TidBITS#1027/10-May-2010
========================
  Issue link: <http://db.tidbits.com/issue/1027>

  Books, email, and iPads, oh my! Our articles cover the gamut this 
  week, starting with Apple's announcement of iPad availability and 
  pricing in a variety of countries. We're also pleased to announce 
  the release of ebooks about Apple Mail on the Mac, managing spam 
  with Apple Mail, and the Mail app on the iPad, iPhone, and iPod 
  touch. Elsewhere in this issue, Glenn Fleishman takes a long look at 
  reading books on the iPad and covers the new Eye-Fi Geo X2 Wi-Fi SD 
  card, Mark Anbinder examines Bento for iPad, and Adam reports on a 
  new plug-in for Gmail that provides social networking details for 
  email correspondents. Finally, if you want to peruse the past, we 
  note the reappearance of nearly all the old Info-Mac Digests from 
  yesteryear. Notable software releases this week include MarsEdit 
  3.0, Aperture 3.0.3, Typinator 4.0, Mac Pro Audio Update 1.1, Epson 
  Printer Drivers 2.3.1 for Mac OS X 10.6, and Phone Amego 1.1.20.

Articles
    Old Info-Mac Digests Come Back Online
    New Take Control Ebooks Offer Mail Help for Mac, iPad, and iPhone
    International iPad Ship Dates and Prices Announced
    Eye-Fi Updates Geo Card for Apple and Adds Hotspots
    Rapportive Plug-in Replaces Gmail Ads with Sender Info
    Bento for iPad Not Just a Bigger Box
    Reading Books on the iPad: iBooks, Kindle, and GoodReader
    TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 10 May 2010
    ExtraBITS for 10 May 2010


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Old Info-Mac Digests Come Back Online
-------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11255>
  2 comments

  Dan Palka, who took over the Info-Mac name and domain when I shut 
  down the original Info-Mac nearly five years ago (see "The Info-Mac 
  Network Retires," 19 December 2005), tells me that he and a bunch of 
  contributors have now brought almost the entire collection of 
  Info-Mac Digests back online in a modern system. The end result is a 
  largely complete archive of postings from 1984 through 2002, 
  collected from a variety of different sources. The main holes occur 
  in 1992 and in 1995, so if you have Info-Mac Digests from those 
  years, let the current Info-Mac folks know or tell me and I'll pass 
  things on.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8375>
<http://www.info-mac.org/viewforum.php?f=213>

  I'm a great believer in making old information available, not so 
  much because it's useful in the way that current information is, but 
  because you can never anticipate just how you'll want to use it. For 
  instance, we've been asked a number of times about when certain 
  software came out, because if it was before a particular date, it 
  would qualify as prior art in invalidating a patent (and these 
  patents are almost always for something painfully obvious). If 
  there's something in the Mac past that you've been wondering about, 
  you can search all the old Info-Mac Digests.

<http://www.info-mac.org/search.php?fid[]=213>

  Along with all this newly restored historical information (the 
  Info-Mac Archive of software is also back online and searchable, 
  with files last added as of 2005), the modern Info-Mac comprises a 
  discussion forum, blog, industry headline list, classified ad 
  section, and buyer's guide. 

<http://www.info-mac.org/viewforum.php?f=94>
<http://www.info-mac.org/>

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New Take Control Ebooks Offer Mail Help for Mac, iPad, and iPhone
-----------------------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11270>

  We're pleased to bring you not one, not two, but _three_ new Take 
  Control ebooks from Joe Kissell, all aimed at helping you use Apple 
  Mail more effectively and solve pesky email-related problems. Two of 
  these titles are updates to stalwarts of the Take Control series, 
  and the third explores the timely topic of using the Mail app on 
  your iPad, iPhone, or iPod touch. They can all be read on their own 
  or in combination for more comprehensive guidance; various 
  30-percent-off bundles are available on the book pages linked below.

  The new ebooks are:

* "Take Control of Mail on the iPad, iPhone, and iPod touch": Brought 
  to you by the dream team of Joe Kissell (author) and Dan Frakes 
  (editor), this new 96-page ebook takes a practical look at using the 
  Mail app on an iPad, iPhone, or iPod touch. It explains various 
  email account options, helps you develop a real-world mobile email 
  strategy that integrates with your Mac, explains the mechanics of 
  sending and receiving mobile email, and provides essential 
  troubleshooting advice. Joe started with the iPhone and iPod touch 
  in mind but was delighted to find that he could extend the 
  manuscript to cover iPad details too, thus providing helpful, timely 
  advice regardless of which device(s) you use for email. $10

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/iphone-mail?pt=TB1027>

* "Take Control of Apple Mail in Snow Leopard": Completely updated for 
  Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard's Mail 4, this 133-page ebook provides 
  comprehensive guidance on all things related to Apple Mail. You'll 
  learn the nuts and bolts of receiving, composing, and sending email, 
  along with many advanced topics, including real-world Exchange, 
  MobileMe, and Gmail integration; mastering sophisticated 
  organization and filing techniques; and using digital signatures and 
  encryption. Plus you'll get a handle on various Mail mysteries - the 
  sometimes-present Outbox, the Dock unread count, why smart addresses 
  can be stupid, "unsafe" addresses, the Previous Recipients list, 
  attachment tricks, and much more. $15

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/snow-leopard-apple-mail?pt=TB1027>

* "Take Control of Spam with Apple Mail": If the 5 pages of advice 
  about eliminating spam from your Inbox in "Take Control of Apple 
  Mail in Snow Leopard" aren't sufficient for the volume of spam you 
  receive on your Macintosh, this ebook brings out the big guns. Now 
  at version 1.5, this 73-page ebook explains how Apple Mail filters 
  out spam, discusses how to optimize the Junk Mail filter, and gives 
  advice for fixing a spam-clogged incoming queue. Joe also reviews 
  third-party options that can identify even more spam. The ebook 
  comes with a coupon for $5 off on SpamSieve, Joe's favorite plug-in 
  for enhancing Mail's anti-spam capabilities. The ebook covers Apple 
  Mail in 10.3 Panther all the way through 10.6 Snow Leopard. $10

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/spam-apple-mail?pt=TB1027>

  If you're curious about how you might read these and other Take 
  Control ebooks on an iPad, check out Tonya's article on the topic 
  ("Reading Take Control Ebooks on an iPad (or iPhone or iPod touch)," 
  7 April 2010), which also introduces our still-in-beta account 
  management system. These books won't be available in EPUB format for 
  a week or so, but we'll post the files as soon as we get them back 
  from conversion.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11169>

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International iPad Ship Dates and Prices Announced
--------------------------------------------------
  by Doug McLean <doug_mclean@tidbits.com>, Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11265>
  6 comments

  Apple has announced that the iPad will officially be available in 
  Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Spain, 
  Switzerland, and the UK on 28 May 2010. Customers will be able to 
  buy it through the online Apple Store, Apple retail stores, and 
  select Apple Authorized Resellers; online pre-orders will be 
  accepted as of 10 May 2010. 

<http://www.apple.com/pr/library/2010/05/07ipad.html>

  Apple also said that the iPad will be released in Austria, Belgium, 
  Hong Kong, Ireland, Luxembourg, Mexico, Netherlands, New Zealand, 
  and Singapore in July 2010. 

  Apple appears to be keeping its markup low over U.S. prices, which 
  is rare. But given that the iPad can be used worldwide, and that the 
  3G flavor is unlocked and may be used with any GSM carrier, Apple 
  may be trying to avoid the lightweight iPad being purchased in large 
  quantities in the United States and sold overseas. In most cases, 
  the price differences between countries are less than surface 
  shipping costs.


**Device Costs** -- Apple revealed iPad pricing for some countries in 
  its press releases. We've pieced together prices in other countries 
  from press reports. Prices below are for the Wi-Fi iPad in 16, 32, 
  and 64 GB versions, followed by the 3G iPad in the same capacities.

* Australia, in Australian dollars: Wi-Fi, $629, $759, and $879; 3G, 
  $799, $928, and $1,049 (prices include the 10 percent GST)

<http://www.apple.com/au/pr/library/2010/05/07ipad.html>

* Canada, in Canadian dollars: Wi-Fi, $549, $649, and $749; 3G, $679, 
  $779, and $879 (5 percent GST and 0-10 percent PST is not included)

<http://www.apple.com/ca/pr/library/2010/05/07ipad.html>

* Germany: Wi-Fi, €514, €614, and €714; 3G, €614, €714, and 
  €814 (Germany's prices are about €15 higher than in other 
  European countries due to a copyright levy on top of 19 percent VAT)

<http://www.chip.de/news/Deutsche-iPad-Preise-Weltweit-nirgendwo-teurer_42827419.html>

* France and Italy: Wi-Fi, €499, €599, and €699; 3G, €599, 
  €699, and €799 (includes 19.6 percent and 20 percent VAT, 
  respectively)

<http://www.apple.com/fr/pr/library/2010/05/07ipad.html>
<http://www.apple.com/it/pr/library/2010/05/07ipad.html>

* Japan: Wi-Fi: ¥48,960, ¥59,040, and ¥68,880; 3G: ¥58,230, 
  ¥67,920, and ¥77,280 (5 percent tax is not included in prices)

<http://mb.softbank.jp/mb/ipad/price_plan/chart/>

* Spain: Wi-Fi, €479, €579, €679; 3G, €579, €679, €779 
  (price includes 16 percent VAT)

<http://www.apple.com/es/pr/library/2010/05/07ipad.html>

* Switzerland, in Swiss francs (CHF): Wi-Fi, 649 CHF, 779 CHF, and 899 
  CHF; 3G, 799 CHF, 929 CHF, and 1049 CHF (price appears to include 
  7.6 percent sales tax)

<http://www.apple.com/chde/pr/library/2010/05/07ipad.html>

* UK: Wi-Fi, £429, £499, and £599; 3G, £529, £599, and £699 
  (prices include the UK's 17.5 percent VAT)

<http://www.apple.com/uk/pr/library/2010/05/07ipad.html>

  While these prices may seem like steep markups over the $499 to $829 
  range of iPad pricing in the United States, U.S. prices don't 
  include mandatory national taxes. Some U.S. states have sales tax 
  approaching 10 percent, and Apple charges sales tax in every state 
  in which tax is collected. Non-U.S. iPad pricing, once tax is 
  removed from the price, appears to have a 5 to 8 percent markup over 
  base street prices in the United States.


**Service Plans** -- The plans announced by most carriers outside the 
  United States should make Americans glad to have AT&T to kick 
  around, for once. Very few carriers are providing anything like 
  unlimited monthly service; several offer a data cap after which 
  service is throttled to 64 Kbps, but no additional charges accrue.

  One or more carriers in every country but Australia and Switzerland 
  have provided plan details. Several transnational carriers, like O2, 
  Orange, and Vodafone, have different offerings in each country in 
  which they provide service. 

  Only Softbank in Japan offers a contract-based service as an option; 
  all other plans are one-time only (typically for day or week use), 
  or recurring billing until canceled with no penalty.

* Canada's Rogers Communications is offering service comparable to its 
  iPhone plans. For $15 Canadian per month, you get 250 MB of usage 
  and for $35 per month, 5 GB of usage. Both plans include unlimited 
  Wi-Fi. No overage fees are described.

<http://www.rogers.com/web/content/ipad-dataplans>

* In France, two carriers will offer iPad service plans, but only 
  Orange (which provides service in many countries) has so far 
  provided pricing. Orange's plans in France are 200 MB for €10 per 
  month and €39 for 2 GB per month. Both plans include unlimited 
  Wi-Fi on Orange's 30,000-hotspot network. Additional units of 300 MB 
  are available at €10 each and must be used within 31 days. Orange 
  is offering a 15-percent discount to voice subscribers. Orange's 
  footnotes say that VoIP, newsgroups, and peer-to-peer networking are 
  forbidden.

<http://www.orange.fr/bin/frame.cgi?u=http%3A//www.ipad.orange.fr/>

* O2 in Germany has a capped service that provides HSPA 7.2 (7.2 Mbps 
  raw rate) downstream service until you pass the cap - at which point 
  you throttle down to 64 Kbps. Service costs €10 per month for 200 
  MB, €15 for 1 GB, and €25 for 5 GB.

<http://www.o2online.de/nw/meta/aktionen/ipad/ipad-mit-o2blue.html?o2_type=top&o2_label=/ipad>

* Also in Germany, Vodafone has a somewhat less appealing offer. The 
  company will charge €19.95 per month for up to 200 MB and €29.95 
  per month for up to 3 GB. When you run out of data with the 200 MB 
  plan, you're finished. There's no option I can see to renew. The 3 
  GB plan throttles usage each month to 64 Kbps after you hit the 
  limit. VoIP, instant messaging, and P2P are forbidden.

<http://www.vodafone.de/privat/ipad-tarife.html#ID167325>

* In Italy, Vodafone is taking an interesting approach: usage is 
  limited to 500 MB per day, and you can pay either €2 per day or 
  €30 per month. After 500 MB of usage each day, service is 
  throttled to 64 Kbps. VoIP is forbidden.

<http://ipad.vodafone.it/>

* Orange in Spain will charge €3.50 per day at up to 250 MB usage 
  per day or €35 per month at up to 2 GB per month. After the daily 
  or monthly limits, rates are throttled, likely to 64 Kbps.

<http://movil.orange.es/ipad/tarifas.html>

* Vodafone's charges for Spain aren't revealed without entering a 
  legitimate address, but other sites report service is €17.40 per 
  month for 250 MB of usage and €37.12 for "unlimited," which is 
  likely just a few GB per month with a throttle as with Orange.

<http://tienda.vodafone.es/moviles/lanzamientos/datos_ipad/>

* Softbank in Japan offers both prepaid and postpaid plans, in a 
  unique twist. You can pay ¥4,410 for 1 GB usage over 30 days, or 
  pay ¥2,910 per month with a two-year contract for unlimited use 
  during that period - although with a throttle past some undefined 
  usage limit.

<http://mb.softbank.jp/mb/ipad/price_plan/>

  In the United Kingdom, three carriers are providing iPad plans, all 
  of them offering many options with lots of provisos:

* O2 has three plans: £2 a day for up to 500 MB of data, and monthly 
  plans of £10 for 1 GB and £15 for 3 GB. If you're paying by the 
  day and run out of data you can add another 500 MB for £2. If 
  you're paying by the month, you can add either 1 GB for £10 or 3 GB 
  for £15. However, no matter what plan you have, you cannot use more 
  than 5 GB in a month. All three plans include "unlimited" hotspot 
  Wi-Fi, which excludes streaming audio and video, VoIP, and P2P, 
  among other unspecified "excessive" uses.

<http://shop.o2.co.uk/ipadtariffs/>
<http://www.o2.co.uk/explore/tariffs/boltons/paymonthlyboltons/unlimitedwifi>

* Orange has five plans. You can pay as you go at 5 pence per MB up to 
  a total of £40 per month (800 MB, in effect), but you can use the 
  service until you hit 2 GB in a month. A daily plan costs £2 (up to 
  200 MB), valid until midnight of the day you sign up, while a £7.50 
  weekly plan includes up to 1 GB, good until to midnight of the 
  seventh day. Two monthly plans run 3 GB for £15 and 10 GB for £25. 
  The monthly plans include "unlimited" Wi-Fi, which is just 750 MB 
  per month of usage!

<http://shop.orange.co.uk/ipad/ipad-choose-your-plan>

* Vodafone will charge £10 per month for 1 GB and £25 for 5 GB. The 
  Vodafone site isn't yet providing full details on related terms, 
  limits, caps, and Wi-Fi.

<http://shop.vodafone.co.uk/shop/mobile-broadband-devices/apple-ipad-microsim>

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Eye-Fi Updates Geo Card for Apple and Adds Hotspots
---------------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11231>

  Eye-Fi has updated the Wi-Fi SD camera card that it sells 
  exclusively via Apple Stores with double the memory and a number of 
  other features. The new Geo X2 card has 4 GB of storage and will 
  cost $69.99 when it becomes available for purchase in May 2010. The 
  Eye-Fi Geo X2 works with Mac OS X software to transfer photos 
  directly into iPhoto.

<http://www.eye.fi/products/geox2>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-04/eye-fi-geo-x2.png>

  Eye-Fi embeds a processor, Wi-Fi radio, and storage in the tiny SD 
  form factor. The card operates independently of the camera in which 
  it's inserted, using Wi-Fi to transfer images and videos to a 
  computer running Eye-Fi software on the local network and/or 
  uploading to online storage and sharing sites directly. It can also 
  transfer to a file server via FTP and SFTP.

  This latest Geo model for Apple is part of a revision in speed, 
  capacity, and features that the company mostly released in March 
  2010 with its new X2 series of cards. The Connect X2 ($49.99, 4 GB), 
  Explore X2 ($99.99, 8 GB), and Pro X2 ($149.99, 8 GB) each come with 
  a slightly different set of features.

<http://www.eye.fi/products/compare-cards>

  All X2 cards include 802.11n networking for faster data transfer, as 
  well as a feature Eye-Fi dubs "Endless Memory." With this option 
  enabled, the cards automatically delete the oldest stored images and 
  video that have been successfully transferred to a computer or Web 
  site when the card starts to fill up.

  (The X2 cards and previous models include a Selective Share feature 
  that lets you use a lock or protect feature on most cameras - 
  normally meant to prevent accidental erasure of images - to instead 
  choose which pictures to upload. The feature lets you choose to use 
  selective uploading for computer transfer, online sharing, or a 
  combination of both.)

<http://www.eye.fi/blog/selective-share>

  The X2 models all transfer JPEG images as well as several movie 
  formats including MPEG-4, AVI, and QuickTime. The Pro X2 also 
  uploads raw files.

<http://support.eye.fi/eye-fi-setup/uploading-photos/upload-video/which-video-formats-do-eye-fi-video-cards-upload/>

  The Geo, Explore, and Pro X2 models all include geotagging using 
  Skyhook Wireless's Wi-Fi positioning system. The Eye-Fi card 
  captures a scan of any Wi-Fi networks in the vicinity when a picture 
  is taken, and when the pictures are later transferred via Wi-Fi (not 
  loaded via a card reader) Eye-Fi looks up and attaches coordinates 
  to the image's metadata. iPhoto '09 and Aperture 3 automatically use 
  this location data for the Places feature. (Of course, this feature 
  doesn't work if there are no Wi-Fi gateways broadcasting nearby, or 
  if you're not in a built-up area that Skyhook has scanned.)

  The Explore and Pro include a year of free hotspot uploading, which 
  was recently upgraded to include 21,000 locations operated by AT&T 
  in the United States, and will be further expanded in the next two 
  months. Walk into a hotspot and turn on a camera with an Eye-Fi 
  card, and it will automatically log in and upload images to whatever 
  services you specified.

  The hotspot upgrade adds support for Devicescape's system for 
  bypassing login screens at paid and free hotspots. Devicescape lets 
  you enter any credentials for network access, like a Boingo Wireless 
  account, in an account you create at Devicescape's Web site. When 
  you visit a hotspot, the software handles behind-the-scenes 
  interaction with a Web server in the hotspot to pass it those 
  credentials. No Web browser is required.

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

  Devicescape also adds automated login for tens of thousands of free 
  and open networks for which a user would otherwise need some 
  mechanism to enable a connection. The software works extremely well 
  on "interface-free" devices, such as Eye-Fi cards. 

  Eye-Fi also lets you enter network passwords and other configuration 
  information using Mac or Windows software when the Eye-Fi card is 
  connected via a card reader. Devicescape can also manage home and 
  office network passwords.

  Starting 1 June 2010, Eye-Fi will charge $29.99 per year for hotspot 
  access, either as an add-on for Connect and Geo X2 owners, or as a 
  renewal for Explore and Pro when the first year is up. Until 31 May 
  2010, Connect and Geo owners can pay a promotional price of $14.99 
  for a year's access.

  I believe this latest release checks off the final item on Adam 
  Engst's 2008 opinion piece, "Why I Hate the Eye-Fi Share Wireless SD 
  Card" (18 August 2008). Adam had many complaints, including 
  incorrect iPhoto import behavior, an inability to handle movie 
  imports, and the lack of a way to choose which images were 
  transferred. The faster speed of the newer cards mean that media 
  files are typically transferred before a camera automatically powers 
  down, too. [Well... Having wasted $100 and lots of time testing 
  software updates to the original 2 GB Eye-Fi card, I wouldn't even 
  consider purchasing a subsequent model and would need to do hands-on 
  testing before I would trust that these nominal feature improvements 
  perform as advertised. It's also worth noting that the Eye-Fi cards 
  cost five to seven times as much as comparable normal SD cards. 
  -Adam]

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9737>

  I was more impressed back in my article, "Why I Like the Eye-Fi 
  Explore Wireless SD Card" (18 August 2008), and I've found the 
  regular feature improvements, the increase in memory, and the faster 
  file transfers make the current Eye-Fi models even more enjoyable.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9738>

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Rapportive Plug-in Replaces Gmail Ads with Sender Info
------------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11117>
  8 comments

  For anyone who uses Gmail via its Web interface, there's a new 
  plug-in for Firefox, Chrome, and Mailplane called Rapportive that 
  replaces Gmail's right-hand advertising sidebar with a widget that 
  shows you information about the sender of the currently displayed 
  email message. 

<http://rapportive.com/>

  I've seen no word as to what Google thinks about this, given how it 
  replaces advertising, but from a user perspective, it's generally a 
  big win. How many times have you ever clicked an ad in a Gmail 
  message? I can count the times I've done so on one hand, and most of 
  those clicks were pure curiosity as to what the ad might be for, not 
  because I was actually interested in the product. Ads in Gmail are 
  an oddity for Google anyway, because Gmail is essentially a private 
  space (as opposed to the public space of the Google search results), 
  because Google happily lets any Gmail user avoid the ads by using 
  POP or IMAP to read email in a client, and because none of Google's 
  other private-space services (Docs, Reader, Calendar, Wave, iGoogle, 
  etc.) have advertising.

  Despite this huge win in trading ads for useful information, there 
  is a slight loss of functionality after you install Rapportive, 
  since it takes over the entire right column in Gmail, which includes 
  not just the ads but also the conversation controls for creating a 
  new window, printing the email, creating a new Google Docs document, 
  expanding and collapsing all the messages in the conversation, and 
  forwarding the conversation. Rapportive repositions those links just 
  above the right edge of the message and drops their text labels, 
  which is a little too bad. 

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-03/Before-and-after-Rapportive.png>

  Perhaps more troubling for some will be the loss of Gmail's 
  automatic detection of addresses for mapping and of appointment 
  times for event creation, since those, when Gmail finds them, appear 
  in that right column between the conversation commands and the ads. 
  Rapportive just eliminates those shortcuts. I can't say I'm too 
  bothered, since although I think they're cool, I've never actually 
  used them. 

  But the information Rapportive does provide can be highly useful, 
  including the person's name, picture, email address, location (which 
  you can click to map), position, and Twitter feed, along with links 
  to their pages on other social networking sites like LinkedIn, 
  Facebook, Flickr, and many others. In my usage so far, I've quite 
  enjoyed seeing people's pictures and recent tweets, and sometimes 
  it's helpful to learn what someone's professional position is, if I 
  haven't previously met them. I believe the position information 
  comes from LinkedIn, which sometimes leads to slightly odd results 
  if that information hasn't been kept up to date.

  Rapportive discovers all this information from the person's email 
  address, so in theory it shouldn't be a privacy intrusion. The main 
  concern I can see is if someone is corresponding in a professional 
  capacity in email but posting to Twitter in a personal capacity via 
  an account associated with the professional email address. Having 
  your drunken party tweets showing up next to your email messages to 
  prospective clients or business colleagues would be a no-no, but 
  then again, if you're posting to a public Twitter account, you 
  should be aware that what you're saying could be associated with you 
  in different contexts.

  At the bottom of the Rapportive plug-in is a field for you to add 
  your own notes that only you will see; this could be quite helpful 
  for answering that "Who the heck is this person?" question for 
  people with whom you correspond only sporadically .

  When you're viewing a conversation with multiple senders in Gmail, 
  exactly who shows up in the right sidebar can be a bit variable. 
  Usually it's the person who last contributed to the thread, but 
  every so often, someone in the middle of the thread appears in 
  Rapportive instead. You can force Rapportive to show a particular 
  person's information by mousing over their name in the message's top 
  line (this trick works not just for the colored name of the sender 
  but also for the plain-text names of recipients).

  Rapportive is taking suggestions on a UserVoice forum; it's worth 
  reading through to see what users are asking for. The first thing I 
  found myself wanting is a link that would show all my Gmail 
  conversations with the current person. That has been suggested, and 
  the UserVoice system lets you see what others have suggested and 
  vote on those ideas rather than creating duplicates. (As an aside, I 
  haven't used the UserVoice system before, but it seem quite clever.)

<https://rapportive.uservoice.com/forums/42557-general>

  Installing Rapportive in Firefox and Chrome is easy, just like any 
  other extension, and turning Rapportive on in Mailplane is even 
  easier, since it's merely a checkbox in the Advanced view for each 
  account you've set up in Mailplane's preferences. Alas, Rapportive 
  does not work in Safari just yet, but the company is working on 
  adding support for more browsers, with Internet Explorer 8 next. 
  Perhaps with some encouragement, Safari will come shortly after.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-03/Rapportive-in-Mailplane.png>

  In the meantime, Rapportive is one of the most interesting additions 
  I've seen to Gmail - and to email in general - in some time, and 
  it's well worth a look for those using Gmail's Web interface.

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11117#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/11117>


Bento for iPad Not Just a Bigger Box
------------------------------------
  by Mark H. Anbinder <mha@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11144>
  7 comments

  Some of the first apps geared specifically for Apple's iPad have 
  been little more than iPhone apps rejiggered to use a bigger screen. 
  While a couple are the inevitable riffs on the Star Trek PADD, a few 
  show us the beginnings of the real potential of the iPad platform. 
  The personal database Bento for iPad, available from FileMaker, Inc. 
  for the same $4.99 price as Bento for iPhone, looks to be a great 
  example of an app that groks the iPad.

<http://memory-alpha.org/en/wiki/PADD>
<http://www.filemaker.com/products/bento/ipad.html>
<http://www.filemaker.com/products/bento/iphone.html>


**What's Bento?** Bento arrived first for Macintosh as a standalone 
  database application geared toward personal use for those who don't 
  need the relational database features or networking capabilities of 
  FileMaker Pro. Dozens of included templates and access to a template 
  gallery offering work shared by other users make it easy and quick 
  to start using the software for simple information management tasks.

  In May 2009, the company added a version of Bento for the iPhone and 
  iPod touch, a $4.99 app that not only provided a handheld database 
  experience but also offered synchronization of data between the 
  handheld and Bento on the Mac (see "FileMaker Reaches iPhone with 
  $4.99 Bento App," 6 May 2009). The iPhone isn't ideal for data 
  entry, especially when text is involved, but it turns out to be 
  great for accessing information when you don't have your Mac with 
  you - and it's just fine for updating or entering relatively small 
  bits of data.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10259>

  With Bento for iPad, though, the FileMaker folks can leverage a much 
  bigger virtual keyboard that is a huge step up from the iPhone's for 
  serious typing, not to mention the capability to use the iPad 
  Keyboard Dock or a Bluetooth keyboard.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-04/Bento-keyboard.png>

  FileMaker didn't stop there. Bento takes full advantage of the 
  iPad's screen size and rotation capabilities, offering a record list 
  down the left side and the current record on the right when in 
  landscape orientation, much the way Mail for iPad shows a mailbox 
  listing along with an open message when the iPad is held 
  horizontally. Bento can also incorporate videos and display Web 
  sites within the app, rather than passing the user off to Safari, 
  and it can similarly send email itself rather than launching Mail.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-04/Bento-landscape.png>

  I especially like the expanding text field control that Bento's 
  developers added to the iPad app's user interface; these fields show 
  a preview on a record's summary page, but can be tapped to expand 
  for viewing, or editing, the full contents of that field. Apple 
  should incorporate this user interface element in the developer 
  tools, so other apps can easily make use of it.


**What's Missing?** -- The iPad is such an obvious information 
  collecting device for hospitals and other places with mobile staff 
  that we wish Bento for iPad could talk to something - anything - 
  beyond Bento for Mac. Even just the capability to interface with 
  FileMaker Pro could give a handheld Bento database tremendous 
  utility as a mobile database front end for more serious uses. That 
  would make Bento hugely attractive to a professional audience beyond 
  the youth hockey coach and kitchen dabbler that FileMaker currently 
  targets. One possible approach would be FileMaker Pro 11's Automatic 
  Recurring Import feature, which could regularly update a FileMaker 
  database (or even an SQL or ODBC back-end database) from changes in 
  Bento (see "FileMaker Pro 11 Promises Welcome Enhancements," 18 
  March 2010). We haven't yet been able to determine whether that 
  feature supports Bento.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11090>

  Even worse, nearly a year after we explained Bento for iPhone's 
  network limitations, FileMaker still hasn't solved the problem and 
  admits that it's shared by Bento for iPad. Specifically, the network 
  syncing feature works only if both the iPad and the Mac are on the 
  same Wi-Fi network subnet. This means it won't work if your Mac uses 
  a wired network or one of the many incompatible enterprise wireless 
  networks that create logical subnets for different devices connected 
  to the same access point. Creating a computer-to-computer wireless 
  network on your Mac (AirPort menu > Create Network) will help in 
  some such situations, but is of course forbidden in many of the 
  scenarios where this is an issue, such as a corporate or college 
  environment.

  FileMaker's inability to fix this problem leaves Bento for iPad just 
  as marooned as its iPhone sibling, unable to talk to a large subset 
  of the rest of the world. Or, at least, unable to talk to my MacBook 
  Pro if my machines and I are at work instead of on my simple home 
  network. I realize Bento is aimed at that home audience, but the 
  great thing about Mac laptops and, yes, the iPad, is that people 
  don't have to do all their home computing sitting at home any more, 
  and you can be sure they're not going to.

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11144#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/11144>


Reading Books on the iPad: iBooks, Kindle, and GoodReader
---------------------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11150>
  14 comments

  The iBooks app wasn't the sexiest first app I could download for my 
  new iPad, but it was high on my list as an author and as an 
  able-bodied assistant to our faithful publishers of Take Control 
  ebooks. I also installed the updated Kindle app with iPad support, 
  which Amazon formally announced in March. (See "Amazon Releases 
  Kindle for Mac and Explains iPad Plans," 22 March 2010.) 

<http://www.apple.com/ipad/features/ibooks.html>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/kindle/id302584613?mt=8>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11092>

  Both apps are free downloads. iBooks isn't bundled with the iPad, 
  and can be downloaded only in the United States until 28 May 2010, 
  when the iPad ships in nine other countries. The Kindle app is 
  available in many countries - Amazon doesn't specify precisely which 
  - and with varying availability of titles in each.

<http://www.amazon.com/gp/help/customer/display.html?ie=UTF8&nodeId=200420790>

  In addition to the two dedicated readers, I added GoodReader for 
  iPad, a multipurpose file viewer previously available for the iPhone 
  and iPod touch that has been optimized for the iPad. It's also on 
  sale for $0.99. GoodReader is a terrific way to both store and read 
  PDF and text documents, although it also stores and handles all 
  other iPhone OS-supported document types, photos, and videos. Unlike 
  iBooks and Kindle for iPad, there's no way to buy content from 
  within GoodReader.

<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/goodreader-tablet-edition/id363448914?mt=8>

  There's also Stanza, a free reading app from the Amazon-owned 
  company Lexcycle, which also has its own store for purchasing books, 
  but which hasn't yet been updated with iPad support. (The current 
  Stanza app works on the iPad, of course, but only in the small 
  pixel-accurate mode used for iPhone apps, or pixel-doubled to a 
  larger size, which makes the text fuzzy and difficult to read.) 
  We'll cover it, and perhaps others like B&N eReader, once an iPad 
  version becomes available.

<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/stanza/id284956128?mt=8>

  I created a video demonstrating the first three apps, which you can 
  watch in two parts at YouTube (split due to length). The first part 
  covers iBooks and the Kindle app; the second, GoodReader.

<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pv2wC9zU524>
<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ySD3uw-Yx6M>

  I've used the Kindle and Kindle 2 (though not the larger Kindle DX 
  which is nearly identical in size to the iPad), and have read books 
  on any number of mobile and portable devices. I quite like the 
  Kindle app on the iPhone, having consumed many titles on it in 
  travel and during odd moments.

  The iPad beats everything I've ever used hands down, no matter which 
  book or file viewer I tried. It's the right size and shape, with 
  enough resolution coupled with gloriously rich color to provide a 
  full experience of a book. It's too heavy to hold for any period of 
  time even in both hands, but on a stand, a knee, a tray table, or 
  other surface, it works just fine.

  Some Kindle-owning friends and colleagues have said that no matter 
  how marvelous the iPad's display, they will still prefer Amazon's 
  device because it's easier on their eyes than traditional backlit 
  displays. Since I've been reading books for many months on an 
  LED-backlit iPhone, a far more cramped experience, I don't think 
  that's an issue for me, but it's worth keeping that bias in mind.

  Let's look at the three apps.


**Getting Books into iBooks** -- Everyone has been all a-Twitter over 
  the coming of the iPad's iBooks app and its associated iBookstore, 
  mostly because it shook the pricing structure that Amazon had set. 
  That's well and good, but I'm interested both in what's available 
  and the reading experience. We can talk about whether pricing is 
  fair another time.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-04/ipad-ibooks-library.jpg>

  Let me talk first about availability, before speaking to how the 
  iBooks app lets you read books in the next section.

  Apple is clearly still loading the iBookstore with titles. While it 
  contains some New York Times bestsellers and many familiar titles, 
  my searches on present and past popular fiction and non-fiction 
  authors brought up few matches.

  For instance, Philip K. Dick has a shelf full of titles in my public 
  library and 36 books of his works or containing his stories in 
  Amazon's Kindle list, but only two - neither of which I was aware of 
  - in the iBookstore.

  The search feature within the iBookstore is both simple and 
  irritating. Start typing a name or title in the search field in the 
  upper right, and suggestions start appearing - but not instantly, 
  even with my fast cable connection and 802.11n Wi-Fi. By the time I 
  reach to tap Philip K. Dick, another author has scrolled him out of 
  the way as auto-complete searches continue. There's not yet a genre 
  or browse feature, or a way to mark favorite authors or follow a 
  particular series.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-04/ipad-ibooks-typing-authors.jpg>

  Downloadable samples - a chapter or more - were available for all 
  the books I found. The samples seem generous, and remind you that 
  you can purchase the whole book with a small Buy button at the top 
  of each page and a book icon and buy button filling the last page. 
  Samples are striped with a Sample banner in the main Library view, 
  too.

  I wound up purchasing a popular non-fiction title called "This Book 
  Is Overdue!" just to test the purchase feature. Your iTunes Store 
  account is also used for purchasing books, just as with music, apps, 
  and videos. When you purchase a book, the download is shown as an 
  overlaid progress bar on the book's icon, just as when apps download 
  in iPhone OS.

<http://www.thisbookisoverdue.com/This_Book_Is_Overdue/Opener.html>

  Apple chose not to license or aggregate reviews of books, so the 
  information about each title is sparse. The description includes 
  some bibliographic details about publication date and page count in 
  the original edition, and a description. This may work for apps, in 
  which Apple is the only purveyor, but the more information about 
  books the better, and there are plenty of published sources from 
  which Apple could have provided better data. I guess the company 
  doesn't think it needs to compete at that game, but unless the 
  iBookstore proves wildly popular, you may be better off reading 
  reviews at Amazon first.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-04/ipad-ibooks-purchase-preview.jpg>

  The iBookstore also lists a passel of free books. These appear in 
  searches, as well as in the Top Charts section in the Store via a 
  button on the bottom of the screen. Top Free Books is shown 
  alongside Top Paid Books.

  The free books appear to be drawn entirely from Project Gutenberg, a 
  long-running effort to convert public-domain titles into digital 
  text with attention to accuracy; it offers over 30,000 titles. Not 
  present are books from Google Books, which favors scanning volume 
  over text perfection - Google claims over a million titles. 
  (Google's public-domain book scanning isn't in dispute; only its 
  scanning of works under copyright protection.)

<http://www.gutenberg.org/>
<http://books.google.com/>

  The neat part of iBooks, however, is that while you can perform 
  over-the-air downloads only of books you get from the iBookstore, 
  you can copy books in EPUB format to an iPad by dragging them into 
  the renamed Books sidebar item in iTunes 9.1. The books are managed 
  by iTunes and then synced to an iPad. 

<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EPUB>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-04/ipad-itunes-books-section.jpg>

  EPUB is a fairly rich format that can incorporate graphics and some 
  formatting. It doesn't compare with PDF in terms of preserving 
  precise layout and embedded fonts, but it's quite good and has 
  decent tool and reader support. While EPUB can be wrapped inside 
  digital rights management, which is what Apple does for its books 
  sold via iBookstore, the basic format can be transferred without any 
  protection among many different reading devices and reader software.

  Your own books can be loaded into a Kindle as well, but you must 
  mount the Kindle as a disk on a desktop computer, and then copy and 
  manage the books in the Kindle's storage space. You also have to 
  convert EPUB into Kindle format or use an alternative format. The 
  Kindle DX reads PDFs natively, which iBooks cannot do, and which is 
  why I discuss GoodReader later in this article.

  As an example, I'd like to read Flatland, the classic book by Edwin 
  Abbott Abbott (attributed, however, to "A Square"). Google Books has 
  a digitized version of the title, and so on the computer I use to 
  sync media with my iPad, I load that page in the browser, click the 
  Download menu, and select EPUB. I choose iTunes as the application 
  with which to open that file format, and the book appears in iTunes 
  in the Books section. (The cover doesn't seem to come with these 
  titles. I select the book in iTunes, press Command-I, and click the 
  Artwork button. Back on the Google Books Web site, I use 
  Command-Shift-4 to copy the book cover image, then drag it from the 
  Desktop into the Artwork window in iTunes, but you could also grab 
  an image from the Web.)

<http://books.google.com/books?id=R6E0AAAAMAAJ&printsec=frontcover&source=gbs_slider_thumb#v=onepage&q=&f=false>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-04/ipad-itunes-insert-cover.jpg>

  A number of authors support the concept of freely available 
  electronic versions of their books supporting the purchase of paid 
  print or electronic works, or other support of their endeavors. Cory 
  Doctorow is foremost among this crowd, having made a great success 
  of his fiction career. Various of his books are available as free 
  downloads in many formats, including EPUB, such as Eastern Standard 
  Tribe. (It's not quite irony to note that Cory also wrote a screed 
  at BoingBoing titled "Why I won't buy an iPad (and think you 
  shouldn't, either)." More ironic was my search on Cory's name in the 
  iBookstore, which returned a pile of matching titles - free via 
  Project Gutenberg!)

<http://craphound.com/est/>
<http://www.boingboing.net/2010/04/02/why-i-wont-buy-an-ipad-and-think-you-shouldnt-either.html>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-04/ipad-ibooks-cory-titles.jpg>

  Some publishers may opt to release titles in unprotected EPUB 
  format, relying on readers to keep the books to themselves in order 
  to reach a larger audience as EPUB takes hold as a lingua franca. 
  (Take Control ebooks are sold as unprotected PDF files, and we've 
  had remarkably little trouble with their spread; our EPUB tests look 
  pretty decent, too.)

  Because Apple wraps EPUB inside proprietary DRM, books you buy from 
  the iBookstore can be read only on an iPad, which is rather 
  restrictive given that Apple may expect you to move between a 
  desktop, laptop, iPhone, and iPad. We'll see an iBooks app for the 
  iPhone and iPod touch in iPhone OS 4, due in mid-2010, and we can 
  hope for EPUB support even in Preview in Mac OS X, too.

  Having established that there are books to read, let's look at how 
  one reads in iBooks.


**Reading in iBooks** -- Let me precede this detailed accounting of 
  iBooks navigation and appearance by stating that it's an unalloyed 
  pleasure to read using iBooks and on the iPad. We'll see if I feel 
  that way after a few months, but it's certainly true to begin with.

  iBooks is organized around the Library, a bookshelf metaphor that 
  shows five books per row, five rows per visible page in portrait 
  orientation. Tap Edit in the upper-right corner, and the shelf turns 
  into something like an apps layout screen: you can drag books into a 
  new order, or delete them by tapping an X in the upper-left corner. 
  At least they don't shimmy, as with organizing apps. 

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-04/ipad-ibooks-landscape-library.jpg>

  The bookshelf analogy can become unwieldy if you start to pump lots 
  of titles into your iPad, so there's a list view, too. In List view, 
  you can search for books by title, and sort them by "Bookshelf" 
  order (your custom drag-and-drop position), or by title, author, or 
  category. The Edit option here only lets you remove books.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-04/ipad-ibooks-library-list.jpg>

  You tap a book to open it, and iBooks shows the cover, or the point 
  at which you left off in reading. There are minor interface elements 
  on top and bottom. The top shows buttons to return to the Library, 
  view the table of contents, adjust brightness, set font size and 
  face, and search. The bottom shows the current page number (using 
  the chosen font) and the total page count, provides a slider for 
  advancing quickly through the book, and tells you the number of 
  pages left in the current chapter or section.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-04/ipad-ibooks-brightness-control.jpg>

  A square slider overlays a series of dots that fill in from left to 
  right when you load the book: iBooks paginates the book in the 
  background. The slider appears when pagination is done.

  Tap the middle of the screen, and most of the interface elements 
  disappear, leaving the page less cluttered. The running head at the 
  top, and current page and total pages at bottom are all that remain.

  To move among pages, you can tap the left or right edge to move 
  backward or forward, or swipe in either direction. Swipe slowly, and 
  the page-turn animation shows some fancy rendered bleed-through from 
  the turned page, as if you could see through the page slightly.

  Lines of type can appear either "fully justified" - in which 
  complete lines are flush to the left and right with white space 
  divided to stretch the line - or what's called "flush left/ragged 
  right," in which spaces between words are all the same, and the 
  lines don't align smoothly with the right margin. As is also true in 
  the Kindle devices and apps, you cannot choose which kind of 
  justification is used; that appears to be the choice of the 
  publisher, for better or worse.

  As a one-time typesetter and veteran book designer, I'm picky about 
  justification, and wish it were simply left ragged rather than 
  justified in a clunky fashion.

  I'm also not ecstatic about the font faces offered. Apple lets you 
  pick among five choices, only one of which is classically used in 
  books. Baskerville, Cochin, Palatino, Times New Roman, and Verdana 
  are your options, and only the first of those is typical in books. 
  Cochin is a specialty face, though quite lovely. I have a fondness 
  for it, with its marvelous curled-in lowercase h, for instance, but 
  several lines of italics will make your eyes droop.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-04/ipad-ibooks-appearance-choice.jpg>

  Times New Roman was intended to be read at small points on coarse 
  paper, and Verdana, while legible, lacks the charm of book type for 
  me, and makes it seem too much like I'm reading a Web page - it's 
  not booky enough. 

  Palatino is the best to my eyes for this particular display. You can 
  choose among nine sizes of type by tapping a smaller or larger A no 
  matter which face is selected. The italic is quite easy to read over 
  long stretches.

  iBooks interleaves illustrations embedded in the book, automatically 
  repaginating and rewrapping based on your font and size selections. 
  Apple includes Winnie-the-Pooh with your free download, which is a 
  good choice at showing the winsome Ernest H. Shepard illustrations 
  in their high-resolution and full-color glory.

  While reading, you can switch to the table of contents without 
  losing your position. A nifty Resume bookmark drapes over the upper 
  right part of the book to help you flip back to where you were 
  before. 

  While reading, you can tap words and select items to bookmark, 
  through which iBooks thoughtfully runs a possibly-too-cute rough 
  highlighter pen stroke. After creating a highlight, you can tap it 
  again to select among a few colors, or remove it (unbookmark is an 
  infelicitous term). If you bookmark an image, the border is made up 
  of separate highlighter strokes, even. I suppose it's charming. 

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-04/ipad-ibooks-highlighting.jpg>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-04/ipad-ibooks-pooh-image-highlight.jpg>

  You can also choose to search on the selected words or look them up 
  in the dictionary. Dictionary results pop up in the iPad style to 
  which we will soon become accustomed. Unfortunately, despite 
  including Winnie-the-Pooh, no one at Apple apparently looked up what 
  "pooh" would produce in the dictionary results. Oh, bother.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-04/ipad-ibooks-oh-bother.jpg>

  To search within a book, tap the magnifying glass in the upper right 
  and enter your search term in the popover window. Tap a result, and 
  you're taken to that page. Tap the glass again, and the previous 
  results remain. The Search Google and Search Wikipedia links at the 
  bottom don't open in-app browser windows, but instead take you out 
  of iBooks into Safari.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-04/ipad-ibooks-search-results.jpg>

  One of the lovely features of iBooks is that Apple thought about how 
  we would want to read when looking at an iPad in portrait mode and 
  in landscape orientation. In portrait view, the iPad shows a single 
  page; in landscape, two pages appear side by side. The display is 
  large enough to make this work. (Amazon's Kindle app, as I'll 
  explain below, displays a single page whether you're in portrait or 
  landscape orientation, even on the iPad. Thus, landscape orientation 
  results in lines that are too long to read comfortably, or that 
  require you to bump the point size way up.)

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-04/ipad-ibooks-landscape-view.jpg>

  The iPad has an orientation lock switch above its volume rocker 
  switch, so you can choose which view to use and lock that mode to 
  avoid accidentally teetering. The iPad seems more sensitive to 
  orientation than the iPhone, possibly because its greater weight 
  provides data more quickly to the accelerometer that measures change 
  in position.

  The iPad's display is well suited to reading because of Apple's use 
  of an IPS (in-plane switching) LCD display, which allows far more 
  angles of comfortable viewing, although with some diminution in 
  brightness. That's why it's also nice that there's a brightness 
  button within iBooks to let you change the screen's intensity 
  without leaving the app.

<http://www.apple.com/ipad/design/>

  The main missing pieces here are annotation and copying. I hope 
  annotations will appear in future releases, as people like to mark 
  up books with their own marginalia and there's no reason why that 
  feature should not be offered here. Where would Fermat's Last 
  Theorem have come from, otherwise?

  Copying is more complicated. On DRM-free EPUB books, I was able to 
  make selections and copy them. In books sold by Apple, not so. I'm 
  sure this is part of the agreement Apple has with publishers, but it 
  seems churlish to prevent copying of even phrases or short passages. 
  I could simply look at the iPad or a screenshot and retype the text, 
  so it's hardly an effective copy-protection mechanism.

  iBooks gets high marks for its combination of simple choices and 
  clever options. It's not just designed to be pretty; reading is its 
  focus.


**Amazon's Kindle App** -- Amazon has a single Kindle app revised to 
  work to the advantage of each iPhone OS device. The iPad 
  modifications are thoughtful enough, making good use of the 
  additional screen space.

  The main Kindle screen can show either your Home, which displays 
  books downloaded on the iPad, or Archived Items, which is a strange 
  way to describe books you've purchased via Amazon's Web site or a 
  Kindle device, all of which are available for retrieval at any time. 
  Periodical and blog subscriptions can currently be viewed and 
  downloaded only to a Kindle device, not to the app. Tap an Archived 
  Items book and it's downloaded to Home.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-04/ipad-kindle-home.jpg>

  This is the key advantage Amazon has over Apple: the portability 
  across Kindle, Windows, iPhone, and Mac OS X hardware (with its new, 
  but primitive reader; see "Amazon Releases Kindle for Mac and 
  Explains iPad Plans," 22 March 2010). Amazon's locker strategy is 
  also nice, ensuring that you don't have to sync to a particular 
  media library on a desktop machine to retrieve books you purchased 
  on another system. Amazon's Whispersync system keeps notes, 
  highlights, bookmarks, and the last-read point all in order among 
  everything registered to your account, too.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11092>

  Amazon claims 450,000 titles available, which includes free works, 
  but those don't seem to make up a preponderance of its catalog. 
  (Barnes and Noble's Nook reader and software claims a much larger 
  number, but hundreds of thousands of those are public domain titles 
  drawn from Google Books.)

  The reading experience in the Kindle app is comparable to iBooks, 
  though Kindle offers less control over appearance. You tap a book on 
  the Home page, and it opens to the book display. Tap the center of 
  the page, and a Home button appears at upper left, a running head 
  across the top middle, and a bookmark location in upper right. Tap 
  the bookmark to set or unset one.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-04/ipad-kindle-page-view.jpg>

  At the bottom, you can use a Return button to jump back to the 
  previous position, or set or unset a bookmark by tapping a plus or 
  minus. The Go To link offers the cover, table of contents, beginning 
  of the book, or a way to jump to what Amazon calls a "location." 
  Amazon tracks the position in the book by something like paragraphs 
  instead of arbitrarily creating page numbers as iBooks does. You can 
  also view and navigate through highlights and notes.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-04/ipad-kindle-go-to-navigation.jpg>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-04/ipad-kindle-notes-and-marks.jpg>

  An "Aa" button lets you set the appearance. There's no option for 
  typeface selection; Amazon chose Georgia, which is fine and legible, 
  and only slightly reminiscent of Web pages. (I can't criticize the 
  actual design of either Verdana or Georgia; they're both from the 
  world's preeminent type designer, Matthew Carter.)

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-04/ipad-kindle-view-options.jpg>
<http://www.will-harris.com/verdana-georgia.htm>

  You can choose among four sizes, select type and background colors 
  (black on white, white on black, or black on sepia), and set 
  brightness.

  Finally, a sync button lets you pull and push any changes if you 
  were offline and needed to retrieve the latest position when you're 
  back on the Internet or make sure notes were stored.

  On all iPhone OS devices, the Kindle page rotates to reflect 
  orientation. The iPhone and iPod touch version have an onscreen lock 
  button, which is unnecessary on the iPad due to its hardware lock. 

  When you turn an iPhone or iPod touch to landscape, making the 
  column wider seems fine. On the iPad, the line length is too long 
  for comfortable reading, and Amazon will need to adjust that 
  approach. The release notes in iTunes state bluntly that the iPad 
  version was released without seeing actual hardware, which comes as 
  no surprise given the competition between the two companies and the 
  fact that almost no iPad developers were allowed to test on an 
  actual device. (That said, it's not like the iPad simulator wouldn't 
  have shown that the line length would be too long.)

  The font and landscape quibbles aside, Amazon does hold quite a few 
  trump cards. The Kindle app's flaw? It can't read anything but 
  Amazon-sold books. And that brings us to GoodReader.


**GoodReader for PDFs and text** -- GoodReader, which was previously 
  available for the iPhone and iPod touch, comes in a separate 
  iPad-only edition (GoodReader for iPad), currently on sale for 
  $0.99. The developers make brilliant use of the iPad's extra space.

<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/goodreader-tablet-edition/id363448914?mt=8>

  GoodReader is a combination data hub and document reader optimized 
  particularly for PDF and text. Along with PDF and text, GoodReader 
  can read any file format that iPhone OS supports, such as iWork '08 
  and '09 files, and it can also display photos and play videos. 

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-04/ipad-goodreader-main.jpg>

  To get files into GoodReader, you can browse the Web to download 
  files; connect to MobileMe's iDisk, the Dropbox service, and local 
  or remote WebDAV servers; and configure and connect to mail servers 
  from which you can retrieve PDF and other attachments. You can also 
  turn on a sharing mode in which GoodReader makes its data store 
  available over Wi-Fi as a WebDAV server.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-04/ipad-goodreader-dropbox-popup.jpg>

  You can also load files into GoodReader on an iPad via a new feature 
  in iTunes 9.1. With your iPad connected to a computer, and iTunes 
  launched, select the iPad from the Devices list, select the Apps 
  tab, and scroll beneath the apps sync and layout area. The File 
  Sharing section shows all apps that have a way to associate files, 
  and lets you add or remove items from the list. (You can also drag 
  files in here from the Finder.)

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-04/ipad-itunes-file-sharing.png>

  It can be a little overwhelming to have all these options at your 
  disposal, but it's also lovely not to have to worry where you stored 
  a file you want to read. I've already loaded a camera manual into 
  GoodReader, among other reference material.

  GoodReader on the iPad is great for reading PDFs, because GoodReader 
  gives you all the tools you need for searching, viewing, and paging 
  through, as well as an experimental option to extract the text from 
  a PDF for even more stripped-down reading. The iPad's screen size is 
  large enough that you can read many PDFs without zooming in. But 
  most important, from the perspective of a Take Control author, is 
  that GoodReader supports the many navigation links in our ebooks, 
  along with bookmarks, making navigation of a well-designed PDF far 
  easier than in a basic PDF reading environment like Safari, which 
  ignores all the effort put into making a rich PDF ebook.

  There's one format mismatch that's not GoodReader's fault. You can 
  use its built-in browser to navigate to the Google Books site, from 
  which you can access public-domain titles in either PDF or EPUB 
  format. The problem is that EPUB files aren't natively supported by 
  the iPhone OS, only by iBooks. To make a Google Books EPUB file 
  available for reading on the iPad, you must copy those files into 
  iTunes and then sync over USB. If you choose to download the PDF 
  that Google Books provides, it's just an image scan with no text. As 
  an object of historical interest, it's fascinating to see the 
  original book pages, but you can't search, it's slower to page 
  through, and it can be hard to read.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-04/ipad-goodreader-google-scan.jpg>


**Just Getting Started** -- What feels most extraordinary about my 
  initial experiences of reading with all these apps on an iPad is 
  that it's so early. Sure, there have been many months for the Kindle 
  app and GoodReader to mature in the more-confined space of the 
  iPhone and iPod touch, but the good-to-great experience from the 
  start gives me hope that there will be even more substantial 
  improvements to come.

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11150#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/11150>


TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 10 May 2010
-----------------------------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11267>

**MarsEdit 3.0** -- Red Sweater Software has released a major update 
  to its popular blog posting software MarsEdit, with new features 
  aimed at making the program more accessible to the general user. The 
  biggest change is the inclusion of a rich text editor, enabling 
  users to style text (complete with images, lists, and more) in blog 
  posts without using HTML tags. Other changes include new HTML syntax 
  highlighting for those who do wish to write in HTML; the capability 
  to schedule posts with media attachments while offline for later 
  posting; support for WordPress pages and for customizable fields on 
  sites that support the WordPress API; and media integration with the 
  photo management programs iPhoto, Aperture, and Lightroom. ($39.95 
  new, $14.95 upgrade, 4.9 MB)

<http://www.red-sweater.com/marsedit/>

  Read/post comments about MarsEdit 3.0.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11258#comments>


**Aperture 3.0.3** -- Apple has released Aperture 3.0.3, a significant 
  maintenance update to its professional photo management and editing 
  application. The fixes delivered by the update address issues 
  pertaining to applying image adjustments, using RAW Fine Tuning 
  presets, working with detected faces, changing target printers while 
  printing, making smart album duplicates, building and repairing 
  Aperture libraries, reconnecting missing referenced files, working 
  with GPS files in Places, and performing keyword searches. A lengthy 
  list of changes is available on Apple's Web site. ($199 new, free 
  update, 69.4 MB)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1040>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/TS2518>

  Read/post comments about Aperture 3.0.3.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11260#comments>


**Typinator 4.0** -- Ergonis Software has released a major update to 
  its auto-typing and auto-correcting utility Typinator. Version 4.0 
  introduces a new feature called QuickSearch that acts like Spotlight 
  (or, more accurately, like LaunchBar) for snippets, enabling users 
  to access snippets without having to remember their individual 
  abbreviations. The update also brings improved Snow Leopard 
  compatibility, enhanced performance speeds, the capability to enable 
  or disable sets globally, better syncing via Dropbox and MobileMe, 
  and better integration with third-party applications such as Mellel, 
  Nisus Writer Pro, Tinderbox, and Parallels Desktop. A full list of 
  changes is available on Ergonis Software's Web site. (€19.99 new, 
  discounted upgrades available, 3.1 MB)

<http://www.ergonis.com/products/typinator/>
<http://www.ergonis.com/products/typinator/history.html>

  Read/post comments about Typinator 4.0.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11259#comments>


**Mac Pro Audio Update 1.1** -- Apple's Mac Pro Audio Update 1.1 
  reportedly addresses odd noises emanating from some early 2009 Mac 
  Pros when using FireWire audio devices in conjunction with Mac OS X 
  10.6.3. No specifics are given regarding what causes these noises or 
  how the update prevents them. We suspect gremlins. (Free, 516 KB)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1042>

  Read/post comments about Mac Pro Audio Update 1.1.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11262#comments>


**Epson Printer Drivers 2.3.1 for Mac OS X 10.6** -- Apple's release 
  notes for its latest Epson Printer Drivers update for Snow Leopard 
  say only that the update "installs the latest software for your 
  Epson printer or scanner." While the notes link to a master list of 
  supported Epson printers, they don't indicate which models have been 
  added. Still, it's nice to know that Apple is expanding its printer 
  support, and you can search the list to see if a particular printer 
  is supported. (Free, 688.23)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL900>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT3669#epson>

  Read/post comments about Epson Printer Drivers 2.3.1 for Mac OS X 
  10.6.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11261#comments>


**Phone Amego 1.1.20** -- With version 1.1.20 of the Bluetooth and 
  Google Voice phone utility Phone Amego, Sustainable Softworks is 
  cleaning up some messy bits, changing the Finder name of the 
  application to "Phone Amego" (with a space) and renaming the 
  application's login item. These changes unfortunately require manual 
  intervention from the user - you must add a space to the current 
  PhoneAmego.app file in your Applications folder for the automatic 
  update to 1.1.20 to work. Once you've updated, remove 
  com.sustworks.phoneAmego.loginItem.sCID from the Login Items view of 
  the Accounts preference pane, then open Phone Amego itself, and 
  select the Launch at Startup checkbox to install the new login item.

<http://www.sustworks.com/pa_guide/>

  Other notable changes since the 1.1.14 release we last looked at 
  include:

* Reorganization of the User's Guide as a navigable Web site, making 
  it much easier to get started with Phone Amego.

* Addition of a Phone Amego User Forum for support. 

<http://www.sustworks.com/phpBB3/viewforum.php?f=1>

* The Recent submenu shows the most recent five calls at the top, and 
  then sorts the rest alphabetically for easier scanning. Also, 
  Address Book phone type labels appear in the Recent menu items.

* Addition of an option to log all dialed calls in a separate iCal 
  calendar.

  Finally, Sustainable Softworks has fixed a number of bugs in Phone 
  Amego 1.1.20, improving the reliability of opening Bluetooth 
  connections and eliminating some possible crashes. ($20, free 
  update, 2.7 MB)

  Read/post comments about Phone Amego 1.1.20.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11257#comments>



ExtraBITS for 10 May 2010
-------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11266>

  All the interesting bits we found on the Web this week revolve 
  around the iPad and iPhone, not terribly surprisingly. Most 
  fascinating are Jakob Nielsen's iPad usability test findings, along 
  with Bytemobile's tests showing that the iPad consumes more data 
  than an iPhone. Also, Jeff Carlson talks about iPad 3G details on a 
  MacJury podcast, and we note that Apple's Worldwide Developer 
  Conference sold out in only eight days, despite focusing mostly on 
  iPhone OS topics.


**Jakob Nielsen Releases First iPad Usability Test Results** -- The 
  iPad is obviously not a Mac, but less obvious is the fact that it's 
  not simply a scaled-up iPhone. Usability guru Jakob Nielsen has now 
  released initial results from the Nielsen Norman Group's first iPad 
  usability tests. Criticisms raised by the tests include inconsistent 
  app interfaces, low discoverability of interface elements, and an 
  over-reliance on a print metaphor. We're not surprised; the iPad's 
  combination of a multitouch interface and large screen size make it 
  significantly different from any previous device, and iPad 
  developers didn't even have access to physical units for their 
  initial designs. (Although it's too soon for a complete list of 
  design guidelines, iPad developers would also do well to read the 
  full 93-page PDF report, in addition to this executive summary.)

<http://www.useit.com/alertbox/ipad.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11269#comments>


**WWDC 2010 Sells Out in 8 Days** -- Bad news for those who dragged 
  their feet on ordering tickets to this year's Worldwide Developers 
  Conference: the event is now sold out! Apple set a new record by 
  selling out after only eight days of ticket sales, showing just how 
  compelling iPhone OS development is now, given the minimal focus on 
  Mac-related topics at the conference this year.

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

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11264#comments>


**Jeff Carlson Talks iPad 3G Details on MacJury** -- On a recent 
  MacJury podcast with Chuck Joiner, Jeff Carlson joined a 
  conversation about the first weekend with the iPad Wi-Fi + 3G model. 
  Among other topics, we looked at how 3G access makes the iPad more 
  useful when walking around an unfamiliar city, whether the 250 MB 
  data plan is realistic, and the effect on battery life from the 3G 
  radio.

<http://www.macjury.com/macjury-1008-judgement-on-the-first-weekend-with-the-ipad-3g/>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11263#comments>


**iPad Consumes More Data than iPhone for Same Apps** -- Bytemobile 
  carried out identical tasks on apps using an iPhone (presumably 3GS) 
  and 3G iPad, and found that many generated substantially higher 
  amounts of traffic on the iPad. This is explained by the iPad 
  display's greater area, which shows more and larger graphics. USA 
  Today's app used 6.3 times as much data on an iPad, while Maps ate 
  up 2.6 time as much. This will have some impact on whether people 
  choose a 250 MB or unlimited 3G plan (or any 3G plan at all). 
  Bytemobile's interest? It works with cell operators to optimize 
  content to reduce mobile data use and congestion.

<http://bytemobile.com/news-events/2010/archive_260410.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11256#comments>



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