TidBITS#1055/06-Dec-2010
========================
  Issue link: <http://db.tidbits.com/issue/1055>

  It’s the Great Holiday TidBITS Gift Guide, Charlie Brown! We’re 
  doing something a little different this year, with some 
  well-considered suggestions from TidBITS staffers along the theme of 
  “bits-not-atoms.” We also have a review of a pair of unusual 
  iPhone and iPad cases from ZeroChroma, along with a review of the 
  Navigon MobileNavigator iPhone app. And then there’s a DealBITS 
  drawing for cf/x alpha, an interesting image processing application. 
  Notable software releases this week include FlickrExport 4 for 
  iPhoto and Aperture, RapidWeaver 5.0.1, Swift Publisher 2.3.3, 
  VMware Fusion 3.1.2, Cyberduck 3.8, EyeTV 3.5, and Google Earth 6.

Articles
    Save 50% in Take Control 7th Anniversary Sale
    DealBITS Drawing: Win a Copy of cf/x alpha 1.0
    ZeroChroma iPhone and iPad Cases Integrate Stands
    Navigon MobileNavigator App Bests Standalone Devices
    TidBITS Gift Guide 2010
    TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 6 December 2010
    ExtraBITS for 6 December 2010


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Save 50% in Take Control 7th Anniversary Sale
---------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11802>

  It’s hard to believe, we know, but it was seven years ago, in 
  2003, when we tentatively announced our first Take Control ebook, 
  Joe Kissell’s “Take Control of Upgrading to Panther.” 
  (Remember what was new and cool in Panther? No, we don’t either.) 
  Now it’s time to celebrate Take Control’s seventh anniversary 
  with a 50-percent-off sale. Order any of our ebooks at half-off 
  through the end of December using this coupon-loaded link.

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/catalog?pt=TB1055&cp=CPN01206TC7>

  In retrospect, we started Take Control at a particularly auspicious 
  time. The PDF format was nearly ubiquitous, we had all become 
  accustomed to buying things on the Internet, and most of the major 
  publishers hadn’t yet figured out ebooks in a big way. That 
  enabled us to focus on writing, editing, and producing the best 
  possible ebooks we could, constantly refining what we considered a 
  good ebook to be as we went. 

  Since then, the bar has risen much higher for what is expected of an 
  ebook publisher, and we’ve plunged into an exciting new world, 
  taking our readers along for the ride as we come up with better ways 
  for our books to provide the help you need, when you need it. Most 
  notably, you can now log in to your Take Control Ebooks account to 
  see exactly which ebooks you own and re-download them (on an iOS 
  device, you can even read them directly from your account). For 
  those who need alternative ebook formats like EPUB (for iBooks in 
  iOS, and for other e-readers) and Mobipocket (for the Kindle), 
  we’ve (mostly) made those formats available in your account for 
  all but our older titles.

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/account>
<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/device-advice>

  We may be pretty good at writing and publishing books, but we’ve 
  had to stretch to learn ever more about delegation, project 
  management, finance, and development. At times, the entire project 
  is exhausting. But we start each day (well, most days), re-energized 
  thanks to you, our readers, who buy and read our books, who write in 
  with anecdotes about what’s working and what’s not, and who give 
  us constructive comments. And we’re by no means done! We have lots 
  of ideas in the works for more account-related capabilities, easier 
  ways for you to read the ebooks, faster publishing of more file 
  formats, and of course, more ebooks on the topics you care about.

  As a thank you to everyone who reads the Take Control series and as 
  an encouragement for anyone who hasn’t yet tried our ebooks (so 
  please, spread the word!), we’re holding this seventh anniversary 
  sale for the rest of the month. Whether you want to update a bunch 
  of older ebooks all at once, see what’s new in the Take Control 
  catalog (check out “Take Control of Your Paperless Office” and 
  “Take Control of Mail on the iPad, iPhone, and iPod touch”), or 
  order a bunch of ebooks to put on a thumb drive as a gift (“Take 
  Control of iPhone Basics” and “Take Control of iTunes 10: The 
  FAQ” might be especially appreciated), you can save 50 percent on 
  whatever you buy through the end of December.

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/catalog-alpha?pt=TB1055&cp=CPN01206TC7>

  Thanks again for your support, and our best wishes for a happy 
  holiday season and end to 2010! 


  ----
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DealBITS Drawing: Win a Copy of cf/x alpha 1.0
----------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11799>

  I’m about to embark on another calendar production project in 
  iPhoto, and although I generally don’t do much editing of the 
  images I choose, apart from cropping and the basic adjustments 
  iPhoto can make, I’m really tempted to do some additional work in 
  a tool I just learned about, cf/x Software’s cf/x alpha. It’s an 
  image processing tool tweaked toward transparency and blending, 
  enabling a variety of effects that might be difficult to replicate 
  in other programs, ranging from blended collages to mosaics.

<http://www.cfxsoftware.com/products/alphaoverview.html>
<http://www.cfxsoftware.com/products/cfxalphausecases.html>

  In essence, cf/x alpha lets you take one or more images and arrange 
  them into a single new image, using cropping, scaling, zooming, and 
  blending to create a pleasing composition. The software doesn’t 
  just provide basic tools, but has more than 20 customizable blend 
  generators and 70 configurable effects, and it even offers 
  professional composing tools that internalize ways of maximizing 
  impact like the Rule of Thirds and the Fibonacci Spiral. Once 
  you’re done, you can export to many file formats, send images via 
  email, or upload to Flickr.

  For instance, the image below is something I created almost 
  accidentally while fiddling with the free calendar templates cf/x 
  Software has available for download; it’s far from polished, but 
  gives a sense of how easy it would be to generate a compelling 
  image. If you’re thinking you might like to spend some of your 
  holiday downtime playing with images, check out the free trial 
  version of cf/x alpha to see what you can do.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-12/cfx-alpha-sample.png>
<http://www.cfxsoftware.com/products/download2011calendarpacks.html>

  There are actually three versions of the software: the $89 
  entry-level cf/x alpha home that has basic features, the $229 
  standard edition cf/x alpha that has all the capabilities most 
  people could want, and the $389 cf/x alpha pro with added workflow 
  and automation features. 

<http://www.cfxsoftware.com/products/versioncomparison.html>

  But for this week’s DealBITS drawing, if you want to win one of 
  three copies of the $229 cf/x alpha 1.0, enter at the DealBITS page. 
  All information gathered is covered by our comprehensive privacy 
  policy. Remember too, that if someone you refer to this drawing 
  wins, you’ll receive the same prize as a reward for spreading the 
  word.

<http://www.tidbits.com/dealbits/cfx-alpha/>
<http://www.tidbits.com/about/privacy.html>


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ZeroChroma iPhone and iPad Cases Integrate Stands
-------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11790>
  2 comments

  I’ve had a hard time getting excited about most iOS device cases 
  and stands, apart from the highly functional Hand-e-holder (see 
  “Palm Your iPad with a Hand-e-holder,” 29 October 2010). 
  That’s because I’m far more interested in function than fashion, 
  and I’m pretty good at treating portable electronics gently. 

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11673>

  Nevertheless, when Apple was giving away iPhone 4 cases to address 
  the antenna issue, I got the Incase Snap Case, even though I 
  hadn’t experienced any problems with reception. Incase’s shell 
  case turned out to be just about perfect for my situation. It was 
  clear, so it didn’t hide the iPhone’s excellent industrial 
  design or muck it up with garish plastic. It was smooth like the 
  iPhone, so I could still slip it in and out of my pocket easily. It 
  didn’t obstruct any of the iPhone’s ports or buttons. And best 
  of all, it was thin enough on the bottom that I could still dock the 
  iPhone with the case on. Perhaps it didn’t provide much 
  protection, but I didn’t want much protection.

<https://www.goincase.com/products/detail/cl59630>

  So I was initially dubious when a PR rep contacted me to ask if 
  I’d be interested in checking out the new Vario case for the iPad 
  and Teatro case for the iPhone 4 from ZeroChroma. But I become more 
  intrigued when I saw their industrial design: both shell cases 
  include a truly clever stand that flips out and holds the device at 
  a variety of angles in both portrait and landscape mode. Both are 
  made of rigid matte plastic, and are just a tiny bit less slick than 
  the Snap Case. Neither is perfectly smooth. 

<http://zerochroma.com/>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-12/ZeroChroma-Vario-iPad-case.jpg>

  The $44.95 Teatro case for the iPhone 4 is slightly wavy on the 
  sides, for a better grip, and it has a recessed dimple in the back, 
  right where you’d want to put your index finger normally, again to 
  improve the grip. It also has a hard rubber rim around the back edge 
  that prevents the case from slipping when propped up, and a few tiny 
  shock-absorbing rubber bumpers inside. 

  The $69.95 Vario case for the iPad lacks those grip-enhancing 
  features and slip-resisting rim, but sports internal hard rubber 
  shock absorbers and hard rubber bumpers at each corner. Due to the 
  curvature of the iPad and the case, the bumpers don’t touch the 
  surface when the iPad is laying flat, but they could provide some 
  protection from a short drop (no, I didn’t test this). The bumpers 
  also keep the iPad from slipping when it is propped up.

  What sets both cases apart from the crowd is the integrated stand. 
  Many iPad cases, in particular, flip around in some way to provide a 
  stand of sorts, but most are limited to a couple of angles. 
  ZeroChroma’s cases provide many more angles by incorporating a 
  fold-flat hinge that can assume either 14 (iPhone) or 16 (iPad) 
  positions. Even cooler is the way the two-piece hinge is inset in a 
  rotating circular piece of plastic that clicks into place every 90 
  degrees, so that you can prop your iPhone or iPad up at nearly any 
  portrait or landscape angle you wish. In my review units, the iPhone 
  case’s stand was both easy to operate and sturdy; the iPad 
  case’s stand was quite a bit stiffer to operate because of its 
  thicker plastic, but was still perfectly sturdy. (If I can find some 
  graphite, I might lubricate the iPad case’s stand with a tiny 
  amount of it.)

  ZeroChroma claims that the Vario case for the iPad works as a 
  hand-holder, and while it’s better than nothing in some 
  situations, if I wanted to hold the iPad for more than a couple of 
  minutes, I’d use the Hand-e-holder instead. Speaking of which, the 
  Vario fits nicely over the Hand-e-holder’s 3M Dual Lock ring 
  that’s attached to the back of my iPad. The Vario case has another 
  nice touch: I can flip the iPad over and insert it face-down in the 
  case to protect the screen when I put it in a bag or backpack.

  Despite the ZeroChroma company name, both the Teatro and Vario cases 
  are available in three two-tone models: black with a gray stand, 
  white with a gray stand, and pink with a lighter pink stand.

  The only significant downside to both cases is that they’re too 
  thick to allow the iPhone or iPad to be docked. Since Incase’s 
  Snap Case allows the iPhone 4 to dock, it seems as though the Teatro 
  could have just slightly thinner plastic on the bottom to allow 
  docking. The Vario, however, would require a more-significant 
  cut-out to allow an iPad to dock.

  Despite the inability to dock the iPhone or iPad while they’re in 
  these cases, I’m quite happy with them. Although entire days may 
  pass when I don’t pop out the built-in stand, when I do find 
  myself wanting to prop up the iPhone or iPad, the stand is right 
  there, waiting to be used. When I use cases that lack integrated 
  stands, I find myself either wandering around trying to find a stand 
  or just giving up and propping up my device on whatever object 
  happens to be handy, which usually results in an unsatisfactory 
  reading angle and always leaves me with the nagging worry that 
  I’ll accidentally knock the device over and damage it.

  ZeroChroma also makes a version of the Teatro for the 3rd generation 
  iPod touch ($34.95) and for the 5th generation iPod nano 
  ($24.95)—that’s the previous generation—and a landscape-only 
  case stand for the iPhone 3G/3GS called the Projeto ($34.95). 
  There’s also a version of the Vario for the Kindle II ($59.95). 
  Versions of the various cases are also planned for the 4th 
  generation iPod touch, the Kindle III, and the Galaxy Tab tablet.


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Navigon MobileNavigator App Bests Standalone Devices
----------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11801>
  7 comments

  Perhaps my favorite piece of consumer electronics over the past five 
  years has been the car navigation GPS device, and I’ve reviewed a 
  slew of them in TidBITS in that time (see our series “Find 
  Yourself with GPS”). But don’t go looking for most of those 
  models because they likely aren’t available any more—the field 
  moves quickly, rendering older models obsolete.

<http://db.tidbits.com/series/1264>

  My dirty little secret is that although I recommended these devices 
  to friends and relatives, I never bought one for myself, since they 
  were never quite perfect (though I liked the Garmin nüvi 255W quite 
  a lot). I could see that the state of the art kept changing, and I 
  didn’t want to get stuck with a model that suffered greatly in 
  comparison with later incarnations. You’ll also notice that the 
  last review in that series compared the device to early iPhone GPS 
  navigation apps, G-Map and AT&T Navigator. I didn’t feel that I 
  could quite trust either of those in stressful driving situations.

  Hence my gift suggestion this year, for anyone who has an iPhone and 
  could use navigation help when travelling in unfamiliar environs, is 
  a GPS iPhone app I’ve tested extensively and feel comfortable 
  recommending: Navigon MobileNavigator (hereafter referred to as 
  Navigon). Put simply, Navigon is as good as or better than every 
  standalone GPS device I’ve used, with only a few minor 
  qualifications.

<http://www.navigon.com/portal/us/produkte/navigationssoftware/mobile_navigator_iphone_us.html>

  I hope by now that most people understand what car GPS navigation is 
  about. You enter your destination, and are given the “best” 
  route. As you drive, you’re given turn-by-turn directions complete 
  with street names, spoken aloud so you can keep your eyes on the 
  road, not on the constantly updated map. If you take a wrong turn or 
  if the GPS makes a mistake (hey, both happen), it calmly 
  recalculates and gives you new directions.

  Well, Navigon does all that brilliantly. Its voice is clear and 
  understandable, its map is extremely readable and accurate, and 
  while I can’t say that it has always directed me perfectly, it has 
  always gotten me to my destination along a reasonable route. (One 
  tip: if you know an area well, the GPS’s directions will 
  inevitably disagree with your favorite routes, although in an urban 
  environment it might also teach you some previously unknown 
  shortcuts.)

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-12/Navigon-map.png>

  What sets Navigon apart are its extras. You can enter addresses 
  manually, find them from your contacts, search for built-in points 
  of interest, and—this is huge for when the points of interest 
  database fails you—do a Google Local Search right from within the 
  app. Once you’ve specified a destination, Navigon tells you what 
  the weather conditions are there, and lists nearby points of 
  interest that may be useful. Tapping Start Navigation then presents 
  you with several possible routes, which is nice when you have a 
  rough idea of which way you’d like to go.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-12/Navigon-destination-info.png>

  You can even tell Navigon if you’re biking or walking, so it 
  calculates speed correctly, and walking directions are presented in 
  a way that makes more sense when you’re strolling city streets. 
  Speaking of speed, there’s an option when driving to alert you 
  (with the single word “Caution”) when you exceed the posted 
  speed limit by more than a user-specified amount; you can even set 
  that amount separately depending on whether or not you’re in an 
  urban area. Navigon works well in both portrait and landscape modes, 
  unlike some other GPS apps I’ve used. I also really appreciate the 
  fact that Navigon can automatically silence music or pause an 
  audiobook or podcast to speak its directions, rewinding a few 
  seconds in audiobook mode so you don’t miss anything. Finally, 
  Navigon looks and works like a true iOS app, with native controls 
  and integration, rather than the truly funky interfaces that many 
  other GPS apps have ported from their companies’ standalone 
  devices.

  Although Navigon isn’t perfect, the mere fact that it’s an 
  iPhone app means that it keeps changing and improving. In fact, 
  that’s part of why I haven’t reviewed it before this; every time 
  I’d get close, a new version would force me to revisit the entire 
  app. In various versions, its displays have improved and changed, 
  live traffic information has become available as an in-app purchase 
  (I haven’t tested this; there is no traffic where I live), 
  connections to Facebook and Twitter have been added (I don’t use 
  this, since I don’t want to clutter my followers’ brains with 
  where I am at any given time), and more. And because it does receive 
  updates, map changes can also be built in, whereas they’re often 
  an extra purchase for standalone GPS devices.

  I have only a few real criticisms of Navigon. First, it’s somewhat 
  slow to start up, which used to be more of a problem before iOS 
  4’s multitasking and fast app switching, although it’s still 
  annoying when I can’t start driving until I have directions. Plus, 
  if I launch it immediately after leaving a building, it can 
  sometimes take longer than I’d like to get a GPS lock, forcing me 
  into a useless and confusing simulation mode until it catches on. A 
  single screen for entering addresses would be easier than the 
  multi-screen approach now, with one screen for each aspect of the 
  address. And finally, sometimes it can be a bit chatty; I’d like 
  an option to control how often it speaks. But as I noted, because 
  Navigon is an app, these criticisms could be eliminated by updates; 
  previous annoyances I’ve had with the software have disappeared.

  You will likely want some sort of a device to hold your iPhone in a 
  good viewing position in the car, along with a car charger (like the 
  standalone GPS units, an iPhone running a GPS app has a battery life 
  of only about two hours). Lastly, although I have no experience with 
  this, Navigon theoretically works on the iPad and iPod touch as 
  well, though I imagine it would require a 3G iPad or, for the iPod 
  touch, the Magellan Premium Car Kit for iPhone and iPod touch, which 
  provides a GPS receiver for the iPod touch (though its reviews on 
  Amazon are decidedly mixed).

<http://www.amazon.com/dp/B002WN30IM/?tag=tidbitselectro00>

  Navigon comes in a variety of editions that differ only by their 
  internal maps. A full United States and Canada version costs $59.99 
  right now, a U.S.-only version costs $49.99, and there are three 
  versions for the Eastern, Central, and Western areas of the United 
  States that are $29.99 each. Prices for versions with maps of other 
  countries range from $59.99 to $119.99. 

<http://itunes.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewArtistSeeAll?dkId=11&ids=320198400&softwareType=iPhone>

  While all those prices may sound high for iPhone apps, they’re 
  notably lower than a standalone car navigation GPS device would be, 
  and for something that works better, improves regularly, and won’t 
  leave you with another device in your drawer in a few years. 


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TidBITS Gift Guide 2010
-----------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11749>

  By now you’ve no doubt seen a few gift guides for the holiday 
  season—not counting the barrage of advertising that saturates 
  November and December each year. We’ve offered TidBITS Gift Guides 
  since 1993, and we encourage you to look at recommendations from 
  recent years, because in many cases the suggestions are still good, 
  like the perennial stalwart software Solitaire Till Dawn. In 
  particular, the 2009, 2008, and 2007 Gift Guides should still be 
  relatively useful.

<http://www.semicolon.com/STDX.html>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10818>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9920>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9352>

  This year, however, we’ve taken a different approach. While we 
  certainly like shiny new gadgets—TidBITS covers Apple and 
  technology, for goodness sake—we don’t need even more physical 
  _stuff_ cluttering our offices and houses, and inevitably migrating 
  to the back of a drawer or a closet before eventually being donated 
  to the Salvation Army or sent to the landfill. So this year, we’re 
  emphasizing bits over atoms with a variety of recommendations from 
  TidBITS staffers, focusing on virtual goods and services that 
  don’t add more plastic and metal to the pile. That’s not to say 
  that each of the recommendations below is entirely based on 
  flittering electrons, but those that aren’t are listed with an eye 
  toward improving our virtual lives.

  We’d also like to hear your suggestions of gifts along this theme 
  in the comments for this article!


**Navigate with Navigon (Adam)** -- Perhaps my favorite piece of 
  consumer electronics over the past five years has been the car 
  navigation GPS device, and I’ve reviewed a slew of them in TidBITS 
  in that time (see our series “Find Yourself with GPS”). But 
  don’t go looking for most of those models because they likely 
  aren’t available any more—the field moves quickly, rendering 
  older models obsolete. 

<http://db.tidbits.com/series/1264>

  My dirty little secret is that although I recommended these devices 
  to friends and relatives, I never bought one for myself, since they 
  were never quite perfect (though I liked the Garmin nüvi 255W quite 
  a lot). I could see that the state of the art kept changing, and I 
  didn’t want to get stuck with a model that suffered greatly in 
  comparison with later incarnations. You’ll also notice that the 
  last review in that series compared the device to early iPhone GPS 
  navigation apps, G-Map and AT&T Navigator. I didn’t feel that I 
  could quite trust either of those in stressful driving situations.

  Hence my gift suggestion this year, for anyone who has an iPhone and 
  could use navigation help when travelling in unfamiliar environs, is 
  a GPS iPhone app I’ve tested extensively and feel comfortable 
  recommending: Navigon MobileNavigator (hereafter referred to as 
  Navigon). Put simply, Navigon is as good as or better than every 
  standalone GPS device I’ve used, with only a few minor 
  qualifications.

<http://www.navigon.com/portal/us/produkte/navigationssoftware/mobile_navigator_iphone_us.html>

  In the interests of space, we’ve continued the discussion of 
  Navigon in a separate article—“Navigon MobileNavigator App Bests 
  Standalone Devices,” 6 December 2010)—since, unlike many iPhone 
  apps, it’s sufficiently deep and capable to warrant significant 
  exploration and commentary.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11801>


**Netflix Watch Instantly and Hulu Plus (Adam)** -- In another 
  bits-not-atoms effort, allow me to recommend a Netflix Watch 
  Instantly account and a Hulu Plus account, which enable the account 
  holder to watch an unlimited number of videos streamed over the 
  Internet. Each account costs $7.99 per month, making even the 
  combination cheaper than purchasing or renting individual items from 
  the iTunes Store for most people. These accounts are even more 
  economical than purchasing DVDs of movies or TV shows, with the 
  added benefit that you don’t have to store yet another DVD box in 
  your house.

<http://www.netflix.com/GiftPurchase?gctrkid=67141322>
<http://www.hulu.com/plus>

  The only significant downside of the Netflix Watch Instantly account 
  is that it doesn’t include many recent TV shows and movies, but 
  it’s safe to say that Netflix still offers thousands of hours of 
  streamed entertainment for just about anyone. And, if you want to 
  edge back toward atoms just a little bit, $9.99 per month adds a 
  single physical DVD at a time, which could be perfect for the person 
  who wants to see the occasional current movie.

  Netflix in general lacks current TV shows, but that’s where Hulu 
  Plus steps in, offering every episode of dozens of popular TV shows 
  from the current season, along with past episodes from numerous 
  other shows. Hulu Plus currently boasts more than 200 seasons and 
  2,400 episodes. I have to admit that we don’t subscribe to Hulu 
  Plus since Netflix provides us with far more video than we have time 
  to watch anyway, but many people feel the need to stay up with 
  current TV shows. Be warned, even after paying for a Hulu Plus 
  subscription, shows still have ads, whereas shows streamed via 
  Netflix’s Watch Instantly service are ad-free.


**Catalog Choice Unlisting Service (Tonya)** -- Although I enjoy 
  browsing through paper catalogs, my overall appetite for catalogs is 
  modest—give me one with schlocky Christmas decor, a couple of 
  clothing catalogs, one with products like laser-based bug zappers, 
  and a few arty catalogs with high production values, and I’m happy 
  for months. A few years ago, the catalog load became so heavy that 
  we were getting a year’s supply each week—we’re talking actual 
  poundage of paper. 

  Fortunately, we found a simple way to manage our catalogs in the 
  form of a suggestion from TidBITS reader Matt Henderson. Matt 
  pointed TidBITS readers to a Web site run by a non-profit 
  organization called Catalog Choice. Since signing up in late 2007, 
  Adam and I have opted out of receiving catalogs from 176 merchants! 
  (To read our original write-up, see “Stop the Catalog Madness with 
  Catalog Choice,” 3 December 2007.) 

<http://www.catalogchoice.org/about>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9232>

  Turning someone on to Catalog Choice would be a nice thing to do, 
  but it’s not quite a gift. However, you can give a special Catalog 
  Choice annual subscription, which includes removal from higher-level 
  lists maintained by third-party marketing services that supply the 
  catalogs with fresh meat, er, names. Catalog Choice is presenting 
  this gift subscription as a “Gift of Less.” What you buy is a 
  code that you can email to your recipient or that’s included in a 
  card that you can print from the Catalog Choice site. Whether you 
  also give a laser bug zapper is up to you. But I’m betting they 
  don’t really work.

<http://www.catalogchoice.org/gift/new>


**Give the Gift of Sleep (Tonya)** -- When it comes to sleep, forget 
  the whiskey, the hot milk, and the sleeping pills (though a little 
  nookie is never a bad thing). For chronic insomnia, a well-chosen 
  audiobook is the ticket to dreamland. The trick is to play it on an 
  iPod (or iPhone) with the sleep timer set for 15 to 30 minutes. The 
  sleep timer automatically turns the audio off at the appointed time 
  with no click (Adam discussed this back in 2005, in “iPods 
  Defeating Insomnia,” 28 February 2005).

  This gift means you’ll be providing the necessary tech support to 
  help your recipient connect an iPod or iPhone to an external speaker 
  (an older, hand-me-down device works admirably for this 
  single-purpose function), fully understand how to operate the sleep 
  timer, and put some audio on the device. To the best of my 
  knowledge, all iPods except for the iPod shuffle have this function. 
  The sleep timer in the iPod touch and the iPhone is available in the 
  Clock app’s timer; the Sleep iPod option is at the bottom of the 
  list of alarm sounds in iOS 4.2.1. The iPhone 4’s built-in speaker 
  is loud enough that you likely don’t need an external speaker.

  The trick is choosing the right audio. It must be interesting, but 
  it can’t be too scary or funny, or too closely related to personal 
  worries, or read with an overly perky voice. My all-time top pick 
  goes to Bill Bryson’s “A Short History of Nearly Everything,” 
  which is available at Amazon and iTunes, but costs less at Amazon. 
  We’ve listened to a number of other books (make sure to get 
  unabridged versions—you want these to go on as long as possible), 
  but have recently become fond of iTunes U class lectures, most 
  notably Donald Kagan’s Ancient Greek History class. 

<http://www.amazon.com/Short-History-Nearly-Everything/dp/B0000U7N00/>
<http://itunes.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewAudiobook?id=358316465&s=143441>
<http://ax.itunes.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewPodcast?id=341651987>

  iTunes U offers a treasure trove of free audio (and video) from 
  college courses. You have to pick carefully because sound quality 
  can vary, and classes with many student questions can prevent you 
  from dropping off. I also recommend Paul Bloom’s Psychology 110 at 
  Yale University, a course that was among the iTunes U picks reviewed 
  recently in the New York Times article “Audit This: 12 Online 
  Courses Worth Watching” (individual reviews are linked to below 
  the article’s main body). I want to emphasize that we listen to 
  these audio files repeatedly until we have absorbed them, and we 
  _like_ them a great deal, even if they do put us to sleep.

<http://ax.itunes.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewPodcast?id=341652042>
<http://www.nytimes.com/2010/04/18/education/edlife/18openintro-t.html>

  One more thing. Although we plug in Adam’s iPhone 4 beside the bed 
  every night for this purpose, you can get an external speaker for 
  the iPhone 3G or 3GS that does not use batteries or cables. It’s 
  called the Griffin AirCurve, and I adore mine. You just plunk the 
  iPhone into it, and the shape of the device conditions the sound 
  waves to add about 10 decibels to the volume. It doesn’t work with 
  other iPhones or the iPod touch, unfortunately, and although 
  there’s an AirCurve Play to amplify the iPhone 4, the iPhone 4’s 
  speaker is itself louder than the iPhone 3GS with the AirCurve.

<http://www.griffintechnology.com/products/aircurve>
<http://www.griffintechnology.com/products/aircurve-play>


**Flickr Pro Membership (Jeff)** -- Digital cameras encourage us to 
  take more photos than we ever did when shooting film, but how are 
  people going to see them if they’re stuck on a computer’s hard 
  drive? Of the many services that let you publish and share photos on 
  the Web, Flickr has long been my favorite. I appreciate its clean 
  interface and easy photo sharing and embedding controls.

<http://www.flickr.com/photos/jeffcarlson/>

  Flickr is also _free_, but a free account is restricted to 300 MB of 
  photos and two videos (which must be shorter than 90 seconds) per 
  month. Your photostream is also limited to the most recent 200 
  images, you can post to up to 10 group pools, and you can’t 
  re-download higher-quality originals that you uploaded.

  For friends or family members that want to share more than that, a 
  great gift idea is to purchase a Flickr Pro account for them at a 
  yearly cost of $24.95 (or $47.99 for two years). They’ll get 
  unlimited uploads (up to 20 MB in size per photo, or up to 500 MB 
  per video), the capability to show HD video, unlimited storage and 
  bandwidth, and archiving of high-resolution originals. They can also 
  replace photos, post items to up to 60 group pools, and get view 
  counts and referrer statistics.

<http://www.flickr.com/gift/>

  If you’re a grandparent who wants to encourage more online photos 
  of grandchildren, or if someone you know has recently delved into 
  photography, a Flickr Pro membership is something that can pay off 
  every day throughout the year.


**Words with Friends (Glenn)** -- Words with Friends is an iOS board 
  game that bears a resemblance to Scrabble. That resemblance is 
  called “identity,” coupled with a few strategic shifts of the 
  board layout, which you’ll have to learn. I made some boneheaded 
  moves initially by thinking of the triple-word squares being in the 
  corners, instead of indented.

  Since I installed Words with Friends HD four months ago, I’ve 
  played several dozen games with a variety of buddies. I nearly 
  always have a move waiting to respond to. I have both the $2.99 iPad 
  version and the $2.99 iPhone/iPod touch edition, so I can play with 
  whatever device I have in hand. (The developer offers a free version 
  with ads for the iPad and iPhone/iPod touch, too.)

<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/words-with-friends-hd/id364140796?mt=8>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/words-with-friends/id322852954?mt=8>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/words-with-friends-hd-free/id400949811?mt=8>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/words-with-friends-free/id321916506?mt=8>

  Words with Friends’ key advantage over the licensed Scrabble iOS 
  app is that the developer has its own network for connecting with 
  others. You don’t need to use Facebook, which is a turnoff for 
  some people—you can get a friend’s Words with Friends handle, 
  send an invite via email, or be hooked up with a stranger (casual 
  text, anyone?). Facebook and Twitter matchups are also available.

  If you prefer the authorized Scrabble app, it has a fair amount 
  going for it, too. There’s a built-in dictionary to check—but 
  not find—words, including a list of all legitimate two-letter 
  words. You can play against the computer from easy to advanced. It 
  creams me at the advanced level, but it’s a great way to learn to 
  play, and play fast games.

<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/scrabble/id284815117?mt=8>

  The Scrabble iPad app also pairs with the free Tile Rack for the 
  iPhone and iPod touch where each player in a game can flick tiles 
  from their device onto a shared iPad to play them! Scrabble also has 
  a pass-and-play mode, and a local network mode in which you can play 
  with other people using the app.

<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/scrabble-tile-rack/id363327037?mt=8>

  Scrabble also lets you cheat: a Best Word feature, which can be 
  disabled, suggests up to four words per round based on your tile 
  rack and the current game board. (Scrabble comes in an iPad edition 
  for $9.99—which seems steep only relative to Words with Friends, 
  but not to the number of hours you’ll use it—and a $2.99 
  iPhone/iPod touch version.)

<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/scrabble-for-ipad/id363306776?mt=8>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/scrabble/id284815117?mt=8>

  Both Scrabble and Words with Friends have a feature that purists 
  won’t like: you can place words on the board, and have the app 
  tell you that one or more of the words isn’t valid. In real game 
  play, an illegitimate word may be played unless challenged. If 
  challenged and found in a dictionary—one you’ve agreed on or 
  that happens to be lying nearby—the challenger loses a turn; 
  otherwise, the player who placed the word removes his or her tiles 
  and loses that turn. (The Scrabble app lets you choose among a 
  couple of dictionaries; its computer player plays only legitimate 
  words.)

  Of course, word challenges lead to hard feelings, destroyed 
  friendships, and family turmoil; perhaps it’s best that the apps 
  act as the arbiter of word legitimacy.


**Kindle Gift Certificates (Glenn)** -- When the Kindle first shipped, 
  I was dubious that people would spend piles of money on books that 
  could be read on only one device. I was wrong about that—plenty of 
  regular commuters and frequent travelers switched to the Kindle to 
  avoid carrying around piles of paper books. And Amazon has opened up 
  the Kindle ecosystem broadly since the first device, while 
  dramatically improving the reader and lowering the price of the 
  7-inch model. 

  You can now get free Kindle software for iOS, Mac OS X, Windows, and 
  other mobile platforms. The same ebook may be read on any Kindle 
  device or software, and the last-read place, notes, and bookmarks 
  are synchronized as well.

  This makes a Kindle gift certificate a highly reasonable option in 
  place of a paper book. The upside: your recipient can immediately 
  purchase and download whatever they want, or even apply the gift 
  certificate towards the purchase of a Kindle reader. The downside: 
  books can’t be transferred after purchase, unlike a printed book 
  that might make its way through family and friends.

<https://www.amazon.com/gp/gc/order-email>

  You can also give specific book titles as Kindle gifts; if a 
  recipient doesn’t want that particular book, he or she can convert 
  the gift to a Kindle gift certificate. Also worth noting is that 
  your friend receives an email message when the gift is purchased, so 
  if you want to keep it a secret until December 25th, you’ll need 
  to place the order on that day.


**Developer Membership Fee (Matt)** -- Got a budding developer in your 
  life? You probably do, because the advent of the iPhone (not to 
  mention the iPad) has brought a torrent of newbies eagerly swimming 
  down Cocoa Touch Creek, tumbling over the Waterfall of Nerdliness 
  and happily getting their feet wet in the Pool of Programming. 
  iPhone apps, in particular, are often so simple and single-minded 
  (and, let’s face it, frequently downright trivial and silly) that 
  they bring out the programmer in all of us, that little inner voice 
  that says: “Hey, I bet I can do this!”

  But there’s a catch, as new iOS programmers quickly discover: 
  although the Xcode developer tools are a free download, and although 
  developing an app on your computer and testing it in the Simulator 
  is free as well, if you want to move an app off the computer and 
  onto an actual iOS device, whether it’s for the pleasure of 
  carrying it around with you and playing with it, or to share it with 
  friends or beta-testers, or to make it available in the App Store, 
  you have to be a member of the iOS Developer Program, which requires 
  an annual fee of $99.

<http://developer.apple.com/programs/ios/>

  This season, help someone over that fiscal hump by giving the gift 
  of one year of developer-hood. You probably can’t actually _pay_ 
  the fee directly, because that requires signing in and enrolling as 
  the developer. But you can give the $99 in some other way, earmarked 
  as your contribution to the recipient’s Developer Program 
  membership. This is a great way to say you care. It’s also a great 
  way to express confidence and support for your recipient. When you 
  give a Developer Programmer membership, what you’re really saying 
  is: “This is just an investment; I expect you take this money, 
  enroll in the iOS Developer Program, write a killer app, sell 
  gazillions of copies of it at the App Store, and make me rich!” 
  After all, reciprocity is the essence of gift-giving, as 
  anthropologists are fond of reminding us.

<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Gift_(book)>

  Seriously, a developer membership is a great gift. When I first 
  signed up for my membership, that $99 seemed a mighty tall hurdle. 
  But in the end, even though all my apps are free except for one, and 
  even though that one hasn’t exactly taken the world by storm, I 
  did make enough back in the first year to pay for the membership 
  (but no, not for my iPod touch).

<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/zotz/id346433833?mt=8>

  And speaking of shamelessly self-promoting plugs (we _were_ speaking 
  of that, weren’t we?) another way to help your budding developer 
  over the learning curve is with a good book about how to program for 
  iOS. I’m writing one for O’Reilly Media at this very moment, and 
  even though it isn’t finished yet, the bulk of the book is in 
  place, and you can obtain it now in digital form in an Early Release 
  edition, as an EPUB or PDF, or via the Web through Safari Books 
  Online. Just like our own Take Control books (see elsewhere in this 
  article), an Early Release edition has the advantage of mutability: 
  as I write new chapters and revise earlier ones, the changes get 
  pushed out and incorporated into the digital book automatically. 
  Honestly, the programming world changes so fast these days that if 
  it weren’t for this Early Release feature of O’Reilly’s, I 
  don’t think I could have been persuaded to write the book at all.

<http://oreilly.com/catalog/0636920010258/>


**Backup Products and/or Services (Joe)** -- I’ll spare you the 
  sermonette about backups; suffice to say that there are many ways to 
  accomplish this essential task, and making backups easier for a 
  loved one—in whichever way—is a wonderful gift. I’ve used many 
  different backup programs in writing “Take Control of Mac OS X 
  Backups, Fourth Edition,” and “Take Control of Easy Mac 
  Backups,” and I have at least three running regularly on my Macs. 
  Of these, I have a special fondness for CrashPlan, which lets you 
  store your backups in the cloud (via an inexpensive service called 
  CrashPlan Central), on a local hard drive, on another computer you 
  own, on a friend’s computer anywhere in the world, or any 
  combination of the above. Although the standard version of CrashPlan 
  is free, I recommend the not-free CrashPlan+, which (as of 7 
  December 2010) offers continuous backups rather than a single backup 
  run per day, backup sets, and a built-in subscription to CrashPlan 
  Central. Alternatively, if you want an online-only backup system 
  that’s extraordinarily easy to set up, and inexpensive too, give 
  the gift of Backblaze ($50 per computer per year).

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/backup-macosx?pt=TB1055&cp=CPN01206TC7>
<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/backup-easy-mac?pt=TB1055&cp=CPN01206TC7>
<http://crashplan.com/consumer/>
<http://crashplan.com/consumer/store.vtl>
<http://www.backblaze.com/gift>

  If you choose CrashPlan, you may want an extra hard drive to go with 
  the new backup software, and the one I have my eye on this holiday 
  season is the first 2.5-inch, bus-powered drive with a 1.5 TB 
  capacity: the Seagate FreeAgent GoFlex ($184.99 at Amazon.com with a 
  USB 3.0 interface; add a FireWire 800 interface and cable for $24.55 
  or an eSATA interface and cable for $16.24). Yes, it’s made of 
  atoms, but it packs lots of storage into a very small space—and is 
  quieter than a full-size drive. And, as a bonus—if you’re buying 
  CrashPlan+ for a loved one—you can offer to back up _their_ files 
  over the Internet so they get a great gift that takes up no room for 
  them.

<http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00455MCRA/?tag=tidbitselectro00>
<http://www.amazon.com/dp/B003IT6PHC/?tag=tidbitselectro00>
<http://www.amazon.com/dp/B003IT6PH2/?tag=tidbitselectro00>

  Another space-saving storage option is a Drobo storage device. 
  Drobos hold from four to eight hard drives, and let you freely add 
  or upgrade drives (to increase your available storage space) at any 
  time, with no manual reconfiguration required—so they help you 
  reduce clutter both now and in the future. Of the many Drobo models, 
  I’m most drawn to the five-bay Drobo S, which is reasonably 
  inexpensive at $799 and, thanks to its USB, FireWire, and eSATA 
  interfaces, lets you use it for bootable duplicates if you like.

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


**Fujitsu ScanSnap Scanner (Joe)** -- If you want to reduce physical 
  stuff in your home or office, those thousands of pages of paper 
  files are a good place to start. Convert them to searchable PDF 
  files to get all the advantages of digital storage (you can back up 
  your paper files!), and clear out some clutter in the process. There 
  are lots of excellent Mac-compatible document scanners, but if I 
  were buying a new one for myself today, I’d go for the Fujitsu 
  ScanSnap S1300, which I reviewed in TidBITS (see “ScanSnap S1300 
  vs. Doxie: Two Portable Document Scanners,” 24 July 2010). It’s 
  not the fastest scanner on the market but is still reasonably zippy, 
  scanning both sides of each sheet simultaneously at up to 16 pages 
  per minute. It’s inexpensive at $295, has a 10-sheet feeder, 
  includes OCR software, and is compact enough to take with you on 
  business trips. And you can learn all about how to use it as part of 
  a complete process for going paperless in “Take Control of Your 
  Paperless Office ($10).”

<http://www.fujitsu.com/us/services/computing/peripherals/scanners/scansnap/s1300.html>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11458>
<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/paperless-office?pt=TB1055&cp=CPN01206TC7>


**Give a Kiva Loan (Rich)** -- I admit to having the terrible habit of 
  buying things I want and need as I find them, making gift-giving 
  holidays ridiculously complicated for my friends and family. Odds 
  are that you have a few similar people on your holiday list. When my 
  wife and I got married, we solved this by asking people to donate to 
  our favorite charities, rather than giving us yet another duplicate 
  kitchen item. The problem with charities as a gift is all you 
  usually get is a nice letter, and it isn’t like you can _play_ 
  with your donation. Kiva changes all that by mashing up a charity, 
  video game, and financial management system.

<http://www.kiva.org/>

  Kiva isn’t a charity per se; it’s a microcredit program that 
  provides small loans to startup businesses in developing nations. 
  The participants are all financially vetted and required to pay back 
  the loans. But rather than sending your money off to some unknown 
  face to make all the decisions, Kiva allows you to choose who you 
  provide loans to, and how much, through a dynamic Web application. 
  You browse entrepreneurs, their proposals, and funding requests and 
  choose to provide financing to the ones of interest. As you invest, 
  and loans are repaid, you manage your portfolio and can choose to 
  continue loaning to new projects, donate money for Kiva operating 
  costs, or remove the funds via PayPal.

  Since the average repayment rate is 99 percent, and Kiva has funded 
  over 460,000 entrepreneurs, your gift can go a very long way. Kiva 
  can also be addictive, thanks to its portfolio management and 
  lending interface. It may feel like a financial game, but with every 
  click you’re helping small businesses and local economies 
  throughout the world.

<http://www.kiva.org/gifts>


**Books, E- and Otherwise (Michael)** -- I’m a book person—big 
  time. So big time that I not only have bulging shelves of books 
  around me, but a storage locker a few miles away from my home 
  bursting at its seams with even more books. Yet, as much as I love 
  the talismanic power of a bound hardcover codex, I have also become 
  a big-time fan of ebooks, and have loaded my iPad and iPhone with 
  them. And not just ebooks from Apple’s iBookstore, but from 
  Amazon, and Barnes & Noble, and several other ebook publishers and 
  vendors (like Take Control!). If you happen to have family members 
  or friends who have iPads, Kindles, Nooks, or other ebook readers, 
  and you happen to be reasonably clueful about your gift 
  recipients’ tastes, an ebook or two, or a gift certificate for the 
  same, can make a great gift. What’s more, there’s no wrapping 
  paper to end up in the landfill once the gift is received.

  With that said, here are two books I’ve recently enjoyed that 
  might make a good gift for the right person on your list.

* “The Autobiography of Mark Twain, Volume 1”: Published 100 years 
  after Twain’s death, the autobiography consists of an enjoyable 
  and highly readable set of free-wheeling recollections, 
  reminiscences, and ruminations that Twain dictated from his bed in 
  the last years of his life, and to which he added newspaper 
  clippings, letters, and various other items at need or on a whim. 
  Twain wanted the work withheld until he had been in his grave for a 
  century, and although portions of it have been printed over the 
  years, the University of California’s Mark Twain Papers and 
  Project has prepared this authoritative edition and published it in 
  both paper and electronic form (and that latter format Twain himself 
  had even foreseen!). A Kindle edition of it is available for under 
  $10, and can be purchased as a gift from Amazon’s site.

<http://bancroft.berkeley.edu/MTP/>
<http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00413QAFG/?tag=tidbitselectro00>

* “CryoBurn”, by Lois McMaster Bujold: For the science fiction fan 
  on your holiday list, this most recent self-contained novel in the 
  Miles Vorkosigan Saga from the Hugo and Nebula Award-winning Bujold 
  is a satisfying science-fiction mystery adventure that touches upon 
  issues of deep philosophic and political import while never failing 
  to entertain. What makes it a good addition to this bits-not-atoms 
  gift list, though, is the CD-ROM included in the Baen Books 
  hardcover edition, which contains ebook versions of almost all of 
  the Vorkosigan Saga novels and stories (including “CryoBurn” 
  itself) in a variety of formats: EPUB, Mobipocket, HTML, RTF, and 
  others. What’s more, there is no digital rights management imposed 
  on these ebook versions. The hardcover with CD-ROM is available from 
  Amazon as well as most bookstores (remember those?).

<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vorkosigan_Saga>
<http://www.amazon.com/dp/1439133948/?tag=tidbitselectro00>


**Take Control Books** -- Obviously, we highly recommend our Take 
  Control ebooks, which consist of easily transferred bits instead of 
  bulky atoms, offer thousands of pages of great information on a wide 
  variety of topics, and feature free or discounted updates. 

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/?pt=TB1055&cp=CPN01206TC7>

  To buy one as a gift, you can buy the ebook as you would normally 
  and then either send it via email (for instant gift-giving 
  satisfaction) or copy it to a CD or thumb drive and deliver it the 
  old-fashioned way (postal service, delivery service, or right jolly 
  old elf). It’s not quite in keeping with bits-not-atoms, but you 
  could order a print version using the Buy Print Book button located 
  on each ebook’s Web page. If you go this route, do it Real Soon 
  Now, because the printed books, unlike the ebooks, don’t ship 
  instantly and can’t be updated.

  If you want to give something tangible, while staying within the 
  theme of this article, perhaps reference it in a simple holiday 
  card: “Dear Steve: This year, I bought you an ebook that will 
  answer all of your questions about reading email on an iPad. I’ll 
  help you install it when I visit you next week. Love, Eudora.” 
  Then you can send the actual PDF (or EPUB, or Mobipocket file, for 
  most titles) via email later.

  Whether you’re shopping for a loved one or looking for ideas to 
  put on your holiday list, all the ebooks sold from the Take Control 
  site are 50-percent off through the end of December, in honor of 
  Take Control’s recent seventh anniversary.

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/catalog?pt=TB1055&cp=CPN01206TC7>

  That’s it for our recommendations for this year, but as always, 
  feel free to contribute your favorite bits-not-atoms gift 
  suggestions in the comments! 


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11749#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/11749>


TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 6 December 2010
---------------------------------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11795>

**FlickrExport 4 for iPhoto and Aperture** -- Connected Flow has 
  released version 4 of FlickrExport for iPhoto and FlickrExport for 
  Aperture. Both the iPhoto and Aperture versions now sport refined 
  interfaces and support multiple Flickr accounts, along with the 
  capability to upload photos to multiple photosets at once. The 
  updated version of the iPhoto plug-in introduces support for video 
  upload and setting license terms for images as you upload them. Also 
  new in the Aperture plug-in is the capability to perform 
  metadata-only uploads, for when you want to update Flickr’s 
  metadata without replacing the photos themselves. (iPhoto plug-in: 
  £12 new, £6 upgrade, 1.5 MB; Aperture plug-in: £14 new, £7 
  upgrade, 1.8 MB)

<http://connectedflow.com/flickrexport/iphoto/>
<http://connectedflow.com/flickrexport/aperture/>

  Read/post comments about FlickrExport 4 for iPhoto and Aperture.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11800#comments>


**RapidWeaver 5.0.1** -- If you’re disappointed that Apple’s 
  latest iLife update neglected iWeb, here’s some news that may 
  cheer you up: Realmac Software has released version 5 of its 
  award-winning Web design software RapidWeaver. New in version 5 are 
  a Projects Window, a Bookmarks Manager, six new themes, 
  stat-tracking support, HTML and XML sitemap generators, integrated 
  Safari Web Developer Tools, and what Realmac calls a “bucketload 
  of UI refinements.” Also new in this version is an Addons area to 
  make managing RapidWeaver plug-ins much simpler—see the Realmac 
  Software site for a full list of additions. ($79 new, $39 upgrade, 
  34.0 MB)

<http://www.realmacsoftware.com/rapidweaver/>

  Read/post comments about RapidWeaver 5.0.1.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11797#comments>


**Swift Publisher 2.3.3** -- BeLight Software’s desktop publishing 
  software Swift Publisher has been updated to version 2.3.3. Starting 
  with this version, Swift Publisher can automatically check for (and 
  download) new updates automatically. Several bug fixes are also 
  included in the release: object dimensions are more accurate when 
  viewing pages at the 100-percent zoom level, page order when 
  printing in Imposition mode is fixed, and several bugs with tool 
  buttons under Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard are also corrected. If you 
  already own version 2 of the software, you can download a much 
  smaller update (instead of the full application installer) from 
  BeLight. ($44.95 Standard Edition/$54.95 Retail Edition, free 
  update, 40.4 MB full download, 8.3 MB update download)

<http://www.belightsoft.com/products/swiftpublisher/overview.php>
<http://www.belightsoft.com/swiftpublisher/update/update.php>

  Read/post comments about Swift Publisher 2.3.3.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11798#comments>


**VMware Fusion 3.1.2** -- When you must run Windows or another 
  Intel-based operating system, it’s nice that VMware Fusion at 
  least lets you do so without leaving the comfy confines of your Mac. 
  Now, the virtualization software has been updated to version 3.1.2, 
  which resolves many bugs and security-related issues. Fixed problems 
  include one where you’d encounter errors when attempting to resume 
  virtual machines with DivX Player installed, video display issues 
  with Slingbox Slingplayer, and windowing issues with Microsoft 
  Office applications. Many other bugs—problems with volume, 
  connected handheld devices, full screen mode, the Samsung Galaxy S, 
  Outlook 2007, and Mac OS X Server—are also addressed; the complete 
  list is available at VMware’s Web site. Beyond all those fixes, 
  version 3.1.2 includes patches for a small handful of security 
  vulnerabilities that could allow local users to access files that 
  they shouldn’t be permitted to see. ($49.99 new after $30 rebate 
  from VMware, free update)

<http://www.wmware.com/products/fusion/>
<http://www.wmware.com/support/fusion3/doc/releasenotes_fusion_312.html>

  Read/post comments about VMware Fusion 3.1.2.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11793#comments>


**Cyberduck 3.8** -- The field of powerful file transfer tools has 
  expanded significantly over the years, and perhaps the most capable 
  of the donationware tools is David Kocher’s open-source Cyberduck. 
  Cyberduck 3.8 packs in a variety of new features, including some 
  specific CDN options for users of Amazon CloudFront, importers for 
  FireFTP and CrossFTP bookmarks, improvements for the display of file 
  sizes and dates, and plenty more. Also included in the update are 
  more than a dozen bug fixes that provide speedier SFTP transfers, 
  reduced upload preparation time, and better handling when accessing 
  Google Docs through Web proxies. (Free, 20.4 MB)

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

  Read/post comments about Cyberduck 3.8.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11792#comments>


**EyeTV 3.5** -- Before Hulu, the number one way Mac users could watch 
  TV with their computers was with Elgato’s EyeTV, and even now it 
  remains popular for recording TV from cable (see “Recording TV to 
  iTunes with Elgato’s EyeTV Tuners,” 19 August 2010). The 
  software has now been updated to version 3.5, which is the first 
  Intel-only release; PowerPC processors are no longer supported. 
  While the new version of the software works on Macs running Mac OS X 
  10.5.8 Leopard or better, Elgato recommends Mac OS X 10.6.5 Snow 
  Leopard or later.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11529>

  EyeTV 3.5 offers enhanced performance and stability with the EyeTV 
  Netstream Sat. Numerous bugs are fixed, among them: recordings from 
  IceTV are now properly labeled as Movies or Series, missing 
  thumbnails are now created, and subtitle position when switching 
  between SD and HD now works correctly. Also corrected are issues 
  with invalid characters being displayed on the new Apple TV, and an 
  issue with iPad playback on devices running iOS 4.2. ($79.95 new, 
  free update, 104 MB)

<http://www.elgato.com/elgato/na/mainmenu/products/software/EyeTV3/product1.en.html>
<http://www.elgato.com/elgato/int/mainmenu/products/tuner/netstreamsat/product1.en.html>

  Read/post comments about EyeTV 3.5.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11789#comments>


**Google Earth 6** -- You’ve got the whole world in your hands—or 
  at least on your Mac—with Google Earth. Google has bumped the 
  globetrotting software to version 6, which is now available for 
  Intel-based Macs only. The new version adds access to a variety of 
  views, including Street View, 3D trees, and historical imagery. 
  Other additions include ground-level navigation, 3D measurements, 
  and improvements to the Tour Recorder. Google Earth requires Mac OS 
  X 10.5 Leopard or later. Note that Google Earth 6 turns out to be a 
  beta, something that wasn’t initially clear; it may be worth 
  waiting for an official release to upgrade. (Free, 53.3 MB)

<http://www.google.com/earth/>

  Read/post comments about Google Earth 6.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11786#comments>




ExtraBITS for 6 December 2010
-----------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11794>

  We have just a few must-see links this week, including a music video 
  (really!) that provides fabulous commentary on disassembling a 
  laptop, news of the new MacTech Boot Camp conference for consultants 
  and support professionals, and a link to an article by Glenn 
  Fleishman about the future of Mac networking.


**Laptop Disassembly Music Video** -- No, really, it is a music video 
  by Jayme Gutierrez about how hard it is to take his laptop apart to 
  clean the fan. It’s remarkably well done, with tons of music video 
  tropes, a catchy song, and a nod to Apple at the end (not that Mac 
  laptops are necessarily all that easy to take apart either!). And 
  you have to love the disclaimer: “This is not a definitive 
  maintenance video.”

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

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11791#comments>


**MacTech Boot Camp Offers Support Training** -- Building on the 
  success of November’s MacTech Conference, which was aimed at IT 
  professionals and Mac developers, MacTech has announced another 
  conference, with a twist. Called MacTech Boot Camp, it’s a 
  single-track, hotel-based seminar designed specifically to help Mac 
  consultants and other support professionals. A single-day event, it 
  will be held in San Francisco on 26 January 2011, the day before the 
  Macworld Expo show floor opens, making it easy to combine travel 
  costs. MacTech Boot Camp costs $295 through 15 December 2010, or 
  $495 afterward.

<http://www.mactech.com/bootcamp/>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11788#comments>


**Future of Mac Networking** -- Glenn Fleishman lays out the future of 
  Mac networking standards in Macworld, including USB 3.0 and upcoming 
  802.11ac and 802.11ad wireless flavors, and the seemingly inevitable 
  removal of FireWire.

<http://www.macworld.com/article/156103/2010/12/macofthefuturenetwork.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11787#comments>




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