TidBITS#1024/19-Apr-2010
========================
  Issue link: <http://db.tidbits.com/issue/1024>

  TidBITS turns 20 years old today! We're celebrating with a double 
  elephant folio issue containing Adam's thoughts about what makes 
  TidBITS special, stories about how our staff members got started 
  with TidBITS, and an extensive collection of memories from numerous 
  Macintosh-industry friends. Oh, and don't miss our drawing for $200 
  worth of an iPhone, iPod touch, or iTunes Gift Card! But rest 
  assured that this issue isn't all navel gazing, as Adam explains the 
  iPad's DHCP-related problems on large networks, Doug McLean 
  summarizes what's new in Adobe Creative Suite 5, and we cover last 
  week's solid update to the MacBook Pro line. All our notable 
  software releases this week are from Apple, including Mac OS X 
  10.6.3 Combo Update 1.1, Mac OS X Server 10.6.3 Combo Update 1.1, 
  Security Update 2010-003 (Snow Leopard), Security Update 2010-003 
  (Leopard), Server Admin Tools 10.6.3, 27-inch iMac EFI FW Update 
  1.0, MacBook Pro Software Update 1.3, and MobileMe Backup 3.2.

Articles
    TidBITS Celebrates 20 Years of Internet Publication
    Apple Brings Intel Core i5/i7 to MacBook Pro
    Princeton University Identifies iPad DHCP Flaw
    Adobe Unveils Creative Suite 5
    TidBITS Staffers Recall How They Got Their Starts
    Twenty Years of Memories from Friends of TidBITS
    TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 19 April 2010
    ExtraBITS for 19 April 2010


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TidBITS Celebrates 20 Years of Internet Publication
---------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11206>

  This is it - TidBITS has turned 20 years old! In what is a bit of 
  happy coincidence, the email issue containing this article is 
  #1,024. That's right, we've officially published 2^10 issues of 
  TidBITS, or, roughly speaking, 1 kiloTidBITS. Geeky, eh?

  To share our excitement, we considered giving away a staff-signed 
  Twentieth Anniversary Mac, but they turn out both to be difficult to 
  find and, given that they're powered by a PowerPC 603e, not 
  particularly useful.

<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twentieth_Anniversary_Macintosh>

  Besides, in honor of this anniversary and in recognition of how the 
  world has changed, we're changing our Web logo's subtitle from "Mac 
  news for the rest of us" to "Apple news for the rest of us." So 
  instead of giving away a relatively useless old Mac, we're going to 
  give one lucky TidBITS reader $200 toward an engraved iPhone or iPod 
  touch, or an iTunes Gift Card. (The choice of prize is up to the 
  winner, since many of you probably already have an iPhone or iPod 
  touch, and we'll have to figure out the logistics with the winner, 
  since they'll vary by country.) Enter at this tweaked DealBITS page 
  before 26 April 2010. I hope our server holds up! (If you have a 
  problem, just come back later.)

<http://www.tidbits.com/dealbits/TidBITS20th/>

  In thinking about how best to commemorate this milestone, I first 
  considered those talking points we pull out when speaking with those 
  who aren't familiar with TidBITS - our 20 unbroken years of Internet 
  publication and our 1992 creation of the first Internet advertising 
  program.

  While I'm proud of those accomplishments, they aren't my favorite 
  aspects of TidBITS. When I trained for and raced 26.2 miles in the 
  New York City Marathon in November 2008, that required setting a 
  goal and working hard to accomplish it. Publishing TidBITS for 20 
  consecutive years has never been a goal, it's simply become a way of 
  life. 

  And while I'd like some credit for starting Internet advertising 
  (using an understated NPR/PBS sponsorship model), I'm uncomfortable 
  with many of the ways Internet advertising has evolved, what with 
  pop-up ads, interstitials, and disgustingly illustrated ads from 
  modern-day snake-oil salespeople. On the upside, maybe I can take an 
  infinitesimal bit of credit for Google, which would never have 
  become what it is today without Internet advertising.

  No, the aspects of publishing TidBITS that get me out of bed every 
  morning are quite different. For one, I love being able to write, 
  edit, and publish articles that both explain complex topics and 
  actually make a difference in the lives of our readers. There's no 
  better feeling than reading an email message or article comment 
  telling you how an article saved hours of troubleshooting, brought 
  some device back to life, or helped eliminate time-wasting tedium. 

  I'm proud of the elegant technologies that we've designed and 
  implemented: the TidBITS Publishing System, the TidBITS Commenting 
  System, the TidBITS News iPhone app, the custom ExpressionEngine 
  back-end for the Take Control site, our still-in-beta account 
  management system, and more. These systems make life easier for us 
  and improve TidBITS and Take Control for you, and while we lack the 
  budget to develop everything we want as quickly as we want, I think 
  we do extremely well, and it's amazingly fun to work on these 
  projects.

  More generally, it's wonderful to work with the other members of the 
  TidBITS staff. They're top-notch, so much so that they're also in 
  great demand by other publishers. And yet, Tonya and I must have 
  done something right, since these talented writers and technologists 
  have stuck with us for years, some of them from nearly the 
  beginning. You can read more about how each of them got started with 
  TidBITS in "TidBITS Staffers Recall How They Got Their Starts" (19 
  April 2010). I've also hugely enjoyed working with the volunteers 
  who have generously translated TidBITS into various languages, 
  expanding the reach of TidBITS and teaching me about the 
  difficulties of translating English idioms.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11205>

  But the most compelling part of my daily swim in the sea of TidBITS 
  email, article comments, tweets, chats, and phone calls is the 
  ineffable excitement of sharing discoveries, thoughts, opinions, 
  jokes, tips, and advice with friends, colleagues, and TidBITS 
  readers. Through TidBITS I've met some of the nicest, smartest, 
  funniest, most interesting people I know. I've managed to convince a 
  few of them to work with us on TidBITS and Take Control, and I've 
  watched with enthusiasm as many others have gone on to do great 
  things in the technology world. And rather than tell you more about 
  them here, I want to introduce you to a number of them in "Twenty 
  Years of Memories from Friends of TidBITS" (19 April 2010). It's a 
  hefty article, with each sharing thoughts and memories about TidBITS 
  in his or her own words. Set aside some time when you want to think 
  back over the last 20 years, and I think you'll find it a 
  tremendously enjoyable read.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11207>

  If you'd like to extend that walk down memory lane, check out our 
  "TidBITS History" series, in which we've covered all the bases - 
  looking backward, forward, and inward, and sharing experiences, 
  lessons learned, and much more. In re-reading these articles, I was 
  struck by how relevant some of them, like "Lessons from Ten Years of 
  TidBITS" (17 April 2000), remain years later.

<http://db.tidbits.com/series/1166>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/5899>

  I won't pretend that another 20 years and 1,024 issues of TidBITS is 
  a goal, because it's not. TidBITS is what we do, and we'll keep 
  going as long as events conspire to allow us to continue. 

  Thanks to one and all for enabling us to come this far!

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11206#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/11206>


Apple Brings Intel Core i5/i7 to MacBook Pro
--------------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11188>

  Showing that it still pays attention to the Macintosh side of its 
  business, Apple has updated the entire MacBook Pro line at once, a 
  welcome change from previous updates that have focused on a 
  particular model to the exclusion of the others. Significant changes 
  include new CPU options, better battery life, seamless integration 
  of dual graphics processors, optional high-resolution displays, 
  inertial scrolling on the Multi-Touch trackpad, and the option of 
  higher-capacity solid-state drives. The changes aren't evenly 
  distributed across the line though.

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

  The new 13-inch MacBook Pro continues to rely on the Intel Core 2 
  Duo processor, speed-bumped to either 2.4 GHz or 2.66 GHz. However, 
  Apple claims that the 13-inch MacBook Pro's new 48-core Nvidia 
  GeForce 320M graphics processor will provide up to 80 percent faster 
  graphics performance. The new graphics processor should be 
  especially welcome for graphics-intensive applications and 
  high-performance games. The other notable change that will be 
  welcome across the board is the new model's purported 10-hour 
  battery life. The battery is built-in and cannot be swapped by the 
  user, but it can be replaced by Apple.

<http://www.apple.com/macbookpro/specs-13inch.html>

  While the 13-inch MacBook Pro is relatively unchanged, the 15-inch 
  and 17-inch models see more significant improvements. They rely on 
  either the Intel Core i5 (at 2.4 or 2.53 GHz for the 15-inch and 
  2.53 GHz for the 17-inch) or the Intel Core i7 (at 2.66 GHz) 
  processor, for what Apple claims is up to 50 percent faster 
  performance than previous models. Some improvements stem from how 
  the Intel Core i5 and i7 processors integrate the memory controller 
  and Level 3 cache to speed access to system memory. Apple says that 
  additional performance improvements come from Hyper-Threading 
  technology that improves data throughput by creating virtual 
  processing cores. Then there's Turbo Boost, which optimizes 
  performance between the two processor cores, essentially 
  accelerating the system from 2.66 GHz to 3.06 GHz for intensive 
  dual-core tasks and up to 3.33 GHz for single-core tasks. How all 
  this will play out in real-world usage remains to be seen.

<http://www.apple.com/macbookpro/specs.html>
<http://www.apple.com/macbookpro/specs-17inch.html>

  Also improved in the 15- and 17-inch models is the graphics 
  subsystem, which features a pair of graphics processors, the Nvidia 
  GeForce GT 330M for top performance and the Intel HD Graphics for 
  reduced energy usage. A welcome change from the performance split in 
  previous generations is that the new MacBook Pro models switch 
  between them automatically; you don't need to choose a specific 
  graphics mode, log out, and then log back in to apply the change. 
  (Apple has already released MacBook Pro Software Update 1.3 to 
  improve graphics stability for high-performance video and gaming 
  applications. It's a 258.32 MB update and is presumably available 
  via Software Update to purchasers of these new Macs.)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1026>

  Apple is also claiming better battery life on the new 15- and 
  17-inch models, with 8 to 9 hours per charge (up from the previous 
  claim of 7 to 8 hours), thanks to tightly integrated hardware and 
  software. The fact that the 15-inch model's battery went from 73 
  watt-hours to 77.5 watt-hours probably helps, too (the 17-inch 
  model's battery remains at 95 watt-hours).

  During a briefing with Apple, we learned more about how Apple 
  calculates battery life numbers. The top end of Apple's claims is 
  rooted more in real-world usage than the "ideal circumstances" 
  estimates of years past. On a device with the screen brightness set 
  at 50 percent, Apple runs a battery test called Wireless Web. A 
  script loads Web pages via Wi-Fi, creates and saves text documents, 
  and otherwise emulates "light duty" usage.

  Another test is designed to put the ultimate strain on the battery: 
  screen brightness is set to 100 percent, the volume is cranked up to 
  maximum, and a DVD is played (introducing the physical 
  drive-spinning mechanism as well as on-the-fly MPEG decoding and 
  playback). In this test, the 15-inch MacBook Pro averaged about 4.5 
  hours of battery life - a span that not too long ago represented 
  good longevity in light usage conditions.

  Something we're looking forward to experiencing in person is the new 
  "inertial scrolling" feature of the Multi-Touch trackpad. Apple 
  mentions it only briefly, but we're guessing the trackpad - and 
  software that recognizes it - can scroll items with the same 
  simulated physics found in the iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch. We have 
  to admit there are times when we switch between using an Apple touch 
  device and a Mac and expect the same behavior in both environments. 
  (Adobe Photoshop CS4 implemented this type of scrolling, making it 
  easier to "throw" a zoomed-in image around its window and reduce the 
  amount of scrolling required.)


**Base Features and Options** -- The standard features should sound 
  familiar. All models come with a MagSafe power port, Gigabit 
  Ethernet port, Mini DisplayPort for video out, one FireWire 800 
  port, and two USB 2.0 ports (three on the 17-inch model). The 
  13-inch model offers a single audio in/out port, whereas the 15- and 
  17-inch models have separate audio line in and audio line out ports. 
  The 13-inch and 15-inch models feature an SD card slot, and the 
  17-inch model replaces it with an ExpressCard/34 slot. In terms of 
  wireless networking, all of them have AirPort Extreme Wi-Fi wireless 
  networking based on 802.11n, along with Bluetooth 2.1+EDR. And all 
  models have a built-in iSight video camera.

  4 GB of RAM is standard on each model, but each can be upgraded to 8 
  GB. Hard drive options are available up to 500 GB, and solid-state 
  drives are available in 128 GB, 256 GB, and 512 GB sizes for a $200, 
  $650, or $1,300 premium over the 500 GB hard drive.


**More Screen Resolution** -- All MacBook Pro models include glossy 
  LED-backlit screens, but some custom configurations are available. 
  The 13-inch model's screen is glossy with a resolution of 1280 by 
  800 pixels, with no option for an antiglare screen. The standard 
  configuration for the 15-inch model is glossy with a resolution of 
  1440 by 900 pixels. For an extra fee, you can order a 
  higher-resolution 1680-by-1050-pixel display with either a glossy 
  ($100 more) or antiglare ($150 more) surface. The antiglare option 
  is available only at the higher resolution, not the default 
  resolution. The screen on the 17-inch model is 1920 by 1200 pixels, 
  and an antiglare version is available for an extra $50.


**Greener MacBooks** -- With the latest batch of MacBook Pros, Apple 
  continues to demonstrate a commitment to producing environmentally 
  friendly products. Each MacBook Pro in the new lineup has been 
  awarded EPEAT Gold status (meaning it meets all of EPEAT's required 
  criteria and at least 75 percent of the optional criteria), and each 
  one satisfies the requirements for the Energy Star 5.0 rating.  

<http://www.apple.com/macbookpro/environment.html>
<http://www.epeat.net/Criteria.aspx>

  Features contributing to those achievements include the highly 
  recyclable aluminum unibody enclosure, a mercury- and arsenic-free 
  LED-backlit display, and the lack of any components containing 
  brominated flame retardants (BFRs) or polyvinyl chloride (PVC).  
  Additionally, the new graphics switching technology that enables the 
  MacBook Pro to switch automatically between the powerful Nvidia 
  GeForce GT 330M for heavy workloads and the energy efficient Intel 
  HD Graphics processor for less intense operations increases battery 
  life. Coupling that with a lifetime expectancy of 1,000 charges 
  (roughly 5 years by Apple's estimation) should result in less 
  battery waste. When a battery is finally used up, Apple also 
  provides an environmentally responsible program to deal with its 
  removal and disposal, and the installation of a new battery - priced 
  at either $129 or $179, depending on your model.


**Pricing and Availability** -- All models of the new MacBook Pro are 
  available now, in the following base configurations (the final 
  17-inch configuration isn't actually a base configuration, but it 
  seemed odd to leave it out of a list that was otherwise 
  differentiated largely by CPU type):

* 13-inch ($1,199): 2.4 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo, 250 GB hard drive

* 13-inch ($1,499): 2.66 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo, 320 GB hard drive

* 15-inch ($1,799): 2.4 GHz Intel Core i5, 320 GB hard drive

* 15-inch ($1,999): 2.53 GHz Intel Core i5, 500 GB hard drive

* 15-inch ($2,299): 2.66 GHz Intel Core i7, 500 GB hard drive

* 17-inch ($2,299): 2.53 GHz Intel Core i5, 500 GB hard drive

* 17-inch ($2,499): 2.66 GHz Intel Core i7, 500 GB hard drive


**Of Timing and Performance** -- It's easy to see these new 
  configurations as a specifications speed bump, but we think a larger 
  leap has occurred, and at a fortuitous time. Reports from owners of 
  the latest iMac models with Core i5 or i7 processors indicate a 
  dramatic performance boost over the Intel Core 2 Duo. Given that 
  Apple's notebooks significantly outsell the company's desktop 
  models, the MacBook Pro needs the highest performance it can get. 
  The fact that Apple has improved battery life, instead of 
  sacrificing it for speed, and has eliminated the awkward method of 
  switching between graphics modes indicates that the company is still 
  expending the resources needed to improve its Mac products, and 
  isn't just tossing in slightly better components. We're fans of the 
  MacBook Pro, and these new models just improve our already positive 
  feelings.

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11188#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/11188>


Princeton University Identifies iPad DHCP Flaw
----------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11195>
  17 comments

  Princeton University's Office of Information Technology has posted a 
  document describing networking problems suffered by roughly half of 
  the 40 iPads on campus. The problem isn't so much experienced by the 
  iPad as caused by it - here's what's happening. (Since I initially 
  wrote this article, I've heard of other sites experiencing the 
  problem, including the University of Washington and George 
  Washington University.)

<http://www.net.princeton.edu/announcements/ipad-iphoneos32-stops-renewing-lease-keeps-using-IP-address.html>

  The iPad uses DHCP (Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol) client 
  software (in the iPhone OS) to request network configuration 
  information - most notably an IP address - from a DHCP server. That 
  IP address is typically "leased" to the DHCP client for a period of 
  time; once that lease expires, if the DHCP client is still online, 
  it asks to renew the lease and retain its IP address. If the client 
  is not online when the lease expires, the DHCP server is free to 
  assign that IP address to another device. When the DHCP client 
  returns to the network, it requests and receives a new IP address.

  The problem seems to be that the iPad, in some situations, is 
  failing to renew its DHCP lease but continuing to use the previously 
  assigned IP address. Because the lease wasn't renewed, the DHCP 
  server believes it is free to reassign the IP address. If that IP 
  address is reassigned to another device while the iPad continues to 
  use it, both devices end up using the same IP address, which can 
  cause loss of network connectivity, confusing dialogs as operating 
  systems attempt to handle the error condition, and more. 

  Princeton is working with Apple to resolve the problem, which is 
  believed to lie with the DHCP client in iPhone OS 3.2, and which 
  should be easy to fix with an update to that version of the iPhone 
  OS. In the meantime, Princeton recommends that iPad users not 
  connect to the campus network because if an iPad malfunctions, it 
  may need to be blocked to prevent it from causing problems for other 
  network users.

<http://www.dailyprincetonian.com/2010/04/14/25850/>

  Who's likely to experience this problem? Primarily institutions with 
  large networks that rely on DHCP for a constantly changing 
  collection of network devices. Home users and those with small 
  networks aren't nearly as likely to experience IP address collisions 
  due to this problem. 

  If you do run into this problem on a small network you control, 
  there are a variety of possible solutions:

* Assign a static IP address to your iPad and configure your DHCP 
  server to avoid handing out that address to other devices. This fix 
  isn't feasible on a large network with a lot of devices because it 
  requires too much manual intervention.

* Configure your DHCP server to reserve a particular IP address for 
  your iPad. I tried this in AirPort Utility using the client ID 
  approach to identifying the iPad, but it didn't work; it's possible 
  the MAC address approach would work better. This approach also 
  requires too much manual intervention to be useful on a larger 
  network.

* Set a very long DHCP lease time so the DHCP server is much less 
  likely to reassign the iPad's IP address to another device. Trying 
  this on a large network would likely tie up too many IP addresses 
  that weren't actually in use or require the use of NAT.

  It is worth noting that, despite a quote in The Daily Princetonian 
  article linked above, this DHCP problem is almost certainly 
  unrelated to the Wi-Fi problems that have plagued some iPad users 
  (see "Some iPad Users Suffer Wi-Fi Woes," 6 April 2010).

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11166>

  Nevertheless, here's hoping that Apple fixes this problem soon, not 
  because it's necessarily causing all that much trouble even for 
  large networks, but because it would be a shame if the iPad garnered 
  a bad reputation among network managers based on what should be an 
  easily fixed bug, given that DHCP is a long-established standard.

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11195#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/11195>


Adobe Unveils Creative Suite 5
------------------------------
  by Doug McLean <doug_mclean@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11186>

  With over two years having passed since its last major update, 
  Adobe's Creative Suite 5 faces high expectations - users want to see 
  dazzling new features introduced alongside refined basics and 
  enhanced performance. From the looks of it, the hulking software 
  behemoth that is CS5 has met that challenge.

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

  When reporting on something as large as CS5 it's difficult even to 
  summarize the most significant changes - it's no longer a bundle of 
  a few major programs, but instead a conglomeration of software 
  (between 6 and 18 programs depending on which edition you buy). 
  Still, one must try, so here is a summary of the most interesting 
  changes throughout the suite. If you're hungering for more details, 
  Adobe's Web site is teeming with them.


**Photoshop** -- Many of the new image and photo tools present in 
  Photoshop CS5 Extended also exist elsewhere in the Creative Suite. 
  One of these tools is the new Mixer Brush that holds multiple colors 
  on a single tip, blending with the paint already laid out in your 
  image. You can even define how "wet" the existing paint is, creating 
  effects ranging from wet-on-wet to dry-brushing. Bristle Tips is 
  another neat painting tool that mimics real-world brush media with 
  startlingly accurate and detailed effects.

<http://www.adobe.com/products/photoshop/photoshopextended/whatsnew/index.html?segment=design>

  Perhaps one of the most amazing features added to CS5 is Content 
  Aware Fill, which enables you to erase something completely from a 
  photo, instantly replacing the erasure with convincing fabricated 
  imagery based on the surrounding area. You really have to see this 
  in action to believe it. Similarly impressive, Puppet Warp, enables 
  you to distort and warp images with extreme accuracy, and the new 
  Refine Edge feature is much better at detecting edges than its 
  predecessor. Many of the new Photoshop tools, also present in 
  InDesign and Illustrator, are more easily understood through 
  observation than description - which makes Adobe's feature video 
  tours especially useful. 

<http://tv.adobe.com/go/4972/>
<http://tv.adobe.com/go/5651/>
<http://tv.adobe.com/go/4971/>
<http://tv.adobe.com/show/cs5-design-premium-feature-tour/>

  For photographers, Photoshop CS5 brings enhanced High Dynamic Range 
  (HDR) imaging, enabling users to combine nearly identical pictures 
  with various exposures to create images with light levels balanced 
  throughout the picture (and also create surreal and hyper-realistic 
  images). Although Photoshop has included an HDR module for a while, 
  this version adds a Remove Ghosts option that eliminates 
  semi-transparent areas that differ between source images. This 
  problem crops up often with HDR images because elements within the 
  frame, like trees or grass, move slightly between exposures and 
  appear ghosted when the images are merged.

  A new version of Adobe's raw image converter, Camera Raw 6, supports 
  over 275 camera models and improves the overall image quality of 
  imported photos. More specifically, the converter offers enhanced 
  sharpening, noise removal, and the capability to edit TIFF and JPEG 
  files as well as those in raw image formats.

  Adobe incorporated several long-awaited, low-level improvements. The 
  Mac version is finally 64-bit native, which eases working with large 
  files on 64-bit-capable systems with sufficient RAM. Enhancements to 
  the OpenGL engine improve the handling of 3D graphics, and users can 
  now drag and drop files onto a document to create a new layer. The 
  latest version also brings panel-customization capabilities, new 
  workspace management options, and a mini Bridge that enables users 
  to access Photoshop's file manager from within the program.

<http://www.adobe.com/products/photoshop/photoshopextended/>


**Illustrator** -- Illustrator CS 5 features a new perspective drawing 
  tool that draws images with convincing depth in 1-, 2-, and 3-point 
  perspective; a Beautiful Strokes tool which provides precise control 
  over the variable width of any brush stroke; a new Shape Builder 
  tool for creating anything from a simple speech bubble to an 
  amorphous blob; the capability to create and warp 3D images, logos, 
  or buttons on any layer easily; and enhanced capabilities for 
  designing graphics for the Web and mobile devices.

<http://www.adobe.com/products/illustrator/whatsnew/>


**InDesign** -- InDesign CS5 most notably enables users to add 
  interactivity, navigation, motion, sound, and video to documents and 
  presentations by exporting projects to Flash Professional. In the 
  latest version, text changes can be tracked, multiple page sizes can 
  coexist within single documents, paragraphs can span multiple 
  columns, ebooks can be more easily produced in the EPUB format, and 
  the Layers panel functions more like the Photoshop and Illustrator 
  versions, giving users more direct control over items in pages. 
  Also, giving and receiving feedback has been made easier with added 
  support for Adobe CS Review, a component of the CS Live online 
  services.

<http://www.adobe.com/products/indesign/whatsnew/>


**Dreamweaver and Flash** -- Dreamweaver CS5 includes integrated 
  support for content management systems, CSS inspection, integration 
  with Adobe BrowserLab, support for Subversion, and PHP custom class 
  and site-specific code hinting. Flash Professional CS5 includes a 
  new code snippets panel, an ActionScript editor, XML-based FLA 
  source files, wide content distribution, and improvements to working 
  with video.

<http://www.adobe.com/products/dreamweaver/whatsnew/>
<http://www.adobe.com/products/flash/whatsnew/>


**Purchasing Options** -- Adobe provides a smorgasbord of purchase and 
  upgrade options, with the entire suite available in five 
  configurations (upgrade pricing varies with each bundle):

<http://www.adobe.com/products/creativesuite/compare/>

* Design Standard includes InDesign CS5, Photoshop CS5, Illustrator 
  CS5, and Acrobat 9 Pro for $1,299.

* Design Premium includes InDesign CS5, Photoshop CS5 Extended, 
  Illustrator CS5, Flash CS5 Professional, Flash Catalyst CS5, 
  Dreamweaver CS5, Fireworks CS5, and Acrobat 9 Pro for $1,899.

* Web Premium includes Dreamweaver CS5, Flash CS5 Professional, Flash 
  Catalyst CS5, Flash Builder 4 Standard, Photoshop CS5 Extended, 
  Illustrator CS5, Fireworks CS5, Acrobat 9 Pro, and Contribute CS5 
  for $1,799. 

* Production Premium includes Photoshop CS5 Extended, Illustrator CS5, 
  Flash CS5 Professional, Flash Catalyst CS5, After Effects CS5, 
  Premiere Pro CS5, Soundbooth CS5, OnLocation CS5, and Encore CS5 for 
  $1,699.

* Master Collection includes everything (except Photoshop CS5, since 
  Photoshop CS5 Extended is part of the lineup) for $2,599.

  Each suite also includes Bridge CS5 and Device Central CS5; the 
  Production Premium and Master Collection bundles also include 
  Dynamic Link. Also, all of the major programs remain available for 
  individual purchase (prices are listed on the same configurations 
  and upgrades page linked above). 

  According to Adobe, the software is scheduled to ship in the middle 
  of May 2010.

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11186#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/11186>


TidBITS Staffers Recall How They Got Their Starts
-------------------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11205>

  TidBITS is a joint effort, and always has been. While Adam Engst 
  sits atop our virtual masthead, we collaborate on nearly everything 
  in groups ranging anywhere from two to ten - such as this article's 
  introduction. (No, we didn't! Yes, we did!)

  A few of us date back to the pre-history of TidBITS, meeting Adam 
  before the publication came into being. Others were long-time 
  readers and contributors, while fresh faces - Rich Mogull and Doug 
  McLean being the most pink-cheeked - have joined us to beef up 
  coverage and add their own particular voices and specialties.

  Herewith, then, are recollections of how and why we've arrived here, 
  in order of how long we've been associated with TidBITS.


**Tonya Engst** -- When TidBITS began, Adam and I weren't married. We 
  shared a cat and a Macintosh SE. Adam was working as a computer 
  consultant, helping clients set up backup systems and create 
  databases. I was working for Cornell University's computer store, 
  helping staff and students choose among Macs, PCs, and NeXTs. Adam 
  and I had recently graduated from Cornell University with a motley 
  collection of majors and minors: Communications (me), the History 
  and Philosophy of Science and Technology (me), Classics (Adam), and 
  Hypertextual Fiction (Adam).

  One night, we had a long, intertwingled conversation about PageMaker 
  and HyperCard, helping individuals keep up with the tech industry, 
  academic versus commercial writing, and much more. Before we began 
  talking, we were having an entirely unremarkable evening; once we 
  had finished, we had set ourselves on a path that we had not 
  previously anticipated and could not have predicted. 

  The result of that conversation was TidBITS. Call it a HyperCard 
  stack, call it an email newsletter, call it the inevitable result of 
  a mix of our college majors, call it the first Internet publication 
  ever to accept advertising, call it a community, call it a 
  database-driven and comment-receptive Web site, call it a 
  collaboration between many writers and readers, call it what you 
  will, TidBITS became the focus of our lives.

  So, while Adam has been the frontman - writing and editing many of 
  the articles, attending conferences, answering the constant deluge 
  of email, inspiring and collaborating on ever-newer and whizzier 
  ways to publish TidBITS, what exactly have I been doing?

  I've been writing articles, editing articles, learning and teaching 
  every last thing to know about early versions of Microsoft Word and 
  early versions of HTML, pushing for change, being a passionate 
  advocate for less-experienced readers, acting as a sounding board, 
  inspiring articles, bookkeeping, budgeting, serving as CFO, serving 
  as an ad hoc "human resources" department, being the iron hand of 
  project management and scheduling, getting a "real" job during 
  certain lean years, learning how to be a sane working mother, not 
  minding the many days when working hours are odd, and - since 2003 - 
  devoting the majority of my time to the Take Control ebook series 
  which partly funds TidBITS.

  Were working for TidBITS Publishing Inc. a normal job, there's no 
  way I would have continued. The hours are murderous, the demands are 
  many, and the to-do list endless. Fortunately, the enjoyment of 
  interacting with so many interesting people and participating 
  meaningfully in the technology world balances the downsides. Running 
  TidBITS with Adam and everyone else has become a lifestyle that 
  continues to surprise and delight, and to remind me that we are all 
  connected. 


**Matt Neuburg** -- Back in 1980, while completing my PhD studies in 
  Classics at Cornell University, I startled my supervisors by 
  writing, editing, and outputting my PhD thesis on the university's 
  mainframe computer. This was a natural approach for me (I'd started 
  programming a dozen years before), and it enabled me to complete my 
  thesis efficiently; but personal computers were not yet widespread, 
  and a Humanities scholar with a computing background was a rarity.

  Fast-forward to 1987, when I returned to Cornell for a couple of 
  years to teach Classics. By then I was using an Apple II to output 
  complex documents that mixed English, Latin, and Greek, and to store 
  lecture notes in outline form. One of my brighter students noticed 
  this, and I told him about my use of computers, past and present; 
  he, too, was a Humanities scholar with a strong interest in 
  computers, and we struck up a friendship outside the classroom. That 
  was Adam Engst.

  In 1989, Adam told me about Storyspace, a pre-release application 
  for making and reading hypertextual documents, which he was using to 
  write his senior honors thesis. He also showed me the Macs in 
  Cornell's computer labs, but failed to persuade me that the Mac was 
  much more than a toy at that stage.

  A few years later, though, I was teaching at Swarthmore College (my 
  undergraduate alma mater), and they _gave_ me a Mac as part of my 
  office furniture. I became a Mac person, and I started creating 
  classware in HyperCard, scholarly documents in Nisus, and 
  educational documents in Storyspace.

  In the early 1990s, as an academic, I had desktop access to the 
  Internet, and kept up with Info-Mac, where programmers posted 
  applications for download and users posted Mac questions and answers 
  (for a brief history of Info-Mac, see Adam's "The Info-Mac Network 
  Retires," 19 December 2005). Adam was an Info-Mac denizen, and he 
  started posting TidBITS to it. So we remained in touch, and we still 
  had many specific Mac interests in common: HyperCard, Nisus, 
  Storyspace.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8375>

  I naturally proposed to write about these applications for TidBITS, 
  and Adam was very helpful, letting me write super-detailed reviews 
  spread over many issues, and even volunteering to share authorship 
  with me. Thus he appears as co-author in my review of Storyspace (my 
  first TidBITS article, "Storyspace Introduction," 18 November 1991), 
  and as guest commentator in my review of Nisus ("Nisus Review 
  Preview," 6 April 1992).

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/3319>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/3154>

  By now I was emulating Adam's style of working and writing (the 
  TidBITS ethos, you might say), and the rest, to coin a phrase, is 
  history. I'll skip other ways in which Adam has affected my 
  subsequent career and conclude by saying that the great thing about 
  writing for TidBITS is trust. I try to adhere to the TidBITS 
  philosophy and live up to its literary and intellectual standards, 
  and in return Adam gives me freedom to write what I want, when I 
  want, to whatever length I think appropriate. What could be better?


**Mark H. Anbinder** -- Adam, Tonya (who then went by her maiden name 
  of Byard), and I were all students at Cornell University in the late 
  1980s. In addition to enjoying a college campus with a 
  higher-than-most penetration of early Macintosh computers, we were 
  also graced by Steve Jobs himself arriving on campus one winter to 
  show off the NeXT Cube. (This was before his jeans and black 
  turtleneck look, though Tonya did say she was wildly impressed with 
  his shoes.) We had long known some of the same people, but that NeXT 
  presentation was the first time I can remember meeting Adam and 
  Tonya. 

  We all stayed around Ithaca after graduating, and our paths crossed 
  more and more until the three of us became active participants in 
  and organizers of MUGWUMP, the local Mac user group, whose name was 
  an acronym for "Macintosh User Group for Writers and Users of 
  Macintosh Programs." MUGWUMP never had a huge membership, but it was 
  a committed group with a software lending library, a well-designed 
  print newsletter in an era of desktop-publishing atrocities, monthly 
  meetings and presentations on the latest software and hardware for 
  Mac users, and regular gatherings of the steering committee. We 
  found ourselves to be three of the most active members in that crew.

  When Adam and Tonya decided to combine their affection for HyperCard 
  and hypertext with the joy of sharing knowledge about Macintosh 
  computing, I was there; before long I was involved helping set up 
  their first (UUCP-based) TidBITS email system, occasionally helping 
  publish an issue, and doing an increasing amount of writing. When 
  they moved to Seattle in 1991, I kept TidBITS running for the month 
  of August while Adam looked for a new Internet connection.

  As a News Editor, and then a somewhat less-active Contributing 
  Editor, I've been on hand for many of TidBITS's biggest 
  collaborative coverage efforts - helping write about new computers, 
  new operating systems, and the like, hardly ever face-to-face but 
  often feeling as though we're huddled together around a big table. 
  (There are still a couple of TidBITS regulars I've never met in 
  person, though that number continues to shrink.)

  Over the course of 20 years we've gotten to meet or otherwise 
  interact with so many of our readers, and I think that interaction 
  is a big part of what keeps TidBITS going for all of us. My TidBITS 
  connections have also led to other writing opportunities, for which 
  I consider myself very lucky. As I write these thoughts in a hotel 
  in the Artists' Quarter of Safed, Israel, I'll wish a hearty "Mazel 
  Tov!" to the rest of the TidBITS crew.


**Geoff Duncan** -- I first encountered TidBITS in the summer of 1990 
  (issue #10 caught my eye: HyperCard 2.0 and rumors of a color Mac SE 
  - excitement!) but it was just a curiosity until maybe a year later 
  when the smart lady in the next office idly asked "Hey, do you get 
  TidBITS? You should. Adam and Tonya are great people." Turned out I 
  was sharing a poorly lit computing center hallway with Linda Iroff, 
  who knew Adam and Tonya from Cornell. When I packed up and headed 
  for Seattle shortly afterwards, Linda said Adam and Tonya had moved 
  there recently too and we should meet. I made a mental note (in my 
  jumble of mental notes), but was surprised a few months later when I 
  answered a knock on the apartment door. "Hi!" There stood Adam and 
  Tonya, who had stopped by on their way to grocery shopping. I had 
  long nurtured an interest in online publishing, and I eventually 
  wound up signing on as TidBITS's first kinda-sorta-formal staff 
  member.

  I believed then - and believe today - that TidBITS occupies a unique 
  and important position in the Macintosh community, not only because 
  it publishes top-quality information and analysis (for free!) but 
  because TidBITS connects so many dots. TidBITS isn't just about the 
  when-where-and-how-much of a topic, but has the freedom to delve 
  deeply into the _why_ - and after 20 years in the biz, TidBITS has 
  the knowledge, contacts, and connections to get those answers. It's 
  a testimony to Adam and Tonya that they have pulled it all off not 
  by sinking into the manipulation, posturing, politicking, and shady 
  deals so common in the industry but by being their genuine, upfront, 
  and warm-hearted selves. TidBITS's success really is that simple, 
  and I'm proud to have been associated with it in some small way.


**Glenn Fleishman** -- I remember reading TidBITS in its early days, 
  although I can't recollect where I first found it - probably in the 
  comp.sys.mac.digest Usenet newsgroup that mirrored Info-Mac.

<http://groups.google.com/group/comp.sys.mac.digest/browse_frm/month/1990-04>

  It wasn't long after reading TidBITS that I started writing to the 
  Engsts about various things, including this 1991 complaint about an 
  error in describing Multiple Master fonts. My first article 
  ("Apple's 16-bit Solution," 19 April 1993) appeared several years 
  later, just before I moved to Seattle. I had a lot of time on my 
  hands after a job ended in Maine and before I drove west.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/3569>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/2608>

  I corresponded a bit with the Engsts before I arrived in Seattle, 
  and soon received invitations to attend the monthly soirees at their 
  near-lakeside home in Renton. (Okay, it was a tiny bungalow a few 
  blocks from a less-popular portion of Lake Washington - near a 
  Boeing plant - within commuting distance of Tonya's Microsoft job.)

  My first significant article for TidBITS was likely "The Experiment 
  is Over" (1 May 1995), which explained how the Internet's 
  then-backbone, run by the National Science Foundation as NSFNet, was 
  in its final days of a transition to commercially operated backbone 
  service. The article got a lot of traction in 1995 and was picked up 
  and distributed all over.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/1501>

  Writing for TidBITS seemed like a big deal then, and it still does 
  today. TidBITS was the voice of the user, in contrast to the huge 
  trade journals of the day, which focused more on companies with lots 
  of money to spend, partly because the publications were pumped full 
  of advertising dollars as the information technology and personal 
  technology markets were exploding.

  I can draw a direct line from the confidence I got from writing for 
  TidBITS to my later freelance career. While I started writing for 
  money in 1995, it wasn't until 1998 that I began working with 
  national publications like the New York Times, and later Wired, 
  Business 2.0, Fortune, and others during the dot-com bubble.

  I've been working hard for and with TidBITS (including a short stint 
  trying to launch an Internet-focused offshoot called NetBITS in 
  1997-1998) for over 12 years.

  The Engsts and I became friends after being colleagues, and I recall 
  a lot of laughs in Renton, and then in their mountaintop mad 
  scientist lair at the end of a road in Issaquah, WA. When they moved 
  back to Ithaca, I shed a few tears, but our virtual contact became 
  even stronger.


**Jeff Carlson** -- In 1994, inspired by the possibilities dangled in 
  front of us by Wired magazine, I bought a modem for my Mac Classic 
  II. To be honest, I didn't quite know what to do with it at first, 
  but I could tell that "getting online" was going to be a big deal. I 
  located a couple of local bulletin board systems, including one for 
  writers. It was there I met Geoff Duncan, the TidBITS Managing 
  Editor at the time, who pointed out that if I liked using BBSes, I 
  really needed to get on the Internet. (Geoff was the virtual dealer 
  tantalizing me with a gateway drug.)

  Of course, the way to gain access the Internet at the time was 
  Adam's book "Internet Starter Kit for Macintosh," which gave me not 
  only the knowledge but also the software needed to get connected 
  (MacTCP on a floppy disk attached to the inside back cover.) In 
  addition to getting me on the Internet, "Internet Starter Kit for 
  Macintosh" was instrumental because it taught me that a "computer 
  book" could be entertaining as well as informative - I read it cover 
  to cover.

  By 1996 (thanks to a referral from Geoff), I was working as Managing 
  Editor for Open House Books, an imprint in Seattle that wrote and 
  packaged titles such as "Real World FreeHand" by Olav Martin Kvern 
  and "Real World Adobe Photoshop" by David Blatner, Bruce Fraser, and 
  the owner of the company, Steve Roth. Steve also co-ran Thunder 
  Lizard Productions, a technology conference business that was taking 
  off. In the nicest possible way, Steve told me that he was going to 
  dissolve Open House Books and let me go.

  Fortunately, I had started writing articles for publications like 
  Adobe Magazine and still had a few books in the editing pipeline, so 
  I was ready to test the freelance waters. My first appearance in 
  TidBITS, appropriately enough, was a short April Fools article, 
  "Netscape Sleep Plug-In" (1 April 1996).

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/1069>

  Later that year, while attending a lunch with several Seattle 
  technology writers (at the original Speakeasy.net café), I finally 
  met Adam and Tonya in person. After lunch, Tonya came up to me and 
  said, "So, tell me more about being a managing editor!" (That 
  exclamation point is deliberate: for as long as I've known her, 
  Tonya is unfailingly chipper, especially when meeting someone new.) 
  I didn't realize right away that I was in the middle of a job 
  interview, but I must have answered well enough. They soon offered 
  me the part-time position and I accepted, thereby monopolizing 
  almost every Monday (when we build the email issue) for the next 15 
  years.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/759>


**Joe Kissell** -- I started using Macs in 1991 while in graduate 
  school studying linguistics at the University of Texas at Arlington. 
  Within a couple of years I had read Adam's "Internet Starter Kit for 
  Macintosh" and started subscribing to TidBITS - I can't recall which 
  happened first. But by the time I began working for Nisus Software 
  in 1994, I had read quite a bit of Adam's stuff and regarded him as 
  nothing short of a celebrity.

  The following January I attended Macworld Expo in San Francisco for 
  the first time, and when a colleague offered to introduce me to 
  Adam, who was a Nisus Writer fan, I was star-struck. He was a famous 
  author who seemed to know everything about my favorite computer, and 
  relatively speaking I was a newbie.

  A year later, I'd written my own first book, "The Nisus Way," and 
  that was what I talked about with Tonya when I met her at the next 
  Macworld Expo. She blew my mind by telling me about this new Web 
  site called Amazon.com where, if I referred people to buy my book, I 
  would somehow mysteriously get extra money for it. A couple of 
  months later, Tonya reviewed my book in TidBITS ("I Am Joe's Book," 
  18 March 1996). I made a point of telling her that my own mother 
  couldn't have written a more complimentary review, and that I would 
  be happy to buy her a milkshake to say thanks. (Tonya, I believe I 
  still owe you that milkshake!)

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/1089>

  A few years later, while on our first vacation to Paris, I told my 
  then-girlfriend Morgen about my goal to one day write an article for 
  TidBITS - and maybe even, eventually, if I was lucky, one for 
  Macworld. Even though I'd had a couple of books published by then, 
  writing for TidBITS seemed like a stretch, something I wasn't sure I 
  was qualified to do. After a five-year stint at Kensington, I wrote 
  my third book, which was published in early 2003 and for which Adam 
  generously contributed a foreword. That interaction finally led to 
  my first TidBITS article ("Salling Clicker in Action," 25 August 
  2003), and then, a few months later, to the beginning of my 
  involvement with Take Control Books. That, in turn, prompted an 
  invitation to write an article for Macworld. In the years since, 
  both publishers have kept asking me to write things and have given 
  me titles with the word "senior" in them, so I've kept writing - 
  still a bit mystified at my good fortune at being sucked into the 
  TidBITS vortex, merely (so it seems) by standing too close.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/7320>


**Rich Mogull** -- I may be one of the most recent additions to the 
  TidBITS staff, but I believe I'm the only member whose association 
  started with a secret identity.

  I'm a bit of a geek. My tech and programming days started in the 
  early 1980s with the Commodore PET in our elementary school. I was 
  also lucky to have a friend with somewhat wealthy parents who owned 
  an Apple II (I can't remember which model) upon which we spent 
  countless hours playing Wizardry, Olympic Decathlon, and 
  occasionally programming. 

  Flash forward to 2005. I was working as an analyst on the security 
  team at Gartner and _still_ didn't own a Mac, despite years of 
  drooling over everything from the first PowerBooks to the first 
  iMac. Chris Pepper, a childhood friend and long-time Apple user, 
  constantly pushed me to take the plunge and switch, which I finally 
  did with the release of the Mac mini since the price made it a 
  low-risk investment. On Chris's suggestion I subscribed to TidBITS 
  and bought a few Take Control books to learn Mac OS X.

  Within a matter of weeks I realized that Mac mini had become my 
  primary computer. I even started programming in AppleScript, relying 
  on a rapidly dog-eared copy of Matt Neuburg's AppleScript: The 
  Definitive Guide. When Apple announced the transition to CPUs from 
  Intel, I was able to virtualize Windows on a Mac and continue my 
  conversion.

<http://www.amazon.com/dp/0596102119/?tag=tidbitselectro00>

  As an industry analyst I did a fair bit of writing on technology, 
  but it was all impersonal. By this point Chris had contributed some 
  articles to TidBITS, and I asked if he could quietly approach Adam 
  with a story idea about my "switcher's tale." The only problem was 
  that, due to my day job, I would have to write under a pseudonym and 
  my real identity would need to be kept secret. 

  Adam liked the idea, and thus I wrote my first ever TidBITS article 
  ("From iPod to MacBook Pro: A Switcher's Tale," 13 March 2006). Over 
  the course of the next year I wrote three more TidBITS articles 
  under the name "Robert Movin." In August of 2007 I left my job, 
  founded my own firm, and started writing the occasional TidBITS 
  article under my real name.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8455>

  As Macworld Expo approached I asked Adam in email if it would be 
  okay if I used TidBITS as a reference to apply for a press pass. I 
  didn't hear back right away - which is unlike Adam - leading me to 
  assume I had offended him. When I gently inquired again, I was 
  shocked when he offered me a staff position. I hadn't offended him; 
  he was just bouncing the idea off the rest of the team. 

  It's been almost three years now, and I am still completely humbled 
  and honored to be a part of this group.


**Doug McLean** -- My first knowledge of TidBITS came in an unexpected 
  way for one of the world's longest-running electronic publications: 
  by shuffling through the Jobs section in an actual newspaper! I had 
  just returned to Ithaca with my girlfriend, who was beginning her 
  master's degree at Cornell. The ad said something about a part-time 
  opportunity for writing and editing about computers with a focus on 
  Apple. Having just left a job managing a Mac-based network for a 
  small art college near Boston, the job sounded perfect. 

  After a cheery phone interview with Tonya and a writing sample 
  submitted, I found myself face-to-face with Tonya and Adam at a 
  local coffee shop. It was one of the best job interviews I've had - 
  not because I thought I nailed it, but because we actually had a fun 
  and engaging conversation. An hour flew by talking about Facebook 
  versus Twitter, Steve Jobs's performance and personality, and even a 
  little about art (Adam and Tonya both have a keen interest, and I 
  studied art in college and continue to maintain a studio).

  Well, I lucked out, and got the job. Joining the TidBITS staff has 
  been an enormously enjoyable learning experience. I can remember 
  early on asking Adam if he could suggest some general reading on the 
  history of the Apple, being invited over to the Engsts' home, and 
  coming away with a heavy stack of books including everything from 
  Guy Kawasaki's seminal "The Macintosh Way" to David Allen's "Getting 
  Things Done" (a helpful book for those learning to work from home!) 
  - as well as some of the many peaches produced by their overzealous 
  fruit trees. I was also astonished by my first time collaborating in 
  real time on coverage of a big Apple event. It was amazing to see 
  the characters in the article appear, disappear, and change before 
  my eyes as five other editors worked on it - like some kind of 
  digital ant hill.

  While I've been a part of TidBITS for only a tiny fraction of its 
  existence, working alongside the rest of the TidBITS crew is a daily 
  pleasure, and one for which I'm enormously grateful.

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11205#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/11205>


Twenty Years of Memories from Friends of TidBITS
------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11207>

  When I think back on what I've enjoyed the most about TidBITS over 
  the last 20 years, it's not the technology. Instead, the way TidBITS 
  has enriched my life the most is through the people it has enabled 
  me to meet and work with, at all levels of the Macintosh industry, 
  ranging from independent Mac developers to Mac user group members to 
  Apple executives.

  So I want to share something special with you today - my friends and 
  colleagues. I've asked a random set of people I've known in the 
  industry for a long time to write a few words about how they first 
  encountered TidBITS, what they remember from meeting me and Tonya, 
  how TidBITS has influenced their lives, and so on.

  My only regret is not having time to include even more people, but 
  if you have a fun story about finding TidBITS for the first time, 
  about meeting anyone on the staff, or how TidBITS has changed your 
  life, please share it in the comments!

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11207#comments>


**Andy Affleck** -- All I really need to say is, "Once again I 
  recommend Solitaire Till Dawn." OK, OK...

  When Adam's "Internet Starter Kit for Macintosh" came out, I bought 
  a copy at the Dartmouth Bookstore (I was working at Dartmouth at the 
  time). As I stood in line waiting to pay, I happened to flip around 
  the index and caught my name (at that time, I went by Andy J. 
  Williams). I was shocked! Adam had mentioned my habit-at-that-time 
  of providing LISTSERV access to various email lists and described me 
  as "a sucker for resources in need of a home." The checkout person 
  at the store was not impressed, but I was thrilled to have achieved 
  some small amount of fame.

  The following summer, during my annual pilgrimage to Macworld Expo 
  in Boston, I discovered that Adam was signing books at his 
  publisher's booth. I flipped my badge backward to hide my name and 
  walked up to him and in my best 
  stern-I-am-trying-not-to-smile-and-give-it-away look said, "You 
  called me a sucker in your book, and I'm really upset!" He looked at 
  me like I was some crazy (okay, to be fair, I was), and then I 
  flipped my badge around and he laughed. And that's how we met.

  I think I wrote my first article for TidBITS a while later, a review 
  of a new LaserWriter (see "LaserWriter 16/600 PS," 14 November 
  1994).

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/1747>

  TidBITS has been an integral part of my life since its HyperCard 
  days. I hope it's going strong in 2,048 issues, and I wish everyone 
  involved a happy 20th birthday!

  [Andy Affleck is a Take Control author and TidBITS contributor who 
  has become infamous for recommending the Solitaire Till Dawn card 
  game for the annual TidBITS gift guide.]


**David Blatner** -- TidBITS, my old friend. Why, I remember when you 
  were just a little thing, a strangely formatted recurring email in 
  the wee-early 1990s that reminded me that I was far from alone in my 
  odd proclivities toward all things Macintosh. (Yes, you remember 
  that ol' "Mac" used to go by a longer name!) I don't recall much 
  from those days, which seem a haze to my addled brain, though the 
  memories are all fond ones. And, of course, it's hard to discern 
  where my remembrances of TidBITS end and those of Adam and Tonya 
  begin (as though, like Tron, they were early on pulled into the 
  digital reality of their own writings, becoming one with the greater 
  ASCII.) I recall that wonderful party at Adam and Tonya's house 
  before they left for New York in 2001 (boo hoo), where we inherited 
  a jade plant (now sprouted into several in our kitchen). I recall 
  far-out conversations with Geoff Duncan and my surprise when my 
  officemates and friends (Glenn Fleishman and Jeff Carlson) were 
  suddenly enlisted into positions of greater editorial 
  responsibility. I remember writing, re-writing, editing, and 
  thinking all the time, "I'm really doing this article for free?" For 
  that's the magic of TidBITS: it draws us all back to our childhoods, 
  where we communally shared our experiences and got excited with our 
  friends about the tiniest things - the things that were, are, most 
  important in the minutiae of our lives. Congratulations, Adam and 
  Tonya. I applaud you.

<http://db.tidbits.com/author/David+Blatner>

  [David Blatner is the co-host of InDesignSecrets.com and the Print 
  and ePublishing Conference. He is generally acknowledged to be one 
  of the world's experts on publishing software, though he has also 
  written on pi, aviation, and Judaism.]


**Liz Castro** -- I started reading TidBITS in the early 1990s when I 
  was still living in Barcelona, translating the third edition of "The 
  Macintosh Bible" into Spanish. It was my lifeline to news about the 
  world of Apple, and I have depended ever since on its timely, 
  accurate, incisive, and relevant stories. I can remember numerous 
  times having read an article and later encountered the problem which 
  it solved.

  I love how TidBITS has evolved. In the beginning, it was mostly Mac 
  stuff, but as Apple has added iDevices, TidBITS has stepped up to 
  cover them. TidBITS always makes me feel like I'm up to date, like I 
  have the inside track covered.

  And to show how small the world can be, I first met Adam and Tonya 
  at a Macworld Expo in San Francisco and after some conversation, it 
  turned out we had friends in common in Ithaca.

  Congratulations, and thanks for 20 years!

  [Liz Castro is a computer book author best known for her "HTML, 
  XHTML, and CSS: Visual QuickStart Guide," which has sold more than a 
  million copies across six editions.]


**Marshall Clow** -- I've been reading TidBITS since my kids - now 21 
  and 19 - were very small, but it was sometime after the switch from 
  the HyperCard stack format. Articles have helped me out of jams on 
  several occasions, and just being able to point someone at a TidBITS 
  article and say, "Is this the problem that you are having?" has made 
  my life a lot easier over the years. 

  I've been mentioned a few times in TidBITS articles, which is always 
  a kick because I get comments from other people: "Hey, I saw you in 
  TidBITS!" But the most amusing bit was the year I received what 
  turned out to be a one-off version of the TidBITS April Fools issue 
  wishing me a happy birthday.

  [Marshall Clow is a long-time Mac developer who has worked on 
  products from StuffIt Deluxe to Eudora and whose birthday is indeed 
  on April 1st.]


**Michael E. Cohen** -- I can't even remember the first time I read 
  TidBITS, but it wasn't on the Web because Tim Berners-Lee hadn't yet 
  unleashed the World Wide Web on the world. I vaguely recall using a 
  Mac program called Easy View that formatted TidBITS email issues for 
  easy onscreen reading. TidBITS was great for those of us hankering 
  for Mac news back in the last century - it was a great source of, 
  well, really useful and interesting tidbits, sort of a Mac and an 
  Internet jungle drum that beat its way into my mailbox once a week. 
  A year or two after I read my first issue, I picked up a copy of 
  Adam's "Internet Starter Kit for Macintosh" to share with all my 
  friends and colleagues. I probably read about the book in a TidBITS 
  issue.

  The first time I met Adam and Tonya (and, I think, the only time 
  that we've met offline) was during Macworld Expo in San Francisco in 
  2007, a few months after they had published the first edition of my 
  Take Control book on syncing. I remember thinking how much _nicer_ 
  they both were in person than in email and on the phone, and, given 
  that they both are among the nicest people I've ever dealt with 
  remotely, that was impressive. Congratulations on 1K of TidBITS!

  [Michael E. Cohen has written three Take Control books about 
  syncing, and currently holds the record for most puns per title.]


**Colin Crawford** -- In over three decades the Apple industry has 
  experienced swings of great highs and deep lows. However, despite 
  some turmoil there has been a remarkable camaraderie in the industry 
  - it is bonded by a desire to see Apple and the whole ecosystem not 
  just survive but continue to set high standards for others to 
  emulate. It's not about unquestioning loyalty or fanboy fanaticism - 
  we've all been willing to offer constructive criticism to help 
  improve products from Apple and others in the industry. When subpar 
  products have appeared, we've called the companies on them and dealt 
  with some inevitable backlash. The focus has always been to serve 
  Macintosh users, to give them the best advice we can.

  TidBITS over the last 20 years has been a consistent voice of 
  reason. The style is not strident, but it's authoritative, well 
  reasoned, and always presented with great clarity and total 
  editorial professionalism. In a nutshell, Adam and Tonya have 
  created an indispensable trusted brand that is an integral part of 
  the Mac community.

  The contributions to this issue from all across the industry are 
  testament to the tremendous reach and influence of TidBITS. I am 
  looking forward to reading their insights for many more years.

  [Colin Crawford was the CEO of Macworld Magazine from 1995 to 2003.]


**Nancy Davis** -- I knew about TidBITS before I knew about the people 
  behind TidBITS.

  When I first went to work at Peachpit, I was a Mac user, but I 
  wasn't immersed in the world of Mac. My colleagues at Peachpit 
  turned me on to TidBITS, and it quickly became a trusted source of 
  news and, more importantly, a beautifully written (and edited) 
  interpretation of that news.

  I was introduced to Adam and Tonya a year or so later. By then I had 
  read about them and learned a bit about them, but I can still recall 
  that my very first thought on meeting them was, "This cannot be Adam 
  and Tonya. They are so young!" I realized that because they wrote 
  with such authority, confidence, and understanding of technology 
  that I had unconsciously aged them in my mind. They couldn't 
  possibly have all that experience and be that young, could they?

  Soon thereafter I was assigned to be Adam's editor on his first 
  Peachpit book. And I'll admit, I was more than a bit intimidated. 
  Yes, with Adam writing and Tonya editing, I had a book editor's 
  dream team, but how could I edit their work? How would I work with 
  them?

  I quickly discovered that they were indeed a dream team and a 
  delight to work with. I am sure I learned far more from them than 
  they did from me, but they were fantastic partners and consummate 
  professionals, and ultimately, they have become my friends. I feel 
  very fortunate to work with them, and to continue to learn from 
  them. The TidBITS issues that arrive each week are a welcome sight 
  in my overcrowded inbox, and the TidBITS archives are a treasure 
  that I turn to for reminders, information, and sometimes, just fun.

  Congratulations on 20 amazing years! Thank you for everything you do 
  to keep this community strong.

  [Nancy Davis is Editor-in-Chief of Peachpit Press.]


**Sky Dayton** -- My relationship with TidBITS and Adam go way back. 
  Seventeen years ago, Adam's TidBITS advice and his seminal "Internet 
  Starter Kit for Macintosh" helped me get my Mac on the Internet for 
  the first time. Soon afterward, I decided to start EarthLink, and I 
  ordered "Internet Starter Kits" by the case to give to every 
  EarthLink subscriber as they signed up. Later on, Apple selected 
  EarthLink as their built-in Internet provider because of our long 
  dedication to the Mac, which all started with TidBITS. 

  Through thick and thin, TidBITS has been the heart and soul of the 
  Mac community for twenty years.

  [Sky Dayton founded EarthLink in 1994 and Boingo Wireless in 2001, 
  where he remains chairman of the board.]


**Steve Dorner** -- What I most remember about TidBITS is how 
  tirelessly you helped people with Eudora and evangelized the 
  program, merely since you yourself found it useful.

  [Steve Dorner is the original author of Eudora.]


**Ole Eichhorn** -- I first downloaded TidBITS on CompuServe, in the 
  old setext format, starting with issue #7 or so. I remember being 
  notified of new issues via a newfangled thing called Internet email 
  to my account 70740,50. Yes, that's right, I had a seven-digit 
  CompuServe account number.

  Hundreds of articles in TidBITS have helped me with an important tip 
  or pointed me to something interesting. I remember when just 
  figuring out all the Apple models was challenging, and which models 
  supported which features. That has sure changed. I think the 
  software reviews were one of my biggest reasons for reading, since 
  in the old days software companies couldn't easily offer trial 
  versions, and this was before the Internet; you couldn't just Google 
  for reviews. TidBITS always did "fair and balanced" views of 
  products.

  To me, the most amazing thing about TidBITS is its consistency and 
  longevity. If I were telling a friend about TidBITS now, I'd 
  probably tell the story about how, to celebrate its 20th anniversary 
  and 1,024th issue, Adam contacted some longtime readers and asked 
  them to talk a little about TidBITS, including relating the most 
  amazing story about TidBITS they could think of...

  [Ole Eichhorn is Chief Technology Officer at Aperio. His previous 
  positions include Executive Vice President of Engineering at PayPal 
  and General Manager of Online Billpay at Intuit.]


**Akif Eyler** -- One thousand of anything is a very large number in 
  human scale. But 1,024 issues in online publishing may be a unique 
  effort unequaled elsewhere. Congratulations...

  Twenty years is quite a long time in human appreciation. But twenty 
  years of steady and robust determination is a wonderful achievement. 
  Thank you...

  I was an early Mac user between 1987 and 1997. I have known TidBITS 
  since its second year. The importance of TidBITS in my life, 
  however, is not as a reader or a Mac user. I took part in the 
  development of browsing tools aimed at supporting electronic 
  publishing. Easy View was one of the earlier tools - an academic 
  work at that time - in the field. Our very similar dedication to 
  "easily reachable archives" was the strong link between us.

  [Akif Eyler is Professor of Computer Engineering at Marmara 
  University in Istanbul, Turkey. He is best known in the Mac world 
  for developing the Easy View file viewer that was for many years the 
  preferred way to archive and view TidBITS issues.]


**Dan Frakes** -- Honestly, I have no recollection of the first time I 
  met Adam or Tonya - it seems like I've known them for ages, although 
  it has probably been only 12 or 13 years. I knew _of_ them long 
  before that: I remember browsing a copy of "Internet Starter Kit for 
  Macintosh" at the campus computer store back in 1993 or 1994, about 
  the same time I started reading TidBITS regularly.

  Back then, the idea of getting weekly Mac news that wasn't a week 
  (or more) old was still fairly unique - the Web hadn't yet taken off 
  as a primary source of Mac information. I still have fond memories 
  of using Easy View to read those issues. In a way, Easy View and 
  TidBITS were like an early RSS reader... albeit one that updated its 
  feeds only once per week.

  Here we are, nearly two decades later, and TidBITS is still going 
  strong. One of the most amazing things about TidBITS is how long 
  Adam and Tonya have been publishing continuously: the TidBITS Web 
  site provides the oldest unbroken archives of Mac-related news out 
  there.

  But that archive has personal meaning, as well. I've written 
  articles for TidBITS, but a search of the TidBITS Web site turned up 
  a number of quotes from me as a _reader_ that helps document my own 
  technological history. For example, I discovered that my name first 
  appeared in TidBITS in November 1998 (see "Talkin' About MP3," 30 
  November 1998). The staff had asked readers some questions about the 
  nascent technology of MP3 audio and quoted my response. I didn't 
  realize I was listening to MP3 files in 1998, but evidently I was, 
  and regularly!

<http://db.tidbits.com/author/Dan+Frakes>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/5192>

  I bring this up not just because I found my 12-year-old quotes 
  interesting, but because it points to a big reason for TidBITS's 
  success: Adam and Tonya have always considered TidBITS readers to be 
  not just passive consumers, but part of a community of contributors. 
  I look forward to many more years of that community.

  [Dan Frakes writes for Macworld and occasionally moonlights as a 
  Take Control editor and TidBITS contributor.]


**Greg Friedman** -- Around the end of 1990, I applied for a job at 
  Aladdin Systems, which had recently introduced the first commercial 
  version of StuffIt. At the time, Aladdin was a company of six 
  employees operating out of a house in Aptos, California. TidBITS was 
  being published as a HyperCard stack at the time (a really cool 
  HyperCard stack which aggregated back issues, if I recall 
  correctly). Like many of us, I downloaded it from the Info-Mac 
  Archives each week over my 2400 baud modem.

  Anyway, TidBITS ran a piece on the imminent release of StuffIt 
  Deluxe 2.0, which I read prior to interviewing with Aladdin. One of 
  the guys who interviewed me was Dave Schargel, President of Aladdin 
  and a well-known personality in the industry. Dave asked me what 
  industry magazines I read. I told him I read MacUser, Macworld, and 
  TidBITS. In fact, I told him, I'd recently read the TidBITS coverage 
  of the upcoming StuffIt Deluxe 2.0 release. Dave hadn't heard of 
  TidBITS before, but he was impressed by how up-to-date I was because 
  of that article and we launched into a memorable first conversation 
  about the evolution of media into the digital space. In short, 
  TidBITS helped me land my first job in the industry. 

  Twenty years! That's just incredible. What a ride these past twenty 
  years have been for all of us. Heartfelt congratulations to you and 
  the TidBITS family!

  [Greg is currently a Development Manager at Microsoft where, among 
  other things, he worked on the first few releases of Internet 
  Explorer for the Mac. Prior to Microsoft, he worked at Aladdin 
  Systems and spent a few years working on Developer Tools at Apple.]


**Lea Galanter** -- I was a member of the Mac user group in Houston 
  before I moved to Seattle in 1990, where I met Adam and Tonya at 
  Seattle's dBug. Adam was the person who first showed me "the Web" - 
  via something called Mosaic. I was blown away - one of those moments 
  I remember in detail.

  I think I've been reading TidBITS since the beginning, and I still 
  read TidBITS regularly; it seems even more important now with 
  multiple Apple products in my life (a laptop, an iPhone, and one day 
  soon an iPad). I can't think of anywhere else I can get the latest 
  news and information that matters about Apple products all in one 
  place.

  [Lea Galanter is a Take Control editor.]


**Jeff Ganyard** -- Let's see, I would first have encountered TidBITS 
  back in 1992. The Apple Assistance Center was in the process of 
  being created in Austin, TX, out of the "System 7 Answerline." It 
  was Apple's further foray into the world of direct end user support. 
  One of the people in that group had been at Cornell just prior to 
  coming to Austin to work for Apple. She introduced me to TidBITS. We 
  all looked forward to each issue, and even as we were getting some 
  excellent training within Apple, TidBITS provided us with the wider 
  view of what was happening in the Mac world.

  The things I can share about the early influence of TidBITS in my 
  career...

* We formatted all the reference docs for the software support group 
  at Apple in setext format and referenced it in Easy View, all based 
  on an article Adam wrote. That was the beginning of several years of 
  me building nimble and quick reference resources for Apple's support 
  reps.

* I found out about BBEdit from TidBITS. I've spent an awful lot of 
  time with BBEdit, Rich Siegel, and Bare Bones in the last 18 years.

* I learned about MacHTTP from TidBITS. As Chuck Shotton's work laid 
  the foundation for Web serving on Macs, so he also helped create my 
  career in Apple, as just a couple years later I became the Server 
  Evangelist and then the Internet Evangelist.

* I don't recall when I first met Adam but I do remember helping him 
  stash that splintery stake from MacHack under the sink in my hotel 
  room in 2000. I wonder where in the hotel it is now? [To find out, 
  read the articles in "The Story of the Stake." -Adam]

<http://db.tidbits.com/series/1278>

  [Jeff Ganyard is Development Manger for Mac Products at Nuance 
  Communications, which recently purchased MacSpeech, and formerly 
  Internet Evangelist at Apple.]


**Jon Gotow** -- I've been reading TidBITS since before there were Web 
  browsers - yeah, that's old. I first encountered TidBITS on the 
  Info-Mac Digest, where Adam was an active contributor and TidBITS 
  was one of _the_ sources of Mac knowledge. TidBITS has always been 
  one of those rare gems that provides enough technical detail and 
  background for you to really understand topics, and Adam hits the 
  right balance of technical depth and approachability. Plus he's 
  always straight with his readers - even before meeting him, I felt I 
  knew him and very much trusted his opinions.

  After reading TidBITS for so long and emailing Adam on a number of 
  occasions, we finally met at MacHack one year. I think the things 
  that struck me the most were that this busy, incredibly well-known 
  Mac expert sat down and talked to me for a _long_ time and that he 
  was as excited about what was going on in the Mac world as if he'd 
  just discovered it - not as though he'd been writing about these 
  things for years.

  Lots of TidBITS articles have been helpful to me over the years, and 
  back in the day, articles tracking virus outbreaks and explaining 
  the workings of clever software like RAM Doubler were invaluable. It 
  made me look smart whenever anyone had a Mac question. But the best 
  part was my 15 minutes of fame in a publication that I really 
  respected when Adam wrote an article about me and my son Ben when we 
  won the hacking contest at MacHack (see "The MacHax Best Hack 
  Contest 2003," 23 June 2003).

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/7244>

  Even now, what sets TidBITS apart is how comprehensive it is. Say 
  there's a big issue brewing - like the iPad - you can surf all over 
  the place and spend a while collecting information and opinions, or 
  you can just read about it in TidBITS and get a solid, 
  well-researched perspective about what's up, with reliable links to 
  more information.

  [Jon Gotow is the president of St. Clair Software and the developer 
  of Default Folder X and HistoryHound.]


**John Gruber** -- I started reading TidBITS in 1991, during my 
  freshman year of college. I don't recall how I first came upon it, 
  but I'd wager heavily that it was on one of the comp.sys.mac.* 
  Usenet groups.

  As a budding writer and Mac nerd, TidBITS immediately struck a 
  chord. Not just because of what it was about, but because of what it 
  was and how it was delivered. TidBITS has been delivered in a 
  variety of formats over the years - HyperCard stack, plain text 
  email and Usenet postings, and, now, of course, a Web site - but one 
  thing it has never been about is print. And, more importantly, it 
  has always been free of charge to readers.

  We take digital distribution and free access for granted today. But 
  TidBITS debuted _years_ before the Web. Think about that. More 
  importantly, TidBITS's standards for writing, editing, insight, and 
  respect for its readership have been consistently excellent, right 
  from the start. Most of the initial forays into digital publications 
  were clearly from people who saw digital content as inherently 
  inferior to print. Not TidBITS. Their attitude was, "let's make 
  something great, and let's do it ourselves." If anything, TidBITS 
  published higher-quality writing than the print publications 
  covering the Mac market in the early 1990s. And, given the speed of 
  digital distribution, it was more timely and more relevant. In 
  short, TidBITS wasn't just "good for something that's free," it was 
  good, period. It didn't try to replicate print. It instead 
  emphasized what digital distribution does best.

  Needless to say, I found this incredibly inspiring. TidBITS was 
  _the_ inspiration for the independent Mac publications that 
  followed, including mine. And it's every bit as relevant today as it 
  was in 1990 (when, I remind you, it was distributed as a HyperCard 
  stack), by remaining focused not on any specific distribution format 
  but on the writing.

  Formats come and go. Great writing is forever.

  [John Gruber writes Daring Fireball.]


**Andy Ihnatko** -- I think everybody you ask will have a memory of 
  the day they discovered TidBITS. It's sort of a touchstone for every 
  generation, isn't it?

  My story, for what it's worth. I was in Zayre's department store 
  with my Mom and one or two of my sisters. As usual, I was sort of 
  off on my own and I wound up in the record department. I don't know 
  why I was drawn to TidBITS specifically. I think it was the colorful 
  cover. It was like a picture puzzle, almost. I thought I recognized 
  Mae West and W.C Fields. Actually, I'll be honest: there was a 
  sticker on the plastic that promised that there were cutouts inside.

  So I bought it with my birthday money. I opened it up when I got 
  home and played with the cutouts. It was probably a couple of days 
  before I got to actually listen to TidBITS. I had a cassette player 
  in my room... Dad's hand-me-down from work, one of those kinds where 
  it was shaped like a shoebox and the controller buttons were levers 
  on the front. I wasn't allowed to use the family stereo downstairs.

  But my oldest sisters had a record player and I was able to use it 
  when they weren't home. I just remember putting on the headphones 
  and sitting on the floor in front of the record player, listening to 
  this freaky, freaky music. It was beautiful. But for all of its 
  intensity, it played out like one of my story tapes; it had a 
  beginning and a middle and an end. I wondered whether the TidBITS 
  editors on the back were really "playing" the roles, or if they were 
  just singing about characters they'd made up.

  The last track sort of threw me, though. It was the form of a dream 
  that transitioned into waking and then getting on a bus. It was 
  really familiar territory for a kid who went to public school. The 
  thing was, though, that it appeared to be broken in half. 
  Intellectually, I knew that this was how the song was meant to go, 
  but it seemed like there was more to the story than that. So I was a 
  little pleased with myself when I learned later that Tonya and Adam 
  had each written two separate songs, and then when they were putting 
  TidBITS together they realized that they could glue them together. I 
  keep forgetting who wrote which part.

  Anyway. If you'd told me way back then that I would one day count 
  Adam and Tonya as friends, and moreover that I'd be asked to 
  contribute a little piece of my own to commemorate TidBITS's 
  anniversary, I would have told you that you were nuts. It's just one 
  of a thousand little miracles that I've encountered in my career. 
  Congratulations, you two.

  [Andy Ihnatko writes about technology for the Chicago Sun-Times, 
  does a vast number of other things, and long ago moved up from being 
  the Macintosh world's 42nd most-beloved industry personality.]


**Chuck Joiner** -- TidBITS at twenty? Is that even possible? There 
  are very, very few things in any category that have been part of my 
  life for twenty years. Whether I outgrew them, lost interest, or 
  they closed up or lost their relevance, they just aren't there any 
  longer. TidBITS is a notable exception. Adam, Tonya and the entire 
  crew have maintained not only relevance, but also a standard of 
  consistent excellence while growing and evolving with the changes in 
  the world of Apple technology and beyond. Their unique blend of tech 
  reporting, insight and personal experiences set TidBITS apart early 
  on, and continue to make it one of the few truly must-read resources 
  for Apple product users of every stripe. Thanks for a great twenty 
  years - and over one thousand issues - of useful, interesting, and 
  thought-provoking information.

  [Chuck Joiner is the indefatigable mastermind behind the 
  MacNotables, MacVoices, and MacJury podcasts.]


**Greg Joswiak** -- Wow! It's mind-boggling that TidBITS is turning 
  20. I remember when I first discovered TidBITS in the early 1990s 
  and thinking of it as an unbelievably timely, informative, 
  authoritative, and classy publication. I couldn't wait to get each 
  issue to stay up on the happenings in our beloved Mac community. 
  Little did I realize that Adam and team were inventing the future 
  with TidBITS long years before any of us would ever use the word 
  "blog." But more importantly, they were also part of the fabric and 
  soul of our community. We've all been through a lot with each other. 
  And like a good friend, through good times and bad, TidBITS was 
  always there for us. Never getting into the muck, always staying 
  true to the TidBITS mission to keep us up on the latest news and 
  info. Now 20 years later, TidBITS hasn't skipped a beat and is every 
  bit as timely, informative, authoritative, and classy!

  Congrats on your first 20 years. And THANK YOU to the entire team at 
  TidBITS.

  [Greg Joswiak is Apple's Vice President of iPod and iPhone Product 
  Marketing.]


**Paul Kafasis** -- I've been reading TidBITS for years and years, and 
  it's the source of some of the absolutely most thoughtful, in-depth 
  writing on the Mac.

  When our products get reviewed in TidBITS, we know someone has spent 
  time and energy to use and understand the product. On the Web, 
  amidst hundreds of sites which offer little new, that sort of effort 
  has grown rare. TidBITS brings depth to everything it covers.

  [Paul Kafasis is the CEO and Lackey of Rogue Amoeba Software.]


**Jonathan Kahn** -- I believe I first encountered TidBITS in the 
  early 1990s in the Aladdin Systems days. Leonard Rosenthol 
  introduced us at a Macworld Expo. I also remember that we really 
  felt as a company that we'd made the big time the first time TidBITS 
  wrote about us. It was through TidBITS that I learned about Chad 
  Magendanz's ShrinkWrap, then a shareware product that we ended up 
  buying, and which I used to make a lot of disk images back then. I 
  also remember how TidBITS helped us out during the years, giving us 
  advice on our products, acting as a sounding board, and providing 
  insight on where the Mac was moving. That was especially helpful 
  during the launch of StuffIt 5.0, where your advice helped us get 
  though the switch from the .sit format to .sitx format.

  [Jonathan Kahn is the Executive Vice President & General Manager 
  Productivity & Graphics Group at Smith Micro; he was formerly the 
  president of Aladdin Systems and Allume.]


**Paul Kent** -- In the same way people have favorite music that 
  serves as the soundtrack of their lives, TidBITS has been a 
  constant, trusted thread that has chronicled the world of Apple 
  technology. The first time Adam spoke for me was at Mactivity '93, 
  shortly after "Internet Starter Kit for Macintosh" came out. That 
  seminal work informed the tone of his early presentations and 
  mirrored the tone of TidBITS - always clear, concise, and 
  compassionate, but never condescending. It's an inclusive tone that 
  fosters community and makes us all feel that we're exploring the 
  world of technology together. 18 years and several dozen 
  presentations later, TidBITS continues to serve its readership with 
  the spirit of the original Mac community and the vibrancy of our 
  current world. Onward to 2,048!

  [Paul Kent founded the Mactivity series of conferences and is now 
  General Manager of Macworld Expo for IDG World Expo.]


**Shawn King** -- TidBITS this, TidBITS that... blah, blah, blah....

  My entire life for the past 17 years is Adam Engst's fault.

  I was a poor starving college student, trying to find a job with my 
  (to this day) meager skills. But I was really good at talking and 
  explaining things to people and someone told me I should be a 
  computer trainer.

  "This Internet thing is going to be huge. You should look into 
  that."

  My local bookstore had a copy of Adam's "Internet Starter Kit for 
  Macintosh." $50 (Canadian). Gulp. I sadly spent my beer money on it 
  and took it home, devouring it over the weekend. Installed the 
  software and BOOM! A whole new world of information opened up to me.

  Thanks to that book and TidBITS, I looked like a _genius_, and those 
  of you who know me know how hard that is to accomplish. I could get 
  fellow Mac users on the Internet with ease, troubleshoot their 
  problems and tell them about cool software, hardware, tips, tricks 
  and information - all things I gleaned from TidBITS. And better yet, 
  they would _pay_ me to talk to them!

  A couple of years go by and I'm starting this little "Internet 
  radio" show. I scraped up enough money to go to a Macworld Expo and 
  got to meet Adam and Tonya. Now, we Canadians are generally a 
  reserved, reticent folk, not given to public displays of fanboyism, 
  but I just had to tell Adam how much I appreciated his work and how 
  much he had (unknowingly and unwittingly) contributed to my career.

  I fully expected Adam to dismiss me breezily, but he stood there for 
  10 minutes as we talked Mac stuff. He introduced me to Tonya (who I 
  still have a little crush on to this day) and wished me well with my 
  new show.

  I could not have been more impressed - I've always been impressed 
  with the style and quality of the writing in TidBITS - but it was at 
  that moment I realized why. It's because Adam and Tonya _are_ 
  impressive, and they imbue everything they do with passion, 
  intelligence, and respect, and yet still keep a sense of joy and 
  excitement about their lives, both professionally and personally.

  I am very proud to have been, to my knowledge, the only person to 
  get Adam to curse during a live broadcast, but I'm even more proud 
  to call them both my friends.

  Here's to 20 more years of being who you are, Adam and Tonya!

  [Shawn King is the host of Your Mac Life and is the original 
  Internet Mac broadcaster.]


**Ted Landau** -- I don't recall when I first discovered TidBITS - 
  although I am sure it was very early on. 

  My more distinct memory is when I first became aware of Adam's 
  "Internet Starter Kit for Macintosh." At the time, I was using AOL 
  or CompuServe as my main gateway to the Internet. These services 
  seemed _so_ much better than dealing with all the hassles that were 
  inherent with what the Internet Starter Kit described. I just didn't 
  understand what was getting Adam so excited, or what was making his 
  book so popular. At the time, I would have placed bets that AOL or 
  something like it would keep ascending while the stuff Adam was 
  promoting would fade into oblivion. 

  It's a good thing no one was taking my bets or I'd be out a lot of 
  money. Clearly, Adam and Tonya had their fingers on the pulse of 
  where things were headed. They still do. Congratulations on 20 years 
  of leading the way. 

  [Ted Landau is the king of Macintosh troubleshooting, having founded 
  MacFixIt and written numerous books and articles on the topic. His 
  most recent title for Take Control is "Take Control of iPhone OS 
  3."]


**Pat Lee** -- I started reading TidBITS back in 1992. I had just 
  joined Dantz Development, the makers of DiskFit Pro and Retrospect 
  backup software, and like most other small companies at the time we 
  had a single "Internet-accessible" email address to the outside 
  world. Chris Holmes, who also worked in our tech support team at the 
  time, was responsible for distributing TidBITS to the rest of the 
  company.

  It's funny looking back now on those articles that TidBITS wrote 
  about Retrospect and transparent file compression software (see 
  "Retrospect and Compression Software," 25 May 1992). Does anyone 
  else remember using Salient's AutoDoubler or Alysis's More Disk 
  Space to get the most use out of our 40 MB (that's right, MB not GB) 
  hard drives? Now 2 TB hard disks cost only about $150.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/3074>

  I first met Tonya and Adam at Macworld Expo back in the mid-1990s 
  and looked forward to seeing them every year at Dantz's Macworld 
  parties at the Thirsty Bear and then keeping in touch with them over 
  email.

  At VMware, it has been great collaborating with Adam, Tonya, and Joe 
  Kissell on two "Take Control of VMware Fusion" ebooks. They truly 
  get what Mac users are looking for, and I am glad we can work 
  together to make life even easier for VMware Fusion customers.

  I look forward to continued years of reading TidBITS, Take Control 
  ebooks, and whatever great new ideas Adam and Tonya come up that 
  make life as a Mac user even better!

  [Pat Lee is Director of Personal Desktop Products at VMware.]


**Peter N Lewis** -- The first email I can find from Adam was in 
  August 1993, when he asked me, John Norstad and Steve Dorner to tech 
  edit the MacTCP chapter of "Internet Starter Kit for Macintosh." But 
  I'd known of TidBITS since November 1991, when I received a report 
  from one of its readers that my DeHQX 2.0 reported an error decoding 
  issue #95 of TidBITS [which was then a stuffed, binhexed HyperCard 
  stack -Adam].

  I'm always pleased to see any mention or review in TidBITS because 
  TidBITS has always been so discerning - anyone can get a mention on 
  any of the various press release republishing sites, but only 
  programs that TidBITS folks actually care about appear in TidBITS, 
  which I think is where it gets a lot of its value. The first time I 
  remember being reviewed in TidBITS was in "Anarchie Rules" (31 
  January 1994) - an article that has Adam raving about the value of 
  URLs - at that point a new idea! 

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/2244>

  It also includes the comment, "I'm looking forward to the day when 
  you can select a URL in TidBITS, hit a hot key or select an item 
  from a menu, and have Anarchie snag the file for you instantly." 
  Later in 1994, Quinn and I answered Adam's desire with the Internet 
  Config utility, which was later rolled in to Mac OS by Apple (see 
  "Internet Config Ships," 5 December 1994).

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/1718>

  Congrats on 20 magical years! It is fantastic to see TidBITS still 
  going strong, even while many other publishing companies are 
  struggling - a true testament to the value of quality journalism and 
  tenacity - well done!

  [Peter N Lewis is the founder of Stairways Software and is 
  well-known in the Macintosh Internet world for programs such as 
  Anarchie (which became Interarchy and was bought by Nolobe), 
  Internet Config, and FTPd. He also played a pivotal role in the 
  founding of Kagi, and now publishes the macro utility Keyboard 
  Maestro.]

  [Peter said he couldn't remember when we first met, but it's one of 
  our most cherished stories, so I can't resist sharing. In June 1994, 
  Peter sent me email asking if I was going to Mactivity that year so 
  we could meet up. I had a conflict, but since we had corresponded 
  online a bit by then, I sent what I thought was a throwaway social 
  gesture, and invited Peter to visit if he was going to be up in 
  Seattle (Mactivity was in California). I didn't understand that 
  young Australians are among the world's most enthusiastic travelers, 
  so I was somewhat surprised when Peter asked if July 12th through 
  17th was OK. I'd offered, so I couldn't say no, and I still remember 
  telling Tonya that I'd accidentally invited someone we'd never met 
  to stay with us for five days. Ever practical, she asked how old he 
  was (our age) and what he ate (everything). The visit was a smashing 
  success, and subsequent years saw many of Peter's Mac friends from 
  Australia coming through, and we remain friends with all of them. So 
  much so that we arranged to be in Perth in 1998 for Peter's 30th 
  birthday party. -Adam]


**Jean MacDonald** -- Two particular articles from last year come to 
  mind whenever I think of TidBITS. Matt Neuburg's "ClickToFlash 
  Spiffs the Safari Experience" (28 May 2009) changed my 
  computer-using life! I cannot use a browser without ClickToFlash 
  installed anymore. I had no idea how much Flash was embedded in the 
  Web pages I visited. Matt's article explained how it worked and how 
  to install it so well, I shared that link with everyone I knew. And 
  I got so many thanks for doing so.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10303>

  And on the lighter side, I was amused when Jeff Carlson and Glenn 
  Fleishman approached me about doing an April Fools Day article about 
  a rift between our company founders, resulting in a spin-off called 
  FrownOnMyMac. We had never done anything like that before. I was a 
  little nervous about proposing it to Philip and Greg since we're 
  careful not to do anything that might tarnish our reputation. But I 
  trusted Jeff and Glenn to do it well. The resulting piece - 
  "FrownOnMyMac Fills New Mac Niches," 1 April 2009 - was very amusing 
  and inspired me to create a mock Web page for the fake company. And 
  only one person came up to me at Macworld that year to say he heard 
  that Greg had left the company...

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10187>

  [Jean MacDonald is a partner at Mac utility developer SmileOnMyMac 
  and a really good sport when it comes to April Fools jokes.]


**Jim Matthews** -- I started reading TidBITS when it was a HyperCard 
  stack, and I think I first heard about it on the Info-Mac mailing 
  list. TidBITS came from Cornell, Info-Mac from Stanford, Eudora from 
  the University of Illinois, and I was working on Fetch at Dartmouth. 
  At that time the Mac Internet community was primarily an 
  academia-based phenomenon, just starting to break out into the wider 
  world.

  One of the things that made that breakout possible was Adam's 
  "Internet Starter Kit for Macintosh." There had been a couple of 
  other Internet books before, but Adam's was the first to give you 
  everything you needed: knowledge, hand-holding, and software - 
  including a copy of Apple's elusive MacTCP! - to get onto the net. 
  Seeing "Internet Starter Kit for Macintosh" on the shelves at 
  Borders was a revelation, an unmistakable sign that the world was 
  about to change.

  One thing that hasn't changed is TidBITS's approach to journalism; 
  it has remained remarkably scrupulous, patient, and devoted to clear 
  explanations for a confusing and confused world. TidBITS is an 
  Internet treasure.

  [Jim Matthews created Fetch, one of the first file transfer programs 
  for the Mac, while working at Dartmouth College in 1989. In 2000, 
  Jim used some of his winnings from "Who Wants to Be a Millionaire" 
  to buy Fetch's source code from Dartmouth and form Fetch Softworks.]


**Kirk McElhearn** -- I bought my first Mac in 1991; a PowerBook 100. 
  Shortly thereafter, I started buying a French Mac magazine (I live 
  in France) that came with a floppy disk of freeware and shareware. 
  One thing it had, with every issue, was a copy of TidBITS. In part 
  because of TidBITS, I continued to buy that magazine for years, and 
  TidBITS kept me up-to-date on the kind of news that the French 
  magazine didn't report.

  Some years later, I started contributing articles to TidBITS, and 
  one article led to a Macworld editor contacting me, asking me to 
  write about a specific program that I had reviewed in TidBITS for a 
  feature article. Since then, I have become a Senior Contributor for 
  Macworld, and I can only say that TidBITS - and Adam's personal help 
  in making that Macworld connection - got my writing career going.

  I don't contribute to TidBITS as much as I used to, but I read it 
  every week, and recognize it as one of the essential reads for Mac 
  users.

<http://db.tidbits.com/author/Kirk+McElhearn>

  Congratulations to Adam and Tonya on 20 years!

  [Kirk McElhearn has written several Take Control titles, numerous 
  Macworld articles, and a variety of print books.]


**Don Mayer** -- I've been reading TidBITS for nearly all of its 20 
  years and in addition to the incredibly valuable tips, analysis and 
  reviews, TidBITS was directly responsible for the launch of my own 
  electronic newsletter, Kibbles & Bytes. You see, Adam and Tonya had 
  DealBITS going for awhile and as a sponsor we would include some 
  offers for TidBITS readers. When they put that incarnation of 
  DealBITS on hiatus, I decided to launch a weekly e-newsletter. 
  Naturally, Small Dog Electronics called it Kibbles & Bytes and 
  25,000 subscribers and 12 years later it is an integral part of our 
  business.

  Happy Birthday TidBITS, you rock!

  [Don Mayer is the CEO of Small Dog Electronics, and he contributed 
  this from his iPad while travelling in Hong Kong.]


**Kee Nethery** -- Back in the old days of Hayes 2400 baud modems, I 
  first ran into TidBITS on a floppy disk from BMUG (Berkeley 
  Macintosh Users Group). Back then floppies were the primary 
  distribution media for bits. It would be extremely difficult to 
  pinpoint the first TidBITS article that saved my butt. Even today in 
  the era of online search, having TidBITS as a source of vetted 
  Macintosh information is valuable. TidBITS was essentially the first 
  Macintosh blog, before the term was invented and before the Internet 
  was accessible to mere mortals.

  In the beginning, TidBITS was the first and best source for details 
  on any new Mac-related development. With Twitter and other modern 
  developments, TidBITS might no longer be the first outlet with news, 
  but it certainly has the best set of useful information. TidBITS 
  explains what the situation used to be, what it is now, how that 
  impacts the technology, how the technology impacts the users, and 
  what developers have come up with to address the situation. In a 
  world of Sound Bite News, a TidBITS article contains actionable 
  information.

  [Kee Nethery is the CEO of Kagi, the ecommerce company he founded in 
  1994 after leaving Apple, where he specified and delivered the Apple 
  Internet Server Solution for the Web.]


**Alan Oppenheimer** -- It's hard to remember back that far, but I 
  think I first learned about TidBITS when I met Adam. I was, in 
  hindsight, somewhat isolated at Apple, and didn't get out into the 
  general Mac community much, despite, for instance, my running a 
  working group in the IETF and talking at WWDC. So it wasn't until I 
  left Apple and started Open Door that I began to get a real world 
  perspective. I met Adam and TidBITS in early January 1995, at 
  Macworld Expo, when I launched Open Door to do ARA-based dialup 
  Internet access. Someone at the show, possibly Kee Nethery, with 
  whom I had worked at Apple, mentioned TidBITS, Adam, and the 
  Netter's Dinner. I believe it was, amazingly, also the first time I 
  heard about Eudora! Getting out of Apple opened a whole new world 
  for me, quite literally.

  Some of TidBITS's reviews of our products have certainly helped. Not 
  just to let more people know about the products, but also because it 
  feels good to get recognition, both from TidBITS and from your 
  readers. 

  I'd like to see TidBITS continue to evolve with Apple, and add more 
  coverage, as you've been doing, of the iPhone and iPad. It was so 
  great of that reader to sponsor iPads for the entire staff. That 
  must have felt good.

  [Alan Oppenheimer is President and founder of Open Door Networks, 
  and one of the creators of AppleTalk.]


**Naomi Pearce** -- Do you remember when the Internet essentially 
  meant text: files, email, and such, rather than "the Web"? TidBITS 
  started as interesting nuggets of text, and became like a bible to 
  me, as a searchable source I go to over and over, and can trust. 
  Being on the flip side of working with the writers can be 
  non-trivial - TidBITS writers ask tough questions - and that's 
  definitely the right approach.

  Take Control has been useful too. I still don't know how Intel's 
  employee #4 (Les Vadász) ended up in my mailbox asking Mac switcher 
  questions. But after exhausting what I knew and hitting the wall, 
  the Take Control ebooks came to the rescue, and the price was 
  tailor-made for gifting.

  I remember meeting Adam and Tonya way back, before a single gray 
  hair, before any young'uns, before GeekCruises, way, way back when 
  Jerry Garcia was still alive. Heck, it may have been back when Bill 
  Graham was alive, but I can't remember that far. It was back when 
  the Internet provided fast delivery of chunks of text, before it was 
  about the Web and video on demand. These chunks of text were the 
  little tidbits of info. Then, nobody had to tell you to keep it 
  short, or to define "short" as 140 characters. Now, a bazillion 
  tidbits of helpful TidBITS later, it's a weekly update _and_ a 
  repository of many thousands of individual articles for that 
  emergency search. It's only in retrospect that it looks like a long 
  time; and allofthesudden that Steve Martin line "some of these 
  houses are over Twenty Years Old" is, and isn't, really funny.

  [Naomi Pearce is the owner of Pearce Communications, one of the most 
  highly respected public relations firms in the Macintosh industry.]


**Chris Pepper** -- In my mind, TidBITS is inextricably linked to 
  Usenet, Info-Mac, and Eudora. It's good that at least one of those 
  four has survived and prospered. I don't recall when I first 
  encountered TidBITS, but I know I printed TidBITS and the Info-Mac 
  Digest on a high-speed dot-matrix line printer (wide green-and-white 
  striped paper) at Rockefeller University in the 1992-1995 period. It 
  was invaluable there for supporting Macs - my first job. 

  My most memorable TidBITS moment came when Adam let me post a job 
  listing in TidBITS Talk, and I not only filled the job, but made two 
  good friends in the process. Appearing in articles was also very 
  cool, and I made another friend that way. Being written about (rare) 
  is more fun and surprising than writing for TidBITS, which is more 
  significant but much more work! The most trepidation I've felt was 
  in speaking carefully but honestly about relatives for a piece on 
  family tech support (see "InterviewBITS: Family Tech Support," 23 
  April 2007). 

<http://db.tidbits.com/author/Chris+Pepper>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8954>

  TidBITS remains the best resource for Mac information that I'm aware 
  of, with a long and illustrious history. It broke new ground in 
  publishing, while many readers have been largely unaware of just how 
  unusual TidBITS has been. 

  [Chris Pepper is a system administrator in New York City who has 
  contributed a number of articles to TidBITS over the years and whose 
  eagle eyes significantly reduce the number of typos and other errors 
  in TidBITS articles. He has also contributed feedback on numerous 
  Take Control ebooks.]


**David Pogue** -- Congratulations on TidBITS #1024! I've always 
  appreciated TidBITS's insight, technical accuracy, and measured 
  opinions; the only thing I don't appreciate is how old this 
  anniversary suddenly makes me feel. :-)

  Even so, I'm looking forward to the next 1,024 issues!

  [David Pogue is Tech Columnist for The New York Times.]


**Jeff Porten** -- I found TidBITS in a grad school computer lab in 
  late 1990 or early 1991. Early enough that it was still in HyperCard 
  format, and "Hey, let's sit down and read all the back issues" 
  wasn't a particularly nutty thing to do. I can't remember when 
  TidBITS switched to setext, but yeah, I had Easy View to format it 
  all pretty. I also liked the option of reading it in pine on the lab 
  VT100 terminals - for some reason, they had trouble with HyperCard 
  stacks.

  I first met Adam and Tonya at my first Macworld Expo, which was the 
  last one in Boston. Everyone was treating it like a wake, but I was 
  psyched to meet people. I sat next to them at lunch, with these 
  first impressions: Tonya is short, and Adam is completely insane. 
  (He was training for some kind of double marathon up every hill in 
  Ithaca, hopping backward in the dark in snowshoes. At least that's 
  how I remember it.)

  More importantly, my _other_ first impression is that they seemed as 
  happy to meet me as vice versa, and immediately made me feel like 
  we'd been friends since I downloaded that first HyperCard stack.

  I became a Mac and Internet consultant in 1993, catching the very 
  early wave of clients when online meant either AOL or MacPPP. I 
  think I urged around 1,000 people to subscribe to TidBITS, and told 
  most of them that Adam's "Internet Starter Kit for Macintosh" was 
  the best way to avoid tossing the PowerBook out a window. I value 
  both reading and writing for TidBITS for the same reason I always 
  have: it's the club with all of the smart, fun kids.

<http://db.tidbits.com/author/Jeff+Porten>

  See y'all for issue #2,048. You should release it in HyperCard. 
  Preferably with HyperCard itself.

  [Jeff Porten has served as a roving correspondent for TidBITS at a 
  number of trade shows, blogs for MacUser, and may one day finish a 
  Take Control book.]


**Quinn** -- My memory of all things non-technical is, as always, very 
  hazy. However, I dug through my old email archives to look for our 
  earliest communications and I discovered the following letter to the 
  editor I wrote back in 1992. It's astonishing how closely history 
  has repeated itself with the release of the iPad.

  In response to Adam's line "Despite this move away from numbers, the 
  Mac is a computer, and no one pretends otherwise." in "Apple Newtons 
  II" (15 June 1992), I commented:

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/3052>

  "This may be true _now_ but in 1984 I don't think that was what 
  Apple intended. Remember _the_ advert. The key speech therein is:

    On January 24th, Apple Computer will introduce Macintosh.
    And you'll see why 1984 won't be like "1984."

  "No mention of the Macintosh being a computer there. There's also 
  lots of other evidence that the Mac was never intended to be a real 
  computer. 'Welcome to Macintosh' proclaims it every time you boot. 
  Macintosh doesn't just mean the hardware or the software but the 
  _entire system_. This was Jobs's vision, the Macintosh as a 'bicycle 
  for the mind.' Of course, there's a fine line between vision and 
  hallucination. :-)

  "With the Newton, Sculley is trying to do in 1992 exactly what Jobs 
  tried to do in 1984. The only question is, will he do a better job?"


**Drummond Reed** -- TidBITS has the distinction of being the entire 
  launch strategy for one of the first pure Internet software products 
  back in 1993. The Internet Adapter (TIA), which solved the problem 
  of how users with a text-only SLIP connection could use the 
  newfangled graphical Mosaic Web browser, was sold exclusively online 
  (digital keys for unlocking the product were delivered in email). 

  So it made sense to launch it via a review by Adam in TidBITS and 
  let word of mouth spread from there. It was so successful that 
  Adam's article was cross-posted to two dozen mailing lists within 12 
  hours, and it generated over $1 million of TIA sales in the next 6 
  months. I wouldn't be working in the Internet business today were it 
  not for Adam and Tonya and TidBITS.

  [Drummond Reed is Executive Director of the Information Card 
  Foundation and Open Identity Exchange, and he's a pioneer in digital 
  addressing and linking technologies with an emphasis on online 
  identity.]


**Michael T. Rose** -- In 1990, as a very green intern, I was among 
  the few, slightly nervous Mac-heads in Time Inc.'s manufacturing and 
  distribution group. My boss, the late Dennis A. Chesnel, was 
  encouraging us to explore the brave new world of 
  professional-quality desktop publishing for the magazine business, 
  and I was fortunate enough to have both a Mac IIfx and a NeXT Cube 
  competing for real estate on my desk.

  I'm not sure whether it was Dennis who first forwarded me an issue 
  of TidBITS; it might have been Chris Green, the database lead at 
  Fortune Magazine... but I definitely remember trying to figure out 
  what "setext" was. Took a while, too; this was pre-Google, in the 
  days of Gopher and WAIS, when 2400-baud modems roamed the land. I 
  read about PostScript headers, RAM Doubler, and 32-bit 
  compatibility; I read about SCSI termination and ADB, printer fonts 
  and INITs. Good stuff.

  My readership has waxed and waned over the years, but it has always 
  been a pleasant moment to see TidBITS land in my inbox, forwarded or 
  printed or subscribed, with savvy tips and solid information. It's 
  hard to believe it has been 20 years.

  Congratulations Tonya and Adam, congratulations extended TidBITS 
  family, and congratulations loyal readers - here's to the next 
  twenty years!

  [Michael T. Rose is an editor at The Unofficial Apple Weblog 
  (TUAW).]


**Leonard Rosenthol** -- Has it really been 20 years?! No wonder I 
  feel old. I don't recall exactly how I first stumbled across 
  TidBITS, but apparently I sent Adam email about screen savers in 
  July 1990 (see "Save Our Screens," 30 July 1990), and "Macworld 
  Impressions" (13 August 1990) documents the first time we met in 
  person - in the wonderful heat of Macworld Boston with me doing 
  software demos of MicroPhone II talking to CompuServe! That 
  certainly would have been the first of many (many!) Macworld Expos 
  during which we hung out, not to mention those sleepless days (or 
  were they nights?) at MacHack. Adam and Tonya were always great 
  sounding boards for the various software projects that I was 
  involved in over the years - MicroPhone, StuffIt, CyberFinder, 
  SITcomm, PDF Enhancer, and many, many more - all of which got fair 
  and impartial reviews (no matter how much we tried to bribe them!) 
  that helped make the software better the next time around. But my 
  favorite article, of course, has always been "SEx and the Single 
  Archive" (18 July 1994).

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/3805>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/3795>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/1926>

  Watching the Mac industry grow up with you guys was wonderful - it's 
  one of the things I do miss about my work outside the industry over 
  the last 10 years. I don't know if you guys really want to do this 
  for another 20 years - but whatever life brings you it should be 
  great!

  [Leonard Rosenthol was developing Macintosh software before TidBITS 
  was born, and is now PDF Standards Architect at Adobe Systems.]


**Steve Sande** -- My first Mac was a 512K model purchased in the 
  latter part of 1984. By 1986, I was the sysop of a bulletin board 
  system here in the Denver area called MAGIC. In 1994, after seeing a 
  demonstration of Mosaic at WWDC, I decided I needed to get onto this 
  Internet thingie. A quick jaunt to my local bookstore netted me a 
  book by some guy named Adam Engst. It was called "Internet Starter 
  Kit for Macintosh" and helped me begin my journey in this strange 
  little cyber world that we all inhabit.

  One of the first Web sites I visited was TidBITS, and to this day I 
  still visit the site regularly as a resource that's chock full of 
  information and great writing. About five years ago, I noticed that 
  Adam and Tonya were starting to publish ebooks, so I submitted a 
  book that I had self-published, and to my amazement they wanted it 
  as part of the Take Control series. Through Tonya's patient editing, 
  I learned a lot about writing that I never would have picked up 
  elsewhere.

  Many congratulations to the entire TidBITS staff on your 2^10th 
  issue!

  [Steve Sande is a Take Control author and blogger for The Unofficial 
  Apple Weblog (TUAW).]


**Greg Scown** -- My greatest TidBITS-related delight was to meet 
  Adam, Tonya, and Tristan on the show floor of Macworld 2009 at the 
  SmileOnMyMac booth for Tristan's 10th birthday. As a long-time 
  TidBITS reader, I'd read lots about Tristan, so it was really fun to 
  meet him along with his parents and in the always interesting 
  environment of the Macworld show floor. I hope he enjoyed our happy 
  birthday wishes.

  [Greg Scown is a co-founder and partner at Mac utility developer 
  SmileOnMyMac.]


**Sanford Selznick** -- I first encountered TidBITS in 1875. I was 
  working as a telegraph operator in Missouri. If I remember 
  correctly, Adam's new printing press with continuous roll paper was 
  giving him fits. But TidBITS's articles about photography of the day 
  were incredibly instructional. I'll never forget when Eadweard 
  Muybridge himself came in to send a telegram. While he was writing 
  out his communication, he spotted one of TidBITS's articles on the 
  counter. Soon afterwards Muybridge proved to the world that when a 
  horse gallops, all four legs are actually off the ground at the same 
  time.

  TidBITS is one of the few technology news sources on the wire that 
  maintains its readers' trust with incredibly well-researched 
  articles, complete with sources. The impact that TidBITS has had on 
  the past is clear. Who would even know about the telegraph without 
  it? But the future... I wonder. What other technology could possibly 
  be invented?

  Thank you for TidBITS!

  [Sanford Selznick is the founder of Selznick Scientific Software, 
  best known for the PasswordWallet family of programs. He's also the 
  joker who once sent us a gallon of amazing kosher dill pickles after 
  hearing Adam's "Hacking the Press" talk at MacHack.]


**David Shayer** -- I've been reading TidBITS since it was sent out by 
  carrier pigeon. In those days it arrived once a week, with all the 
  latest Mac news. It was far more timely than the monthly Macworld 
  and MacUser magazines, with their long lead times.

  When I finally wrote an article for TidBITS, it was great (see 
  "Shootout at the Disk Repair Corral," 24 November 2003)! Instant 
  fame and fortune, people stopped me on the street and asked for my 
  autograph. But Adam tricked me. He said writing an article wasn't 
  much work. Turned out there was a lot of research and fact checking 
  involved. [True, but that was a most amazing article, and one that 
  received a vast number of positive reactions. -Adam]

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/7451>

  I value the news and reviews in TidBITS because I know they're 
  honest and unbiased. Probably the single most useful article I've 
  read in TidBITS was Joe Kissell's explanation of how to make Apple's 
  Mail program work well with Gmail and IMAP (see "Achieving Email 
  Bliss with IMAP, Gmail, and Apple Mail," 2 May 2009). It saved me 
  many hours.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10253>

  [David "if you're using white earbuds, you're running my code" 
  Shayer is a long-time Mac developer acclaimed for his knowledge of 
  filesystems thanks to his work on the low-level disk editor Sedit, 
  the disk-repair program Public Utilities, and three versions of 
  Norton Utilities for Macintosh.]


**Peter Sichel** -- I first learned about TidBITS from a colleague at 
  Digital Equipment Corporation around 1993. I used Macs extensively 
  at Digital and became part of a small group of Mac fans at an 
  increasingly PC-dominated company. Talking one day with my fellow 
  Mac-heads, we lamented the lack of a software IP router for the Mac. 
  We all had several machines at home and increasingly needed them to 
  be on the Internet. I knew from Apple that more than half of all Mac 
  users owned more than one Mac, and that TidBITS was being sent 
  weekly to over 50,000 subscribers who must therefore have Internet 
  access. From these numbers I concluded there was a market for at 
  least a few thousand software IP routers, so in 1996 I set off to 
  write one. In this way, TidBITS helped launch Sustainable Softworks 
  and IPNetRouter.

  TidBITS has always been about serving the Mac community by bringing 
  people and information together. Congratulations on reaching 20 
  years!

  [Peter Sichel is the founder of Sustainable Softworks and the 
  developer of IPNetRouterX, IPNetMonitorX, IPNetTunerX, KeyClick and 
  Phone Amego.]


**Rich Siegel** -- The TidBITS email newsletter has been a part of my 
  ongoing computing existence for longer than I can clearly recall. 
  According to Adam, our first in-person meeting was at a party "in a 
  pool hall, at Macworld Boston". Putting some equally fuzzy memories 
  together suggests that the place was Jillian's, and the year would 
  have been 1988, and the party was probably a Symantec company 
  function.

  A much more memorable occasion was the time that Adam and Tonya 
  drove the hundreds of miles from Ithaca to Boston, to attend a 
  dinner that we were throwing to celebrate the 10th anniversary of 
  the first commercial release of BBEdit. That was a lot of fun, and 
  it was that much more so because these two wonderful people made the 
  trip to be a part of it.

  Before then, since, and in between, I have always enjoyed the news 
  and reviews and analysis that TidBITS deposits in my inbox on a 
  continual basis. My thanks and congratulations to Adam and Tonya and 
  all of the TidBITS staff and contributors, for a great twenty years. 
  Here's to the next twenty!

  [Rich Siegel is the founder of Bare Bones Software and the creator 
  of BBEdit.]


**Jason Snell** -- I honestly can't remember how I first heard about 
  TidBITS, back in those strange days when the Internet was a big, 
  echoey room largely populated by people on university campuses. I 
  believe I heard about it from Geoff Duncan, a friend of Adam and 
  Tonya's (for his first article, see "Life in the Fast Lane," 11 July 
  1994) and later a TidBITS editor himself (announced in "New TidBITS 
  Managing Editor," 12 December 1994), who was also the co-editor of 
  InterText, an Internet-based short story magazine I had started in 
  1991.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/1936>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/1705>
<http://intertext.com/magazine/>

  In those days there was no Web to publish on, so we distributed 
  InterText via FTP, newsgroup posting, and email, and I soon 
  discovered that one of the only other publications out there back in 
  the early '90s was a newsletter about the Mac.

  A few years later, as an assistant editor at MacUser (I note that 
  Adam first mentioned me in "MacUser arrives on the Internet," 20 
  June 1994), I was asked to speak with several of my colleagues at a 
  meeting of a local Seattle-area Mac user group. The company paid to 
  fly a bunch of us up and put us up in a nice hotel (man, those were 
  the days!) and I got a chance to meet Geoff, Adam, and Tonya. It was 
  the beginning of a beautiful friendship. Also, the rental car 
  company had inexplicably given me a Miata, and I remember Tonya 
  being very enthusiastic about getting a ride in that crazy little 
  car through the streets of greater Seattle.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/1965>

  These days I frequently receive email from people who aspire to 
  write about technology in general (and Apple in particular) for a 
  living, asking me how to get started. One of my most common 
  suggestions is to try to break into TidBITS. Back when I was 
  starting at MacUser, we didn't have a Web site for me to use as an 
  outlet - just a very limited number of pages in print. So I wrote a 
  couple of articles for TidBITS on topics that interested me (and the 
  editors of TidBITS, thankfully). Apparently in 1995 I was interested 
  in Macintosh mailing list programs ("Making a List: Mac List Servers 
  Arrive," 24 July 1995) and running classic video games on a Mac 
  ("Retro Software: Everything Old Is New Again," 18 December 1995).

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/1396>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/1200>

  These days, any TidBITS reader who pays close attention to the pages 
  of Macworld and Macworld.com will discover a whole lot of familiar 
  names. TidBITS is a magnet for quality technology writers, and we've 
  found numerous key Macworld contributors through their excellent 
  work for TidBITS.

  It's a colossal understatement to say that things have changed a bit 
  since TidBITS and InterText were two of the handful of publications 
  on the Internet. But TidBITS has adapted to the way the world has 
  changed. Today, quite honestly, I don't find myself reading TidBITS 
  issues much - mostly because I've already read most of the articles 
  on tidbits.com! But that's not a bad thing. Some people want to get 
  their information in a periodical, while others want it right away 
  on the Web. As someone who edits a monthly print magazine and a Web 
  site, I understand the importance of having both.

  Here's to another few decades - or kilo-issues or whatever other 
  format gets invented - of great, balanced, sober, hype-free, and 
  useful TidBITS content.

  [Jason Snell is VP/Editorial Director of Macworld.]


**Tom Standage** -- I've read TidBITS since the early 1990s, when I 
  started using Macs. It must have been 1994, I suppose, when I first 
  got Internet access... but you guys were on CompuServe before that, 
  right? Those were the days of the Quadra and MacWEEK. Centuries ago.

  I got my start in journalism freelancing for MacUser UK, among other 
  publications. 15 years ago, I even wrote a piece for TidBITS about 
  lightweight text editors (see "Word 6.0 - NOT!," 10 April 1995). 
  Having since moved into mainstream tech journalism at The Economist 
  and then onto business writing more generally, I still enjoy reading 
  TidBITS every Tuesday morning with my coffee. I'm still a Mac user 
  after all these years, and I continue to do tech support for my 
  Mac-using family and friends.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/1535>

  The funny thing is that I still write about Apple from time to time 
  for The Economist - most recently, our cover on the iPad in January 
  ("The Book of Jobs"). And Glenn Fleishman writes for our Technology 
  Quarterly section sometimes. I relish the connection to the Mac 
  community that TidBITS provides. Keep up the good work! Loved the 
  iPad tips last week. You've done a good job of broadening your 
  coverage from the Mac to include other Apple products.

<http://www.economist.com/opinion/displaystory.cfm?story_id=15393377>

  [Tom Standage is the business affairs editor for The Economist.]


**James Thomson** -- I first came across TidBITS in the early 1990s, 
  alongside the Info-Mac Digest postings on comp.sys.mac.digest. For 
  our younger readers, that's a Usenet group - go look it up on your 
  iPads. I was an avid reader, as it was one of the few sources of Mac 
  journalism online.

  Tonya reviewed DragThing in "Desktop Launchers, Part IV" (22 May 
  1995), calling it a "a solid, easy, elegant application" - a quote I 
  was so pleased with that it remains on my Web site almost 15 years 
  later. Did I say 15 years? Okay, now I feel old... And PCalc was 
  originally released in 1991, I think, which means I'm only a year 
  behind TidBITS. 

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/1479>

  I remember meeting both Adam and Tonya at the post-WWDC parties held 
  by Rick Holzgrafe of Solitaire Till Dawn fame. A very young Tristan 
  was eating lemons from the tree, as if they were apples, and we 
  rubbed shoulders and ate pizza with luminaries such as Jason Snell, 
  Peter Lewis, and Quinn. Whatever happened to that Jason guy?

  Congratulations on your 20th anniversary, and thank you for all your 
  help and support over the years!

  [James Thomson is a long-time Mac developer based in Scotland and 
  founder of TLA Systems, which publishes DragThing and PCalc. In the 
  late 1990s, he was on the Mac OS X Finder team at Apple and was the 
  original engineer for the Dock.]


**Neil Ticktin** -- Wow, 20 years. TidBITS, Adam, and Tonya have been 
  part of the landscape for so long, I don't even remember when we 
  first met, or when TidBITS first appeared on my radar. One could 
  easily talk about the unbelievably well written content, or the 
  timeliness, reliability, and quality of our weekly glimpse into the 
  Apple community. But what strikes me most about Adam, Tonya, and the 
  rest of the team is how they stand out as people.

  Credibility, integrity, and honesty are the first words that come to 
  mind. It's so often that we see in the media, particularly the 
  general media, content slanted to serve the requests of an 
  advertiser, rather than that of the reader. TidBITS bucks that 
  trend, and I welcome reading the insights each issue.

  MacTech may be one of the oldest Web sites and publications in the 
  Mac market, but TidBITS is clearly the original and long-standing 
  trailblazer for Internet publications.

  Congratulations Adam, Tonya, and the entire TidBITS team!

  [Neil Ticktin is the publisher and editor-in-chief of MacTech 
  Magazine, MacTech.com, and MacNews.com.]


**Elsa Travisano** -- How long have I been reading TidBITS? Basically 
  forever. Has it really been twenty years?

  Adam and Tonya have been stalwart supporters of the Macintosh user 
  group community for as long as I can remember - as sought-after 
  speakers at User Group University and in the Apple User Group Lounge 
  at more Macworld Expos than I can count, by allowing user groups to 
  reprint TidBITS articles in their print newsletters, and as sponsors 
  of the generous and effective Take Control user group program that 
  provides review and raffle titles for user groups worldwide. How 
  thrilling it was to find out that they live only two hours from my 
  own user group, MUG ONE. To have a speaker of Adam's caliber in our 
  own upstate New York backyard is priceless, and he now presents to 
  MUG ONE every year.

  My favorite moment (of many) was having a quote from one of my Take 
  Control reviews used as a promotional pull-quote on their Web site.

  Best wishes for more decades of TidBITS goodness!

  [Elsa Travisano is President of MUG ONE and chair of the Apple User 
  Group Advisory Board.]


**Khoi Vinh** -- It's frightening to realize it's been so long, but 
  I've been reading TidBITS for 16 years now. It's a tremendous 
  comfort to see it landing in my inbox once a week, harkening back to 
  those dark days when the Macintosh seemed on the edge of death. 
  TidBITS was a great friend during that era, a reassuring reminder 
  that others out there shared my passion for what technology could do 
  if it was done superbly. Over the years I've turned to it again and 
  again, and it always rewards me with something new, something 
  unexpected, and, always, something really smart.

  Congrats, Adam, and for many more years to come!

  [Khoi Vinh is a graphic designer and the Design Director for 
  NYTimes.com.]


**Sharon Zardetto** -- It was at a Macworld Expo, for sure, but 
  Boston, San Francisco... there were so many that they've all run 
  together. I was either signing copies of "The Macintosh Bible" or 
  hanging out at the MacUser booth schmoozing with various writers and 
  editors when Adam and Tonya came up and introduced themselves. They 
  certainly looked like teenagers, though when I do the math, they 
  must have been a little bit older.

  I remember a slight stab of jealousy ("Wow, if only the Mac had been 
  invented when I was in college, what I could have done with it!"). 
  And when I saw Adam's "Internet Starter Kit for Macintosh" not long 
  thereafter in a bookstore, I thought, "Hey, I met that guy and his 
  wife!" and of course, I bought it. It's amazing how seldom, in the 
  small-ish "professional" Macintosh community, that our paths have 
  crossed physically over the years; equally amazing, and so 
  gratifying, is that electronic communications and personalities 
  being what they are, Adam and Tonya feel like friends, not just 
  colleagues.

  The early TidBITS publications: I remember thinking how dedicated 
  someone would have to be to do a plain-text, free newsletter on a 
  regular basis, and how odd it was to read large chunks of Mac 
  information on the screen instead of in print. Small chunks? Sure, I 
  was sysoping in the Mac forums on CompuServe. But the equivalent of 
  a newspaper article? TidBITS was my first exposure to that concept!

  1,024 issues? You've been planning this all along, haven't you?!

  [Sharon Zardetto is best known in the Macintosh world for writing 
  several editions of "The Macintosh Bible," but she has also authored 
  a number of Take Control titles and innumerable magazine articles 
  about the Mac over the years, including some for TidBITS.]

<http://db.tidbits.com/author/Sharon+Zardetto>

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11207#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/11207>


TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 19 April 2010
-------------------------------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11209>

**Mac OS X 10.6.3 Combo Update 1.1** -- Apple has updated the combo 
  updater for Mac OS X 10.6.3 (for details on that update, see "Mac OS 
  X 10.6.3 Update Delivers Range of Fixes," 29 March 2010). Although 
  Apple provided no details on what was changed, the only users who 
  need to consider installing it are those who updated from Mac OS X 
  10.6.0 using the 1.0 version of the Mac OS X 10.6.3 Update, build 
  10D573 (in other words, someone reinstalling Snow Leopard from 
  scratch and then updating to 10.6.3 in one step). Apple has also 
  released the tiny (635 KB) Mac OS X 10.6.3 Supplemental Update 1.0 
  solely via Software Update for these users. The combo updater is 
  available via the Apple Support Downloads page, and will be 
  presented by Software Update to those reinstalling Snow Leopard from 
  scratch. (Free, 785.29 MB)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1017>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11123>

  Read/post comments about Mac OS X 10.6.3 Combo Update 1.1.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11202#comments>


**Mac OS X Server 10.6.3 Combo Update 1.1** -- In addition to 
  releasing a new version of the Mac OS X 10.6.3 Update noted above, 
  Apple has updated the combo updater for Mac OS X Server 10.6.3. 
  (Free, 897.32 MB)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1019>

  Read/post comments about Mac OS X Server 10.6.3 Combo Update 1.1.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11203#comments>


**Security Update 2010-003 (Snow Leopard)** -- Apple has released 
  Security Update 2010-003 (Snow Leopard) to address a critical 
  vulnerability in the way Apple Type Services in Mac OS X 10.6 Snow 
  Leopard parses embedded fonts. Users who view or download any 
  documents containing maliciously crafted embedded fonts run a risk 
  of arbitrary code execution. The update addresses this issue by 
  improving index checking. This vulnerability was first demonstrated 
  by Charlie Miller at the Pwn2Own conference 20 days earlier, which 
  shows a reasonably quick response on Apple's part. The update 
  requires Mac OS X 10.6.3 and is available via Software Update and 
  the Apple Support Downloads page. (Free, 6.5 MB)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1029>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT4131>

  Read/post comments about Security Update 2010-003 (Snow Leopard).

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11199#comments>


**Security Update 2010-003 (Leopard)** -- Addressing the same critical 
  vulnerability noted above, Apple has also released Security Update 
  2010-003 (Leopard-Client). A nearly identical update - Security 
  Update 2010-003 (Leopard-Server) - is available for Leopard Server. 
  The update requires you to be running Mac OS X 10.5.8 and is 
  available via Software Update and the Apple Support Downloads page. 
  (Free, 218.6/379.5 MB)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT4131>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1027>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1028>

  Read/post comments about Security Update 2010-003 (Leopard).

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11201#comments>


**Server Admin Tools 10.6.3** -- Apple has rolled out its latest 
  collection of remote administration tools, documentation, and 
  utilities for Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard Server in its Server Admin 
  Tools 10.6.3 update. The update contains the latest versions of iCal 
  Server Utility, Podcast Composer, Server Admin, Server Monitor, 
  Server Preferences, System Image Utility, Workgroup Manager, and 
  Xgrid Admin. Changes include improved Server Admin performance on 
  IPv6 networks, increased support for late-2009 27-inch iMacs, and a 
  fix for an issue in Workgroup Manager that could cause a user's 
  primary shortname to be changed when adding or editing other 
  shortnames. Full release notes are available on Apple's Web site. 
  (Free, 236 MB)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1032>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT3931>

  Read/post comments about Server Admin Tools 10.6.3.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11200#comments>


**27-inch iMac EFI FW Update 1.0** -- Apple's recent EFI firmware 
  update targets 27-inch iMacs with quad-core Intel Core i5 and Core 
  i7 processors with two bug fixes that address issues with processor 
  loads and the backlit display. The first issue could cause high 
  processor loads when playing audio through the iMac's headphone 
  jack, while the second could prevent the display backlight from 
  powering on. To install the update, follow the instructions in the 
  updater application that launches automatically after the installer 
  has closed. More information regarding installing a firmware update 
  on an Intel-based Mac is available on Apple's Web site. The update 
  is available via Software Update and the Apple Support Downloads 
  page. (Free, 2.1 MB)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1031>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT4125>

  Apple has also released a minor SMC firmware update for 27-inch 
  iMacs that addresses unspecified compatibility issues regarding 
  Target Display mode. More information regarding installing SMC 
  firmware updates is available on Apple's Web site. That update is 
  also available via Software Update and the Apple Support Downloads 
  page. (Free, 397 KB)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1030>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT4117>

  Read/post comments about 27-inch iMac EFI FW Update 1.0.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11198#comments>


**MacBook Pro Software Update 1.3** -- Only a few days after the 
  announcement of the new MacBook Pro lineup, Apple released a 
  software update for the laptops. The update improves high-end 
  graphics performance, particularly as it relates to 
  resource-intensive video and gaming. The update also fixes a handful 
  of minor unspecified bugs. The hefty update is recommended for all 
  15- and 17-inch mid-2010 MacBook Pros, and is available via Software 
  Update or the Apple Support Downloads page. (Free, 258.32 MB)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1026>

  Read/post comments about MacBook Pro Software Update 1.3.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11197#comments>


**MobileMe Backup 3.2** -- Apple has released a minor update to 
  MobileMe Backup that purportedly improves overall reliability in 
  restoring from backup - though no specifics are provided in the 
  release notes - and introduces a feature that helps the program use 
  disk space more efficiently. That feature is called "recycling" and 
  amounts to the deleting of old backups to recover disk space. 
  Limited scheduling options are available to those backing up to hard 
  disk or optical discs; users backing up to iDisk do not have the 
  option of choosing when backups are recycled. Users may also choose 
  to disable recycling. More information on recycling is available on 
  Apple's Web site. The update is available via Software Update or the 
  Apple Support Downloads page. (Free, 6.73 MB)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1025>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT3991>

  Read/post comments about MobileMe Backup 3.2.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11193#comments>



ExtraBITS for 19 April 2010
---------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11208>

  While we were working on our 20th anniversary coverage all week, we 
  still found a few minutes to keep up on the latest iPad news from 
  Apple, Sprint, and Israel; to chuckle at a trenchant Tom Tomorrow 
  comic and a tongue-in-cheek suggestion for how to print from an 
  iPad; to note the shipment of the amusingly named Doxie scanner; and 
  cheer for our own Glenn Fleishman's debut in Australian politics 
  (via a quote, anyway).


**Strong Demand Causes iPad Shortages, Delays International Release** 
  -- Apple has released a statement saying that the unexpectedly 
  strong demand for the iPad in the United States (over 500,000 units 
  sold in the first week) and the large number of preorders for the 
  iPad 3G will result in product shortages for a few more weeks. In 
  addition, Apple is delaying the international launch of the iPad one 
  month, to late May; pre-orders will be accepted starting 10 May 
  2010. It's a good news/bad news situation: the iPad is wildly 
  popular, but so much so that it will be hard to get in the near 
  term.

<http://www.apple.com/pr/library/2010/04/14advisory_ipad.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11190#comments>


**Sprint Offers iPad Case for 3G/4G Portable Hotspot** -- Sprint is 
  upping its promotion of the combined 3G (EVDO) and 4G (WiMax) 
  Overdrive portable hotspot to iPad owners as an alternative to a 
  3G-enabled iPad by offering a special case that can hold both an 
  iPad and the Overdrive. The case requires a trip to a Best Buy in a 
  state in which Sprint's Clearwire division offers WiMax service. The 
  Overdrive costs $100 with a 2-year contract at $50-$60 per month for 
  unlimited WiMax, and up to 5 GB of 3G service each month (300 MB 
  outside Sprint's 3G/4G territory).

<http://now.sprint.com/4gcases/?ECID=vanity:4gcases>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11204#comments>


**Tom Tomorrow on "If Real Life Were More Like the Internet"** -- Tom 
  Tomorrow's "This Modern World" comic turns its attention to the 
  question of what real life would be like if it were more like the 
  Internet. Scary funny stuff!

<http://www.salon.com/entertainment/comics/this_modern_world/2010/04/12/this_modern_world>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11196#comments>


**Israel Bans Import of iPads** -- Never mind that Apple's new iPad 
  won't be available outside the United States for a few more weeks. 
  An Associated Press article tells us Israel has banned all imports 
  of the popular tablet device, even going so far as to confiscate 
  them from tourists upon arrival and hold them for a daily fee. 
  Customs officials will return the iPad upon its owner's departure 
  from the country. The Communication Ministry says the iPad's 
  wireless frequencies are incompatible with national standards. If 
  you decide to travel light with your iPad, make sure it will be 
  welcome wherever you're going!

<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/04/15/AR2010041502023.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11194#comments>


**How to Print from an iPad** -- Big points to Steve Cencula of the 
  design group FORM for his tongue-in-cheek photo showing the fastest 
  and easiest way to print from an iPad.

<http://www.theformgroup.com/about/blog/2010/04/how-to-print-from-an-ipad>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11191#comments>


**Doxie Cloud-Focused Scanner Now Shipping** -- Attempting to go 
  paperless in your life or business, but having trouble finding the 
  right scanner? Consider checking out Apparent Corporation's portable 
  USB-powered document scanner Doxie, which we first saw in 
  pre-release at Macworld Expo. The $129 device, which is now 
  shipping, scans documents at up to 600 dpi and can send them to 
  Google Docs, Flickr, Evernote, Scribd, and many other Web and local 
  applications. Doxie is currently available in the United States, 
  Canada, the E.U., Australia, and Japan, and it requires that you be 
  running Mac OS X 10.5 or later.

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

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11192#comments>


**Australian Broadband Minister Quotes TidBITS Staffer in Speech** -- 
  Our own Glenn Fleishman was quoted by Australia's Senator Stephen 
  Conroy, the minister for broadband, communications, and the digital 
  economy, in a recent speech. The quote came from an article Glenn 
  wrote for the Northwest news site PubliCola, about electricity being 
  the killer app of 1900, in the way that broadband is the killer app 
  today. Australia plans an ambitious fiber and wireless 
  infrastructure buildout to ensure near universal high-speed access, 
  with 90 percent of residents having fiber to the home.

<http://australia.to/2010/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=2123:senator-conroy-speech-the-sydney-institute&catid=101:australian-news&Itemid>
<http://www.publicola.net/2009/12/11/the-killer-app-of-1900-2/>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11187#comments>



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