TidBITS#1053/15-Nov-2010
========================
  Issue link: <http://db.tidbits.com/issue/1053>

  We note two major updates in this issue: Mac OS X 10.6.5 and 
  Microsoft Office 2011 for Mac 14.0.1. The former fixes a bunch of 
  highly specific bugs that most people have never seen; the latter 
  addresses more common problems in the initial release of Office 
  2011. Mac OS X 10.6.5 also breaks PGP Whole Disk Encryption, but 
  Rich Mogull explains the problem and how to recover from it. Also 
  this week, Adam contemplates playing ping-pong with an iPad for a 
  paddle and trembles before the Attack of the Zombie Input Managers. 
  And for those contemplating the Apple Battery Charger, Michael Cohen 
  looks at how well it works and why battery charge percentages are so 
  confusing with its batteries. Lastly, we’re pleased to announce 
  the release of Glenn Fleishman’s “Take Control of iPhone and 
  iPod touch Networking & Security, iOS 4 Edition” and an update to 
  “Take Control of Wi-Fi Security,” along with the winners of last 
  week’s DealBITS drawing for Simon (along with a discount for those 
  who didn’t win). Notable software releases this week include 
  iTunes 10.1, BBEdit 9.6.1, Security Update 2010-007 (Leopard and 
  Leopard Server), 1Password 3.5.0, Coda 1.7, HP Printer Drivers 
  v.2.5.2, and Carbon Copy Cloner 3.3.6.

Articles
    No TidBITS Issue on 22 November 2010
    First Office 2011 for Mac Update Fixes Crashers
    Two New Ebooks Explore Networking and Security
    DealBITS Discount: Save up to 50% on Simon 3.0
    Mac OS X 10.6.5 Continues to Squash Bugs
    Whole Disk Encryption, and Why Mac OS X 10.6.5 Broke PGP WDE
    Attack of the Zombie Input Managers
    Apple Battery Charger and the Secret of NiMH
    Palm Your iPad with a Hand-e-holder
    TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 15 November 2010
    ExtraBITS for 15 November 2010


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No TidBITS Issue on 22 November 2010
------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11754>

  Next week is the Thanksgiving holiday in the United States, so we 
  won’t be publishing an email issue on 22 November 2010 as we get 
  ready for family and food. (I for one will be consulting Joe 
  Kissell’s “Take Control of Thanksgiving Dinner” ebook, which 
  is also now available in the iBookstore—which it isn’t yet 
  possible to link to—and as an iPhone app, for my dinner 
  preparations.)

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/thanksgiving?pt=TB1053>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/take-control-thanksgiving/id390693004?mt=8>

  Although the weekly email edition of TidBITS won’t appear on 
  Monday, we’ll no doubt continue to post to the TidBITS Web site. 
  Check back at the site or subscribe to the our RSS feed or Twitter 
  stream to keep up with everything we’re writing. And look for the 
  next email issue on 29 November 2010!

<http://www.tidbits.com/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/feeds/tidbits.rss>
<http://twitter.com/TidBITS>


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First Office 2011 for Mac Update Fixes Crashers
-----------------------------------------------
  by Michael E. Cohen <lymond@mac.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11736>
  4 comments

  Barely two weeks have passed since the formal release of Office for 
  Mac 2011 from Microsoft and its first update is now out the door, 
  bringing with it an assortment of “improvements to security, 
  stability, compatibility, and performance.” 

<http://blog.officeformac.com/office-for-mac-2011-available-october-26/>
<http://support.microsoft.com/kb/2454823>

  The security fixes address a vulnerability, rated Important by 
  Microsoft, that allows remote code execution when a user previews or 
  opens a specially crafted RTF email message in Outlook 2011. 
  Microsoft’s security bulletin notes that a successful exploit of 
  this vulnerability gives an attacker the same privileges as the 
  Mac’s current user: those who run their Macs from an administrator 
  account are the most vulnerable.

<http://www.microsoft.com/technet/security/bulletin/MS10-087.mspx>

  In addition to patching the vulnerability, the Microsoft Office for 
  Mac 2011 14.0.1 Update applies fixes and improvements for Excel, 
  Word, PowerPoint, and Outlook. It also provides form-based 
  authentication for all Office applications when users connect to a 
  SharePoint server, and fixes an issue that erroneously locked images 
  copied to ChemDraw from any Office application.

  Excel users who have experienced crashes when enabling a macro will 
  be glad to hear that Microsoft claims to have fixed this problem; 
  those who have seen Excel fail to update some calculated spreadsheet 
  cells when related data has changed will also be happy to learn that 
  affected cells now update properly. Word users who have seen crashes 
  when using the Equation Tools will find this problem fixed as well. 
  PowerPoint bug fixes include one that led to crashes during slide 
  shows, and another that caused PowerPoint to display numbered lists 
  incorrectly in presentations created in PowerPoint 2007 and 
  PowerPoint 2010.

  The newest Office for Mac application, Outlook 2011, came in for its 
  share of fixes. Aside from patching the previously mentioned 
  security vulnerability, the update fixes a number of other Outlook 
  issues. A flaw that caused only one email message to be deleted when 
  multiple messages in an IMAP account were selected for deletion has 
  been fixed; Sync Services Agent no longer requires users to quit it 
  manually when installing a new update; passwords are no longer 
  deleted from the keychain when Outlook imports new mail accounts; 
  database rebuilds no longer delete mailing list rules; and when 
  users import identities, Outlook no longer prematurely ends the 
  import when it encounters an identity with a category called 
  “Untitled.”

  The free 110.5 MB update requires a Mac running Mac OS X 10.5.8 or 
  later. It is available directly from Microsoft or can be obtained by 
  running Microsoft AutoUpdate: in any Office 2011 application, choose 
  Help > Check for Updates.

<http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/en/details.aspx?FamilyID=8bd6ca3b-8004-4e8d-a09d-220dcbbce799>


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Two New Ebooks Explore Networking and Security
----------------------------------------------
  by Michael E. Cohen <lymond@mac.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11743>

  It’s not quite a no-brainer, but it’s close enough: just about 
  anyone can get an iPhone or iPod touch connected to a Wi-Fi or 3G 
  data network, as millions of satisfied iOS device users can attest. 
  But just because something is easy doesn’t mean it’s simple. 
  Many subtleties and features lurk beneath the surface of iOS 
  networking, and you can make better and safer choices if you 
  understand them. And that’s where Glenn Fleishman’s latest 
  effort in our Take Control ebook series, “Take Control of iPhone 
  and iPod touch Networking & Security, iOS 4 Edition” comes in.

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/iphone-networking?pt=TB1053>

  In the 165-page ebook, you can learn how Glenn thinks about iOS 
  networking, and thereby profit from his explanations of, and advice 
  about, key networking topics. Mystified about how networking 
  security works? Confused about which 3G data plan to use? Baffled by 
  what it means to tether your devices? Wondering how to connect a 
  Bluetooth device to your iPod touch? Concerned about what you should 
  do if you lose your iPhone in a bar near Gizmodo headquarters some 
  evening? The ebook covers all of that and more (well, except for the 
  Gizmodo bit).

  From the moment iOS 4 was announced in June 2010, Glenn has been 
  researching and writing this book, and now his comprehensive and 
  detailed look at the iOS networking landscape is ready, both for 
  those who already have their devices in hand, and for those who will 
  soon receive a shiny new iPhone or iPod touch during the holiday 
  gift-giving season. It’s $15 and is available in PDF and print 
  now, with EPUB and Mobipocket coming in a few weeks for those who 
  purchase the PDF.

  (If “Take Control of iPhone and iPod touch Networking & Security, 
  iOS 4 Edition,” sounds like a familiar title, you’re likely 
  thinking of Glenn’s older “Take Control of iPad Networking & 
  Security,” which is up for a minor update once iOS 4.2 ships for 
  the iPad. The two books are somewhat similar, and we may combine 
  them into a single title for iOS 5 if enough of the differences have 
  been ironed out.)

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/ipad-networking?pt=TB1053>

  But that’s not all that Glenn has been up to: together with 
  co-author Adam Engst, he has been working on an update to the 
  109-page “Take Control of Your Wi-Fi Security,” aimed at those 
  who want to understand and implement wireless security for home or 
  small business networks. Like previous updates to this longstanding 
  title, this version 1.7 is a free update for everyone who has bought 
  the book already, but the update brings it up to date with the 
  latest operating systems from Apple and Microsoft, current security 
  issues, and recommended protection mechanisms. It’s $10, and is 
  also available in PDF and print forms, with EPUB and Mobipocket 
  coming soon.

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/wifi-security?TB1053>

  ’Tis the season to network safely! 


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DealBITS Discount: Save up to 50% on Simon 3.0
----------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11755>

  Congratulations to Nelson Ayuyao at uic.edu and Alan Duchan at 
  me.com, whose entries were chosen randomly in the last DealBITS 
  drawing and who each received a copy of Simon 3.0, worth $499. But 
  don’t fret if you didn’t win, since Dejal is offering all 
  TidBITS readers significant discounts (20 to 50 percent) on the 
  different levels of Simon, along with other Dejal products, through 
  31 December 2010. To take advantage of the discount, order from 
  Dejal’s store. Thanks to the 290 people who entered this DealBITS 
  drawing, and we hope you’ll continue to participate in the future!

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11728>
<http://go.dejal.com/simontb>
<http://www.dejal.com/store/paypal/?prod=simon&coupon=tbdealbits&ref=tb>


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Mac OS X 10.6.5 Continues to Squash Bugs
----------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11741>
  15 comments

  With the just-released Mac OS X 10.6.5, the latest version of Snow 
  Leopard, Apple continues to eliminate bugs that were undoubtedly 
  either unknown until recently or so minor that they weren’t deemed 
  sufficiently important to address before this. Also addressed are 
  numerous security vulnerabilities.

<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT4250>


**Feature Enhancements and Bug Fixes** -- The only two functional 
  enhancements in 10.6.5 are SSL support for transferring files with 
  iDisk, which is a welcome nod to the need for secure connections, 
  and raw image compatibility with additional digital cameras. For a 
  full list, see “Mac OS X v10.6: Supported digital camera RAW 
  formats.” (Also released last week was Digital Camera RAW 
  Compatibility Update 3.4, which extends raw image format 
  compatibility to Aperture 3 and iPhoto ’09 for some new camera 
  models.)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT3825>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1072>

  In fact, the details of the rest of the fixes are so specific that I 
  can’t even see any way to group or summarize them. I recommend 
  reading down the remaining 22-item bullet list to see if you’ve 
  encountered any of the problems that 10.6.5 addresses.

* Improves reliability with Microsoft Exchange servers. (TidBITS 
  Contributing Editor Mark Anbinder tells me that if the user sets a 
  message priority in Mail, Exchange no longer discards that attribute 
  when the message hits the server. He went on to say that a much 
  bigger deal is that calendar permission delegation in iCal seems to 
  have been fixed.)

* Addresses performance of some image-processing operations in iPhoto 
  and Aperture.

* Addresses stability and performance of graphics applications and 
  games.

* Resolves a delay between print jobs.

* Addresses a printing issue for some HP printers connected to an 
  AirPort Extreme.

* Resolves an issue when dragging contacts from Address Book to iCal.

* Addresses an issue in which dragging an item from a stack causes the 
  Dock to not automatically hide.

* Resolves an issue in which Wikipedia information may not display 
  correctly in Dictionary.

* Improves performance of MainStage on certain Macs.

* Resolves spacing issues with OpenType fonts.

* Improves reliability with some Bluetooth braille displays.

* Resolves a VoiceOver issue when browsing some Web sites with Safari 
  5.

* Improves Bluetooth pairing with Magic Trackpad.

* Resolves performance issues with third-party displays that use 
  InstaPort technology.

* Resolves an issue when opening 4-up Photo Booth pictures in Preview.

* Addresses keyboard responsiveness issues in the Dock when Spaces is 
  turned on.

* Resolves an issue syncing Address Book with Google.

* Fixes an issue when replying to a Mail message sent by a person 
  whose name contains certain characters such as é or ü.

* Improves performance for users bound to an Active Directory domain.

* Improves reliability of Ethernet connections.

* Systems with a Mac Pro RAID Card (Early 2009) installed can now be 
  put to sleep. For more information, see “Mac Pro RAID Card (Early 
  2009): Enabling system sleep.”

<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT4266>

* Improves reliability of fibre channel connections, resolving a 
  potential Xsan volume availability issue.

  Mac OS X Server 10.6.5 includes all of the above changes, along with 
  numerous other fixes and small enhancements to Chat Service, client 
  management, Directory Services, Mail Service, Podcast Service, 
  Server Admin, Software Update Service, System Image Utility, PHP, 
  Web Calendar, Wiki Service, and Xsan. Plus, Apple has released 
  Server Admin Tools 10.6.5, with all the latest versions of Apple’s 
  administration tools.

<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT4249>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1071>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT3931>


**Security Fixes** -- More important, though less obvious to most Mac 
  users, are the numerous security fixes rolled into 10.6.5, over 50 
  all told. Vulnerabilities were eliminated in numerous areas of the 
  operating system, including AFP Server, AppKit, Apple Type Services, 
  CFNetwork, Core Graphics, Core Text, Directory Services, disk image 
  handling, the fsck_hfs application, Image Capture, ImageIO, Image 
  RAW, the kernel, Quick Look, QuickTime, Safari RSS, Time Machine, 
  and Mac OS X’s printing and networking subsystems.

  Along with vulnerabilities closed in those parts of Apple’s code, 
  Mac OS X 10.6.5 also rolls in updates to bundled open source 
  software, including Apache, CUPS, gzip, neon, OpenLDAP, OpenSSL, 
  PHP, python, X11, and xar.

  Flash Player merits special attention, since Apple’s inclusion of 
  version 10.1.102.64 (the current version) addresses 56 different 
  vulnerabilities since the previously shipped version. That’s 
  somewhat deceptive, since Mac OS X 10.6.4 shipped with Flash Player 
  10.0.45.2 even when 10.1.53.64 was current with fixes for numerous 
  security holes. In short, don’t depend on Apple to provide the 
  latest version of Flash Player; it’s a huge target for security 
  exploits and Adobe is constantly releasing new versions to address 
  significant problems.

  Three of the security changes are specific to Mac OS X Server, 
  notably fixes to Password Server and Wiki Server, and a new version 
  of MySQL.

  As always, there’s no telling how many of the vulnerabilities, if 
  any, have actually been exploited by scoundrels, but it’s 
  generally a good idea to stay current with security fixes since many 
  of them can be triggered by opening a maliciously crafted file, and 
  there’s no way to know in advance if a file is malicious.


**Downloading** -- With updates to Mac OS X, it’s usually easiest to 
  let Software Update download just the code that applies to your 
  specific Mac and version of Mac OS X. But Apple does provide a delta 
  installer to update 10.6.4 to 10.6.5 (for both Snow Leopard and Snow 
  Leopard Server) and a much larger combo installer to update any 
  version of 10.6 to 10.6.5 (again, for both Snow Leopard and Snow 
  Leopard Server). Apple pulled the Snow Leopard Server updates 
  briefly, but replaced them shortly after with no indication of what 
  had changed other than a security note indicating a fix to a problem 
  with the Dovecot mail server.

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1325>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1327>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1324>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1326>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT4452>

  As always, make sure you have a current backup before you update, 
  and don’t interrupt the upgrade process once it has started. 


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Whole Disk Encryption, and Why Mac OS X 10.6.5 Broke PGP WDE
------------------------------------------------------------
  by Rich Mogull <rich@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11751>
  2 comments

  On 10 November 2010, Apple released Mac OS X 10.6.5, an important 
  update full of bug fixes and security patches. But for users of 
  Symantec’s PGP WDE (Whole Disk Encryption) product, updating their 
  Macs resulted in disastrous consequences as they were completely 
  unable to boot their systems. Reports started appearing in the PGP 
  WDE support forums, and this was quickly confirmed by TidBITS Senior 
  Editor Joe Kissell—not through intrepid investigative reporting, 
  but due to being locked out of his own laptop after trying to 
  upgrade.

<http://threatpost.com/en_us/blogs/pgp-disk-encryption-bricks-upgraded-macs-111110>

  This isn’t the first time PGP WDE users have struggled with Mac OS 
  X upgrades, and to understand why, it’s worth taking a moment to 
  talk about how disk encryption works.

  And for any of you who are locked out of your PGP WDE-encrypted 
  drive, the good news is that your data is safe, and PGP issued 
  recovery software and instructions on 12 November 2010. Also, for 
  those PGP WDE users that haven’t yet upgraded to Mac OS X 10.6.5, 
  Symantec also posted instructions on that page about how to upgrade 
  safely using the latest version of PGP WDE (10.0.2).

<https://pgp.custhelp.com/app/answers/detail/a_id/2288>


**How Full Disk Encryption Works** -- Disk encryption is the single 
  most important security control for anyone with sensitive data on a 
  laptop. Without it, if your laptop is lost or stolen, anyone with a 
  modicum of knowledge can easily access your data. Circumventing 
  passwords isn’t all that difficult on any operating system, and 
  Mac OS X is no exception.

  One option for Mac users is to use Apple’s built-in FileVault 
  technology, which encrypts your home folder. FileVault is extremely 
  secure, but it can make managing backups difficult. For example, if 
  you use FileVault, Time Machine will back up your home folder files 
  only when you log out of your account (unless you are one of the 
  rare few storing your backups on a Mac running Mac OS X Server). 
  FileVault also protects only your home folder, which may not be 
  sufficient for everyone.

  Finally, as I documented in “The Ghost in My FileVault” (13 
  September 2007), like any encryption, FileVault can be persnickety 
  at times and can lock you out of all or some of your data. (Since 
  encryption modifies the file system at a low level, single-bit 
  errors can sometimes lead to much wider corruption).

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9176>

  Another option is called Whole Disk Encryption (WDE) or Full Disk 
  Encryption (FDE). Unlike FileVault, which stores your data in an 
  encrypted disk image, WDE products encrypt nearly the entire 
  contents of your drive at the disk sector level. WDE products are 
  powerful, since they encrypt everything, and by encrypting at such a 
  low level all your backups work normally.

  This is so effective that when I’m advising large enterprises on 
  how to protect their mobile workers, I always tell them their most 
  important security control is to deploy WDE on all portable systems 
  (and to encrypt smartphones and iPads, but that’s an article for 
  another day).

  Note that Symantec’s PGP WDE is currently one of only two WDE 
  products sold directly to Mac consumers; the other is WinMagic’s 
  SecureDoc, and I know of two additional products for corporate 
  users.

<http://www.winmagic.com/products/securedoc_disk_encryption_for_mac>

  WDE works by integrating with the firmware on your Mac so that when 
  you boot your computer you enter an unencrypted “pre-boot” 
  environment. This is nothing more than a highly secure mini 
  operating system whose sole job is to ask you for your password, and 
  then decrypt and give you access to your normal operating system, 
  which lives in an encrypted disk partition. (Joe Kissell discusses 
  more about how WDE works in “Securing Your Disks with PGP Whole 
  Disk Encryption,” 31 October 2008.)

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9840>

  That’s why, for those of you using PGP WDE, when you turn on your 
  Mac you see the PGP prompt... which looks nothing like Mac OS X. 
  Entering your password there is what enables the pre-boot operating 
  system to recover the protected encryption key that unlocks the rest 
  of your system, and then loads Mac OS X.


**Why OS Updates Break WDE** -- When a minor software update affects 
  only the main operating system, it shouldn’t cause any problems 
  for WDE products. The issue is usually seen with major updates, 
  which may change how the operating system loads or interacts with 
  the firmware that, among other things, enables the hardware of your 
  computer to see storage devices and load the operating system code.

  That’s the reason I no longer use PGP WDE, even though I had 
  initially switched to it after my problems with FileVault. When Mac 
  OS X 10.6 was released, PGP (which wasn’t yet owned by Symantec) 
  warned all users that the product was not compatible with the 
  changes in the operating system and the Mac firmware (EFI, the 
  Extensible Firmware Interface). Since I needed to write about 10.6, 
  I had to upgrade, so I decrypted my system and removed PGP WDE. 
  Around the same time I also bought a spiffy new Mac Pro, thus 
  relegating my laptop to a secondary system. Since I wasn’t worried 
  about backing it up, I switched back to FileVault. (PGP eventually 
  provided Snow Leopard compatibility; see “PGP Whole Disk 
  Encryption and PGP Desktop Professional 10.0,” 14 May 2010.)

<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extensible_Firmware_Interface>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11277>

  In their knowledgebase post, Symantec states that they tested PGP 
  WDE with all development versions of Mac OS X 10.6.5 and there 
  weren’t any problems, but that the shipping version of the update 
  overwrote one of the changes PGP WDE makes to the boot.efi file used 
  to load the operating system. This prevents loading of the pre-boot 
  environment, and thus eliminates password entry.

  Joe Kissell solved the problem by booting his laptop from an 
  unencrypted external drive that also had PGP WDE installed, and then 
  decrypting his main drive with that version of PGP. You might have 
  such a setup if part of your backup plan includes a bootable 
  duplicate, as most experts (including Joe) recommend.

  Symantec’s solution is a bootable disk containing a version of PGP 
  WDE designed specifically to recover from this problem. Instead of 
  decrypting the drive and removing the security, when the password is 
  entered, it accesses the drive and modifies the files needed to 
  enable PGP WDE to work normally again.

  If Symantec’s statement is true, this means Apple modified the 
  release version of the update without giving developers the chance 
  to evaluate the changes and update their products. Apple has done 
  this in the past, which can lead to a variety of frustrating 
  software issues. It’s one of the common criticisms from enterprise 
  users who have to support hundreds or thousands of systems and, 
  often, custom software. If the update was in the development 
  pre-releases, then Symantec is at fault. Either way, this was a 
  completely preventable problem.


**Should You Encrypt Your Disk?** -- I still highly recommend 
  encryption for anyone worried about losing a laptop and thus 
  exposing its information. A whole disk encryption product offers the 
  best security, and easiest backups, but since this software isn’t 
  provided by Apple, there is a greater chance of upgrade issues. You 
  might also encrypt a desktop if you’re worried about theft.

  FileVault is also very secure, and if you are comfortable with 
  altering your backup strategy to account for its limitations, it has 
  the added advantage of being free and completely supported by Apple. 
  It also allows you to encrypt only your own files if you share a 
  system with another user.

  Either way, keeping current backups is absolutely essential, and I 
  recommend having at least one good backup of important data 
  (especially sentimental items like photos) that you can access even 
  if your encryption breaks. A great option is to use a backup service 
  like CrashPlan that backs up your data to a remote drive or 
  location, and encrypts it in an entirely different way (for more 
  about CrashPlan, see “CrashPlan: Backups Revisited,” 26 February 
  2007 and “CrashPlan Adds Direct-to-Disk Backups,” 15 December 
  2008).

<http://www.crashplan.com/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8882>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9942>


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Attack of the Zombie Input Managers
-----------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11714>
  22 comments

  With Halloween fading into last month, you might think you’re safe 
  from zombies for another year. But that may not be true, and if 
  you’re like me, your Mac may be concealing a host of zombies that 
  are eating the brains of your 32-bit programs.

  The first hint that zombies were infesting my Mac came shortly after 
  I installed BBEdit 9.6 (see “BBEdit 9.6 Released; Still Doesn’t 
  Suck,” 26 October 2010). Within a few hours, BBEdit crashed, 
  twice! That exclamation point is intentional; BBEdit almost never 
  crashes for me, and apart from Mailplane and my Web browsers, it’s 
  the most-used program on my Mac. Luckily, I know Rich Siegel of Bare 
  Bones well, so within a few hours of BBEdit sending in its crash 
  reports, he pinged me on iChat. But he wasn’t interested in 
  troubleshooting the problem further because my crash logs had 
  revealed that I was running input manager hacks, which Rich hates 
  with an all-consuming passion spawned from the crashes they cause in 
  his products.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11698>

  (By the way, if you want to see if an input manager might be 
  implicated in a particular crash, open the crash log—usually 
  stored in ~/Library/Logs/CrashReporter—in Console and do a search 
  for InputManagers. If you get any hits, that’s an indication that 
  one or more input managers were loaded into that application when it 
  crashed.)

  I promised to remove the input managers, restart, and let him know 
  if I had any more crashes, and in fact, since then BBEdit has been 
  solid. But that got me thinking. Didn’t input managers go away 
  with Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard? I distinctly remembered that being 
  one of the big issues when Snow Leopard came out, but the details 
  were hazy in my mind.

  To learn more about what was going on, I called Matt Neuburg, 
  knowing that his dislike of input managers was on par with 
  Rich’s—long before Snow Leopard was released, Matt wrote an 
  article for TidBITS called “Are Input Managers the Work of the 
  Devil?” (20 February 2006). Like me, Matt couldn’t initially 
  remember the exact details beyond the basic impression that Snow 
  Leopard had done away with input managers, but within a few minutes, 
  we’d come up with the real story.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8430>

  It turns out that Snow Leopard didn’t so much do away with input 
  managers as tighten the conditions under which they work. The two 
  most relevant changes are that input managers in Snow Leopard work 
  only if they are located in /Library/InputManagers and only in 
  32-bit applications. (The other changes relate largely to file 
  permissions and process privileges.) The practical upshot of these 
  changes is that input managers in Snow Leopard don’t work in 
  64-bit applications, such as the Finder and Safari (which had 
  previously been a popular target for input manager-based hacks), and 
  input managers installed in ~/Library/InputManagers won’t be 
  loaded no matter what.

<http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1338978/inputmanager-plug-ins-in-snow-leopard-os-x-10-6>

  But a large number of my commonly used programs—including BBEdit, 
  Mailplane, Firefox, Google Chrome, iTunes, Panorama, Fetch, Things, 
  TweetDeck, NoteBook, LaunchBar, and iPhoto—are still 32-bit apps, 
  presumably since recoding to make them 64-bit compliant doesn’t 
  provide much of a benefit. And worse, when I looked in 
  /Library/InputManagers, I found four input managers there (another, 
  Smart Crash Reports, was located in the Snow Leopard-disabled 
  ~/Library/InputManagers folder; Unsanity says it isn’t Snow 
  Leopard-compatible anyway). The four that were loading were:

<http://unsanity.com/haxies/smartcrashreports>

* 1PasswordIM (used by 1Password 2.x and replaced in 1Password 3)

<http://agilewebsolutions.com/products/1Password>

* GearsEnabler (used by Google Gears, which isn’t compatible with 
  Snow Leopard)

<http://gears.google.com/support/bin/answer.py?answer=79875>

* SIMBL (used by various Safari hacks and now updated for Snow 
  Leopard, but my version was from 2007)

<http://www.culater.net/software/SIMBL/SIMBL.php>

* Menu Extra Enabler (used for putting icons in the system-wide menu 
  bar; Unsanity says it’s incompatible with Snow Leopard)

<http://unsanity.com/products/mee>

  In short, these four input managers were still being inserted into 
  the executing code of every 32-bit application on my Mac. Regardless 
  of the fact that these input managers had once performed useful 
  tasks, all four were entirely obsolete and doing nothing useful for 
  me any more. They were zombies, lurching around my Mac’s memory 
  and eating the brains of my applications. And I’m willing to bet 
  that many of you out there have zombie input managers in your Macs 
  as well.

  You might wonder why Apple didn’t make the Snow Leopard installer 
  disable input managers by default (as happened with incompatible 
  kernel extensions, for instance), and so did I. All I can think is 
  that Apple felt that the tightened restrictions on how input 
  managers load would significantly reduce the problems they were 
  causing, with no need for installer intervention. Plus, since some 
  input managers could continue to operate in Snow Leopard with 32-bit 
  applications, Apple may have felt that it wasn’t appropriate to 
  disable functioning software.

  Luckily, removing these zombie input managers is easy. Just open 
  /Library/InputManagers (that’s the InputManagers folder in the 
  top-level Library folder) and drag everything in there to the Trash, 
  or if you’re not certain you wish to delete them right away, to 
  the Desktop. When prompted, enter your admin password. Then restart 
  your Mac—as long as the input managers aren’t in that folder, 
  they won’t load. (You can also delete any input managers in the 
  ~/Library/InputManagers folder—the one in your home folder’s 
  Library folder—but that’s just for cleanliness, since they 
  aren’t loading in Snow Leopard anyway.)

  Although it’s unlikely that modern software would install an input 
  manager under Snow Leopard, it’s not difficult to prevent them 
  from being installed. If you want to go this route, check out Bill 
  Bumgarner’s instructions.

<http://www.friday.com/bbum/2006/01/20/detecting-and-disabling-smart-crash-reporter/>

  I can’t promise that removing old, unused input managers will make 
  your Mac more stable, but it certainly can’t hurt. And I’m 
  curious—how prevalent are these zombies in the Mac world? If you 
  have any obsolete input managers that are still loading other than 
  the ones I’ve found, let us know in the comments.


  ----
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Apple Battery Charger and the Secret of NiMH
--------------------------------------------
  by Michael E. Cohen <lymond@mac.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11666>
  18 comments

  Perfect timing: I had just seen the first low power warning from my 
  Magic Mouse overlay my iMac’s screen when my phone rang—it was 
  Dennis, my older brother, asking me what I wanted for my birthday. 
  “How about an Apple Battery Charger?” I immediately asked, 
  thinking about that battery warning and remembering that the dish 
  where I toss depleted batteries before taking them to a recycle drop 
  (as if!) was getting full. Just two days later, right before the 
  alkalines in my mouse flatlined, I found a small package at my front 
  door. The charger that came out of the small package was even 
  smaller.

<http://www.apple.com/battery-charger/>

  The Apple Battery Charger, unpacked and removed from its thin 
  cardboard box, is white and minimalistic, as so many Apple products 
  are. And it’s a little pricey ($29), as so many Apple products 
  are. But it’s also so nicely designed that it _feels_ worth it. 

<http://images.apple.com/battery-charger/images/hero_20100727.png>

  But is it worth it? That depends on your expectations.

  It’s certainly easy to use: just stick in one or two of the six 
  supplied AA NiMH batteries and plug the charger in. A pinhole-size 
  light at the plug end of the charger glows amber when it’s 
  charging, green when it’s done charging, and turns off after six 
  hours. 

  And it’s convenient: When it’s not charging batteries, the 
  charger draws only a measly 30 mW, which means you won’t drive up 
  your electric bill even if you leave it plugged in all the time. A 
  set of batteries recharges fully after five hours.

  But what I really wanted to know (and what I’m sure you want to 
  know) is, how long do the batteries last?

  First, let’s look at what happened when I stuck my first set of 
  newly charged Apple NiMHs into my Magic Mouse: my iMac reported that 
  my mouse batteries were at 91 percent of capacity. To double-check, 
  I swapped in a different set of fully charged NiMHs, and the iMac 
  registered an even lower 86-percent power level. Not a promising 
  sign.

  Now, remember my dish of dead batteries? Slothful as I am, I 
  haven’t taken any batteries to be recycled since I got my Magic 
  Mouse, so I have a baseline for comparison. I got the mouse in 
  mid-November 2009, and the dish held eight dead soldiers before I 
  got the Apple charger at the beginning of this month. Add in the 
  dying batteries I had just removed, and there are now ten dead 
  batteries in the dish, which means that my Magic Mouse had been 
  getting better than two months of service from each set of the 
  alkalines I’ve been using. 

  By comparison, after only two days of (admittedly heavy) mousing 
  around, the Apple NiMHs that started at 86 percent had dropped down 
  to 62 percent of a full charge. Seeing this, I didn’t think I was 
  going to get two months out of a set of charged NiMHs. More like a 
  week or two per set if the power depletion rate I’d seen so far 
  remained constant.

  But it turns out that the depletion rate isn’t constant. The NiMHs 
  don’t run down the same way that disposable batteries run down: 
  once my current set of Apple batteries hit about 60-percent 
  capacity, the rate of decline slowed drastically. Although it took 
  only two days for my batteries to go from 86 percent to 62 percent, 
  it took four more days to go from 62 percent to 56 percent, and a 
  full week after that to go from 56 percent to 54 percent. 

  The reason for the initial weak showing of the NiMHs, of course, is 
  quite simple. The typical fully charged alkaline AA battery delivers 
  1.5 volts and has a 2500 mAh capacity. By comparison, the low 
  self-discharge (LSD) NiMHs that Apple supplies with the charger 
  deliver 1.2 volts when fully charged and each have a 1900 mAh 
  capacity. With that difference, I am surprised to see that a fully 
  charged set even registers 86 percent of capacity on my iMac. (Note 
  that the Apple charger can also work with other LSD NiMH AA 
  batteries, some brands of which may have different capacities than 
  the batteries supplied by Apple.)

  The depletion curve of the NiMHs is also as precipitous at the end 
  of a duty cycle as it is at the beginning: after about three weeks 
  of the slow decline following the initial quick fall-off, the 
  batteries began a race to the bottom. Only a few hours after I saw 
  the 20-percent capacity warning appear on my iMac, the batteries 
  were no longer able to keep my mouse in contact with my iMac. All 
  told, the NiMH batteries in my Magic Mouse had lasted about three 
  and a half weeks on a charge.

  Even though my Apple batteries don’t last as long per charge as 
  disposable batteries, I am far from disappointed. The LSD NiMHs that 
  Apple supplies are designed to hold a charge when not in use, and 
  lose only 20 percent of their charge after a year in storage. That 
  means I can charge up a set of my Apple batteries in five hours, 
  stick them in a drawer, and, whenever my Magic Mouse begins warning 
  me, I can just swap the charged batteries in and recharge the 
  depleted ones in an afternoon; after that, they can go in the drawer 
  until needed. And though they turn out to run down significantly 
  more quickly than disposable batteries, I’d still rather do a more 
  frequent swap-and-charge exercise than buy a six-pack of disposable 
  batteries every few months, and then have to look for a place to 
  recycle the dead batteries (especially given my sorry record in this 
  regard), or, worse, surreptitiously toss them in the trash in the 
  dead of night. 

  But will you be disappointed? Beats me. If you need the high initial 
  charge and the other performance characteristics of disposable 
  batteries, you might be. Otherwise, Apple’s Battery Charger with 
  its supplied batteries seems like a reasonable investment. 


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Palm Your iPad with a Hand-e-holder
-----------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11673>
  1 comment

  Much as I’m impressed by Apple’s industrial design with the 
  iPad, I sometimes wish they had used the polycarbonate plastic from 
  the early iPhones for the iPad’s back. The aluminum is a little 
  slick, and there are times when I’m holding it that I’m a little 
  worried that it’s going to slip from my grip. Plus, although this 
  hasn’t affected me personally, I could see someone’s hand 
  getting tired of gripping an iPad for an extended period of time.

  That concern was the impetus behind the invention of the 
  Hand-e-holder, a clever device that in essence enables you to palm 
  an iPad much as Michael Jordan would palm a basketball, but with no 
  effort and virtually no chance of dropping it. However, it was 
  running, not basketball, that led to the invention: the 
  Hand-e-holder was developed by Burns Computer Services (BCS), a 
  pioneer in the computerized timing of races. I was introduced to BCS 
  founder Mike Burns by some mutual friends who had just written an 
  iPad app called iResults for BCS and who knew that I was interested 
  in both iPads and running.

<http://www.handeholder.com/>
<http://www.burnscomputer.com/News/Press_Releases/iResults.htm>

  BCS’s goal with iResults was to enable the organizers of large 
  running events (a big race can easily have tens of thousands of 
  participants) to equip volunteers with iPads (linked wirelessly to a 
  results server) to show race participants the finishing times, 
  places, and splits immediately following the event. For waiting 
  friends and family, iResults could also be used to display 
  runners’ progress as they pass various check points. But, as Mike 
  Burns told me, one problem quickly became obvious—sooner or later 
  a volunteer would inevitably drop an iPad by accident. At $499 per 
  iPad, that’s an expensive slip. 

  Hence, the Hand-e-holder, which, while it can be helpful for any 
  iPad user, is particularly useful for medical professionals, 
  delivery people, mechanics, cooks, or anyone who needs to hold and 
  display the iPad securely. Nonetheless, there’s nothing 
  iPad-specific about the Hand-e-holder at all: it works just as well 
  with a Kindle DX, a clipboard, or one of those whiteboards that 
  basketball coaches use to diagram plays.


**Talk to the Hand** -- There are two parts to the Hand-e-holder: an 
  adhesive 3M Dual Lock ring that almost perfectly surrounds the Apple 
  logo on the back of the iPad, and the Hand-e-holder itself, a 
  combination of two rigid plastic plates attached to a neoprene 
  strap. To use it, attach the Dual Lock ring to the back of the iPad, 
  and then mate it with the Dual Lock-covered plastic plate on the 
  Hand-e-holder. The Hand-e-holder’s second plastic plate is 
  permanently attached to the first, but rotates freely, and the 
  neoprene strap goes through a loop so you can resize it to fit 
  snugly around the back of your hand. (Should you want to remove the 
  adhesive ring at some point in the future, Mike Burns has assured me 
  it peels off without hurting the iPad.)

<http://solutions.3m.com/wps/portal/3M/en_US/3M-Industrial/Adhesives/Promotions-New-Products/Reclosable-Fasteners/>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-10/Hand-e-holder-Dual-Lock-ring.jpg>

  When I demoed the Hand-e-holder at a recent meeting of the Oneonta 
  Mac user group, there was a collective gasp from the attendees when 
  I stuck my hand into my laptop bag, slipped it into the 
  Hand-e-holder, and then pulled the iPad out and held it up without 
  gripping it by the edge. Another gasp came when I turned my hand 
  over as though I was palming a basketball, since the iPad was poised 
  to fall to an untimely death if the Hand-e-holder hadn’t kept it 
  firmly attached to my hand.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-10/Hand-e-holder-suspended.jpg>

  So is there any concern that the Hand-e-holder might lose its Dual 
  Lock grip on the iPad? None that I’ve seen yet, and honestly, 
  I’m not at all worried. 3M’s Dual Lock fasteners use hundreds of 
  interlocking mushroom-shaped protrusions that snap 
  together—we’re talking way beyond Velcro here. Apparently, 
  breaking the Dual Lock connection by pulling straight up and down 
  would require 170 pounds of pressure, which would likely do 
  something bad to the iPad well before the Dual Lock let go. For a 
  video demonstration of just how much confidence Mike Burns and crew 
  have in the Hand-e-holder and the Dual Lock fastening system, watch 
  the video of them playing ping pong using Hand-e-holder-equipped 
  iPads as paddles.

<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XnuI3TB_aQs>

  But Dual Lock is indeed a removable fastener; the trick is that its 
  shear strength (pressure applied parallel to the back of the iPad) 
  is only 8 pounds. This means you can easily detach the Hand-e-holder 
  from the Dual Lock ring on the back of the iPad if you need to 
  insert it into a case or the like. Just catch the edge of the bottom 
  disc with your finger tips, and use a peeling motion to detach it.

  In fact, the hardest part of getting started with the Hand-e-holder 
  is attaching the two Dual Lock pieces together; you have to press 
  down just a bit harder than feels right. You can align one edge and 
  push down, then press down on the opposite edge to finish the job. 
  There’s a nice pop as the Dual Lock mushrooms mesh with one 
  another. 

<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3-6589qETiA&NR=1>


**Gotta Hand It to You** -- I’ve found that I leave the 
  Hand-e-holder attached to my iPad all the time, since it’s almost 
  always easier to slip my hand into the neoprene strap than to grip 
  the edge of the iPad (which I can still do, if I’m just picking it 
  up for a few seconds). Attached as it is to the center of the back 
  of the iPad, it doesn’t get in the way of docking the iPad in the 
  iPad Keyboard Dock. If you have a form-fitting case like the Apple 
  iPad Case, you can cut out a circle so that the Hand-e-holder’s 
  Dual Lock ring shows through; watch the video for instructions.

<http://www.apple.com/ipad/accessories/>
<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8u3d-GYMqe4>

  But the real reason I like leaving the Hand-e-holder attached at all 
  times is that the company also makes a wide variety of stands that 
  use an acrylic Adapter Plate with notches on either side spaced 
  perfectly to hold the Hand-e-holder’s second plastic plate. Slide 
  the Hand-e-holder into the notches in the Adapter Plate, and the 
  iPad is held firmly in the stand; a pair of holes at the top can 
  accept a retention pin that prevents the iPad from slipping out the 
  top of the Adapter Plate, should the stand be jostled or turned 
  over.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-10/Hand-e-holder-Adapter-Plate.jpg>

  You can buy the Adapter Plate by itself. It has a pair of screw 
  holes so you can attach it to a wall, which might be an especially 
  good way to display the iPad in picture frame mode or to mount it at 
  eye-level in a kitchen. 

  However, the Adapter Plate is more commonly used with stands. 
  Hand-e-holder currently offers three basic stands in different 
  designs: a tear-drop base, a rectangular base with a groove to hold 
  an Apple Wireless Keyboard, and a single-piece acrylic stand. More 
  interesting, though, are the specialty mounts: a tripod with 
  non-skid feet, 1.5- and 2.5-inch C-clamps, and a spring clamp. And, 
  for you pilots accustomed to keeping maps and flight plans on a 
  kneeboard that straps around the thigh, a Leg Strap Kit makes it 
  easy to attach an aviation app-equipped iPad to your thigh instead. 
  (The screenshot shows the tripod and the spring clamp stands, and my 
  iPad is floating next to my desk courtesy of the C-clamp stand.)

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-10/Hand-e-holder-stands.jpg>

  Adjustment knobs on all the various stands and mounts make it 
  possible to position the iPad in a wide variety of angles and 
  orientations, and the Hand-e-holder folks are always interested in 
  hearing about specific needs. For example, they made a C-clamp mount 
  with a long, straight arm for a professor who wanted to use an iPad 
  to display research results at a conference. For the 
  security-minded, they’ve made versions that replace the Dual Lock 
  fasteners with unremovable standard adhesives and coupled them with 
  screw-attached mounts and a lock that fits into the hole at the top 
  of the adapter plate.

  The Hand-e-holder itself costs $39.99, the Adapter Plate by itself 
  is $19.99, and the various stands and mounts range from $39.99 to 
  $49.99. You can also buy extra Dual Lock rings for $6, so you can 
  use your Hand-e-holder with multiple iPads or other devices.

  The prices seem a touch high, but Mike Burns said that he refuses to 
  outsource manufacturing to China when so many people in his home 
  state of Michigan need jobs. Otherwise, I haven’t found much about 
  the Hand-e-holder to criticize. Some of the stands, while highly 
  functional, aren’t as elegantly designed as other iPad stands 
  I’ve seen. Furthermore, the retention pin, which is separate from 
  the Adapter Plate used by each of the stands and mounts, is the sort 
  of thing that can be lost quickly unless you attach its keyring to 
  the mount with some string. And lastly, I can see the Hand-e-holder 
  being incompatible with certain other cases.

  But in the end, the Hand-e-holder is a neat solution to a particular 
  problem that many iPad users may have, and it’s well worth 
  checking out if you want a better way to hold and display your iPad 
  or similarly shaped object. 


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TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 15 November 2010
----------------------------------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11753>

**iTunes 10.1** -- Just as the first appearance of autumn leaves 
  signals a change of seasons, the appearance of iTunes 10.1 signals 
  the imminent arrival of iOS 4.2. In fact, the release notes cite the 
  capability of this release to sync the iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad 
  with iOS 4.2. Also added to iTunes 10.1 is AirPlay, which provides 
  the capability to stream video from iTunes to the new Apple TV. 
  Furthermore, this version enables users to disable Ping in the new 
  iTunes Sidebar, and brings with it a changed license agreement that 
  specifies the kinds of information Apple receives from users when 
  Ping is used. And, of course, iTunes 10.1 contains the customary 
  “important stability and performance improvements” and security 
  fixes. The update is available from Software Update and directly 
  from Apple. (Free, 90.63 MB)

<http://www.apple.com/itunes/>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1103>

  Read/post comments about iTunes 10.1.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11748#comments>


**BBEdit 9.6.1** -- Following swiftly upon the release of BBEdit 9.6 
  (see “BBEdit 9.6 Released; Still Doesn’t Suck,” 26 October 
  2010), Bare Bones Software has issued a minor update to their 
  flagship text editor. The release notes for BBEdit 9.6.1 list one 
  addition and two changes, along with a number of bug fixes. The 
  addition is an expert preference, set via the command line, to show 
  SCM administrative files in disk browsers and projects when Show 
  Invisibles is enabled. The two changes are a new location for 
  FTP/SFTP cache files and an expert preference to display multi-file 
  search results in a flat list rather than hierarchically by file. 
  Among the several dozen bug fixes is one that fixes the loss of the 
  final character of a URL that appears at the end of a document when 
  BBEdit tries to resolve it (a bug that Adam Engst first reported); 
  another fix eliminates crashes caused when BBEdit erroneously 
  attempts to load out-of-date language modules instead of ignoring 
  them. ($129 new, free update, 15.8 MB)

<http://www.barebones.com/products/bbedit/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11698>
<http://www.barebones.com/support/bbedit/current_notes.html>

  Read/post comments about BBEdit 9.6.1.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11747#comments>


**Security Update 2010-007 (Leopard and Leopard Server)** -- The 
  just-released Mac OS X 10.6.5 includes numerous security fixes that 
  are also relevant to Mac OS X 10.5.8 Leopard and Leopard Server. For 
  you Leopard users out there, Apple has now released Security Update 
  2010-007 Leopard Client and Security Update 2010-007 Leopard Server 
  to address 32 vulnerabilities spread throughout the operating 
  system. You can read the details on Apple’s Web site.

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1329>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1330>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT4435>

  Flash Player merits special attention, since Apple’s inclusion of 
  version 10.1.102.64 addresses 56 different vulnerabilities since the 
  previously shipped version. That’s somewhat deceptive, since Mac 
  OS X 10.6.4 shipped with Flash Player 10.0.45.2 even when 10.1.53.64 
  was current with fixes for numerous security holes. In short, 
  don’t depend on Apple to provide the latest version of Flash 
  Player; it’s a huge target for security exploits and Adobe is 
  constantly releasing new versions to address significant problems.

  Four of the security changes are specific to Mac OS X Server 10.5.8, 
  notably fixes to Password Server and Wiki Server, and new versions 
  of MySQL and PHP.

  Security Update 2010-007 is most easily downloaded via Software 
  Update, but standalone installers are also available via the links 
  above. (Free, 240.74 MB for Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard, 448.10 MB for 
  Leopard Server)

  Read/post comments about Security Update 2010-007 (Leopard and 
  Leopard Server).

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11742#comments>


**1Password 3.5.0** -- Good news for Google Chrome users! 1Password, 
  the Web password manager from Agile Web Solutions, has been updated 
  to version 3.5.0, and the big news in this version is an “awesome 
  new extension” for the Google Chrome Web browser, available only 
  to Mac users, that achieves feature parity with 1Password’s Safari 
  and Firefox extensions. Also new is a Dropbox sync status display in 
  the sidebar. Other changes include reduced disk space for stored 
  attachment icon files and usability enhancements for item editing. 
  In all, the release notes list 34 changes. 1Password requires Mac OS 
  X 10.5.8 or higher. ($39.95 new, free update, 19.1 MB)  

<http://agilewebsolutions.com/products/1Password/Mac>
<http://agilewebsolutions.com/>
<http://agilewebsolutions.com/products/1Password/versions#v30795>

  Read/post comments about 1Password 3.5.0.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11737#comments>


**Coda 1.7** -- Coda, the code editor and transfer application from 
  Panic, Inc., has received an update to version 1.7. New in this 
  version is code completion for the latest HTML5 tags, improved 
  syntax checking for Perl and CSS, and added keyboard shortcuts. The 
  release notes itemize the changes in the latest version. ($99 new, 
  free update, 20 MB)

<http://www.panic.com/coda/>
<https://www.panic.com/coda/releasenotes.html>

  Read/post comments about Coda 1.7.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11740#comments>


**HP Printer Drivers v.2.5.2** -- Apple has released revised printer 
  drivers for Hewlett-Packard printers. The driver package provides 
  support for hundreds of HP printer models and requires Mac OS X 
  10.6.1 or later. The update is available via Software Update as well 
  as directly from Apple. A complete list of supported printers is 
  available in an updated knowledgebase article. (Free, 448.7 MB)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL907>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT3669#HP>

  Read/post comments about HP Printer Drivers v.2.5.2.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11739#comments>


**Carbon Copy Cloner 3.3.6** -- The popular Carbon Copy Cloner backup 
  utility from Bombich Software has been updated to version 3.3.6. In 
  the latest version, handling of damaged media has been improved so 
  that read errors produce error dialogs more quickly, so the user can 
  decide how to proceed. Other usability enhancements include a task 
  scheduling setting option so that users can choose to be prompted to 
  initiate the scheduled backup task instead of the task automatically 
  starting, and a confirmation prompt that appears when the user tries 
  to stop the verification stage of a block-copy operation. Version 
  3.3.6 fixes a bug introduced in 3.3.5. The release notes list all 
  the changes, additions, and fixes. (Free, 4.3 MB)

<http://www.bombich.com/ccc_features.html>
<http://www.bombich.com/software/updates/ccc-3.3.6.html>

  Read/post comments about Carbon Copy Cloner 3.3.6.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11738#comments>


  ----
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ExtraBITS for 15 November 2010
------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11752>

  Just two worthwhile links for you this week—news that Apple and 
  Oracle will be collaborating to ensure that Java remains available 
  for Mac OS X and an Apple-acknowledged bug in iOS 4.1 that messes up 
  repeating alarms.


**Oracle and Apple Announce OpenJDK Project for Mac OS X** -- Those 
  who feared that the days of Java on Mac OS X were over following 
  Apple’s announcement that it was “deprecating” Java on Mac OS 
  X will be heartened by the news that Oracle and Apple are creating 
  the OpenJDK Project. Apple’s press release states that “Java SE 
  6 will continue to be available from Apple for Mac OS X Snow Leopard 
  and the upcoming release of Mac OS X Lion. Java SE 7 and future 
  versions of Java for Mac OS X will be available from Oracle.”

<http://www.apple.com/pr/library/2010/11/12openjdk.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11746#comments>


**Reset iOS Clock App Alarms after Daylight Saving Time Change** -- 
  There’s a bug in iOS 4.1 that causes repeating alarms in the Clock 
  app to trigger an hour later than they should shortly before and 
  after the daylight saving time change. Apple says the bug is fixed 
  in the forthcoming iOS 4.2, but in the meantime, you can fix your 
  alarms by deselecting all days in the repeat interval, saving, and 
  then resetting the alarms for the days you need them.

<http://support.apple.com/kb/TS3542>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11734#comments>


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11752#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/11752>


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