TidBITS#1031/14-Jun-2010
========================
  Issue link: <http://db.tidbits.com/issue/1031>

  The big news that didn't surface during Steve Jobs's WWDC keynote 
  last week was the release of Safari 5, and Adam takes a hard look at 
  the Web browser's new features. For more from Steve Jobs, also read 
  Doug McLean's summary of Jobs's unscripted discussion with Walt 
  Mossberg and Kara Swisher at the D8 conference shortly before WWDC. 
  In other news, AT&T will allow eligibility transfers for iPhone 4 
  upgrades in family plans, Adobe has released an essential update to 
  Flash Player, we've uncovered some details about the forthcoming 
  iMovie for iPhone, and Retrospect has been acquired by Sonic 
  Solutions. Also, be sure to enter this week's drawing for a Drobo, 
  and if you didn't win in last week's drawing for Boinx's 
  iStopMotion, you can save 20 percent on new orders. Notable software 
  releases this week include PasswordWallet 4.5.3, MacSpeech Scribe 
  1.1, 1Password 3.2.1, Microsoft Office 2008 for Mac 12.2.5 Update, 
  Microsoft Office 2004 for Mac 11.5.9 Update, Cyberduck 3.5, and 
  Photoshop Lightroom 3.0.

Articles
    AT&T Allows Eligibility Transfers in Family Plan
    Adobe Flash Player 10.1.53.64 Blocks 32 Security Holes
    iMovie for iPhone Details Surface
    Anti-Social Software Turns Your Tweet Off
    DealBITS Drawing: Win a Drobo!
    DealBITS Discount: Save 20% on iStopMotion 2
    Retrospect Backup Software Acquired by Sonic Solutions
    Steve Jobs Answers (Nearly) All at D8
    Apple Extends Safari 5 with Reader, HTML5, Performance
    TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 14 June 2010
    ExtraBITS for 14 June 2010


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AT&T Allows Eligibility Transfers in Family Plan
------------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11338>

  I call my wife, Lynn, "the Early Rejecter." And I don't mean that in 
  a pejorative way. She'd rather have the 2.0 or 3.0 version of some 
  product, and chuckle as I suffer the pain of early upgrades and new 
  hardware. 

  Of course, she's the one in our AT&T Family Plan to be eligible for 
  a low-cost iPhone 4 upgrade, qualifying for the $199 (16 GB) and 
  $299 (32 GB) pricing. My eligibility report says I have to wait 
  until February 2011, or pay an extra $200 ($399 or $499) to get an 
  iPhone 4 now.

  Fortunately, an AT&T spokesperson confirmed for me that eligibility 
  is transferrable among members of a Family Plan. But it will 
  apparently be impossible to accomplish online. The spokesperson 
  recommended calling AT&T to place an order to work out the details 
  when pre-orders start being accepted on 15 June 2010.

  To discover your eligibility, go to att.com/iphone and log into your 
  account, or call *639# from the phone you want to upgrade to receive 
  a free text message with a date and more details. Whether AT&T will 
  spot you an early phone trade-up isn't strictly about your contract 
  date, but includes factors such as the service plan and other 
  dollars you've paid them. Some friends who purchased an iPhone 3GS 
  at the same time that I did already qualify for the lowest price.

<http://att.com/iphone>

  In the past, it was possible to swap SIM cards among phones, 
  transfer phone numbers within the account, or perform other hoodoo 
  to make it work out. But the iPhone 4 uses a micro-SIM, just like 
  the 3G iPad, which means you can't interchange a full-sized SIM from 
  an earlier iPhone with the iPhone 4 (unless you buy one of these SIM 
  cutters).

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

  ----
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Adobe Flash Player 10.1.53.64 Blocks 32 Security Holes
------------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11345>
  6 comments

  As Rich Mogull explained in "Security News: Flash Attacked, iPhone 
  Exposed, Spyware Discovered" (7 June 2010), Adobe Flash suffered 
  from a serious security vulnerability that had been exploited in the 
  wild. Initially, the only way to protect yourself was to download 
  the Flash 10.1 Release Candidate, but Adobe has now officially 
  released Flash Player 10.1.53.64 to address 32 different security 
  holes. Adobe has also released Adobe AIR 2.0.2.12610 to fix the same 
  problems. You can read more about the updates in Adobe's security 
  advisory, but suffice it to say, we recommend you upgrade now.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11324>
<http://www.adobe.com/support/security/bulletins/apsb10-14.html>

  To determine what version of Flash Player you're running, visit the 
  About Flash Player page (although, realistically, it's unlikely that 
  you're up to date), and then head over to the Adobe Flash Player 
  Download Center to download the latest version. You'll get a disk 
  image with an installer to run; you need to quit all running Web 
  browsers before you click the Install button.

<http://www.adobe.com/software/flash/about/>
<http://get.adobe.com/flashplayer/>

  Figuring out what version of Adobe AIR is installed on your system 
  (you'd have Adobe AIR installed if you use TweetDeck, or another 
  Adobe AIR-based program) is annoyingly difficult; you have to look 
  for the CFBundleVersion entry inside the Info.plist file stored at:

    /Library/Frameworks/Adobe AIR.framework/Versions/1.0/Resources/

  That's craziness, of course, so if you're using Adobe AIR at all, 
  I'd recommend just downloading a new version from the Adobe AIR 
  Download Center.

<http://get.adobe.com/air/>

  In the whole dustup between Apple and Adobe surrounding Apple's 
  decision to keep Flash out of the iOS, little has been said about 
  how the addition of Flash would increase the security vulnerability 
  of the entire platform. Situations like this, where Flash Player had 
  critical vulnerabilities that were being exploited in the wild for 
  some time before a fix was available, clearly support Apple's 
  position.

  ----
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iMovie for iPhone Details Surface
---------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11343>
  8 comments

  During the WWDC keynote last week that introduced the new iPhone 4, 
  Apple also revealed iMovie for iPhone, an app that can edit video 
  clips and still images into a movie. The app creates movies complete 
  with themes, transitions, titles, and other features that go beyond 
  just trimming individual clips, an option found in the iPhone 3GS. 
  The demonstration was impressive (it begins at the 57:00 mark of the 
  keynote video), but several questions were left unanswered. 

<http://www.apple.com/iphone/>
<http://www.apple.com/iphone/features/imovie.html>
<http://events.apple.com.edgesuite.net/1006ad9g4hjk/event/index.html>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-06/imovie_iphone_wwdc.png>

  Thanks to sources within Apple, I have uncovered some details:

* iMovie for iPhone will require the iPhone 4, and will not be 
  available for the iPhone 3GS. Handling video and creating real-time 
  transitions needs the power of the iPhone 4's A4 processor.

* Although the iPad runs the A4 processor, the app won't run on that 
  device. I suspect the app is tailored to the iPhone 4's 
  higher-density screen, and therefore wouldn't work within the iPad's 
  pixel-doubled compatibility mode. (I'd be very surprised if an 
  iMovie for iPad version doesn't appear at some point, possibly with 
  the release of iOS 4 for the iPad in a few months.)

* Projects edited on the iPhone cannot "currently" be transferred to 
  iMovie on the Mac for further editing; projects stay on the phone. 
  (The edited movies can be exported or synced to iTunes, however.)

* Video clips can be recorded directly within iMovie for iPhone or 
  come from the Camera Roll (clips previously shot using the phone's 
  built-in camera). Based on how the Camera Roll works, I suspect it 
  may also be possible to work with clips you've shot elsewhere by 
  emailing them from your computer to the iPhone, then saving the 
  attachment to the Camera Roll. The clips would need to be properly 
  formatted as H.264 videos (and without having the software or an 
  iPhone 4 to test, I don't know which specifications that entails).

* iMovie for iPhone is scheduled to ship 24 June 2010 to coincide with 
  the launch of the iPhone 4.

  As previously announced, the app will cost $4.99 and be available in 
  the App Store.

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11343#comments>
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Anti-Social Software Turns Your Tweet Off
-----------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11336>

  What's that giant sucking sound? It's the noise made by your 
  productivity swirling down the drain as you check Twitter, Facebook, 
  Foursquare, or any of hundreds of other social-networking sites 
  instead of getting work done, writing that essay that's due, or 
  focusing on real life. Fred Stutzman's Anti-Social software can 
  help.

<http://anti-social.cc/>

  Anti-Social disables access to over 150 social-networking sites for 
  a period of time you specify, up to 480 minutes (8 hours). The 
  software's Web site includes a list of blocked domains. This 
  includes api.twitter.com, the URL used by third-party Twitter 
  clients to access Twitter messages and account information. A reboot 
  is required to restore access to those sites before your specified 
  time limit has passed.

<http://anti-social.cc/about>

  Anti-Social is a case-specific version of Stutzman's earlier 
  utility, Freedom, which disables all network access for up to 480 
  minutes, optionally allowing local network access to remain 
  available. Freedom was written for the Mac, and was recently also 
  released for Windows XP, Vista, and Windows 7.

<http://macfreedom.com/>

  Stutzman is a doctoral candidate at the University of North Carolina 
  at Chapel Hill in information and library science, and his software 
  reflects his interest in the impact of social networking on how 
  people make life transitions.

<http://fredstutzman.com/>

  I interviewed Stutzman for a recent Economist article, "Stay on 
  Target," which looks at the notion of using software to prevent 
  yourself from doing something.

<http://www.economist.com/node/16295664>

  Anti-Social costs $15; Freedom is $10. Trial versions are available 
  for each application, but include just five uses before the software 
  is disabled.

  ----
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DealBITS Drawing: Win a Drobo!
------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11347>

  For those of us who remember the pricey megabyte-sized hard disks of 
  yesteryear, the cost and capacity of today's terabyte-sized drives 
  continues to amaze. And yet, our data needs continue to outpace our 
  storage capacities, and modern drives don't seem significantly more 
  reliable than the drives of the past. But ingenuity offers a single 
  solution to both problems - a device that combines multiple drives 
  to increase storage capacity and reliability. This approach, called 
  RAID, for redundant array of inexpensive disks, divides and 
  replicates data among multiple drives such that any one of them can 
  fail without any loss of data.

  But implementing RAID is often expensive and fussy, requiring 
  identically sized disks and complex management software. To address 
  those concerns, Data Robotics developed the BeyondRAID technology, 
  which removes limitations in traditional forms of RAID, and 
  implemented it in the Drobo storage devices. With a Drobo, you can 
  install multiple drives (starting with 2 and expanding up to 4, 5, 
  or 8, depending on the model) of any size or speed, and from any 
  manufacturer. The Drobo automatically combines them into a single 
  volume (up to 16 TB). The capacity of that volume will be roughly 
  the total of all the installed drives, minus the size of the largest 
  one and some overhead (Data Robotics has capacity calculators that 
  show exactly how much usable space you get with different drive 
  configurations). But here's the magic. In exchange for that drop in 
  total capacity, you can - at any time - remove any drive and insert 
  another without any loss of data or interruption of service.

<http://www.drobo.com/drobobits/>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-06/Drobo.jpg>

  There are two basic reasons you might want to do this - drive 
  failure and capacity upgrades. As we all know, hard drives die, and 
  usually at the most inconvenient time. If that happens with a drive 
  in a Drobo, fixing the problem is just a matter of removing the dead 
  drive and replacing it with a fresh one. Similarly, it's equally 
  known that drives keep getting larger, and if you initially 
  populated a Drobo with some old 250 GB and 500 GB drives you had 
  lying around, as those drives die or as you need more space, you can 
  pop in a couple of 1 TB or 2 TB drives and radically increase your 
  storage pool, all while retaining the protection against drive 
  failure. (And let's be clear, RAID-like protection against drive 
  failure is not the same thing as backup; a Drobo won't protect 
  against fire, theft, or even a deleted file.)

  Much more could be written about the Drobo, but the folks at Data 
  Robotics, the makers of Drobo, have put together videos of Drobo 
  users at Macworld 2010 describing why they love their Drobos, how 
  they use them, and what they store on them. Several members of the 
  TidBITS staff, including Jeff Carlson and Rich Mogull, swear by 
  theirs as well.

<http://www.drobo.com/drobobits/>

  If you want to win your very own four-bay Drobo, worth $399, enter 
  at the DealBITS page. (Unlike most of our drawings, we're giving 
  away serious hardware here, so we won't be doing referral entries.) 
  All information gathered is covered by our comprehensive privacy 
  policy. 

<http://www.tidbits.com/dealbits/drobo/>
<http://www.tidbits.com/about/privacy.html>

  ----
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DealBITS Discount: Save 20% on iStopMotion 2
--------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11349>

  Congratulations to Ken Blakely at me.com and John Sweeney at 
  neb.rr.com, whose entries were chosen randomly in the last DealBITS 
  drawing and who each received a copy of iStopMotion Home 2, worth 
  $49. But don't fret if you didn't win, since Boinx Software is 
  offering a 20-percent-off discount on any edition of iStopMotion 2 
  to all TidBITS readers through 30 June 2010; enter "ismDeal" in the 
  Coupon/Promo Code field on the second screen of Boinx Software's 
  online store to get your discount. Thanks to the 387 people who 
  entered this DealBITS drawing, and we hope you'll continue to 
  participate in the future!

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11328>
<http://boinx.com/istopmotion/>
<http://boinx.com/kagi/>

  ----
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Retrospect Backup Software Acquired by Sonic Solutions
------------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11311>
  2 comments

  In an extremely quiet move, EMC has sold its Retrospect software to 
  Sonic Solutions, the parent company of Roxio. For reasons that 
  remain unclear, neither EMC nor Sonic Solutions has issued a press 
  release about the acquisition, so few details have been forthcoming. 
  The acquisition price was not revealed, though sources indicate that 
  much of the product team will move over to Sonic Solutions.

<http://www.retrospect.com/>
<http://www.sonic.com/>

  Retrospect was created by Dantz Development in the early days of the 
  Macintosh, and it grew to become the dominant Mac backup program by 
  the late 1990s. However, its long history (and the extreme care with 
  which backup programs must handle the data entrusted to them) made 
  for a somewhat slow and rocky move to Mac OS X. 

  In 2004, EMC acquired Dantz, but Retrospect languished within EMC 
  for several years, coasting on its reputation. Only in 2008 did EMC 
  start devoting resources to Retrospect development again, bringing 
  back some of the original developers and testers. About a year ago, 
  EMC shipped Retrospect 8 (see "EMC Ships Modernized Retrospect 8," 
  23 March 2009), but the release was premature, lacking PowerPC 
  support (many small businesses use older Power Macs as backup 
  servers), documentation, FTP support, and a smooth upgrade path. 
  Although there have been additional minor releases of Retrospect 
  since, the program still isn't fully baked, and a quick scan of the 
  archives of the MacEnterprise mailing list reveals dissatisfaction 
  with Retrospect's progress. 

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10159>
<http://groups.google.com/group/macenterprise/search?q=Retrospect&start=0&scoring=d>

  Eric Ullman, Director of Product Management in charge of Retrospect 
  at EMC (he also worked on Retrospect at Dantz), said that the 
  Retrospect team is looking forward to being able to finish the job 
  that they returned to EMC to do, namely, rebuild Retrospect for 
  Macintosh into a product that's deserving of the trust of network 
  administrators. 

  Regaining that trust will take time, unfortunately, and the backup 
  world has evolved since Retrospect ruled the market. Back then, 
  Retrospect Express was used heavily by individual users, which 
  helped introduce them to Retrospect's capabilities; if those users 
  went on to become network administrators, they tended to rely on the 
  beefier versions of Retrospect. Now the market for individual backup 
  is largely owned by Apple's Time Machine, with additional 
  capabilities provided by programs like CrashPlan, SuperDuper, and 
  Carbon Copy Cloner. And they're by no means alone; Joe Kissell lists 
  over 100 backup programs in the online appendixes of his "Take 
  Control of Mac OS X Backups."

<http://www.crashplan.com/consumer/>
<http://www.shirt-pocket.com/SuperDuper/SuperDuperDescription.html>
<http://www.bombich.com/>
<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/resources/0014/>
<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/backup-macosx?pt=TB1031>

  Time Machine, CrashPlan, and others have also traded scheduled 
  backup for constant operation, backing up changed files every 15 to 
  60 minutes. And Internet backup services like CrashPlan Central, 
  Backblaze, and Mozy (also now owned by EMC) provide an easy solution 
  for offsite backup by backing up over the Internet, either to a 
  centralized service or, in the case of CrashPlan, to another copy of 
  the program that you or a trusted third-party controls.

<http://www.crashplan.com/consumer/features-central.html>
<http://www.backblaze.com/>
<http://mozy.com/>

  Though it's unlikely to become a dominant backup solution for 
  individual users ever again, Retrospect now competes in the small 
  and medium business world, where the players are largely different, 
  with primarily CrashPlan PRO and MozyPro playing in both spaces. And 
  while constant backup, backing up only file differences, and offsite 
  backup features would be good to add, Retrospect still stands apart 
  with its strong support for tape drives and optical media, which are 
  important in the business world.

<http://www.crashplan.com/business/>
<http://mozy.com/pro>

  The next step up is the enterprise, where tape support is essential 
  for creating versions of backups and where there's a significant 
  split in capabilities between administrator and user. In the 
  enterprise world, Retrospect will need to focus on performance and 
  reliability to earn back the trust of network administrators. For a 
  look at some of the other enterprise-level Macintosh backup 
  software, see District13 Computing's PDF-based white paper on 
  Enterprise Backup Solutions.

<http://www.district13computing.com/wp.html>

  There's no question that rebuilding the Retrospect brand to its 
  former glory won't be easy, but speaking as someone who has fond 
  memories of the Retrospect of yesteryear, I'm extremely happy to see 
  the team getting the chance to try again under Sonic Solutions.

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11311#comments>
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Steve Jobs Answers (Nearly) All at D8
-------------------------------------
  by Doug McLean <doug_mclean@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11346>
  2 comments

  Earlier this month, the Wall Street Journal's Walt Mossberg and Kara 
  Swisher hosted the eighth annual D: All Things Digital conference, 
  known in its most recent incarnation as D8. The conference has been 
  bringing together industry leaders for conversations, demos, and 
  interviews since 2003, with this year's speakers including such 
  notables as Microsoft's Steve Ballmer, Avatar director James 
  Cameron, and Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg.

<http://allthingsd.com/d/>
<http://d8.allthingsd.com/speakers/>

  Steve Jobs, featured as the opening night guest, sat down with 
  Mossberg and Swisher for over 90 minutes (the full video interview 
  can be found on the D8 Web site) to offer insights into everything 
  ranging from Apple's recent market cap advance over Microsoft to how 
  Jobs spends an average workday. 

<http://d8.allthingsd.com/20100607/steve-jobs-at-d8-the-full-uncut-interview/>

  And while this year's WWDC keynote speech offered Apple fans the 
  chance to catch up with its CEO, the D8 interview is a unique 
  opportunity to watch Jobs follow an agenda set by somebody else. His 
  responses may toe (or set) Apple's party line, but he nevertheless 
  had to respond to the questions Mossberg and Swisher were asking. 
  Furthermore, with a heavy hitter like Walt Mossberg - the most 
  powerful technology journalist in the world -  serving the 
  questions, it was as close to a conversation between equals as 
  you'll find. And unlike Jobs's famously terse email messages, his 
  answers here often provide interesting detail.

  While much was covered in the interview, the choicest moments came 
  when discussing Flash, Google, and the recent controversies plaguing 
  Apple.


**Flash** -- One of the first topics of conversation was Apple's 
  relationship with Adobe and Flash. Mossberg, referring to Jobs's 
  "Thoughts on Flash" essay, asked if it was unfair to consumers to 
  cut them off from the commonly used technology. Jobs's response 
  centered on Apple's history of embracing emerging technologies (in 
  this case HTML5), while orphaning others in decline. He pointed to 
  the first iMac's jettisoning of the floppy drive and legacy ports - 
  and the subsequent initial public ire over those decisions - as 
  examples of Apple's willingness to abandon technologies that are 
  past their prime. According to Jobs, denying support of Flash on iOS 
  products was strictly a technical decision, based on Apple's view 
  that Flash is over the technological hill (and thus, as Joy of Tech 
  put it, "sent to the island of Apple-banished toys").

<http://www.apple.com/hotnews/thoughts-on-flash/>
<http://www.geekculture.com/joyoftech/joyarchives/1404.html>

  Jobs even seemed to get a little ruffled when recounting how, 
  without provocation, Adobe started a press campaign against Apple's 
  abandonment of Flash. Noting that Apple and Adobe have many shared 
  customers as a result of the Adobe Creative Suite, and that Apple 
  had merely declined to support one of Adobe's products, Jobs 
  expressed incredulity at Adobe's attack. He also noted that Apple 
  had encouraged Adobe to get in touch when Flash was faster and more 
  stable on the iOS, but that this invitation has yet to be met.

  In the end, Jobs said that people will either buy Apple products or, 
  if the company has chosen the wrong technologies to support, they 
  won't. But, cracking a smile, he noted that so far people seem to be 
  liking the iPad.


**Google** -- Jobs seemed most reticent to comment when the 
  conversation turned to Google as a competitor. Several times 
  Mossberg and Swisher attempted to prod him into articulating the 
  current state of Apple's relationship with the search giant, and 
  whether he personally felt betrayed by Google's emergence as a 
  competitor, especially given that Google CEO Eric Schmidt once sat 
  on Apple's board. But Jobs kept his cards close to his chest. At one 
  point, asked again by Mossberg about the relationship, Jobs 
  responded, "My sex life is pretty good these days, how's yours?" 
  Whether he was mocking Mossberg's insistence on the word 
  "relationship," or implying that the line of questioning had begun 
  to dig too deep, Jobs was clearly trying to get the journalists to 
  back off.

  Jobs said repeatedly that he did not see himself or Apple as 
  competing with Google, but rather that Apple simply tries to make 
  the best products it can, and that it was Google that chose to 
  compete with Apple. Yet this tenuous distinction failed to hold 
  water with his interviewers, and Jobs eventually agreed, after much 
  nudging, that the two companies are competing. He acknowledged that 
  in trying to make the best products they can, Apple is also trying 
  to make better products than Google's. But Jobs went on to say that 
  while the two companies are competing, things needn't get rude. To 
  that end, he pointed to the fact that Google and Apple share various 
  properties: that Android now supports iTunes songs, and that Apple 
  makes use of Google's maps.

  While Jobs clearly enjoys repeating his mantra that he's solely 
  focused on his products - and there is likely a lot of truth to this 
  image of him with stunning tunnel vision - it's clear that as the 
  CEO of one of the world's most ambitious companies, his competitors 
  are on his mind at least some of the time.


**Controversies** -- Finally, Mossberg and Swisher asked Jobs about 
  the recent iPhone prototype debacle and the recent spate of suicides 
  at Apple's electronics supplier Foxconn. 

  With the iPhone 4 now unveiled, the prototype story has become old 
  hat, but it's interesting to hear Jobs talk about it. He said 
  there's a debate as to whether the prototype was left in a bar 
  accidentally, or stolen out of the engineer's bag (and the fact that 
  the engineer wasn't fired would seem to support the latter). And he 
  went on to suggest that it's an amazing, colorful story that would 
  make a great movie, with its combination of theft, purchasing of 
  stolen property, and extortion - he even suggested that there's 
  probably sex in there somewhere. (Much more of this, and Jobs will 
  start sounding like the famously risque Jean-Louis Gassée, a 
  high-ranking Apple executive in the 1980s.) Although Jobs disavows 
  significant knowledge of the case, it's clear that Apple's story 
  differs significantly from the one Gizmodo has been telling.

  Regardless, since one side of the case is up to the district 
  attorney, not Apple, Jobs's comments regarding how Apple responded 
  are illuminating. Noting that several people had encouraged him to 
  let the situation slide, Jobs said he thought long and hard about 
  how to pursue the case, and in the end acted according to the same 
  core principles he had 10 years ago, when Apple had almost closed 
  its doors. Though he doesn't quite say this, it would seem that he's 
  suggesting that Apple has succeeded because it focuses on the small 
  details, whether in terms of product design or protecting product 
  secrecy. Clearly, Jobs regards himself as having the same hunger and 
  industriousness as when he returned to Apple, which bodes well for 
  the company's fortunes over the next decade.

  Regarding the Foxconn situation, Jobs said Apple was taking the 
  suicides extremely seriously and that he believes Apple is perhaps 
  the most diligent in the tech industry, or any industry, in its 
  evaluation of working conditions in its supply chain. Apple 
  publishes an annual Supplier Responsibility report detailing the 
  working conditions, employee treatment, and environmental 
  responsibility of its primary, secondary, and tertiary suppliers. He 
  went on to emphasize that Foxconn is not a sweatshop - that in fact 
  it provides its workers with restaurants, movie theaters, swimming 
  pools, and hospitals (not bad for a factory!) - but that Apple is 
  looking into the matter with concern. 

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

  One potential insight into the situation came when Jobs noted that 
  many of the workers at Foxconn are only in their late teens and are 
  living away from their poor rural communities for the first time. He 
  noted that this drastic transition and separation from home may be a 
  serious contributor to the difficulties facing some of these young 
  people. He also said that both professionals from within Apple and 
  outside hires were currently trying to understand the issues at 
  hand. (Foxconn has recently said it will be raising worker salaries 
  to reduce the pressure on workers to work overtime.)


**Interview Recommended** -- While these topics were among the most 
  dynamic sections of the interview, it's always enjoyable to watch 
  Steve Jobs. That's especially true when he's not working from a 
  script while responding to journalists who aren't afraid to push him 
  for answers. If you find yourself with some spare time, I highly 
  recommend checking out the D8 video linked at the start of this 
  article.

  ----
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Apple Extends Safari 5 with Reader, HTML5, Performance
------------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11331>
  20 comments

  In a WWDC keynote dominated by the iPhone 4 and iOS 4, Steve Jobs 
  didn't so much as mention Apple's other major release of the day: 
  Safari 5 for both Mac and Windows. In step with the version number, 
  Apple is focusing on five new features of Safari 5: Safari Reader, 
  more support for HTML5, better performance, support for Bing in the 
  search bar, and a Safari Developer Program that enables developers 
  to create extensions.

<http://www.apple.com/safari/>
<http://www.apple.com/safari/whats-new.html>


**Safari Reader** -- The primary user-focused feature in Safari 5 is 
  Reader, which extracts the text from recognized articles and 
  displays it without ads, site graphics, or other visual 
  distractions. Plus, on sites that break longer stories into multiple 
  pages, such as the New York Times, Safari Reader automatically 
  follows the necessary links to present the entire story on one long 
  scrolling page. A translucent pop-up at the bottom of the screen 
  provides controls for changing text size, sending the page via email 
  as a Web archive, and printing the page. 

  You invoke Safari Reader by clicking the Reader button in the 
  address bar (or choosing Edit > Enter Reader [Command-Shift-R]), and 
  it displays the page in what looks like a JavaScript-driven lightbox 
  - sort of a Web-based dialog where the rest of the page is darkened 
  and the Reader display is inset within it. The controls for changing 
  text size, sending email, and printing aren't new - the standard 
  menu commands and their associated keyboard shortcuts have existed 
  for quite some time. (They are: View > Zoom In [Command-+], View > 
  Zoom Out [Command--], File > Mail Contents of This Page [Command-I], 
  and File > Print [Command-P].)

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-06/Safari-5-Reader.png>

  There are some interesting quirks related to Safari Reader. Most 
  notably, there's no way to know which sites it supports, or, more to 
  the point, which HTML tags it uses to identify articles within a 
  site. For instance, Safari Reader doesn't work on the TidBITS home 
  page, but does work on TidBITS articles. And it does work on the 
  Take Control home page, but not on Take Control News posts. On the 
  sites I tried, including TidBITS, Safari Reader considers reader 
  comments to be "visual distractions" and doesn't display them.

  Also, the Reader button in the address bar replaces the RSS button, 
  leaving one to wonder how you'd subscribe to a site's RSS feed if 
  Safari Reader is active. The answer is to click and hold on the 
  Reader button, which reveals the normal RSS menu for various feeds. 

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-06/Safari-5-RSS-menu.png>

  Unfortunately, the visible control for sending the page via email 
  uses the Mail Contents of This Page command, rather than Mail Link 
  to This Page (Command-Shift-I). If you want the latter, invoke it 
  manually from the File menu or keyboard shortcut. Happily, though, 
  if you invoke Print (in any way) while Safari Reader is showing, the 
  resulting printout reflects the much cleaner Reader display rather 
  than the normal Web site layout.

  Safari Reader will undoubtedly prove controversial in some circles 
  because it will reduce the click-through rate on ads even further, 
  especially for sites that break long articles into multiple pages - 
  each with their own set of ads. Even beyond the advertising issue, 
  it's somewhat distressing to see Apple deciding for a publication 
  what content is and is not relevant. On the TidBITS site, for 
  instance, we consider our reader comments highly relevant, along 
  with related articles that link to the article being read, but 
  Safari Reader hides all of that and more. I'd like to see Apple 
  publicize how Safari Reader works so publications could choose what 
  parts of their content would be recognized, and how.

  All that said, Safari Reader is notable mostly because it has been 
  built into one of the main Web browsers by default. There have been 
  numerous ways of focusing on the text of an article on a Web page 
  over the years; the most impressive ones I've seen are Readability 
  (on which Safari Reader was based) and Readable, both of which 
  operate via JavaScript-based bookmarklets. Both should work in any 
  modern browser.

<http://lab.arc90.com/experiments/readability/>
<http://readable-app.appspot.com/>


**Improved HTML5 Support** -- Apple is now making a very big deal 
  about how the iOS supports two platforms, native iOS apps and 
  HTML5-based Web apps. As a result, it's not surprising that Safari 5 
  on the Mac now boasts greater HTML5 support, with things like 
  full-screen video, closed captioning for video, location services, 
  and much more. 

  HTML5 support is one of those chicken-and-egg situations at the 
  moment, since Web developers can't rely heavily on it until it's 
  well-supported in most browsers, and browser makers may not have 
  significant incentive to support it well until it has wide adoption. 
  (For useful information showing what tags are likely safe to use for 
  different browser versions, see the When Can I Use... site.) So it's 
  good to see Safari 5 trumpeting its HTML5 support, since that will 
  raise the bar for other browser makers. Using the HTML5 Test site 
  (which could be biased in some way), I found that Safari 5 is indeed 
  the most-compliant HTML5 browser around, edging out Google Chrome. 
  The scores are out of a total of 300 points.

<http://caniuse.com/>
<http://html5test.com/>

* Safari 5: 208 and 7 bonus points

* Google Chrome 5.0.375.70: 197 and 7 bonus points

* Firefox 3.6.3: 139 and 4 bonus points

* Opera 10.53: 129 and 4 bonus points

* Camino 2.0.3: 46 and no bonus points

* OmniWeb 5.9: 32 and no bonus points


**Better Performance** -- Apple claims better performance in Safari 5 
  on three fronts: the Nitro JavaScript engine, DNS prefetching, and 
  improved page caching. Although Apple has some charts showing Safari 
  to be the fastest browser available, it's hard to translate 
  benchmarks into real-world performance.

  For instance, although Apple says that Safari 5's Nitro JavaScript 
  engine is 30 percent faster than Safari 4's, 3 percent faster than 
  Chrome, and twice as fast as Firefox 3.6, it was hard to see the 
  difference on JavaScript-intensive sites I use. Part of the problem 
  is that many such sites are using AJAX, so although JavaScript is 
  being used to present an interface to the user, there's also a bunch 
  of back-end work happening that isn't always quick.

  DNS prefetching is quite neat - if you're on a page containing links 
  to other sites, Safari 5 automatically looks up those addresses so 
  when you click on one, it already knows the site's address, reducing 
  the time necessary to load the page. Apparently, this feature has 
  existed in Google Chrome for some time; thanks to commenter Glenn 
  Rempe for the tip.

<http://blog.chromium.org/2008/09/dns-prefetching-or-pre-resolving.html>

  Page caching is the final feature that Apple claims to have improved 
  in Safari 5, though Apple says only that additional types of Web 
  pages are now cached, without giving any specifics.


**Bing Search** -- Also new in Safari 5 is the addition of Bing to the 
  search engine options in Safari 5's General preferences; it joins 
  Google and Yahoo. Apple also added Bing to the search engine options 
  in iOS 4, and it's hard to know quite what to make of the addition. 

  According to the Stat Owl site, Google dominates the search engine 
  world with 86 percent of the market. Bing is second with 6 percent, 
  and Yahoo third with 4.92 percent. So it's possible that Apple 
  merely wants to help even the playing field, especially when you 
  consider that Google's share of the search market for the Safari 
  browser is over 95 percent. Given the tension between Apple and 
  Google of late, I could see Apple wanting to spread the search 
  traffic around so as not to become entirely dependent on Google for 
  search.

<http://statowl.com/search_engine_market_share.php>

  Of course, the inclusion of Yahoo Search sort of already did that, 
  but since July 2009, Yahoo Search has been powered by Bing. Oddly, 
  the databases or algorithms must be slightly different, since Yahoo 
  Search and Bing don't present quite the same results to the same 
  searches. 


**Safari Extensions** -- The last of Apple's marquee features in 
  Safari 5 is support for Safari Extensions, something that has been 
  needed for a long time. Developers have resorted to all sorts of 
  ugly hacks to modify Safari's behavior in the past, and hopefully 
  the new extensions will enable developers to extend Safari in 
  interesting ways while playing within the rules. Extensions are 
  managed in a new Extensions pane in Safari's preferences, which 
  implies that automatic updating of extensions will be available. 
  (The Extensions pane appears only once you've installed an 
  extension, or if you enable the Develop menu from the Advanced pane, 
  and then choose Develop > Enable Extensions.)

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-06/Safari-5-extensions.png>

  A new Extension Builder application helps developers create Safari 
  Extensions, which can put buttons on the toolbar, change the way Web 
  content appears, add controls to Web pages, and more. Safari 
  Extensions rely on HTML5, CSS3, and JavaScript, so they should be 
  more accessible to Web developers than would an extension model that 
  requires Cocoa programming in Xcode. 

  Although it's hard to determine the specifics, it looks as though 
  Apple may be evaluating Safari Extensions in some way. All Safari 
  Extensions must be signed with an Apple-provided digital certificate 
  that comes free with membership in the Safari Developer Program. The 
  certificate ensures that Safari Extensions aren't tampered with and 
  come from the developer they say they do, which is good, and they 
  use sandboxing to increase security. Plus, Safari Extensions can be 
  submitted to the Safari Extensions Gallery, opening in a few months, 
  where users can find and download extensions. It's unclear if there 
  will be any vetting of Safari Extensions along the lines of iOS 
  apps.


**More Features** -- Other changes in Safari 5 are smaller, but some 
  will be extremely welcome. For instance:

* If you close a tab accidentally, pressing Command-Z before you do 
  anything else will re-open it. This is tremendously helpful and 
  something I've long appreciated in Firefox (where the shortcut is 
  Command-Shift-T).

* Safari 5's address field can now match text against the titles of 
  Web pages in the History and Bookmarks as well as any part of their 
  URLs. Unfortunately, much as Apple likes to call it the "Smart 
  Address Field," Safari 5's address field is still far stupider and 
  less useful than the address fields in Firefox and Chrome, which 
  attempt to do the right thing with whatever you type, even if that 
  means guessing at a Web page or performing a search. This is the 
  main reason I don't use Safari as my primary browser.

* Safari 5 claims to be smarter about opening new Web pages in tabs 
  instead of separate windows, something that has long bothered me. If 
  you use tabbed browsing, you generally want new pages opened in 
  tabs, not windows, and Safari 4 was rather inconsistent about that.

* A new button at the top of the window makes it easy to switch 
  between Top Sites and Full History Search views. There's also a new 
  keyboard shortcut (Command-Option-2) for Show All History in the 
  View menu.

* When you're in Private Browsing mode (choose Safari > Private 
  Browsing to prevent Safari from remembering pages you visit, 
  auto-fill information in forms, or search history), Safari 5 
  displays a Private button in the address field, next to the Reader 
  button if necessary. Clicking it turns off Private Browsing.

* Safari 5 can filter potentially malicious scripts used in cross-site 
  scripting (XSS) attacks. Interestingly, the StartPanic.com Web site 
  that shows off the CSS-based browser history leak doesn't seem to be 
  able to read Safari 5's history, which is great. However, Safari 5 
  is still susceptible to the tabnabbing phishing attack ("Beware 
  Tabnabbing, a New Type of Phishing Attack," 28 May 2010).

<http://startpanic.com/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11314>

* A new Timeline panel in the Web Inspector shows how Safari interacts 
  with various aspects of a Web site. To display it, turn on the 
  Develop menu in Safari's Advanced preferences, and then choose 
  Develop > Show Web Inspector and click the Timeline button. Then 
  click the round red Record button at the bottom of the Web Inspector 
  and load a page. There are also new keyboard shortcuts for switching 
  among the Web Inspector panels.

* Apple fixed a number of bugs that improve stability and performance 
  related to Top Sites, trackpad pinch gestures, pasting text, 
  auto-complete, transferring images to iPhoto, handling PDFs, making 
  comments in Facebook, using eMusic.com, authenticating to Windows 
  IIS, and dragging files while logged into etrade.com.

<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT4134>

* Finally, Safari 5 eliminates a number of security vulnerabilities 
  related to ColorSync, PDF handling, URL obfuscation, clipboard 
  handling, UTF-7 encoding, CSS, keyboard focus, and more. 

<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT4196>

  Safari 5 is available via Software Update, or as a 37.46 MB download 
  from the Apple Support Downloads site. It's free, of course, and 
  requires Mac OS X 10.5.8, 10.6.2, or 10.6.3. If you're still using 
  Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger, you can take advantage of many of Safari 5's 
  features other than Safari Reader by upgrading to Safari 4.1 for 
  Tiger, which is a 29.46 MB download from Apple's Support Downloads 
  site; it's also available via Software Update. The Windows versions 
  of Safari 5 run under Windows XP, Windows Vista, and Windows 7; they 
  seem to be available from the same Support Downloads page as the Mac 
  version of Safari 5.

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1046>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1045>

  ----
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TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 14 June 2010
------------------------------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11350>

**PasswordWallet 4.5.3** -- Selznick Scientific Software has released 
  a minor update to the longstanding password management utility 
  PasswordWallet. Version 4.5.3 offers synchronization speeds that are 
  ten times faster than the previous release, along with improved 
  keyboard support for working with document password dialogs. The 
  update also fixes occasional issues with the Find Duplicates 
  feature, addresses duplication errors with syncing, and resolves a 
  bug related to files remaining locked after quitting the program. 
  The company has also released Password Wallet 4.5.2 for the iPhone 
  with a number of new features and usability tweaks. ($20 new, free 
  update, 5.7 MB)

<http://www.selznick.com/products/passwordwallet/>
<http://www.selznick.com/products/passwordwallet/iphone/>

  Read/post comments about PasswordWallet 4.5.3.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11341#comments>


**MacSpeech Scribe 1.1** -- MacSpeech has released a minor maintenance 
  update to its transcription software MacSpeech Scribe. Version 1.1 
  fixes a pesky bug that prevented users from closing the File Open 
  window after completing a transcription. The update also adds 
  support for volume licensing. To learn more about MacSpeech Scribe, 
  see Matt Neuburg's recent review, "Transcribe Recordings With 
  MacSpeech Scribe," 19 May 2010. ($149.99 new, free update, 8.8 MB)

<http://www.macspeech.com/pages.php?pID=181>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11296>

  Read/post comments about MacSpeech Scribe 1.1.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11339#comments>


**1Password 3.2.1** -- Agile Web Solutions has released a maintenance 
  and compatibility update to the popular password management utility 
  1Password. Version 3.2.1 adds support for the just-released Safari 
  5, changes default search settings to always search all items, and 
  improves the process by which Web site icons and page previews are 
  downloaded. Also, several minor issues have been addressed including 
  a problem with the Login password generator, sluggish keyboard 
  scrolling through Login lists, and a bug related to date selection. 
  Full release notes are available on the Agile Web Solutions Web 
  site. ($39.95 new, free update, 15.1 MB)

<http://agile.ws/products/1Password>
<http://agilewebsolutions.com/products/1Password/versions#v30653>

  Read/post comments about 1Password 3.2.1.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11332#comments>


**Microsoft Office 2008 for Mac 12.2.5 Update** -- The Microsoft 
  Office 2008 12.2.5 Update addresses 14 security vulnerabilities, the 
  most serious of which pertain to maliciously crafted Excel files 
  that could enable attackers to run arbitrary code and gain elevated 
  system rights; accounts with administrative rights are at a greater 
  risk than accounts with fewer privileges. The update addresses these 
  issues by changing the way certain Excel files are parsed and by 
  correcting certain installation problems with the Open XML File 
  Format Converter for Mac. Additionally, the update fixes an issue 
  with the custom dictionary that caused it to include words from 
  other languages.

<http://support.microsoft.com/kb/2028864>
<http://www.microsoft.com/technet/security/bulletin/ms10-038.mspx>

  The update is rated Important for Microsoft Office 2008 for Mac and 
  requires that you've previously installed the Microsoft Office 2008 
  for Mac 12.2.4 Update. The update is available from Microsoft's Web 
  site and via the Office 2008 version of Microsoft AutoUpdate. (Free, 
  332.8 MB)

  Read/post comments about Microsoft Office 2008 for Mac 12.2.5 
  Update.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11333#comments>


**Microsoft Office 2004 for Mac 11.5.9 Update** -- The Microsoft 
  Office 2004 for Mac 11.5.9 Update addresses 14 security 
  vulnerabilities, the most serious of which pertain to maliciously 
  crafted Excel files that could enable attackers to run arbitrary 
  code and gain elevated system rights; accounts with administrative 
  rights are at a greater risk than accounts with fewer privileges. 
  The update addresses these issues by changing the way certain Excel 
  files are parsed and by correcting installation problems with the 
  Open XML File Format Converter for Mac.

<http://support.microsoft.com/kb/2028866>
<http://www.microsoft.com/technet/security/bulletin/ms10-038.mspx>

  The update is rated Important for Microsoft Office 2004 for Mac and 
  requires that you've previously installed the Microsoft Office 2004 
  for Mac 11.5.8 Update. The update is available from Microsoft's Web 
  site and via the Office 2004 version of Microsoft AutoUpdate. (Free, 
  9.7 MB)

  Read/post comments about Microsoft Office 2004 for Mac 11.5.9 
  Update.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11334#comments>


**Cyberduck 3.5** -- Cyberduck 3.5 is a significant update to the 
  popular open-source file transfer client, adding support for Google 
  Docs storage. Files uploaded to Google Docs are converted to Google 
  Docs format, and you can set what format you want downloaded files 
  in. Plus, if you upload images to Google Docs, Cyberduck can perform 
  optical character recognition on the files. The update also adds 
  support for Reduced Redundancy Storage at Amazon S3, custom metadata 
  attributes for S3 and Rackspace Cloud Files, keyboard-interactive 
  authentication using SecureID, the capability to configure access 
  logs for CloudFront streaming distributions, and Romanian and 
  Slovenian localizations. A full list of changes and enhancements is 
  available on Cyberduck's Web site. (Free, 19.2 MB)

<http://cyberduck.ch/>
<http://cyberduck.ch/changelog/>

  Read/post comments about Cyberduck 3.5.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11335#comments>


**Photoshop Lightroom 3.0** -- Following a lengthy public beta, Adobe 
  has released Photoshop Lightroom 3.0. The latest major version of 
  the company's professional photo cataloging and editing software 
  dramatically improves its capability to reduce noise from high-ISO 
  images, adds support for organizing video files in the library, 
  uploads images to Flickr (and displays comments that other people 
  leave on them at the site), and adds tethered shooting to record 
  photos directly from the camera to Lightroom. A few other new 
  features dance between the analog and digital photo worlds. Notably, 
  a lens correction feature can correct images based on camera model, 
  lens model, and combinations of the two, addressing the quirks of 
  specific sensors and glass. Perspective correction helps remove 
  unwanted distortion. And, at the other end of the spectrum, a new 
  film grain simulation tool brings a customizable analog film look to 
  digital photos. ($299 new, $99 upgrade, 74.9 MB)

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

  Read/post comments about Photoshop Lightroom 3.0.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11329#comments>

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11350#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/11350>


ExtraBITS for 14 June 2010
--------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11351>

  Apple's Worldwide Developers Conference generated most of the news 
  last week, leading to TidBITS staffers making guest appearances on 
  the MacNotables and Tech Night Owl podcasts. Also, we point at the 
  keynote video itself, along with an article Glenn wrote for Ars 
  Technica giving a possible explanation for the keynote's 
  Wi-Fi-related failure. In other news, an AT&T security breach 
  revealed some iPad user email addresses, and Second Life laid off 30 
  percent of its workforce.


**Adam Discusses the iPhone 4 and iOS 4 on Tech Night Owl Live** -- 
  For yet another discussion of Apple's WWDC announcements, listen in 
  as Adam and Tech Night Owl host Gene Steinberg talk about the top 
  features in the iPhone 4, how FaceTime should integrate with iChat 
  and Skype, and the change in AT&T's data plans, among much else.

<http://www.technightowl.com/radio/podcast/now-playing-june-10-2010-—-adam-engst-ross-rubin-and-peter-cohen/>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11342#comments>


**Congested Wi-Fi WWDC Keynote May Have Triggered iPhone 4 Bug** -- 
  TidBITS editor Glenn Fleishman explains in some depth at Ars 
  Technica how so much Wi-Fi network congestion was in the air at the 
  WWDC keynote. Based on discussions with two Wi-Fi experts, one of 
  whom ran Apple's Mac networking hardware group for seven years, the 
  iPhone 4 likely had a Wi-Fi driver bug, possibly triggered by the 
  congestion.

<http://arstechnica.com/apple/news/2010/06/wwdc-keynote-wifi-woes-may-have-been-due-to-iphone-4g-drivers.ars/>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11344#comments>


**AT&T Security Breach Exposes iPad User Email Addresses** -- The New 
  York Times reports that a hacker group named Goatse Security has 
  successfully exploited a hole in AT&T's Web site to access the email 
  addresses of 114,000 iPad 3G users. AT&T has since patched the hole 
  on its site, but the breach is a black eye for the company and could 
  also harm the iPad's reputation, even though there's no indication 
  that the problem was directly related to Apple.

<http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/10/technology/10apple.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11340#comments>


**Adam & Tonya Discuss Ebook Formats and Safari 5 on MacNotables** -- 
  MacNotables host Chuck Joiner has been confused about how EPUB and 
  PDF compare, so Adam and Tonya tried to explain the pros and cons of 
  each format in this MacNotables podcast. Adam also summarized the 
  new features in Safari 5, and Chuck called upon listeners to vote in 
  a poll to decide whether Adam or Tonya should get the new iPhone 4.

<http://www.macnotables.com/wordpress/macnotables-1021-adam-and-tonya-engst-explain-ebook-formats-outline-safari-5-features-and-ask-for-help-with-a-fam>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11337#comments>


**Second Life Employees Get Second Careers** -- Remember the virtual 
  world Second Life, which was much touted as the wave of the future 
  some years ago? Well, it seems that the jokes about not needing to 
  use Second Life in favor of your first life weren't just poking fun. 
  According to TechCrunch, the user base has been shrinking and Second 
  Life maker Linden Lab is laying off 30 percent of its workforce, 
  giving all those employees a chance at a Second Career.

<http://techcrunch.com/2010/06/09/linden-labs-lays-off-30-percent-of-staff/>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11304#comments>


**2010 WWDC Keynote Video Now Available** -- For those denied the 
  pleasure of watching Steve Jobs unveil the iPhone 4 in person, Apple 
  has posted a video of the 2010 WWDC keynote speech on its Web site. 
  In addition to introducing the iPhone 4, Jobs and company also 
  previewed iOS 4, an update to iBooks, the new video conferencing app 
  FaceTime, and a hearty collection of app demos.

<http://events.apple.com.edgesuite.net/1006ad9g4hjk/event/>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11330#comments>



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