TidBITS#1056/13-Dec-2010
========================
  Issue link: <http://db.tidbits.com/issue/1056>


  It’s our final TidBITS issue for 2010, and we have a great selection
  of articles, including Joe Kissell’s coverage of changes in CrashPlan+
  3.0 and his review of the DEVONthink To Go app. Glenn Fleishman
  explains what makes a good iOS app in general, a topic he spent much
  time considering while selecting apps for his “Five-Star Apps” print
  book. And Adam shares both a fun video of a group playing Christmas
  carols on iOS devices and a cautionary story about why keeping a clone
  of your hard disk mounted at all times can be dangerous. Don’t
  forget—all Take Control ebooks are 50 percent off through the end of
  the year! Notable software releases this week include Switcher Maestro
  1.0, Simon 3.0.1, Microsoft Office 2008 for Mac 12.2.8 Update, Postbox
  2.1, MacBook Air EFI Firmware Update 2.0, Aperture 3.1.1, Mactracker
  5.3, Photoshop CS5 12.0.2, Skitch 1.0.1, Photoshop Lightroom 3.3,
  KeyCue 5.2, and RapidWeaver 5.0.1. See you in 2011!

Articles
    TidBITS 2010 Holiday Hiatus
    iCarols from the iBand
    DealBITS Discount: Save 20% on cf/x alpha
    CrashPlan+ 3.0 Adds Features, Changes Pricing
    What Makes a Stellar iOS App
    Taking DEVONthink To Go for a Spin
    Clone Wars, or How My Backups Ate My Photos
    TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 13 December 2010
    ExtraBITS for 13 December 2010


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

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

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TidBITS 2010 Holiday Hiatus
---------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11821>

  We are once again approaching the end of the year, but with more of 
  a sense of control than in some recent years, thanks to the capable 
  efforts of the TidBITS staff, bolstered recently by the addition of 
  Lex Friedman and Michael E. Cohen. Lex has done an outstanding job 
  keeping us up-to-date with the latest Mac software releases, and 
  Michael, who joined us late in the year, has relieved tremendous 
  amounts of pressure on the Take Control side, thus enabling us to 
  release a number of new and updated ebooks recently (all of which 
  are 50 percent off through the end of the year!).

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/catalog?pt=TB1056&cp=CPN01206TC7>

  Tonya and I are no less thankful for the highly capable and amiable 
  assistance of Glenn, Jeff, Joe, Matt, Mark, and Rich, along with the 
  many Take Control authors and editors. We hear stories about jobs 
  with awful co-workers, so we’re incredibly lucky to get to work 
  with people we’d want to hang out with anyway.

  We’re also indebted to digital.forest for server hosting, and to 
  our TidBITS corporate sponsors for helping us keep the lights on. 
  And, as always, we owe huge thanks to the writers who have 
  contributed articles to TidBITS throughout the year, to the 
  volunteer translators who make TidBITS available in other languages, 
  to the individuals who leave comments on articles and participate in 
  TidBITS Talk, and to everyone who carves out precious time to read 
  what we write. 

  Thank you, one and all, and may all your holiday wishes come true.

  As is our custom, we’re taking the final two weeks of the year off 
  from the email issue, so we and the rest of the TidBITS staff can 
  spend time with our families, reflect on the past year, rest up a 
  bit, and look forward to whatever excitement Apple has in store for 
  us all in 2011.

  Be sure to stop by the TidBITS Web site, read along in the TidBITS 
  News app (with a native iPad interface coming as soon as Apple 
  approves our update!) or subscribe to our RSS, Twitter, or Facebook 
  feeds for news, ExtraBITS links, Watchlist items, and other articles 
  we can’t resist posting. We’ll continue to moderate TidBITS Talk 
  discussions as well, though undoubtedly at a more relaxed pace. The 
  next email issue of TidBITS will come out on 3 January 2011.

<http://www.tidbits.com/>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/tidbits-news/id348629441?mt=8>
<http://db.tidbits.com/feeds/tidbits.rss>
<http://twitter.com/TidBITS>
<http://www.facebook.com/pages/TidBITS/195314925519>


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iCarols from the iBand
----------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11806>
  2 comments

  Sure, we all know you can play music on an iPhone or iPad, but this 
  YouTube video from the iBand, a group at the North Point Community 
  Church outside of Atlanta, takes iOS device music to a whole new 
  level, with an 8-member band playing a medley of Christmas carols 
  entirely on iPads and iPhones. Thanks to reader Charles Reeves for 
  the pointer!

<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F9XNfWNooz4>

  Aside from the enjoyment of watching a bunch of guys in silly hats 
  playing synthesized Christmas music on iPads, all I could think was 
  that they really needed Hand-e-holders so they could rock around a 
  bit more while playing without worrying about dropping their iPads 
  (see “Palm Your iPad with a Hand-e-holder,” 29 October 2010).

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


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DealBITS Discount: Save 20% on cf/x alpha
-----------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11822>

  Congratulations to Kenneth Simon at gmail.com, Roland Whitehead at 
  mac.com, and Mark Palmerino at csr-bos.com, whose entries were 
  chosen randomly in the last DealBITS drawing and who each received a 
  copy of cf/x alpha 1.0, worth $229. But don’t fret if you didn’t 
  win, since cf/x Software is offering a 20-percent-off discount on 
  the entire cf/x alpha product line (home, standard, and pro), along 
  with the collage-specific tool cf/x collage through 31 December 
  2010. To take advantage of the discount, use coupon code CFXDEALBITS 
  when ordering; the discount appears once you’ve entered the code 
  in your cart. Thanks to the 585 people who entered this DealBITS 
  drawing, and we hope you’ll continue to participate in the future!

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11799>
<http://www.cfxsoftware.com/products/alphaoverview.html>
<http://www.cfxsoftware.com/purchase/purchaseoverview.html>


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CrashPlan+ 3.0 Adds Features, Changes Pricing
---------------------------------------------
  by Joe Kissell <joe@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11805>
  4 comments

  When I initially wrote up my recommendation to buy CrashPlan+ as a 
  gift (see “TidBITS Gift Guide 2010,” 6 December 2010), I checked 
  the CrashPlan Web site to confirm the software’s price—$59.99. 
  But a few days later, as we were preparing the article for 
  publication, I noticed that the product had disappeared entirely 
  from CrashPlan’s online store. When I wrote to Code 42 Software to 
  find out what was up, I learned the company was just hours away from 
  releasing an entirely revamped CrashPlan+. The new and improved 
  product, CrashPlan+ 3.0, is now available, and for most people it 
  will provide significantly more features at a lower overall cost 
  (but read on for some qualifications).

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11749>
<http://www.crashplan.com/>

  By way of background, CrashPlan is backup software that runs on Mac 
  OS X, Windows, and Linux. You can use it to back up to a local hard 
  drive, just like most other backup programs; and as with competitors 
  such as Mozy and Backblaze, you can also send your files to secure, 
  cloud-based storage for a modest monthly or yearly fee. However, 
  CrashPlan’s most distinctive feature has always been that you can 
  also back up your files to any other computer on the Internet 
  that’s running the CrashPlan software and has granted you 
  permission—that could be another computer in your home or office, 
  or a friend’s computer around the world. The basic version of 
  CrashPlan was, and still is, completely free.

  Previously, the company had two main paid offerings for consumers. 
  First was the CrashPlan+ software; that $60 investment got you 
  continuous (rather than once-daily) backups and stronger encryption. 
  Separately, you could—with either version of the software—pay 
  for CrashPlan Central, the company’s online storage service. 
  Prices varied depending on whether you were backing up just one 
  computer or all computers in a household, and decreased for 
  purchases of multi-year subscriptions, but on the whole worked out 
  to be a bit cheaper than most competitors.

  With the new announcement, CrashPlan+ and the CrashPlan Central 
  storage service have essentially merged. That is, rather than 
  selling CrashPlan+ as standalone software, it’s now included free 
  with any subscription to the online storage service (which now bears 
  the name CrashPlan+ instead of CrashPlan Central). At first, I was a 
  bit put off by this news—even though I have a multi-year family 
  subscription to CrashPlan Central myself, I know a number of people 
  who want the continuous backup feature of CrashPlan+ but not the 
  company’s online storage, so for them it seemed that this would 
  amount to forcing a purchase of a service they wouldn’t use.

  In reality, the facts are much more benign, as well as more 
  interesting. Because the range of subscription options has broadened 
  and the CrashPlan+ software comes free with all of them, you can 
  actually get the software for considerably less money than 
  before—as little as $1.46 per month (with the purchase of a 
  four-year, 10 GB plan). So, to make an apples-to-apples comparison, 
  for the same $59.99 you would have paid previously just for the 
  software, you now get the software, three years of online storage 
  for up to 10 GB of data (which you can use or not, as you prefer), 
  and any upgrades to the software that appear during that 
  time—previously, some CrashPlan+ upgrades were paid. You might pay 
  a bit more or less depending on what options you want, but on the 
  whole you’re most likely saving money.

  What’s that, you say—a 10 GB plan? Before the recent 
  announcement, all CrashPlan Central subscriptions were for an 
  unlimited amount of data—either from a single computer or multiple 
  computers, depending on which plan you chose. The unlimited options 
  are still offered, but are joined by a 10 GB plan for people with 
  tight budgets, who don’t expect to use the online storage, or who 
  want to back up only a small subset of their files online.

  And that in turn leads me to the biggest new feature in CrashPlan+, 
  backup sets. Previously, although you could back up to as many 
  different destinations as you wanted, you had to back up the _same_ 
  set of files to each. Now, you can pick and choose. For example, 
  back up every last file on your disk to a local FireWire hard drive, 
  back up your home folder to another Mac on your network, and back up 
  just your most crucial documents to CrashPlan+’s cloud storage. In 
  addition to choosing which files are backed up where, you can also 
  manage backup schedules for each set separately.

  For those who do plan to back up lots of data online, the Individual 
  Unlimited and Family Unlimited accounts offer attractive 
  prices—they’ve increased a bit, but they now include the 
  CrashPlan+ features, which formerly required a separate software 
  purchase for each computer you wanted to back up. The Individual 
  Unlimited plans let you back up as much data as you want from a 
  single computer; the Family Unlimited plans apply to all the 
  computers in a household. As with the 10 GB plans, you can pay 
  month-to-month, but you get deep discounts if you pay for one or 
  more years at a time, with discounts increasing along with the 
  subscription period. For example, the Family Unlimited plan costs 
  $12 per month, but you can buy a full year for $119.99, the 
  equivalent of $10 per month; pay for four years up front and it 
  costs only $287.99 ($6 per month—half the month-to-month rate). 
  (You can find full details on all the pricing options at the 
  CrashPlan Store.)

<http://www.crashplan.com/consumer/store.vtl>

  Although the merger of CrashPlan+ with CrashPlan Central and the 
  addition of backup sets are the biggest news in CrashPlan+ 3, 
  several other significant changes are worth mentioning:

* You can now easily reconnect a backup archive with a given computer. 
  Previously, if you replaced your hard drive or migrated to a new 
  computer, even if all the data was the same—for example, copied 
  from a bootable duplicate—CrashPlan tried to restart your backups 
  from scratch, and only an obscure, awkward procedure could enable 
  you to tell the software, “Hey! This is the same data! Just 
  connect this “new” machine to the same archive!” Now it takes 
  just a few clicks.

* You can limit backups to certain days of the week, and can specify 
  with greater granularity when scheduled backups should happen.

* More Mac metadata is handled correctly—in my tests, all but one 
  rare, insignificant metadata type restored perfectly.

* A long list of other features, interface changes, and bug fixes can 
  be found in the release notes.

<http://support.crashplan.com/doku.php/release/m25_r01>

  If you had the previous version of CrashPlan or CrashPlan+ 
  installed, it should already have been updated to version 3.0 
  automatically (or it will be when it next activates). If you were a 
  CrashPlan Central subscriber—whether or not you used 
  CrashPlan+—you get all the new features automatically, with no 
  price increases until the period for which you’ve already paid 
  elapses. Those who want to switch their accounts to one of the new 
  plans, or who had a CrashPlan+ license but no CrashPlan Central 
  subscription, can get various deals on upgrades depending on exactly 
  what they’re moving from and to; customers are invited to contact 
  <support@crashplan.com> for details.

  CrashPlan 3.0 (a single application that includes both the free, 
  feature-limited version and full CrashPlan+ functionality for those 
  with paid subscriptions) is a 13.5 MB download.

<http://www.crashplan.com/consumer/download.html>


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What Makes a Stellar iOS App
----------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11744>
  6 comments

  A book editor friend called me up a few months ago. How would I like 
  to research and write a 200-or-so page tome of iOS app reviews for 
  Peachpit Press? I had to think about it a moment. There were over 
  250,000 (now over 300,000) programs in the App Store. While I had 
  used dozens of them, this would require finding and testing several 
  hundred. I decided it was worth the challenge.

  But how to pick what appeared? The notion of the book, ultimately 
  named “Five-Star Apps” ($19.99 list, about $13.50 online), just 
  out in print form, was that we would include only the best apps in a 
  number of categories. Lackluster programs don’t need the negative 
  attention, and we didn’t need a venue in which to criticize 
  programs and developers. There’s plenty of that online already. 
  That still left a huge field of apps to cull through. I asked 
  friends, went through my collection, read online reviews, looked at 
  bestselling and other categories at iTunes, and put up a survey that 
  I invited people to answer via Twitter. (Follow the book title link 
  for prices at online bookstores, and information on ordering at 35 
  percent off directly from Peachpit Press.)

<http://5str.us/>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-11/five-star-apps-book-cover.jpg>

  Several hundred apps later, I had come up with a number of criteria 
  for what makes a good app. However, I didn’t try to assign point 
  values and weight them. I let the gestalt of an app decide for it. I 
  wanted to include apps that I could recommend to people looking 
  either for something fun to do, or who had an itch that needed 
  scratching. To that end, here’s what guided my thinking, and I 
  share this in the hopes of it helping current and future iOS 
  developers make better apps:

* Did it have unique or rare elements? This was a great winnowing 
  tool, and led me to the addictive and peculiar Osmos HD, a game that 
  also feels like biology; Flipboard, one of a few apps that 
  re-envision RSS, Twitter, and Facebook updates; Corkulous, a 
  literal-minded cork board for organizing ideas; and Calvetica, an 
  attractive rethinking of calendar interaction and display. With so 
  many apps, it’s hard to find ones that differ from all the others 
  that do the same thing, unless no other app carries out the same 
  functions. Unique also doesn’t mean strange. I further omitted 
  whole categories of games when I couldn’t find at least one 
  program that stood out from a field of so-so versions. (Some apps in 
  a category I won’t reveal that allow a player to pit him- or 
  herself against a computer were papered with reviews that the game 
  cheated!)

<http://5str.us/xqa>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-11/5star-osmos-hd.jpg>
<http://5str.us/b6f>
<http://5str.us/vmi>

* Was there a high level of thoughtfulness in the interface and polish 
  in the design? I wasn’t looking for eye candy, but the kind of 
  deep and broad thinking that takes an app from easy to use to being 
  a delight to launch. Dropbox, for instance, has a very tedious 
  purpose—providing remote access to files in your own folder and 
  those shared with you by others. But it’s enjoyable to use to 
  explore, and has an obviousness about the interface that requires 
  little explanation. (Corollary: Any app that needs a deep manual is 
  probably trying too hard or not designed well enough. There are a 
  few exceptions in which the depth of a program is enhanced by having 
  buried features that need more explanation than an intuitive grasp 
  can provide—GoodReader, one of my favorite apps, is such an 
  exception.)

<http://5str.us/wpl>
<http://5str.us/jl7>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-11/5star-goodreader.png>

* Does it promote community? For games, especially, but also for apps 
  with social and information components, how easy is it for you to 
  tie in with your friends and colleagues? Several different game 
  networks exist, some of which span multiple mobile platforms and 
  desktop software; other apps tie right into Facebook and Twitter. 
  Words with Friends is a notable example, letting you play a familiar 
  (but not identical) word-tile game, and offering connections through 
  multiple means—as well as letting you play against a random 
  stranger. Ocarina by itself is a funky and interesting program to 
  simulate an ancient instrument. The World tab lets you listen to 
  (and play for) the rest of the globe.

<http://5str.us/g6r>
<http://5str.us/5dm>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-11/5star-ocarina.png>

* Was it useful? Games don’t qualify, of course, but most of the 
  other categories I looked at, such as reading and remote access, 
  place a high value on utility. For example, I use LogMeIn Ignition 
  regularly for remote access to my various computers via an iPhone or 
  iPad.

<http://5str.us/vgj>

* Does the developer keep updating the software? I found some 
  interesting programs that I might have included, but discovered that 
  they hadn’t been updated since before iOS 4—in some cases, 
  before 2010! That didn’t seem like the kind of commitment 
  necessary. Many popular and well-liked apps are updated almost too 
  often, with updates appearing every few weeks.

* Is the app iOS 4-savvy? I’ve gotten so used to iOS 4’s fast-app 
  switching (see “What is Fast App Switching?,” 23 June 2010), 
  background audio, and background location features, that I was 
  pulled up short every time I used software that had to restart 
  itself on launch or that stopped playing music. With iOS 4.2.1 now 
  available for the iPad, making use of appropriate iOS 4 features is 
  more or less mandatory.

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


**The Fallacy of Five** -- There’s an important component to titling 
  a book “Five-Star Apps”—do the apps literally score five stars 
  in reviews in the App Store? Nearly uniformly: no. That may seem 
  like a hard thing to reconcile with the title. But it has to do with 
  the vagaries of Apple’s rating system. (Marco Arment, developer of 
  the fantastic Instapaper read-later app, analyzed the words in 
  common among five-star and one-star reviews in popular apps a couple 
  months ago; the results were fascinating.)

<http://5str.us/mt2>
<http://www.marco.org/1111087530>

  In researching the book, I discovered that some of the best apps 
  have scores as low as 3 1/2 stars over a program’s life or with 
  sufficient reviews of the latest version. (There’s a problem with 
  how reviews age. A program with a bad start suffers from bad early 
  reviews dragging down an overall rating. Likewise, a bad update can 
  find an app flooded with low-star ratings, which pick up only with 
  the next refresh.)

  This stems from multiple factors. First, free apps often get a large 
  number of poor ratings from people who don’t seem to understand 
  what the app was supposed to do, or object to missing features. This 
  is especially true for “light” versions of full-featured apps, 
  since Apple doesn’t allow trial versions of software that expire. 
  (Apple will let features be enabled through in-app purchases, but 
  that’s not the same thing.)

  Second, before iOS 4, you were always asked if you wanted to review 
  an app when you deleted it from an iOS device. It was easy to tap 
  the single star by mistake, and it’s also the worst time to ask 
  someone their opinion. These ratings persist for programs more than 
  a few months old, and iPad apps continued to be reviewed in this 
  fashion until it was updated to iOS 4.2 as well.

  Third, a five-star rank sets a high bar. Many four-star reviews on 
  the App Store essentially give the program the reviewer’s highest 
  marks, but five stars apparently seems like too many to those users. 
  This was an issue in naming the book, too: there are four-star 
  hotels, but five stars sounds like the maximum possible number. (Six 
  stars just sounds ridiculous—why is that?)

  Fourth, people can just be ornery. Reading through low-ranked 
  reviews for terrific apps, I was struck by how capricious people can 
  be when given their chance to express a view.

  I found a lot of gems through this process, and had an enjoyable (if 
  exhausting) time explaining what makes the apps I chose worth 
  consideration, whether they are free, 99 cents, or $29.99. What’s 
  marvelous about the variety at the App Store is that the nearly 200 
  apps reviewed in my book are still just some of what meets the 
  criteria above. Using those guidelines, I continue to find useful 
  programs—and yes, I’m keeping track for the next edition.


**Buying (or Making) a Great App** -- I didn’t write a narrative 
  book, so I can’t offer you the conclusion of a story arc. “Jake 
  App and Jill iPhone moved into the house on the hill, and they were 
  never bothered by that pesky Steve Ballmer ever again.”

  Rather, I have two sets of advice. For consumers of iOS apps, 
  don’t settle for second best. The bulk of App Store programs are 
  going to be middling. That’s just the way life works. We can’t 
  all be exceptional. But you’re the buyer: you don’t need to 
  settle.

  Because you can’t download test versions of most software, try to 
  find independent reviews at sites like Macworld that are clearly not 
  being paid to review app software, and try out light or free 
  versions of programs.

  For most programs, the penalty of making a bad choice is low. 
  Ninety-nine cents shouldn’t be laughed off, but it’s not $9.99 
  or $49.99. You can afford to experiment a bit.

  For developers of iOS apps, my suggestion is, like that of Steve 
  Jobs and Apple, with so many programs available, you need to reach a 
  bit further. Don’t release yet another app in a crowded category 
  unless you have a unique spin. Apple might prevent even apps with 
  unique twists, anyway, because they have decided there are enough 
  items in certain arbitrary categories. (TidBITS staff writer Lex 
  Friedman just had his Snuggie Sutra app rejected by Apple because 
  the App Store has too many kama sutras—even though Lex’s app, 
  adapted from a book, is clearly a parody.)

<http://blog.lexfriedman.com/post/1605963829/my-very-own-app-store-rejection>

  This can be frustrating. There is nothing new under the sun—that 
  phrase dates back to Ecclesiastes, proving the point—but there are 
  ways to reinvent the wheel without making it square. Find an 
  environmental niche that hasn’t been filled, and be fruitful.

  Good apps float to the top, buoyed by interesting ideas, 
  presentation, and a clarity of thought. Keep it clean, simple, and 
  singleminded, and even hard-to-please users might be compelled to 
  give out those cherished five stars. 


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Taking DEVONthink To Go for a Spin
----------------------------------
  by Joe Kissell <joe@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11730>
  6 comments

  My digital life seems to revolve around PDF files. I have thousands 
  of them, and the number grows daily. Some come from documents I scan 
  and save in searchable PDF format (see, for example, “ScanSnap 
  S1300 vs. Doxie: Two Portable Document Scanners,” 24 July 2010); 
  others appear when I save Web receipts, capture archives of Web 
  pages, or download manuals, data sheets, or books. I have even been 
  known to write the odd occasional PDF-format ebook myself. My tool 
  of choice for cataloguing, searching, annotating, and otherwise 
  managing all those PDFs has for several years been DEVONthink Pro 
  Office. (DEVONthink handles dozens of file types, it just happens to 
  excel at PDFs, and that’s what I mostly use it for.) I liked it 
  enough that I wrote a book on it—distributed primarily as a PDF, 
  natch—“Take Control of Getting Started with DEVONthink 2.”

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11458>
<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/devonthink-2?pt=TB1056>

  Naturally, I’d like to have access to all my PDFs and other 
  documents from DEVONthink when I’m away from my Mac, too. My 
  iPhone and iPad display PDFs brilliantly, but there’s been a 
  problem. Although I can use any of a gazillion apps to copy PDFs to 
  my iOS devices and display them there, the process of getting 
  documents out of my DEVONthink database and into an arbitrary iOS 
  app is tedious at best. So for the most part I haven’t 
  bothered—until now. Thanks to DEVONtechnologies’ new iOS app, 
  DEVONthink To Go, I can wirelessly sync any or all of my DEVONthink 
  database with my mobile devices, so I’m never without any of my 
  crucial data.

<http://www.devon-technologies.com/products/devonthink-to-go>

  Before the release of DEVONthink To Go, the recommended way to get 
  at your DEVONthink library from an iOS device was to use the Web 
  server built into DEVONthink Pro Office and connect to it using 
  Safari. That sort of worked, but its capabilities were limited and 
  it wasn’t practical to use when away from my home network. So 
  I’ve been eagerly awaiting the arrival of DEVONthink To Go, and 
  now that I’ve had a chance to put it through its paces, I want to 
  share my impressions. (This is the season for iOS apps that sync 
  with Mac snippet keepers, incidentally—DEVONthink To Go 1.0 
  shipped less than two weeks after the similar Yojimbo for iPad, 
  which Glenn Fleishman discussed in “Yojimbo 3.0 Gains Scanning and 
  iPad App,” 19 October 2010.)

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11679>

  I wrote a draft of this review shortly after the initial release of 
  DEVONthink To Go, but ended up spending far too many words talking 
  about serious bugs. I decided to give version 1.0 the benefit of the 
  doubt. After all, there’s always pressure to ship, and I know how 
  software development goes—things take longer than you expect, 
  problems crop up at the last minute, things that should have been 
  easy turn out to be hard, and so on. So I put my opinions on hold 
  until I had a chance to work with version 1.0.1, which appeared on 
  23 November 2010.

  The short version: DEVONthink To Go works, and version 1.0.1 does 
  indeed fix the bugs I personally found most irritating. The app 
  still feels like an early effort, though—not quite fully baked. 
  The current limitations don’t prevent me from using it, but as I 
  discuss later, they may frustrate certain types of users. At the 
  same time, after discussions with DEVONtechnologies president Eric 
  Böhnisch-Volkmann, I’m optimistic that in another version or two, 
  this could become an app to be reckoned with.


**The Basics** -- DEVONthink To Go is a universal app that works on 
  any iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch running iOS 3.1 or later, and its 
  interface is individually optimized for each type of screen. It’s 
  available in the App Store for an “introductory price” of 
  $14.99, though the company has not announced how long the current 
  price will last or what it might eventually be. It’s possible to 
  use DEVONthink To Go on its own, but it’s mainly designed to work 
  with version 2.0.5 or later of DEVONthink (Personal, Professional, 
  or Pro Office edition) or DEVONnote. (I’ll refer to these products 
  collectively as “DEVONthink” for simplicity.)

<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/devonthink-to-go/id395722470>

  To get documents into DEVONthink To Go, you first put the documents 
  you want to sync into the Sync group in DEVONthink. A group in 
  DEVONthink is basically a folder, and thanks to something called a 
  replicant (somewhat along the lines of an alias, not a bioengineered 
  being from “Blade Runner”), a document can appear in many groups 
  without taking up any extra space. That means you can create a 
  replicant in the Sync group in order to sync a document without 
  changing its location in the hierarchy of your database. 

  And, if you put a replicant of a _group_ in the Sync group, then any 
  document in that group—now or in the future—is synced to your 
  iOS device. That turned out to be the path of least resistance for 
  me; I selected half a dozen of my most important groups and 
  Command-Option-dragged them to the Sync group to create the 
  replicants and specify what I wanted to sync. In addition to any 
  documents you manually add this way, DEVONthink To Go can sync the 
  contents of your Global Inbox. However, you can’t create 
  replicants of database-specific inboxes at all, so that precludes 
  adding them to your Sync group. And that’s irritating, because I 
  prefer to use a particular database’s inbox, but I currently have 
  no way to sync its contents to DEVONthink To Go automatically.

  You follow a simple initial procedure to pair an iOS device with a 
  copy of DEVONthink on your Mac; the two devices must be on the same 
  Wi-Fi network. (By the way, a single copy of DEVONthink can sync 
  with more than one iOS device.) Then you wait for your documents to 
  sync, which in my tests happened surprisingly quickly. Future syncs 
  require a few taps to initiate—I talk about that a bit later.

  Once the sync is complete, DEVONthink To Go lists all the synced 
  documents, including any group hierarchy, in exactly the same way as 
  all other iOS apps. Tap through folders to see documents; tap a 
  document to display it. You can also tap an icon to display some of 
  the document’s metadata, such as its size, tags, and labels. You 
  can email a document or open it in another iOS app that accepts that 
  file type; you can also edit plain text documents, with support for 
  Smile’s TextExpander touch snippet expansion (see “Third-Party 
  SDKs: The Future of iPhone Apps,” 1 December 2009). DEVONthink To 
  Go also offers fast, full-content searching of your synced 
  documents, and has shortcuts to display recent and unread items. You 
  can adjust the sort order, opt to show only flagged or labeled 
  items, and apply or remove flags, labels, and comments.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10796>

  Unlike Yojimbo for iPad, DEVONthink To Go lets you create new plain 
  text documents, bookmarks, and groups; you can also add images from 
  your photo library and, if your device has a camera, add photos 
  right in the app. When you create a document (of whichever kind), if 
  you have Location Services enabled for DEVONthink To Go, it records 
  the location where that document was made. You can later display a 
  map showing pins where each of your documents was created—which 
  seems like a cool feature that I can’t quite think of a practical 
  use for yet.

  One thing I was very excited about is that you can set up DEVONthink 
  To Go so that when you add a new photo and sync it to your Mac, OCR 
  is performed automatically on the photo, making any text on it 
  searchable. (Tap Settings > DEVONthink > Run OCR on Images.) And 
  this sort of works, but man, it’s weird. First, because the OCR 
  takes place on your Mac, nothing happens until you sync; and you 
  have to sync a _second_ time, after the OCR is finished, to get the 
  version of the image with searchable text back onto your iOS device. 

  That’s not a big deal, but I was expecting the result to be a 
  searchable _PDF_, since that’s what DEVONthink Pro Office creates 
  when you use its OCR feature on scanned documents. But no: what 
  DEVONthink gives you is the same JPEG image from your camera, with 
  the recognized text as metadata in the Comments field. That means 
  you can search it, but you have to work with the data in a strange, 
  artificial way. When I inquired about this, DEVONtechnologies 
  informed me that they did things this way due to feedback from beta 
  testers who didn’t like having their photos converted to PDFs, and 
  that they could easily change the behavior if there’s sufficient 
  interest. So I’ve registered my interest, and if you’re also a 
  DEVONthink To Go user, I urge you to register yours too!

  Of course, if you have DEVONthink Pro Office, you can select the 
  JPEG and manually choose Actions > Convert > to Searchable PDF and 
  sync the resulting file to your iOS device. But although DEVONthink 
  To Go comes tantalizingly close to being a great tool for OCR on the 
  go (as I discuss in my ebook “Take Control of Your Paperless 
  Office”), it’s still a bit too labor-intensive for my taste.

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/paperless-office?pt=TB1056>


**Ins and Outs** -- On the Mac, DEVONthink provides a great many ways 
  to get files, text, Web pages, and other information in—drag and 
  drop, browser bookmarklets, a system-wide Sorter, a Mail plug-in, a 
  global Inbox in Finder sidebars, keyboard shortcuts, AppleScript 
  support, and several others. The hardest thing about capturing 
  information is deciding which method to use! So one might expect 
  that DEVONthink To Go, too, provides comparable ways to capture 
  information from your iOS device.

  As of version 1.0.1, you can get information into DEVONthink To Go 
  directly on your iOS device in the following ways:

* Copy and paste (as plain text only).

* Take a photo.

* Import a photo from your Photos app.

* Create a new plain text document.

* Select text in any document in DEVONthink To Go (including a Web 
  page displayed in its internal browser after following a link in 
  another document) and tap Capture.

* Open a document in another app (say, a PDF in Safari or a Word file 
  in GoodReader) and tap Open In > DEVONthink.

  That may sound like a lot of methods, but three crucial options are 
  conspicuously missing:

* You can’t capture a Web page (using a bookmarklet, for example), 
  although several other iOS apps let you do this—GoodReader, 
  Instapaper, and Evernote among them.

* You can’t use the Open In command with certain common document 
  types that are supported in most iOS apps—including Pages, 
  Numbers, and Keynote.

* You can’t create rich text documents.

  According to DEVONtechnologies, all these features are in 
  development, and some of them are already working in-house. One 
  sticking point is that they’d like to offer PDF capture of Web 
  pages, but although that capability is built into Mac OS X, it’s 
  not a native part of iOS. The same is true of rich text editing—an 
  iOS app developer who wants to offer this feature has to figure out 
  how to build it from scratch, whereas it would be trivial to 
  implement on a Mac.

  Getting information out of DEVONthink To Go is a bit more flexible; 
  you can tap Open In followed by any compatible app to send a 
  document somewhere else. For example, you can use this technique to 
  send a PDF to iBooks or GoodReader. You can also send any document 
  as an email attachment from within the app. However, DEVONthink To 
  Go 1.0.1 doesn’t yet support AirPrint, so if you want to print a 
  document on your iOS device, you must copy it to another app first.


**Syncing Feelings** -- Of the many techniques an app could use to get 
  documents from a Mac onto an iOS device, Wi-Fi sync is one of the 
  more convenient ones—but DEVONthink To Go does it in a 
  less-than-ideal way. To sync DEVONthink To Go with DEVONthink after 
  the first time, you tap the home icon, then tap the sync icon, then 
  tap your computer name (even if syncing is set up with only one), 
  and then tap Synchronize. That’s four taps, compared to apps like 
  Things and 1Password that sync with _zero_ taps—you just make sure 
  the Mac application and the iOS app are both running, and everything 
  else happens automagically. DEVONtechnologies said they’re hoping 
  to move to a zero- or one-tap sync in the future.

  Some DEVONthink To Go users have asked for the additional option of 
  syncing via iTunes—for example to add documents directly to 
  DEVONthink To Go without having to go through DEVONthink (an option 
  I’d probably never use myself). But what many people, including 
  me, really want to see is syncing via the cloud. That is, I want 
  DEVONthink to automatically copy my data to, say, my Dropbox or 
  iDisk, and I want DEVONthink To Go to access that data in the cloud 
  directly, even if DEVONthink isn’t running on my Mac (or it’s 
  not on the same network). 1Password, for example, offers this type 
  of syncing as an option, and I’ve found it much more usable than 
  direct Wi-Fi sync.

  In fact, in a roundabout way, I had this very capability in a 
  previous version of DEVONthink. I once used SugarSync to sync my 
  entire DEVONthink database to the cloud, and then accessed those 
  files using the SugarSync app on my iPhone (see “SugarSync 
  Sweetens Online Syncing,” 30 August 2008). I could even send 
  someone a link to a huge file in the cloud while on the go without 
  ever having to download the file to my iPhone at all! This clever 
  hack is no longer feasible due to changes DEVONthink made to the way 
  it stores its database. However, according to DEVONtechnologies, a 
  future version of DEVONthink To Go will sync with MobileMe, WebDAV, 
  and Dropbox. And, plans to adopt a different database structure that 
  might lend itself to methods such as the one I used are also being 
  discussed. Although I’m not privy to the details, I gather that 
  DEVONtechnologies is working on a scheme whereby multiple Macs and 
  iOS devices can freely interchange DEVONthink data via the cloud, 
  which would solve numerous problems (including the current 
  awkwardness of sharing a DEVONthink database between a desktop and 
  laptop Mac).

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9751>


**Other Considerations** -- DEVONthink To Go 1.0.1 is missing a number 
  of other features that seem (to me, at least) to be crucial in an 
  app of this sort:

* Searching within documents. The search feature tells you which 
  documents contain the search term, but if you’re looking at a 
  100-page PDF, there’s no way to find the term _within_ that 
  document.

* Document management. With a couple of minor exceptions, you can’t 
  rename, delete, or move documents with DEVONthink To Go; all those 
  tasks must be done on your Mac. And, of course, all of 
  DEVONthink’s much-hyped “artificial intelligence” features 
  (such as automatically classifying a document based on its content) 
  are absent. Along with the limitations I mentioned earlier 
  concerning getting documents into the app, this makes DEVONthink To 
  Go a tool much better suited to consumption than creation. (Where 
  have I heard that before?)

* Per-device settings. I have enough space on my iPad to hold my 
  entire DEVONthink database, but on my iPhone, I can spare room for 
  only a handful of documents. Unfortunately, DEVONthink has just one 
  global Sync group; I can’t specify that some documents will sync 
  only to one device or another.

* PDF annotation. DEVONthink on the Mac can annotate PDFs, but if you 
  want to add comments or highlights to a PDF in DEVONthink To Go, you 
  have to send it to another app, such as iAnnotate. That isn’t so 
  bad, but DEVONthink To Go can’t even _display_ PDF annotations, 
  and that may seriously limit its utility for some users.

  According to DEVONtechnologies, adding support for searching within 
  documents is a high priority, and some aspects of document 
  management are also in the queue. The other features are harder to 
  implement, but may appear farther in the future.

  I should also mention that even though DEVONthink To Go 1.0.1 fixed 
  some of the most serious bugs (including syncing problems and a 
  disappearing toolbar), it’s not problem-free by any means. 
  Although I haven’t experienced crashes or syncing problems, as 
  some users have reported, I know there are several outstanding 
  issues that DEVONtechnologies is actively working to resolve.


**The Bottom Line** -- If you look at the user ratings for DEVONthink 
  To Go on the iTunes Store, you’ll see that it’s almost an 
  inverted bell curve—lots of one- and five-star ratings, a modest 
  number of two- and four-star ratings, and very few three-star 
  ratings. In other words: this app provokes strong feelings—users 
  either love it or hate it!

  That doesn’t surprise me; I think it’s largely a matter of the 
  extent to which users’ expectations were or weren’t met.

  For one thing, consider the price. If you paid $149.95 for 
  DEVONthink Pro Office, then an incremental fee of $14.99 to be able 
  to carry all your data with you may be a no-brainer. At the other 
  extreme, if you’re using the $24.95 DEVONnote, that same $14.99 
  could seem absurdly high. (DEVONthink Personal and DEVONthink 
  Professional, at $49.95 and $79.95, respectively, are of course 
  somewhere in between on the continuum of perceived value.) But what 
  you paid for the desktop software is only part of the equation.

  Another factor is how heavily you depend on DEVONthink. If you keep 
  thousands of documents in your DEVONthink database and rely on it 
  every day to get your work done, having an easy way to view and 
  search that data on the go could be invaluable. If you use 
  DEVONthink more casually or have a limited number of documents, a 
  less-expensive tool such as GoodReader or ReaddleDocs may better 
  suit your needs.

  Finally, think about how you want to interact with your data with 
  your iOS device. If your dream is to be able to capture Web pages 
  into DEVONthink on your iPad as easily as you can on your Mac—or 
  to be able to work through a full DEVONthink Inbox on your iPhone 
  while riding the bus (categorizing, renaming, and deleting documents 
  as you go)—I’m sorry to say that must remain a dream for the 
  time being.

  For now, DEVONthink To Go is focused almost entirely on letting you 
  take your DEVONthink data with you. If that meets your current 
  needs, you’ll probably be delighted with the app. If you need 
  something more robust, however, check back in a few months—I fully 
  expect DEVONthink To Go to rise to the occasion. 


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11730#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/11730>


Clone Wars, or How My Backups Ate My Photos
-------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11699>
  9 comments

  An occasional public admission of stupidity can be good for the 
  soul, a bit of psychic self-flagellation. I’m sure you all know by 
  now how obsessive I am about backups, so I’m sure you’ll enjoy a 
  bit of schadenfreude related to this story of how I’ve been losing 
  data for two months without even noticing, thanks to my backups. 
  That’s right, my backups ate my data.


**Down the Rabbit Hole of Data Loss** -- It all started when I 
  received email from a PR person asking if I’d had a chance to 
  check out Boinx Software’s You Gotta See This iOS app, which makes 
  it easy to create a panorama with an iPhone or camera-equipped iPod 
  touch. The app worked fine, but because of the extremely wide aspect 
  ratio of the panoramas, the results didn’t ring my bells. In an 
  effort to explain this to the PR person, I launched iPhoto to snag a 
  recent panorama I’d made, along with a single image of roughly the 
  same scene that I wanted to show her for comparison. But when iPhoto 
  launched, the photos I wanted weren’t there. And when I looked 
  more closely, the last event showing was from two months ago. Uh oh.

<http://www.boinx.com/seethis/>

  Data loss always gives me the horrible sinking feeling in my stomach 
  that I get when I know I’ve done something stupid and There Will 
  Be Consequences. I realized quickly that the problem was that I had 
  somehow been using an iPhoto Library package on a backup disk. In my 
  panic, I initially blamed Time Machine because, well, I don’t 
  trust it. But after my pulse settled down, I realized that Time 
  Machine was not at fault, and that the blame instead lay with my 
  backup strategy, aided and abetted by iPhoto (this was iPhoto ’09, 
  but I suspect that iPhoto ’11 would also be vulnerable) and 
  another nemesis, Spotlight. 

  My backup strategy, which I’ve previously been quite proud of, is 
  threefold. First, I use Time Machine, sending archival backups to a 
  partition on a second internal drive in my Mac Pro. Second, to 
  provide offsite backups and as a secondary archival backup, I use 
  CrashPlan+ to back up my entire home folder over the Internet to a 
  hard drive attached to a friend’s Mac. Third, for quick recoveries 
  and in case my main hard drive (named Zeus) dies a sudden death, 
  Carbon Copy Cloner clones my startup drive to another partition 
  (named DoppleZeus) on the second internal hard disk. That clone runs 
  every night before my Mac goes to sleep.

<http://www.crashplan.com/>
<http://www.bombich.com/>

  Normally having DoppleZeus mounted isn’t a problem; the way 
  applications generally default either to previous locations or 
  default locations (like ~/Documents) ensures that there’s no 
  confusion between my main drive (Zeus) and the clone (DoppleZeus) 
  when opening or saving files. Since I got the Mac Pro in early 2008, 
  this approach has worked fine.

  But I hadn’t counted on iPhoto. When you Option-launch iPhoto 
  ’09 to switch between iPhoto libraries, iPhoto doesn’t give you 
  a standard Open dialog like iTunes does. Instead, it displays a 
  custom dialog that lists all the iPhoto Library packages it can find 
  via Spotlight. Since DoppleZeus is an exact clone of Zeus, iPhoto 
  displays the same libraries on both, differentiating only by a path 
  that’s displayed at the bottom of the dialog. Apparently, at some 
  point in August, I had switched iPhoto libraries to test something, 
  and when I switched back, I accidentally chose the backup version on 
  DoppleZeus. (Although iPhoto won’t see iPhoto libraries on a disk 
  that’s in the Privacy list in the Spotlight preference pane, if 
  you’ve ever chosen a library on that disk before adding the disk 
  to Spotlight’s Privacy list, iPhoto remembers the library’s 
  location from then on in the com.apple.iPhoto.plist file in 
  ~/Library/Preferences, regardless of any Spotlight settings.)

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-10/iPhoto-Library-selection.png>

  I’m sure you can imagine what this means. Every time I imported 
  photos, they were imported into the iPhoto Library on my DoppleZeus 
  backup disk, and the following evening Carbon Copy Cloner deleted 
  them as it followed my commands to keep DoppleZeus looking exactly 
  like Zeus. 

  I hadn’t been doing much with iPhoto, so it took me two months to 
  notice, meaning that I’d lost every imported photo since 
  mid-August. And they were totally gone, with no chance of recovery. 
  Since both Time Machine and CrashPlan back up Zeus and not 
  DoppleZeus, there was no backup of those photos—they never existed 
  on a drive that was itself backed up.

  Before I explain how to avoid this problem, there is a happy ending. 
  I take photos with two cameras: my iPhone 4 and a Canon PowerShot 
  SD870. I use the iPhone when I haven’t anticipated a photo 
  opportunity and failed to pocket the PowerShot SD870. Any time I 
  think of it, I use the PowerShot, since it takes better photos. But 
  since I’ve been busy this summer, it turns out that the only 
  photos I’ve imported into iPhoto were those taken with the iPhone. 
  All my “good” photos are still sitting on the PowerShot’s SD 
  card. I feel a bit like my parents back in the 1980s, who would 
  often forget to develop rolls of film for months. So, while I’m 
  not happy that I lost all my iPhone photos since mid-August, it’s 
  not that big of a deal.

  This problem is pretty specific, and I doubt most people switch 
  iPhoto libraries as often as I do for testing, but be warned if you 
  do use iPhoto’s Option-launch approach to switching. Or use Fat 
  Cat Software’s iPhoto Library Manager, which requires that you 
  specify the iPhoto libraries you want to switch among manually, 
  rather than relying on Spotlight to find every last one.

<http://www.fatcatsoftware.com/iplm/>


**An Ounce of Prevention** -- So how could I prevent this from 
  happening again in the future, and, what’s the solution for those 
  who also use Carbon Copy Cloner or Shirt Pocket’s SuperDuper to 
  clone to another hard disk? My buddy Andrew Laurence gave me the 
  hint I needed when he commented on Twitter that backups should be 
  out of sight, out of mind, read-only, and far away.

<http://www.shirt-pocket.com/SuperDuper/SuperDuperDescription.html>

  Looking at my three-pronged backup strategy, CrashPlan’s backups 
  meet all four criteria. Apart from the partition’s icon on my 
  Desktop, my Time Machine backups are out of sight, and they’re 
  essentially read-only because Time Machine manages the permissions 
  on the folder containing the backups to prevent you from writing to 
  it. (Time Machine fails the out-of-mind test because it’s 
  disconcerting when it’s running, and it isn’t designed to meet 
  the far-away test by allowing backups over the Internet.) My Carbon 
  Copy Cloner setup is out of mind, since it runs only at night when 
  I’m not at the Mac, but there’s no easy way to make it read-only 
  (since Carbon Copy Cloner has to write to the disk), and I don’t 
  want it to be far away.

  The trick is in the remaining goal—putting the Carbon Copy Cloner 
  backup destination out of sight while I’m using my Mac. To achieve 
  that, I can mount the DoppleZeus volume right before Carbon Copy 
  Cloner’s backup runs, and unmount it afterward. Were it on its own 
  disk, rather than sharing the disk with the Time Machine partition, 
  a nice side-effect of this approach would be that the drive 
  wouldn’t be spun up so much, and it might save a tiny bit of 
  power.

  In fact, Carbon Copy Cloner’s documentation gives a script for 
  unmounting a volume after backup with a post-flight script, but it 
  notes that a pre-flight script can’t mount a volume because Carbon 
  Copy Cloner performs sanity checks for the existence of the 
  destination volume. Instead, the documentation suggests mounting the 
  drive in some other way and having Carbon Copy Cloner start the 
  backup when it sees the drive appear.

<http://help.bombich.com/faqs/advanced-strategies/preflight-postflight-scripts>

  There are undoubtedly a bazillion ways of mounting a disk at a 
  particular time, but I chose to have Stairways Software’s Keyboard 
  Maestro execute a short shell script at the appropriate time. The 
  script is simply diskutil mount disk0s2 (you can find the disk 
  identifier—the disk0s2 bit—with the command disktool -l).

<http://www.keyboardmaestro.com/>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-10/Keyboard-Maestro-shell-script.png>

  For the unmount script, I simply copied the script from the Carbon 
  Copy Cloner documentation to a text file, saved it as 
  UnmountDoppleZeus-CCC.sh in ~/Library/Scripts, specified it in 
  Carbon Copy Cloner’s Advanced Settings dialog, and then saved the 
  task, setting Carbon Copy Cloner to execute the entire task whenever 
  the disk appears.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-10/CCC-post-flight-script.png>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-10/CCC-Backup-Task-Scheduler.png>

  It works perfectly, with Keyboard Maestro mounting the disk, Carbon 
  Copy Cloner noticing and performing the clone action, and the 
  post-flight script unmounting the disk.

  Actually, there is one additional problem to solve. Whenever I 
  reboot, the DoppleZeus volume mounts automatically. Luckily, this is 
  solved easily with another Keyboard Maestro macro that executes at 
  login; it simply unmounts DoppleZeus right away. (If you were doing 
  this, you’d want to replace “DoppleZeus” with the name of your 
  disk.)

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-10/Keyboard-Maestro-unmount-script.png>

  Although I don’t currently use SuperDuper in my backup strategy, 
  it’s an extremely popular, useful program for making duplicates as 
  well. But it requires a slightly different approach. Nothing needs 
  to be done to mount the disk before backup, because SuperDuper does 
  that automatically as needed. And if you’re using an external hard 
  disk or a removable disk, you can make it unmount after SuperDuper 
  runs by choosing Eject from the On Successful Completion pop-up menu 
  in the General view of SuperDuper’s options for the backup. So if 
  you’re _not_ using an internal disk, you’re done.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-10/SD-General-options.png>

  However, I am using a partition on an internal hard disk in my Mac 
  Pro as the backup destination. Because the Finder doesn’t give an 
  internal disk an Eject button in the sidebar, the current version of 
  SuperDuper doesn’t see it as ejectable. The next minor revision 
  will do this, according to SuperDuper author Dave Nanian (I suspect 
  he named the program SuperDuper just so it would sound like an 
  adjective when used in front of his name—clearly I need to write a 
  book called “BestSelling”).

  In the meantime, Dave gave me a script that does what’s necessary, 
  forking off an independent process that unmounts the disk that was 
  just backed up to. 

      #!/bin/sh
      nohup /bin/bash -c "sleep 30; diskutil unmount \"$4\"" &

  To use this script, I simply put the above two lines in a text file 
  called UnmountDoppleZeus-SD.sh in ~/Library/Scripts and marked it as 
  executable with the Terminal command below.

      chmod u+x /Users/adam/Library/Scripts/UnmountDoppleZeus-SD.sh

  Then I specified it in SuperDuper’s Advanced options, scheduled 
  SuperDuper to execute at the appropriate time, and all was golden.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-10/SD-Advanced-options.png>


**Out of Sight** -- So, regardless of whether you use Carbon Copy 
  Cloner or SuperDuper to create a bootable duplicate of your hard 
  disk, you can ensure that the clone is mounted only when necessary, 
  and is properly unmounted and out of sight the rest of the time. And 
  hopefully, that will prevent you from making the kind of mistake I 
  made with my iPhoto Library. 


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11699#comments>
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TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 13 December 2010
----------------------------------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11820>

**Switcher Maestro 1.0** -- Peter Lewis of Stairways Software has 
  released a new utility called Switcher Maestro, a focused tool that 
  provides three functions: an application switcher to replace Mac OS 
  X’s Command-Tab application switcher, a window switcher that lets 
  you jump instantly among windows of running applications, and an 
  application launcher. Switcher Maestro doesn’t bring any 
  shockingly new innovations to the switcher/launcher field, but 
  it’s quick, elegant, and highly functional. You can configure the 
  activation hotkey for each of Switcher Maestro’s three features, 
  launch apps by typing a few characters from the start of their 
  names, control the look and feel of the switcher interface, have the 
  switcher pop up near your cursor, and more. If you’re looking to 
  go beyond Mac OS X’s built-in application switcher, and don’t 
  already have a utility that does what you want, Switcher Maestro is 
  absolutely worth a look. ($9.99 new, 10.5 MB)

<http://www.switchermaestro.com/>
<http://www.switchermaestro.com/documentation/1/features.html>

  Read/post comments about Switcher Maestro 1.0.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11817#comments>


**Simon 3.0.1** -- Dejal’s server monitoring tool Simon has become a 
  more-accomplished tweeter with version 3.0.1. Previously, Simon’s 
  interface made it difficult or even impossible to find and select 
  direct message recipients for tweets about server changes; that’s 
  now improved. In addition, Simon 3.0.1 fixes a bug that prevented 
  the MySQL plug-in from loading. (Prices vary, free update, 15.6 MB)

<http://www.dejal.com/simon/>

  Read/post comments about Simon 3.0.1.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11816#comments>


**Microsoft Office 2008 for Mac 12.2.8 Update** -- Though the recently 
  released Microsoft Office 2011 suite is getting the lion’s share 
  of the attention these days, the Microsofties aren’t neglecting 
  the previous incarnation, as proven by the release of the Microsoft 
  Office 2008 for Mac 12.2.8 update. Beyond the traditional stability 
  improvements, the update also includes fixes for several serious 
  security vulnerabilities. The other focus of the update is 
  Entourage; crashing bugs related to opening messages with inline 
  attachments, sending messages, and clicking meeting invitations are 
  all corrected. (Free update, 332.8 MB)

<http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/en/details.aspx?FamilyID=ad1b1984-b2b2-49b3-a1dd-385b77d9248a>
<http://www.microsoft.com/technet/security/bulletin/ms10-087.mspx>

  Read/post comments about Microsoft Office 2008 for Mac 12.2.8 
  Update.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11815#comments>


**Postbox 2.1** -- The elegant, Thunderbird-based email software 
  Postbox has been updated to version 2.1. The hallmark feature of 
  this release is the new Summarize Mode, which provides an 
  alternative to traditional quoting when replying to (or forwarding) 
  messages. Instead, your recipients see a well-designed presentation 
  indicating who said what. Also new in version 2.1 is the capability 
  to toggle between Reply and Reply All via the toolbar, Quick Look 
  for attachments when composing messages, a keyboard shortcut for 
  Paste Without Formatting, and more Quick Reply configuration 
  options. ($39.95 new, free update, 12 MB)

<http://www.postbox-inc.com/>

  Read/post comments about Postbox 2.1.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11814#comments>


**MacBook Air EFI Firmware Update 2.0** -- MacBook Air owners take 
  note: Apple has released MacBook Air EFI Firmware Update 2.0, which 
  the company recommends for all users of the late-2010 11-inch and 
  13-inch MacBook Air models. The update corrects what Apple terms 
  “a rare issue” where the MacBook Air either powers on or wakes 
  up to a black screen, or becomes completely unresponsive, which is 
  bad. As is often the case with these firmware updates, your Mac must 
  be plugged in to install it, and a gray screen with a progress bar 
  will appear after you restart. Apple strongly recommends that you 
  neither disturb nor power off your MacBook Air during the 
  installation of the firmware update. (Free, 2.41 MB)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1337>

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

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11813#comments>


**Aperture 3.1.1** -- Apple has released Aperture 3.1.1, an update to 
  its photo organizing and manipulation tool that addresses overall 
  stability and performance, and packs in a few fixes, too. The new 
  version addresses compatibility issues with the iLife Media Browser, 
  corrects problems where iMovie ’11 would stop responding when 
  scanning your Aperture library, and ensures that your Aperture 
  library appears when attempting to browse it from other iLife 
  applications. The update also improves reliability when upgrading 
  existing Aperture libraries and addresses issues with publishing 
  photos to Web services like MobileMe, Flickr, and Facebook. Full 
  release notes are available directly from Apple. ($199 new, free 
  update, 357.79 MB)

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

  Read/post comments about Aperture 3.1.1.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11812#comments>


**Mactracker 5.3** -- Whether you want to check the memory 
  configuration possibilities on a new Mac Pro, look up the difference 
  between a Quadra and a Centris, or just take a stroll down Mac 
  memory lane, the free Mactracker software can help—laden as it is 
  with information on pretty much every piece of Apple hardware since 
  1984. The 5.3 update adds information on the latest Mac Pro Server 
  and MacBook Air models, updates the 2010 MacBook Pro listing, and 
  adds information on the Original and Maximum OS for iOS devices. 
  Also included in this release is support for adding reminders (about 
  expiring warranties and the like) to iCal calendars on CalDAV 
  servers. (Free, 26.2 MB)

<http://www.mactracker.ca/>

  Read/post comments about Mactracker 5.3.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11811#comments>


**Photoshop CS5 12.0.2** -- Adobe has airbrushed a few fixes onto its 
  flagship image manipulation software with the release of Photoshop 
  CS5 12.0.2. In addition to patching several potential security 
  vulnerabilities, the new update addresses painting performance 
  issues and fixes crashes linked with type and font settings. Other 
  crashes—related to 3D layers, Color Engine, the Sharpen tool, and 
  TWAIN—are also corrected. Rounding out the release are fixes 
  covering problems with file formats, Shift-scrolling, marching ants 
  not appearing at certain zoom levels, the Brush cursor, Droplet 
  issues, and the Histogram progress bar. You can download the updater 
  directly from Adobe. ($699 new, free update, 14.7 MB)

<http://www.adobe.com/products/photoshop/photoshop/whatisphotoshop/>
<http://www.adobe.com/support/downloads/detail.jsp?ftpID=4892>

  Read/post comments about Photoshop CS5 12.0.2.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11810#comments>


**Skitch 1.0.1** -- After a beta period longer than some Hollywood 
  marriages, screenshot sharing software Skitch has finally hit its 
  1.0 milestone (and a quick 1.0.1 bug fix release). Skitch lets you 
  capture screenshots or images from your iSight camera, mark up those 
  images (or others you drag in) with text, arrows, and more, and 
  instantly share them via the Web. The software is free, but the 
  optional Skitch Plus service costs $14.95 per year, removes ads, and 
  adds the capability to capture full-length Web pages, choose custom 
  font settings, watermark images, and export images in more formats. 
  (Free, 8.2 MB)

<http://skitch.com/>

  Read/post comments about Skitch 1.0.1.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11809#comments>


**Photoshop Lightroom 3.3** -- Adobe has updated its photo management 
  software Photoshop Lightroom to version 3.3. In addition to 
  correcting a few issues introduced in Lightroom 3.0, the update adds 
  support for 15 camera models, including the Canon PowerShot G12 and 
  S95, the Nikon D7000, and the Olympus E-5. Apple’s Aperture and 
  iPhoto still lag in their support for raw image formats, which are 
  implemented at the operating system level. ($299 new, free update 
  for owners of Lightroom 3, $99 upgrade from earlier versions, 84.5 
  MB)

<http://www.adobe.com/products/photoshoplightroom/>

  Read/post comments about Photoshop Lightroom 3.3.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11808#comments>


**KeyCue 5.2** -- If your brain has a hard time with all the Options 
  to Control ever-Shifting key Commands, you’ll appreciate the news 
  that Ergonis Software has released KeyCue 5.2, the latest update to 
  its keyboard shortcut cheat sheet. The new version of KeyCue now 
  integrates with macro utility iKey, revealing the key-combinations 
  for any active iKey shortcuts. Also new in this release is a 
  diagnostic function to help identify problems on certain system 
  configurations. Among the latest version’s refinements are better 
  compatibility with Filemaker Pro 11 and Keyboard Maestro (for which 
  KeyCue also reveals hotkey assignments), faster responses in Safari 
  when 1Password is installed, and improved memory management. 
  (€19.99 new, free update, 1.3 MB)

<http://www.ergonis.com/products/keycue/>
<http://www.plumamazing.com/mac/ikey/>

  Read/post comments about KeyCue 5.2.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11807#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>


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11820#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/11820>


ExtraBITS for 13 December 2010
------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11819>

  If you haven’t been listening to iTunes Store previews recently, 
  you might not have realized that they’ve largely been extended 
  from 30 seconds to 90 seconds. And you’ll spend a lot more than 90 
  seconds reading Michael Mace’s fascinating explanation of why 
  Apple is beating RIM, and how computing platforms die.


**iTunes Store Offers 90-second Song Previews** -- Lex Friedman writes 
  at Macworld about how Apple has now modified the U.S. iTunes Store 
  to play 90-second previews of songs longer than two-and-a-half 
  minutes; that’s up from 30 seconds. According to Lex, not all 
  songs have the new previews yet, and the longer previews are limited 
  to the U.S. iTunes Store, presumably due to licensing restrictions 
  in other countries. Still, 90 seconds is much better for getting a 
  sense of a song. Oh, and look carefully at the screenshot; 90 
  seconds should be more than enough to get a sense of that piece!

<http://www.macworld.com/article/156299/2010/12/itunes_90_second.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11818#comments>


**Michael Mace Explains Why Apple Is Beating RIM** -- This lengthy 
  blog post from ex-Apple and ex-Palm exec Michael Mace provides a 
  fascinating look at what BlackBerry maker RIM is doing wrong, and, 
  more generally, how a computing platform dies. It’s a few months 
  old, but well worth reading for an insider’s view of how large 
  technology companies can succeed or fail.

<http://mobileopportunity.blogspot.com/2010/10/whats-really-wrong-with-blackberry-and.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11823#comments>


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11819#comments>
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