail. There 
  should also be a way of hiding all replies completely, so an edited 
  document can be read without interruption.

* If Google Wave is to be useful for document collaboration, it has to 
  be able to publish a wave to other formats and mediums, such as 
  email, straight text, RTF, HTML, to a blog post, or to a content 
  management system. Copy-and-paste is not an interface.

* Blips should be allowed to have user-defined metadata like 
  completion status, task assignment, and due dates so Google Wave 
  could become useful for task and project management. 

  These are relatively minor conceptual changes, though I freely 
  acknowledge that they could require significant architectural and 
  interface modifications. As such, I can't say that I'd be happy to 
  use Google Wave even if Google were to implement all of them, but 
  I'd certainly return with fresh enthusiasm replacing the frustration 
  Google Wave has caused me thus far.

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11074#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/11074>


TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 22 March 2010
-------------------------------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11099>

**BusyCal 1.2.3** -- BusyMac remains, well, busy, pushing out yet 
  another small bug-fix update to BusyCal, their iCal-replacement 
  calendar program with sharing capabilities. BusyCal 1.2.3 fixes 
  problems with unpublishing calendars from Google Calendar and fixes 
  time zone discrepancies when publishing calendars to Google (but 
  note that Google Calendar still doesn't support "floating" time 
  zones, making it unusable for workgroups dispersed across time zones 
  who are trying to coordinate events at a conference where everyone 
  will be in the same time zone, for instance). Several cosmetic bugs 
  have also been squashed, attachments and to-dos are no longer 
  removed from WebDAV calendars by default, and more. Full release 
  notes are available. ($49, free updates, 5.6 MB)

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

  Read/post comments about BusyCal 1.2.3.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11094#comments>


**Phone Amego 1.1.14** -- Sustainable Softworks has updated Phone 
  Amego, the utility that enables you to control a Bluetooth mobile 
  phone (including the iPhone) from a Mac (for more details, see 
  "Phone Amego: the Macintosh/iPhone Mind Meld," 3 September 2009). 
  Version 1.1.14 now supports Growl notifications, improves the Call 
  Window's functionality, and fixes the caller ID display when numbers 
  that are private, unavailable, or all-zeros call in. The update also 
  enables users to place calls remotely from a landline phone that's 
  hooked up to another computer with Phone Amego, adds a German 
  localization, adds a CrashReporter feature that automatically 
  relaunches Phone Amego after a crash, and fixes several crashing 
  bugs. ($20, free update, 2.7 MB)

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

  Read/post comments about Phone Amego 1.1.14.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11093#comments>



ExtraBITS for 22 March 2010
---------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11098>

  Our ExtraBITS links this week focus on saving money by building your 
  own discounted Mac software bundle, learning how the Pandora 
  music-streaming service managed to survive, noting Apple's repeat 
  top ranking among Fortune's "Most Admired Companies," and checking 
  out John Gruber's backup success story.


**TheMacBundles Adds Build Your Own Bundle Option** -- Here's a new 
  twist on the discounted Mac software bundle offer - TheMacBundles is 
  acknowledging that some customers might either already own certain 
  applications or might just not be interested in everything in the 
  bundle. Customers can choose either five titles for $29.75 ($5.95 
  each) or ten titles for $49.50 ($4.95 each). In both cases, more 
  titles can be added at the individual discount prices, and adding 
  TheMacBundles' weekly special reduces the price further.

<http://themacbundles.com/>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11100#comments>


**How Pandora Survived Thanks to an iPhone App** -- If you use the 
  Pandora music-streaming service, you're probably aware that the 
  company had long teetered on the edge of survival. So how did it 
  manage to turn the corner and post its first profitable quarter at 
  the end of 2009? The New York Times runs through Pandora's 
  roller-coaster history, giving much of the credit to the Pandora 
  iPhone app, which brought 35,000 new users per day to the service.

<http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/08/technology/08pandora.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11096#comments>


**Apple Tops Fortune's "Most Admired Companies" List, Again** -- We 
  lost track of this news when it happened two weeks ago, but it's 
  worth getting in the record. For the third year in a row, Apple has 
  topped Fortune's list of the world's most admired companies. 
  Although Google came in second (passing Warren Buffet's Berkshire 
  Hathaway), Apple's margin of victory was the greatest ever. 
  Amazon.com placed fifth and Microsoft was eleventh.

<http://money.cnn.com/magazines/fortune/mostadmired/2010/snapshots/670.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11095#comments>


**Multi-Prong Backup Saves Gruber's Data** -- Daring Fireball's John 
  Gruber had a hard drive develop mechanical issues that prevented it 
  from booting his laptop. Between SuperDuper, Dropbox, and 
  DiskWarrior, he didn't lose a single thing. He details his strategy, 
  and advice for achieving the same results. (Needless to say, we also 
  recommend Joe Kissell's "Take Control of Mac OS X Backups" and "Take 
  Control of Easy Mac Backups.")

<http://daringfireball.net/2010/03/ode_to_diskwarrior_superduper_dropbox>
<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/backup-macosx?pt=TB1019>
<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/backup-easy-mac?pt=TB1019>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11088#comments>



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