TidBITS#1050/25-Oct-2010
========================
  Issue link: <http://db.tidbits.com/issue/1050>

  It’s official—the next big cat will be Mac OS X Lion, due in the 
  middle of 2011. Adam describes how Apple is updating Mac OS X with 
  lessons learned from iOS, which may or may not be to your liking. 
  Other big news from Apple’s media event last week include the 
  release of iLife ’11, new models of the MacBook Air (the 15- and 
  17-inch MacBook Pro models also received a speed bump, but didn’t 
  warrant mention at Apple’s event), and a beta release of FaceTime 
  for the Mac. Along with full coverage of those events, Jeff Carlson 
  and Michael report on Apple’s record-setting Q4 financials, Jeff 
  reveals how to restore the timeline to iMovie ’11, and Glenn 
  Fleishman looks at Yojimbo 3.0 and its associated iPad app. Notable 
  software releases this week include Cyberduck 3.7, Firefox 3.6.11, 
  Aperture 3.1 and ProKit Update 6.0, and Java for Mac OS X 10.6 
  Update 3 and 10.5 Update 8.

Articles
    MacBook Air Loses Hard Drive and Debuts at $999
    MacBook Pro Gains Faster CPU Option
    At Apple Event, Mac OS X Gets FaceTime
    iLife ’11 Updates Three of Its Apps
    Regain the Timeline in iMovie ’11
    Apple Reports $4.31 Billion Profit for Q4 2010
    Yojimbo 3.0 Gains Scanning and iPad App
    Apple Offers a Glimpse of Mac OS X Lion
    TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 25 October 2010
    ExtraBITS for 25 October 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 Dietrich Kessler, Albert Axelrod, 
  Masahiro Kudo, and David Roggenkamp 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>

* Yojimbo 3.0 from Bare Bones Software: The effortless, 
  reliable information organizer for Mac OS X. 
  It will change your life, without changing the way you work. 
  Try it today! <http://www.barebones.com/products/yojimbo/>

* THE MISSING SYNC FOR ANDROID: Sync with iTunes, Address Book, 
  iCal, iPhoto and other Mac applications. Supports HTC EVO, 
  Motorola Droid, Droid X, Droid 2, Google Nexus One and many 
  other phones. <http://www.markspace.com/bits>

* Dragon speech recognition software for Macintosh, iPhone, and iPad! 
  Get the all-new Dragon Dictate for Mac from Nuance Communications 
  and experience Simply Smarter Speech Recognition. 
  Learn more about Dragon Dictate: <http://nuance.com/dragon/mac>

* 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>!

* MacTech Conference, for IT Pros and Apple developers, is Nov 3-5, 
  in Los Angeles. The 3-day event is packed with sessions & evening 
  activities. Learn from the best. Meet and spend time with peers. 
  TidBITS readers save $50 at <http://macte.ch/conf_tidbits>!

* StuffIt Deluxe 2011 has everything you need to backup, encrypt, 
  share, and compress all of your photos, audio and documents. 
  Compress it. Secure it. Send it. Try StuffIt Deluxe 2011 today! 
  Click here for a free 30-day trial: <http://stuffIt.com/tidbits/>

* The Data Rescue Center is dedicated to bringing you the very best 
  hard drive recovery, data migration, and photo archiving options, 
  all at affordable and fair prices for individuals and businesses. 
  Get a FREE estimate today at <http://www.thedatarescuecenter.com/>

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


MacBook Air Loses Hard Drive and Debuts at $999
-----------------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11684>
  1 comment

  Apple’s smallest laptop model, the MacBook Air, has long been due 
  for an update, and as the “one more thing” part of last week’s 
  media event, the new models didn’t disappoint. That’s right, 
  “models,” plural, since the MacBook Air now comes in two sizes: 
  one with the traditional 13.3-inch screen, and an even smaller and 
  lighter unit with an 11.6-inch screen. (Jeff Carlson was on site for 
  Apple’s event—he edited this article via in-flight Wi-Fi on a 
  new 11-inch MacBook Air while he flew back from California—and 
  he’ll have more hands-on details soon.)

<http://www.apple.com/macbookair/>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-10/macbook_air_on_plane.jpg>

  The 13-inch MacBook Air sports an aluminum unibody construction 
  that’s incredibly thin, measuring just 0.68 inches (1.72 cm) at 
  the thickest side by the screen hinge, and tapering to 0.11 inches 
  (0.28 cm). It’s also lighter, dropping 0.1 pound (45 g) to 2.9 
  pounds (1.31 kg). It’s powered by a 1.86 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo 
  processor with 6 MB of on-chip shared L2 cache and a 1066 MHz 
  frontside bus; a 2.13 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo with the same cache is 
  available as an option. The resolution of its 13.3-inch screen is 
  1440 by 900 pixels. Apple claims 7 hours of “wireless 
  productivity” battery life and up to 30 days of standby time, as 
  if you’d let your shiny new Mac sit unused that long.

<http://www.apple.com/macbookair/specs-13inch.html>

  The 11-inch MacBook Air drops to 2.3 pounds (1.06 kg), and also 
  loses a full 1 inch of width and 1.38 inches of depth to clock in at 
  11.8 inches (29.95 cm) wide and 7.56 inches (19.2 cm) deep. On the 
  processor side, you can get either a 1.4 GHz or 1.6 GHz Intel Core 2 
  Duo with 3 MB of L2 cache and an 800 MHz frontside bus. Its 
  11.6-inch screen, while obviously small, has an amazing resolution 
  of 1366 by 768 pixels. The 11-inch model’s smaller battery claims 
  a still-impressive 5 hours of wireless productivity life and the 
  same 30 days of standby time.

<http://www.apple.com/macbookair/specs.html>

  All four models offer only solid-state storage for persistent 
  memory—there’s no hard drive, nor even space for one! The 
  11-inch model comes in 64 GB and 128 GB varieties, while the 13-inch 
  Air is available in 128 GB and 256 GB versions. This flash memory 
  isn’t packaged as a swap-in hard drive replacement, like most 
  solid-state drives (SSDs), where the shape and package looks like a 
  standard laptop drive. Rather, the memory is arrayed on cards that 
  are permanently installed. You can’t upgrade it—although you 
  never know if a third party will figure out a solution later. (The 
  folks at iFixit disassembled a MacBook Air and found that there is 
  an SSD controller inside, however, which makes a computer think that 
  the memory it’s talking to is a hard drive.)

<http://www.ifixit.com/Teardown/MacBook-Air-11-Inch-Model-A1370-Teardown/3745/2>

  In both sizes, 2 GB of RAM is standard, but you can bump that to 4 
  GB for $100 at the time you order; note that you cannot install RAM 
  after purchase. Other standard features include the FaceTime video 
  camera, two USB 2.0 ports (which are flush with the edges, no small 
  flip-down door as found in the previous generations), a Mini 
  DisplayPort, headphone jack, built-in microphone, stereo speakers, 
  and a MagSafe adapter. Both also have Nvidia GeForce 320M graphics 
  adapters with 256 MB of DDR3 SDRAM shared with main memory. On the 
  networking side, both sport 802.11n AirPort Extreme wireless 
  networking and Bluetooth 2.1 + EDR; the Apple USB Ethernet adapter 
  is sold separately. The 13-inch model also has room for an SD card 
  slot. In a particularly nice feature, Apple now ships a USB Software 
  Reinstall Drive to help if and when you need to reinstall Mac OS X. 
  That’s handier, more compact, and more durable than a DVD—and no 
  second computer is required for the reinstallation.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-10/MacBook-Air-models.png>

  Pricing is impressive, and leads one to wonder how long the white 
  polycarbonate MacBook will remain in the lineup. The 11-inch MacBook 
  Air with a 1.4 GHz CPU, 64 GB of storage, and 2 GB of RAM checks in 
  at $999. Increasing the storage to 128 GB bumps the price to $1,199. 
  Switching to a 1.6 GHz CPU adds $100, as does increasing the RAM to 
  4 GB.

  The 13-inch model starts at $1,299 for a 1.86 GHz CPU, 128 GB of 
  storage, and 2 GB of RAM. For $1,599, you can increase the storage 
  to 256 GB, and once again, increasing the CPU speed to 2.13 GHz adds 
  $100 to the price, as does going to 4 GB of RAM. (And you really, 
  really want at least 4 GB of RAM, especially in a machine you 
  can’t upgrade. Trust us on this.) 


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11684#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/11684>


MacBook Pro Gains Faster CPU Option
-----------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11689>
  3 comments

  Unmentioned during Apple’s media event last week was the fact that 
  the 15-inch and 17-inch MacBook Pro models have gained a faster CPU 
  option, a 2.8 GHz Intel Core i7. In both cases, the 2.8 GHz CPU 
  comes at a $200 premium over the 2.66 GHz chip, formerly the high 
  end. Previous CPU configurations remain available.

<http://store.apple.com/us/configure/MC373LL/A?mco=MTc0Njg1ODE>
<http://store.apple.com/us/configure/MC024LL/A?mco=MTc0Njg1NzI>

  There’s little more to say here, other than to note that if 
  you’re buying a MacBook Pro because you want more performance than 
  is available from the MacBook, MacBook Air, or 13-inch MacBook Pro, 
  it might be worth ponying up a few hundred extra dollars to make 
  sure you have the fastest available processor. 


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11689#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/11689>


At Apple Event, Mac OS X Gets FaceTime
--------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11681>
  3 comments

  The question everyone asked when they first saw FaceTime for the 
  iPhone 4 was, “When will this be available in iChat on the Mac?” 
  The answer came at last week’s media event: never (or at least not 
  now). Instead, Apple CEO Steve Jobs demonstrated a separate FaceTime 
  program for Mac OS X that works with the iPhone 4 and 
  fourth-generation iPod touch. Steve Jobs said 19 million iOS devices 
  with which you can use FaceTime have already been sold. A beta 
  release for Mac is already available for testing, and no restart is 
  required after installation. You need Mac OS X 10.6.4 
  and—obviously—a camera-equipped Mac.

<http://www.apple.com/iphone/features/facetime.html>
<http://www.apple.com/mac/facetime/>

  After installing FaceTime and launching it, you’re prompted to log 
  in with an Apple ID, which is the same ID used to purchase items 
  from the Apple Store and iTunes Store. If you don’t have such an 
  account, you can create an identity entirely within the program. 
  With an account, enter your credentials and click Sign In. (At 
  initial release, the beta had a glaring security hole, as reported 
  by Macnotes. Once logged in, anyone who wandered by your computer 
  could access your Apple ID account settings, such as birth date and 
  secret question/answer pair. Apple fixed the problem on the server 
  side several days later.)

<http://www.macnotes.net/2010/10/21/facetime-for-mac-a-serious-threat-for-your-apple-id/>

  To let you be discoverable to others, FaceTime for Mac asks you to 
  choose what email address you associated with your FaceTime access. 
  In iOS, this appears to be implicit, as there’s no way to choose 
  how your iPhone or iPod touch is associated. You can add additional 
  email addresses later through FaceTime > Preferences > Add Another 
  Email.

  FaceTime calls can be accepted when the app isn’t running, but you 
  can disable that in preferences, too. Set the FaceTime On/Off switch 
  to Off. You can accept or reject individual calls, of course.

  After accepting or entering an address, click Next, and your contact 
  list appears. Three buttons at the bottom right of the screen let 
  you choose among Favorites set in the program, Recents for recent 
  connections, and Contacts, which is selected by default.

  Your face appears in a large preview window shaped with the same 
  proportions as an iPhone or iPod touch in portrait orientation if 
  you have a built-in iSight or (as I do) an external FireWire iSight 
  camera. (I apologize for not shaving in the screenshot.) Select a 
  contact, and then click either an email address or a mobile phone 
  number that you believe to be associated with an iPhone 4, and the 
  program tries to make a connection. (You can have only one-to-one 
  conversations, unlike iChat, which allows multiple-person audio and 
  video chats.)

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-10/facetime_before_calling.jpg>

  After connecting to the other party, FaceTime for Mac shrinks the 
  view of you down into a corner of the screen, as in the iOS version. 
  With iOS, you can rotate your device to change the orientation of 
  the video you’re sending. On the Mac, you hover over your image, 
  and click the rotate button. This reframes the image from the iSight 
  into a landscape format. If the other party does the same on the Mac 
  or rotates the iOS device, the full FaceTime window changes to 
  landscape, too. FaceTime in iOS shows whatever orientation you’ve 
  chosen on the other end.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-10/facetime_ace_tonya.jpg>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-10/facetime_apple_banner.jpg>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-10/facetime_mac_on_ios.png>

  iOS device users can swap the front and back cameras to show off, 
  for instance, their marvelous front yards. FaceTime for Mac allows 
  only audio muting; iOS users can press the Home button or 
  double-press it to switch into another app, and the video is paused 
  while audio continues to work.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-10/facetime_fall_in_ithaca.jpg>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-10/facetime_video_paused.jpg>

  Since this is a beta, I wasn't surprised to see a couple of 
  glitches. I was unable to get full-screen mode to work. And in 
  talking with Adam Engst, his video transmission wound up locked in 
  an orientation 90 degrees off how he was holding his phone. 

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-10/facetime_sideways_problem.jpg>

  Will FaceTime replace iChat? Certainly not in this first iteration. 
  iChat allows multiple parties to chat, maintains its own buddies 
  list, allows access to you only when you’re logged in, and 
  includes text chat and screen sharing, among other features. On the 
  other hand, FaceTime requires no configuration after you log in with 
  your Apple ID, relies on your existing contacts, and uses phone 
  numbers and email to make connections. That’s appealing to users 
  who don’t want buddies and account status and other nonsense 
  required in instant messaging networks.

  But I can see Apple trying to divest itself of iChat over time by 
  adding more features to FaceTime for Mac. Apple is dependent on AOL 
  Instant Messenger (AIM) for the underlying buddy and connection 
  components of iChat with MobileMe. iChat also works with Google Talk 
  and Jabber servers, including Mac OS X Server’s version of Jabber. 
  But that’s all a bit out of Apple’s control, and we all know how 
  much Apple hates being reliant on other companies.

  Part of the case for that transition is that the MacBook Air comes 
  with a “FaceTime camera”; the iSight name only appears on older 
  models. Over time, I can’t see Apple supporting iChat and FaceTime 
  as separate and unequal models of communication. By the time Mac OS 
  X Lion roars, FaceTime and iChat might be chimerically molded 
  together.

<http://www.apple.com/macbookair/features.html>


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11681#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/11681>


iLife ’11 Updates Three of Its Apps
-------------------------------------
  by Michael E. Cohen <lymond@mac.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11683>
  2 comments

  Those who thought the next version of iLife would have a different 
  application lineup than its predecessors may have been surprised to 
  see that iLife ’11 once again presents the usual five suspects: 
  iPhoto, iMovie, GarageBand, iWeb, and iDVD. Of those programs, three 
  have received major feature enhancements—iPhoto, iMovie, and 
  GarageBand—while iWeb and iDVD have been updated only for 
  compatibility with the rest of the iLife ’11 suite.

<http://www.apple.com/ilife/>
<http://www.apple.com/ilife/iweb/>
<http://www.apple.com/ilife/idvd/>


**iPhoto ’11** -- Full screen everywhere is the only really _new_ 
  feature of iPhoto, although a number of existing features have 
  received major quality and functionality enhancements. 

<http://www.apple.com/ilife/iphoto/>

  All of iPhoto’s interface can now be presented in full-screen mode 
  with a single click, but you lose no functionality by switching out 
  of the previous window mode. You can browse your collections of 
  events, places, faces, and albums (including Facebook posts); create 
  books, cards, and slideshows; and create and send email. With email, 
  the mail message is composed within iPhoto instead of taking you on 
  a side trip to your email program. iPhoto in full-screen mode can 
  also present an information column that describes which pictures in 
  your iPhoto library have been used in what collections, albums, and 
  other places.

  Apple enhanced Facebook functionality so that photos posted on 
  Facebook by other means sync back to your iPhoto Facebook 
  collections (including comments on photos). You can also set your 
  Facebook profile picture directly from within iPhoto. Flickr 
  integration is similarly improved: you can post directly to your 
  photostream (instead of being forced to choose or create a photo 
  set), and photos already present in your photostream are also synced 
  back to iPhoto.

  Much was made of the fact that books and cards have received design 
  upgrades, and the composing interface has become something that 
  Apple calls the “carousel”: you spin it to access the different 
  components of the card or book you’re building. The printed card 
  templates include a letterpress card template that you can use and 
  then have printed on a high quality mechanical press to create 
  imprinted paper cards. Book and card projects are all collected in a 
  projects bookshelf interface that can be quickly browsed to pick the 
  one on which you want to work. 

  On the downside, calendars aren’t supported in the initial release 
  of iPhoto ’11, and Apple has said only (in a support note) that 
  support will return “very soon.” If you are planning on making 
  calendars for the holiday season, do not upgrade to iPhoto ’11 
  until Apple has either brought the feature back in a minor update or 
  promised that it will return in time for you to make and order 
  calendars in time. You cannot switch back and forth between iPhoto 
  ‘09 and iPhoto 11.

  Speaking of upgrading, the other fact that should give you pause is 
  that some users (including TidBITS friend Liz Castro) are reporting 
  significant data loss as iPhoto ’11 attempts to upgrade the iPhoto 
  Library. It’s not universal, of course, but we recommend either 
  holding off entirely on the upgrade until Apple has released an 
  update or making sure that you have easily restored backups of your 
  entire iPhoto Library package (along with the rest of your Mac’s 
  data, of course). Downgrading to iPhoto ‘09 may be difficult as 
  well.

<http://discussions.apple.com/thread.jspa?threadID=2624311>
<http://www.pigsgourdsandwikis.com/2010/10/warning-iphoto-11-erases-entire-iphoto.html>


**iMovie ’11** -- Trailers and vastly improved audio editing are the 
  most significant iMovie enhancements. Perfectionists can now 
  fine-tune the audio track with a waveform-displaying audio-level 
  editor that allows adjustments to the audio levels for each clip or 
  part of a clip.

<http://www.apple.com/ilife/imovie/>

  The new Movie Trailers feature provides an interface for assembling 
  clips into a complete imitation movie trailer. It has Outline, 
  Storyboard, and Shot List tabs in which you specify the titles and 
  credits that appear in the trailer, as well as the shots and kinds 
  of shots that make up each part of the trailer. When you compose 
  your trailer, iMovie can winnow your clips down to the clips that 
  are appropriate for each part of the trailer that you defined in the 
  trailer’s storyboard. 

  Apple has borrowed some of the Faces technology from iPhoto so that 
  iMovie can analyze your clips and find just the clips that contain 
  people or groups of people in them. (iMovie uses _face-detection_, 
  not _face-recognition_, technology; it can tell you when a human is 
  in the shot, but can’t identify the person.)

  Although some might think the Movie Trailers feature is a gimmick, 
  it’s still fun. We can imagine that kids might put it to uses that 
  staid technology observers can’t even imagine. Now if only iMovie 
  could automatically create the movies promised by these trailers! (I 
  say that facetiously, but, in fact, iMovie’s new Storyboard 
  interface could be extended—even by independent filmmakers—to 
  enable the creation of longer films. The animatics used in trailers 
  are also found in the Maps, Backgrounds, and Animatics panel, ready 
  to be dragged into a project as a placeholder.)


**GarageBand ’11** -- In iLife ’11, GarageBand gets smarter, with 
  features that analyze recorded performances and provide you with the 
  capability to improve them after the fact. 

<http://www.apple.com/ilife/garageband/>

  The Groove Matching feature uses one audio track as the basis for 
  analyzing the rhythm of the other tracks. It then adjusts the 
  playback of each track using sophisticated audio transformations to 
  bring all of the tracks into sync without altering the pitch. 
  Similarly, the Flex Time feature provides the capability to take any 
  part of a recording’s waveform, such as one that contains specific 
  notes or phrases, and stretch or compress that part to adjust the 
  timing.

  Other new GarageBand features include seven new Guitar Amps and five 
  new Stompbox Effects, new music lessons for piano and guitar, and a 
  How Did I Play feature. How Did I Play monitors your performance of 
  a selected piece (either on guitar or keyboard) and detects 
  incorrect notes or timing mistakes. It can keep track of multiple 
  performances of the same piece and show you how, or if, you have 
  improved over time. In essence, it turns practicing a piano (or 
  guitar) piece into a game that you can play repeatedly—it could 
  prove to be a hit with kids who have trouble finding the motivation 
  to practice.


**Pricing and Availability** -- Low, and now. iLife ’11, like its 
  precursors, is included free with every new Mac, and costs only $49. 
  (Apple calls this an “upgrade,” but $49 is the only price. If 
  you’ve purchased a Mac that can run the iLife applications, you 
  own a previous version—and there’s no serial number to enter to 
  get that price, since you have to have a Mac to run iLife.) 
  Customers who purchased Macs between 1 October 2010 and 19 October 
  2010 can upgrade for the cost of shipping, which Apple pegs at 
  $6.99. iLife ’11 is available from the Apple Store online, Apple 
  retail stores, and other resellers as well.

<http://store.apple.com/us/product/MC623Z/A/iLife-11>


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11683#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/11683>


Regain the Timeline in iMovie ’11
-----------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11688>
  15 comments

  When Apple radically changed iMovie between the ’06 and ’08 
  releases, one of the main criticisms was the abandonment of the 
  traditional editing timeline. Instead of one horizontal succession 
  of clips at the bottom of the screen, iMovie ’08 introduced an 
  editing area at the top-left of the screen where the movie wraps 
  like a paragraph.

  Well, if you’ve been pining for a “real” timeline, it’s time 
  to re-evaluate iMovie ’11. With a couple of clicks, you can have 
  it back. Here’s how.

  In iMovie ’11, open a project and, in the Project browser, click 
  the new Single-Row View button in the upper-right corner.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-10/imovie11timeline_button.png>

  The wrapped project extends past the left and right edges of the 
  browser.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-10/imovie11timeline_timeline_top.png>

  Next, click the Swap Events and Projects button in the middle 
  toolbar to place the Project browser along the bottom of the screen. 
  (I’ve also made the audio tracks visible in this screenshot.)

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-10/imovie11timeline_swap.png>

  Swapping the Project and Event browsers has been possible since 
  iMovie ’08, but this is the first time iMovie users have been able 
  to restore the traditional timeline. 


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11688#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/11688>


Apple Reports $4.31 Billion Profit for Q4 2010
----------------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>, Michael E. Cohen <lymond@mac.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11678>
  2 comments

  Apple’s long string of impressive quarterly earnings reports has 
  gotten a bit repetitive. Once again, the company posted record 
  quarterly revenue and profits, and sold more Macs, iPhones, and 
  iPads than ever during the fourth fiscal quarter of 2010, which 
  ended September 30th. On last week’s earnings call with analysts, 
  however, the most exciting inclusion wasn’t earnings-per-share or 
  the fact that iPhones outsold Macs, but the presence of CEO Steve 
  Jobs delivering impassioned opinions about RIM, Google, and the 
  future of the nascent tablet industry.

<http://www.apple.com/pr/library/2010/10/18results.html>

  Jobs rarely participates in earnings calls (the last was in 2008, 
  after Apple had hit impressive sales with the iPhone 3G; see 
  “iPhones, Macs Give Apple a Strong Q4 2008,” 21 October 2008), 
  but in this case he wanted to be on hand to celebrate Apple’s 
  first $20 billion quarter.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9825>

  The company posted revenue of $20.34 billion and a profit of $4.31 
  billion, or $4.64 per diluted share. That compares to revenue of 
  $15.7 billion and profit of $3.25 billion from the last quarter (see 
  “Apple Reports $3.25 Billion Profit for Q3 2010,” 20 July 2010); 
  in the year-ago quarter, Apple posted $9.87 billion in revenue for a 
  profit of $1.67 billion (see “Apple Reports $1.67 Billion Profit 
  for Q4 2009,” 19 October 2009). Both of those quarters were 
  record-breakers, too.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10658>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11445>


**iPhone and Competition** -- Apple sold 14.1 million iPhones during 
  the quarter, squashing any speculation that the “Antennagate” 
  fiasco in July materially affected sales; as we noted in “Apple 
  Responds to iPhone 4 Antenna Issue” (16 July 2010), the problem 
  Apple faced was not one of engineering, but of perception and 
  runaway speculation about a popular product. The sales number 
  compares to 8.4 million iPhones sold in the previous quarter, which 
  included only two days of iPhone 4 sales. iPhone revenue accounted 
  for $8.82 billion in revenue.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11434>

  Signifying just how competitive the smartphone market is, Jobs’s 
  remarks initially focused on Apple’s triumph over Research in 
  Motion (RIM), maker of BlackBerry handsets and formerly the market 
  leader. “We’ve now passed RIM,” he said, “and I don’t see 
  them catching up to us in the foreseeable future.” RIM posted 
  sales of 12.1 million BlackBerry devices in the same quarter.

  Jobs continued, “It will be a challenge for them to create a 
  competitive platform and get developers to develop apps on a third 
  platform. With 300,000 apps in the iTunes App Store, RIM has a high 
  mountain to climb.”

  But the brunt of the CEO’s fusillade was aimed at Google, or, more 
  accurately, the developers, equipment manufacturers, and cellular 
  service providers who are embracing Google’s Android operating 
  system.

  Jobs pointed out that, while Google has been activating 200,000 
  Android handsets per day, Apple has been activating a daily average 
  of 275,000 iOS devices (which includes the iPod touch) over the last 
  30 days. He also took issue with the description of Android as 
  “open,” calling it instead “fragmented” because of the 
  different versions and different carrier interfaces (in contrast 
  with the “integrated” iPhone ecosystem). Jobs noted that the 
  developers of TweetDeck found themselves developing for 244 
  different handsets and over 100 versions of Android.

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


**Macs and iPods** -- Mac sales were also particularly strong, led by 
  the iMac, selling 3.89 million units, another record. Apple CFO 
  Peter Oppenheimer also noted that Mac sales were more than double 
  IDC’s projected growth for the personal computer market overall.

  Also noteworthy is that roughly 50 percent of people who purchase a 
  new Mac at the Apple retail stores are new to the Mac, a percentage 
  that has remained consistent since Apple opened its stores. The 
  retail outlets now number 317 around the world—84 outside the 
  United States—with an average of $11.8 million in revenue for the 
  301 stores that were open during the quarter. Approximately 75 
  million visitors set foot in Apple stores worldwide, an increase in 
  attendance of 62 percent over the previous year. New stores in 
  Beijing and Shanghai posted the highest revenue ever compared to 
  other locations.

  Following a recent trend, sales of iPods continue to decline. Apple 
  sold 9.1 million, compared to 10.2 million a year ago; as usual, 
  Apple didn’t break out sales of particular iPod models from the 
  larger number.


**iPad Sales and Sizes** -- iPads, on the other hand, continue to 
  perform strongly, racking up 4.19 million units during the quarter 
  and accounting for $2.7 billion in revenue. 3.3 million iPads were 
  sold during the previous quarter.

  From what the Apple executives indicated, this quarter’s numbers 
  would have been higher if the company had been able to fulfill 
  demand. COO Tim Cook noted that Apple caught up with the initial 
  backlog only in September and is currently expanding manufacturing 
  to meet demand for the upcoming holiday season and international 
  expansion. They also noted that more than 65 percent of Fortune 100 
  companies are currently “deploying or piloting” the iPad. 
  Consistent with the last quarter, the average iPad selling price is 
  $645, indicating that purchasers are not overwhelmingly choosing the 
  entry-level $499 model. 


**Jobs Answers Analyst Questions** -- During the analysts’ Q&A 
  session, Jobs discussed the impact of iPad sales on the computer 
  market, and said the device was definitely going to affect notebook 
  sales. “It’s not a matter of if, but when,” he remarked.

  Describing corporate adoption of iPads, he said, “We haven’t 
  pushed it real hard in business and it’s being grabbed out of our 
  hands. [...] We’ve got a tiger by the tail here.” He reiterated 
  that two-thirds of the Fortune 100 were either deploying or piloting 
  iPads, and added that Apple was seeing iPad interest picking up in 
  the K-12 education market as well. He went on to note that an even 
  larger percentage of the Fortune 500, about 85 percent, were 
  deploying or piloting iPhones.

  When questioned about Apple TV, Jobs pointed out that while the new 
  version has only been available for a short period of time, the 
  company had already sold over 250,000 units. 

  And what about Macs in the enterprise market segment? Jobs said that 
  Apple believes that “the consumer is at the forefront,” and that 
  it is the consumers who are pulling the Mac into the enterprise 
  market rather than any specific enterprise marketing effort on 
  Apple’s part. As Mac adoption in the enterprise accelerates, 
  however, Jobs said that Apple “will act accordingly” as regards 
  enterprise marketing.

  When asked about the enormous amount of cash that Apple has on 
  hand—now $51 billion—and whether any of it will be returned to 
  shareholders in the form of dividends, Jobs stated that Apple 
  believes that, rather than giving the money to shareholders, “one 
  or more strategic opportunities will come along” that Apple can 
  take advantage of with its cash hoard: “We’re in a unique 
  position because of our cash advantage.” We expect endless 
  speculation in the next few weeks about who Apple might buy.


**No 7-inch iPad?** -- Jobs took aim during the call at those 
  competitors developing smaller form-factor tablet devices. He 
  dismissed 7-inch devices as “tweeners,” saying that the size was 
  just too small for a satisfying user experience and that he doubted 
  developers would downscale their iPad apps and remove features to 
  fit into a smaller display area. In one of the most unexpected 
  visuals to come out of the call, Jobs pointed out that even 
  increasing resolution is meaningless unless users “sand down their 
  fingers” to one-quarter the size.

  Jobs’s scorn of the form-factor may put an end to speculation 
  about a new 7-inch iPad, although he has, in the past, made similar 
  scornful remarks about other product niches that Apple then 
  proceeded to take over soon afterwards (including watching video on 
  mobile devices, ebooks, and, yes, tablet computers).


**Meanwhile, in Redmond** -- It says something about the future of 
  Apple and Microsoft that at almost the same moment Apple announced 
  its best quarter ever and the success of its latest devices, 
  Microsoft announced that Ray Ozzie, its chief software architect, 
  was stepping down from that role; Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer said 
  that he “won’t refill the role” of chief software architect 
  after Ozzie’s departure. When Ozzie assumed Bill Gates’s chief 
  software architect role at the company in 2006, he was a Microsoft 
  outsider, and was described at the time as part of the future of 
  Microsoft. Meanwhile, at Apple, Steve Jobs remains firmly in place, 
  and Apple continues to transform itself into something that barely 
  resembles the firm of a decade ago. Microsoft, on the other hand, 
  seems mostly frozen in amber.

<http://www.microsoft.com/presspass/press/2010/oct10/10-18steveb-mail.mspx>


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11678#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/11678>


Yojimbo 3.0 Gains Scanning and iPad App
---------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11679>
  3 comments

  Bare Bones Software has released version 3.0 of their Yojimbo 
  information organizer with an option to sync to a separately 
  purchased iPad app—Yojimbo for iPad—and scan directly using 
  TWAIN plug-ins. Version 3.0 is otherwise similar to the previous 
  version, apart from a few bug fixes.

<http://www.barebones.com/products/yojimbo/>
<http://www.itunes.com/app/yojimbo>

  Yojimbo is an indispensable application into which I stuff all kinds 
  of material: notes, passwords, serial numbers, PDFs, images, Web 
  archives, and links. I use Yojimbo’s tags to mark similar items, 
  and then create collections to gather data into sets. The program 
  uses MobileMe to sync my data across multiple computers.

  The new scanning feature is intentionally simple—you press a Scan 
  button and an image from your attached scanner is deposited in your 
  Yojimbo library. There are no tweaky settings for scanning, nor an 
  option to perform optical character recognition on the scan.

  Until recently, Yojimbo’s main failing was the lack of an easy way 
  to access the same data in iOS. The new app solves part of that 
  problem. You can’t make changes to items on the iPad, but you can 
  view any data stored in the desktop version, including encrypted 
  items, which remain encrypted on the iPad.

  You set up Yojimbo for iPad after upgrading to Yojimbo 3.0 in Mac OS 
  X. A new preference pane lets you pair with the iPad app via Wi-Fi. 
  Click the Pair button, and a four-digit code appears. Now launch the 
  iPad app, tap the Start Pairing button, and enter the same code. 
  Sync starts, which took many minutes for me the first time around 
  due to the size of my Yojimbo library—180 MB. Sync is a one-to-one 
  relationship: you can only sync Yojimbo on the Mac with one iPad, 
  and Yojimbo for iPad with one Mac.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-10/yojimbo_desktop-preference.jpg>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-10/yojimbo_ipad_syncing.png>

  Sync requires both the Mac and iPad to be connected to the same 
  local network; 3G sync isn’t available. Sync occurs automatically 
  whenever you wake the iPad while the app is running or when you 
  launch it. While I would have liked an option to sync via Dropbox, 
  as Agile Web Solutions does with 1Password under iOS, it’s not 
  going to happen. Bare Bones chief Rich Siegel explained in a 
  briefing that Yojimbo relies on a database architecture that can’t 
  be synced across Dropbox (yet, at least). Siegel also said his 
  company didn’t want to rely on a third party, as it wouldn’t be 
  able to help Yojimbo customers with Dropbox-related problems.

<http://help.agile.ws/1Password3/cloud_syncing_with_dropbox.html>

  With data synced into the Yojimbo iPad app, you can find items using 
  the Yojimbo view. This display mirrors what you see in the left tab 
  of the desktop version.

  Tap the Library, an item type (like Images or Recent), or a 
  collection to drill down to see individual items. You can also tap 
  the Search field and search on the title or tags attached to a 
  Yojimbo element. You cannot search the contents of files.

  Tap an item to view its contents, and it fills the screen in 
  portrait or the right two-thirds in landscape. Bookmarks display Web 
  pages in an embedded browser. Encrypted items show a lock that you 
  tap, after which you must enter your desktop Yojimbo password to 
  view the item. Unencrypted items can be forwarded via email. Links 
  may be copied or opened in the Safari app. You can also copy images 
  or save them to the photo library. An “i” information button 
  exposes creation and modification date, collections to which the 
  item belongs, and assigned tags.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-10/yojimbo_ipad_doc_view.png>

  Yojimbo 3.0 is a free update for owners of Yojimbo 2.x, and a $20 
  upgrade for owners of any Yojimbo 1 license (education, family, or 
  individual). Purchased new, Yojimbo costs $39 for a single-user 
  license, $69 for a family license (up to five in a household), and 
  $29 for educational users. It may be used on multiple computers by 
  the same person. Yojimbo for iPad costs $9.99.

  Yojimbo for iPad is a good first pass, but it’s clearly just the 
  beginning, for the simple reason that it is a read-only copy of your 
  desktop data. That works for me—for now—as a dedicated Yojimbo 
  user who wants my Yojimbo data available wherever I am. But it’s 
  not ideal, and Rich Siegel was up front about how Bare Bones plans 
  to extend the Yojimbo app’s capabilities to take in new 
  information in the future. Right now, sharing data among iOS apps is 
  extremely fussy, but as Apple creates more ways for apps to share 
  data, hopefully we’ll see Yojimbo for iPad become the equal of 
  Yojimbo on the Mac.


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11679#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/11679>


Apple Offers a Glimpse of Mac OS X Lion
---------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11682>
  23 comments

  Keeping entirely with the advertised “Back to the Mac” 
  invitation that showed a lion peeking out from behind a brushed 
  aluminum apple, Apple CEO Steve Jobs last week presented a preview 
  of features we can expect to see in the next big cat—Mac OS X 
  Lion. (Apple never used a version number, but we presume it will be 
  10.7.) Slated for “Summer 2011” (in the Northern Hemisphere), 
  Mac OS X Lion takes its inspiration from the aspects of iOS that 
  Apple has found both particularly successful and applicable to a 
  desktop or laptop computer, including the App Store, multi-touch 
  gestures, app home screens, full-screen apps, and more.

<http://www.apple.com/pr/library/2010/10/20lion.html>


**Mac App Store** -- With 7 billion downloads so far, the App Store 
  has been a huge success. And now, as we joked in our April Fools 
  article “Apple Plans App Store Shakeup with Franchises, Mac 
  Applications” (1 April 2010), Apple will be creating an App Store 
  exclusively for Mac applications. Although the Mac App Store will be 
  integrated into Mac OS X Lion, we won’t have to wait until the 
  middle of 2011 to see it—Jobs said Apple would be opening the Mac 
  App Store within 90 days, and developers will be able to start 
  submitting their apps next month. The Mac App Store will complement, 
  not replace, the ability to install programs by hand, whether free 
  or commercial.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11131>

  If you’ve seen the App Store app on the iPad, you’ve essentially 
  seen the App Store application—Apple isn’t shoehorning it into 
  iTunes. Buttons at the top include Featured, Top Charts, Categories, 
  and Updates, and there’s a search field as well. Click a purchase 
  button and you’ve bought the app; it jumps out of the App Store 
  and onto your Dock, with the familiar iOS icon fill bar showing as 
  it downloads. Installation is completely automatic, as are updates.

  Free and paid apps will be available. While average prices will 
  undoubtedly be higher than in the iOS App Store, the revenue split 
  will be the same, with developers receiving 70 percent and Apple 
  retaining 30 percent. Jobs said apps will be licensed for use on all 
  your personal Macs; what that really means and how it will be 
  enforced remains to be seen. Many Mac programs today are sold with 
  explicit licensing terms to allow use by a single individual on 
  multiple computers, or under a family or household license that 
  allows software to be used on all the computers owned by people who 
  cohabitate. Others, notably Microsoft’s and Adobe’s suites, use 
  serial numbers with a central server check and local network 
  limitations to restrict usage. iOS apps can be installed on multiple 
  devices registered to the same iTunes Store account, but apps are 
  also allowed to use accounts and serial numbers to restrict usage; 
  many GPS navigation programs, which can cost $30 to $80, lock down 
  usage in that way.

  Other questions abound. For instance, what about demo versions? The 
  buzz on Twitter as Jobs announced the Mac App Store was immediately 
  focused on the current inability of the iOS App Store to offer 
  limited demo versions of paid apps for potential buyers to try out. 
  This is a real concern for Mac programs, which can cost hundreds of 
  dollars, and many of which currently offer trial modes or 30-day 
  test periods. Apple could allow the Mac App Store to provide demo 
  versions, of course, or developers could offer trial versions from 
  their own Web sites, but that defeats the marketing potential of the 
  Mac App Store. 

  Likewise, iOS app developers have been increasingly vocal about 
  their inability to sell paid upgrades of apps. Some developers have 
  worked around this by releasing subsequent versions as new apps, and 
  requiring a new purchase for owners of previous releases. Apple will 
  need to address both these issues.

  To a lesser extent, developers are concerned about the revenue 
  split. Mac software developers are used to paying 5 to 15 percent 
  for payment processing, and may not immediately see (nor obtain) the 
  value of the marketing channel that the Mac App Store provides. In 
  the iOS App Store, marketing is essentially impossible. If your app 
  is anointed as a staff pick, sales can go up. But iOS developers 
  have no other channel to sell to device owners. Mac developers have 
  existing channels and will need to evaluate the Mac App Store as a 
  new method of reaching customers in exchange for the 30-percent 
  transaction fee.


**Multi-Touch Gestures** -- Interestingly, Jobs made a point of 
  talking about a feature that Macintosh hardware won’t be 
  gaining—touch-sensitive displays. He said that Apple had done 
  extensive user testing and while vertical touch screens demo well, 
  in real usage, they’re just too tiring to use for any amount of 
  time. So while Mac OS X Lion will make increased use of gestures for 
  basic functionality, the hardware for them will remain horizontal, 
  in the form of MacBook trackpads, the Magic Mouse, and the Magic 
  Trackpad. If you aren’t using one of those devices now, Lion may 
  give you incentive to buy one.


**App Home Screen** -- Although I’m not sure I agree with Jobs that 
  the iOS home screen has been a huge win in iOS (I’m never quite 
  happy with any organization I set up), Apple will be bringing the 
  home screen concept to Mac OS X Lion via a feature called Launchpad. 
  Invoked via a multi-touch gesture, Launchpad hides everything 
  showing on your Desktop and displays a grid of apps. 

  Multiple pages are available, you can rearrange icons on each page, 
  and you can drag icons on top of one another to create folders, just 
  like in iOS 4. And, of course, you can click any icon to launch the 
  associated app. (I believe it’s a single click, but we won’t 
  know for certain until it ships.) Oh, and if you swipe to the right 
  while showing the left-most home screen page, Launchpad displays 
  your Dashboard widgets. Does anyone use Dashboard widgets?


**Full-Screen Apps** -- On the small-screen iOS devices, every app 
  takes over the entire screen, and while Jobs admitted that doesn’t 
  make sense for every app on the Mac, it is true that some programs 
  are more usable when viewed at full screen. That’s especially true 
  of Apple’s iLife apps—iPhoto, iMovie, and GarageBand—which 
  need to present a lot of data and controls at once. Some current Mac 
  applications can operate in a full-screen mode, but it’s unusual, 
  since there’s no standardized way in Mac OS X to return to the 
  normal view. 

  With Mac OS X Lion, full-screen mode is now a standard feature. For 
  apps that support it, the green zoom button in windows will cause an 
  app not to zoom to the largest window size, but to fill the entire 
  screen. In Apple’s demo, even the menu bar disappeared, and if 
  that’s required by full-screen mode, developers will have to 
  ensure that in-window controls are sufficient. 

  To switch to another app while using one in full-screen mode, you 
  use another multi-touch gesture (or so it appeared in the demo). 
  When you switch, the full-screen app remains running in what is 
  essentially its own space (as in a Spaces space). Other gestures let 
  you switch back to the full-screen app and move among other 
  full-screen apps. The demo didn’t make clear how you make a 
  particular app in full-screen mode switch back to windowed mode.


**Mission Control** -- Now, you might be thinking that full-screen 
  apps are encroaching a bit on Spaces’ territory, and you’d be 
  right. But in fact, Apple has a number of technologies—Exposé, 
  Dashboard, Spaces, and now full-screen apps—that all manage the 
  screen in some way. Dealing with them all is becoming a bit 
  confusing, so Apple will be introducing an umbrella technology 
  called Mission Control to bring them all together.

  Invoked by, you guessed it, another multi-touch gesture, Mission 
  Control shows spaces and full-screen apps in an area at the top of 
  the screen, a collection of Exposé windows that are collected 
  together by app in the middle of the window, and the Dock at the 
  bottom. In short, it shows you everything on your Mac at a glance.

  I still feel that most of the problems Apple is trying to solve with 
  these interface approaches disappear entirely if you have two 
  displays, which is easy on all modern Macs. I find Spaces thoroughly 
  confusing because it requires me to maintain an internal mental 
  model of where different applications live, and I never use Exposé 
  to find windows because I can either see them or access them with a 
  single press of a function key (mapped in Keyboard Maestro); other 
  TidBITS editors have never even touched Spaces. And I have never 
  found a single use for Dashboard. But, if you’re running within 
  the constrained space of a laptop screen all the time, perhaps 
  Mission Control will be just what you need.


**Auto Save and App Resuming** -- The final two features of iOS that 
  Jobs said Apple would be bringing to Mac OS X Lion were auto-saving 
  and apps resuming where they left off when relaunched. Presumably 
  there’s additional underlying code in iOS that makes it easy for 
  apps to auto-save and save their state, and that will be coming 
  forward into Lion, since there’s certainly no reason at all that a 
  Mac program couldn’t do auto-save now. Some applications, like 
  Firefox and BBEdit, already resume exactly where they left off after 
  a quit or crash.


**The Cat’s Meow?** -- As Steve Jobs’s vaunted Reality Distortion 
  Field fades away, it’s unclear how much of a difference these new 
  features in Mac OS X Lion would make in my computing life. 
  Certainly, the Mac App Store will have huge ramifications for 
  developers and users alike, but it will be released for Mac OS X 
  10.6 Snow Leopard in the next 90 days.

  While I do some of my work on an aluminum unibody MacBook with a 
  trackpad, most of what I do now is on a Mac Pro with a pair of 
  24-inch displays, where I use a RollerMouse Pro from Contour Designs 
  for mousing around. Rejiggering my workspace to accommodate a Magic 
  Trackpad would require some doing, and without multi-touch support, 
  I’m uncertain how some of these new features will work. (Glenn 
  Fleishman found the Magic Trackpad painful to use with his minor 
  hand and wrist problems.) And even if I were to add a trackpad to my 
  workspace, I prefer launching apps via Keyboard Maestro’s hotkeys 
  and LaunchBar’s abbreviations, and apart from sliding windows out 
  of the way of my Desktop, I never use Exposé or Spaces. It’s not 
  that I don’t like them; I simply have no use for them.

<http://ergo.contourdesign.com/products/product-detail.aspx?id=2>

  Like many TidBITS readers who have equally ingrained and efficient 
  methods of working, I am not Apple’s target audience for Mac OS X 
  Lion. Let me go out on a limb here and suggest in the nicest 
  possible way that Apple doesn’t really care about us. We’re 
  loyal customers and we’ll kit our Macs out with all sorts of 
  clever software from independent developers. Instead, Apple is 
  aiming these changes in Lion at a special sort of switcher—the iOS 
  user who isn’t currently connecting her device to a Mac. Such a 
  person has Windows, but probably doesn’t know much about it, and 
  is buying a Mac because she prefers iOS. Given how many millions of 
  iOS devices Apple has sold to date, that has to be a sizable market, 
  and these people are already predisposed to like Apple.

  Back to the Mac isn’t just about focusing on Mac technologies, 
  it’s about bringing iOS users into the Mac fold for the first 
  time. Jobs said that the Mac accounts for 33 percent of Apple’s 
  revenue now and is a $22 billion business. Fears that Apple might be 
  losing interest in the Mac in favor of iOS and its associated 
  devices still seem unfounded. However, it’s entirely possible that 
  Apple’s renewed focus on the Mac may be taking it in a direction 
  that doesn’t do a lot for professional users (recall that, during 
  the quarterly financial conference call just two days prior, Jobs 
  said, “the consumer is at the forefront”—see “Apple Reports 
  $4.31 Billion Profit for Q4 2010,” 18 October 2010). 

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11678>

  Ponder that for a moment, and if you aren’t entirely happy about 
  it, think about what features Apple could add in Mac OS X Lion that 
  would make your day and add them to the comments on this article. 
  After all, Apple won’t be loosing this Lion on the public for 
  another nine or ten months. 


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11682#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/11682>


TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 25 October 2010
---------------------------------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11693>

**Cyberduck 3.7** -- Version 3.7 of the free (although donations are 
  encouraged) file transfer program Cyberduck is now out. In addition 
  to the bug fixes listed in the open-source program’s changelog, 
  this version adds the capability to import Transmit favorites, 
  duplicate bookmarks via drag and drop, check for updates that 
  include snapshot builds, support PuTTY private key format, display 
  hidden files in the upload prompt, upload files with temporary names 
  and then rename them after the transfer ends, copy files between 
  servers by dragging from one browser window to another, copy 
  multiple URLs at once when using the Copy URL command, and display 
  only affected files in the Synchronize preview. (Free, 19.9 MB)

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

  Read/post comments about Cyberduck 3.7.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11690#comments>


**Firefox 3.6.11** -- Mozilla has released Firefox 3.6.11, a minor 
  update to the open-source Web browser. The update addresses both 
  security and stability concerns—including some potential security 
  threats that could allow an attacker to take control of your 
  computer. One additional Mac-specific fix in this version of Firefox 
  restores the capability to use the Return key in the search or 
  location bar when an input field on a Web page is focused. (Free, 
  17.6 MB)

<http://www.mozilla.com/en-US/firefox/firefox.html>
<http://www.mozilla.org/security/known-vulnerabilities/firefox36.html#firefox3.6.11>

  Read/post comments about Firefox 3.6.11.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11685#comments>


**Aperture 3.1 and ProKit Update 6.0** -- Apple has released Aperture 
  3.1, which the company says boosts stability and performance, and 
  addresses compatibility with the just-released iLife ’11 suite. 
  Specific improvements include performance when opening large 
  libraries and exporting heavily adjusted images. Also addressed are 
  issues with importing photos and videos from iPhoto libraries, 
  iPhones, and iPads; duplicate detection; face detection; thumbnail 
  rendering; red-eye correction; and image quality when straightening 
  images. Apple provides a detailed list of all the fixes included in 
  the update. ($199 new, free update, 357.55 MB)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1315>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/TS2518>

  Simultaneously, Apple also released ProKit Update 6.0 for Snow 
  Leopard to improve reliability for browsing iPhoto libraries in 
  Aperture, to fix disclosure triangle appearance in Aperture, and to 
  resolve an issue with numeric parameters in Logic Pro and MainStage. 
  The update is recommended for users of all versions of Final Cut, 
  Motion, Soundtrack Pro, DVD Studio Pro, Aperture, Soundtrack, Logic, 
  MainStage, and WaveBurner. (Free update, 13.5 MB)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1318>

  Read/post comments about Aperture 3.1 and ProKit Update 6.0.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11687#comments>


**Java for Mac OS X 10.6 Update 3 and 10.5 Update 8** -- Apple has 
  released updates to the Java framework for Mac OS X, with separate 
  versions for Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard and Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard. 
  Apple says that the updates deliver improved compatibility, 
  security, and reliability. Under Snow Leopard, the update 
  accomplishes that by updating Java SE 6 to version 1.6.0_22. Under 
  Leopard, the update does the same thing for 64-bit-capable 
  Intel-based Macs, and instead updates J2SE 5.0 to 1.5.0_26 on other 
  Macs. The company’s Web site provides documentation on the 
  security holes addressed by the Snow Leopard and Leopard versions of 
  the update. Apple recommends that you close any Web browsers and 
  Java-based applications before you install the updates. (Free, 74.30 
  MB for Snow Leopard, 119.07 MB for Leopard)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL972>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL971>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT4417>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT4418>

  Read/post comments about Java for Mac OS X 10.6 Update 3 and 10.5 
  Update 8.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11686#comments>


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11693#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/11693>


ExtraBITS for 25 October 2010
-----------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11692>

  Our review copy of iPhoto ’11 hasn’t yet arrived, but we felt it 
  was important to warn about a potential bug in the program that 
  could erase photos—make backups! Also, if you haven’t yet had 
  your fill of analysis of the Apple announcements, listen in to 
  Adam’s interview on the Tech Night Owl Live podcast. And finally, 
  want to turn a Mac into a Mac-O-Lantern for Halloween? Read on!


**Back Up Before Installing iPhoto ’11!** -- Our friend Liz Castro 
  reports that when the new iPhoto ’11 (which hasn’t arrived here 
  yet) attempted to upgrade her iPhoto Library, it failed in such a 
  way as to delete 230 GB of photos. Others are seeing the problem 
  too, so you should either avoid installing iPhoto ’11 until 
  there’s a fix from Apple or make sure you have multiple backups 
  before installing. It’s also probably best not to interrupt the 
  upgrade process, no matter what.

<http://www.pigsgourdsandwikis.com/2010/10/warning-iphoto-11-erases-entire-iphoto.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11691#comments>


**Convert an Old Mac to a Mac-O-Lantern** -- As Halloween approaches, 
  this 2007 post on the Bad Banana Blog offers a do-it-yourself way to 
  turn a classic Mac (perhaps even a Mac Classic) into a 
  retro-technology pumpkin. Bonus points for spooky screen displays 
  and sounds, if you can get software into the old Mac!

<http://badbanana.typepad.com/weblog/2007/10/mac-o-lanterns.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11695#comments>


**Adam Discusses Lion, Mac App Store, and MacBook Air on Tech Night 
  Owl Live** -- For more on Adam’s thoughts regarding Mac OS X Lion, 
  the Mac App Store, and the new MacBook Air models, tune in to the 
  final segment of last week’s Tech Night Owl Live podcast with Gene 
  Steinberg.

<http://www.technightowl.com/radio/podcast/now-playing-october-23-2010-%E2%80%94-daniel-eran-dilger-adam-engst-and-ross-rubin/>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11694#comments>


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11692#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/11692>


$$

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>





