TidBITS#1041/23-Aug-2010
========================
  Issue link: <http://db.tidbits.com/issue/1041>

  On the Mac side this week, Adam reviews the Matias Tactile Pro 3 
  keyboard and offers some old but little-known tips for finding files 
  more easily in Mac OS X. We're also joined by Julio Ojeda-Zapata, 
  who shares why he so enjoys recording TV to his Mac with EyeTV 
  tuners from Elgato. Meanwhile, in iOS land, Glenn Fleishman covers 
  the renaming of the Barnes & Noble eReader iOS app to Nook, and Adam 
  explains why we had to leave iPad users out in the cold with our 
  recent iOS 4-savvy update to the TidBITS News app. Notable software 
  releases this week include Adobe Acrobat/Reader 9.3.4 and 8.2.4, 
  Pear Note 2.0.1, TextExpander 3.1.1, Typinator 4.1, Interarchy 
  10.0.2, Snow Leopard Graphics Update, and Keyboard Maestro 4.3.2.

Articles
    Look! Nook Took Books
    Explaining the TidBITS News App Version Confusion
    Find Files More Easily in Mac OS X
    Matias Tactile Pro 3 Keyboard Returns to the Alps
    Recording TV to iTunes with Elgato's EyeTV Tuners
    TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 23 August 2010
    ExtraBITS for 23 August 2010


------------ This issue of TidBITS sponsored in part by: --------------

* READERS LIKE YOU! Support TidBITS with a contribution today! 
  <http://www.tidbits.com/about/support/contributors.html> 
  Special thanks this week to Scott Phillips, Tom Marshburn, 
  Gene Reeves, and the Skumikian Family for their generous support!

* WebCrossing Neighbors Creates Private Social Networks 
  Create a complete social network with your company or group's 
  own look. Scalable, extensible and extremely customizable. 
  Take a guided tour today <http://www.webcrossing.com/tour>

* THE MISSING SYNC FOR iPHONE: Sync notes, tasks, files and 
  documents between your iPhone or iPod touch and a Mac. The 
  Missing Sync for iPhone provides two-way syncing over Wi-Fi. 
  Learn more - <http://www.markspace.com/bits>

* The MacSpeech Dictate family is growing. Now for everyday use 
  and the new MacSpeech Dictate Medical with almost 60 specialist 
  vocabularies, and MacSpeech Dictate Legal for legal professionals. 
  Learn more: <http://www.tidbits.com/about/support/macspeech.html>

* CrashPlan is easy, secure backup that works everywhere. Back up 
  to your own drives, computers, and online with unlimited storage. 
  With unlimited online backup, this is one resolution you can keep. 
  Back Up Your Life Today! <http://crashplan.com/ref/tidbits.html>

* Get more productive with software from Smile: PDFpen for 
  editing PDFs; TextExpander for saving time and keystrokes while you 
  type; DiscLabel for designing CD/DVD labels and inserts. Free demos, 
  fast and friendly customer support. <http://www.smilesoftware.com/>

* Pear Note 2: More complete, understandable notes on your Mac. 
  Typed notes are blended with recorded audio, video, and slides 
  to create notes that make more sense when you need them most. 
  Learn more at <http://www.usefulfruit.com/tb>!

* With ChronoSync you can sync, back up, or make bootable backups. 
  Sync or back up your Mac to internal or external hard drives, other 
  Macs, PCs, or remote network volumes you can mount on your Mac. 
  Learn more at <http://www.econtechnologies.com/tb.html>!

---------- Help support TidBITS by supporting our sponsors ------------


Look! Nook Took Books
---------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11523>
  1 comment

  Look! A book. A book Nook! Nook took books. Books! Look. 

<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/barnes-noble-nook-for-iphone/id384910586?mt=8>

  Barnes & Noble has changed the name of its ebook-reading software 
  for iOS from eReader to Nook. Nook is also the name of its separate 
  ebook reading device, and, as with Amazon's Kindle, Barnes & Noble 
  has realized that it should brand the entire ecosystem with the same 
  name. This brings its iPhone/iPod touch-compatible app in harmony 
  with the separate Nook for iPad app, also updated with the new name.

<http://www.barnesandnoble.com/nook/>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/barnes-noble-nook-for-ipad/id373582546?mt=8>

  Download the new Nook app, and log in with your Barnes & Noble 
  credentials. You can then download titles again that you want 
  locally, and set up the appearance of book pages once more. The 
  revised app supports fast-app switching (see "What is Fast App 
  Switching?," 23 June 2010), and renders details at the iPhone 4's 
  higher resolution.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11378>

  In testing, I found the Nook app to offer substantially more choice 
  than iBooks and Kindle in setting up the appearance of a page, 
  without providing too many or poor options. Barnes & Noble made 
  excellent choices in the fonts offered for onscreen display. 

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-08/nook-app-theme-settings.jpg>

  You can also set the margins of a page (nearly flush to the four 
  edges or indented), and choose colors for particular elements 
  instead of picking from preset colors.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-08/nook-app-margins.jpg>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-08/nook-app-color-selection.jpg>

  The revised iOS app is a separate download from the previous eReader 
  app. You can remove the old app, but you will lose all annotations, 
  highlights, and notes. Barnes & Noble (at least in the eReader 
  release) didn't synchronize such information with a central server, 
  unlike Apple with iBooks and Amazon with Kindle. 

  You also lose any custom themes you set up in eReader - specific 
  combinations of background color, font, and type size. If you want 
  to keep notes and settings, retain the old app. 


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11523#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/11523>


Explaining the TidBITS News App Version Confusion
-------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11531>
  5 comments

  As many of you have noticed, version 1.2 of the TidBITS News app has 
  appeared in the App Store. The chief goal of this version is to 
  support iOS 4's multitasking (see "What is Fast App Switching?," 23 
  June 2010). We also modernized the way the app presents its 
  interface when playing a podcast, and updated the graphics to look 
  nice on the iPhone 4's Retina display.

<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/tidbits-news/id348629441?mt=8>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11378>

  But these feature updates, though surprisingly non-trivial to 
  achieve, aren't the subject of this article. The reason I'm writing 
  this article is to explain why some people still using iOS 3 - 
  either on an iPad because that's all it runs right now, or on an 
  older iPhone or iPod touch that doesn't support iOS 4 or hasn't been 
  upgraded to iOS 4 - are receiving an error dialog from iTunes 
  complaining that TidBITS News requires a newer version of iOS.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-08/requires-newer-version.png>

  Put simply, if you are using iOS 3 and you get this error dialog 
  from iTunes, I recommend selecting the "Do not warn me again" 
  checkbox and clicking OK. You aren't missing out on anything by not 
  getting the update, and the version of TidBITS News you've already 
  installed will continue to work fine. The people who are hurt are 
  iPad users and users of older iPhone and iPod touch models who never 
  installed the TidBITS News app in the first place, since now they 
  can't obtain the app at all. But let me explain what happened.

  The first version of the TidBITS News app (1.0) was developed to run 
  under iOS 3.1.2, because that was current at the time. When the iPad 
  appeared, sporting iOS 3.2, TidBITS News ran in emulation mode on 
  it; this was acceptable, but a bug in iOS 3.2 caused the app to 
  behave differently than it did on iOS 3.1.x, so we issued a new 
  version (1.1) that fixed the problem. TidBITS News then ran fine on 
  iOS 3.1.x and in emulation mode on the iPad on iOS 3.2.

  When iOS 4.0 appeared, it was necessary to revise TidBITS News once 
  more, to be a good multitasking citizen. But these and other changes 
  necessary for compatibility with the new system meant that it would 
  be difficult to maintain backwards compatibility with iOS 3.1.x. So 
  we decided to drop future support for iOS 3.1.x, figuring that the 
  vast majority of iPhone and iPod touch users who would be likely to 
  get the app would have updated to iOS 4.0 anyway.

  At the same time, we expected TidBITS News to continue working in 
  emulation mode on the iPad, for which Apple has not yet issued its 
  iOS 4 update. To ensure this, we set the app in Xcode to have a 
  Deployment Target of iOS 3.2. The Deployment Target is the earliest 
  system version on which you are willing for your app to run. And, 
  sure enough, we then tested the new version of the app (1.2) both on 
  devices running iOS 4 and on iPads running iOS 3.2 or 3.2.1, and 
  everything worked fine. 

  Then it came time to submit the app to the App Store via Apple's 
  iTunes Connect administration site. When I tried to upload the 
  binary of the file to iTunes Connect (first via the Web site, and a 
  subsequent time via Apple's Application Loader utility), it failed 
  with this error:
      
      The binary you uploaded was invalid. An application 
      targeting the iPhone device family may not require an iPhone 
      OS Deployment Target of 3.2, which is an iPad-only OS.

  This was a puzzling error, because it was clear from our experience 
  that an iPhone application may perfectly well require an iPhone OS 
  Deployment Target of 3.2, since our app did and in our testing it 
  worked precisely as desired and expected. Matt Neuburg (the 
  developer of the TidBITS News app) queried iTunes Connect support, 
  pointing this out, and was sent what amounted to a canned response 
  advising him to make sure the app was compatible with iOS 4. This 
  response was completely irrelevant and unhelpful, since the app 
  _was_ iOS 4-compatible. Next, I asked iTunes Connect support the 
  same question. The canned non-answer I received told me to read the 
  iTunes Connect Developers Guide and the Developer Program Overview, 
  neither of which address our question at all.

  When I pushed further for an actual answer, or at least some 
  information that was related to the question, iTunes Connect support 
  simply told us to use a Developer Technical Support incident. Since 
  this back-and-forth had taken weeks, not days, we were too 
  frustrated to wait any longer.

  So Matt simply gave up, and set the app's Deployment Target to iOS 
4. After that, iTunes Connect accepted it, and after the requisite 
  11 days or so in purgatory (only 1 of which was spent in review), it 
  was approved. The result is that it is now available, but you can't 
  obtain it for the iPad, even though we know that it could run 
  perfectly well on the iPad in emulation mode (when the Deployment 
  Target is iOS 3.2). In fact, all of us at TidBITS _are_ running 
  TidBITS News 1.2 on our iPads, supplying it to ourselves via Ad Hoc 
  Distribution. So we can do this, but you can't, because of the App 
  Store's inexplicable refusal to accept the iPad-compatible build of 
  the app. Sorry!

  We're well aware that this isn't an ideal situation. There are a 
  variety of solutions:

* Apple could change iTunes Connect such that it accepts our app, 
  since it doesn't seem as though there's any reason it shouldn't be 
  accepted. That seems unlikely.

* Apple could release iOS 4 for the iPad. This will indeed probably 
  happen within the next month or three. At that point, the TidBITS 
  News app should become available for iPad users again at the App 
  Store. At most, we'd have to recompile and resubmit, and it's 
  unlikely that we'd have to do even that.

* Matt could create an iPad-native interface for the TidBITS News app, 
  such that it would be native on all the iOS hardware platforms. This 
  is a reasonable idea, but it hasn't happened yet. (Free app, limited 
  time, our Web site looks good on the iPad, insert all the usual 
  excuses...)

  Regardless, we regret any confusion that this situation has caused, 
  and we ask you to understand that the problem stems from Apple's 
  policies and lack of communicativeness, not from anything we 
  intended to have happen. 

  If you do have an iOS 4 device, I'd encourage you to take a look at 
  the app for a clean and simple TidBITS reading experience that works 
  whether or not you're online. And if you have an iPad or an iOS 
  3.1.x device and you're already running TidBITS News 1.1, it will 
  continue working just fine. 


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11531#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/11531>


Find Files More Easily in Mac OS X
----------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11533>
  8 comments

  For some people, Apple's Spotlight technology is a great boon, 
  shining bright light into the dark nooks and crannies of a hard 
  disk. For others, particularly those who want to search primarily by 
  file name, Spotlight can be annoying to use. I fall into that latter 
  group - I know what my documents are called, for the most part, so 
  if I'm looking for a document, I almost always search by file name 
  (when I do search by "contents" - all file metadata, including 
  textual content - I'm usually disappointed). 

  One frequently mentioned solution to the Spotlight problem is the 
  freeware EasyFind from DEVONtechnologies, which Matt reviewed in 
  "EasyFind 4.0: It's Easy, It Finds, It's Free" (11 October 2007). 
  But EasyFind is relatively slow, since it doesn't index your hard 
  disk, and Spotlight can be tweaked to work more the way many of us 
  want, with a few simple settings. There's nothing new here, but lots 
  of Mac users still aren't aware of these options.

<http://www.devon-technologies.com/products/freeware/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9231>

  First, if you usually know roughly where the files you're looking 
  for are located, you can restrict Spotlight to search the current 
  Finder folder by default, instead of This Mac. To do this, choose 
  Finder> Preferences, click the Advanced button, and choose Search 
  the Current Folder from the pop-up menu. From then on, when you 
  invoke the Finder's Find command by choosing File> Find (Command-F), 
  searches will be limited to the current folder showing in the 
  frontmost Finder window. This option first appeared in Mac OS X 10.6 
  Snow Leopard.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-08/Search-Current-Folder.png>

  Second, if you usually want to search by file name instead of the 
  file's contents, you can make sure the Search bar at the top of the 
  Finder window is set to File Name without requiring an additional 
  click. Hold down the Shift key, and choose File> Find by Name 
  (Command-Shift-F). This command is available in both Mac OS X 10.5 
  Leopard and 10.6 Snow Leopard.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-08/Folder-limited-search.png>

  If you want Find by Name to be your default action, you can switch 
  the keyboard shortcuts using the Keyboard Shortcuts view of the 
  Keyboard preference pane. Just click the + button, and add entries 
  for "Find" and "Find by Name..." (note the three periods - not an 
  ellipsis - after the name) with the appropriate keyboard shortcuts. 
  You may have to log out or restart for the new shortcuts to become 
  active, and I've found remapping shortcuts in this fashion to be a 
  bit finicky, sometimes requiring multiple tries. Again, you can do 
  this in both Leopard and Snow Leopard.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-08/Find-keyboard-shortcuts.png>

  One last suggestion. You can adjust the look of the search results 
  window just like any other Finder window, and once you've done that, 
  the Finder remembers it for subsequent usages. To do this, first 
  start a search. Once the Finder window has search options in it, 
  switch to the desired view (I prefer List view - choose View> as 
  List or press Command-2) and choose View> Show View Options to 
  reveal the View Options window. In it, you can select the "Always 
  open in list view" checkbox if you desire, and you can pick which 
  columns appear. I prefer Date Modified to the default of Last 
  Opened, and yes, it's a darn shame that not all columns are 
  available - notably Size. I have no idea why Apple won't allow us to 
  see the size, version, comments, and labels of found items. You can 
  also resize columns by dragging their column separators and 
  rearrange columns by dragging their headers. Once you get the window 
  looking the way you like, close it, and the Finder should remember 
  its layout next time.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-08/View-options-for-search.png>

  A few quick caveats. If you have "Always open folders in a new 
  window" selected in the Finder's General preferences, using either 
  of the Find commands will create a new window that defaults to 
  whatever location is set in the "New Finder windows open" pop-up 
  menu, which will likely be confusing. I recommend deselecting the 
  "Always open folders in a new window" option. Also, these settings 
  apply only when you start the search from the Finder, not if you use 
  the Spotlight menu or Command-Spacebar. 

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-08/Open-folders-new-window.png>

  If you find yourself changing Spotlight's Search bar settings every 
  time you look for a file, perhaps these settings will make your life 
  just a little bit easier. 


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11533#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/11533>


Matias Tactile Pro 3 Keyboard Returns to the Alps
-------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11521>
  4 comments

  Over six years ago, I reviewed the original Tactile Pro keyboard 
  from Matias, and I think my article's title summarized things nicely 
  - "The Majestic Alps and the King of Keyboards" (29 March 2004). Put 
  simply, the Tactile Pro was the best keyboard I had used in a very 
  long time, in the genre of loud, clicky keyboards with great tactile 
  feel. I don't run any software that records how many keystrokes I 
  type, but it's a lot, and I had basically typed that keyboard into 
  the ground. In fact, I typed two of them into oblivion, since Edgar 
  Matias had initially sent me a prototype without a case, and after a 
  key failed on the production unit that I reviewed, I shoehorned the 
  prototype into the production unit's case and used it for another 
  few years.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/7607>

  Now, you might wonder why this happened (surely a keyboard should 
  last for more than a few years) and why I personally went to such 
  lengths (surely Matias would have given me a new keyboard to test if 
  I'd asked). 

  Although the Alps keyswitches that give the Tactile Pro its 
  excellent feel were historically reliable, Edgar Matias had to order 
  a million keyswitches to convince the Alps factory in Taiwan to keep 
  the tooling active for him. However, that tooling was old, and I 
  believe the reliability of the keyswitches suffered. I'd had a key 
  fail quickly on the first production unit I tested, and although the 
  second production unit that I reviewed performed well for some 
  years, it too eventually died, followed by the prototype I had 
  pressed into service. 

  So why didn't I just get another one? After I wrote my review, 
  Matias was utterly swamped with orders and went through the 9,000 or 
  so keyboards they'd ordered fairly quickly. So by the time I needed 
  a new one, they had moved on to the Tactile Pro 2.0 keyboard, among 
  other products. I tested the Tactile Pro 2.0 briefly, but it was 
  maddening to use due to keyboard matrix problems. Let me explain.

  When you press a key on a keyboard, a circuit is closed and the 
  keyboard controller sends the keystroke to the operating system. But 
  each key does not get its own independent circuit. Instead, up to 
  four keys generally share a circuit, and the keyboard controller 
  figures out which of the keys was pressed by the way the current 
  flows. The problem comes when multiple keys are pressed - 
  specifically when three of four keys in a particular group are 
  pressed. At that point, with a simple circuit, the keyboard 
  controller gets confused and believes that the fourth key was 
  pressed - a so-called "phantom key." Most people don't press three 
  keys at the same time intentionally, but if you type quickly, the 
  effect is the same. For those with some electronics background, Dave 
  Dribin explains the system.

<http://www.dribin.org/dave/keyboard/html/>

  Every keyboard has a matrix, and mostly they're pretty good, such 
  that you don't notice. Unfortunately, the Tactile Pro 2.0 had a bad 
  matrix, so much so that my speedy fingers ran into numerous phantom 
  keys that turned "TidBITS" into "TidBIT<S", "Adam" into "AÎam", 
  and "from" into "frlom", among others. Needless to say, the phrase, 
  "Adam from TidBITS here..." was nearly impossible to type.

  Apparently, the manufacturer that Matias used had other problems, 
  and the Tactile Pro 2.0's reliability was poor overall. So Matias 
  quickly stopped selling them and pulled them back from distributors. 
  That's when the wait for the Tactile Pro 3 started.


**Tactile Pro 3 Ships** -- The wait ended in February 2010, when Edgar 
  sent me an early unit from the first production run of the Tactile 
  Pro 3. It completely solved the phantom key problem, and, thanks to 
  the continued use of Alps keyswitches, felt just like the original 
  Tactile Pro.

<http://www.matias.ca/tactilepro3/>

  Alas, the integrated USB 2.0 hub in the Tactile Pro 3 was flaky, 
  causing lots of USB connects and disconnects. (I use the 
  HardwareGrowler utility that comes with Growl so I can tell what's 
  happening at a low level on my Macs.) Trading that keyboard in for a 
  second one reduced the problems, but they didn't go away entirely. 
  Apparently, about 3 percent of the keyboards in Matias's first 
  production run had bad hubs, so Matias subjected the hub design to 
  more stress testing for the second production run and when that came 
  in a month later, replaced all the keyboards that were flaky, 
  including mine. 

<http://growl.info/>

  I was excited to see if the new Tactile Pro 3 eliminated the USB 
  problems. Unfortunately, when I plugged it into my powered D-Link 
  hub, it didn't work at all. However, when I connected it directly 
  into my Mac Pro, it worked perfectly. When I asked Edgar about my 
  findings, he said that daisy chaining USB 2.0 hubs - remember, the 
  keyboard has its own USB 2.0 hub - was generally a bad idea. Oops.

  That got me thinking that perhaps my D-Link hub itself had gone bad, 
  and indeed, when I removed it from the system and plugged everything 
  into either the Mac Pro or one of the Tactile Pro 3's three USB 
  ports, my USB problems disappeared entirely. So it's possible, even 
  likely, that the first two keyboards were not faulty, but were 
  merely interacting badly with a failing hub. It's amazing I still 
  have my hair left.

  With the spurious USB issues out of the way, let's turn to the 
  Tactile Pro 3 as a keyboard, although there isn't much new to say 
  here. It's a big, traditional keyboard, with 15 F-keys just waiting 
  to be assigned their duties with Stairways Software's Keyboard 
  Maestro macro utility, which I adore for this sort of task. There's 
  an inverted T of arrow keys, along with the usual Help, Forward 
  Delete, Home, End, Page Up, and Page Down keys above it. Finally, 
  the keyboard has a full numeric keypad, and above that, dedicated 
  Volume, Mute, and Eject keys. There are no application-specific 
  keys, or other media keys, but I've never seen the point in those - 
  I'm happy to bend generic F-keys to my will.

<http://www.keyboardmaestro.com/>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-08/Tactile-Pro-3.jpg>

  Each keycap is gently sculpted to hold your fingertips, in contrast 
  to many modern keyboards that have entirely flat keycaps. And 
  printed on each keycap is not just the character and 
  shifted-character that will be typed, but also the characters that 
  result from pressing Option and Shift-Option in conjunction with the 
  key. In other words, those of us in the United States can just look 
  at our keyboards to see that typing the euro symbol (€) requires 
  pressing Shift-Option-2. Those symbols aren't painted onto the 
  keycaps, they're laser etched, so they shouldn't wear off.

  If you, like me, are a fan of clicky keyboards with the classic feel 
  of the old Apple Extended Keyboard, you'll love the Tactile Pro 3. 
  It feels great, and just like the original Tactile Pro. My 
  perception is that I type more accurately and more quickly than on 
  other keyboards I use regularly, such as the one in my MacBook.

  There's no question that the Tactile Pro 3 is loud - if you're 
  taking notes while on a conference call, people will know you're 
  typing. It won't wake the dead, but I recommend closing doors 
  between you and anyone who is actually sleeping. That's personal 
  experience speaking there - Tonya will make up for her motherhood 
  sleep deprivation eventually, but it hasn't happened yet.

  The case has been improved from the original Tactile Pro, so the fit 
  and finish is better, and it will prevent dust and crumbs from 
  sneaking inside better, which turns out to be important for 
  reliability with people who regularly eat and drink at the keyboard 
  (still a bad idea). It has a pair of feet underneath for increasing 
  the angle, but that's usually bad for your wrists, so I don't 
  recommend using them. The white keys can get a little dirty from 
  finger oils, but that's universally true and they're easily cleaned 
  with some rubbing alcohol and cotton swabs.

  The integrated USB 2.0 hub works fine. It isn't powered, so I 
  suspect it works best with low-power devices like mice, flash 
  drives, and digital cameras. Matias says the hub won't charge the 
  iPhone and technically a non-powered hub shouldn't charge, but in an 
  unexpected bonus, my iPhone does get enough juice to charge. The hub 
  definitely can't charge the iPad, which needs a lot more power, but 
  it syncs fine.

  There's little more I can say. If you know you like clicky keyboards 
  with that old-school feel, and you're in the market for a new one, 
  you won't go wrong with the Tactile Pro 3. It's not cheap as 
  keyboards go, but there's a reason that cheap keyboards rely on 
  cheap rubber dome keyswitches instead of the Tactile Pro's precision 
  Alps keyswitches. The keyboard has a 1-year warranty, and from what 
  I've heard from customers, Matias has been great about replacing 
  defective keyboards.

  A U.S. version of the keyboard is available now for $149.95. You can 
  buy directly from Matias, which adds $10 shipping, and other 
  retailers have it for somewhat less (the cheapest I found was 
  $117.52 via Amazon.com). German and Japanese versions of the Tactile 
  Pro 3 will reportedly be shipping next month for the same price. 
  Overseas shipping costs for orders placed through Matias will be 
  high, but if you ask to be notified via their email form, they'll 
  let you know when local resellers in Germany and Japan have the 
  keyboard in stock. You can also ask for models for other countries 
  there, or just direct your questions and feedback at Matias's 
  Tactile Pro Twitter account.

<http://www.amazon.com/dp/B003N3HFI6/?tag=tidbitselectro00>
<http://matias.ca/emailer/index.php?em=info&msgID=TP3>
<http://twitter.com/tactilepro>


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11521#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/11521>


Recording TV to iTunes with Elgato's EyeTV Tuners
-------------------------------------------------
  by Julio Ojeda-Zapata <julio@twitin.biz>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11529>
  10 comments

  I don't TiVo - if you'll forgive my use of the word as a verb - but 
  I _do_ timeshift my TV watching. I can't recall the last time I 
  watched anything live on the tube. All my favorite shows - from "60 
  Minutes" and "Frontline" to "Doctor Who," "The Big Bang Theory," and 
  "The Daily Show with Jon Stewart" - are recorded and archived for 
  future consumption.

  And being a Mac nerd, I do this the Mac way.

  I am a longtime user of EyeTV-tuning gizmos, which are made by 
  Elgato for use, primarily, with the Mac. For years, I have depended 
  on my Apple computers and my EyeTV-tuning gadgetry to convert my 
  programs into digital bits so I could watch them whenever and 
  wherever I wanted.

  EyeTV devices plug into a Mac's USB port and essentially turn the 
  computer into a TiVo-style device. They detect analog (NTSC) and 
  digital (ATSC) signals and display them on the Mac's screen, which 
  becomes a TV. Users then record what they want, using EyeTV software 
  on their Macs to change channels, set up automated recordings (via 
  online TV Guide listings) and more. Once recorded, the programs are 
  normal video files that can be viewed in iTunes or other software, 
  converted to formats that can play on iOS devices, or even fiddled 
  with in video editing software.

  My love affair with Elgato's EyeTV products has grown gradually as 
  they have matured. There was a time when they were awful - crude and 
  unreliable, with video quality that was uniformly terrible. Much of 
  this was not Elgato's fault - Macs (and computers in general) were 
  not powerful and dependable enough to handle the necessary video 
  processing properly, unlike a modern 27-inch iMac that makes a 
  jaw-dropping television when Elgato-ed up. A detailed timeline of 
  Elgato's hardware and software products can be found on Wikipedia.

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

  Though Elgato products are now fantastic, using them can result in 
  annoying moments. Every so often, I will overlook some little 
  setting or detail and a favorite program won't be recorded. The use 
  of Elgato gear is a decidedly geeky kind of TV timeshifting, and not 
  for technophobes.

  However, problems with the Elgato experience are, once again, not 
  always Elgato's fault. These days, Elgato has been in a running 
  technology battle with the likes of the cable giant Comcast, which 
  is changing how its programs are fed to viewers. Comcast's changes 
  have forced Elgato to adapt - which it has done very nicely.

  Despite the Spanish-sounding name, Elgato is based in Munich, 
  Germany, but has offices in San Francisco. The company has sterling 
  credentials - its founder, Markus Fest, is the creator of the Toast 
  disc-burning software for Mac, and the company's product evangelist 
  for years (the aptly named Mike Evangelist), was one of the key 
  minds behind iDVD while at Apple. (He recently took a job at 
  Minnesota-based Code 42 Software - creators of the frequently lauded 
  CrashPlan online backup software and service - as vice president of 
  marketing. In the interests of full disclosure, Mike is a friend and 
  fellow St. Paul-area resident.)


**QAM, I Am** -- Older EyeTV tuners, like the EyeTV EZ and EyeTV 
  Wonder, recorded only analog signals. Later tuners, starting with 
  the EyeTV 250, went digital in a variety of ways. As the age of 
  high-definition over-the-air broadcasts dawned, for instance, I 
  could connect an EyeTV tuner to a simple indoor antenna and pull 
  down pristine digital signals.

  But I now have an even cooler trick up my sleeve.

  The roughly two dozen digital channels available over the air are 
  also available via my Comcast feed, in digital form (and often in 
  high definition) at no cost. The channels include all the network 
  affiliates as well as other digital options. My wife's beloved 
  Spanish-language Univisión channel is on the list, for instance.

  These channels, right there for the watching by any Comcast user who 
  knows where to look and has the correct gear, are known as "clear 
  QAM" or "in the clear" channels. Other cable providers offer similar 
  ones. 

  Getting all this free digital goodness, in my case, is easy. All I 
  have to do is:

1. Plug an EyeTV Hybrid tuner into a USB port on one of my Macs.

2. Connect the coaxial cable with my Comcast feed into the other end 
  of the EyeTV Hybrid. 

3. Fire up the EyeTV software. 

4. Initiate a setup assistant to look for all those digital channels 
  via the coax hookup.

  Like magic, the EyeTV tuner and software sniff out all the free QAM 
  channels and deposit them on the channel-list section of the EyeTV 3 
  application. I can then associate them with TV Guide's terrific 
  online listings in order to set up automatic recordings of my 
  favorite programs. (Only later-model EyeTV tuners, starting with the 
  EyeTV 500, are able to perform this trick.)

  As I write this on a MacBook Pro on a Sunday evening, "60 Minutes" 
  in high definition is about to begin. The EyeTV Hybrid tuner will 
  record it, and the EyeTV software will then export it to iTunes for 
  my MacBook Pro or iPad enjoyment. Every weekday evening, I do the 
  same with my wife's fave Univisión soap opera, "Hasta Que el Dinero 
  nos Separe" ("Until Money Do Us Part"... don't ask).


**Tuning Me, Tuning You** -- This great TV-recording technology is not 
  unique to Elgato, to be clear. There are other Mac tuners (from the 
  likes of Equinux) as well as a gazillion tuners for Windows (I like 
  the Hauppauge ones). Older Elgato hardware was derived from tuners 
  designed for Windows, in fact. Certain PC-centric tuners can even be 
  used with Macs in tandem with the EyeTV software.

<http://www.equinux.com/us/products/tubestick/>
<http://www.hauppauge.com/>

  To complete this little circle, Elgato's latest tuner, the EyeTV 
  Hybrid that I'm using, is packaged with Windows drivers so it can be 
  used either with a Mac or in tandem with Microsoft's Windows Media 
  Center.

<http://www.elgato.com/elgato/na/mainmenu/products/EyeTV-Hybrid-10/product1.en.html>

  What sets Elgato apart is its Macintosh-flavored elegance and its 
  attention to detail. The EyeTV software has evolved into a 
  masterpiece of interface design, with massive flexibility. For 
  instance, its Smart Guides feature lets me do with TV recording what 
  iTunes does with its Smart Playlists, giving me fine control over 
  what gets recorded. Exporting to iTunes is, of course, killer, since 
  I can then do whatever I please with the video, including transfer 
  it to an iPod or an iPad.

  For these and other reasons, EyeTV is my preferred means for keeping 
  track of my favorite programs. I can't rave about it enough.

  I'm reminded from time to time, though, that I'm doing all this TV 
  stuff on a _computer_ instead of a simplified, idiot-proof set-top 
  box. With so many hardware and software variables - not to mention 
  the occasional kernel panic - recordings occasionally won't happen 
  as intended and I'll be deprived of my latest show. Failing to 
  record my wife's latest soap-opera episode makes me feel awful, even 
  though she's sweet about it.

  To be fair, this will usually happen because of user error. The 
  complexity of managing EyeTV 3 recordings means I'll inevitably make 
  a mistake. So when there's something important that I want to ensure 
  gets recorded, I've been known to set up multiple Macs, each with an 
  EyeTV tuner, at different locations, to minimize the possibility of 
  coming up empty. Crazy, I know, but I'd hate to screw up and miss a 
  "V" episode.


**Adapt, Adapt, Adapt** -- Elgato has had to muster all of its 
  ingenuity amid changing times in the cable- and satellite-TV realms. 
  Old ways of recording programs using EyeTV gear are rapidly being 
  rendered obsolete, so Elgato has to come up with new approaches.

  Comcast, for instance, is in the process of phasing out most of its 
  old-style analog service and nudging its customers toward digital 
  offerings. In other words, those long accustomed to using Comcast 
  service with a coaxial connection directly into their TVs now have 
  to get cable boxes.

  This creates complications for me, and for other Elgato users.

  For the longest time, I've been able to get a full roster of analog 
  channels, about 100 in all, the same way I accessed those QAM 
  channels - with my Comcast connection jacked directly into my EyeTV 
  Hybrid tuner.

  Now Comcast has forced an unpleasant choice on me:

* Do QAM as usual, with the capability to set up automated recordings 
  via the EyeTV application, but give up analog channels entirely. 
  Boo!

* Get the full roster of analog channels on a Mac via a set-top box, 
  but give up QAM entirely, along with automated EyeTV recording. 
  Double boo!

* Use a physical switcher to shift between the two previous options. I 
  loathe this since it creates a mess of cables that is a far cry from 
  the older, one-cable-into-the-EyeTV approach, and because it puts 
  even more burden on me to avoid making mistakes.

  Elgato, thankfully, has come up with an alternative solution for 
  those who have cable or satellite set-top boxes. 

  Its latest device, the EyeTV HD, is not a tuner. Instead it plugs 
  into composite and (if available) component ports on a set-top box 
  to record whatever channel the box happens to be set to. Channel 
  switching is done via an IR blaster, a zapper that sits in front of 
  the box and works as a remote. IR blasters tend to work well, but 
  are prone to error, when something is placed between the blaster and 
  the IR receiver, for instance, or if the blaster is knocked out of 
  alignment.

<http://www.elgato.com/elgato/na/mainmenu/products/EyeTV-HD/product1.en.html>

  Your Mac becomes the brain of this Rube Goldberg system, running the 
  EyeTV software, and connecting to the EyeTV HD via USB and to the TV 
  via DVI or HDMI (essentially using the TV as the display). 
  Recordings are deposited onto the Mac's hard drive and exported to 
  iTunes, as usual.

  The ideal Mac for this is, of course, Apple's new unibody Mac mini 
  with an HDMI port for HDTV use. I tested the EyeTV HD and Mac mini 
  with a big, beautiful LG plasma set.

  The EyeTV HD is not the most elegant approach to TV recording and 
  requires a bit of fiddling, but it works for the most part. And it 
  goes a long way to answering the question, "Why in the world would I 
  connect a Mac to my HDTV?"

  The EyeTV HD solution is great in one key respect: All shows, HD or 
  not, on all channels, are available for recording (limited only by 
  the channel packages to which you are subscribed). The device even 
  bypasses copy protection associated with some programs, since 
  recording does not occur over the HDMI connection that enables this 
  annoying impediment.

  Elgato has recently started supporting iOS 4 with its iPad- and 
  iPhone-savvy iOS app, which functions as an extension of an EyeTV 
  user's Mac setup. You must first set up your Wi-Fi router to permit 
  EyeTV access on that network, or via 3G or a Wi-Fi network at a 
  separate location. Once this is done (which is a bit of a headache, 
  largely due to router-configuration complexities), EyeTV 3 
  recordings and even live TV magically become viewable as Internet 
  video, streaming from your Mac to your iOS device (not always 
  smoothly, alas). You can access record settings and show listings 
  from afar, too.

  Elgato keeps working on the encoding end, too. It provides a 
  separate USB-stick device called the Turbo.264 HD, which 
  dramatically speeds up video conversion (from EyeTV's format to 
  iTunes-friendly form, say), especially on older Macs. A 
  software-only Turbo.264 HD version without hardware acceleration has 
  just been released.

<http://www.elgato.com/elgato/int/mainmenu/products/Accessories/Turbo264HD/product1.en.html>
<http://www.elgato.com/elgato/int/mainmenu/products/Turbo264HD-software/product1.en.html>


**What's next, Elgato?** I am dying to know what Elgato will come up 
  with next.

  I dislike the remote that Elgato bundles with its tuners, for 
  instance, and have long lobbied for a cooler one. The logical 
  approach to this problem nowadays, is, naturally, an iOS 4 app to 
  turn one of Apple's devices into an EyeTV remote. I'll wager Elgato 
  is cooking up something like that.

  What about EyeTV software for Windows? Hey, that could happen. Apple 
  created a version of iTunes for Windows, didn't it?  I'd welcome a 
  Windows-based EyeTV program since most of my Macs run Windows 7 as 
  well as Mac OS X, via Boot Camp. It would be fantastic for my Macs 
  to be fully EyeTV-capable regardless of which operating system I 
  happened to be using.

  As I've worked on this article, I have become increasingly amazed at 
  how Elgato products (I must have used a dozen or more different 
  EyeTV tuners over the years) have permeated my digital existence. 
  It's one of the reasons I feel so lucky to be a Mac user. TiVo does 
  have its fanatics, but given a choice, I'll go with a Mac and EyeTV 
  tuner every time. 


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11529#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/11529>


TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 23 August 2010
--------------------------------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11537>

  **Adobe Acrobat/Reader 9.3.4 and 8.2.4** -- Adobe has released updates 
  to Adobe Acrobat and Reader - for both the current 9.x versions and 
  the previous 8.x versions - to address a critical security 
  vulnerability related to TrueType font handling. You can update 
  using the programs' automatic update mechanisms, but many people, 
  including us, have trouble with them, so use the links provided to 
  download the latest version manually if need be. That said, be 
  warned that many people are having trouble with the update to 
  Acrobat 8.2.4 rendering the program unusable - Adobe is aware of the 
  problem. Until a fix appears, users of Acrobat 8.x should hold off 
  on the update or, if it's too late, revert to 8.2.3. (Free updates, 
  various sizes)

<http://www.adobe.com/support/downloads/product.jsp?product=1&platform=Macintosh>
<http://www.adobe.com/support/downloads/product.jsp?product=10&platform=Macintosh>
<http://www.adobe.com/support/security/bulletins/apsb10-17.html>
<http://web.nvd.nist.gov/view/vuln/detail?vulnId=CVE-2010-2862>
<http://forums.adobe.com/thread/704315>

  Read/post comments about Adobe Acrobat/Reader 9.3.4 and 8.2.4.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11530#comments>


**Pear Note 2.0.1** -- Hard on the heels of the major 2.0 release, 
  Useful Fruit Software has released Pear Note 2.0.1 with two notable 
  changes to the multimedia note-taking software. A crashing bug that 
  could occur when Pear Note was updating its search cache has been 
  fixed, and the Web sharing layout has been improved for very long 
  recordings. ($39.99 new, free update, 5.0 MB)

<http://www.usefulfruit.com/pearnote/>

  Read/post comments about Pear Note 2.0.1.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11528#comments>


**TextExpander 3.1.1** -- Smile - née SmileOnMyMac - has upgraded its 
  typing shortcut utility TextExpander to version 3.1.1. The 
  maintenance release fixes a couple of serious bugs, including a 
  potential crash and an issue that could cause you to lose all your 
  saved snippets (the customizable shortcuts that you type to trigger 
  longer text strings). The update also includes a fix for the Adapt 
  to Case option. ($34.95 new, free update, 4.4 MB)

<http://smilesoftware.com/TextExpander/>

  Read/post comments about TextExpander 3.1.1.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11525#comments>


**Typinator 4.1** -- Typinator 4.1 brings a slew of fixes and 
  improvements to the text-expansion utility. Among them are speed 
  boosts for Quick Search and text file imports, clearer behavior 
  during installation and in-application updating, and corrections for 
  text expansion with Gmail in Firefox, Amazon's Kindle for Mac, 
  Komodo, and Apple Mail. Developer Ergonis Software offers more 
  detailed release notes. (€19.99 new, free update, 3.2 MB)

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

  Read/post comments about Typinator 4.1.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11526#comments>


**Interarchy 10.0.2** -- Nolobe's file transfer client Interarchy, 
  which recently saw a major revision to 10.0, has now been bumped to 
  version 10.0.2 to fix more bugs discovered after the main release. 
  The latest bug fixes address various issues with Net Disks, and also 
  correct problems with dragging and editing bookmarks, installing the 
  Interarchy command line tool, and using the Open menu items. Also 
  included in the latest upgrade are numerous improvements to 
  Interarchy's Amazon S3 support. Note that this release also disables 
  SSH ControlMaster, which was reportedly causing performance issues; 
  a hidden preference key can be used to turn it back on. See Nolobe's 
  blog for full release notes. ($49.95 new, free update, 6.5 MB)

<http://nolobe.com/interarchy/>
<http://nolobe.com/blog/2010/08/interarchy1002>

  Read/post comments about Interarchy 10.0.2.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11524#comments>


**Snow Leopard Graphics Update** -- Apple has released the Snow 
  Leopard Graphics Update to address graphics problems in games and 
  graphics applications. In particular, the update addresses frame 
  rate performance problems in Portal and Team Fortress 2 on certain 
  Macs, and fixes a bug that could cause Aperture 3 and  StarCraft II 
  to crash or freeze. Macworld is now reporting that the update can 
  significantly improve graphics performance in other games as well. 
  It's available via Software Update or the Apple Support Downloads 
  page. (Free, 65.65 MB)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1083>
<http://www.macworld.com/article/153566/2010/08/mac_gaming_performance.html>

  Read/post comments about Snow Leopard Graphics Update.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11522#comments>


**Keyboard Maestro 4.3.2** -- Stairways Software has upgraded its 
  flagship Keyboard Maestro utility to version 4.3.2. The minor update 
  addresses aesthetic and functional issues alike. On the visual side, 
  the new version improves the look of disabled keyboard actions to 
  make them more obviously disabled. On the usability side, various 
  tweaks improve typing performance, correct issues with rogue 
  characters, and fix a crash that could occur when referenced files 
  were removed. Additionally, the release adds a configurable command 
  for osascript, which enables you to execute AppleScript plug-ins as 
  32-bit. Keyboard Maestro requires Mac OS X 10.5 or higher, and a 
  free trial is available. ($36 new, free upgrade, 9.0 MB)

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

  Read/post comments about Keyboard Maestro 4.3.2.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11519#comments>


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11537#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/11537>


ExtraBITS for 23 August 2010
----------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11536>

  We were all over the Web this week, noticing iOS birthday bugs, free 
  software for browsing your iPhone via your Mac, SmileOnMyMac's name 
  change, how the iPhone can help in online dating, and a wonderful 
  collection of DIY iPad stands.


**iOS Calendar Misses Grandparents' Birthdays** -- "Sorry for 
  forgetting your birthday, Grandma!" It turns out that the iOS 
  calendar won't display birthdays of people whose first birthday was 
  more than 77 years ago. This is true only of birthdays in the 
  special Birthdays calendar that's generated automatically from 
  birthday information in Address Book. The only workaround for the 
  moment is to create birthday events in a different calendar, though 
  it's probably not worth much effort, since Apple will undoubtedly 
  fix the bug in the next iOS revision by searching for "77" in the 
  code and replacing it with a larger number. Thanks to reader Carl 
  Pohle for alerting us to this one!

<http://support.apple.com/kb/TS3437>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11535#comments>


**Phone Disk Browses iOS Devices for Free Through 1 December 2010** -- 
  For those who want direct access to their iOS device's filesystem, 
  Macroplant is making their Phone Disk utility available for free 
  through 1 December 2010. Phone Disk lets you mount your device like 
  any other disk and copy files to and from it, without any need for 
  jailbreaking. You can even copy files into app directories by 
  clicking the Phone Disk menu bar icon and choosing the desired app 
  from the Change Connection Root submenu.

<http://www.macroplant.com/phonedisk/>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11532#comments>


**SmileOnMyMac Renamed to Smile** -- It's always a problem when a name 
  ceases to describe a company or program properly (et tu, iTunes?), 
  so the long-standing Mac software company SmileOnMyMac has now 
  shortened its name to just Smile in recognition of the fact that 
  they now develop software for iOS devices as well. We suspect it's 
  also an experiment in subliminal advertising - is it possible to 
  read the word "Smile" without smiling?

<http://www.smilesoftware.com/company/pr/smile20100818.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11527#comments>


**The iPhone's Role in Online Dating** -- The dating site OkCupid does 
  interesting research on their user base, with the latest finding 
  being that better cameras take better photos that make their 
  subjects look more attractive. Not surprising, but it is unexpected 
  that the iPhone is the second-ranked camera phone, and isn't much 
  behind most point-and-shoot cameras (and well ahead of the 
  low-ranked Kodak EasyShare, which will ensure you never get a date). 
  Lastly, although this could be good or bad, depending on whether 
  you're a single 30-something or thinking about what phone to get 
  your teenage daughter, it seems that iPhone users of the site sleep 
  with roughly twice as many people as Android users do. Hmm...

<http://blog.okcupid.com/index.php/dont-be-ugly-by-accident/>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11520#comments>


**Do-It-Yourself iPad Stands** -- Thanks to iPad stand manufacturer 
  LapWorks for putting together this slideshow of clever homemade iPad 
  stands made from things like the iPad's own packaging, rubber-banded 
  pencils, Legos, Tinkertoys, a bathroom plunger, a cereal box, and 
  even an extremely relaxed cat.

<http://www.laptopdesk.net/ipad-stand-diy.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11516#comments>


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11536#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/11536>


$$

This is TidBITS, a free weekly technology newsletter providing timely
news, insightful analysis, and in-depth reviews to the Macintosh and
Internet communities. Feel free to forward to friends; better still,
please ask them to subscribe!

Non-profit, non-commercial publications and Web sites may reprint or
link to articles if full credit is given. Others please contact us. We
do not guarantee accuracy of articles. Caveat lector. Publication,
product, and company names may be registered trademarks of their
companies. TidBITS ISSN 1090-7017.

Copyright 2010 TidBITS: Reuse governed by Creative Commons license.

Contact us at:	  <editors@tidbits.com>
TidBITS Web site: <http://www.tidbits.com/>
License terms:    <http://www.tidbits.com/terms/>
Full text search: <http://www.tidbits.com/search/>
Subscriptions:	  <http://www.tidbits.com/about/list.html>
Account help:	  <http://www.tidbits.com/about/account-help.html>





