TidBITS#1054/29-Nov-2010
========================
  Issue link: <http://db.tidbits.com/issue/1054>

  After last week’s Thanksgiving hiatus, we have a bunch of news 
  articles for you today, including news of the Google Voice app 
  appearing, Apple making Find My iPhone free for some people, AT&T 
  staff being confused about unlimited data plans, The Beatles finally 
  coming to iTunes, a Wi-Fi router that uses an iPhone to create a 
  mobile hotspot, and a USB 3.0-capable Drobo storage device. We’re 
  also particularly pleased to publish Joe Kissell’s latest ebook 
  masterpiece, “Take Control of Your Paperless Office,” and 
  welcome a new sponsor, BeLight Software. For in-depth articles, 
  check out Michael Cohen’s look at the RootMetrics approach to 
  crowdsourcing cellular coverage information, and our staff coverage 
  of what’s new for the iPad in the just-released iOS 4.2.1. Notable 
  software releases over the last two weeks include BusyCal 1.5, 
  GraphicConverter 7.0.2, EagleFiler 1.5, Adobe Reader/Acrobat Pro 
  9.4.1, Safari 5.0.3 and Safari 4.1.3, Boot Camp Software Update 3.2 
  for Windows, MacBook/MacBook Pro EFI Firmware Update 2.0, 
  QuarkXPress 8.5, Typinator 4.2, PDFpen/PDFpen Pro 5.0.3, DEVONthink 
  and DEVONnote 2.0.6, and Yojimbo 3.0.1.

Articles
    “Take Control of Your Paperless Office” Reduces Pulp Friction
    Find My iPhone Now Free for Owners of Newest iOS Devices
    Google Voice App Appears at Long Last
    AT&T Staff Confused on Grandfathered Unlimited Data
    The Beatles Come to iTunes (Finally!)
    Nexaira Wi-Fi Router Shares iPhone’s Tethered Connection
    Data Robotics Ships Drobo S with USB 3.0
    BeLight Software Sponsoring TidBITS
    iPhone App Roots Out Mobile Coverage Details
    What’s New for the iPad in iOS 4.2.1
    TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 29 November 2010
    ExtraBITS for 29 November 2010


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“Take Control of Your Paperless Office” Reduces Pulp Friction
-----------------------------------------------------------------
  by Michael E. Cohen <lymond@mac.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11759>
  4 comments

  As I tear my eyes away from the screen and look around me, I can see 
  three separate piles of unsorted papers, a small table supporting a 
  large tower of unfiled folders, a four-drawer file cabinet almost 
  bursting at the seams, and a stack of magazines waiting to be read 
  and their most interesting articles clipped and added to my growing 
  paper piles. Joe Kissell’s latest ebook, the $10 “Take Control 
  of Your Paperless Office,” couldn’t have arrived at a better 
  time.

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/paperless-office?pt=TB1054>

  The 118-page ebook is a friendly and practical guide to reducing the 
  flow of paper into and out of the typical office, whether at a 
  workplace or in the home. Joe explains how to pick scanners and OCR 
  (optical character recognition) software for digitizing the 
  important papers that come to you so that you can discard them as 
  soon as possible without losing track of their contents. He 
  discusses how to choose the right storage strategy for the digitized 
  files that you create in their place. He also gives useful advice 
  for ways to categorize, locate, and display the contents of your 
  growing digital document collections so that you spend less time 
  searching and sorting and more time getting on with your 
  reduced-paper life. 

  (But as Joe says in the book’s introduction, he’s not going to 
  tell you to get rid of all your paper, or that resorting to paper 
  for any reason is somehow a moral failure. Paper has many noble 
  uses, and you may choose to adopt all of Joe’s recommendations, or 
  only a few—everyone is different, so by all means, do only what 
  works for you.)

  In addition to all of the above, Joe clues you in to these 
  paper-reducing tasks and skills:

* How to scan or photograph documents you find while out and 
  about—business cards, receipts, menus, flyers, and labels—so 
  that you keep only digitized versions. Joe discusses a variety of 
  mobile scanner options, with particular emphasis on using a 
  camera-equipped iOS device, and he lists similar options for 
  employing Android and BlackBerry smartphones.

* How to create a digitized image of your signature so that you can 
  create, sign, and share documents digitally, rather than printing 
  them for the sole purpose of signing them with a pen. 

* How to set up your computer to send and receive faxes so that you 
  can avoid using a physical fax machine with paper input and output. 
  Joe describes both using a fax modem and taking advantage of an 
  online fax service.

* How to use common techniques for reducing paper—paperless billing, 
  online bank statements, and more—and some unusual practices, such 
  as using paperless postal mail services and check depositing 
  services. Joe also gives effective tips for reducing the amount of 
  catalogs, junk mail, and paper that you receive.

  This book isn’t just theory—having lived in tiny apartments in 
  San Francisco and now Paris, Joe has been living a nearly paperless 
  life in reality for years.

  If there’s any doubt that “Take Control of Your Paperless 
  Office” is the right ebook for its time, while I was drafting this 
  article, I received an email message from my credit union offering 
  me a chance to win an iPad if I “sign up for free, convenient, and 
  secure eStatements,” and outlining practical and environmental 
  benefits of moving from paper to digital account statements. 
  Regardless of the actual environmental benefits of digital account 
  statements—which Joe considers ancillary at best—you can file 
  _that_ tidbit (digitally, of course) under “Synchronicity.”

  One last note. Although we usually make our ebooks available for 
  print-on-demand as well, it would be just too ironic to have a Buy 
  Print Book button under the “Take Control of Your Paperless 
  Office” title, so we’re intentionally limiting this title to 
  PDF, with EPUB and Mobipocket now available to all purchasers as 
  well (click the Check for Updates button on the cover or log in to 
  your Take Control account to download the alternative formats). 


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Find My iPhone Now Free for Owners of Newest iOS Devices
--------------------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>, Joe Kissell <joe@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11773>

  The Find My iPhone service, which also works with the iPod touch and 
  iPad, is now free to owners of an iPhone 4, iPad, or 
  fourth-generation iPod touch, and also works for any other device 
  they own that’s running iOS 4.2. The service uses GPS, Wi-Fi, and 
  cell tower positioning to report the last-available location of a 
  device to MobileMe. This information is limited to an account 
  registered with the same account as the iOS device.

  Previously, Apple required a paid MobileMe account to use Find My 
  iPhone. Now, if you’re not a MobileMe subscriber, you use a free 
  Apple ID account, which can be an existing one you use with the 
  Apple Store or other Apple services, or one you create afresh. Apple 
  has step-by-step instructions on how to set up Find My iPhone with 
  an Apple ID.

<http://www.apple.com/iphone/find-my-iphone-setup/>

  We’ve written extensively about Find My iPhone, most recently in 
  “Apple Adds Find My iPhone App and Updates Web App,” 18 June 
  2010. That revision of the Web app and release of an iOS app made 
  the service enormously easier to use, especially from mobile 
  devices. With GPS and a 3G cellular connection in an iPhone or 3G 
  iPad, you can get a fairly exact fix quite rapidly so long as a 
  thief hasn’t wiped the device or powered it down.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11368>

  If you own any of the supported devices, after installing iOS 4.2 on 
  any one of them, you may use Find My iPhone with all iOS hardware 
  you own that has also been upgraded to iOS 4.2. People without a new 
  iOS device will still need to pay for MobileMe to use the service. 


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Google Voice App Appears at Long Last
-------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11757>

  Google Voice is now a real boy. The 15-month-plus period in which 
  Apple maintained that the app was in a Schrödinger cat 
  box—neither accepted nor rejected—has finally resulted in the 
  free app becoming available. Apple and AT&T both changed policies 
  about calling apps, whether they use voice-over-IP or rely on 
  built-in cell calling systems. (See “Apple Responds to FCC’s App 
  Store Questions,” 21 August 2009.)

<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/google-voice/id318698524?mt=8>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-11/google_voice_main_screen.jpg>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10497>

  For the last year, Google Voice has been available through an 
  HTML5-compliant Web app, but one that couldn’t match the precise 
  set of capabilities and utility of a standalone app, including 
  dealing with background incoming calls, push notifications, and the 
  like.

<http://www.google.com/mobile/voice/>

  Since Apple held up allowing (or rejecting) Google Voice, Skype, 
  Line2, and Vonage, among others, have been approved. All three 
  programs use VoIP to place calls over 3G and Wi-Fi. (Vonage switches 
  to your regular calling service for domestic U.S. calls when 
  you’re not connected to a Wi-Fi network.) 

<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/skype/id304878510?mt=8>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/line2-2-numbers-1-iphone/id319185557?mt=8>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/vonage-mobile-for-iphone/id331814922?mt=8>

  Google Voice, however, doesn’t use VoIP at all. Instead, it relies 
  on your cell voice plan, using call-around numbers to place your 
  U.S. and international calls, and to handle incoming calls. Google 
  Voice is more of a management hub for phone calls, voicemail, and 
  messaging than a calling service, even though it offers decent 
  outside-the-U.S. per-minute rates. For more details on Google 
  Voice’s offerings, see “Google Voice Opens to All Americans,” 
  22 June 2010.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11374>

  Google embedded a nifty joke—or, at least, I think it’s a 
  joke—in the screenshots that currently appear in the iTunes Store 
  listing. Note that the topmost message shown in the Inbox screenshot 
  is from 6 July 2009, about the time the app was initially submitted 
  to Apple and placed in purgatory.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-11/google_voice_joke_in_itunes.jpg>


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AT&T Staff Confused on Grandfathered Unlimited Data
---------------------------------------------------
  by Mark H. Anbinder <mha@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11779>
  2 comments

  Grandfathers are supposed to be sweet and supportive, but AT&T is 
  playing the crotchety kind. Thanks to Rob Pegoraro at the Washington 
  Post, we see the iPhone’s U.S. cellular provider has stopped 
  letting some longstanding customers keep their unlimited data plans 
  on some devices, such as laptop USB “modems,” not just when 
  moving to a new contract, but even on existing contracts. But what 
  about iPhone data plans?

<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/11/13/AR2010111305881.html>

  AT&T had said in June that existing iPhone customers could keep the 
  unlimited data plan until they canceled or changed their service 
  plan, even when upgrading to a new iPhone. However, some AT&T 
  customer service reps are saying that the company has changed its 
  mind and is forcing customers to choose the $15 DataPlus plan (200 
  MB/month) or $25 DataPro plan (2 GB/month) to replace their existing 
  $30 unlimited plan, whether or not they want to switch. 

  An AT&T media contact assures us, “There has been no change to the 
  policy that existing AT&T smartphone customers with unlimited plans 
  can keep those plans if they choose when upgrading to another 
  smartphone.” 

  If you’re told otherwise, ask for another rep, or a supervisor. 


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The Beatles Come to iTunes (Finally!)
-------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11756>
  5 comments

  Over seven years after the inception of the iTunes Store, Apple has 
  at long last negotiated a deal to bring The Beatles to the online 
  music store. The iTunes Store now contains 17 of The Beatles’ 
  albums, including the 13 original studio albums and the $149 Box Set 
  (presumably without the box). You can also watch a number of The 
  Beatles videos, related Apple TV ads, and 41-minute video of “The 
  Beatles: Live at the Washington Coliseum, 1964.”

<http://www.apple.com/the-beatles/>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/artist/the-beatles/id136975>
<http://www.apple.com/the-beatles/concert/>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-11/Beatles-on-iTunes.png>

  It’s difficult to get too worked up about the inclusion of The 
  Beatles in the iTunes Store. Don’t get me wrong, I’m a huge 
  Beatles fan, but it strikes me that most people who want to listen 
  to The Beatles have already purchased CDs of their favorite albums 
  long ago—it’s not as though there’s a huge pent-up demand for 
  Beatles music that couldn’t be met without them appearing in the 
  iTunes Store. I’m sure the music will sell well to young people 
  only peripherally familiar with The Beatles, and to older folks 
  replacing worn-out LPs and cassettes, especially with Apple’s 
  promotion, but it’s not really going to change the world.

  In the early days of the iTunes Store, the lack of The Beatles was 
  more obvious and more concerning for the future of online music 
  sales, since it was a glaring omission from an up-and-coming store. 
  It was a bit like walking into a grocery store only to be told that 
  it didn’t yet carry milk. But even without The Beatles, Apple 
  turned the iTunes Store into a huge success over the last seven 
  years, so now it’s merely nice to get those virtual shelves more 
  fully stocked with the music we expect to see.

  And thankfully, the rampant speculation can now come to an end.

  [Update: Ah, the power of promotion. Despite my naysaying when the 
  announcement was first made two weeks ago, Billboard quotes industry 
  sources as saying that iTunes sold more than 450,000 Beatles albums 
  worldwide in the first week, 119,000 of which were in the United 
  States. In comparison, U.S. sales of Beatles albums have averaged 
  23,000 per week in the past year. There is some funny accounting 
  going on due to the 13-album box set being accounted for as multiple 
  albums in the worldwide numbers, but as a single album in the U.S. 
  sales. Single track sales reportedly exceeded 2 million worldwide 
  and 1.4 million in the United States. While you’re on the 
  Billboard site, be sure to read “Beatles On iTunes: The Story 
  Behind the Deal,” which gives some sense of the wrangling 
  necessary to put the deal together, including Apple paying a 
  substantial advance to get exclusive online rights for a limited 
  time. Now that explains the marketing push!]

<http://www.billboard.biz/bbbiz/content_display/industry/e3i39b5c49ccd74a21f12815b9fb843970c>
<http://www.billboard.biz/bbbiz/search/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1004126975>


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Nexaira Wi-Fi Router Shares iPhone’s Tethered Connection
----------------------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11768>
  2 comments

  Road warriors appreciate the MiFi, a neat device that creates a 
  mobile Wi-Fi hotspot using a 3G cellular data connection as its 
  backhaul to the Internet. The same feat can be accomplished with a 
  few smartphone models and cell carriers’ support, but there’s no 
  way to share an iPhone’s 3G data connection with nearby devices 
  over Wi-Fi—such as an iPad, iPod touch, or even other computers. 
  The tethering feature finally enabled for U.S. iPhone owners by 
  Apple and AT&T in iOS 4 allows only a single computer to connect via 
  USB or Bluetooth.

<http://www.novatelwireless.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=category&layout=blog&id=19&Itemid=12>

  That inability makes the Nexaira Business Class II 3G/4G Wireless 
  Broadband Router more notable. As sold through 3Gstore with a 
  particular firmware update, the $189.99 router can create a mobile 
  hotspot from an iPhone using USB-based tethering. In this 
  configuration, the router acts just like a host computer would to 
  relay data to and from the iPhone over USB, with Internet access 
  from the iPhone’s 3G data connection. The BC2 has an 802.11n Wi-Fi 
  radio and a wired Ethernet port for local networking. (A second 
  Ethernet port can be connected to a broadband modem, so that the 
  iPhone connection acts as a backup if the broadband connection goes 
  down.)

<http://3gstore.com/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=35&products_id=2439>
<http://3gstore.com/index.php?main_page=page&id=79>
<http://3gstore.com/images/nexaira_bc2.jpg>

  The Nexaira BC2 is a bit bulky, and requires plug-in power via an 
  included AC adapter or a DC car inverter sold separately for $25. 
  (In contrast, the MiFi is battery-powered.) Nonetheless, the Nexaira 
  BC2 might fit the bill for some frequent travelers, especially those 
  who work or travel in groups. The iPhone charges while plugged into 
  the router.

  Using the Nexaira BC2 with the iPhone doesn’t require jailbreaking 
  the phone to use third-party software unsupported by Apple. 
  Tethering involves ordinary communication over USB, although an 
  iPhone may first need to be connected to iTunes on a Mac or Windows 
  system to download a profile after tethering is added to your data 
  plan. (In my recent testing of iPhone tethering, I had to connect to 
  iTunes before tethering would work, but only the first time.)

  No one at TidBITS has prior experience with 3Gstore, which currently 
  has the exclusive rights for this particular firmware release for 
  the router, nor with the Nexaira BC2 router. Nonetheless, we’re 
  seeing no red flags about the product or the claims. It’s only 
  Apple’s cussedness and carrier concerns that prevent an iPhone 
  from being used as a mobile Wi-Fi hotspot by itself. With metered 
  subscription plans, carriers are paid for usage, so it has been 
  entirely unclear why they wouldn’t promote hotspot tethering 
  services in the phone.

  AT&T charges $20 per month for tethering, and requires the 
  $25-per-month DataPro plan, which includes 2 GB of data transfer, 
  and adds $10 for each 1 GB consumed in part or whole thereafter.


**The Competition** -- Sprint, T-Mobile, and Verizon Wireless each 
  offer a limited selection of smartphones that can create a mobile 
  hotspot using the phone’s built-in Wi-Fi capabilities; fees vary. 
  (The Android OS 2.2 release includes tethering and mobile hotspot 
  features, but carriers have largely disabled or disallowed it in the 
  United States.)

  The Nexaira BC2 works more or less like a MiFi sold by Verizon 
  Wireless or the various models of 4G and 3G/4G Spot routers offered 
  in Clearwire’s Clear limited service areas. The MiFi and the Spot 
  are compact enough to fit in a shirt pocket and sport multi-hour 
  batteries.

<http://www.verizonwireless.com/mifi-mobile-hotspot.shtml>
<http://www.clear.com/devices/spot>

  Verizon offers the MiFi with an iPad as a bundle for what works out 
  to be $130, and has service plans of $20 to $50 per month for 1 to 5 
  GB of included data. Purchased separately, the MiFi requires a 
  two-year contract and a $60-per-month 5 GB service plan. (For more 
  details, see “iPad Arriving at Verizon Wireless with MiFi 
  Option,” 14 October 2010.)

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11667>

  Virgin Mobile also has a MiFi on offer—for use only on Sprint’s 
  network—for which you pay $150 up front, and then purchase 10 days 
  of service and up to 100 MB of data for $10, or unlimited data use 
  for $40 during a 30-day period.

<http://www.virginmobileusa.com/mobile-broadband/mifi-2200.html>


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Data Robotics Ships Drobo S with USB 3.0
----------------------------------------
  by Joe Kissell <joe@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11750>

  Data Robotics has announced that a new version of their Drobo S 
  storage device, which replaces the previous generation’s USB 2.0 
  port with a higher-speed (and backward-compatible) USB 3.0 port, is 
  now shipping. The Drobo S offers five storage bays, each of which 
  can hold any standard 3.5-inch SATA or SATA II drive; the device 
  automatically combines the disks into a larger volume while setting 
  aside redundant storage space to protect against drive failure. 
  Users can freely swap or upgrade drives at any time. The price for 
  the Drobo S, which also includes FireWire 800 and eSATA ports, 
  remains unchanged at $799.

<http://www.drobo.com/products/drobo-s.php>

  Steve Jobs reportedly stated recently that Apple has no immediate 
  plans to ship Macs with built-in USB 3.0 ports or driver software to 
  support existing third-party cards. However, at least two 
  manufacturers—CalDigit and LaCie—sell Mac-compatible PCI Express 
  USB 3.0 adapters for the Mac Pro and ExpressCard/34 adapters for 
  those few MacBook Pro models with ExpressCard/34 slots. According to 
  Data Robotics, the new Drobo S has been tested successfully with 
  both manufacturers’ cards and Mac OS X drivers.

<http://www.pcworld.com/article/209623/steve_jobs_has_no_plans_for_usb_30_on_macs.html>
<http://www.caldigit.com/>
<http://www.lacie.com/usb3mac/>

  Data Robotics hasn’t said if or when USB 3.0 will appear on any of 
  its other devices. At present, two other Drobo models still have USB 
  2.0 ports—the second-generation four-bay Drobo (which also has a 
  FireWire 800 port) and the eight-bay DroboPro (which includes 
  FireWire 800 and iSCSI ports). The latter, which was introduced more 
  recently, seems a natural candidate for USB 3.0.

  In other news, Data Robotics has also announced that its Drobo Sync 
  software is now shipping for the DroboPro FS (an eight-bay device 
  with dual Gigabit Ethernet ports). The software, which is available 
  at no cost via Drobo Dashboard, lets a DroboPro FS automatically 
  back up its data to a second DroboPro FS on the same local network 
  or a VPN.

<http://www.drobo.com/products/drobopro-fs.php>


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BeLight Software Sponsoring TidBITS
-----------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11785>

  We’re pleased to welcome as our latest TidBITS sponsor BeLight 
  Software, an unusual firm in the Mac market largely because 
  they’re based in Odessa, Ukraine, giving them a leg up in those 
  “Who traveled the furthest for Macworld Expo?” competitions. 
  Founded in 2003, BeLight has made their name by creating clean, 
  elegant software for graphics and publishing. But where most 
  companies set their sights broadly, aiming to create a program that 
  could be used for many different undertakings, BeLight has focused 
  most of their products on a particular task.

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

  That accounts for Business Card Composer, which simplifies designing 
  and printing business cards and similar objects; Disc Cover, which 
  is aimed at creating labels and covers for CDs and DVDs; Art Text, a 
  graphics program for creating textual graphics, logos, icons, 
  buttons, and the like; and Labels & Addresses (formerly Mail 
  Factory), which helps you print a wide variety of labels and 
  envelopes. Slightly more general are Live Interior 3D, which is 2D 
  and 3D interior design software, and Swift Publisher, a page layout 
  program aimed at flyers, brochures, letterheads, newsletters, and 
  other short publications.

<http://www.belightsoft.com/products/composer/overview.php>
<http://www.belightsoft.com/products/disccover/overview.php>
<http://www.belightsoft.com/products/arttext/overview.php>
<http://www.belightsoft.com/products/labelsaddresses/overview.php>
<http://www.belightsoft.com/products/liveinterior/overview.php>
<http://www.belightsoft.com/products/swiftpublisher/overview.php>

  We haven’t used all of BeLight’s software, but Labels & 
  Addresses has become a staff favorite this time of year for bringing 
  sanity to the process of printing labels for holiday cards (see 
  “Labels & Addresses Restores Holiday Card Sanity,” 12 December 
  2008), and whenever we need to print new business cards, we turn to 
  Business Card Composer (see “Comparing Business Card Design 
  Software,” 3 April 2006). Plus, although our more graphically 
  inclined staffers rightly never allow me to do anything public with 
  graphics software, I love playing with Art Text every now and then.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9939>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8488>

  Despite their far-off location in Ukraine, I had the pleasure of 
  meeting a few of the BeLight folks at Macworld Boston in 2004; we 
  had corresponded previously and they kindly brought me a few small 
  presents to remember them by, including some excellent Ukrainian 
  vodka and a tiny statue of the Duc de Richelieu, a French nobleman 
  who is considered one of the founding fathers of Odessa and 
  subsequently became Prime Minister of France. He still stands on my 
  desk, reminding me of just how small the world has become.

<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Armand-Emmanuel_du_Plessis,_Duc_de_Richelieu>
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Odessa_Steps#Duc_de_Richelieu_Monument>

  Thanks to BeLight Software for their support of TidBITS and the Mac 
  community! 


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11785#comments>
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iPhone App Roots Out Mobile Coverage Details
--------------------------------------------
  by Michael E. Cohen <lymond@mac.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11745>
  8 comments

  Who has the best mobile coverage in the United States? Is AT&T 
  really as bad as reports claim? Does Verizon Wireless lead the pack? 
  What about the other carriers?

  There’s a lot of heat and not much light when it comes to the 
  question of which mobile carrier provides the best service. Soon 
  after the original iPhone hit the market, technology writers began 
  to lambast the service from AT&T, the U.S. carrier that Apple had 
  chosen to provide mobile service for its newest digital objet 
  d’art. Dropped calls, slow throughput, and inability to acquire a 
  signal seemed to afflict everyone—or, at least, everyone who stood 
  to gain from sensational headlines that would attract a lot of 
  eyeballs. Actual reports from ordinary users, however, provided 
  spotty, anecdotal evidence that sometimes supported, and just as 
  often contradicted, the published accounts of AT&T’s purported 
  epic failure.

  In the years since, the picture has become no clearer, although 
  advertising dollars, corporate missteps, and the echo-chamber of the 
  Internet have managed to solidify the common perception that AT&T 
  has not only dropped the mobile coverage ball but has managed to 
  kick it through their own goal posts.

  Enter RootMetrics (formerly Root Wireless), an independent, 
  privately funded service that aims to provide “an accurate, 
  unbiased view of each carrier’s performance.” Well, we’d _all_ 
  like that, now wouldn’t we? But RootMetrics’ goal raises the 
  obvious question: How ya gonna do _that_, Sparky?

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


**The RootMetrics Solution** -- How they do it is by way of one of the 
  more popular of the buzz-words of the day, crowdsourcing. 
  RootMetrics’ approach is to turn the massive throngs of 
  digital-phone-carrying folk into a wide-area sensor network and then 
  assemble the acquired data into a fine-grained picture of mobile 
  coverage performance. RootMetrics began with a custom-built Android 
  app designed to measure signal strength and data throughput and link 
  it to GPS data. They distributed their creation to some adventurous 
  souls and began to run the returned data through their proprietary 
  analysis algorithm in order to produce coverage maps of several U.S. 
  localities. 

  The resulting picture reveals that blanket statements about service 
  quality are worth about as much as one of the pixels used to display 
  such statements on your screen: when it comes to mobile coverage, 
  what really matters is _exactly_ where you are at any particular 
  time. That’s obvious, of course, but the colorful maps that the 
  RootMetrics analysis produces drive the point home effectively.


**The Coverage Map iPhone App** -- iPhone users can now add their two 
  bits to the digital picture that RootMetrics is painting. The 
  company has made a free iPhone app that you can use to see the 
  coverage picture at your location. And you can do more than just see 
  your coverage picture: with the app, you can also test the signal 
  your own iPhone is currently receiving, and you can report dropped 
  calls, slow data, poor signal, and lack of Internet access. Your 
  tests and reports are added to the data that RootMetrics is 
  aggregating.

<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/cell-phone-coverage-map/id399701910?mt=8>

  A few days ago, I loaded the RootMetrics Coverage Map app onto my 
  iPhone and took a look at my neighborhood. The map, which portrays 
  coverage areas in a hexagonal grid, showed that I was on the border 
  between an area of “best” coverage and an area of “better” 
  coverage. That more or less matches my personal experience: if I 
  walk south half a block or so, my phone usually shows more bars; if 
  I walk north I usually see a drop-off.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-11/rootmetrics_map.png>

  The app also shows a comparison between the quality of service that 
  different carriers provide in the area where the phone is located. 
  In my general vicinity, it turns out that neither AT&T nor Verizon 
  rule: instead, Sprint reportedly provides the best service, with 
  AT&T, Verizon, and T-Mobile all vying for second place. This also 
  squares with my experience—the number of bars appearing on my Sony 
  Ericsson phone back when I used T-Mobile matched what I see today 
  with my iPhone on AT&T.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-11/rootmetrics_comparison.png>

  The map does not depict signal strength or data throughput speeds as 
  such. Instead, the quality rankings are based on what RootMetrics 
  calls a “RootScore,” which combines both decibels of signal and 
  throughput speed. RootMetrics does not divulge the algorithm by 
  which it calculates the score.


**Testing Your Service** -- Testing phone service is dead simple with 
  the app: touch a button, and after a few seconds you get a nice 
  visual analysis of your service quality at that particular moment. 
  Note, however, that each test requires that the phone upload and 
  download some test data, roughly about 200 KB or so per test if the 
  cellular network data usage statistics in my iPhone’s Settings app 
  are reliable—if you have a small data allowance on your mobile 
  plan, you probably don’t want to be running a lot of tests.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-11/rootmetrics_test_3G.png>

  Also note that the data upload and download speeds can be quite 
  misleading if you have Wi-Fi turned on and are using it instead of 
  3G: the test results show the speeds you are getting via your Wi-Fi 
  connection instead of from your 3G connection. I suspect this is a 
  bug and not what the RootMetrics folk intend; if so, it should 
  probably be fixed in a later release of the app. In the meantime, if 
  you want a true picture of your service and are within Wi-Fi range, 
  take a trip to your Settings app and turn off Wi-Fi before you run a 
  test.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-11/rootmetrics_test_wifi.png>


**Coverage Map Coverage Still Spotty** -- The areas for which 
  RootMetrics supplies detailed information are limited for the 
  moment: they state that they have map data for “most of the larger 
  metropolitan markets.” Among the 23 U.S. metro areas for which 
  they have recent data are New York, Chicago, Los Angeles-Orange 
  County, Atlanta, Philadelphia, Dallas, San Francisco-San Jose, and 
  Seattle. Other areas of the country may or may not show up on the 
  RootMetrics map. For example, my iPhone-toting brother in Portland, 
  Oregon, will get scant help from RootMetrics at the moment, as only 
  a very few small neighborhoods in that area are rated. Over time, 
  RootMetrics anticipates that growing numbers of users will help 
  flesh out their map throughout the United States and the rest of the 
  world.

  If you happen to live in one of the markets for which RootMetrics 
  has a good dataset, you’ll find the information provided by the 
  Coverage Map app quite illuminating. And if you live elsewhere, you 
  can perform a public service and help RootMetrics fill out their 
  picture for just the cost of a few hundred kilobytes per test. Even 
  if public service is not your thing, the test results will still 
  tell you more about the coverage that your iPhone gets than the five 
  tiny bars at the top of your screen. So hey, grab the app and click 
  that Start Test button so we can finally answer these questions 
  about carrier coverage with real data. 


  ----
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What’s New for the iPad in iOS 4.2.1
--------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11715>
  11 comments

  For those of us with an iPhone or iPod touch running iOS 4, it has 
  been a small torture to switch back and forth between one of those 
  devices and an iPad with iOS 3.2, the version it shipped with (or 
  3.2.1, a minor update that appeared shortly thereafter). We miss 
  fast app switching, folders, background audio, the unified Mail 
  Inbox, and other features that seemed invaluable the minute they 
  became available. It has felt like a long wait for the iPad to get 
  its due at last—so long that determining what’s new between iOS 
  3.2.1 on the iPad and iOS 4.2.1 took some research. Here’s our 
  list of the highlights.

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


**Multitasking** -- The iPad with iOS 3.2 can handle only a single 
  task at a time, with a few exceptions for Apple apps and activities. 
  For instance, you could play music in the background from the iPod 
  app or audio playing in Safari, or receive data via push (such as 
  new calendar events or email) even if you weren’t running the 
  appropriate app for that data.

  Think of iOS 4.2.1 as adding 20 points to the iPad’s IQ, enabling 
  it to keep track of more things at once while an unrelated app is 
  active. Background multitasking comes in a few flavors: audio, 
  location, voice over IP, printing, and streaming. It enables 
  independent apps to play music in the background, update location 
  information for mapping and navigation programs, receive and 
  continue handling an Internet phone call, keep a file spooling to a 
  printer, and streaming audio and video to an Apple TV all at the 
  same time as you’re using another program.

  Background multitasking is distinct from iOS 4’s capability to let 
  you switch among recently launched apps. That’s up next.


**Fast App Switching** -- Fast app switching means no more long waits 
  on splash screens for the same app to launch for the seventh time in 
  one work session. As you might expect, an app must be recompiled for 
  iOS 4 before it can take advantage of the instant-save state. Also, 
  if the iPad runs out of memory, it quietly kills less-recently used 
  apps in the background, requiring a relaunch when you return. (See 
  Matt Neuburg’s more detailed description in “What is Fast App 
  Switching?,” 23 June 2010.)

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

  Pressing the Home button twice quickly brings up the fast-app 
  switching interface, sliding the home screen up to reveal a drawer 
  of recently used apps, shown in order of recency from left to right. 
  Swipe from right to left to view more, and tap an app icon to switch 
  to it.

  Because the Home double-press option is now reserved for fast app 
  switching, it’s no longer possible to customize an action for that 
  double press. In iOS 3.2, you could specify that a double-press 
  would take you to the first Home screen, the Search screen, or 
  switch to the iPod app. Double-pressing the button when the iPad is 
  locked still brings up the audio playback controls without having to 
  unlock the device, however.


**Audio, Orientation, and Brightness Controls** -- The app drawer also 
  reveals options mostly unrelated to switching. Swipe left-to-right 
  with the drawer open and the iPad offers several new controls. A new 
  screen orientation lock button replaces the previous functionality 
  of the hardware switch (more on this in a moment). A screen dimming 
  slider is a welcome new adjustment, saving a trip to the Settings 
  app whenever you want to dim the screen. 

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-11/ipad421_switcher_controls.png>

  Also appearing are playback controls (previous, play/pause, next) 
  that control whichever app is playing media; this applies not just 
  to the iPod app, but also to others such as Pandora or Apple’s 
  Videos app (which is handy if you’re using AirPlay to stream video 
  to an Apple TV). 

  Lastly, if you have AirPlay-compatible devices on your network (such 
  as an Apple TV, AirPort Express, or third-party hardware that works 
  with the service), an AirPlay icon appears to the right of the 
  playback controls, next to a volume slider.


**Folders** -- You can now group apps into “folders” (though 
  visually they don’t look like folders at all). After pressing and 
  holding on an app to enable the app customizing interface—where 
  the app icons all jiggle—drag one app on top of another to create 
  a folder, or drag an app to an existing folder to add it. Don’t 
  forget that you can also rearrange icons and build folders in the 
  Apps screen of iTunes when the iPad is connected and selected in the 
  sidebar; it’s easier to select and move several apps at a time 
  there.


**AirPlay** -- AirPlay is a new name for Apple’s older AirTunes 
  technology, previously available only within iTunes. Using AirPlay, 
  the iPad can stream audio over a Wi-Fi network to an AirPort Express 
  base station connected to a stereo, an Apple TV (old and new 
  models), and other devices that support AirTunes/AirPlay. AirPlay 
  can stream to multiple devices at once.

  AirPlay brings with it not just the name change, but the capability 
  to stream video or photos to the new Apple TV announced in September 
  2010 for playback on a TV; older Apple TV models don’t include the 
  video-streaming feature. Thanks to multitasking, the video can 
  stream in the background while you’re using other apps on the iPad 
  or when the iPad is locked.

  The Apple TV has to be updated to version 4.1 of its operating 
  system, which was released on the same day as iOS 4.2.1. On the 
  Apple TV, choose Settings, then General, then Software Update.


**AirPrint** -- One shortcoming of iOS 3.2 on the iPad for business 
  travelers was the inability to print from the device without 
  third-party software. The good news is that AirPrint adds the 
  capability to print under iOS 4.2.1; the bad news is that the 
  feature is extremely limited.

  Currently, the iPad can print directly only to a small set of 
  supported HP printers. Apple originally promised that AirPrint would 
  also work with other printers shared by a Mac on a network, but that 
  capability didn’t materialize with this release. (A great 
  alternative is Ecamm’s $9.95 Printopia, a Mac OS X preference pane 
  that creates compatible virtual printers for printers that your Mac 
  can print to; it also enables you to send PDFs from your iOS device 
  to the Mac or a Dropbox folder.)

<http://www.apple.com/ipad/features/airprint.html>
<http://www.ecamm.com/mac/printopia/>


**Game Center** -- The Game Center app was introduced in iOS 4.1 for 
  the iPhone, and it’s new to the iPad with iOS 4.2.1. Although many 
  iOS games have a multiplayer option that makes it possible to play 
  with people across the room or across the globe, Apple’s Game 
  Center app gives you a centralized home for accessing many 
  multiplayer games, all with one login account (your iTunes Store 
  account), one handle, one friends list, and one über-scoreboard. It 
  also gives game developers a single method of programming their 
  user-interaction options. 

  As with Ping, Apple’s iTunes social-networking service, Game 
  Center isn’t well integrated with other social networks, with your 
  contacts, or with much of anything else. You have to establish 
  friends one at a time in a tedious fashion, although it is at least 
  associated with your Apple ID: the same friends appear in Game 
  Center across multiple iOS devices.


**Mail Improvements** -- If you manage more than one email account, 
  you’ll be relieved that Mail under iOS 4.2.1 now supports a 
  unified Inbox where all incoming messages appear. Finally, no more 
  multiple taps just to switch between Inboxes in several accounts. 
  Other improvements include:

* Message threads are also now grouped together, keeping email 
  discussions together instead of having to peck through the Inbox to 
  find related messages.

* If you use Exchange ActiveSync, you’ll be happy to know that you 
  can now sync more than one such account. This includes Microsoft and 
  Google, among others. And, Exchange Server 2010 is supported. You 
  can also set up more than one to use in the Mail app for email.

* You can now prevent users of your iOS device from changing email 
  account settings.

* You can now move a message from one account to another.

* MobileMe aliases are now supported automatically, and thanks to 
  improvements in MobileMe, you can now use your MobileMe account to 
  send mail with a From addresses other than username@me.com or 
  username@mac.com.

* It’s now possible to open Mail attachments in a variety of other 
  apps.

* Data Detectors now detect dates and times.


**Search Improvements** -- Searching has been improved in iOS 4.2.1 as 
  well. Now, when you swipe right on the first page of the home screen 
  to display the Spotlight search screen, your searches can be 
  extended beyond the confines of the iPad. That feature comes 
  courtesy of Search Web and Search Wikipedia options that appear at 
  the bottom of the Spotlight search results; tapping Search Web sends 
  the search to your default search engine in Safari and tapping 
  Search Wikipedia opens Safari and performs the search in Wikipedia.

  Also new and welcome is the capability to search within a Web page 
  in Safari, although you may have trouble finding it. The trick is to 
  tap the search field that you would normally use to search in 
  Google, Yahoo, or Bing, and start typing. As the iPad shows 
  suggestions, look at the bottom of the suggestion list for “On 
  This Page” matches. Tap it, and then notice that a new search bar 
  appears at the bottom of the screen with a Next button that lets you 
  advance to the next found match (there’s no Previous button for 
  moving backward), a search field in which you can change what 
  you’re searching for, and a Done button if you want to hide the 
  toolbar (tapping any link also causes it to disappear).


**Minor Tweaks** -- There are many other small changes in iOS 4.2.1, 
  including the capability to rent TV shows in HD from iTunes, sync 
  notes wirelessly, reply to event invitations from within the 
  Calendar app, change fonts in the Notes app, use over 30 new 
  international keyboards and dictionaries, and take advantage of 
  enhanced features for enterprises.

  We’ll be continuing to explore our iPads to see what other changes 
  Apple might have shoehorned into iOS 4.2.1, and if you learn of 
  anything we haven’t mentioned so far, let us know in the comments! 


  ----
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TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 29 November 2010
----------------------------------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11784>

**BusyCal 1.5** -- The new MobileMe Calendar acts as a CalDAV server 
  for sharing calendars with CalDAV clients like iCal and the iOS 
  Calendar app. Great, but many of us who have needed real calendar 
  sharing before the new MobileMe Calendar have long been using 
  BusyMac’s BusyCal. With the release of version 1.5, BusyCal can 
  now sync with the new MobileMe Calendar as well, if you wish, 
  although there’s no need to switch to the new MobileMe Calendar if 
  everything is working well now. (It can also sync with other CalDAV 
  servers, should you need that capability as well.) If you do wish to 
  switch to the new MobileMe Calendar with BusyCal, be sure to read 
  BusyMac’s “Overview of the new MobileMe Calendar” and 
  “Upgrading to the new MobileMe Calendar” support articles first, 
  since the process is non-trivial. 

<http://www.apple.com/mobileme/news/2010/10/new-mobileme-calendar-now-available-to-all-members.html>
<http://www.busycal.com/>
<http://www.busymac.com/help/sync/caldav-overview.html>
<http://www.busymac.com/help/sync/caldav-upgrade.html>

  Put bluntly, we’re not switching to the new MobileMe Calendar at 
  the moment, since the only notable advantages in our workflow would 
  be sharing of events between our MacBooks while we were on the road 
  and an alternative to Google Calendar for sharing of calendars 
  across the Internet. Otherwise, BusyCal’s LAN-based event sharing 
  meets all our needs, and we simply don’t wish to spend the time 
  and effort associated with switching to the new MobileMe Calendar 
  for the minimal gain in capabilities.

  Users of BusyMac’s earlier calendar sharing solution, BusySync 
  (which enables calendar sharing for calendars that you work with in 
  iCal), should note that BusySync can only read calendars hosted on 
  the new MobileMe Calendar; they can’t be written to or shared 
  elsewhere. If you really need BusySync’s capabilities in addition 
  to read-write support for the new MobileMe Calendar, the only option 
  at the moment is to upgrade to BusyCal, which is in essence a 
  melding of BusySync and iCal, with notable improvements to iCal’s 
  interface. ($49 single user/$79 family pack new, $20 upgrade from 
  BusySync, free update, 6.6 MB)

<http://www.busymac.com/busysync/>

  Read/post comments about BusyCal 1.5.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11781#comments>


**GraphicConverter 7.0.2** -- Lemkesoft is giving image conversion 
  fans one more reason to be thankful this time of year with the 
  release of GraphicConverter 7.0.2. The update includes a big list of 
  fixes and improvements; among the new features are support for 
  importing Office Document Imaging greyscale TIFFs, PDF import with 
  alpha channel, and more IPTC options. Updated features include more 
  settings for slideshows, support for float TIFFs with alpha 
  channels, Unicode support, and support for WMFs with transparent 
  backgrounds. Zooming with a trackpad is much improved, and you can 
  now use the Delete key to remove selections. ($39.95 new, free 
  update, 100 MB)

<http://www.lemkesoft.com/>
<http://www.lemkesoft.org/files/graphicconverter/notes/108.html>

  Read/post comments about GraphicConverter 7.0.2.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11777#comments>


**EagleFiler 1.5** -- C-Command Software has released EagleFiler 1.5, 
  a significant update to the company’s tool for organizing, 
  archiving, and searching your email, files, saved Web pages, and 
  other bits of information. The update introduces a new Quick Entry 
  hotkey that lets you create a new text file from within any 
  application. Also included is much-improved tag searching, better 
  previews for iWork documents, support for indexing and searching 
  email attachments, faster smart folders, and plenty more. ($40 new, 
  free update, 11.2 MB)

<http://c-command.com/eaglefiler/>
<http://c-command.com/eaglefiler/manual-ah/quick-entry>
<http://c-command.com/blog/2010/11/22/eaglefiler-1-5/>

  Read/post comments about EagleFiler 1.5.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11778#comments>


**Adobe Reader/Acrobat Pro 9.4.1** -- Adobe has updated Adobe Reader 
  and Acrobat Pro to version 9.4.1, a release focused on patching 
  multiple critical security vulnerabilities in the PDF programs. The 
  patched security flaws could cause crashes or potentially allow a 
  remote attacker to take control of your Mac. Adobe recommends all 
  users of Acrobat and Reader 9.4 update immediately, either from 
  within the software, or via the Adobe Product Updates page. (Free 
  updates, 6.09 MB for Reader, 11.1 MB for Acrobat Pro)

<http://get.adobe.com/reader/>
<http://www.adobe.com/products/acrobat/>
<http://www.adobe.com/support/security/bulletins/apsb10-28.html>
<http://www.adobe.com/downloads/updates/>

  Read/post comments about Adobe Reader/Acrobat Pro 9.4.1.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11776#comments>


**Safari 5.0.3 and Safari 4.1.3** -- Apple has released Safari 5.0.3 
  with, in addition to the requisite slew of security fixes, 
  improvements to the Top Hit results that appear as you type in the 
  address bar, more-accurate Top Sites, and more-reliable pop-up 
  blocking. Also included are fixes for an issue with Flash 10.0, 
  behavior when typing in search boxes on Facebook and Netflix, and 
  improved stability for JavaScript-intensive extensions and VoiceOver 
  integration. Apple also released Safari 4.1.3 for Mac OS X 10.4.11 
  Tiger with roughly the same fixes. (Free, 37.58 MB for Snow Leopard, 
  46.74 for Leopard, 29.46 MB for Tiger)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1070>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT4455>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1069>

  Read/post comments about Safari 5.0.3 and Safari 4.1.3.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11766#comments>


**Boot Camp Software Update 3.2 for Windows** -- If you’re going to 
  suffer through Windows, you should at least run it via your Mac. And 
  if you use Boot Camp for that purpose, you’ll want to look into 
  Apple’s Boot Camp Software Update 3.2, available in both 32-bit 
  and 64-bit permutations. In addition to what Apple calls “critical 
  bug fixes,” the update adds support for the ATI-Radeon HD 5870 
  graphics card, Apple’s USB Ethernet Adapter, and the MacBook Air 
  SuperDrive. The update requires a copy of Windows and Mac OS X 10.6 
  Snow Leopard. (Free, 280.28 MB for 32-bit, 121.25 MB for 64-bit)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1333>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL979>

  Read/post comments about Boot Camp Software Update 3.2 for Windows.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11769#comments>


**MacBook/MacBook Pro EFI Firmware Update 2.0** -- Apple has released 
  EFI Firmware Update 2.0 for both the MacBook and MacBook Pro. The 
  updates are for the mid-2010 models of the MacBook and the mid-2010 
  models of the 13-inch MacBook Pro, and address an issue where 
  external monitors connected to the laptop may exhibit an undesired 
  purple coloration. Your laptop must be plugged in to install the 
  firmware update, which will take several minutes, and Apple 
  recommends that you not cut power to the computer during the 
  installation. If you’re not sure if your laptop needs the update, 
  use Software Update, which will present it as an option only if 
  it’s appropriate. (Free, 1.98 MB)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1332>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1331>

  Read/post comments about MacBook/MacBook Pro EFI Firmware Update 
  2.0.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11770#comments>


**QuarkXPress 8.5** -- Quark has released QuarkXPress 8.5, a free 
  update that the company says improves the publishing package’s 
  stability. The update also introduces support for importing and 
  exporting with Microsoft Word’s .docx format, and adds a 
  self-contained Auto Updater so that next time you’ll know about 
  these updates even before we report on them. In addition, five 
  Pantone libraries have been added or updated. ($799 new, free 
  update, 751 MB)

<http://8.quark.com/>
<http://downloads.quark.com/Details.aspx?fid=174>

  Read/post comments about QuarkXPress 8.5.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11772#comments>


**Typinator 4.2** -- Ergonis continues in its quest to save your 
  overworked fingers with the release of Typinator 4.2, the latest 
  update to its popular typing automator. The update corrects a 
  problem with Mac OS X 10.6.5 where certain characters would prevent 
  abbreviations from expanding properly. It also fixes issues with 
  expansion in iTunes 10, Outlook 2011, and 4D Client; works around an 
  issue with Safari suggestions in the address field; and corrects a 
  problem where Typinator would stop working when more than 100 sets 
  were installed. Full release notes are available on Ergonis’s Web 
  site. (Free update, €19.99, 3.1 MB)

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

  Read/post comments about Typinator 4.2.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11771#comments>


**PDFpen/PDFpen Pro 5.0.3** -- PDFpen and PDFpenPro, Smile’s 
  software for creating and editing PDF documents, have each been 
  updated to version 5.0.3.  In addition to a new Welcome window, 
  issues with saving in both applications and problems with naming 
  form buttons in PDFpenPro have been fixed. Current owners can see 
  the list of changes and upgrade by choosing PDFpen (or PDFpenPro) > 
  Check for Updates. ($59.95/$99.95 new, free update, 41 MB)

<http://www.smilesoftware.com/PDFpen/>
<http://www.smilesoftware.com/PDFpenPro/>

  Read/post comments about PDFpen/PDFpen Pro 5.0.3.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11765#comments>


**DEVONthink and DEVONnote 2.0.6** -- DEVONtechnologies, purveyors of 
  fine software and mixed-case names, has released minor updates for 
  all editions of DEVONthink and DEVONnote. The updates to DEVONthink 
  and DEVONnote address syncing issues with the recently released 
  DEVONthink To Go iOS app, make Quick Look text selectable, improve 
  Spotlight integration, and make it possible to import Yahoo 
  Messenger chat logs and Google Chrome Web addresses. For more on 
  DEVONthink To Go, see “Taking DEVONthink To Go for a Spin” (23 
  November 2010). (DEVONthink Pro Office, $149.95 new, free update, 
  23.6 MB; DEVONthink Professional, $79.95 new, free update, 18.6 MB; 
  DEVONthink Personal, $49.95 new, free update, 13.2 MB; DEVONnote, 
  $24.95, free update, 11.6 MB)

<http://www.devon-technologies.com/products/devonthink/>
<http://www.devon-technologies.com/products/devonnote/>
<http://www.devon-technologies.com/products/devonthink-to-go/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11730>

  Read/post comments about DEVONthink and DEVONnote 2.0.6.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11763#comments>


**Yojimbo 3.0.1** -- Bare Bones Software’s Yojimbo is an information 
  organizer that stores text, images, PDFs, Web pages, serial numbers, 
  and anything else you think to throw into it. The new maintenance 
  release of Yojimbo 3.0.1 contains just one bug fix, but it’s a 
  must-have for folks who use Yojimbo in conjunction with Missing Sync 
  for Windows/Android/Blackberry. The fix works around a data 
  corruption issue that Bare Bones says Missing Sync could cause, 
  leading in turn to Yojimbo for iPad sync sessions hanging forever. 
  ($39 new, free update, 7.6 MB)

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

  Read/post comments about Yojimbo 3.0.1.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11758#comments>


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ExtraBITS for 29 November 2010
------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11783>

  We’ve been paying attention to the world of online streaming, with 
  new plans from Netflix and Hulu, along with office productivity 
  applications, where we found benchmarks of Microsoft Office 2011 and 
  news that Google Docs documents are now editable on iOS devices. 
  Plus, there are more options for putting an iPod nano on your wrist, 
  and some of our staffers offer holiday gift ideas in a recent 
  MacJury holiday gift guide podcast.


**Netflix Offers Streaming-Only Plan, Raises Other Prices** -- Most of 
  us associate Netflix with those red envelopes containing DVDs, but 
  Netflix’s members are now watching more content streamed over the 
  Internet than delivered by mail. Because of that change, Netflix is 
  now offering a $7.99-per-month plan that eschews DVDs entirely in 
  favor of unlimited streaming. Simultaneously, Netflix raised the 
  prices of the DVD-delivery plans, with the 1- and 2-disc-at-a-time 
  plans increasing by $1 per month. Although Netflix has continually 
  increased the amount of content available for streaming, only about 
  a fifth of the movies and TV shows in our queue are available for 
  streaming.

<http://blog.netflix.com/2010/11/new-plan-for-watching-instantly-plus.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11782#comments>


**More iPod nano Watch Bands** -- The latest generation of the iPod 
  nano is as small as a watch face, causing an increasing number of 
  companies to come up with cases and bands that allow you to wear the 
  diminutive music player on your wrist. Jason O’Grady at ZDNet has 
  an overview of the current crop of iPod nano watch bands.

<http://www.zdnet.com/blog/apple/your-next-watch-may-be-an-ipod-and-vice-versa/8745>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11780#comments>


**TidBITS Staffers in the MacJury Holiday Gift Guide** -- All three 
  episodes of the MacJury Podcast’s 2010 Holiday Gift Guide are out, 
  and Chuck Joiner invited several TidBITS staff members to 
  participate. Spread out over the three episodes are gift ideas from 
  Joe, Mark, and Tonya. If you’re thinking about your shopping 
  strategy, MacJury’s musings are worth a listen.

<http://www.macjury.com/macjury-1027-holiday-gift-guide-part-3/>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11774#comments>


**Microsoft Office for Mac 2011 Benchmarks Posted** -- To paraphrase 
  Louis Armstrong, when compared to earlier versions is Microsoft 
  Office 2011 for Mac fast, slow, or half-fast? MacTech has run about 
  1,000 tests to compare the performance of the suite’s applications 
  to Office 2008 and 2004 across a variety of configurations, 
  including MacBook Pro, MacBook, and iMac. The results are available 
  online and will be published in a forthcoming issue of MacTech 
  Magazine.

<http://www.mactech.com/2010/11/16/office-2011-benchmarks>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11764#comments>


**Edit Google Docs on iOS Devices** -- It just became a little bit 
  easier to stay functional while on the go, even when you’re armed 
  only with a svelte iOS device. Google has now announced that Google 
  Docs will shortly be enabling editing from mobile browsers, 
  including the version of Safari on the iPad, iPhone, and iPod touch. 
  (Google Docs editing also works with devices running Android 2.2, 
  though not earlier versions.)

<http://googledocs.blogspot.com/2010/11/editing-your-google-docs-on-go.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11762#comments>


**Hulu Plus Launches at Lower Price** -- The Hulu Plus streaming video 
  service has opened for all subscribers at $7.99 per month, down $2 
  per month from its price during a testing period. The service works 
  on iOS devices, computers, and some game systems, streaming at up to 
  high-definition resolutions, and including full current and past 
  seasons of major network television shows. Advertising is still 
  displayed, however.

<http://www.hulu.com/plus>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11760#comments>


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