TidBITS#1026/03-May-2010
========================
  Issue link: <http://db.tidbits.com/issue/1026>

  We've got a lot of explaining to do this week, and Glenn Fleishman 
  is primarily responsible. First he looks deeply at the 3G iPad's 
  service plans from AT&T, and after that, he examines the whole 
  Apple/Adobe tiff over Flash, explaining just what the fuss is all 
  about. And if that weren't enough, he shares a simple solution to 
  your iPad's screen going dark outside. Not to be left out, Adam 
  weighs in to announce the new TidBITS Facebook page and our latest 
  ebook, the essential "Take Control of Permissions in Snow Leopard." 
  Adam also looks at BBEdit 9.5 and interviews the winner of our 20th 
  anniversary drawing. Notable software releases this week include 
  Fetch 5.6, TypeIt4Me 5.0, iStat Menus 3.0.1, Transmit 4.0, iTunes 
  9.1.1, PDFpen 4.6.2 and PDFpenPro 4.6.2, and Digital Camera Raw 
  Compatibility Update 3.2.

Articles
    TidBITS Now on Facebook Thanks to dlvr.it
    New Take Control Ebook Explains Permissions in Snow Leopard
    The iPad's Polarizing Effect
    InterviewBITS with John Miller
    BBEdit 9.5 Enhances Searching, Attachability, Archive Browsing
    Jobs Explains Apple's Position on Adobe Flash
    Ins and Outs of the 3G iPad AT&T Service Plans
    TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 3 May 2010
    ExtraBITS for 3 May 2010


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TidBITS Now on Facebook Thanks to dlvr.it
-----------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11245>
  7 comments

  After significant effort, we're pleased to announce the opening of 
  the TidBITS Facebook page. It's nothing fancy, largely because there 
  isn't much fancy that can be done on Facebook. Nonetheless, if you 
  click the Like button at the top of the page, you'll see our 
  headlines and article summaries interspersed with the rest of your 
  news feed items. Click a headline link and you'll pop over to the 
  full article on our site. It's simple, yet effective, and if you 
  enjoy using Facebook to keep up on what's happening, I encourage you 
  to connect with TidBITS via the Like button.

<http://www.facebook.com/pages/TidBITS/195314925519>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-04/TidBITS-page-on-Facebook.png>

  You can also leave comments on any post, click the Like link for a 
  post if you liked it, and use the Share link to share it with your 
  Facebook friends. We'd prefer if you left comments on our site using 
  the TidBITS Commenting System, so they're linked with articles and 
  so we can more easily reply, but we'll try to check in on the 
  TidBITS page to respond to comments as appropriate.


**Setup Tribulations** -- If you're interested in what we went through 
  to get this set up, the problems fell into two basic categories: 
  accessing our RSS feed and creating reasonable graphics.

  Although there are a lot of Facebook apps that promise to bring an 
  RSS feed into Facebook, most of them didn't work with a fan page 
  (now called a business page) when I started this project. The 
  process of accessing a Facebook app, configuring it with appropriate 
  RSS information and Facebook permissions, and then waiting for our 
  RSS feed to update so I could see if it worked was slow, awkward, 
  and incredibly frustrating.

  Eventually I came across dlvr.it, a Web site and Facebook app 
  designed to publish RSS feeds to social networking services, 
  including Twitter and Facebook. I first switched the TidBITS Twitter 
  account to use dlvr.it instead of the Twitterfeed service we had 
  been using but which had suffered some growing pains. When that 
  worked out well, I started trying to use dlvr.it to feed TidBITS 
  headlines and summaries to my newly created TidBITS Facebook page.

<http://dlvr.it/>
<http://twitterfeed.com/>

  That was more problematic, but dlvr.it's extremely responsive 
  technical support helped with a few troublesome areas (most of which 
  were Facebook's fault, or the result of Facebook's nearly 
  impenetrable interface for setting up business pages), and 
  eventually I got the feed importing properly.

  Unfortunately, it was ugly as sin. Initially, dlvr.it grabbed a 
  random graphic from our pages (usually the QR code; see "Tag, You're 
  in 2D!," 1 October 2009) to use as the post's thumbnail, which 
  appeared next to the profile thumbnail for each post. Luckily, a few 
  weeks ago, an update to dlvr.it gave me additional control over 
  thumbnails on Facebook, so I was able to eliminate per-post 
  thumbnails, leaving just the profile thumbnail (click Older Posts at 
  the bottom of the TidBITS Facebook page to see examples of this ugly 
  thumbnail duplication).

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10616>

  But our problems weren't over yet. I had tried to use our standard 
  TidBITS logo for the Facebook page's profile picture, but Facebook 
  really wants a square image there, to the extent that it trims 
  rectangular profile pictures into squares when displaying them as 
  thumbnails (I could never find any specs on image sizes or aspect 
  ratios). After many attempts, we finally gave up on our standard 
  logo entirely and created a square logo that worked for both the 
  large profile picture and the truncated thumbnails.

  Regardless of this fuss, everything seems to be working well now, 
  and dlvr.it even reports click-through stats for each social 
  networking service and for each item (currently quite low for 
  Facebook, since so few people know about it now). So if you're 
  interested in setting up a Facebook business page and populating it 
  at least in part from your RSS feed, I highly recommend dlvr.it. 

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-04/TidBITS-Facebook-stats.png>

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New Take Control Ebook Explains Permissions in Snow Leopard
-----------------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11244>

  If you like to go under the hood of Mac OS X, or if you've been 
  forced to by quirky problems, check out our latest ebook, freshly 
  revised for Snow Leopard: "Take Control of Permissions in Snow 
  Leopard." Written by Unix guru and Mac aficionado Brian Tanaka (and 
  edited by Geoff Duncan), the 91-page ebook mixes practical how-to 
  details and troubleshooting tips with just the right amount of 
  theory as it explains permissions in relation to how you keep your 
  files private, copy files to and from servers effectively, set the 
  Ignore Permissions option for external disks, repair default 
  permissions, and delete those files that just won't die.

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/snow-leopard-permissions?pt=TB1026>

  For those who want to learn advanced concepts, the $10 ebook delves 
  into topics like the sticky bit, symbolic versus absolute ways to 
  set permissions, and how to work with bit masks. Of course, Brian 
  looks at what's new with permissions in Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard, 
  including the increased use of access control lists, changes to the 
  way umask works, and which permissions a copied file ends up with. 

  Don't worry if you're not accustomed to using the Unix command line 
  in Terminal, since Brian provides clear instructions for that, along 
  with how to manage permissions from the Finder's Get Info and 
  Inspector windows, and with a third-party utility, FileXaminer. (And 
  of course, if you do want to become more familiar with the command 
  line, we strongly recommend Joe Kissell's "Take Control of the Mac 
  Command Line with Terminal," which provides a friendly and thorough 
  introduction.)

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/command-line?pt=TB1026>

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The iPad's Polarizing Effect
----------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11232>
  9 comments

  I thought the universe, in the form of Apple products, was playing a 
  nasty trick on me. A new MacBook Pro's hard drive had failed, and on 
  my way to a Genius Bar appointment at the nearby Apple Store, I had 
  to reboot my iPhone to get it to play over my car stereo. When I 
  arrived outside the store, I tried to fire up my iPad, and the 
  screen was blank. Nothing I tried could start or restart it.

  I figured that the battery must have discharged. I went into the 
  Apple Store to see if I could plug it in to a computer, and while a 
  cast member - er, associate - went off to find a cable, I tried the 
  iPad, and it woke up just fine.

  I apologized, went back outside, and the iPad didn't work again. 
  Then it struck me: my sunglasses. I removed them, and the iPad was, 
  of course, just fine. The polarized sunglasses I was wearing had 
  performed a neat trick. 

<http://science.howstuffworks.com/sunglass5.htm>

  This effect shouldn't have surprised me. I had noticed it in the 
  past with my iPhone 3GS while testing over a dozen GPS apps for a 
  Macworld review. If the iPhone was in portrait orientation, I could 
  see it just fine with my sunglasses on; when I rotated to test the 
  apps in landscape mode, the screen became nearly black.

<http://www.macworld.com/article/144972/2009/12/gps.html>

  Studying up on this, I found that LCDs rely on two perpendicular 
  polarized filters with liquid crystal (and other things) in between 
  the filters. The liquid crystal changes the light's polarization, 
  essentially canceling the perpendicular effect that would block 
  transmission. 

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

  I've never noticed this with other LCD monitors or screens, but 
  that's likely because the vast majority of the time I'm using a 
  device without sunglasses, or, if outdoors, using the device in a 
  particular orientation.

  The iPad's top polarizing filter is obviously rotated 90 degrees 
  from the one used in the iPhone. In portrait mode, the screen is 
  nearly black; in landscape mode, it appears normal. The photos were 
  taken through the sunglasses I was wearing.

<http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3369/4559692568_c6acc3aabc.jpg>
<http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3438/4559170559_033837babd.jpg>

  If this happens to you, don't fear for your sanity; just take off 
  your sunglasses. The future's so bright, you gotta doff shades.

  ----
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InterviewBITS with John Miller
------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11248>

  As you may know, we're legally required to announce the winners of 
  any of our drawings, which we normally spice up by offering a 
  discount on the product being given away for those who didn't win. 
  For the drawing we ran to celebrate the 20th anniversary of TidBITS 
  (see "TidBITS Celebrates 20 Years of Internet Publication," 19 April 
  2010), I wanted to do something a little different and introduce you 
  to the winner, John Miller of Fairbanks, Alaska, a retired research 
  institute project manager.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11206>

  Adam: Congratulations on winning our prize, John! First off, what do 
  you think you'll get with the $200?

  John: I'm waiting for Apple to release a new version of the iPod 
  touch, assuming it does have significant improvements, or the new 
  iPhone, which certainly will have improvements.

  Adam: In that case, I'll send you a general Apple Gift Card for 
  $200, and you can use it on whichever device most catches your 
  fancy. Remember to engrave it with "From TidBITS"! On to the 
  interview... How long have you been using the Mac?

  John: I've been a Mac user since 1984. After hearing about the new 
  Mac in the media, I checked out the 128K Mac at a local Apple 
  dealer. That fall I bought the 512K Mac to use at work, and I've 
  never looked back.

  Adam: So you were able to use the Mac at work, even back in 1984? 
  That's impressive.

  John: Although I've been retired since 1995, before that I was a 
  project manager at a research institute at the University of Alaska 
  Fairbanks. 

  Adam: Were you able to introduce Macs into the rest of your 
  department?

  John: Oh yes, since I had purchasing authority. One by one I bought 
  a Mac for each member of the project. Over the years we bought the 
  Mac Plus, SE/30, Mac II, IIcx, IIci, IIfx, and the PowerBook Duo 230 
  with its ponderous dock, as they became available.

  Adam: Was the PowerBook Duo 230 your first portable? We had a 
  PowerBook 100 before that, but Tonya adored her Duo 230 for a number 
  of years in the early 1990s.

  John: Now that I think of it, no. I do remember lugging a 17-pound 
  Mac Plus in a shoulder harness from one terminal to another in 
  O'Hare Airport on an extended business trip. That was how important 
  a Mac was to the work we did. Yes, it did fit in an overhead bin. 
  Later on, but before the Duo 230, we used an Outbound Laptop, which 
  required ROMs from an older Mac. It was a quarter the size and half 
  the weight of the Mac Plus, but the screen and battery life were not 
  impressive.

  Adam: How about networking? Did you network all your Macs?

  John: Absolutely, and the productivity boost from using our own 
  networked AppleTalk printers was astounding. They eliminated waiting 
  as long as overnight for a print job from the mainframe line printer 
  six floors below. We also didn't have to submit drafts to the word 
  processing center and wait in line for their output to edit, 
  resubmit, etc. (To be fair, they were a pretty efficient and helpful 
  bunch. And in due course they switched almost entirely to Macs, 
  too.)

  Since our AppleTalk network operated independently of the mainframe 
  network, we had flexibility to add or remove machines by our own 
  choices and timing. Not being connected to the mainframe network 
  also meant we also could make software choices and installations 
  independently, limited only by our budget. The IT folks weren't even 
  aware of our independent AppleTalk network for some time, but they 
  deserve credit for not interfering when they did learn of it.

  Adam: Did Macs spread out from your department?

  John: Yes, as time went by, other project leaders caught on and soon 
  Macs were sprouting up on every floor, for which I had no direct 
  influence. 

  Adam: How about at home? What's your current Mac, and what did it 
  replace?

  John: I currently do a lot of what I call research and writing on a 
  2008 Mac Pro, which replaced a Power Mac G3 that I keep meaning to 
  get rid of but never do. Before that, I used a Quadra 660AV. And 
  going even further back, before the Macs, at home I was heavily into 
  the Apple /// and its 5 MB ProFile external hard disk. It was such 
  fun running Catalyst, the first app switcher, and a premiere word 
  processor called WordJuggler. I was mad at Steve for axing the ///, 
  and I never experienced any of the problems the media reported on 
  with loose chips.

  Adam: What about the rest of your family? Were you a lone Mac user 
  in a sea of PC users, or has everyone ended up with Macs as well?

  John: Definitely the latter. My wife has her own 2008 21-inch iMac, 
  and we travel with an old 17-inch PowerBook G4 that's on its last 
  legs. Before that, our laptop was a PowerBook G3 (Wallstreet), which 
  was one of the best-designed laptops, in my biased opinion, since 
  the Duo 230.  It, too, is still limping along, and I've yet to 
  dispose of it.

  Somewhere along the line I was responsible for helping my daughter 
  procure a Bondi Blue iMac, then later a 2007 20-inch iMac. I also 
  helped my sister get an early eMac, and later a Mac mini. And 
  although my granddaughter used a Performa 630 in college, she later 
  married a Windows guy.

  Adam: How long have you been reading TidBITS?

  John: As far as I can tell, sometime in the early 1990s. I do not 
  recall who introduced me, but probably a colleague on one of the 
  early nets. I was hooked from the beginning.

  Adam: I'm particularly glad to know that our prizewinner is a 
  long-time fan. Your comment in email to me upon reading about our 
  anniversary was most kind. You wrote, "You use the language so well 
  - the prose sometimes seems intrinsically poetic. Even if your 
  topics weren't something dear to my heart, it might be tempting to 
  read your articles for their sheer pleasure to the mind."

  John: Entirely deserved. I also appreciate TidBITS's reviews of new 
  software and hardware, and coverage of happenings in the Mac world, 
  along with announcements of new Take Control books.

  Adam: Holy cow, I see that you've bought 79 Take Control ebooks over 
  the years too. Thanks for such loyal support. Is there anything you 
  think we can do better?

  John: I appreciate the moderation in TidBITS Talk, but I'd say that 
  the moderators could cut off threads after the postings cease to 
  provide useful information on the original topic. 

  Adam: Suggestion taken, and in the interests of following that 
  advice, I'll end the interview here as well. I appreciate your years 
  of support for both TidBITS and Take Control, and I hope you enjoy 
  your upcoming iPhone or iPod touch.

  ----
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BBEdit 9.5 Enhances Searching, Attachability, Archive Browsing
--------------------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11220>
  5 comments

  Bare Bones Software has released the latest version of the 
  long-standing text editor BBEdit, adding just a few new user-facing 
  features but making many small refinements.

<http://www.barebones.com/products/bbedit/>

  Most notable among BBEdit 9.5's changes is the addition of a Live 
  Search bar that appears at the top of the editing window when you 
  choose Search > Live Search (or press Command-Option-F). It looks 
  and works much like the in-page search field in Safari, presenting a 
  search field and highlighting all matches as you type. It also shows 
  the number of matches and a pair of arrows that step the actual text 
  selection forward and back through the matches (Return and 
  Shift-Return also step through matches). Live searches are always 
  literal and case-sensitive. Live Search replaces the Quick Search 
  window from previous versions; I never found that window useful, but 
  I think Live Search will prove far more effective.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-04/BBEdit-Live-Search-bar.png>

  Perhaps even more important, but of interest to fewer users, is 
  BBEdit's significantly enhanced script attachability. In the past 
  (and I bet most people don't know this), you could attach a script 
  to a BBEdit menu item in the Menus pane of BBEdit's Preferences 
  window. That's actually quite compelling, if you think about it, 
  since it means you can extend any standard menu command to perform 
  additional actions when selected by the user. What's new in 9.5 is 
  the capability to attach scripts to 15 application and document 
  events. This means that BBEdit can more easily be integrated into 
  other workflows because scripts placed in ~/Library/Application 
  Support/BBEdit/Attachment Scripts can now extend BBEdit's 
  functionality based on events happening within the application, such 
  as opening, closing, and saving documents. We're already playing 
  with how this can smooth our Subversion-based document collaboration 
  workflow.

  For more information on attachability, consult the program's user 
  manual, accessible from the Help menu. It's also worth noting that 
  Bare Bones put some effort into cleaning up BBEdit's online help for 
  9.5, bringing it up to date, making styles consistent, and covering 
  new features.

  BBEdit has been able to look inside tarball files for some time; new 
  in version 9.5 is the capability to look inside ZIP archives as 
  well, in the program's disk browser windows. It displays only files 
  that BBEdit can read, and files are read-only, but if you try to 
  make a change, BBEdit prompts you to save a copy of the file 
  elsewhere. In a subtle but useful twist, this feature lets you peer 
  inside EPUB-based ebooks, since the EPUB format uses ZIP as a 
  packaging format for its XML and CSS files. Drop a ZIP archive or 
  EPUB file on BBEdit to see how this works.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-04/BBEdit-browsing-EPUB.png>

  Subversion support has been integrated into different parts of the 
  program. There's a new menu button at the bottom of disk browsers 
  and project windows that contains Subversion commands, and the 
  contextual menu in project lists also now contains Subversion 
  commands. Finally, if any matches in a results window from a search 
  across multiple files are in files within a Subversion working copy, 
  Control-clicking one now reveals a contextual menu that contains 
  appropriate Subversion commands.

  Beyond these feature additions, BBEdit 9.5 has evolved in many small 
  ways, with numerous changes and bug fixes. For instance:

* The internal format of saved document state now captures only those 
  settings that are fundamental to the document or different from the 
  defaults - this should resolve confusion caused by documents not 
  picking up changes made to global preferences. You can reset the 
  current document's display and editing settings to the current 
  defaults with the new Edit > Normalize Options command.

* BBEdit now remembers preview window positions on a per-document 
  basis, falling back to the position indicated by the Window > Save 
  Default Window command if the preview window position isn't set 
  explicitly.

* If a window contains multiple documents, its submenu in the Window 
  menu now contains diamonds to indicate documents with unsaved 
  changes. 

* If a file that's open in BBEdit changes on disk, and the copy in 
  BBEdit has unsaved changes, you're now given the option to ignore 
  future changes to that file as long as it remains open.

* A Replace All command in a text factory no longer generates a 
  results window.

* The Open Hidden command has been removed from the File menu, having 
  been replaced by the Show Hidden Items checkbox in all Open dialogs.

  For those reading the extensive release notes carefully (and if 
  you're a serious BBEdit user, you really should), be sure to note 
  how the ponies' shoes have been reinforced. 

<http://www.barebones.com/support/bbedit/arch_bbedit95.html>

  One last change that's worth noting is that BBEdit now requires Mac 
  OS X 10.5 or later, running on either a PowerPC- or Intel-based Mac. 
  According to Rich Siegel of Bare Bones, supporting earlier versions 
  of Mac OS X is becoming much more difficult because of feature 
  disparity between OS versions, the effort of working around old OS 
  bugs fixed in later releases, and the significantly larger test 
  matrix older versions require.

  Upgrades are free to users of BBEdit 9.x; BBEdit 9.5 costs $125 new, 
  and upgrades from any version prior to 9.0 cost $30. It's a 16.7 MB 
  download, and is also available as a 30-day trial version.

<http://www.barebones.com/store/>
<http://www.barebones.com/products/bbedit/demo.html>

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Jobs Explains Apple's Position on Adobe Flash
---------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11243>
  5 comments

  The notoriously private Steve Jobs, who keeps Apple within the same 
  public comment straitjacket, has found his voice lately. In a break 
  from answering email messages sent to sjobs@apple.com with one-word 
  responses (generally, "No"), the Apple CEO posted a candid 
  assessment of why Adobe's Flash technology has no place in the 
  iPhone OS.

  Jobs's "Thoughts on Flash" reiterates points made by many of us who 
  have a long experience with Adobe, Apple, and the capabilities of 
  mobile devices. Notably, John Gruber has written extensively about 
  this issue, including an essay on a change in the iPhone Developer 
  Program agreement that Jobs told one email correspondent was "very 
  insightful and not negative."

<http://www.apple.com/hotnews/thoughts-on-flash/>
<http://daringfireball.net/2010/04/why_apple_changed_section_331>

  There are two areas that Jobs splits a bit across his six points 
  that I want to discuss: open standards and Flash's suitability for 
  the mobile world.


**Open Standards** -- Jobs writes that Adobe is pushing a proprietary 
  technology, Flash, while Apple is backing the open standards of 
  HTML5, CSS, and JavaScript. Apple also developed and put 
  considerable effort into the open-source WebKit browser engine, 
  which Google, Nokia, and Palm use as the basis of browsers on their 
  smartphones. Research In Motion will be moving to WebKit for the 
  BlackBerry, too.

  This bleeds a bit into Jobs's second point, in which he rebuts 
  Adobe's claim that by not having Flash support, the iPhone OS lacks 
  "the full Web." 

  In an ideal world, content created targeting the three standards 
  that Jobs cites would display similarly on any device regardless of 
  browser. HTML5 includes descriptions - but not prescriptions - for 
  graphical animation, video playback, audio playback, and quite a bit 
  else, all of which encroach on some of the main uses of Flash.

  Adobe's CEO, Shantanu Narayen, told the Wall Street Journal a few 
  hours after Jobs's essay hit that "Flash is an open specification," 
  chuckling while talking to the reporter. It is true that Adobe has 
  published the details of Flash - as the SWF File Format 
  Specification - but that's more than a little disingenuous.

<http://blogs.wsj.com/digits/2010/04/29/live-blogging-the-journals-interview-with-adobe-ceo/>
<http://www.adobe.com/devnet/swf/>

  Unlike any version of HTML, CSS, or JavaScript, SWF was a closed 
  spec until 1 May 2008. Also unlike those other standards, there was 
  not and remains no explosion of Flash-oriented applications across 
  many platforms. 

  True, Adobe's Flash player is available for many systems, and some 
  non-Adobe software can create SWF files. Adobe has released some SWF 
  code under an open-source license. And there's even a mature effort, 
  Gnash, to bring Flash playback to the GNU/Linux and BSD world.

<http://gnashdev.org/>

  There are issues that remain about how a third-party Flash player 
  could process DRM that's embedded in content - like the BBC Player. 
  But my reading of the open-source Flash code documentation is that 
  the 10.1 release of Flash will allow third parties to work with 
  protected content.

  What the Wall Street Journal reporter should have asked Narayen was, 
  "Tell me about all the applications and players not from Adobe that 
  handle Flash?" or "How are other individuals and companies actively 
  involved in Flash format development?" 

  That's because none of the movement in the Flash world holds a 
  candle to the variety of Web browsers available. Nor is Adobe's 
  control of the Flash spec anything but a sharp contrast with the 
  ability to influence browser capabilities that the W3C (World Wide 
  Web Consortium) or other standards body has. 

  Flash may be an "open specification," but Adobe remains in complete 
  control of development, saying only that "Adobe seriously considers 
  all feedback to the SWF file format specification." Notably, Adobe 
  has no requirement to incorporate the ideas of others or to reach 
  consensus on how the Flash community would like to see the 
  technology evolve.

  In comparison, HTML, CSS, and JavaScript are the result of well over 
  a decade (more than 15 years in HTML's case) of experimentation, 
  pushback, browser differentiation, compromise, debate, and not a 
  little hostility among competing interests. 

  The reporter should also have asked about Adobe's alleged role in 
  stalling HTML5 development through procedural moves related to the 
  scope of HTML5's work. HTML5 incorporates a video tag that will 
  allow direct embedding of video in a standard way. (The underlying 
  video format, whether H.264, Ogg Theora, or Google's V8, will likely 
  not be specified in the HTML5 spec, but H.264 will likely be the 
  most widely supported, given Microsoft's commitment to H.264 in 
  Internet Explorer 9.)

<http://blogs.msdn.com/ie/archive/2010/04/29/html5-video.aspx>

  HTML5's video tag threatens Flash, even though Adobe's tools can 
  output H.264 and other video formats. Adobe denied holding up HTML5 
  draft progress, but the Web's father, Tim Berners-Lee, stepped in to 
  move things along by declaring that HTML5's scope was just fine, and 
  work should proceed.

<http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-html/2010Feb/0871.html>

  Of course, Jobs is also being disingenuous about Apple's commitment 
  to openness when he focuses on Web-based standards. Outside the 
  browser, the iPhone OS is a completely closed platform, and the 
  changes that John Gruber discussed in the iPhone Developer Program 
  License Agreement require that apps be written only using tools 
  supplied by and controlled by Apple. (According to a New York Post 
  article, that move may prompt an antitrust inquiry.)

<http://www.nypost.com/p/news/business/an_antitrust_app_buvCWcJdjFoLD5vBSkguGO>

  The license agreement change prevents Adobe from letting developers 
  compile Flash programs into iPhone OS apps using a tool in Adobe 
  Creative Suite 5 that has already been used for 100 programs in the 
  App Store. 

  It may also prevent the use of some other development tools for 
  creating iPhone apps; it's not yet known whether Apple will enforce 
  the rule change uniformly. With 200,000 apps in the App Store, the 
  company can afford to lose a few, despite the impact on those 
  developers.

  Apple and Adobe are intentionally arguing at cross purposes. Jobs 
  supports open formats for Web-based resources, but a closed 
  development and distribution system for everything outside the 
  browser.

  Adobe is arguing for a quasi-proprietary embedded use of Flash on 
  Web pages, which requires that everyone have Adobe's Flash Player 
  installed instead of relying on browser makers to shape a consistent 
  experience independent of any one company. 

  But in the realm of apps, Adobe is arguing that Flash developers 
  shouldn't be forced to use a separate development process for the 
  iPhone OS, which Apple has now required via the iPhone Developer 
  Program License Agreement.

  In terms of tools, Adobe makes the only rich Flash design and 
  development software, while Apple makes the only viable iPhone OS 
  development environment. Developers would likely prefer Adobe's 
  hegemony, despite the limits it imposes, if only because Flash's 
  reach is much broader than that of the iPhone OS.

  (Whether Adobe's packaging tool can turn Flash content into an app 
  that provides as good a user experience as a native app is a 
  separate question, and one that Jobs strongly disagrees with in a 
  different section of the essay.)

  What the two firms are really arguing about is control. Apple wants 
  near-total control over the iPhone OS platform, but is willing to 
  accept open standards in the realm of the browser, because even the 
  best Web apps don't challenge iPhone OS apps. The best thing a 
  browser can do is let Web pages appear and work the same as every 
  other browser. It took Microsoft a decade to accept that.

  On the other side of the coin, Adobe wants control over embedded Web 
  content, seeing itself as a conduit for developers to create a 
  single product that can span dozens of disparate environments.

  Each company clearly sees itself as the developers' friend: Apple in 
  encouraging developers to rely on open standards that will render 
  well everywhere, and Adobe in providing developers with tools to 
  create rich content that will render well everywhere that Flash is 
  supported.


**Mobile Performance and Suitability** -- Jobs devotes his other two 
  points to whether Flash even makes sense on a phone as it now 
  stands.

  Despite the focus on the iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad, Flash isn't 
  widely available on any other mobile platform. Nokia includes Flash 
  9.4 on its N900, which is not a phone, but no Android, Windows 
  Mobile, BlackBerry, webOS, or Symbian phone handles Flash content. 
  (There is a Flash Light player that works on many basic phones, but 
  which requires Flash content that has been designed and optimized 
  for Flash Light. The Flash Light site appears to be have been last 
  updated in 2008.)

<http://maemo.nokia.com/n900/>
<http://www.adobe.com/mobile/supported_devices/handsets.html>

  While Adobe has complained about the lack of Flash support from the 
  start on the iPhone, it has only recently demonstrated reasonable 
  mobile performance with a beta of Flash 10.1 on Android.

  As Jobs writes, "We have routinely asked Adobe to show us Flash 
  performing well on a mobile device, any mobile device, for a few 
  years now. We have never seen it." 

  Adobe currently has commitments for Flash 10.1 to appear in Android 
  2.2 later this year. And that's it for 2010. Palm, just purchased by 
  HP, has no announced plans, and RIM hasn't said boo about Flash, 
  either. Flash 10.1 for Symbian devices is likely, but I have heard 
  nothing about preinstalled support.

  Microsoft at one point said that Flash would be included with its 
  Windows Phone 7 system due out in time for the holidays in 2010, but 
  the company has since backed away from that timeline. A future 
  release will support Flash.

  Adobe's complaints seem to be that Apple won't include support for a 
  technology that nobody else supports and that isn't ready for 
  prime-time mobile use until mid-2010 at the earliest, after an 
  18-month delay. Jobs writes, "We think it will eventually ship, but 
  we're glad we didn't hold our breath. Who knows how it will 
  perform?"

  Jobs also makes public several claims that have been reported as 
  being aired privately within Apple. First, that Flash "is the number 
  one reason Macs crash." Adobe's CEO's response to the Journal: that 
  it has something "to do with the Apple operating system."

  We can't evaluate either claim. The only browser plug-in that most 
  users rely on regularly is Flash, and thus browser crashes not 
  caused by browser bugs would be due to Flash. Apple has said this 
  without referring to Adobe before, and it gathers such information 
  directly from automatically generated crash reports.

  Second, Jobs claims that Flash is a battery hog due to a lack of the 
  necessary low-level hardware support on mobile devices. Jobs says 
  plain H.264 video burns through power at half the rate that Flash 
  video does. Adobe's CEO says that's "patently false."

  It's also hard to evaluate this claim. On a Mac, Flash often chews 
  up processor power, but the Flash 10.1 release looks to be 
  substantially more efficient. Someone could benchmark H.264 playback 
  against Flash video with the 10.1 beta on an Android phone to test 
  the current state of those claims.


**The Future** -- Jobs's essay and Adobe's Wall Street Journal 
  interview make it clear that neither embedded Flash Web content nor 
  Flash-as-apps are in the iPhone OS future. Adobe is pushing hard on 
  other platforms, but to the extent it has made this a battle with 
  Apple, Adobe simply can't win.

  Adobe's CEO says the company is working on "dozens" of tablet 
  projects with other companies. But those projects aren't in the 
  market - a market where Apple has already sold 85 million iPhones 
  and iPod touches and, as of 3 May 2010, 1 million iPads.

<http://www.apple.com/pr/library/2010/05/03ipad.html>

  And just this last week, Microsoft canned the Courier tablet concept 
  project,  a well-received set of new ideas for a two-screen 
  slate-sized computer, and TechCrunch reported that HP, in the wake 
  of its Palm acquisition, has opted not to release a Windows 7-based 
  tablet demonstrated by Microsoft's CEO at CES in January 2010.

<http://gizmodo.com/5527442/microsoft-cancels-innovative-courier-tablet-project>
<http://techcrunch.com/2010/04/29/hewlett-packard-to-kill-windows-7-tablet-project/>

  Adobe has made a strategic error. Its customers aren't Web users; 
  its customers are developers and designers. Adobe should have been 
  spending its time and effort to make a superb creative and 
  production environment for creating content that would appear on 
  every smartphone, tablet, laptop, and desktop. Its customers care 
  vastly more about being able to create something that works in 
  Mobile Safari and other mobile browsers than the reasons why Adobe 
  hasn't yet been able to get Flash working on a single smartphone 
  platform.

  Adobe deserves enormous praise for developing Flash for all these 
  years and managing to get it embedded in most browsers. Without 
  Flash, the Web would have been much less interactive, much less fun, 
  and much less useful over the last few years. Video on the Web would 
  have been a non-starter. YouTube, Vimeo, Hulu, and all the rest 
  would probably not have come into existence at the time they did.

  Let's give Adobe all that. But it's also clear that the necessity 
  for Flash as the sole enabling technology to bring rich media and 
  rich interaction to the Web is over. HTML5's support for animation, 
  video, and audio, coupled with improvements in JavaScript rendering 
  engines, means that most of what Flash was absolutely needed for 
  will be generally available without buying into a particular 
  company's technology or tools. Adobe's tools will have to evolve to 
  match this new reality.

  Beyond this sea change in Web development, going head-to-head with 
  Steve Jobs never works. The only way Adobe could have gotten Flash 
  on the iPhone was to convince Jobs that Apple's customers - we end 
  users - desperately wanted content that was available only from 
  Flash developers. That didn't happen.

  Apple is happy to force technological change on the industry, and if 
  HTML5 will meet the industry's needs, few companies will resist 
  adding support for it if they want to serve their own iPhone 
  OS-using customers.

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11243#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/11243>


Ins and Outs of the 3G iPad AT&T Service Plans
----------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11251>
  73 comments

  The 3G iPad is in buyers' hands, including mine and those of TidBITS 
  Managing Editor Jeff Carlson, giving us a chance to drill down into 
  the details of the two simple mobile broadband service plans that 
  AT&T offers. Terms of carriers outside the United States are still 
  unknown.

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

  The two plans are based on consumption of incoming and outgoing data 
  via 3G over a 30-day billing cycle. For $14.99, you get 250 MB; for 
  $29.99, you get unmetered data - a true unlimited offering. Both 
  plans also include unlimited access at AT&T's 21,000 domestic Wi-Fi 
  hotspots. Each plan automatically renews unless you cancel it, but 
  no long-term contract is required.

  If you don't use the full 250 MB in the first plan during the 30 
  days, unused bandwidth simply expires; it does not roll over to a 
  subsequent month. There is no penalty for cancellation and you can 
  cancel at any point after a given 30-day period begins, up until the 
  moment that your credit card is charged. (In fact, AT&T says you 
  even have a two-hour grace period after the card is charged to 
  cancel.)

  The Cellular Data tab in the Settings app - which appears only on 
  the 3G iPad model - is where you control all your 3G data settings. 
  There is no switch to flip from 3G data down to the older 2G EDGE 
  standard, a feature in the iPhone 3G and iPhone 3GS that's used to 
  improve battery life or establish a more reliable cellular 
  connection. The iPad does fall back to EDGE if 3G isn't available 
  (and then down to GPRS in the absense of EDGE, if necessary) - 
  there's just no manual control for switching it yourself. I have a 
  query in to Apple about this, but it's likely because using an 
  iPhone for voice over 3G exacts a much higher battery toll compared 
  to the same call over 2G because of the continuous nature of the 
  call, even though it's broken up into data packets. Sending pure 
  data over 3G exacts a lower toll than voice.

  You don't need a network connection via Wi-Fi in order to sign up 
  for a cellular plan, which is rather nifty; you just have to be in 
  range of an AT&T network in the United States. With the cellular 
  data connection active, signal strength bars and a network operator 
  appear in the upper left whether or not you have already signed up 
  for a service plan. (The top figure shows an active Wi-Fi connection 
  with AT&T service available; the bottom figure shows the network 
  status after I activated a 3G plan and turned Wi-Fi off manually.)

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-04/ipad-no-3g-indicator.jpg>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-04/ipad-3g-indicator.jpg>

  (One commenter found that, in former Alltel territory in Montana, 
  even though his iPad shows AT&T in the upper-left corner, he is 
  unable to sign up for a plan. Alltel was a regional CDMA carrier 
  purchased by Verizon to acquire customers, but a number of rural 
  markets were spun off to AT&T, which is using the licenses to offer 
  GSM service.)

  To set up a data plan, you tap the View Account button. You're 
  presented with a long screen in which you enter your name, a phone 
  number at which you can be reached (it doesn't have to be a cell 
  number or an AT&T account), an email address and password for an 
  account, and credit card billing information. You also select which 
  of the two plans you want. You cannot pay for service except with a 
  credit card; Visa, MasterCard, American Express, and Discover are 
  accepted.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-04/ipad-3g-account-signup.jpg>

  The account you create is fresh: AT&T doesn't recognize existing 
  Apple IDs or even AT&T accounts. Your email address is used to send 
  you receipts and service updates, along with warnings about data 
  usage on a 250 MB plan. 

  After you enter all the required information and click Next, you 
  must accept AT&T's terms of service. Click Agree, and the next 
  screen shows a summary of charges, and the option to buy insanely 
  expensive international service, too. Click Submit, and a final 
  screen tells you it will take a few minutes for 3G service to be 
  activated. For me, on what was probably a busy day for activation, 
  it took about five minutes. A push notification appears on screen 
  when it's done.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-04/ipad-3g-payment-summary.jpg>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-04/ipad-3g-activated-push-message.jpg>

  Just as on the iPhone, you can use Airplane Mode at the main 
  Settings level, and a Cellular Data switch in the Cellular Data 
  settings to disable the use of the 3G radio. Airplane Mode disables 
  GPS, 3G, Bluetooth, and Wi-Fi radios, but you can turn Wi-Fi back on 
  manually - useful in planes in which Wi-Fi is available for Internet 
  access.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-04/ipad-3g-cell-data-switch.jpg>

  It wasn't clear to me before the 3G iPad was released how it would 
  work on networks outside a carrier's home territory. With the 
  availability of international plans and a Data Roaming switch (to 
  disable non-home network roaming) in the Cellular Data settings 
  area, it's clear that an iPad will try to use any available network 
  with which AT&T has a relationship worldwide.

  Jeff and I both signed up initially for 250 MB plans in order to see 
  what happens when you get close to limits and how practical that 
  amount of data is. As I noted in "Can You Get By with 250 MB of Data 
  Per Month?" (2 February 2010), I found I was using nearly 300 MB of 
  3G data on average each month on my iPhone 3GS in my first several 
  months of use. 

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10971>

  Jeff tested Netflix streaming, which is allowed over 3G, and managed 
  to burn through 250 MB in about an hour of streaming a movie, which 
  is a little surprising. At a streaming rate of as fast as 1.5 Mbps 
  over AT&T's network, Netflix could have pushed out nearly 700 MB. 
  (Using some bandwidth testers, I managed to burn through 25 MB in 
  about five minutes.)

  Other streaming video apps aren't allowed to use the 3G network. 
  Jeff tried ABC's app, and the iPad popped up an expected error. I 
  wonder if Netflix's app will be pulled and relaunched with a Wi-Fi 
  only restriction? It wouldn't take many Netflix users to have a huge 
  impact on AT&T's data network.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-04/ipad-3g-app-not-allowed.jpg>

  Once you've paid for a data plan, you can make changes to it by 
  returning to the Cellular Data settings and tapping View Account. In 
  a colossally irritating decision, AT&T requires that you log in each 
  time you want access to account information or to make changes. 
  There's no password caching, even over a period of seconds, nor any 
  way to store a password. 

  When you log back in, you can see various data, such as the billing 
  period, and the amount of data consumed (according to AT&T's 
  records). Jeff found that AT&T's information about data consumed has 
  a time lag of 30 to 60 minutes (though that could have been due to 
  first-day traffic as tens of thousands of people all activated their 
  3G iPads); the Usage pane in the General settings screen shows what 
  the iPad measures at the moment.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-04/ipad-3g-add-change-view.jpg>

  AT&T also displays the phone number assigned to your iPad - that's 
  right,  a phone number. This is presumably because there has to be 
  something in AT&T's database that's associated with billing. I tried 
  calling Jeff's iPad number, and AT&T played a recorded message that 
  explained the party I was calling was unable to accept calls at this 
  time. Or perhaps ever.

  You can also make changes to your plan from the Add Data or Change 
  Plan screen. Tap that item, and you'll see something different 
  depending on your current plan. I opted for 250 MB to start with, so 
  I was offered the chance to buy another 250 MB of data, change to 
  unlimited, or cancel the plan. I presume you see an option to move 
  down to 250 MB or cancel service if you're already on the unlimited 
  plan.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-04/ipad-3g-plan-change-options-screen.jpg>

  Both options in the screenshot above are slightly misleading, but 
  not in AT&T and Apple's favor; users might be more likely to make 
  choices that would increase revenue if the results of actions were 
  explained better. While the buttons say one thing, the text above 
  them is more clear: "The selected plan will start when the current 
  plan ends." This includes cancellation.

  For instance, if you "Add 250 MB of data," and you're already on the 
  250 MB plan, no change is made if you don't run through 250 MB of 
  data within 30 days. It simply keeps you on the same plan. If you 
  run out of data within 30 days, however, the next 250 MB chunk is 
  added to your account, and the billing period resets to count 30 
  days starting from the moment you switch over into the new data 
  pool.

  Likewise, the unlimited plan begins only when you either run out of 
  data on a 250 MB plan before 30 days is up, or the next 30-day cycle 
  starts, whichever comes sooner.

  The cancel plan option takes effect in the same way, too; rather 
  than "Cancel Plan," the text should read "Cancel Automatic Renewal." 
  When I tested canceling my service, AT&T sent a confirmation email a 
  few hours later with just that language: "You have chosen to cancel 
  automatic renewal of your 250 MB of data for 30 days for $14.99 
  plan. If you wish to re-establish service, please go to Settings on 
  your iPad to select a new plan."

  When you tap Cancel Plan, you have two options about proceeding. You 
  can either delete the account you used to set up the plan 
  immediately, or you can delete it later. "Later" isn't quite the 
  right word: AT&T's text explains that dormant accounts are deleted 
  after 60 days.

  No matter which method you choose to cancel automatic renewal, the 
  current service remains active until you exhaust the 250 MB data on 
  that plan or for the remainder of the 30-day period.

  The only reason I can think of for the two kinds of account removal 
  would be to allow a 3G plan to continue temporarily on an iPad when 
  selling a 3G iPad or perhaps sending a child off to college with it.

  If you use 3G service on an iPad intermittently (with more than 60 
  days between uses), you're going to wind up creating an account many 
  times, it seems. Here's hoping AT&T can cope with the same email 
  address being used each time.

  The international data plan rates for the iPad are precisely the 
  same as AT&T offers for other phone packages, and aren't a gotcha - 
  these options are a one-time, 30-day period purchase and don't 
  renew. You can even pick the start date at midnight Eastern Time 
  (even if you're in a different time zone) of at least the next day. 
  The usurious rates run from - get this -  $24.99 for 20 MB to 
  $199.99 for 200 MB. It remains to be seen if it will be possible to 
  buy a cheap pre-paid MicroSIM when travelling in other countries. 
  (To be fair, AT&T is paying enormous fees to its international 
  partners, too, just not that enormous.)

  Apart from the international data plans, AT&T's 3G service options 
  are rather remarkable, with unusual elements related to pricing, 
  extending service, upgrading, and cancellation that make it flexible 
  enough for occasional use but affordable for regular use. Careful 
  about that streaming video, though.

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11251#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/11251>


TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 3 May 2010
----------------------------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11253>

**Fetch 5.6** -- Fetch Softworks has updated the file transfer client 
  Fetch to version 5.6. New in Fetch 5.6 is automatic resumption of 
  stalled or failed downloads, coupled with a number of other tweaks 
  that improve Fetch's capability to resume downloads. Other changes 
  include improved scrolling performance in large folders, additional 
  detail in the Fetch Transcript, better encoding handling when 
  editing files with BBEdit or TextWrangler, and a number of bug fixes 
  described in the full release notes. ($29 new, free update for 
  purchases after 28 January 2009; otherwise $10 upgrade, 17.4 MB)

<http://fetchsoftworks.com/fetch/>
<http://fetchsoftworks.com/fetch/release-notes#fetch-5.6>

  Read/post comments about Fetch 5.6.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11241#comments>


**TypeIt4Me 5.0** -- Those who type a lot, take notice: Ettore 
  Software has released a significant update to the long-standing text 
  expansion utility TypeIt4Me. Version 5.0 trades its System 
  Preferences pane for a standalone application that opens the Edit 
  Clippings and Preferences windows more quickly. The latest version 
  is also fully 64-bit compatible, enables users to resize the Edit 
  Clippings window, and increases text expansion responsiveness. Also, 
  an option has been added that enables a period to require a second 
  trigger before expanding and automatic updating via Sparkle has been 
  added. TypeIt4Me 5.0 requires Mac OS X 10.5 or later. ($27 new, $9 
  upgrade, 5.2 MB)

<http://www.ettoresoftware.com/products/typeit4me/>

  Read/post comments about TypeIt4Me 5.0.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11241#comments>


**iStat Menus 3.0.1** -- Bjango Software has released the latest 
  version of its comprehensive Mac OS X monitoring utility iStat 
  Menus, which puts user-selected meters in the menu bar. Version 
  3.0.1, while just a minor bug fix update, comes hard on the heels of 
  the larger 3.0 update that moves the preferences into a standalone 
  app (previously they were contained within a preference pane), makes 
  installation easier via drag-and-drop, adds fan speed controls, 
  displays the Mac's public IP address, adds battery monitoring, and 
  adds flashing time separators. Also, CPU usage has been reduced, 
  SMART drive temperature monitoring has been improved, localizations 
  for seven languages have been added, and a number of crashing bugs 
  have been fixed. A full list of changes is available on Bjango's Web 
  site. With version 3.0, iStat Menus also moves from being free to 
  commercial. ($10 new, free update from 3.0, 6.4 MB)

<http://bjango.com/apps/istatmenus/>
<http://bjango.com/apps/istatmenus/versionhistory/>

  Read/post comments about iStat Menus 3.0.1.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11242#comments>


**Transmit 4.0** -- Panic Inc. has released Transmit 4, a major update 
  to its popular FTP, SFTP, Amazon S3, and WebDAV client, with over 45 
  new features. Transmit 4's interface has been completely redesigned, 
  featuring a more Mac-like feel, tear-away tabs, simultaneous 
  progress bars for the current and overall status, thumbnail views 
  for images, label capabilities, and support for Quick Look and Cover 
  Flow. The update makes syncing easier with a new step-by-step sync 
  assistant, adds a new Places feature that enables users to access 
  their most-used folders quickly, adds multitouch navigation support, 
  and overhauls the program's AppleScript support. Additionally, File 
  Skipping is no longer restricted to syncing, options under Advanced 
  Server Preferences have been expanded, and a new Send SSH command 
  has been added. Transmit 4 also sees dramatic performance 
  enhancements, including upload speeds that are reportedly up to 25 
  times faster and download speeds up to 18 times faster. A full list 
  of changes is available from Transmit's Web page, by clicking the 
  "See All New Features Button" under the Features section. ($34 new, 
  $19 upgrade, 22.6 MB)

<https://www.panic.com/transmit/>

  Read/post comments about Transmit 4.0.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11235#comments>


**iTunes 9.1.1** -- iTunes 9.1.1 reportedly improves overall stability 
  and performance while addressing a number of unspecified stability 
  and usability issues regarding VoiceOver and Genius Mixes. The 
  update also fixes a problem related to syncing while simultaneously 
  converting songs to the 128 Kbps AAC format. Apple appears to have 
  done some additional quiet releases, so if you're having any trouble 
  with iTunes 9.1.1, download a fresh copy and reinstall to make sure 
  you have the latest version. (Free, 93 MB)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1036>

  Read/post comments about iTunes 9.1.1.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11236#comments>


**PDFpen 4.6.2 and PDFpenPro 4.6.2** -- SmileOnMyMac has released 
  minor maintenance updates to its PDF editing utilities PDFpen and 
  PDFpenPro. The updates mainly addresses a problem with the Correct 
  Text Tool that could cause it to erase more text than it should. 
  Other unspecified improvements and fixes have also been included. 
  ($49.95/$99.95 new, free updates, 43.8 MB/44.0 MB)

<http://www.smileonmymac.com/PDFpen/>
<http://www.smileonmymac.com/PDFpenPro/>

  Read/post comments about PDFpen 4.6.2 and PDFpenPro 4.6.2.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11237#comments>


**Digital Camera Raw Compatibility Update 3.2** -- Apple has released 
  its latest Digital Camera Raw Compatibility Update, which extends 
  Aperture 3 and iPhoto '09 support for a handful of cameras. Newly 
  supported cameras and file formats include the Canon EOS Rebel T2i 
  (550D/Kiss X4), the Leica S2, the Olympus E-450, the Olympus E-600, 
  the Olympus E-620, the Sony Alpha DSLR-A230, the Sony Alpha 
  DSLR-A330, the Sony Alpha DSLR-A380, and the Sony Alpha DSLR-A450. 
  This version also addresses unspecified issues with raw image 
  processing for the Canon EOS 30D, the Pentax K-x, and the Pentax 
  K-7. The update is available via Software Update and the Apple 
  Support Downloads page. (Free, 5.28 MB)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1035>

  Read/post comments about Digital Camera Raw Compatibility Update 
  3.2.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11229#comments>



ExtraBITS for 3 May 2010
------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11252>

  We have a cornucopia of reading for you this week, including Apple 
  selling movies via iTunes in France and Ireland, HP buying Palm, the 
  deadline for printing an iPhoto book for Mother's Day, Apple buying 
  a voice search company, the WWDC dates being announced, Princeton 
  suggesting a workaround for the iPad DHCP bug, Sony discontinuing 
  floppy disks, and a rundown on the whole Gizmodo stolen iPhone 
  story, complete with the identify of the guy who found the 
  prototype. Phew!


**iTunes Store Now Offers Movies in France and Ireland** -- Apple has 
  announced that movies from major film studios are now available for 
  rent or purchase in the iTunes Store in France and Ireland. 
  Purchases start at €7.99 for older titles, €9.99 for recent 
  releases and €13.99 for new releases. Rentals cost either €2.99 
  for older titles or €3.99 for new releases; add €1 for high 
  definition versions. With this move, France and Ireland join the UK, 
  Canada, Australia, and New Zealand to have movies available in 
  iTunes (outside of the United States). The delays in adding 
  additional countries are no doubt due to content license 
  restrictions from the major studios.

<http://www.apple.com/pr/library/2010/04/30itunesfrance.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11254#comments>


**HP to Buy Palm for $1.2 Billion** -- Nancy Gohring of IDG News 
  Service writes that HP plans to buy Palm for $1.2 billion, 
  potentially rescuing Palm's webOS from obscurity. The Palm Pre and 
  Pixi smartphones, which run webOS, haven't competed well with the 
  iPhone or smartphones based on Google's Android operating system, 
  and Palm has been looking for a buyer. HP hopes to use Palm's 
  technology to power both smartphones and a new generation of 
  tablet-sized devices. Despite its size, HP hasn't been a significant 
  player in either market, and however good webOS may be, it wasn't 
  enough to slow the adoption of iPhone OS- and Android-based devices.

<http://www.macworld.com/article/150916/2010/04/hp_palm.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11246#comments>


**Wired Identifies iPhone Prototype Finder** -- In the continuing 
  story of the lost iPhone prototype purchased by Gizmodo, Wired has 
  tracked down the person who found the prototype, a 21-year-old who 
  "regrets his mistake," according to a statement from his lawyer.

<http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2010/04/iphone-finder/>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11249#comments>


**Mother's Day iPhoto Book Deadline Approaching** -- Want to create an 
  iPhoto book for a Mother's Day gift? Apple notes that the deadline 
  to order a book and have it delivered in time is today, May 3rd (for 
  express shipping). And speaking from experience, it takes some time 
  to choose and lay out all those photos, so you'd best get finished!

<http://www.apple.com/ilife/iphoto/print-products.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11247#comments>


**Apple Buys Voice-Based Search Company Siri** -- The New York Times 
  is reporting on Apple's recent acquisition of Siri, a startup 
  company specializing in mobile search. The company's iPhone app Siri 
  Assistant enables users to perform searches and tasks like making 
  restaurant reservations, buying movie tickets, and securing cabs 
  with voice-based commands. While it's unclear exactly what Apple 
  plans to do with the technology, the most obvious application would 
  be to provide a native search alternative to Google on the iPhone. 
  The buying of Siri also fits a bigger picture of Apple buying 
  smaller companies to get a leg up in the mobile industry; other 
  recent purchases include the chip maker Intrinsity and the mobile ad 
  company Quattro Wireless.

<http://www.nytimes.com/2010/04/29/technology/29apple.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11239#comments>


**Apple Announces Dates for WWDC 2010** -- Apple has announced that 
  the annual Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) will be held 7 
  June 2010 through 11 June 2010 in San Francisco. Despite the short 
  notice and $1,599 price tag, Apple appears confident that the likely 
  debut of iPhone OS 4 and a new iPhone will ensure strong attendance. 
  Apple's emphasis on iPhone OS development  - the Apple Design Awards 
  are open only to apps currently sold in the App Store, for example - 
  is causing some grumpiness among Mac-only developers.

<http://developer.apple.com/wwdc/>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11234#comments>


**Princeton Suggests Workaround for iPad DHCP Flaw** -- Princeton 
  University's Office of Information Technology is now suggesting that 
  the iPad's DHCP lease renewal problem may be related to the iPad's 
  screen being locked, either manually or automatically. The best 
  workaround seems to be to disable automatic screen locking and avoid 
  locking the screen manually; the downside to this is of course 
  reduced battery life. Other (but worse) possibilities include 
  turning off Wi-Fi or the entire iPad at the end of each session.

<http://www.net.princeton.edu/ipad/ipad-iphoneos32-dhcp-workaround.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11233#comments>


**Sony to Discontinue Floppy Disk Sales** -- The end of an era is 
  approaching. In March 2011, Sony will discontinue sales of 3.5-inch 
  floppy disks in Japan; apart from a few niche markets, worldwide 
  sales of floppy disks were halted in March 2010. It's not really 
  surprising, and one friend noted in Twitter that it was more 
  interesting to realize that Sony has still been making floppies all 
  this time (other manufacturers have already left the market). The 
  last Mac to support a floppy drive - the PowerBook (FireWire) via a 
  media bay - debuted in February 2000 and was discontinued in January 
  2001.

<http://www.examiner.com/x-16352-Japan-Headlines-Examiner~y2010m4d24-Sony-to-discontinue-35-inch-floppy-disk-in-Japan>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11230#comments>


**CNET Continues Gizmodo Stolen iPhone Coverage** -- Could the story 
  of the iPhone prototype get weirder? Police obtained a warrant to 
  search a Gizmodo editor's home, and the legal speculation is running 
  rampant as to whether Gizmodo is protected by reporter shield laws, 
  or if California's laws regarding lost property will instead take 
  precedence. Declan McCullagh and Greg Sandoval cover recent events 
  for CNET.

<http://news.cnet.com/8301-13579_3-20003477-37.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11227#comments>



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