TidBITS#1023/12-Apr-2010
========================
  Issue link: <http://db.tidbits.com/issue/1023>

  The iPad continues to feature heavily this week, as Adam looks at 
  Apple's early sales numbers for iPads, books, and apps, Glenn 
  Fleishman covers the early Wi-Fi problems some iPad users are 
  experiencing, and Jeff Carlson shares a slew of iPad tips. But the 
  big news is iPhone OS 4, and we have a detailed look at what Apple 
  has said about it, as well as some thoughts about the changes to the 
  iPhone Developer Program License Agreement that ban the use of a 
  Flash-to-iPhone compiler. Elsewhere, Matt Neuburg points a spotlight 
  at Google Groups problems, Adam can't resist sharing a tremendously 
  clever video that shows classic video game characters bitmapping 
  Manhattan, and we give away three copies of the $149 FotoMagico Pro 
  photo presentation software. Notable software releases this week 
  include KeyCue 5.0, The Missing Sync for Android 1.3, Photoshop 
  Lightroom 2.7, and PDF Enhancer 3.5.

Articles
    Steve Jobs Shares iPad Sales Numbers
    Some iPad Users Suffer Wi-Fi Woes
    DealBITS Drawing: Win a Copy of FotoMagico Pro 3
    Google Groups on the Fritz
    Classic Video Game Characters Take Manhattan
    iPhone Developer Agreement Change Bans Flash-to-iPhone Compiler
    22 Useful iPad Tips
    Apple Previews Major New Features in iPhone OS 4
    TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 12 April 2010
    ExtraBITS for 12 April 2010


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Steve Jobs Shares iPad Sales Numbers
------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11175>
  1 comment

  As is his wont at Apple press events, Steve Jobs shared some of the 
  numbers related to products connected with the iPhone OS 4 sneak 
  preview, with iPad sales front and center. 

  After Apple announced that 300,000 iPads had been sold on the first 
  day (meaning, via pre-order and on 3 April 2010), many people 
  wondered if the iPad would maintain its sales velocity. The answer 
  would seem to be yes, with Jobs stating that as of 8 April 2010 
  Apple had sold 450,000 iPads, meaning that another 150,000 left 
  shelves in the subsequent four days (one of which was Easter Sunday, 
  when few Apple Stores were open).

<http://www.apple.com/pr/library/2010/04/05ipad.html>

  Given that the best estimates we've seen put Amazon's Kindle at 
  somewhere over 1 million units sold since its 2007 launch, for Apple 
  to reach nearly half that number in less than a week indicates just 
  how much more significant the iPad is than the Kindle, a comparison 
  that was much debated before the iPad was formally announced and 
  that has continued even after the iPad shipped.

  Similarly, though Amazon won't disclose how many Kindle books it has 
  sold, Apple is less shy, announcing that 250,000 books were 
  downloaded from the iBookstore on the first day. That number rose to 
  600,000 by the iPhone OS 4 announcement, though Jobs didn't 
  distinguish between free and paid title downloads. Apple makes 
  available tens of thousands of free books from Project Gutenberg, 
  and promotes a list of top free downloads alongside top paid ones.

  Apps have been even more popular, with 1 million iPad-savvy apps 
  downloaded on the first day; that number grew to 3.5 million four 
  days later. Again, Jobs didn't differentiate between free and paid 
  apps, though he did note that there are now 185,000 apps in the App 
  Store, of which 3,500 are iPad-savvy (running either solely on the 
  iPad or available as universal apps that can run tailored for either 
  the iPad or iPhone).

  If all those numbers sound positive, the ones that most shocked us 
  were the iPhone and iPod touch sales figures. Currently, Apple says 
  it has sold 50 million units of the iPhone and another 35 million of 
  the iPod touch, worldwide. Add in the iPad and Apple is closing in 
  on 86 million iPhone OS devices out there. 

  That may not put the iPhone ahead of RIM's BlackBerry yet, but Jobs 
  did share a slide claiming that the iPhone accounts for 64 percent 
  of U.S. mobile Web browser usage, with phones based on Google's 
  Android at 19 percent, BlackBerry at 9 percent, and the rest filling 
  in the final 8 percent.

  At TidBITS, in the week beginning 3 April 2010, about 5 percent of 
  visitors used an iPad to view our pages, with about 7 percent using 
  an iPhone and 1 percent an iPod touch. That's a significant spike 
  for a just-released device - glad you thought to come to TidBITS! 
  We're not alone - Alaska Airlines tweeted that the iPad became the 
  second most used device to access the company's Web site in less 
  than a week.

<http://twitter.com/AlaskaAir/status/11906719417>

  ----
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Some iPad Users Suffer Wi-Fi Woes
---------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11166>
  6 comments

  In what may be a technical misstep with the first iPads, many owners 
  are reporting trouble in getting and retaining a strong Wi-Fi signal 
  with their devices, even in places where other Apple and non-Apple 
  hardware connect fine. A long discussion thread is in progress at 
  Apple's site, and has received over 70,000 views and 500 messages so 
  far.

<http://discussions.apple.com/thread.jspa?threadID=2387493&tstart=0>

  We're normally quite conservative about reporting hardware troubles 
  at TidBITS, because there's no way to know what percentage of users 
  are afflicted. However, even aside from the fact that some TidBITS 
  staffers are seeing wonky Wi-Fi behavior, the volume of reports here 
  is high enough, detailed enough, and widespread enough that it's 
  clear something is awry.

  There appear to be four common problems, which may or may not be 
  related:

* Users see a fluctuating or single bar of Wi-Fi signal strength 
  displayed on the iPad in an area where other devices, including 
  iPhones, have no trouble picking up a strong and consistent signal.

* The iPad drops off the Wi-Fi network repeatedly, interrupting 
  network communication.

* Throughput varies continuously between slow and high rates.

* The iPad prompts for a Wi-Fi network password to a network it has 
  already joined successfully with a password.

  A fifth problem that I've seen fewer accounts of involves Wi-Fi 
  network disruptions when laying the iPad flat on a table or other 
  surface.

  For one specific problem, where the iPad repeatedly drops off a 
  network and then reconnects, some users found that disabling the Ask 
  to Join option in the Wi-Fi network setup kept a consistent 
  connection, while others did not. Still others tried restarting all 
  their network hardware, which seemed to eliminate all the problems 
  cited above... but typically only for a short period of time.

  Apple posted a technical support note that addresses common Wi-Fi 
  connection problems, but it appeared on the day the iPad shipped and 
  although it's full of general, useful advice, it doesn't 
  specifically address the particular problems users are reporting.

<http://support.apple.com/kb/TS3237>

  Several days later, Apple posted a new iPad support note that refers 
  to one potential problem related to simultaneous dual-band base 
  stations made by other firms - that is, base stations that can 
  deliver Wi-Fi over the 2.4 and 5 GHz bands at the same time. These 
  devices create two separate networks, one in each band, just like 
  Apple's AirPort Extreme Base Station and Time Capsule network 
  appliance. 

<http://support.apple.com/kb/TS3304>

  If the non-Apple base station's networks are set to have the same 
  name but use different security methods, the iPad can fail to rejoin 
  the network after restart or waking from sleep. Apple advises either 
  making the security method and encryption key the same, or naming 
  the two networks on the same base station differently. (This is in 
  fact Apple's bug - the iPad should be recording the network's 
  underlying unique ID, not its network name, to associate with the 
  security type and stored key.) 

  The iPad ships with iPhone OS 3.2, which is not yet available for 
  the iPhone or iPod touch, and it's possible that some changes or 
  enhancements in this release are to blame. I expect we'll see 3.2.1 
  quickly if the problems are as extensive as they appear.

  ----
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DealBITS Drawing: Win a Copy of FotoMagico Pro 3
------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11178>

  Thanks to writing seven editions of my "iPhoto Visual QuickStart 
  Guide" since iPhoto's launch, I've talked to a vast number of iPhoto 
  users. One common theme among those conversations is dissatisfaction 
  with iPhoto's slideshow capabilities, even as Apple has enhanced 
  them over the years. You can't add text to a photo in an iPhoto 
  slideshow, or add narration, for instance, both of which are 
  frequently requested features.

  A powerful answer to iPhoto's slideshow limitations comes from Boinx 
  Software, in the form of FotoMagico 3, which comes in Home and Pro 
  editions. At a basic level, the $29 FotoMagico Home starts with 
  essentially the same features as iPhoto, but builds from there. You 
  can add images from iPhoto or the Finder, mix still images with 
  movies, apply the Ken Burns Effect to pan and zoom on both still 
  images and movies, put text titles on top of your photos, use 
  jitter-free transitions, and lots more. Apart from just showing your 
  slideshow in FotoMagico, you can also export it to YouTube, a 
  Web-based movie, or for display on a DVD, iPod, iPhone, or Apple TV.

<http://boinx.com/fotomagico/>

  But while FotoMagico Home can do much of what most people might 
  want, the $149 FotoMagico Pro adds the truly cool features, like 
  being able to record narration directly within the program, 
  watermark images during the slideshow, and display a teleprompter on 
  one screen while showing images on another. FotoMagico Pro also 
  extends the export options significantly and comes with a license 
  for Boinx's PhotoPresenter, which lets users make template-based 
  slideshows in seconds.

  So if you want to win one of three copies of FotoMagico Pro 3.0, 
  each worth $149, 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/fotomagico/>
<http://www.tidbits.com/about/privacy.html>

  ----
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Google Groups on the Fritz
--------------------------
  by Matt Neuburg <matt@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11160>
  2 comments

  Last year, when I set up a discussion group and mailing list for 
  users of my RubyFrontier Web framework project, I made a choice 
  between creating a Yahoo group or a Google group. I went with Yahoo 
  Groups even though I'm not terribly fond of the interface and 
  features. Now I'm happy I didn't choose Google, when I discovered 
  that Google Groups are suffering from an annoying glitch.

<http://groups.yahoo.com/>
<http://groups.google.com/>

  Two important Google Groups features are the capability to create 
  and publish custom Web pages and the fact that you can upload, 
  store, and share files. It appears that these features - called 
  "Pages" and "Files" - have broken for some groups. I first noticed 
  the problem while trying to access some Pages for a Google group I 
  belong to; but as I write this, the Is Something Broken Google group 
  (part of Google's Help Forum) is filled to overflowing with threads 
  where users complain that they can't upload or download files and 
  that they can't view pages.

<http://groups.google.com/intl/en/googlegroups/tour3/page3.html>
<http://groups.google.com/intl/en/googlegroups/tour3/page5.html>
<http://groups.google.com/group/is-something-broken/topics>

  The most frustrating part of the problem, for many, is the lack of 
  response from Google. Indeed, there is no direct way to contact 
  Google about such matters. Clicking the Contact link that appears 
  when pages fail to load tells the user that you can't email Google 
  about anything but abuse and legal matters; the alternative is to 
  post on the Help group, which is exactly what users are doing, with 
  no sign that Google folks are paying any attention.

  This issue is making many Google Groups users, those for whom the 
  Pages and Files features are an essential aspect of a particular 
  group, feel that their Google Groups experience is broken, or that 
  they have effectively lost important data. Even if the problem is 
  cleared up soon, which of course it may well be, it illustrates a 
  peculiarly telling confluence of circumstances:

* Web applications are great, and free Web applications are really 
  great. But Web applications are software, and software can develop 
  bugs - not to mention that the networked nature of Web applications 
  can result in other glitches (such as, a server can become 
  unavailable). It's natural to put your faith in a Web application, 
  as if it were a service that seems like it will always be there, 
  like electricity or running water to a house; but, just like those 
  services, things can go wrong, and when they do, there's a feeling 
  of anger and loss, as if you'd been robbed of something.

* The Web is not backup. It's convenient, but something stored "in the 
  cloud" is no less likely to vanish than something stored on a hard 
  disk, and since you have no direct access to the server and you're 
  not in charge of how it gets backed up, you have no recourse when it 
  does. Users who feel they've lost data because of this incident have 
  misunderstood how to use the Internet; your sole copy of something 
  should _never_ be on a remote server.

* Google's Web applications have a lot of users. That means that when 
  things go wrong, there can be a lot of complaints. So there can be a 
  very big spike of very angry noise very quickly.

* Google's famous "Don't be evil" slogan can backfire at moments like 
  this. Users are explicitly accusing Google of evil even though 
  Google hasn't particularly done anything; it's as if users felt that 
  "Don't be evil" were somehow equivalent to a hybristic attitude 
  ("Unlike everyone else, we are utterly infallible"). Maybe Google 
  should have chosen something less pretentious, like "Do your best 
  under the circumstances."

* The public memory is notoriously short. Google Groups has always had 
  problems with the Pages and Files features. This isn't really a new 
  problem at all, as a look through the older Google Help Forum 
  postings reveals.

* The real failure here, in my opinion, is communication. Google feels 
  like a remote behemoth because it is acting like a remote behemoth. 
  There is something distinctly Microsofty about the inability of 
  users to get Google's explicit and direct attention on this matter. 
  Google should make itself open to bug reports via email, or at least 
  through a Web form where the user is sent a personal (even if 
  canned) response within a day or two.

  All of that said, I'm just as furious as everyone else. For the 
  groups where I'm dependent on these features, their loss is 
  effectively breaking my use of those groups. Google's silence on the 
  matter is giving users the impression that the company doesn't care 
  about Google Groups. Google needs to take action to correct that 
  impression, and soon.

  ----
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Classic Video Game Characters Take Manhattan
--------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11174>

  Patrick Jean's video "Pixels" is a graphical tour de force of 
  classic video game characters destroying Manhattan. Space Invaders 
  bomb New York City cabs into pixelated rubble, Pac-Man eats the 
  subway, Tetris blocks "complete" skyscrapers, the Breakout paddle 
  knocks out supporting bricks in the Brooklyn Bridge, and Donkey Kong 
  takes over the Empire State Building. I especially liked Frogger's 
  cameo appearance, and true to form, he just hops across the street 
  without hurting anything. See how many video game company logos you 
  can find in the backgrounds!

<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UQT_VoLtyIY>

  ----
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iPhone Developer Agreement Change Bans Flash-to-iPhone Compiler
---------------------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11177>
  3 comments

  Along with this week's release of the iPhone OS 4 SDK, Apple made a 
  change to Section 3.3.1 of the iPhone Developer Program License 
  Agreement. Previously, that section read:

    "Applications may only use Documented APIs in the manner prescribed by Apple and must not use or call any private APIs."

  After Apple's addition, it reads as follows:

    "Applications may only use Documented APIs in the manner prescribed by Apple and must not use or call any private APIs. Applications must be originally written in Objective-C, C, C++, or JavaScript as executed by the iPhone OS WebKit engine, and only code written in C, C++, and Objective-C may compile and directly link against the Documented APIs (e.g., Applications that link to Documented APIs through an intermediary translation or compatibility layer or tool are prohibited)."

  That additional verbiage appears designed to block the use of 
  certain cross-platform compilers such as Novell's MonoTouch, which 
  compiles C# and .NET apps for the iPhone, and Adobe's forthcoming 
  Flash-to-iPhone compiler (there are actually four or five of these 
  cross-compilers, not all of which will be affected). John Gruber 
  explains the situation well at Daring Fireball, and his followup 
  article "Why Apple Changed Section 3.3.1" makes some good points 
  about how cross-platform compilers have seldom resulted in top-notch 
  Macintosh applications. Read his analysis for details, and be sure 
  to check out Steve Jobs's related comments in email to Tao Effect 
  CEO Greg Slepak.

<http://monotouch.net/>
<http://labs.adobe.com/technologies/flashcs5/appsfor_iphone/>
<http://daringfireball.net/2010/04/iphone_agreement_bans_flash_compiler>
<http://daringfireball.net/2010/04/why_apple_changed_section_331>
<http://www.taoeffect.com/blog/2010/04/steve-jobs-response-on-section-3-3-1/>

  One aspect of the situation that John doesn't touch on is the legal 
  firestorm that this change may engender. MonoTouch comes from Novell 
  and Adobe has undoubtedly spent a huge amount of money on developing 
  its Flash-to-iPhone compiler. Both companies have strong legal 
  departments, and given that this change was made to a legal 
  agreement, it seems entirely likely that we'll see these companies 
  filing lawsuits against Apple for anti-competitive behavior.

  However, it's important to remember that Apple isn't acting 
  irrationally, as John notes:

    "So from Apple's perspective, changing the iPhone Developer Program License Agreement to prohibit the use of things like Flash CS5 and MonoTouch to create iPhone apps makes complete sense. I'm not saying you have to like this. I'm not arguing that it's anything other than ruthless competitiveness. I'm not arguing (up to this point) that it benefits anyone other than Apple itself. I'm just arguing that it makes sense from Apple's perspective - and it was Apple's decision to make."

  He's right. It would be nice to see Apple competing entirely on the 
  basis of having the best products, but as Mac users know, the best 
  product doesn't always win. Having been on the wrong side of that 
  battle for 25 years, Apple isn't going give up any potential 
  advantage in the brave new iPhone OS world.

  ----
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22 Useful iPad Tips
-------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11167>
  12 comments

  As many companies have discovered, you can't successfully slap a 
  desktop operating system onto a tablet device. The iPad uses Apple's 
  iPhone OS, which, although based on the guts of Mac OS X, was 
  designed with a touch interface in mind. And when you're designing 
  something from scratch, there are numerous opportunities to enhance 
  the experience.

  Now that I have an iPad in my hands, I've discovered some new 
  techniques and hidden shortcuts, and also found myself making 
  heavier use of existing iPhone shortcuts (including a few I didn't 
  realize were there).


**Small Swipes for Large Actions** -- No doubt the iPad's biggest 
  selling point is its large screen, especially compared to an iPhone 
  or iPod touch. But it can also feel like a liability at times.

  In the Home screen or the Photos app, for example, you'll be tempted 
  to swoosh across the entire width of the screen, which is what I've 
  always done on the iPhone. Instead, only a small swipe motion is 
  required. For example, to advance images in the Photos app, position 
  your left thumb at the left edge of the screen (where it likely is 
  if you're holding the iPad with your left hand supporting its 
  weight) and just flick the thumb half an inch right-to-left or 
  left-to-right.

  (This tip also applies to the iPhone and iPod touch, but the small 
  size of the screen makes it less useful.)


**Add Up to Six Apps to the Dock** -- The iPad ships with a basic 
  iPhone layout, which includes four apps on the Dock that appears at 
  the bottom of all Home screens. Take advantage of the extra screen 
  size and add up to two more. Tap and hold an app you want to add 
  until all of the apps begin jiggling. Then drag the app to the Dock. 
  Press the Home button when you're done.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-04/ipad_dock_six_apps.jpg>

  Unfortunately, you can't put more than 20 apps on a screen, but 
  there are 11 screens. This will change with folders in iPhone OS 4.


**Jump to the Top** -- This behavior was introduced on the iPhone, but 
  you need it more on the iPad's large screen. Tap the status bar at 
  the top of the screen to jump back to the top of the page or window 
  you're viewing. 

  I wish there were a similar action for jumping to the end of a page 
  (such as when I want to read comments at the end of an article, for 
  example). The closest there is to a workaround is Vais Salikhov's 
  free End of Page app, which is actually a clever bookmarklet that 
  works in Safari. (He also has a similar Find in Page app that 
  enables searching inside Web pages.)

<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/end-of-page/id354598188?mt=8>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/find-in-page/id349889817?mt=8>


**Lock That Rotate** -- This may not qualify as much of a secret, 
  since Apple promotes the feature, but in my early experience, it's 
  terrifically useful. Flick the switch above the volume controls to 
  lock screen rotation. The iPad is quite sensitive to orientation, 
  and rotates its screen with little provocation. Locking rotation 
  means sticking with the view you're in, even as you shift position, 
  or place the iPad flat on a surface.


**Quick Mute** -- With that switch repurposed for rotation lock, what 
  happened to the iPhone's capability of using it to mute the volume? 
  On the iPad, press and hold the volume down button. After about two 
  bars of volume, the iPad's volume jumps to zero. (Take Control 
  author Sharon Zardetto gets credit for pointing out this tip.)

<http://ipadpunditry.wordpress.com/>


**Use Spotlight to Launch Apps** -- Again, this is something not 
  unique to the iPad, but I never used it on the iPhone. Once you've 
  accumulated a bunch of apps, it can take a while to flip through 
  several home screens to find the one you want. Although there's no 
  equivalent to LaunchBar for the iPad (believe me, I'd buy it in a 
  heartbeat), here's the next best thing.

  When you're on a home screen, press the Home button to get to the 
  first screen, then either press the button again or swipe to the 
  right to expose the Spotlight search interface. Tap the Search field 
  and start typing the app name; you'll see that Spotlight also grabs 
  everything similar, including Mail messages, song titles, contacts, 
  and events, as well as the app. Then tap the one you want to launch.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-04/ipad_app_launcher.jpg>

  The iPad returns results on this page enormously faster than on an 
  iPhone 3GS or current iPod touch.


**Type an Apostrophe from the Basic Keyboard Layout** -- The iPad's 
  onscreen keyboard approaches the dimensions of a full-size keyboard 
  (in wide orientation, at least), but accommodations still had to be 
  made to get it to fit. One of the most maddening is the lack of an 
  apostrophe key. I keep hitting the Return key with my right pinkie 
  finger when I mean to type an apostrophe. You need to tap the 
  ".?123" button to reveal the correct key, which itself is in an odd 
  position at the bottom of the layout.

  Instead, press and hold the comma key. A pop-up variation appears 
  with an apostrophe, and it even appears highlighted, which means you 
  don't have to move your finger to select it. Simply tap, hold for a 
  moment, then release to create the apostrophe.


**Type Curly Quotes** -- Similarly, tap and hold the single or 
  double-quote key to get a selection of real quotes (the curly kind) 
  as used in major languages that use the Roman alphabet. This feature 
  is in the iPhone, too, and I'd never discovered it, probably because 
  I didn't notice typography as much on the small screen. When putting 
  together a Keynote presentation, however, those curly quotes make a 
  big difference. (Straight quotes - disparagingly referred to by 
  typographers as "typewriter quotes" - often indicate the person is a 
  graphics amateur.)

  The onscreen keyboard hides all kinds of other goodies, too, which 
  seem more useful in extended typing on the iPad than on the iPhone 
  or iPod touch. For instance, hold down the period key on some 
  keyboards, and a list of domain extensions (like .com and .org) 
  appear.


**Access Alternate Characters** -- This tip isn't specific to the 
  iPad, but it's worth remembering. Touch and hold a character on the 
  onscreen keyboard to view related characters. For example, holding 
  the E key brings up accented E characters, or holding the $ key 
  brings up other currency symbols. (Thanks to reader "Arthur" for the 
  reminder.)


**Better Word Suggestions** -- This one isn't so much a tip as it is 
  an observation. I've noticed that the iPad's word assistance is 
  better than the iPhone's. When I miss the space bar while typing 
  (especially now as I'm just getting accustomed to the onscreen 
  keyboard), the iPad automatically suggests that something like 
  "feellike" should be "feel like".


**Practice Good Typing Form** -- I never realized that I rest my hands 
  on the keyboard when I type until I started using the onscreen 
  keyboard where every contact on the screen creates an action. Keep 
  those fingers and palms up as you type.


**Zoom Way, Way In** -- The Zoom accessibility option that's in the 
  iPhone OS is even more helpful on the iPad than on a smaller device 
  because of the additional screen territory. You can turn this on 
  from Settings > Accessibility > Zoom by flipping Zoom to On. 

  The Zoom screen explains the three options: double tap with three 
  fingers to zoom in; drag with three fingers for panning around the 
  screen; and use three fingers to double tap without releasing, and 
  then drag up or down to zoom in or out.


**Use an External Keyboard** -- When you want to do some extended 
  typing, pair the iPad with a Bluetooth keyboard or plug it into 
  Apple's iPad Keyboard Dock. In addition to better ergonomics, this 
  setup gives you access to common keyboard commands like Copy 
  (Command-C) and Paste (Command-V), and lets you make selections of 
  text by holding down a Shift key and using the arrows for 
  navigation. You can also delete words with Option-Delete, and entire 
  lines with Command-Delete.

  It's also helpful for navigating a document. Press Command-Up arrow 
  to jump to the top of a document (like a Home key), or Command-Down 
  arrow to jump to the end (like an End key). Option-Left arrow and 
  Option-Right arrow move the insertion point by words, as you'd 
  expect.


**Manage a Bluetooth Keyboard** -- If you've paired a Bluetooth 
  keyboard, be sure to turn it off or disable Bluetooth when you're 
  not using it. If you enter any editable text field that requires 
  text input and the keyboard is within range, the onscreen keyboard 
  won't appear.

  You can press the Eject button on the Bluetooth keyboard to toggle 
  the appearance of the onscreen keyboard. But it's easier just to 
  turn off the external keyboard when you're not going to use it for a 
  while, or taking the iPad to another room.

  To turn off the Apple Wireless Keyboard, press and hold the power 
  button for a few seconds. The status light will come on; wait until 
  it goes out. Then the keyboard's power is off, and the iPad will 
  resume using its onscreen keyboard.

  You can also go to Settings > General > Bluetooth and set the 
  Bluetooth switch to off, which both reduces battery usage and 
  disables any other paired Bluetooth connection.


**Master Shifting** -- The iPad has territory enough to offer a Shift 
  key on both the left and right sides of the keyboard and for your 
  hands to lie flat on the screen. This lets you take advantage of a 
  feature found in the iPhone OS, but not quite practical to use on 
  the iPad's smaller siblings: you can hold down the Shift key while 
  typing a letter to a get a single capital letter, then release, as 
  with normal physical keyboard touch typing. This can dramatically 
  increase your typing speed. You can still tap a Shift key, which 
  turns blue, and then tap a letter to get a single capital letter.

  I've actually disabled the Caps Lock key on my MacBook Pro because I 
  hate accidentally hitting it and TYPING IN ALL CAPS, but there are 
  times where turning on Caps Lock is helpful (such as writing about 
  topics with lots of acronyms like AVCHD, HDCP, HDTVs, or TANSTAAFL). 
  You can do this in the iPhone OS too, though I never felt the need 
  for it when typing on those devices.

<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/There_ain't_no_such_thing_as_a_free_lunch>

  Go to Settings > Keyboard > Enable Caps Lock and set the switch to 
  On. Then, when you're typing, double-tap one of the Shift keys. The 
  entire key becomes illuminated in blue, with a white arrow in the 
  middle, to indicate that caps are locked. Tap a Shift key again to 
  exit the Caps Lock mode. 

  You can also hold down either Shift key and type letters to create a 
  series of capitals.


**Easier Text Selection** -- This feature is also not unique to the 
  iPad, but it's worthwhile and something I never knew about until a 
  few days ago. Double-tap and hold a word to select it to circumvent 
  the need to tap the Select button that appears, and then drag to 
  extend the selection to additional words. It works on both sides of 
  the selected word; when you're moving just the selection handles, 
  that's not the case.


**Replace Text** -- When you select a word, the familiar pop-up 
  options appear: Cut, Copy, and Paste. The iPad adds a new option: 
  Replace. Tap it to view alternate spellings or corrections.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-04/ipad_replace.jpg>


**Use the Spell Checker** -- The iPad includes a built-in spell check 
  feature that acts the same as the one in Mac OS X. If you misspell a 
  word, it appears with a dotted red underline. Tap the word to view 
  suggested spellings. (Thanks to reader "Rivka" for pointing this 
  out.)


**Watch iTunes-Purchased Movies on an HDTV** -- Movies in the iTunes 
  Store are wrapped in Apple's FairPlay DRM, which uses HDCP to ensure 
  that only devices that support HDCP can play the video. If you 
  bought the iPad Dock Connector to VGA Adapter and hope to play video 
  on your recent HDTV, you're out of luck because it won't carry the 
  digital signal. If your television has component connections (red, 
  green, and blue cables), buy Apple's Component AV Cable kit and hook 
  your iPad to the TV. Voilà! It's like having a portable Apple TV 
  with you at all times.


**Always Show Bookmarks Bar in Safari** -- I use MobileMe to sync my 
  Safari bookmarks to the iPad, and keep my most-used bookmarks handy 
  by storing them in the Bookmarks Bar on my MacBook Pro. Safari on 
  the iPad also features a Bookmarks Bar, but it's hidden by default. 
  In fact, the only way to make it appear is to tap the Address field 
  to position the cursor there. Instead, go to Settings > Safari and 
  turn on the Always Show Bookmarks Bar setting to make the bar appear 
  at all times.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-04/ipad_bookmarks_bar.jpg>


**Two-Finger Zoom for Web Video** -- Reader "Joe" pointed out that 
  when you encounter a video on a Web page that the iPad can play, 
  touching it with two fingers and expanding (the opposite of the 
  pinch gesture) zooms the video to full-screen mode.


**iBooks Easter Egg** -- I haven't heard of any Easter eggs - hidden 
  programming surprises that developers sometimes include in software 
  - in the iPad's software, but I did discover something similar. In 
  the iBooks app, touch and hold the shelves that display your 
  library, then drag down as far as you can to reveal a little 
  surprise hidden behind the faux wood.

  Have you discovered any iPad tips? Share them in the article's 
  comments and we'll update this article or write a new one (with full 
  credit, of course)!

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11167#comments>

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Apple Previews Major New Features in iPhone OS 4
------------------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11176>
  8 comments

  Less than a week after shipping the iPad, Apple established at a 
  media event on 8 April 2010 that it's the Company that Does Not 
  Sleep by offering an extensive preview of iPhone OS 4. The new 
  operating system offers more than 100 new user features and 1,500 
  APIs for developers, and tackles most of the outstanding criticisms 
  of the iPhone, including support for particular kinds of 
  multitasking, folders for app organization, enhanced Mail support, 
  iBooks, and greater enterprise support. It also brings a new way for 
  developers to make money from apps: iAd, Apple's new in-app mobile 
  advertising service.

<http://www.apple.com/iphone/preview-iphone-os/>

  A beta of iPhone OS 4 is currently available to registered iPhone 
  developers. It will be available for iPhone and iPod touch devices 
  in the summer and for the iPad in the fall (those being Northern 
  Hemisphere seasons).

<http://developer.apple.com/technologies/iphone/whats-new.html>

  Along with the iPad, iPhone OS 4 will work on the iPhone 3G, iPhone 
  3GS, iPod touch 2nd generation (late 2008), and iPod touch 3rd 
  generation 32 GB and 64 GB (late 2009). Even among that list, some 
  features, like multitasking, will be available only to the iPhone 
  3GS and 3rd generation iPod touch. The original iPhone lacks the 
  hardware to run iPhone OS 4, according to Apple. Apple will probably 
  also announce at least a new iPhone model by July that would likely 
  ship with iPhone OS 4 installed. (The iPod touch is typically 
  revamped along with other iPod models in the third quarter.) 

  In his presentation, Steve Jobs ran through the main categories of 
  features by calling out seven "tentpoles," making for a very large 
  and odd-shaped but interesting tent.


**Tentpole #1: Multitasking** -- The most significant improvement 
  planned for iPhone OS 4 is multitasking, and as Adam noted in "Does 
  the iPhone OS Need Multitasking?" (8 February 2010), most people 
  haven't thought very carefully about what multitasking really 
  entails. Luckily, Apple has. In iPhone OS 4 the company has 
  introduced seven services that satisfy most of the desires of those 
  who called for multitasking without allowing true background apps 
  that would carry out simultaneous, independent actions while a 
  foreground app was running. True background apps would likely reduce 
  battery life and certainly hurt performance, especially considering 
  the devices' memory constraints. Apple's multitasking services 
  include:

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

* Fast App Switching: There's no provision in the iPhone OS, even on 
  the large-screen iPad, to display multiple apps simultaneously, but 
  in iPhone OS 4, it will be easier to switch between apps. Pressing 
  the home button twice will display a strip at the bottom of the 
  screen showing all the apps that are running. (The effect appears to 
  be like adding a widget in Dashboard in Mac OS X, where the entire 
  screen shifts up.) You tap an app's icon to switch to it.

    What "running" means here is that the app's state has been 
  suspended. When you press the Home button in the current iPhone OS, 
  an app's state is normally dropped, but some apps (like our TidBITS 
  News app) are coded to resume in the same state when relaunched. 
  This takes time and resources, however, and has a notable delay for 
  games and other complicated apps that have to set up network 
  connections. In the new regime, the app is just in quiet suspension, 
  consuming no active resources, but storing some data to resume 
  instantly from where it left off. From remarks during the Q&A 
  session following the announcement, it's unclear whether and how you 
  quit a suspended app.

* Background Audio: The poster children for why the iPhone OS has 
  needed multitasking are music streaming apps, like Pandora, and 
  Internet radio apps, like Public Radio Player. Streaming audio apps 
  currently work only when active, unlike Apple's iPod app, which can 
  keep playing in the background. Apple has now opened up an API so 
  developers like Pandora and Public Radio Exchange can continue to 
  provide audio even when not active. Pandora CEO Tim Westergren said 
  that it took them only a day to make Pandora fully background-aware 
  on the developer preview.

<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/pandora-radio/id284035177?mt=8>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/public-radio-player-2-1/id312880531?mt=8>

* Background VoIP: Skype and other voice-over-IP apps are another 
  class of apps whose users have begged for multitasking. With the new 
  background VoIP API, these apps will be able to receive calls in the 
  background and continue a call even if the user switches to another 
  app. This is huge, since it will turn the iPod touch (and the iPad, 
  to a lesser extent) into far more powerful voice communications 
  devices, without relying on cell carriers. With the coming support 
  from Apple and AT&T for VoIP over 3G, background VoIP puts a real 
  crimp in the need for large minute pools for most subscribers. 
  (Plans for VoIP over 3G outside the United States aren't quite as 
  clear.)

* Background Location: Also needing background services are GPS apps 
  like Navigon and CoPilot, which will be able to continue tracking 
  your location and giving you voice directions even when you've 
  switched to another app. They tend to suck up a lot of power, but 
  are usually engaged while the iPhone is plugged into a car's power 
  outlet.

<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/navigon-mobilenavigator-north/id321506742?mt=8>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/copilot-live-directions/id339549084?mt=8>

    The new Background Location API will also be useful for 
  location-aware social networking apps, but, cognizant of the privacy 
  issues, Apple has added a status bar indicator next to the battery 
  icon to show if an app is asking for your location. We do wonder if 
  there have been actual problems with people revealing location 
  unintentionally, or if people are simply squeamish about the 
  concept.

    iPhone OS 4 will also let you turn location awareness on and off 
  for each app; currently, you opt in or out during the first two 
  sessions in which an app requests location; you can't easily reset 
  this choice for a particular app later. (There's an ad tie-in as 
  well: if a program uses Apple's iAd system, described later, and you 
  opt in to providing location data, Apple could target ads to you 
  more closely.)

* Push Notifications: Introduced with iPhone OS 3, push notifications 
  have been as close as apps could get to multitasking before this, 
  and it's unclear if much of anything has changed. It would be nice, 
  for instance, if there were a way of showing more than one 
  notification at a time, if they've stacked up. Apple did note that 
  their servers have pushed out 10 billion notifications so far.

* Local Notifications: What is new is the concept of local 
  notifications, which builds on the same approach as push 
  notifications but doesn't need to use Apple's servers. Local 
  notifications will be extremely useful for apps like calendars and 
  clocks that need to alert the user to an event. This addition may 
  explain why there's no Clock app on the iPad - Apple may expect 
  other developers to fill that gap.

* Task Completion: The final multitasking-related service is task 
  completion, which will enable an app to complete a task - uploading 
  a picture to Flickr, sending a tweet - even if you've switched to 
  another app. 


**Tentpole #2: Folders** -- Since the early days of the iPhone OS, the 
  mechanism for organizing apps on the Home screen has been limited. 
  Scrolling through several screens' worth of apps gets old quickly. 
  To improve the experience - and to deal with the capacity for up to 
  2,160 apps on a device! - Apple is introducing folders.

  Folders enable you to group related items into categories. Press and 
  hold an app until all of the apps jiggle (the current way to move or 
  delete apps), and then drag an app on top of another to create a 
  folder. The folder's initial name is based on the predominant App 
  Store category represented within; for example, grouping games 
  creates a Games folder, though you can also rename the folder as you 
  please.

  When you tap the folder icon (which features miniature icons of the 
  apps within the folder), the home screen splits to reveal the 
  contents while the other apps in the background are made 
  semi-transparent. Jobs also pointed out that a folder can be added 
  to the Dock, a quick way to access many categories of apps without 
  swiping between multiple home screens.

  Given that iTunes provides an alternate and more straightforward way 
  to organize app layouts, it's likely that you'll have a 
  stripped-down way to add apps to folders there, too.


**Tentpole #3: Enhanced Mail** -- Anyone who checks multiple email 
  accounts on an iPhone or iPod touch will be happy to learn that the 
  Mail app under iPhone OS 4 finally features a unified Inbox - no 
  more tapping several times to exit one account's Inbox and navigate 
  to another account's Inbox. All of your messages appear in the same 
  window.

  If you want to focus on just one account, however, you can switch to 
  just that account's Inbox using a new fast Inbox switching feature. 
  In all accounts, email is threaded: you can view a conversation over 
  multiple messages without having to cherry-pick each one from the 
  list of all messages.

  Speaking of multiple accounts, iPhone OS 4 also supports multiple 
  Microsoft Exchange accounts. Another welcome addition is better 
  handling of mail attachments. If an app is present that can open the 
  file type, you're given the option of choosing that app.


**Tentpole #4: iBooks on iPhone** -- Perhaps the least surprising of 
  Apple's iPhone OS 4 features is the addition of the iBooks app, 
  which will make the iBookstore's EPUB-based books available to the 
  iPhone and iPod touch, along with the iPad. The interface of iBooks 
  looks nearly identical to the iPad version with the same bookshelf 
  metaphor and iBookstore. It will even come with the same free copy 
  of "Winnie-the-Pooh."

  New will be a "buy once, read anywhere" feature that lets you 
  purchase a book on your iPhone, for instance, and read it on any of 
  your devices. Additionally, the app will offer wireless syncing of 
  position and bookmarks between devices, presumably via either the 
  iBookstore or MobileMe.

  The "anywhere" is still limited to iPhone OS 4 devices and iPads, 
  but it's possible Apple was signaling that "anywhere" might include 
  a Mac OS X reader as well, or support within Preview. While that's 
  not the ideal experience, it would provide a bit more oomph to the 
  "anywhere" statement.


**Tentpole #5: Enterprise Enhancements** -- Apple took a lot of heat 
  in its first iPhone OS release back in 2007 for failing to take into 
  account a host of large-scale corporate - so-called enterprise - 
  requirements. That has improved through the iPhone OS 2 and 3 
  releases, but in iPhone OS 4 Apple adds a number of missing pieces 
  and enhancements.

<http://www.apple.com/iphone/business/preview-iphone-os/>

* Data protection: Apple finally appears to be closing a major hole in 
  the iPhone OS that allowed a jailbroken iPhone to reveal all the 
  device's data, even if hardware encryption was enabled. In iPhone OS 
  4 email messages and attachments (the primary enterprise concern) 
  will be encrypted using the PIN code of the device as an element in 
  constructing the encryption key, which means the data should still 
  be protected even if someone gains physical control of the device 
  and hacks the operating system. Combined with the capability for 
  enterprises (or anyone) to use the iPhone Configuration Utility to 
  support long passcodes or even full passwords, this significantly 
  improves the security of email data on the device. Apple also 
  announced that they would open up data protection APIs so other 
  applications can also build this extra security into their code for 
  internally stored data.

* Mobile device management: IT managers have few tools today for 
  configuring iPhones en masse. iPhone OS 4 will offer hooks to allow 
  third-party management software that enterprises use for monitoring, 
  pushing out updates, and configuring hardware to tie in iPhones as 
  well. These hooks extend to remote locking and remote wiping, so 
  we'll undoubtedly see significant extensions to existing tools and 
  potentially new tools focused just on iPhones.

* Wireless app distribution: While enterprises can pay $299 per year 
  for a special developer's license to create and distribute apps for 
  company use on iPhone OS devices, those apps could be loaded only 
  over USB via iTunes. iPhone OS 4 lets these apps be pushed out over 
  Wi-Fi or 3G networks, which will make it easier to release interim 
  versions and bug fixes without requiring company-wide plug-fests. 
  For an enterprise user, this could mean they will only need to 
  connect to iTunes to synchronize media (music/video/photos), to 
  apply firmware updates, or to generate device backups.

<http://developer.apple.com/programs/iphone/enterprise/>

* Multiple Exchange accounts on single phone: It isn't unusual for an 
  enterprise user to connect to multiple Microsoft Exchange email 
  accounts, or to a mix of corporate Exchange and personal email 
  services. Now those users will have full support to mix and match 
  accounts, rather than being limited to a single server. The unified 
  mailbox will let all of those accounts (if desired) appear alongside 
  other email accounts, too.

* Exchange Server 2010 support: This feature will allow the iPhone to 
  connect with Microsoft's latest version of their popular 
  collaboration server, enabling enterprises to update to the latest 
  versions of both platforms without worrying about compatibility 
  issues and enabling the iPhone to make use of the new features 
  offered by Exchange 2010.

* SSL VPN support. Virtual private networks come in three primary 
  flavors: L2TP over IPsec, PPTP, and SSL. Apple provided reasonable 
  support from the start for the first two kinds, and added more 
  options for authentication (using, for instance, token generators or 
  secure cards) in subsequent releases. iPhone OS 4 finally adds 
  SSL-based VPN support, which is in wide use and which requires 
  low-level system hooks to work. SSL VPNs come in a huge variety, and 
  Apple is adding underlying support to allow third-party apps from 
  Juniper and Cisco to enable SSL-based VPN connections.


**Tentpole #6: Game Center** -- It's no secret that the iPhone OS has 
  become a huge gaming platform, with 50,700 game and entertainment 
  apps currently available in the App Store. That number blows Apple's 
  competitors out of the water: the Nintendo DS reportedly has 4,321 
  titles, while the Sony PSP boasts only 2,477. 

  A big part of gaming is the social aspect, comparing scores and 
  achievements with friends and strangers across the Internet. To 
  enrich its gaming environment, Apple is creating its own social 
  gaming network, called Game Center.

  While the details remain murky, Game Center sounds not unlike the 
  wildly popular Xbox Live network. Apple's Scott Forstall said we 
  could expect features such as friend invites, leaderboards, 
  achievements, and matchmaking (which enables users to seek out and 
  match up against opponents at a similar skill level). 

  At a more basic level, as Forstall noted during the Q&A session, 
  Game Center is intended to help the viral spread of entertainment 
  apps by enabling users to be clued in on what their friends are 
  playing. Game Center will ship in preview mode for iPhone OS 4 and 
  will be available to all iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad users later 
  this year. 

  While it may appear that Apple is hijacking a feature developers 
  would want to build themselves, by building a baseline for the 
  entire platform, larger numbers of people will likely participate 
  than if they were stuck in a single developer-specific network.


**Tentpole #7: iAd Mobile Advertising** -- Apple's new ad service, 
  iAd, seeks to help developers who make free apps earn some income 
  via advertising dollars. Jobs said, "Our developers are putting ads 
  into apps, and for lack of a better way to say it, we think most of 
  this kind of advertising sucks." iAd is Apple's solution to this 
  problem, a way to insert advertising into apps without compromising 
  the quality of the iPhone OS experience.

  Since iPhone OS users spend most of their time in apps and not on 
  search engines (where most advertising dollars go), this is where 
  the mobile advertising opportunities exist. Apple calculates that 
  the average user spends 30 minutes per day using apps. Were Apple to 
  present these users with an ad every 3 minutes, that would equal 10 
  ads per device per day. With nearly 86 million iPhone OS users (and 
  rising) Apple puts its advertising potential at 1 billion ad 
  impressions per day.

  But it's not just the market Apple is after. The company also wants 
  to increase the quality of mobile ads. Jobs sees iAd as the way to 
  bring new levels of interactivity and emotion to mobile advertising. 
  By "emotion," Jobs seemed to mean "video content that really 
  connects with users" (he pointed to the fact that most advertising 
  dollars remain in television because of the medium's emotional 
  dimension). The other difference with iAds will be where users view 
  them. Most people don't tap on ads in part because doing so will 
  take them out of their app and onto an company's Web page. In 
  contrast, iAd will be able to offer interaction and video within the 
  app. 

  The demonstration included ads for Toy Story 3, Nike (Air Jordan), 
  and Target. Each seemed almost like its own app - including games, 
  videos, wallpaper, and interactive maps - existing within the app 
  from which it originated; a truly different kind of advertisement 
  and one that will undoubtedly interest advertising agencies.

  Rich iAds will rely on HMTL5 for video and interactivity. Jobs went 
  on to note that ad agencies are excited at the prospect of creating 
  interactive advertisements, saying, "For the first time, you can 
  really start to take advantage of the great pool of skills an ad 
  agency has." In the Q&A session, Jobs also said that there will be 
  some boundaries for ads - that advertisers won't be able to run just 
  anything. It will be curious to see how this plays out given the 
  various struggles the App Store approval process has faced in the 
  last year. 

  Apple plans to sell and host the ads, while providing developers 
  with 60 percent of the resulting ad revenues.


**Smaller Features** -- Not everything in iPhone OS 4 received 
  "tentpole" status - an armful of smaller features were instead 
  splashed across a couple of slides at the beginning of the 
  presentation.

  We have to admit that one feature jumped out: Bluetooth keyboard 
  support, something we've wanted since the first iPhone was 
  introduced. The iPad shipped with support for Bluetooth wireless 
  keyboards, and now iPhone OS 4 brings Bluetooth keyboard support to 
  all devices that can handle the system upgrade. There are times when 
  all you need to make an iPhone or iPod touch into a mobile email 
  device for serious work is a keyboard. Apple may have wanted to wait 
  until it had the iPad out before making this an option, to provide a 
  choice among a range of device sizes.

  Another feature likely to be popular with users is the option to 
  change the Home screen wallpaper, just as on the iPad. That said, 
  the feature makes less sense on the iPhone and iPod touch, since 
  there isn't as much empty space between icons and it could cause the 
  home screens to appear cluttered.

  The iPhone OS 4 SDK will offer over 1,500 new APIs and developer 
  features such as calendar access, address and date data detectors, 
  iPod remote control accessories, in-app SMS, regular expression 
  matching, date formatters, photo library access, image I/O, 
  half-curl page transition, Quick Look, call event notification, full 
  access to still and video camera data, ICC profiles, carrier 
  information, power analysis tools, full map overlays, draggable map 
  annotations, performance profiling tools, automated testing, and a 
  new framework for hardware-accelerated math functions called 
  Accelerate. Phew!

  On the user end, some of the new 100 features that were not 
  explicitly addressed include playlist creation, birthday calendars, 
  5x digital zoom, IMAP note syncing, CardDAV, nested playlists, 
  tap-to-focus video, workout uploading to Nike+, Places in Photos, 
  iPod out (we don't know what that is, either), SMS/MMS message 
  searching, persistent Wi-Fi, wake-on-wireless, the capability to 
  file and delete Mail search results, Web search suggestions, editing 
  of Mail messages in the Outbox, image size selection in Mail 
  messages, CalDAV invitations, spell check, app gifting, easy access 
  to recent Web searches, and larger fonts for Mail, SMS, and alerts.

  With the iPhone OS 4 announcement and the wealth of detail offered, 
  it's clear that Apple is pushing to address many of the shortcomings 
  of the iPhone OS and stay ahead of the competition. If you weren't 
  sure whether Apple was serious about wanting to dominate the mobile 
  market, this presentation made it clear that Apple doesn't plan to 
  cede any territory to competitors.

  ----
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TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 12 April 2010
-------------------------------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11181>

**KeyCue 5.0** -- Ergonis Software has released a major update to the 
  keyboard shortcut documentation utility KeyCue. The biggest change 
  in KeyCue 5.0 is the addition of an open interface that enables 
  third party applications to display shortcuts not natively available 
  through program menus. Previously, only shortcuts available from a 
  program's regular menus were accessible to KeyCue (see "KeyCue's 
  Keyboard Shortcut Cheat Sheet Goes Global," 24 March 2009). The 
  update also improves the update and installation process and 
  provides other refinements, including the capability to specify on 
  which display, in a multi-monitor setup, the KeyCue shortcut table 
  will appear. (€19.99 new, free update for purchases made within 
  the last 2 years, 1.3 MB)

<http://www.ergonis.com/products/keycue/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10164>

  Read/post comments about KeyCue 5.0.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11182#comments>


**The Missing Sync for Android 1.3** -- For those who have chosen an 
  Android-based smartphone over the iPhone, Mark/Space has updated its 
  The Missing Sync for Android syncing software to include wireless 
  syncing via Wi-Fi and Bluetooth, enabling users to rid themselves of 
  at least one cluttering cable for connecting to the Mac. Other 
  improvements include the addition of syncing for notes, a new 
  ringtone editor, and the capability to archive text messages. 
  Overall sync performance and security have also been improved. 
  ($39.95, $29.95 crossgrade, free update)

<http://www.markspace.com/products/android/missing-sync-android.html>

  Read/post comments about The Missing Sync for Android 1.3.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11184#comments>


**Photoshop Lightroom 2.7** -- As Adobe inches towards the debut of 
  Lightroom 3.0, it has rolled out the software's release candidate, 
  version 2.7, adding raw camera support for nine new cameras. The 
  newly supported cameras include the Canon EOS 550D (Digital Rebel 
  T2i/ EOS Kiss X4 Digital), Kodak Z981, Leaf Aptus-II 8, Leaf 
  Aptus-II 10R, Mamiya DM40, Olympus E-PL1, Panasonic G2, Panasonic 
  G10, and the Sony A450. The update also raises the cache limit to 
  200 GB and fixes a slideshow playback crashing bug for Windows 
  users. Coinciding with this update are the releases of the Photoshop 
  Camera Raw 5.7 and DNG Converter 5.7 Release Candidates. ($299 new, 
  free updates for existing Lightroom and Photoshop users, 
  75.8/51.8/47.7 MB)

<http://labs.adobe.com/wiki/index.php/Lightroom_2.7>
<http://labs.adobe.com/wiki/index.php/Camera_Raw_5.7>
<http://download.macromedia.com/pub/labs/cameraraw/5-7/dngconverter5-7_r1_mac_040510.dmg>

  Read/post comments about Photoshop Lightroom 2.7.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11179#comments>


**PDF Enhancer 3.5** -- Apago's PDF Enhancer may not be the sort of 
  utility every Mac user needs, but for certain professionals, it's a 
  must-have for automating the creation, standardization, and 
  optimization of PDF documents (we rely on it heavily for our Take 
  Control ebooks). Version 3.5 offers faster processing speeds (key in 
  a production environment), improved reliability, clean-up of scanned 
  documents, AES security, and improved font and color handling. With 
  version 3.5, Apago has slimmed the product line, dropping the 
  Standard and Server editions to focus on the Professional and 
  Advanced Server editions. ($349 (Professional)/$1,999 (Advanced 
  Server) new, upgrade prices vary)

<http://www.apagoinc.com/pdfenhancer>
<http://www.apagoinc.com/prod_feat.php?feat_id=44&feat_disp_order=10∏_id=37>

  Read/post comments about PDF Enhancer 3.5.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11171#comments>



ExtraBITS for 12 April 2010
---------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11180>

  There's no point in denying it - nearly everything we're reading and 
  talking about is still about the iPad and iPhone OS 4. But it's all 
  good stuff, and if you're not yet sick of the iPad, do tune into 
  some of our podcasts and check out the articles we link to. 


**TidBITS Staff Discusses the iPad on MacJury Podcast** -- In what was 
  perhaps the largest podcast we've ever participated in, nearly the 
  entire TidBITS staff joined MacJury host Chuck Joiner to talk about 
  the iPad. Topics ranged widely, including how it will be shared, the 
  need for a guest mode, how we'll interact with it as an object, and 
  where it will fit into our digital lives. But the real reason to 
  listen is to hear Tonya compare using the iPad to "eating pudding 
  with your fingers," an image that left many of us briefly 
  speechless.

<http://www.macjury.com/macjury-1007-the-tidbits-braintrust-discusses-the-many-aspects-of-the-ipad/>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11183#comments>


**Google Developer Explains iPhone OS 4 Multitasking** -- A Google 
  developer, formerly on the Android team, provides a detailed, fair, 
  and clear explanation of how iPhone OS 4 multitasking will work. 
  Robert Love explains the difference between true background 
  application multitasking and Apple's limited set of APIs that let 
  certain processes continue to operate in the background. He also 
  differentiates serialization (quitting an app while preserving its 
  state precisely) and true background operations.

<http://blog.rlove.org/2010/04/iphone-os-4-and-multitasking.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11185#comments>


**Jason Snell Examines Apple's Strategic Position** -- Our friend 
  Jason Snell of Macworld has a must-read piece on how Apple used the 
  iPhone OS 4 announcement to take aim at a variety of competitors: 
  Google's Android operating system, App Store critics, Adobe, and 
  (again) Google. Jason is, as usual, spot on, and his conclusion 
  should be required reading for anyone complaining about Apple's 
  behavior.

<http://www.macworld.com/article/150539/2010/04/apple_world.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11164#comments>


**Adam Discusses the iPad and iPhone OS 4 on Tech Night Owl Live** -- 
  It's been an iPad- and iPhone-intensive week, and Adam took some 
  time out in the middle to talk with Tech Night Owl host Gene 
  Steinberg about the first few days of iPad hands-on, along with a 
  run-down of the most interesting bits of Apple's iPhone OS 4 
  announcement.

<http://www.technightowl.com/radio/podcast/now-playing-april-8-2010-%E2%80%94-kyle-wiens-amanda-lefebvre-and-adam-engst/>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11149#comments>


**John Gruber of Daring Fireball Reviews the iPad** -- Few writers put 
  the kind of thought into user interface that John Gruber of Daring 
  Fireball does, and that shows in his lengthy review of the iPad. 
  It's very much worth reading for his detailed impressions in support 
  of why the iPad is Apple's reconception of personal computing.

<http://daringfireball.net/2010/04/the_ipad>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11142#comments>


**A Toddler's First iPad Encounter** -- Hoping to capture her initial 
  reactions, Todd Lapin had his camera ready when he first showed his 
  iPad to his 2.5-year-old daughter. Aside from being cute, the 
  footage is interesting for what it shows us about which aspects of 
  the iPad interface are intuitive and which are less so. The clip 
  also hammers home just how standard and ubiquitous this technology 
  will become for the next generation.

<http://laughingsquid.com/a-2-5-year-old-uses-an-ipad-for-the-first-time/>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11173#comments>


**Jeff Carlson Joins Photographers to Talk about G10/G11 Book** -- On 
  a recent MacVoices podcast, Jeff Carlson joined Chuck Joiner to talk 
  about the making of Jeff's (almost ridiculously long-titled) book 
  "Canon PowerShot G10/G11: From Snapshots to Great Shots." What's 
  great about this episode is that they were joined by photographers 
  Jeff Lynch and Justin Van Leeuwen, who contributed photos for the 
  book through an experimental crowd-sourcing process using Flickr.

<http://www.macvoices.com/wordpress/macvoices-1072-jeff-carlson-and-contributors-discuss-digital-photography-social-networking-and-the-canon-g10g11/>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11172#comments>


**Tips on Traveling with Gadgets from the TSA Blog** -- If you've done 
  any air traveling in the last several years, you know part of the 
  process is handing over your laptop, phone, and any other gadgets 
  for security screening. The Transportation Security Administration, 
  responsible for air travel security measures in the U.S., offers 
  tips in a new blog post on traveling with small gadgets such as 
  e-readers, netbooks, and, yes, the iPad.

<http://www.tsa.gov/blog/2010/04/traveling-with-e-readers-netbooks-and.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11170#comments>


**WeatherBug Elite for iPad Free for Limited Time** -- Adam's favorite 
  weather app for the iPhone, WeatherBug Elite, has been expanded for 
  the iPad, and for a limited time, it's available for free. We 
  haven't spent much time with it yet, but it appears to use the 
  iPad's larger screen to good effect, devoting most of the display to 
  the map, and providing four zoomable panels for conditions, cameras, 
  forecast and hourly forecast. The main missing feature appears to be 
  pin dropping and display, but WeatherBug's developers tell me they 
  just couldn't get it in for the iPad launch, and plan to add it to 
  an update, due in the next month or so.

<http://weather.weatherbug.com/mobile/weatherbug-elite-apple-ipad.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11168#comments>


**First Day Impressions of the iPad on MacJury, Part Two** -- The 
  madness continues as Matt Neuburg and other sleep-deprived zombies 
  rattle on with Chuck Joiner about the first-day iPad experience.

<http://www.macjury.com/macjury-1005-judgement-on-the-first-weekend-with-the-ipad-part-2>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11165#comments>



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