TidBITS#1060/24-Jan-2011
========================
  Issue link: <http://db.tidbits.com/issue/1060>


  As we pack for Macworld Expo, we have news of Apple’s stellar Q1 2011
  financial results and an amusing mystery from Jim Matthews about how
  his iPhone and MacBook Pro managed to communicate, seemingly without
  the necessary connections. Then we get into the meat of the issue,
  with Adam taking a close look at Panic’s Transmit 4 file transfer
  software and Michael Cohen reviewing the UnityRemote, which turns an
  iOS device into a universal remote. Notable software releases this
  week include ScreenFlow 2.1.5, iMovie 9.0.2, TextWrangler 3.5.1,
  Postbox 2.1.2, Epson Printer Drivers v2.5.1, MacBook Air (Late 2010)
  Software Update 2.0, and iDVD 7.1.1.

Articles
    Apple Reports Stellar Q1 2011 Financial Results
    Immaculate Reception, or, A MobileMe Mystery
    DealBITS Winners: Disc Cover 3
    Transmit 4 Improves on File Transfers
    UnityRemote Turns iOS Device into Universal Remote
    TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 24 January 2011
    ExtraBITS for 24 January 2011


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Apple Reports Stellar Q1 2011 Financial Results
-----------------------------------------------
  by Michael E. Cohen <lymond@mac.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11899>
  4 comments

  Apple posted its financial results for the company’s first 
  financial quarter of 2011, which, by general accounting principles 
  that laugh at your calendar and ours, ended on 25 December 2010. The 
  news was, as expected, more than good: a quarterly profit of $6 
  billion ($6.43 per diluted share) on record revenue of $26.74 
  billion. This was more than $10 billion higher than the year-ago 
  quarter’s revenues of $15.68 billion and almost twice the year-ago 
  quarter’s profit of $3.38 billion. Apple closed the quarter with 
  $59.7 billion cash on hand, an increase of $8.7 billion since last 
  quarter.

  And what about the products? An impressive 4.13 million Macs were 
  sold (a year-over-year increase of 23 percent); 16.24 million 
  iPhones reached customers this quarter (an increase of 86 percent 
  from a year ago); and 19.45 million iPods went out the door (a 
  decline of 7 percent from last year). Apple also sold 7.33 million 
  iPads during the quarter, producing enough revenue—$4.61 
  billion—for the tablet to become the second-largest 
  revenue-producing product line in Apple’s portfolio. All told, 
  Apple has sold over 160 million iOS devices and would have sold 
  more—especially iPhones—if they could have made them quickly 
  enough.

  Worldwide, Apple has been on a juggernaut-scale roll, with revenue 
  growth occurring everywhere: the Americas saw a 51 percent increase; 
  Europe saw growth go up 44 percent; Japan increased revenues by 83 
  percent, and Asia-Pacific dominated all other regions with a 175 
  percent increase. One of the reasons for that last staggering figure 
  is Apple’s recent focus on China: revenue growth for “greater 
  China” (mainland, Hong Kong, and Taiwan) increased fourfold over 
  the previous year’s figures.

  Given the information above, it should be no surprise that Apple 
  Stores saw continued success last quarter as well. Average revenue 
  per store was $12 million, up 69 percent, resulting in more than $1 
  billion in profits from the retail segment. As has been reported 
  quarter after quarter, about half of in-store Mac sales were to new 
  customers.

  Apple’s guidance for the current quarter was traditionally 
  low-key: Apple expects to see earnings per share of $4.90.

  The Q&A session of the financial results phone call was satisfyingly 
  devoid of questions concerning the health of the company’s CEO. 
  One questioner asked if Apple saw the iPad cannibalizing their own 
  Mac sales. Apple’s Tim Cook responded that there has been some, 
  but there is also a halo effect with iPad and other iOS device sales 
  driving Mac sales, especially in Asia-Pacific and Japan markets; 
  Cook noted that “if this is cannibalization, it feels pretty 
  good.”

  When asked to comment on the competitive landscape regarding tablet 
  computers, Cook responded that most iPad competitors weren’t 
  shipping yet, and said that Apple had a huge first-mover advantage 
  and was not sitting still. In response to a question about the 
  consumerization of business technology, Cook pointed out that some 
  people could now run a business just on an iPhone or iPad and said 
  that Apple was “just scratching the surface right now.” 


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Immaculate Reception, or, A MobileMe Mystery
--------------------------------------------
  by Jim Matthews <matthews@fetchsoftworks.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11907>
  5 comments

  I’m traveling in Cambridge, England, and this morning I visited 
  the King’s College Chapel, where one of the enormous stained glass 
  windows depicts the immaculate conception of the Virgin Mary: it 
  shows her fully-clothed parents exchanging a chaste kiss.

  My digital companions on this trip are an AT&T iPhone and a MacBook 
  Pro, and for a while it seemed that they had managed a similarly 
  miraculous feat of information transfer. I have connected the 
  MacBook Pro to the slow, expensive hotel Wi-Fi, but to avoid nasty 
  surprises on my next AT&T bill, I turned off data roaming on the 
  iPhone. I haven’t bothered to set the iPhone up to use the hotel 
  Wi-Fi connection, and it has never been in England before.

  So I was astonished when my MacBook Pro notified me about a calendar 
  event that I had entered on my iPhone. Of course, it alerted me 5 
  hours late (I hadn’t changed the Calendar time zone on the iPhone 
  before entering the event), but all the same, it seemed like a case 
  of immaculate reception: how could MobileMe sync the event from the 
  iPhone to the MacBook Pro when the iPhone hadn’t synced with the 
  Mac and had no data connection to the Internet?

  While pondering this mystery, I happened to walk by the Cambridge 
  Apple Store, where I had earlier bought my son an unlocked iPhone 
  for his study abroad time here. This time I pulled my iPhone out of 
  my pocket and saw, to my surprise, that it had associated with the 
  Apple Store’s open Wi-Fi network. The solution suddenly became 
  elementary, my dear Holmes.

  My deduction was that all Apple Store Wi-Fi networks broadcast the 
  same network name, and since I’ve used this iPhone on an Apple 
  Store network in the United States, it happily (and silently) joined 
  this one, and took the opportunity to sync my calendar with 
  MobileMe.

  I believe there was a time when Americans traveling abroad would 
  regularly check for mail and telegrams at the nearest American 
  Express office; it was their link to home. Maybe the increasingly 
  common Apple Stores have become the modern-day equivalent.

  [Jim Matthews created the file transfer client Fetch in 1989 and 
  founded Fetch Softworks in 2000.]

<http://fetchsoftworks.com/>


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DealBITS Winners: Disc Cover 3
------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11915>

  Congratulations to Peter Frary at virginmedia.com, Marshall Clow at 
  idio.com, Manny Lefebvre at sasktel.net, Dennis Helsel at 
  practicalstats.com, and the reticent, email-only Chuck (McDonald, I 
  believe) at gmail.com, whose entries were chosen randomly in the 
  last DealBITS drawing and who each received a copy of Disc Cover 
  3.0, worth $34.95. We hope you entered the drawing if you wanted a 
  copy, since entrants received a 30-percent-off discount on Disc 
  Cover 3. Thanks to the 497 people who entered this DealBITS drawing, 
  and we hope you’ll continue to participate in the future!

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11890>
<http://www.belightsoft.com/disccover/>


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Transmit 4 Improves on File Transfers
-------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11911>
  3 comments

  In the beginning, there was Fetch. Written by Jim Matthews when he 
  was at Dartmouth College, Fetch was one of the first graphical Mac 
  applications for the Internet, and I bundled a copy of it with the 
  first edition of my “Internet Starter Kit for Macintosh” in 
  1993. Also mentioned in that book was FTPd, a program from Peter 
  Lewis that let you set up your Mac as an FTP server; Peter soon 
  shifted gears and wrote Anarchie, an FTP client that went Fetch one 
  better by including the capability to search the Archie servers that 
  indexed the contents of public FTP servers on the Internet. I 
  bundled Anarchie with the second edition of “Internet Starter Kit 
  for Macintosh.”

  Both Fetch and Anarchie, the latter eventually renamed Interarchy 
  when it proved impossible for Peter to acquire the anarchie.com 
  domain name during the domain name land grab days, remained the 
  standard Mac FTP clients for years, each adding features and file 
  transfer protocols, experimenting with different interfaces, and 
  becoming ever more reliable. Both also eventually changed hands, 
  with Jim Matthews buying Fetch back from Dartmouth with money won on 
  “Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?” and Interarchy developer 
  Matthew Drayton buying the program from Peter Lewis. But file 
  transfer is no longer rocket science, and thanks to lulls in their 
  development and other factors, over time the two applications were 
  joined by a whole host of competing file transfer programs that 
  offered slightly different takes on the task, including Captain FTP, 
  CuteFTP Mac Pro, Cyberduck, Filezilla, Flow, ForkLift, Transmit, 
  Yummy FTP, and more.

<http://fetchsoftworks.com/>
<http://nolobe.com/interarchy/>
<http://captainftp.xdsnet.de/>
<http://www.globalscape.com/cuteftpmacpro/>
<http://cyberduck.ch/>
<http://filezilla-project.org/>
<http://extendmac.com/flow/>
<http://www.binarynights.com/>
<http://www.panic.com/transmit/>
<http://www.yummysoftware.com/>

  Nevertheless, Fetch and Interarchy always served my file transfer 
  needs, so I never found the time to explore any of the newer 
  alternatives... until I wanted to use Automator. 


**Changing Needs** -- One aspect of distributing a new Take Control 
  ebook title is that I need to create a number of precisely named 
  files on my Mac, after which they need to be uploaded to multiple 
  destinations, which include our primary server via SFTP, to Amazon 
  S3, and to a soon-to-be-retired server via FTP. This is not 
  difficult work, but it’s repetitive and fussy—particularly the 
  file naming, which takes our nicely human readable filenames and 
  makes them shorter and more appropriate for online filenames—and 
  anything that’s repetitive and fussy should be automated.

  Unfortunately, while Fetch has good support for Automator, it 
  doesn’t work with Amazon S3. And while Interarchy does work with 
  Amazon S3, its Automator support was a little dicey and worse, when 
  I started this project, it set files uploaded to Amazon S3 to be 
  private, requiring me to do manual fiddling to enable them to be 
  seen by non-authenticated users. I turned first to Cyberduck to 
  solve this problem, since it supported Amazon S3 and set the file 
  permissions correctly, but Cyberduck didn’t come with Automator 
  actions, forcing me to upload each file manually.

  So after 17 years of relying on Fetch and Interarchy, this 
  particular combination of needs sent me looking for a new file 
  transfer client. I can’t say that I evaluated all the 
  possibilities in depth, since, while a number of programs now 
  support Amazon S3, Automator support was also essential, and few of 
  the file transfer programs advertise that feature. Within a short 
  period of time, I ended up testing Panic’s Transmit 4.

<http://www.panic.com/transmit/>


**Exploring Transmit** -- Beyond providing the basic functions of 
  uploading and downloading files, and working with external editors 
  (features that I assume are common to all file transfer clients), 
  Transmit boasts a huge feature set and a deep, elegant user 
  interface. Nevertheless, I initially found Transmit’s two-pane 
  interface a bit uncomfortable, purely because I’ve become 
  accustomed to Fetch’s spartan list view and Interarchy’s 
  mimicking of Web browser tabs and bookmark bar. Transmit does 
  support tabs, but since it doesn’t display the tab bar by default, 
  you might not notice that capability immediately. And, while 
  Transmit can open a single favorite in each pane on startup, it 
  won’t reopen your previously visible tabs on startup as Interarchy 
  does. Still, after some fiddling and exploration of Transmit’s 
  many preferences, I was able to get it to show a single pane (I 
  prefer to drag files in from the Finder to upload) and to open a 
  favorite automatically on startup. And now that I know Transmit 
  supports tabs, I’ll use the New Tab command instead of New Window 
  when I want to connect to another remote location.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2011-01/Transmit-single-pane.png>

  In part, I had trouble with Transmit’s visible interface initially 
  because I was paying more attention to integrating it into my 
  Automator workflows. There it performed brilliantly, though I had to 
  think briefly about the best ways of doing things due to 
  Transmit’s flexibility. For instance, in my workflow I could 
  either specify the remote server information manually, or I could 
  have it use a Transmit favorite (the former would have been better 
  had I been creating the workflow for someone else to use). My first 
  tries at automating the uploads to Amazon S3 were successful, which 
  was the Holy Grail of the entire process. I did discover that my 
  uploaded files lacked the desired permissions on Amazon S3, but some 
  quick research into Transmit’s permissions preferences (Transmit > 
  Preferences > Rules > Permissions) revealed that I could set default 
  permissions on upload, either for a protocol as a whole or for 
  particular file types, which addressed that issue.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2011-01/Transmit-permissions.png>

  With some additional tweaking, I created favorites for all the 
  remote locations I use regularly, gave them custom icons to make 
  differentiating among them easier, configured Transmit to give me 
  proper HTTP URLs (instead of the default SFTP URLs) when copying 
  from certain favorites’ file lists, and generally set up Transmit 
  to work the way I wanted. I even synchronized its favorites via 
  MobileMe so I’d have the same set on my MacBook. With that done, I 
  started exploring some of Transmit’s more advanced and unusual 
  features.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2011-01/Transmit-custom-icons.png>

  First, I decided to give the two-pane interface another look. 
  Several of my remote locations map exactly to local folders, so I 
  opened the local folder on the left and the remote folder on the 
  right. This was a bit tricky the first time, since my local folders 
  are actually on a mounted network server, but Transmit has an 
  easy-to-overlook Places pop-up at the left side of the Path Bar that 
  provides quick access to local or remote folders. Once I’d 
  navigated to the right spot on my network server, I was able to add 
  the three folders to the Places pop-up (note that they must be 
  dragged in from Transmit, not from the Finder). Then it was easy to 
  get the two panes showing the local and remote files.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2011-01/Transmit-two-pane-with-Places.png>

  Next I realized that Transmit can synchronize local and remote 
  folders, in both directions, comparing same-named files either by 
  modification date or file size. For giggles, I ran some simulated 
  syncs (any synchronization feature should allow simulation, as 
  Transmit does, so you can see what’s going to happen before it 
  does). I discovered, interestingly, that I had two misnamed files 
  locally; apparently I had fixed some naming problems only online. 
  I’m not entirely sure when I’d use synchronization in my 
  particular workflow, but it’s easy to imagine situations where 
  files could appear on both sides of the equation and need regular 
  synchronization.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2011-01/Transmit-synchronization.png>

  One interesting feature, although one that I haven’t yet used, is 
  Transmit’s integration with the MacFUSE utility to create virtual 
  disks for any remote site. These virtual disks look and work exactly 
  like any other hard disk or network volume in the Finder, and 
  Transmit doesn’t even have to be running for you to use them. It 
  does occur to me that perhaps I could have used Automator’s Finder 
  copying actions with Transmit’s virtual disks instead of using 
  Automator’s Transmit actions.

  One Transmit interface feature that I especially like is the 
  interactive path bar at the top of the file list. It shows all the 
  folders above the current one in the hierarchy (local or remote), 
  and you can click any one to jump directly to it. The last folder in 
  the bar is also a pop-up menu listing the hierarchy: useful for when 
  you’re too deep in the hierarchy for all the intermediate levels 
  to appear in the path bar. However, if you need to copy and paste a 
  given file’s path, you have to Control-click a given file and 
  choose Copy Path, something I need every so often.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2011-01/Transmit-path-bar.png>

  Transmit also now supports all of the Finder’s views, including 
  icon view and Cover Flow view, not that either seem all that useful 
  for remote file handling (then again, I don’t find either all that 
  useful in the Finder). And then there’s Quick Look support (select 
  a remote file and press the Spacebar), which is a big win when 
  you’re trying to identify some oddly named graphic or text file.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2011-01/Transmit-Quick-Look.png>

  In the end, I’m struck by how deep Transmit is. I had been using 
  it happily for some time before I set out to write this article, and 
  most of the niggling annoyances that I was prepared to mention 
  merely turned out to be capabilities that I hadn’t yet found or 
  come to understand. Transmit’s online help is adequate, but by no 
  means loquacious, and because Panic put so much effort into making 
  the interface provide controls only when they’re needed, you may 
  not realize what the program can do. What I’m saying, in short, is 
  that although everything in Transmit makes sense, if you’re used 
  to another file transfer program, be prepared to spend some time 
  poking and prodding at Transmit’s interface.

  So should you drop whatever file transfer program you’re using and 
  switch to Transmit? No, honestly, I don’t think so. Unless, that 
  is, there’s something that you’ve found lacking in whatever 
  you’re using now, much as I did, or if some of the features I’ve 
  described above seem compelling to you. As I said, basic file 
  transfer is no longer rocket science, and if you have relatively 
  minimal needs, nearly any file transfer client will suffice. But if 
  you’re looking for power and flexibility beyond what some other 
  programs can offer, you won’t go wrong by checking out Transmit.

  Transmit 4.1.4 costs $34 directly from Panic or $33.99 from the Mac 
  App Store. It requires Mac OS X 10.5 or later, and a free trial 
  version is available as a 22 MB download from Panic’s Web site.

<https://www.panic.com/transmit/buy.html>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/transmit/id403388562?mt=12>


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UnityRemote Turns iOS Device into Universal Remote
--------------------------------------------------
  by Michael E. Cohen <lymond@mac.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11885>
  16 comments

  A black plastic cylinder sits on my coffee table. It’s about half 
  the size of a can of soup. And it has changed my life.

  That’s a little melodramatic, but the UnityRemote from Gear4 
  really has improved the portion of my life that is dedicated to 
  couch potato pursuits. Now, you should understand that I’m far 
  from the most dedicated of couch potatoes; my entertainment gear 
  consists of a year-old HDTV, a cable-box/DVR supplied by my cable 
  company, a first-generation Apple TV, and a stereo amplifier old 
  enough to be pursuing post-graduate studies (I also have a DVD 
  player, but I rarely use it). However, the four entertainment 
  devices I use mean that I must have four different remote controls 
  at hand to manage my modest assemblage of home entertainment 
  technology from across the room.

<http://us.gear4.com/product/_/93/unityremote/?cid=31>

  That is, I needed those remotes until Gear4 sent me a review unit of 
  their UnityRemote device to examine for a couple of weeks. Now my 
  remote has been replaced by a small black plastic cylinder and my 
  iPad. 

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2011-01/UnityRemote_replaces.png>

  And so, as I recline on my sofa, I can tap out the opening lines of 
  this review, channel-surf, check a reference online, and call up 
  instant replays of a sporting event all from my iPad’s screen. 
  Sloth may be one of the Seven Deadly Sins, but there’s a thin, 
  delicious line between sloth and multitasking satisfaction.


**Out of the Box** -- The $99 UnityRemote arrives in a small box that 
  contains the device itself, three AA batteries, and a small booklet 
  that explains how to insert the batteries and pair the device with 
  your iOS device via Bluetooth.

  That’s right, Bluetooth: the UnityRemote contains a Bluetooth 
  radio with which your iOS device communicates to the UnityRemote. 
  The UnityRemote also contains a small bank of infrared transmitters 
  ringing the top of the cylinder inside of its tinted black plastic 
  shell; it uses those to send control signals to your entertainment 
  gear.

  The first time you pair your iOS device with the UnityRemote 
  (Settings > General > Bluetooth), your iOS device tells you that you 
  need an app to use the paired device, and then you’re whisked to 
  the App Store so you can download the free UnityRemote app. 

  The app itself is compatible with iPhone (3G or later) and iPod 
  touch (2G or later), and with iPad. The iPhone and iPod touch must 
  be running iOS 3.1.3 or above; the iPad requires iOS 3.2 or above. 
  However, even though the app is compatible with iPad, the app is 
  designed for the iPhone and the iPod touch screen dimensions, so 
  running it on an iPad, as I do, means that you have to tap the 2X 
  screen button to see the app in full-screen glory. 

  For many apps, this last is often a drawback; for the UnityRemote, 
  however, it is a feature—at least for me: I’m quite 
  near-sighted, and I usually have to remove my glasses in order to 
  make out the labels on ordinary remote controls (and then put my 
  glasses back on to see the TV screen). The pixel-doubled UnityRemote 
  buttons on the iPad, on the other hand, are easily readable when my 
  glasses are on. Note that even if you don’t share my visual 
  issues, you still get some benefit from the pixel-doubled 
  UnityRemote interface: the large buttons mean there’s less chance 
  you’ll hit the wrong one when using the app. 


**Devices and Actions** -- When you first launch the app, a Setup 
  Assistant offers to walk you through introducing your entertainment 
  devices to the UnityRemote and then to configure one or more 
  “actions.” 

  Introducing your entertainment devices to the UnityRemote is simple. 
  For each device you do the following: power it down, place the 
  UnityRemote near it, choose the device manufacturer from a list 
  (there are many dozens of manufacturers in the app’s database), 
  specify the type of device (such as TV, receiver, DVD player, and so 
  on), and then wait for the UnityRemote to power it on. If the device 
  turns on, it means that UnityRemote has found a set of infrared 
  control codes that work with the device, and it assigns those codes 
  to the device. 

  All but one of my devices, even my ancient amplifier, were 
  successfully mapped to a set of control codes by the app. My Apple 
  TV was not set up during this initial session, but I didn’t expect 
  it to be: first, the Apple TV is never off, but remains on standby 
  whenever it is plugged in, so the power-on trick won’t work with 
  it. Even more tellingly, there is _no entry_ for the Apple TV in the 
  list of Apple devices presented by the app. (A Gear4 engineer tells 
  me that, in fact, the Apple TV is supported, but the entry for it in 
  the app version I have isn’t obvious; that will be changed in a 
  future update.) Luckily, UnityRemote enables you to create arbitrary 
  devices and can learn the infrared signals that their remote 
  controls emit, and the one that I have created from scratch works 
  just fine.

  Once you teach the app about your devices, you configure 
  “actions”: these are simple templates for common activities that 
  require several of your entertainment devices to work together, such 
  as “Watch TV,” which, in my case, requires the cable-box, the 
  HDTV, and the stereo amplifier. The Assistant asks you a series of 
  questions about how the devices needed by the action work together, 
  how they need to be powered on, and so forth, and then it creates a 
  series of keypads containing the controls that you typically use 
  when engaging in that action. For example, a Watch TV action might 
  provide volume controls, channel controls, a directional controller 
  (with up, down, left, right, and enter buttons), and controls for 
  choosing the video input. 

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2011-01/UnityRemoteKeypad.jpg>

  Once the Setup Assistant finishes its work, you’re ready to kick 
  back and be entertained—at least, in theory.


**Theory vs. Practice** -- As the saying goes, “In theory, there is 
  no difference between theory and practice, but in practice there 
  is.” In my earliest attempts to use the UnityRemote, for example, 
  I discovered that not all of the remote control buttons listed in 
  the app matched the ones on my physical remotes, and that some of 
  the ones that _were_ present were mislabeled. For example, the 
  button to switch to the HDMI-1 input on my TV did not work; instead, 
  the app’s Video-1 button did that job. Furthermore, the Option 
  button for my TV didn’t appear among the standard keys for my TV 
  in the app at all. Also, the pre-supplied keypad layouts supplied 
  with each action were not a good match for my viewing practices, and 
  several buttons that I use a lot weren’t on the pre-supplied 
  keypads. 

  These, however, sound like bigger obstacles than they actually are: 
  you can add buttons, and change the assignment of any button, on any 
  keypad, at any time, with very little effort, and you can relabel 
  any of the buttons that don’t match their actual functionality. 
  Furthermore, if a button (like my TV’s Option button) is not 
  included among those listed in the app, you can use your original 
  remote to teach it to the UnityRemote quickly. You can also add 
  additional keypads to those pre-supplied with any action template: 
  within a day or two, I had created six custom keypads for my “TV 
  Central” action (based on the “Watch TV” template) that suited 
  my viewing needs admirably.

  The only thing you can’t do when creating and customizing keypads 
  is change the order in which the keypads appear after you create 
  them; so, if you want to avoid flicking left and right from keypad 
  to keypad to keypad just to do some simple common viewing task, you 
  have to give some thought to which buttons belong together, and 
  which keypads should be adjacent to each other.


**My Grand Experiment** -- After I had played with the app for a few 
  days, and had come up with a good collection of actions and keypads 
  for those actions, I took the big leap: I took all of my individual 
  remote controls and stuck them in a drawer to see if I could go for 
  a week using only the UnityRemote for my viewing and listening 
  activities.

  Much to my delight, I did not miss any of my old remote controls at 
  all. The app was more than equal to my channel-surfing/DVR-watching/ 
  volume-setting/device-hopping couch potato activities. At first, I 
  was troubled by the small delay of having to wake my iPad and wait 
  for it to reconnect to the UnityRemote device whenever my iPad went 
  to sleep, but I soon discovered the configuration setting in the app 
  for bypassing my iPad’s sleep timeout. What’s more, I learned 
  that keeping my iPad awake and illuminated did not run the battery 
  down nearly as much as I thought it might: just sitting there, lit 
  up and waiting for my touch, the iPad lost only five percent of its 
  charge per hour.  


**Rough Edges** -- The UnityRemote is not without its flaws and bugs. 
  One common shortcoming that I have regularly encountered is a 
  warning telling me that the app has received a low memory message 
  and that I should close both the UnityRemote app and any other apps 
  as well. The instruction to “close” is especially vague in the 
  iOS 4.2 era of multitasking. It turns out that “close” really 
  means “completely quit”: to solve the memory issue, you not only 
  have to close the UnityRemote app, but also remove it from the 
  multitasking bar before you restart it. For best results, you need 
  to do the same with any other apps in your multitasking bar as well, 
  though you can probably get away with just killing off Mail and 
  Safari, both of which make considerable use of RAM in the 
  background. (The memory warning, by the way, occurs more often on 
  the iPad and older iPhones than on the iPhone 4: the iPad has only 
  256 MB of working RAM compared to the 512 MB on the iPhone 4.)

  I also found that the app can lose track of which of my 
  entertainment devices are powered on at any time. Although there is 
  a Help button that can often fix such problems, it doesn’t always 
  work, and the big, friendly Contact Tech Support button included in 
  the Help component doesn’t seem to do anything at all.


**Nonetheless...** -- Even with its occasional hiccups and sometimes 
  confusing error messages, I am more than pleased with the 
  UnityRemote. A friend of mine has spent well over $1,000 trying out 
  various other universal remotes, and I have suffered with him as I 
  helped him to set them up, only to find that they were more trouble 
  than they were worth. For $99, the UnityRemote is closer to his 
  remote control Holy Grail than any other that I have seen. In fact, 
  a few days from now, when I have to return my UnityRemote review 
  unit, I plan to buy one for myself. 


  ----
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TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 24 January 2011
---------------------------------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11914>

**ScreenFlow 2.1.5** -- Good news for screen Scorceses: Telestream has 
  updated its screencasting software ScreenFlow to version 2.1.5. 
  Among the new features in this iteration are support for publishing 
  videos longer than 15 minutes to YouTube, improved capture 
  resolution for Logitech webcams, and better playhead accuracy. Bugs 
  fixed include an error when changing a text clip with multiple font 
  sizes, an export failure when a second monitor is disconnected, and 
  an issue with a warning when quitting during export. Various 
  localization issues are corrected, as well. ($99 new, free update, 
  11.8 MB)

<http://www.telestream.net/screen-flow/overview.htm>

  Read/post comments about ScreenFlow 2.1.5.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11910#comments>


**iMovie 9.0.2** -- Apple has updated iMovie to version 9.0.2. Beyond 
  improving overall stability, the update also fixes an issue that 
  could cause audio playback to fall out of sync. Apple recommends the 
  update for all users of iMovie ’11. (Free update, $49 new as part 
  of iLife ’11, 27.52 MB)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1355>

  Read/post comments about iMovie 9.0.2.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11909#comments>


**TextWrangler 3.5.1** -- Bare Bones Software has updated its free 
  general-purpose text editor TextWrangler to version 3.5.1. The 3.5.1 
  release was a quick bug-fix update to the recently released version 
  3.5, which contains many, many changes brought over via the shared 
  code with BBEdit 9.6—all of which are detailed in Bare Bones’s 
  typically detailed release notes. Highlights include a new Live 
  Search bar for finding text faster, text folding, swipe-based 
  navigation, enhanced script attachability, and safer saving of files 
  to remote mounted file systems. Note that support for BBXT plug-ins 
  has been removed. The new version of TextWrangler can also open 
  files significantly larger than previous versions could. 
  Confusingly, although TextWrangler 3.5.1 is available from the Bare 
  Bones Web site, the Mac App Store version reports itself to be 3.5.2 
  with the same changes. (Free, 13 MB)

<http://www.barebones.com/products/textwrangler/>
<http://www.barebones.com/support/textwrangler/current_notes.html>

  Read/post comments about TextWrangler 3.5.1.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11906#comments>


**Postbox 2.1.2** -- Postbox, Inc. has released Postbox 2.1.2, the 
  latest version of its lovely email software based on the open-source 
  Thunderbird code base. The new version does away with the need to 
  install separate language packs; all supported languages are now 
  installed automatically. IMAP email accounts work better with Time 
  Machine, requiring far less file space, and there’s a new option 
  to close a message window automatically when you delete the message, 
  instead of automatically loading the next message in your inbox. 
  Also fixed are issues with groups from Address Book and importing 
  messages from Apple Mail. ($39.95 new, free update, 13.4 MB)

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

  Read/post comments about Postbox 2.1.2.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11905#comments>


**Epson Printer Drivers v2.5.1** -- Apple has released Epson Printer 
  Drivers v2.5.1, its latest incarnation of updates for Epson printers 
  and scanners. A full list of supported printers is available from 
  Apple’s Web site. (Free, 837.37 KB)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL900>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT3669#epson>

  Read/post comments about Epson Printer Drivers v2.5.1.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11904#comments>


**MacBook Air (Late 2010) Software Update 2.0** -- Apple has released 
  MacBook Air (Late 2010) Software Update 2.0. The update’s sole fix 
  corrects an issue with some MacBook Air systems that prevented those 
  Macs from sleeping properly. We suspect that sheep counting was 
  involved. (Free, 342 KB)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1354>

  Read/post comments about MacBook Air (Late 2010) Software Update 
  2.0.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11903#comments>


**iDVD 7.1.1** -- Apparently, Apple hasn’t _completely_ forgotten 
  about iDVD, though it wasn’t updated for iLife ’11. The company 
  has now released iDVD 7.1.1, which it says boosts stability. The fix 
  also improves compatibility when you send slideshows to iDVD from 
  iPhoto ’11. Apple recommends the update for all users of iDVD 7. 
  ($49 as part of iLife ’11, free update, 34.53 MB)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1353>

  Read/post comments about iDVD 7.1.1.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11902#comments>


  ----
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  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/11914>


ExtraBITS for 24 January 2011
-----------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/11913>

  Carve out some reading time, because we have a slew of worthwhile 
  articles beyond the confines of TidBITS this week. Our own Lex 
  Friedman has a couple of thought-provoking pieces at Macworld about 
  treadmill desks and Apple’s responses to customer complaints. Then 
  there are Macworld’s wishes for the Mac App Store, all those 
  Easter eggs hidden inside Apple icons, the BBC’s excellent 
  Internet visualization tools, and the story behind the Stuxnet worm.


**Does Apple Listen to Customers?** -- Over at Macworld, Lex Friedman 
  has a summary of a number of high-profile instances of customer 
  outcry regarding Apple products. It’s instructive to see how Apple 
  responds to such complaints, since it could suggest more and less 
  effective ways to give the company feedback.

<http://www.macworld.com/article/157205/2011/01/apple_and_customers.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11912#comments>


**BBC News Helps Visualize the Internet** -- Kudos to BBC News for 
  developing some tools that help us visualize interesting data points 
  about the Internet. The Top 100 page shows a treemap of the 100 
  most-trafficked sites on the Web, broken into categories. The Net 
  Growth page presents an animated world map showing how the number of 
  Internet users has grown from 1998 through 2008. And the How It 
  Works page displays a constantly updating count of the total number 
  of Internet users, along with the number of today’s email 
  messages, blog posts, and Google searches.

<http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/8562801.stm>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11908#comments>


**Easter Eggs Inside Apple Icons** -- We glance at icons all day long, 
  but if you look really closely, you may see more than initially 
  meets the eye. Electricpig has zoomed in on a number of standard 
  Apple icons to discover hidden text and other Easter eggs.

<http://www.electricpig.co.uk/2011/01/18/apple-icon-secrets-hidden-meanings-hiding-in-plain-sight/>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11901#comments>


**Stuxnet Worm Reportedly Aimed at Iran by U.S. and Israel** -- This 
  revelation from the New York Times is a bit outside our normal 
  sphere of coverage, but it’s important because it shows that 
  computer security is going to become even more important as 
  governments move to electronic attacks on one another, potentially 
  causing normal civilians to become unwitting transmission vectors to 
  real-world targets.

<http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/16/world/middleeast/16stuxnet.html?_r=1&pagewanted=all>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11900#comments>


**Macworld’s Mac App Store Wishlist** -- The Mac App Store has been 
  out for only a week, but that’s long enough for our friends at 
  Macworld to have put together a list of ten changes they’d like to 
  see. In general, we agree with all of their suggestions and 
  criticisms.

<http://www.macworld.com/article/157180/2011/01/mac_app_store_10_missing_features.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11898#comments>


**Walk While You Work with a Treadmill Desk** -- Lex Friedman explains 
  over at Macworld how to set up and use a treadmill desk, which goes 
  one step—well, many steps, actually—beyond a standing desk to 
  ensure that you stay in motion all day long. Given recent research 
  showing that even people who exercise are hurt by being too 
  sedentary in the rest of their lives, we think more people will be 
  exploring ways to keep moving. If only we could generate power at 
  the same time!

<http://www.macworld.com/article/156988/2011/01/treadmilldesk.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/11897#comments>


  ----
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  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/11913>


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