TidBITS#1038/02-Aug-2010
========================
  Issue link: <http://db.tidbits.com/issue/1038>

  The big news this week is Apple's release of new models of the iMac 
  and Mac Pro, a new 27-inch Cinema Display, the new Magic Trackpad, 
  and the new Apple Battery Charger. Jeff Carlson and Doug McLean run 
  down the details of all of these new devices for you. Doug also 
  covers Safari 5.0.1 and the new Safari Extension Gallery; Jeff 
  explains how a bad battery in a Magic Trackpad is cause for... well, 
  not much; and Glenn Fleishman examines how the latest DMCA exemption 
  ruling from the Librarian of Congress renders iPhone jailbreaking 
  legal (but not easy). Most notably, Joe Kissell contributes a 
  detailed review and comparison of a pair of portable document 
  scanners: the ScanSnap S1300 and the Doxie. Finally, don't forget 
  that the Take Control 50-percent-off sale ends Tuesday! Notable 
  software releases this week include Snapz Pro X 2.2.3, Retrospect 
  8.2, and BBEdit 9.5.1.

Articles
    Take Control Sale Ends 3 August 2010
    Safari 5.0.1 Brings Bug Fixes, Safari Extensions Gallery
    Apple Spreads Magic to New Trackpad, Battery Charger
    A Rational Response to a Magic Trackpad Glitch
    Jailbreaking Made Legal by Librarian of Congress
    Apple Updates iMac, Mac Pro, and Cinema Display
    ScanSnap S1300 vs. Doxie: Two Portable Document Scanners
    TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 2 August 2010
    ExtraBITS for 2 August 2010


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Take Control Sale Ends 3 August 2010
------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11485>

  We hear regularly from people who don't always get around to reading 
  their TidBITS issues right away (we're not offended, we have the 
  same problem), so we wanted to remind anyone who missed last week's 
  issue that our 50-percent-off sale on all Take Control ebooks and 
  Macworld Superguides continues through the end of Tuesday, 3 August 
  2010. For more information, see "Take Control Sale: 50% Off to 
  Celebrate Account Management" (26 July 2010). 

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/catalog?cp=CPN00721JULY&pt=TB1038>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11465>


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Safari 5.0.1 Brings Bug Fixes, Safari Extensions Gallery
--------------------------------------------------------
  by Doug McLean <doug_mclean@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11471>
  3 comments

  Apple has updated Safari to version 5.0.1, activating new extension 
  capabilities and launching the external Safari Extensions Gallery 
  (see "Apple Extends Safari 5 with Reader, HTML5, Performance," 9 
  June 2010). The Web-based gallery enables users to search for 
  particular extensions, browse extension categories, and install 
  extensions with a single click and no relaunch.

<http://www.apple.com/safari/>
<http://extensions.apple.com/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11331>

  While Safari has always supported plug-ins such as Flash Player and 
  has been extensible in unsupported ways, Safari Extensions are 
  different. Most importantly, they're more secure due to requiring 
  signed digital certificates from Apple that ensure any updates are 
  coming from the original developer and that no one is tampering with 
  them. The extensions are also "sandboxed," meaning they can't 
  communicate with a user's system beyond Safari, and can't provide 
  information to Web sites not specified by the developer. Safari 
  Extensions are also arguably easier for developers to build, as they 
  rely on open HTML5, CSS3, and JavaScript Web standards, and Apple 
  has provided developers with an Extension Builder application. 
  Finally, they're better supported by Apple in their management and 
  installation (hence the easy one-click installation). 

  Though Safari 5.0 supported Safari Extensions, the feature was 
  deactivated by default and users were on their own to find 
  extensions on the Web. With Safari 5.0.1 and the Safari Extensions 
  Gallery, extensions are on by default and a Safari Extensions 
  Gallery item appears in the Safari application menu. Users can 
  continue to search out and download extensions not listed in the 
  gallery, but Apple's site makes it easy to find those that will 
  likely prove, for most people, to be the most useful or interesting.

  Apple's recent press release announcing the Safari Extensions 
  Gallery highlighted a few of the new extensions. Among them is an 
  Amazon wish-list extension that enables users to add items from any 
  Web site to an Amazon wish list; a Bing search engine extension that 
  can provide potentially relevant information when any given text is 
  selected, such as a map appearing when an address is highlighted; 
  and a Twitter extension that enables users to tweet directly from 
  Safari when stumbling across content on the Web.

<http://www.apple.com/pr/library/2010/07/28safari.html>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-07/Safari-Extensions-Gallery.png>

  More interesting to us are some of the productivity extensions, such 
  as SafariRestore, which automatically restores your previous 
  browsing session when launching Safari; Sessions, which goes one 
  step further to provide a browsing history manager; and 
  AutoPagerize, which turns lengthy multiple-page Web articles on 
  sites like Ars Technica and the New York Times into a single 
  scrollable Web page.

  Safari 5.0.1 also adds a number of smaller features and addresses a 
  handful of stability issues. Improvements include more precise Top 
  Hit results in the address field, more accurate timing for CSS 
  animations, enhanced stability when triggering the keyboard shortcut 
  for Safari Reader, and better stability when scrolling in MobileMe 
  Mail. Problems that have been addressed include a number of 
  site-specific issues, such as displaying multi-page articles from 
  Rolling Stone's Web site in Safari Reader and printing boarding 
  passes from American Airlines' Web site. Also, Google Wave 
  compatibility with 32-bit systems has been repaired, a bug 
  preventing Safari from launching on Leopard systems with network 
  home directories has been fixed, and a bug causing DNS prefetching 
  of results to overwhelm certain routers has been addressed. A full 
  list of changes is available on Apple's Web site.

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1070>

  The update also fixes several critical security vulnerabilities. 
  These security issues are mainly related to WebKit's handling of 
  various Web elements, malicious RSS feeds, and AutoFill. They could 
  lead to arbitrary code execution, files being sent to remote 
  systems, and, in the case of AutoFill, information being disclosed 
  to malicious Web sites without any user interaction. This final fix 
  addresses the vulnerability identified recently by Jeremiah 
  Grossman, so it's once again safe to turn AutoFill on. Safari 5.0.1 
  is a 37.57 MB download via Software Update and the Apple Support 
  Downloads page.

<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT4276>
<http://jeremiahgrossman.blogspot.com/2010/07/i-know-who-your-name-where-you-work-and.html>

  Finally, Apple has also released Safari 4.1.1 for Mac OS X 10.4 
  Tiger users, including many of the same feature updates, stability 
  improvements, and security fixes - though it does not include 
  support for Safari Extensions. It's also available via Software 
  Update and the Apple Support Downloads page as a 29.53 MB download.

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1069>


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Apple Spreads Magic to New Trackpad, Battery Charger
----------------------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11466>
  7 comments

  Apple introduced something new last week: the Magic Trackpad, a 
  wireless touch-sensitive trackpad that brings Multi-Touch gestures 
  to the company's desktop Macs. 

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-07/magictrackpad_3q.jpg>

  Matching the height and depth of the Apple Wireless Keyboard, the 
  Magic Trackpad enables gestures like swiping, pinching, and rotating 
  items in programs that support them. Apple's Web page notes that the 
  "entire surface is a button that clicks," and according to Dan 
  Frakes at Macworld, the trackpad clicks via buttons in the feet.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-07/magictrackpad_hand.jpg>
<http://www.apple.com/magictrackpad/>

  The trackpad communicates with the Mac via Bluetooth and is powered 
  by two AA batteries. It also reduces its power consumption when 
  inactive, and includes an On/Off button. 

  The Magic Trackpad and Multi-Touch Trackpad Update 1.0 (75.09 MB) 
  enables the Multi-Touch controls (and offers options for choosing 
  which ones to activate) in the Trackpad preference pane. It also 
  provides inertial scrolling and three-finger drag gesture support to 
  a number of MacBook and MacBook Pro models.

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1066>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT4254>

  The Magic Trackpad costs $69 and is available now.


**Apple Battery Charger** -- Here's something unexpected. Apple also 
  unveiled the Apple Battery Charger, a $29 charger that includes 6 
  rechargeable AA batteries and powers two at a time. Apple claims the 
  Apple-supplied NiMH batteries have up to a 10-year lifespan, with a 
  self-discharge rate that retains 80 percent of their original charge 
  even after sitting unused for a year. The charger works with other 
  companies' NiMH batteries, too.

<http://www.apple.com/battery-charger/>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-07/batterycharger.jpg>

  What sets Apple's charger apart is the amount of power it uses once 
  its batteries have been charged: 30 milliwatts (mW), compared to 315 
  mW for other chargers. The reduction in the "vampire draw," as Apple 
  terms it, promises to reduce your house or office's overall energy 
  consumption. The Apple Battery Charger is available now.

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A Rational Response to a Magic Trackpad Glitch
----------------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11474>
  8 comments

  I received a Magic Trackpad for review from Apple last week, and 
  immediately ran into a problem: it wouldn't turn on (for more 
  details about the device, see "Apple Spreads Magic to New Trackpad, 
  Battery Charger," 27 July 2010).

<http://www.apple.com/magictrackpad/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11466>

  I tried pressing the power button once, pressing and holding it, and 
  trying again a few times - but nothing worked. So I opened the 
  battery compartment and discovered that the battery on top, a 
  typical Energizer alkaline AA, was corroded.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-07/magic_battery.jpg>

  Now, realize we're talking about an Apple product, and it's common 
  knowledge that Apple is infallible and everything the company 
  creates is perfect... except of course when it isn't. So what's the 
  obvious response to this situation? Product recall? Class action 
  lawsuit? Angry blog post demanding a redesign of not only the Magic 
  Trackpad, but also everything Apple uses that includes a battery? I 
  suppose I should also include frothing, seething rage in here 
  somewhere.

  Or not. Because I like to think I live in the real world.

  The batteries in this Magic Trackpad were no doubt installed in a 
  factory in China. Although it came from Apple's public relations 
  department, the box was shrinkwrapped, so any consumer could have 
  gotten this particular Magic Trackpad.

  According to Green Batteries, more than 15 billion batteries are 
  produced and sold worldwide every year. When talking about 
  quantities like that, there are bound to be a sizable number that 
  don't work or have some minor manufacturing defect, even considering 
  quality control procedures.

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

  We see this all the time with tech products, and, yes, Apple 
  products too. Someone's iPhone 4 doesn't work correctly or a Mac 
  arrives completely dead on arrival - and some people freak out. As a 
  longtime follower of Apple products and news, I've seen it over and 
  over again.

<http://www.zdnet.com/blog/apple/my-iphone-4-is-a-lemon-oh-my-updated/7387>

  In this case, because the trackpad came from Apple PR, I sent an 
  email to my contact explaining what happened; she asked for the 
  serial number and I passed that along. In the extremely unlikely 
  chance that there's a wider battery supply problem, Apple can use 
  that information to track down the source. If I had purchased the 
  trackpad at an Apple retail store, I'm sure I could take it back and 
  either be given a new trackpad or just a new set of batteries. 

  Oh, and then I put a new battery in, after which the Magic Trackpad 
  worked perfectly. End of story, and no need for drama.

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Jailbreaking Made Legal by Librarian of Congress
------------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11468>
  2 comments

  The Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) is an odious piece of 
  legislation that criminalized ordinary behavior around media you 
  have purchased, in the name of preventing unfettered piracy of 
  digital music, games, and video. Yeah, well, we see how well that 
  worked.

  One of the DMCA's key provisions is its restriction on the use of 
  tools that break encryption designed to prevent the unauthorized 
  copying of media - digital rights management (DRM) is the rubric. 
  The DMCA has been successfully used in lawsuits for its precise 
  purpose, however misguided, but also for ridiculous things like 
  protecting code that prevents the use of third-party ink cartridges.

  The legislation had a backdoor: the Librarian of Congress, the 
  poobah of copyright in the United States, may carve out exemptions 
  for cases not covered in the legislation. These exemptions allow 
  non-infringing uses of copyrighted works that are prevented by 
  technological means like DRM. 

  These exemptions were supposed to be issued every three years; the 
  latest were approved last week, nearly four years after the previous 
  rulemaking.

<http://www.copyright.gov/1201/>
<http://frwebgate3.access.gpo.gov/cgi-bin/TEXTgate.cgi?WAISdocID=zdp3L1/0/1/0&WAISaction=retrieve>

  Groups like the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) have used this 
  exemption tool to lobby for the rights of individuals and 
  researchers to have more control over media and devices in their 
  possession. The EFF was widely cited in the new rules, and issued a 
  happy press release.

<https://www.eff.org/press/archives/2010/07/26>

  The latest set of exclusions, drafted by the Registrar of Copyrights 
  and approved by the Librarian of Congress, legitimizes jailbreaking 
  of iPhones. It's remarkably specific, because Apple's phone is the 
  most popular locked device on which you cannot install arbitrary 
  third-party software. The rule applies to other devices; they just 
  aren't enumerated.

  The exemptions also include a renewal of a 2006 rule that allows 
  breaking encryption to unlock a phone that is set to work only on a 
  single carrier's network. The new rule allows unlocking only of used 
  phones, which seems to mean a phone that was bought for and used on 
  a given carrier network. Carriers can still charge cancellation 
  penalties, of course.

  The rulemaking about jailbreaking is rather complicated, but it 
  concludes with a dense "designation of a class of works" that I'll 
  pick apart for you:

      Computer programs that enable wireless communication handsets 
      to execute software applications, where circumvention is 
      accomplished for the sole purpose of enabling interoperability 
      of such applications, when they have been lawfully obtained, 
      with computer programs on the telephone handset.

  If you read through the explanation of why this exemption was 
  approved, it's because the registrar found that all of Apple's 
  copyright-related reasons for locking down the iPhone aren't 
  germane, and that an individual shouldn't be kept from circumvention 
  of the iPhone's locks for the legitimate installation of software 
  Apple didn't anoint.

  The designation above means that the iOS (a computer program that 
  enables a handset to run software) can be circumvented to allow 
  installation of other programs that work alongside those provided or 
  sold by Apple. (Note the phrase "lawfully obtained": that's in there 
  to avoid accidentally making it legal to install pirated software.)

  The registrar's rule doesn't require Apple to allow jailbreaking, 
  but Apple can no longer claim jailbreaking is illegal. The company 
  has seemingly never sued anyone for creating jailbreaking 
  instructions or for the act itself.

  Apple can also continue to say that jailbreaking voids the warranty 
  (as Apple PR informed Leander Kahney of Cult of Mac). It's within 
  Apple's power to define the limits of its guarantees for a product, 
  but state courts and state attorneys general define whether a firm's 
  warranty conforms with the law. The exemption to the DMCA about 
  jailbreaking might make a state consumer-protection lawsuit have 
  greater merit, or a suit even in small-claims court by an individual 
  against Apple. Consumer-protection laws tend to favor purchasers of 
  a product if the item fails, so long as the buyer made reasonable 
  and appropriate use, regardless of what the warranty clauses attempt 
  to enforce.

<http://www.cultofmac.com/apples-official-response-to-dmca-jailbreak-exemption-it-voids-your-warranty/52463>

  This rule change thus doesn't precisely change the circumstances of 
  jailbreaking. It's unclear whether jailbreaking software or services 
  are illegal under the DMCA, as providing such information or service 
  isn't covered by the exemption. Severe penalties are provided for 
  those that violate the DMCA for "commercial advantage or private 
  financial gain," but a Web site explaining how to jailbreak an 
  iPhone with no fee attached would seemingly not be covered.

<http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/uscode17/usc_sec_17_00001204----000-.html>

  So has the landscape for the App Store changed? Will developers now 
  choose between selling apps via Apple or via third-party stores 
  directly to consumers? It seems unlikely at present. Apple might 
  need to work harder to appease developers, but the company also has 
  consistently patched the vulnerabilities exploited by jailbreaking 
  software, and might become even more vigorous on that front.

  The exemption sets an important principle, however: that copyright 
  can't be used as a bludgeon to control how people use devices. It 
  won't lead to an open iOS platform, but it will keep Apple on its 
  toes.

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Apple Updates iMac, Mac Pro, and Cinema Display
-----------------------------------------------
  by Doug McLean <doug_mclean@tidbits.com>, Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11467>
  1 comment

  Last week, Apple announced upgrades to its iMac and Mac Pro lineups, 
  and introduced a new 27-inch Cinema Display.


**iMac** -- Apple has revamped its iMac lineup with faster processors 
  and graphics. The lower-end iMacs see the biggest changes, including 
  a move away from the Intel Core Duo architecture to the new Intel 
  Core i3 and i5 processors, and a shift away from the Nvidia GeForce 
  9400M graphics processor to ATI-powered discrete graphics. Now the 
  Intel Core i3, i5, and i7 processors and the ATI discrete graphics 
  processors are standard in iMacs across the board.

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

  The 21.5-inch and 27-inch models remain the standard form factors 
  for the iMac, with the smaller model offered in three separate 
  processor configurations, and the larger model offered in four. The 
  base configurations and their respective build-to-order options are 
  as follows:

* 21.5-inch ($1,199): 3.06 GHz Intel Core i3, 500 GB hard drive, ATI 
  Radeon HD 4670 discrete graphics with 256 MB GDDR3 SDRAM, and 4 GB 
  of 1333 MHz SDRAM. The only build-to-order option is 8 GB of RAM.

* 21.5-inch ($1,499): 3.2 GHz Intel Core i3, 1 TB hard drive, ATI 
  Radeon HD 5670 discrete graphics with 512 MB GDDR3 SDRAM, and 4 GB 
  of 1333 MHz SDRAM. Build-to-order options include a 3.6 GHz Core i5 
  processor, a 2 TB hard drive, and 8 GB of RAM.

* 27-inch ($1,699): 3.2 GHz Intel Core i3, 1 TB hard drive, ATI Radeon 
  HD 5670 discrete graphics with 512 MB GDDR3 SDRAM, and 4 GB of 1333 
  MHz SDRAM. Build-to-order options include a 3.6 GHz Core i5 
  processor, an ATI Radeon HD 5750 graphics card with 1 GB GDDR5 
  SDRAM, a 2 TB hard drive, a 256 GB solid state drive, and 8 or 16 GB 
  of RAM. It's also possible to replace the hard drive with a 256 GB 
  solid-state drive, or, in a first for the iMac, install an 
  _additional_ 256 GB solid-state drive.

* 27-inch ($1,999): 2.8 GHz quad-core Intel Core i5, 1 TB hard drive, 
  ATI Radeon HD 5750 discrete graphics with 1 GB GDDR5 SDRAM, and 4 GB 
  of 1333 MHz SDRAM. Build-to-order options include a 2.93 GHz 
  quad-core Intel Core i7 processor, a 2 TB hard drive, 8 or 16 GB of 
  RAM, and an additional 256 GB solid-state drive.

  All models come standard with four USB 2.0 ports, one FireWire 800 
  port, 802.11n Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 2.1+EDR, an 8x SuperDrive, a Gigabit 
  Ethernet connector, and an SD card slot that now supports the SDXC 
  format (for higher capacity cards). Also standard is the built-in 
  iSight camera, microphone, speakers (which Apple claims are improved 
  over the previous version), headphone and audio-in jacks, and a Mini 
  DisplayPort output that supports DVI, VGA, and dual-link DVI. 

  While no major environmental leaps have been made with these updated 
  models, Apple continues to uphold its green standards. In its press 
  release, Apple notes that the iMac meets Energy Star 5.0 
  requirements, achieves EPEAT gold status, features displays that are 
  mercury- and arsenic-free, and is built with highly recyclable 
  materials that are devoid of any BFRs or PVCs.

<http://www.apple.com/pr/library/2010/07/27imac.html>

  Note that Apple released Mac OS X v10.6.4 Update iMac (Mid 2010) 
  (452.62 MB) and Mac OS X Server v10.6.4 Update iMac (Mid 2010) 
  (460.91 MB) to fix some graphics-related compatibility and 
  performance problems, improve compatibility with large-format SDXC 
  memory cards, and to add support for the Magic Trackpad. Software 
  Update is likely the easiest way to see if your new iMac needs these 
  updates.

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1065>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1064>


**Mac Pro** -- The Mac Pro, Apple's desktop tower of power, is now 
  even more burly thanks to the option to equip it with up to 12 
  processing cores and up to four 512 GB solid-state drives. It also 
  features improved ATI graphics processors.

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

  The low-end configuration includes a single quad-core Intel Xeon 
  "Nehalem" processor - the type that previously represented the high 
  end of the Mac Pro line - at speeds up to 3.2 GHz. The higher-end 
  configurations include Intel's "Westmere" processors in quad-core or 
  6-core models. (If 4 cores are "quad-core," would 6 cores be 
  "sex-core"?) The Mac Pro can be outfitted with one or two 
  processors, providing a 6-core system at 3.33 GHz, an 8-core 
  (octo-core?) system at 2.4 GHz, or a 12-core (duode-core?) system at 
  up to 2.93 GHz. Apple also notes that the Westmere chips include 8 
  MB or 12 MB of L3 cache per processor to improve performance.

  Graphics processing is handled by the ATI Radeon HD 5770 with 1 GB 
  of GDDR5 memory, which Apple claims is faster than the previous 
  top-of-the-line option. Or, you can move up to the ATI Radeon HD 
  5870 with 1 GB of GDDR5 memory, which offers a wider memory bus 
  (256-bit and 153.6 GB per second versus 128-bit and 76.8 GB per 
  second) and higher-performance GPU. Each card includes two Mini 
  DisplayPort outputs and a dual-link DVI port. If you equip the Mac 
  Pro with two ATI Radeon HD 5770 cards, you can connect up to six 
  displays.

  In terms of storage, the Mac Pro includes four 3.5-inch drive bays 
  that offer up to 8 TB of storage when configured with four 2 TB SATA 
  3Gb/s drives. Apple also offers the option to add up to four 512 GB 
  solid-state drives, capable of accessing data at up to 230 MB per 
  second. Or, mix and match hard drives and solid-state drives to fill 
  the bays.

  The new Mac Pro will be available in August 2010. The online Apple 
  Store does not yet list it for pre-order, so you can't build a 
  configuration online and see how much the combination of processors 
  and drives will cost. However, Apple's press release for the Mac Pro 
  lists two base configurations:

<http://www.apple.com/pr/library/2010/07/27macpro.html>

* $2,499 buys a Mac Pro with a single 2.8 GHz quad-core Intel Xeon 
  W3530 (Nehalem) processor with 8 MB of L3 cache, 3 GB of memory 
  (expandable up to 16 GB), ATI Radeon HD 5770, one 1 TB hard drive, 
  and an 18x SuperDrive.

* $3,499 buys a Mac Pro with two 2.4 GHz quad-core Intel Xeon E5620 
  (Westmere) processors with 12 MB of L3 cache, 6 GB of memory 
  (expandable up to 32 GB), ATI Radeon HD 5770, one 1 TB hard drive, 
  and an 18x SuperDrive.

  All models include four PCI Express 2.0 slots, five USB 2.0 ports, 
  four FireWire 800 ports, AirPort Extreme 802.11n wireless 
  networking, Bluetooth 2.1+EDR, Gigabit Ethernet, and an Apple 
  Keyboard with numeric keypad and Magic Mouse.


**27-inch Cinema Display** -- The new 27-inch Cinema Display features 
  a 2560-by-1440-pixel resolution with a 178 degree viewing angle 
  (thanks to in-plane switching technology) and offers 60 percent more 
  screen real estate than its 24-inch sibling. It keeps with Apple's 
  standard of the 16:9 edge-to-edge glass display mounted on an 
  aluminum stand with an adjustable hinge, and comes with a built-in 
  iSight camera, 49-watt speakers, microphone, and USB 2.0 hub.

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

  The display also has a built-in Mini DisplayPort connector, an 
  integrated MagSafe connector for powering a MacBook or MacBook Pro, 
  and an ambient light sensor that automatically adjusts screen 
  brightness depending on the lighting conditions.

  Interestingly, the 27-inch Cinema Display will be Apple's only 
  external display going forward. Apple confirmed with several news 
  outlets that the current 24- and 30-inch Cinema Displays will be 
  retired in sync with the release of the new 27-inch model, so if you 
  want one of those models, get it now before Apple runs out of stock. 

  The 27-inch Cinema Display requires a Mac with Mini DisplayPort 
  capabilities, and will cost $999 upon release in September 2010.

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11467#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/11467>


ScanSnap S1300 vs. Doxie: Two Portable Document Scanners
--------------------------------------------------------
  by Joe Kissell <joe@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11458>
  4 comments

  As part of my ongoing struggle against clutter, several years ago I 
  adopted the habit of scanning pretty much every piece of paper that 
  crosses my desk. Many papers can then be recycled or shredded, 
  saving valuable space. But even in cases where I need to save the 
  original for some reason, scanning everything lets me back up all my 
  important physical documents along with my digital files. And, since 
  I perform OCR (optical character recognition) on everything I scan, 
  I can search, select, and copy text from all my documents with ease. 
  I wrote about this process for Macworld in "The Real Paperless 
  Office," with improved AppleScripts for OCR in "Update: The 
  Paperless Office."

<http://www.macworld.com/article/60229/2007/10/nov07geekfactor.html>
<http://www.macworld.com/article/137091/2008/11/paperlessoffice.html>

  A central component of any paperless office is of course a scanner, 
  and at Macworld Expo earlier this year I was delighted to see an 
  explosion of new document scanner models on display. Recently I had 
  the opportunity to test two of the latest scanners, the Fujitsu 
  ScanSnap S1300 and Apparent's Doxie. Both of these 600-dpi document 
  scanners are designed for portability, and are therefore 
  significantly smaller and lighter than conventional desktop 
  scanners. I spent a good bit of time with each one to see how they 
  compare to each other and to my desktop ScanSnap scanner. Neither 
  was perfect, but each has some interesting virtues that may 
  recommend it for certain types of users.

<http://www.fujitsu.com/us/services/computing/peripherals/scanners/scansnap/s1300.html>
<http://www.getdoxie.com/>


**Fujitsu ScanSnap S1300** -- I've been a fan of Fujitsu's ScanSnap 
  scanners for a number of years, and have used two earlier desktop 
  models (the S510M and the fi-5110EOXM). I reviewed the S510M for 
  Macworld back in 2007, and found very little to complain about. On 
  the surface, at least, the new S1300 is different from previous 
  models primarily in two respects: its diminutive size (with 
  corresponding reductions in speed and feeder capacity) and its 
  software, which is updated from what shipped with earlier 
  incarnations of the ScanSnap.

<http://www.macworld.com/article/131313/2007/12/scansnaps510m.html>

  The S1300 measures 11.18 x 3.90 x 3.03 inches (284 x 99 x 77 mm) and 
  weighs 3.08 pounds (1.4 kg). That makes it about one-third the 
  volume, and about half the weight, of the nearest desktop model, the 
  ScanSnap S1500M. That sounds impressive, especially as Fujitsu's 
  desktop scanners are themselves quite petite, but I found that in 
  practice, by the time you've raised the lid and extended the paper 
  holders, the S1300 doesn't take up significantly less desktop space; 
  the smaller size is interesting only when it comes time to pack the 
  scanner for a trip. (And, the S1300 looks positively gigantic 
  compared to the tiny Doxie, about which I'll say more in a moment.)

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-07/ScanSnap-Doxie-iPhone.jpg>

  The S1300's paper feeder holds 10 sheets, compared to 50 on the 
  S1500M. Because I rarely scan documents longer than 10 pages anyway, 
  I don't find the smaller capacity to be a problem. The speed is 
  somewhat slower than desktop models: at default resolutions, it's 
  rated at 8 pages per minute for color documents and 16 for grayscale 
  (compared to 20 ppm for either color or grayscale on the S1500M). 
  The difference is noticeable but not troubling; since I mostly scan 
  black-and-white documents, this simply means a few extra seconds of 
  waiting. However, these numbers may be somewhat misleading, 
  depending on how you use the scanner - which brings me to the matter 
  of electrical power.

  The S1300 can use a standard (and reasonably compact) AC adapter, or 
  it can draw all its power via USB. If I can leave the power adapter 
  at home when traveling, that's obviously a plus. But there are two 
  significant catches. First, when the scanner is powered only by USB, 
  it's much slower. And second, in order to work without an adapter, 
  you must run two separate USB cables between your computer and the 
  scanner - one that carries data, and another (which has a DC 
  connector on the other end) that delivers power. Since most Mac 
  laptops have only two USB ports to begin with (and the MacBook Air 
  has only one), that means you can't use any other USB devices unless 
  you also pack a hub, which will most likely require its own AC 
  adapter anyway! And be careful not to lose that special, proprietary 
  USB power cable - without it, you'll be completely sunk.

  All right, so apart from those niggles, how does the thing actually 
  work? To put it succinctly: easily and well. You pop a document in 
  the feeder and press the scanner's single button. The S1300 then 
  rapidly scans both sides of each page at once, automatically 
  detecting document size, presence or absence of color, paper 
  rotation, and so on. Although I didn't submit test documents to a 
  pixel-by-pixel examination, I didn't notice any obvious difference 
  in quality between the S1300's scans and those of my desktop 
  ScanSnap (which is to say: they look great).

  Depending on how you've configured ScanSnap Manager, any of numerous 
  things can happen once the scan is complete. For example:

* The document can be saved wherever you choose, in either JPEG or PDF 
  format.

* OCR can be performed on the document, turning it into a searchable 
  PDF.

* The document can be sent directly to an application on your Mac, 
  such as Preview, iPhoto, or my personal choice, DEVONthink Pro 
  Office.

* The document can be converted to an editable Word or Excel file.

* Your printer can spew out a copy of the document.

* The scanned document can be attached to a new message in your 
  default email client. (In earlier versions of the software, this 
  worked with only Apple Mail, but now other clients work as well.)

  You can also save a variety of profiles for various scanning 
  activities, each with its own settings for things like compression, 
  file format, and destination, and switch between them with a click 
  or two. If you prefer to decide what should happen on a 
  document-by-document basis, you can opt to display the Quick Menu, 
  which is a pop-up window in which you can click a button to perform 
  any of seven common activities.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-07/ScanSnap_Quick_Menu.png>

  For the most part, my preferred workflow is the one that requires 
  the least thought, effort, and intervention. I simply have every new 
  scan sent directly to DEVONthink Pro Office, which has its own OCR 
  capabilities and can also automatically categorize most of my 
  documents. (I say a great deal more about this in "Take Control of 
  Getting Started with DEVONthink 2.")

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/devonthink-2?pt=TB1038>

  Compared to the software that came with my older ScanSnap model, the 
  S1300's software package - which includes a driver, a control center 
  called ScanSnap Manager, ABBYY FineReader for ScanSnap OCR software, 
  and Cardiris for ScanSnap - is improved in most respects. The 
  capability to turn scans into editable Word or Excel files was new 
  to me, and on my test documents, it worked shockingly well. In most 
  cases the resulting Office files were so close to the original - 
  including matching fonts - that I initially thought I was looking at 
  a bitmapped image. There were a few amusing oddities. For example, I 
  scanned a letter that my wife and I had both signed, and asked 
  ScanSnap Manager to turn it into a Word file. In the resulting 
  document, my signature was independently selectable as a floating 
  graphic, which slightly blew my mind because that's exactly what 
  should have happened, but I never expected the software to be that 
  smart. However, my wife's signature, right next to it, was rendered 
  as unintelligible garbage characters. You win some, you lose some.

  Another component my earlier scanner didn't include was Cardiris 
  software for processing scanned business cards. Here, the results 
  were decidedly less impressive. In theory, the software is supposed 
  to pick out elements such as name, title, address, and phone number 
  and assign them to the proper fields; you can then export the data 
  in a form that Address Book (or your favorite contact manager) can 
  read. However, with most of the cards I tried, only a few elements 
  were recognized correctly, and on some - particularly cards with a 
  dark background and light text - not a single character was 
  recognized. That's a pity - cleaning up the data produced by 
  Cardiris takes about as much time as entering the data manually - 
  but then, I don't collect so many business cards that this amounts 
  to a hardship.

  Previously, if you wanted to turn a scanned document into a 
  searchable PDF, you used ScanSnap Manager's Scan to Searchable PDF 
  feature to open the scanned file in a separate application called 
  ABBYY FineReader for ScanSnap, which then performed OCR. You could 
  fine-tune FineReader's behavior with preferences for which languages 
  to recognize, image quality, whether to prompt you for a file name, 
  and so on. That was all straightforward, and you still _can_ do all 
  that, but now ScanSnap Manager has a second, completely different 
  way to do OCR. On the program's File Option tab, you can select a 
  Convert to Searchable PDF checkbox to force OCR to happen without 
  opening an external application at all. Your range of selectable 
  options is smaller - for example, you can specify only a single 
  target language, whereas the stand-alone FineReader lets you choose 
  more than one, and automatically figures out which language the 
  document is in. On the other hand, when you use this built-in 
  capability, the software can look for text that you've marked with a 
  highlighter and automatically confine OCR to all marked sections or 
  to the first marked section, and can use the marked text as a 
  keyword that can be seen in Adobe Acrobat products. This is an 
  extremely neat trick.

  The thing is, having two independent methods of OCR is confusing. 
  The software doesn't prevent you from turning both on at once - in 
  which case the OCR process happens twice! - and the documentation 
  provides no guidance as to which one of these techniques one should 
  use under which circumstances. Ideally, the two methods should be 
  conflated - provide a single interface with access to both sets of 
  features, preferably without the need to launch a separate 
  application.

  But let's say you especially like this new OCR feature, or the 
  scan-to-Word feature, or any of the various other improvements and 
  bug fixes this version of the software contains - yet you have last 
  year's ScanSnap model. The software package that comes with the 
  S1300 also works fine with older ScanSnap scanners, such as the 
  S510M and the S300M, and the documentation even calls attention to a 
  few software features that are unavailable when used with older 
  scanners that lack certain hardware capabilities. So, surely you can 
  upgrade to the latest software to get the new features, right? 
  Wrong. Fujitsu makes it impossible for owners of older models to 
  upgrade to the latest software without buying an entirely new 
  scanner. The company did release a version of the older software 
  that was updated for Snow Leopard compatibility, but if existing 
  ScanSnap owners want any of the new software features - which, I 
  must emphasize, _work perfectly well with their older scanners_ - 
  they can't get them without buying a second scanner. I can 
  understand that licensing issues could arise with bundled 
  third-party software, but Fujitsu's own ScanSnap Manager surely 
  doesn't have that problem.

  This utterly crazy situation isn't new - each generation of ScanSnap 
  improves both the hardware and the (backward-compatible) software, 
  but the only people who benefit from the newer software are those 
  who buy the new hardware. Crazier still, existing customers can't 
  even _buy_ the upgraded software; it simply isn't available at all. 
  I asked a Fujitsu rep about this, and she acknowledged the problem 
  but said it was a decision from Fujitsu's home office in Japan, and 
  that the U.S. division was powerless to solve it.

  So, one point off from the S1300 for giving my old ScanSnap 
  capabilities that it couldn't get without a new hardware purchase.

  All in all, though, I liked the S1300 just as much as the desktop 
  S510M I reviewed a few years ago - better software capabilities, 
  more compact, capable of running without an AC adapter in a pinch, 
  and only marginally slower - yet much less expensive! Oh yes, I 
  forgot to mention that the S1300 has a retail price of $295, which 
  is $200 less than the S1500M (the current desktop model for Mac 
  users). For the extra money, you'd get a higher-capacity feeder, 
  somewhat faster performance, an ultrasonic multi-feed detection 
  sensor, and a bundled copy of Adobe Acrobat 8 Professional. But 
  those features are unimportant to many users, including me. So, if I 
  were in the market for a new _desktop_ scanner, I'd unhesitatingly 
  choose the S1300 over the S1500M - and consider the portability a 
  nice bonus.

  But if portability is your main concern, even the S1300 can't hold a 
  candle to the Doxie - to which we turn now.


**Doxie** -- I want to start my discussion of the tiny Doxie scanner 
  with a couple of complaints (but don't worry, I'll get to the good 
  stuff in due time). Apparent's advertising campaign for Doxie, which 
  was in full swing for months before the scanner started shipping in 
  April 2010, emphasized the product's key distinctive feature - it 
  "scans directly to the cloud." That puzzled me at first, and still 
  does. Of the many things I've wished a scanner could do, scanning to 
  the cloud was never one of them. I get it: scanned documents go 
  directly (more or less) onto a server somewhere on the Internet. So?

  If the point were online access, then that would be reasonable 
  enough, although not particularly interesting. I could do that 
  already with any old scanner, by specifying my Dropbox or iDisk as 
  the destination folder for scans, or by syncing the scan folder with 
  SugarSync, backing it up with CrashPlan or Backblaze, or in any of a 
  dozen other ways. But in fact online storage as such isn't what 
  Doxie is all about; it's about _sharing_. The cloud-based services 
  to which you can send documents scanned by your Doxie are Flickr, 
  Google Docs, Picnik, Scribd, Tumblr, and Twitter. That selection 
  should tell you something: the reason you'd want to "scan to the 
  cloud" is so that other people (generally, the public) can see a 
  document, not primarily so you can have an online backup or be able 
  to access the document from multiple locations.

  So, let's pursue that. What documents do I have _on paper_ that I'd 
  want to share online via one of these services? The occasional old 
  photo from pre-digital days? My child's latest piece of scribbled 
  artwork? A ticket stub autographed by a rock star? I suppose. But 
  honestly, I just don't encounter documents like that very often. 
  About 99.99 percent of the time, the paper that comes into my life 
  that I'd want to scan is stuff I'd never, ever share on the 
  Internet: contracts, invoices, receipts, legal documents, tax 
  statements, that sort of thing. Sure, there might be occasions when 
  I need to share a document or two with an accountant or attorney or 
  whatever, but those are few and far between, and I have lots of 
  other ways to do that. But photographs - the most obvious thing I'd 
  want to share - are virtually always digital to start with these 
  days.

  I tell you all this to put the Doxie in context. It's actually quite 
  a lovely device and has much to recommend it, but its key flaw - 
  which could be remedied easily with some minor changes to software 
  and some big changes to marketing - is that it seems to be a 
  solution in search of a problem.

  But wait! Scanning to the cloud is one thing Doxie does, but it's 
  not the only thing. It can also save files locally just like other 
  scanners, so surely that's its redeeming feature! Well, yes and no. 
  To explain, let me tell you exactly what Doxie does.

  Before you can scan, you must first launch the Doxie application - 
  in the interest of simplicity, the software includes no drivers, but 
  that means no background process watching for the scanner to be 
  used. Well, no matter. In the Doxie window, you pick a resolution 
  from a pop-up menu and a mode (color, grayscale, or 
  black-and-white). Then you insert a document and press the single 
  button, labeled with a large pink heart (yes, really). Doxie pulls 
  the sheet through the scanner, a process that in my testing took 
  about 20 seconds at 200 dpi in black and white, or 80 seconds at 600 
  dpi in color - this is not a speedy scanner.

  Once the document has been scanned and processed, a preview window 
  appears. You can then click Done to proceed with the file as a 
  one-page scan or click Scan Another Page to build a multi-page 
  document manually. (Doxie scans just one side of the page at a time, 
  unlike the ScanSnap, and has no automatic sheet feeder, so each 
  sheet must be inserted manually.) Next a window appears in which you 
  can choose a file format (PDF, PNG, or JPEG) and a destination - a 
  local file, a local application (such as Preview, Evernote, or 
  iPhoto), one of the aforementioned cloud-based services, Doxie's own 
  cloud storage, or - as of a recent software update - the iBooks app 
  on your favorite iOS device. You can even send a document to 
  multiple destinations without rescanning it.

  I want to point out here that even if you accept all the defaults 
  from the previous scan, it requires a minimum of four clicks and 
  three windows (not counting the button press) to complete even the 
  simplest scan with Doxie, compared to the ScanSnap, which can be 
  configured to do everything with a single button press. In other 
  words, simplicity has its tradeoffs.

  All right. Your document has been scanned, and you've ended up with 
  a PDF, PNG, or JPEG file that exists somewhere on your hard disk, in 
  the cloud, on your iOS device, or in multiple locations. What's 
  missing? Only the most important thing: Doxie has no OCR.

  Let me qualify that: Doxie has no _included_ OCR capabilities. If 
  you save your document to Google Docs, the server can perform OCR on 
  _a single page_ of your scan, but I tried it and found the results 
  to be appallingly bad. In addition, Google Docs saves only the 
  recognized text, not an image of the original, as you'd get with a 
  searchable PDF. Or, you can send your document to Evernote, which 
  _can_ do multi-page OCR and does give you a searchable PDF file... 
  but only if you subscribe to Evernote Premium ($5 per month or $45 
  per year) - the free version of Evernote doesn't offer searchable 
  PDFs. Of course, if you happen to have third-party desktop software 
  that can do OCR (such as PDFpen Pro, Readiris Pro, or Acrobat 
  Professional), you can use that with Doxie's scanned images - but 
  it's up to you to purchase and configure that software yourself.

<http://www.evernote.com/about/premium/>

  Even so, you might not always get the results you expect. I tried 
  having the Doxie software send scans in PDF format to DEVONthink Pro 
  Office, and although DEVONthink did import the PDF, it did not 
  automatically perform OCR as it does when I use a ScanSnap. Sure, I 
  could convert it to a searchable PDF with a couple of clicks per 
  document, but when I'm used to the hands-off simplicity of the 
  ScanSnap, that's a disappointment.

  Apparent claims that OCR is simply not what Doxie is about, that 
  people who need OCR are not their target audience, and that they 
  have plenty of satisfied customers even without offering that 
  capability. But my feeling is that Doxie misses the whole point of 
  document scanning. Doxie's Web site says the product is good for 
  scanning, storing, and organizing things like business cards, bills, 
  receipts, and reports, but how is that useful without OCR? Do you 
  really want to look through hundreds of _pictures_ of bills to find 
  the one you're looking for? Of course not; you want to type in a 
  word or date and see matches instantly, and you want to be able to 
  copy the information to use in other programs. Virtually every other 
  document scanner on the market - not only Fujitsu's but desktop and 
  portable models made by Avision, Canon, Epson, Iris, iVina, Neat, 
  and others - touts the creation of searchable PDFs as its key use. 
  That's as it should be, and by leaving out that capability, Doxie is 
  seriously missing the boat.

  But...

  Now that I've gotten myself, and possibly you, all worked up about 
  how terrible it is that Doxie doesn't do OCR, I want to tell you why 
  that might not be such a big deal after all - at least for certain 
  types of users.

  __1. Doxie is cheap.__ Doxie's retail price is $129, which means 
  that for the price of a Fujitsu ScanSnap S1300, I could buy a Doxie, 
  some really good OCR software, and dinner for two at a nice 
  restaurant. In other words, you get what you pay for, and if (that 
  is, _since_) you need OCR, nothing's stopping you from buying OCR 
  software separately with all the money you save on your scanner.

  __2. Doxie is tiny.__ When I first looked at a "full-size" desktop 
  ScanSnap, I thought, "Wow, that's a compact scanner - it's smaller 
  than the StyleWriter that once sat on my desk." When I first looked 
  at a portable ScanSnap model, I thought, "Wow, that makes my desktop 
  ScanSnap look huge by comparison." And when I first saw a Doxie, I 
  thought, "Holy @#$%. That makes the ScanSnap S1300 look enormous." 
  And it's not only small (11.5 x 2 x 1.6 inches, or 291 x 51 x 40 
  mm), it's light too - 10.9 ounces (309 g). What does size have to do 
  with OCR? Well, I could take a Doxie places I'd never dream of 
  toting an S1300. That means it can capture much more paper at the 
  source - preventing that paper from ever entering my home or office. 
  Given that OCR is still possible (even if less convenient than with 
  other scanners), the fact that Doxie keeps away paper clutter covers 
  over a multitude of sins.

  __3. Doxie could add OCR in the future.__ Apparent could add OCR 
  capabilities like those in Evernote Premium to the Doxie Cloud 
  service, meaning that without so much as a software update, Doxie 
  owners could get searchable PDFs. Or, they could bundle third-party 
  OCR software - perhaps at a slightly higher cost. I don't know that 
  the company will do either of these things, but there's no 
  technological reason they couldn't. The scanner itself has all the 
  capabilities it needs, and with just a nudge in the right direction, 
  it could become truly great.

  With all that out of the way, let me mention a few other noteworthy 
  things about the Doxie.

  On the plus side:

* It uses a standard (A-to-B) USB cable, which supplies all the power 
  it needs - no AC adapter is included or required.

* You can set the resolution for anywhere from 75 to 600 dpi; lower 
  resolutions take less time and produce smaller files, but show less 
  detail.

* In case you don't like pink hearts, you can cover the scanner's body 
  and its button with decals that are included in the box - zebra fur, 
  clouds, wood grain, argyle, plaid, or plain black. (Tip to Apparent: 
  save yourselves 10 cents on the bill of materials by ditching both 
  the hearts and the decals.)

  On the minus side:

* Before using your Doxie, and periodically thereafter, you must 
  calibrate it by scanning a special sheet that's included with the 
  device. This is a rather weird and annoying extra step, one I've 
  never had to do with a document scanner before.

* Instead of recognizing whether a document is color or grayscale 
  automatically, the Doxie software makes you choose which mode to 
  scan in up front.

* Unlike most other scanners, Doxie offers no scan-to-print capability 
  (for using your scanner as an impromptu photocopier). To get that 
  result, you'd have to scan a document to a file, open it in an 
  application such as Preview, and then print it from there.

  The bottom line is that I wouldn't recommend Doxie as the sole 
  scanner for people who, like me, scan documents because they want to 
  end up with searchable PDFs - especially if many of the documents to 
  be scanned are double-sided or consist of multiple pages. On the 
  other hand, if you already have a desktop scanner and stand-alone 
  OCR software, a Doxie would be a fantastic thing to carry with you 
  on business trips, because it's tiny enough that you could toss it 
  in your bag whenever you leave the house without even thinking about 
  it. In addition, if size and cost are of primary importance (and, 
  for many people, I have no doubt that they are), if your scanning 
  volume is low, and if you truly don't care about OCR (or can 
  accomplish it in some other way), then by all means, go for the 
  Doxie.


**Other Portable Scanners** -- As I mentioned, the ScanSnap S1300 and 
  the Doxie are just two of a large and growing number of portable, 
  Mac-compatible scanners (and Windows users have even more choices). 
  Although these are the only ones I've tried myself so far, you may 
  well find another model to be more to your liking. Among the other 
  options you may want to consider are the following:

* NeatReceipts for Mac

<http://www.neatco.com/products/neatreceipts-for-mac>

* Xerox DocuMate 3115

<http://www.xeroxscanners.com/en/us/products/DM3115/default.asp>

* IRIScan 2

<http://www.irislink.com/c2-1656-189/IRIScan-2-------Overview-of-IRIScan-2-Portable-Scanner.aspx>

* IRIScan Anywhere 2 - notable in that it can scan even without a 
  computer attached

<http://www.irislink.com/c2-1700-189/IRIScan-Anywhere-2-------Scan-your--without-computer-.aspx>

* IRIScan Pro 3

<http://www.irislink.com/c2-1677-189/IRIScan-Pro-3-Office--------The-Office-and-Mobile-Solution-from-I-R-I-S--bundled-with-a-powerful-Office-Suite-.aspx>


  ----
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TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 2 August 2010
-------------------------------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11480>

  **Snapz Pro X 2.2.3** -- Snapz Pro X, the popular screenshot and video 
  capture utility from Ambrosia Software, has been upgraded to version 
  2.2.3. The update addresses two crashing bugs. One, limited to newer 
  MacBooks, occurred during object selection, and the other occurred 
  for folks using mirrored monitors while attempting to make captures. 
  The updated version of the software also automatically stops 
  capturing video before the movie fills up your hard drive. ($69 new, 
  free update, 10.8 MB)

<http://www.ambrosiasw.com/utilities/snapzprox/>

  Read/post comments about Snapz Pro X 2.2.3.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11476#comments>


**Retrospect 8.2** -- Cross-platform backup software Roxio Retrospect 
  (recently purchased by Roxio's parent company; see "Retrospect 
  Backup Software Acquired by Sonic Solutions," 27 May 2010) has been 
  upgraded to version 8.2. Beyond interface enhancements designed to 
  make the software simpler to use, the upgrade makes network backup 
  performance up to three times faster than before. The new version 
  also adds support for 64-bit memory utilization, which can handle 
  backups for volumes with "tens of millions of files," the company 
  says. Additionally, the upgrade reintroduces the capability to 
  restore from backups made using the older Retrospect 6 (those 
  backups are treated as read-only). In the Retrospect 8.2 Read Me, 
  Roxio recommends that you run Retrospect servers on Intel-based 
  Macs, and warns that the software performs more slowly on 
  PowerPC-based Macs. The company also notes that Internet/FTP backups 
  are not yet supported, and optical device support has been 
  deactivated in this release (though you can enable it manually if 
  you don't mind dedicating the drive to Retrospect). Full release 
  notes are available. ($129 new for up to three users, free update, 
  free trial available, 258 MB)

<http://www.retrospect.com/products/software/retroformac/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11311>
<http://kb.dantz.com/article.asp?article=9710&p=2>
<http://kb.dantz.com/article.asp?article=9720&p=2>
<http://kb.dantz.com/article.asp?article=9719&p=2>

  Read/post comments about Retrospect 8.2.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11475#comments>


**BBEdit 9.5.1** -- Bare Bones Software has released a minor update to 
  its powerful text editor BBEdit. The update doesn't pack in any new 
  features, but it does offer a host of fixes covering a wide range of 
  issues. For those irked by BBEdit 9.5's changed approach with 
  Capitalize Sentences and Capitalize Lines, one of the two dozen 
  fixes reinstates the behavior from pre-9.5 versions of BBEdit, so 
  that the software now once again lowercases your text before 
  applying the selected capitalization. Beyond that fix, the release 
  corrects an issue with updating HTML markup preferences, addresses a 
  bug with prefixed Emacs commands, and attempts to better preserve 
  file permissions when saving documents. Several other fixes to 
  script attachability enable scripts that run when documents are 
  closed to work properly.  ($125 new, free update, 16.4 MB)

<http://www.barebones.com/products/bbedit/>
<http://www.barebones.com/support/bbedit/arch_bbedit951.html>

  Read/post comments about BBEdit 9.5.1.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11470#comments>



ExtraBITS for 2 August 2010
---------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11478>

  Along with a pointer to Glenn Fleishman's appearance on the 
  TechFlash radio show, we have links to Ars Technica's Magic Trackpad 
  review, the news of Amazon releasing new Kindles, and a New York 
  Times blog post that's scary for anyone spending most of the day at 
  a desk.


**Glenn Fleishman Discusses Windows Phone, Future Slates on Radio 
  Show** -- Glenn Fleishman and long-time Windows observer Mary Jo 
  Foley talked to host Todd Bishop of TechFlash, a Northwest tech 
  business and venture capital reporting site, on KIRO-FM's weekly 
  tech segment. We discussed Microsoft's missed opportunities for 
  challenging the iPad, and the Kindle's place in the mobile device 
  ecosystem.

<http://www.techflash.com/seattle/2010/07/techflash_podcast_25_microsoft_blogger_walks_into_an_apple_store.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11472#comments>


**Ars Technica reviews the Magic Trackpad** -- In a painfully 
  well-headlined review, Jacqui Cheng takes on Apple's new Magic 
  Trackpad, and finds that it's both awesome and not-so-awesome. She 
  really likes most of the Multi-Touch shortcuts that the trackpad can 
  use, but says that precision is an issue, as it is with all 
  trackpads. We won't spoil the ending, but the review does attempt to 
  answer not just the question of whether the Magic Trackpad is good, 
  but also whether it's $70-worth of good.

<http://arstechnica.com/apple/reviews/2010/07/magic-trackpad.ars>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11472#comments>


**Amazon's New Kindles Start at $139** -- Amazon is releasing two new 
  6-inch display Kindles to replace the Kindle 2: a Wi-Fi-only model 
  for $139, and one with both AT&T 3G and Wi-Fi for $189. The new 
  devices have 50 percent higher contrast, new fonts, faster 
  performance, longer standby time (a month!), and double the storage, 
  all while weighing less. The new models ship 27 August 2010 in the 
  United States.

<http://blogs.chron.com/techblog/archives/2010/07/amazon_launches_2_new_kindles_1.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11473#comments>


**Your Chair Is Trying to Kill You** -- On the New York Times's health 
  blog, Gretchen Reynolds discusses the dramatic increase in heart 
  disease-related death for folks who sit for long periods (whether in 
  front of a computer or television, or in the car). Even more 
  alarming for those of us who try to get away from our screens for 
  some exercise are recent studies that show that adding exercise to 
  your daily routine fails to lessen the negative health impacts of a 
  sedentary lifestyle. Rather, we desk jockeys should find ways to 
  increase our physical activity while we work. Frequent walking 
  breaks, pacing while you're talking on the phone, or converting to a 
  standing desk, could truly be a lifesaver.

<http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/07/14/phys-ed-the-men-who-stare-at-screens/>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11432#comments>



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