TidBITS#1072/11-Apr-2011
========================
  Issue link: <http://tidbits.com/issue/1072>


  Adam is on an explanation jag this week, leading off with coverage of
  how a recent update to the iBooks app enables it to open EPUB files
  from apps like Safari, Mail, and Dropbox. Then he turns his attention
  to how to add Google’s Browse By Name feature to Google Chrome and
  Safari. And in his ongoing series about Gmail, he looks at the most
  useful Gmail Labs extensions to Google’s Web-based email service. In
  other news, the MacTech Boot Camp conferences are fast approaching
  (TidBITS readers can save $200 on registration!), and we’re pleased to
  announce a pair of Take Control ebooks about GarageBand ’11. Notable
  software releases this week include GraphicConverter 7.2, Boot Camp
  3.2 Update for MacBook Pro (early 2011), and ChronoSync 4.2 and
  ChronoAgent 1.2.

Articles
    MacTech Boot Camps Fast Approaching
    iBooks Now Opens EPUB Files Directly
    Two Updated Take Control Books Take GarageBand to 11
    Surf Faster in Google Chrome and Safari 5 with Browse By Name
    Zen and the Art of Gmail, Part 3: Gmail Labs
    TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 11 April 2011
    ExtraBITS for 11 April 2011


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MacTech Boot Camps Fast Approaching
-----------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/article/12110>

  As we noted not long ago in “MacTech Boot Camp Adds Four More 
  Cities” (18 February 2011), the MacTech Boot Camp conferences are 
  going on the road, with events scheduled for Dallas, Boston, Los 
  Angeles, and Chicago in the next four months. Having them throughout 
  the country should make it easier for people to attend without 
  requiring significant travel. MacTech Boot Camp conferences cover 
  topics aimed at helping consultants and support techs who work with 
  home and small office users.

<http://tidbits.com/article/11979>
<http://www.mactech.com/bootcamp/>
<http://www.mactech.com/bootcamp/topics>

  MacTech Boot Camp Dallas is fast approaching on 27 April 2011 at the 
  Hyatt Regency DFW, and Boston isn’t far behind on 18 May 2011 at 
  the Royal Sonesta Hotel in Cambridge. (Los Angeles is scheduled for 
  27 July 2011 and Chicago for 31 August 2011.)

  Although the $200 discount for early bird registrations is no longer 
  available for the Dallas or Boston events, TidBITS readers can get 
  the equivalent of the $295 early bird pricing using this special 
  link.

<http://www.mactech.com/bootcamp/special-reg_TidBITS>

  And, like the initial MacTech Boot Camp conference last January in 
  San Francisco, there will be a special Apple Certification Testing 
  session the day before the MacTech Boot Camp conference, complete 
  with a proctor-moderated group study session beforehand for 
  last-minute studying. Attendees can take any current Apple Training 
  exam, and the regular $299 price drops to $199 for MacTech Boot Camp 
  attendees.

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


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iBooks Now Opens EPUB Files Directly
------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/article/12100>
  13 comments

  In another instance where it would have been nice of Apple to 
  publish more-complete release notes, we totally missed a significant 
  change in the iBooks app until recently. Back in “Take Control’s 
  Problems with Apps and Docs in iOS” (25 July 2010), I complained 
  about how hard it was to distribute files to iOS users via the 
  Internet due to limitations in iOS. Although some limitations went 
  away in iOS 4.0 and 4.2, others (no centralized file storage area, 
  no OS-level support for Zip files) remain. Luckily, one notable 
  limitation — iBooks failing to register itself as being able to 
  open EPUB files from other apps — has now been rectified.

<http://tidbits.com/article/11459>

  The practical upshot of this fix is that you can now transfer EPUB 
  files into iBooks far more easily than before, when the only way was 
  to drop them into iTunes and do a USB sync. For individual users, 
  that means you can send yourself an EPUB via email and transfer the 
  attachment to iBooks, and you can also copy EPUB files into Dropbox 
  and use the iOS Dropbox app to send them to iBooks.

  From our perspective as a publisher, even more important is that you 
  can now tap a link to a .epub file in Safari and use the Open In 
  interface to open the file in iBooks. Once we realized this, we 
  changed the interface for the Take Control Library so account 
  holders (everyone who has ever purchased a Take Control ebook from 
  our cart) can now download EPUB versions of their purchased ebooks 
  directly on their iOS devices. 

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/account>

  We are still providing slightly different interfaces depending on 
  whether you’re using a desktop computer or a mobile device. For 
  desktop computers, for each book, we provide links to download 
  zipped PDFs. For many titles, we provide also “alternative 
  format” Zip files that generally contain both the EPUB and the 
  Mobipocket (for the Kindle) versions. We’ll soon be breaking those 
  alternative format files apart to serve EPUB and Mobipocket 
  independently.

  (We now create our own EPUB files, so those are available 
  immediately after purchase, but converting our EPUBs into decent 
  Mobipocket files with Amazon’s inscrutable kindlegen tool turned 
  out to be something we need to farm out, so Mobipocket files are 
  coming back a week or so after publication.)

  For iOS devices, though, Zip files are a pain, since there’s no 
  way to guarantee that users will have an app that can open them 
  (though the popular GoodReader is among those apps). As a result, 
  when you load your Take Control Library on an iOS device, you can 
  tap links to access either the PDF or the EPUB directly; in both 
  cases you can then use iOS’s Open In feature to send the file to 
  iBooks or another compatible app.


  ----
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Two Updated Take Control Books Take GarageBand to 11
----------------------------------------------------
  by Michael E. Cohen <lymond@mac.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/article/12102>
  1 comment

  Writing about software designed to compose and record music is hard. 
  I know: I’ve tried to do it myself a few times, with, at best, 
  indifferent success. The difficulty of capturing both the dynamic 
  power of music and the craft of creating it in fixed, silent print 
  makes the new editions of musician/composer Jeff Tolbert’s pair of 
  GarageBand books all the more impressive.

  His “Take Control of Making Music with GarageBand ’11” and 
  “Take Control of Recording with GarageBand ’11” take 
  different, but complementary, approaches to the popular and 
  feature-laden iLife application. Together, they address the wide 
  range of users and uses of GarageBand ’11 on the Mac (they don’t 
  cover the more-limited iPad version, although many of the tips will 
  still be useful).

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/garageband-music?pt=TB1072>
<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/garageband-recording?pt=TB1072>

  The 159-page “Take Control of Making Music with GarageBand 
  ’11” is for the new or intermediate user who wants to take 
  advantage of all the built-in music-making features of the program. 
  It provides step-by-step instructions that guide readers through 
  using GarageBand’s built-in loops to create five songs, explaining 
  not only how to use GarageBand’s editing and mixing features but 
  also how to be playful and creative while composing tunes that 
  please the ear. Readers learn how to plan a song, get the most out 
  of the Magic GarageBand feature, edit and arrange Real Instrument 
  and Software Instrument loops in numerous ways, create exciting 
  mixes, and even how to score a movie with the program.

  The 166-page “Take Control of Recording with GarageBand ’11” 
  addresses the needs of musicians who want to use the program as the 
  core component of a home recording studio. Readers of this volume 
  find out how to plan a recording session and learn real-world 
  recording studio techniques, such as how to use a microphone 
  effectively, methods for getting the best sounds out of old gear, 
  how to apply pro effects with the 12 GarageBand amps (including 7 
  new ones!) and the wide selection of stompbox effects, how to do 
  multi-track recording, and even how to clean up a take with Flex 
  Time and Groove Matching. Two example songs demonstrate many of the 
  techniques discussed.

  The example songs used in both books are linked in the text to the 
  actual recordings, available online, and, as an added bonus, readers 
  can also download the GarageBand projects that created those songs.

  Each book costs $15, but they can be purchased together in a $20 
  bundle via the “Buy Both” option in the left margin of either 
  Web page or by clicking this link.

<https://secure.esellerate.net/secure/prefill.aspx?s=STR5625274989&cmd=BUY&_cartitem0.skurefnum=SKU62598565858&_cartitem1.skurefnum=SKU15289232426&_Shopper.CouponName=CPN011500408BUN&_eSellerate.Options=prevalidatecoupon&pt=TB1072>

  So crank the amp to 11 and, with Jeff’s help, get ready to lay 
  down some tasty tracks. 


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Surf Faster in Google Chrome and Safari 5 with Browse By Name
-------------------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/article/12099>
  4 comments

  In “Firefox 4 Improves, But Not Radically” (2 April 2011), I 
  wrote about Google’s Browse By Name service, introduced in 2004 in 
  the Google Toolbar, and how to add it back to Firefox 4. Put simply, 
  Browse By Name enables you to jump directly to the desired Web page 
  without going through the intermediate step of the Google search 
  results. It may seem like a small win, but when Browse By Name works 
  properly (which it does for me in almost all situations), it saves 
  an unnecessary page load for the Google search results, a click on 
  the top result, and the mental context switch necessary to parse the 
  results. When you know what you’re looking for, there’s simply 
  no reason to go through the extra steps.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12077>


**Understand Browse By Name** -- As an example that’s near and dear 
  to my heart, imagine that you want to visit the Take Control Web 
  site, a popular spot on all Internet sightseeing tours. If you were 
  to type “take control” into the Google search bar in Firefox or 
  Safari, or into Chrome’s Omnibox (a combined location and search 
  bar) and press Return, the browser would show you the page for this 
  URL:

<http://www.google.com/search?q=take+control>

  Easy enough, certainly, but compare that with what would happen if 
  you typed “take control” into a Browse By Name-enabled location 
  bar, which is equivalent to clicking this URL:

<http://www.google.com/search?sourceid=navclient&gfns=1&q=take+control>
  As you can see, the first one opens a Google search results page, 
  with our Take Control Web site as the first hit, whereas the second 
  one does the exact same search, but takes you directly to the site, 
  saving you a page load and a click. 

  Browse By Name is effective only when you know where you want to go, 
  so sometimes you need to give it just a bit more to work with so the 
  top hit in Google for your search is sufficiently certain.

  For instance, searching in a Browse By Name-enabled browser on 
  “sparrow” takes you to the page for the Sparrow email app, 
  implying that most people searching on that term are more interested 
  in the app than the bird. But a search on “ostrich” takes you to 
  the bird’s Wikipedia page, and a search on “penguin” just 
  displays the normal Google search results page, because there are 
  four likely entries: Penguin Group (the publishers), Club Penguin 
  (the online game), the bird (via Wikipedia), and the 
  penguin-emblazoned clothing from Munsingwear. If you wanted to hit 
  those sites directly via Browse By Name, you’d just want to make 
  your search more accurate, as in:

* “penguin book”
* “club penguin”
* “penguin wiki”
* “penguin clothing”

  In other words, using Browse By Name effectively is just like 
  searching Google effectively.


**Add Browse By Name to Chrome** -- To make Google Chrome use Browse 
  By Name by default, follow these steps.

1. Choose Chrome > Preferences to open the Chrome preferences page.

2. Click Manage Search Engines to display a list of all the search 
   engines Chrome knows about.

3. In the Other Search Engines area, enter the details for Google 
   Browse By Name; the name and keyword don’t particularly matter, 
   but the URL must be:

  http://www.google.com/search?sourceid=navclient&gfns=1&q=%s

4. Press Return to make Chrome accept your new search engine, and then 
   hover your cursor over it and click the Make Default button, after 
   which it moves up into the main list.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-04/Chrome-Browse-By-Name.png>

  (As an aside, note the keyword fields for Google, Wikipedia, Amazon, 
  and TidBITS, which are the sites I search on a regular basis. I’ve 
  given them single-letter keywords so I can search them from the 
  Chrome location bar easily, as in “t Mailplane” or “w 
  SquirrelFish”. It’s a nice shortcut, and I’ve configured 
  Firefox and LaunchBar similarly so I can use the same keyboard 
  shortcuts in all places.)

  Once you’ve run through these steps, you can just type searches 
  into Chrome’s location bar with no more ado. If you decide you 
  don’t like it, just make a different search engine the default 
  again.


**Add Browse By Name to Safari** -- Addicted as my fingers are to 
  Browse By Name, Safari’s address bar simply doesn’t cut the 
  mustard. Whenever I find myself using it for normal browsing, I’m 
  constantly entering search terms that Safari either interprets as 
  domains (typing “sparrow” takes me to http://www.sparrow.com/) 
  or just fails on (typing “penguin book” takes me to an error 
  page because http://penguin%20book/ isn’t a domain).

  Of course, Safari has a search field too, but it’s limited to 
  Google, Yahoo, and Bing. I tried a couple of different approaches to 
  bending Safari to my will, and here are the two I like best right 
  now.

  First, create a JavaScript bookmarklet in the Bookmarks bar. To do 
  this, create a bookmark to any Web page by clicking the + button in 
  the address bar and saving it in the Bookmarks Bar. Then choose 
  Bookmarks > Show All Bookmarks, select Bookmarks Bar in the sidebar, 
  and edit the just-created bookmark to give it an appropriate name 
  and the URL below (as one line, without returns) in the Address 
  field.
      
      javascript:void(q=prompt('Enter%20search%20terms%20for%20Br 
      owse%20By%20Name',getSelection()));if(q)%20void(location.href= 
      'http://www.google.com/search?sourceid=navclient&gfns=1&q='%20 
      +%20escape(q))

  To use this bookmarklet, click the bookmark in the Bookmarks bar and 
  enter your search terms in the dialog. The bookmarklet even gets a 
  keyboard shortcut of Command-number based on its location in the 
  Bookmarks bar (see Bookmarks > Bookmarks Bar for the list).

  Second, install the free PopSearch extension from Canisbos Computing 
  (download it, and then double-click it to install in Safari 5). Once 
  installed, press Command-K to bring up the PopSearch dialog and 
  click its Settings button. First edit the entries in the Engines tab 
  to add Google Browse By Name, as I’ve done in the screenshot 
  (it’s the same URL as in the Chrome steps above), and to tweak any 
  other search engines (look, my keywords are now consistent across 
  three browsers and LaunchBar!).

<http://canisbos.posterous.com/pages/popsearch>
<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-04/PopSearch-Engines.png>

  Then, to make Safari work as much like Firefox and Chrome as 
  possible, switch to the General tab and change the default hotkey 
  for PopSearch to Command-L (which overrides Safari’s internal use 
  of Command-L for File > Open Location). Finally, also in the General 
  tab, select Google Browse By Name as the default search engine and 
  set PopSearch to use the default search engine all the time. What I 
  like about this approach is that my muscle memory of pressing 
  Command-L in Firefox and Chrome will now carry over to Safari as 
  well.

  For those who haven’t experienced Browse By Name due to being 
  Safari users, I encourage you to give it a try, and for anyone 
  accustomed to it in earlier versions of Firefox, I hope this article 
  gives you the tools you need to try Chrome or Safari without 
  changing your browsing habits. 


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Zen and the Art of Gmail, Part 3: Gmail Labs
--------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/article/12038>

  In this series so far, I’ve explained features of Gmail that are 
  standard (see “Zen and the Art of Gmail, Part 1: Why I 
  Switched”) and “Zen and the Art of Gmail, Part 2: Labels & 
  Filters”). But as much as I’ve liked using Gmail, the fact that 
  it has met my needs in large part has been due to the optional 
  enhancements provided by Google engineers via Gmail Labs. I presume 
  these are the sort of features that Gmail’s product managers 
  consider unnecessary for most users, but they’re made available to 
  anyone who wants them, and some are essential to my workflow.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12036>
<http://tidbits.com/article/12037>

  To access Gmail Labs, click the gear icon at the top of Gmail’s 
  Web interface page and click Labs in the menu that appears. (For 
  Google Apps accounts, there’s a Settings link at the top instead 
  of the gear icon.) Then scroll down through the long list of items, 
  clicking the Enable radio button for any that look interesting. I 
  recommend being somewhat conservative in how many you enable at a 
  time, since a flaky Gmail Labs feature can in theory cause Gmail to 
  fail to load. I won’t attempt a laundry list, but here are the 
  ones that I find make an actual difference to my Gmail use, in rough 
  order of importance.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-03/Gmail-Labs.png>


**Quote Selected Text** -- I consider this Gmail Labs feature 
  essential for cutting some replies down to size. Much of the time 
  there’s no need to quote an entire original message in a reply, 
  and with this feature enabled, you can select just the text you want 
  quoted before replying. This feature is commonplace in traditional 
  email programs, and I would miss it horribly if it weren’t 
  available in Gmail.


**Undo Send** -- One of the things I liked about Eudora was that I 
  could queue messages for later delivery, which would happen either 
  on my next mail check, or when I manually released them. It was 
  entirely common for me to remember something I wanted to add to a 
  queued message, so I appreciated that approach, even though it 
  created a little more work.

  Gmail, like many other email programs, lacks the concept of queuing 
  outgoing messages, instead offering only a Drafts mailbox for 
  in-progress messages that you haven’t yet sent. That’s not good 
  enough; I need to be able to add to a message that I previously 
  thought was done, and the Undo Send feature of Gmail Labs gives me 
  that.

  Once enabled, it displays an Undo link on the screen next to where 
  Gmail reports “Email Sent.” Click it within 30 seconds 
  (configurable in the main Settings screen), and Gmail moves the 
  message (which hasn’t really been sent yet) back into Drafts and 
  lets you edit it again. I use it regularly.


**Quick Links** -- I really like the Quick Links widget, which enables 
  me to create a single-click link to any bookmarkable URL in Gmail, 
  most notably unread messages in my Inbox. So, anything you can 
  encapsulate in a search, such as the following, can be turned into a 
  link for instant access.

* is:unread in:inbox — This displays all unread messages in the 
  Inbox.

* in:spam (label:tidbits-talk OR label:press-release) — This one 
  looks for messages sent to TidBITS Talk or our press release 
  reflector that have been marked as spam — every now and then Gmail 
  produces a false positive. I scan this occasionally and mark good 
  messages as not spam.

* from:(tonya@tidbits.com OR tc-comments@tidbits.com) -{label:tc-order 
  label:automated-message} — This one shows all messages from Tonya, 
  eliminating some automated messages that also send mail from 
  tc-comments@tidbits.com.

  One tip: Complex searches in Gmail are easier to build if you first 
  click Show Search Options (in tiny text to the right of the search 
  field). Then build your search, make sure it finds the right 
  messages, and copy the search phrase from the “Search Results 
  for:” line to the left of Gmail’s main interface buttons. Then 
  paste that into the normal search field and make your Quick Link. If 
  you make a Quick Link with Search Options showing, it will show 
  every time you use the Quick Link, which is a waste of screen real 
  estate.

  Alas, Quick Links can’t have keyboard shortcuts, which would be 
  helpful.


**Navbar Drag and Drop** -- Gmail puts quite a number of items in the 
  left-side navigation bar, but they aren’t always in the order you 
  want. With this Gmail Labs feature, you can rearrange them, at least 
  somewhat. I like to put Quick Links near the top, but it often moves 
  down on its own for unknown reasons. 


**Multiple Inboxes** -- Like Priority Inbox, the Multiple Inboxes 
  widget in Gmail Labs tweaks Gmail’s default list of messages, 
  offering you up to five additional boxes that you can use to display 
  the results of any search. (Remember, everything is about search.) 
  Of course, the most likely searches are for labels, but you can 
  display anything you can find. You can set how many messages appear 
  in the boxes, though they all use the same number.

  The various boxes can be displayed below, above, or to the right 
  side of the main Inbox. I could see above being useful for 
  particularly important messages, and I prefer below, but because the 
  right-side display shrinks the Subject area of the message list, it 
  would be helpful only with a very wide window.

  You configure the searches for Multiple Inboxes in its own settings 
  screen, accessible from a link added to the others at the top of the 
  main Settings screen.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-03/Gmail-Multiple-Inboxes.png>

  Unfortunately, Priority Inbox overrides Multiple Inboxes, so to see 
  the Multiple Inboxes display, you must click the Inbox link in 
  Gmail’s left-hand nav bar instead of the Priority Inbox link. 
  Since Priority Inbox came out, I don’t use Multiple Inboxes nearly 
  as much.


**Previews in Email** -- A number of Gmail Labs features enhance Gmail 
  by embedding content right in the message, based purely on links 
  included in the message. So, if a friend sends you a link to a set 
  of Flickr photos, the Gmail Labs feature lets you view see previews 
  of the photos right in Gmail, without having to bounce out to 
  Flickr.

  Currently, you can get previews for Flickr, Picasa, Google Docs, 
  Google Maps, Yelp listings, and even Google Voice messages (so you 
  can play your Google Voice voicemail right from the email 
  notification). YouTube previews used to be available via a Google 
  Labs feature, but are now built into Gmail by default.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-03/Gmail-Flickr-previews.png>


**Smart Addressing** -- A pair of Gmail Labs features make Gmail the 
  best email program I’ve seen for helping the user avoid addressing 
  mistakes. Once you add one or more recipients to a message, 
  “Don’t forget Bob” enables Gmail to suggest other people, 
  based on groups you have sent email to in the past. And “Got the 
  wrong Bob?” alerts you when you address a message too quickly and 
  accidentally send to Bob (your boss) rather than Bob (your friend). 
  It kicks in only once you’ve added more than two recipients (since 
  it needs the context of groups you’ve sent email to in the past to 
  guess that you might have the wrong Bob). For more information, see 
  “Gmail Further Foolproofs Group Emailing ” (15 October 2009).

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-03/Gmail-Dont-Forget-Bob.png>
<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-03/Gmail-Wrong-Bob.png>
<http://tidbits.com/article/10649>


**Google Calendar Gadget** -- Since I have full access to my calendar 
  in BusyCal on my Mac at all times, and reminders from it and on my 
  iPhone, Google Calendar isn’t that important to me. But since we 
  use Google Calendar as the intermediary for sharing certain 
  calendars via BusyCal, I’ve added the Google Calendar widget to 
  Gmail as well, so I see a little box showing the next couple of 
  events in Gmail’s left-side navigation bar. 


**Advanced IMAP Controls** -- Although I read my mail in Gmail’s Web 
  interface, I also back it up by retrieving it in Apple Mail via 
  IMAP. That way, should something awful happen to Google or my mail 
  in particular, I have a local copy that’s backed up along with all 
  the rest of my data. This Gmail Labs feature makes working with IMAP 
  a bit easier. My understanding is that Gmail’s IMAP is, shall we 
  say, kind of weird, since it has to map labels to IMAP folders 
  (meaning that a message can appear in multiple IMAP mailboxes). For 
  more information, see Joe Kissell’s essential article on the 
  topic, “Achieving Email Bliss with IMAP, Gmail, and Apple Mail” 
  (2 May 2009).

<http://tidbits.com/article/10253>


**Canned Responses** -- This feature attempts to mimic Eudora’s 
  stationery feature, at least as far as the boilerplate text goes 
  (Eudora’s stationery could include message header information as 
  well). Although I like the idea of having canned responses, in the 
  real world, I don’t use it much, and I use it only manually since 
  I don’t trust software to send mail for me automatically. But 
  that’s just me. Of course, you could also use something like 
  TextExpander or Keyboard Maestro for this functionality, though such 
  utilities don’t appear within Gmail’s interface.


**Add Any Gadget by URL** -- I don’t use this Gmail Labs feature, 
  but I like the idea of it, and I tried using it briefly to put a 
  Twitter gadget in Gmail’s left-side navigation bar. There are 
  oodles of Google gadgets, which are roughly similar to Dashboard 
  widgets. The only problem is that a lot of them are bad, and not all 
   display well in the limited width of Gmail’s navigation bar.

<http://www.google.com/ig/directory?synd=open>

  While Gmail Labs widgets can go a long way toward improving the 
  overall Gmail experience, there’s one more thing you can — and 
  should — do to make Gmail into a first-class citizen on your Mac. 
  For that, you’ll need to use the Mailplane application to free 
  Gmail from the confines of your Web browser, and I’ll look at 
  Mailplane in the next installment in this series (see “Zen and the 
  Art of Gmail, Part 4: Mailplane”).

<http://tidbits.com/article/12039>


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://tidbits.com/article/12038#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://tidbits.com/t/12038>


TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 11 April 2011
-------------------------------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/article/12107>

**GraphicConverter 7.2** -- Lemkesoft has released GraphicConverter 
  7.2. Among the many new features are a command to Select Last 
  Selection, additional movie options for batch conversions, WebP 
  import and export, Apple-Touch-Icon export support, and an option to 
  cycle through open windows. Full release notes are available at 
  Lemkesoft’s site. (Free update, $39.95 new, 100 MB)

<http://www.lemkesoft.com/content/188/graphicconverter.html>
<http://www.lemkesoft.com/content/162/new-functions-and-versions.html>

  Read/post comments about GraphicConverter 7.2.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12105#comments>


**Boot Camp 3.2 Update for MacBook Pro (early 2011)** -- According to 
  Apple, Boot Camp 3.2 Update corrects just a few issues for 2011 
  MacBook Pros. The update addresses issues with shutdown, along with 
  Japanese and Korean keyboards on those Macs when running Windows 7 
  via Boot Camp. (Free, 21.55 MB)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1371>

  Read/post comments about Boot Camp 3.2 Update for MacBook Pro (early 
  2011).

<http://tidbits.com/article/12104#comments>


**ChronoSync 4.2/ChronoAgent 1.2** -- Econ Technologies has released 
  ChronoSync 4.2 and ChronoAgent 1.2. Among the new features in these 
  versions of the synchronization/backup software are new Trial Sync 
  options, including additional file statistics, time estimates, and 
  options for controlling and comparing files on both sides of the 
  sync. Also, Econ Technologies enhanced scheduling options with Retry 
  on Errors, which runs a sync again if errors occurred, and Sync 
  Limits, which limits the number of syncs that can take place 
  simultaneously to prevent too many from happening when a Mac rejoins 
  a network. ChronoAgent also adds the capability to schedule 
  ChronoSync Container Documents using the Sync When Available option. 
  Full release notes for ChronoSync and ChronoAgent are available. 
  ($40 new for ChronoSync, $10 new for ChronoAgent; free updates; 21 
  MB, 3.2 MB)

<http://www.econtechnologies.com/pages/cs/chrono_overview.html>
<http://www.econtechnologies.com/pages/ca/agent_overview.html>
<http://www.econtechnologies.com/pages/cs/chrono_notes4.html>
<http://www.econtechnologies.com/pages/ca/agent_releasenotes.html>

  Read/post comments about ChronoSync 4.2/ChronoAgent 1.2.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12103#comments>




ExtraBITS for 11 April 2011
---------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/article/12106>

  Along with an announcement of Adam’s upcoming MUG meeting in 
  Denver, we have a pair of podcasts for your listening pleasure this 
  week, with Joe Kissell talking about Mac maintenance on the Tech 
  Night Owl Live and Matt Neuburg joining a MacJury to celebrate the 
  iPad’s birthday.


**Adam Previews Lion at MacinTech Users’ Group in Denver** -- If 
  you’re in Denver on Tuesday (12 April 2011), come listen to Adam 
  at the MacinTech Users’ Group meeting at 7 PM — follow the link 
  for meeting location details. He’ll be previewing what’s coming 
  in Mac OS X Lion as well as talking about the iPad, the iPhone, and 
  well, anything else that anyone asks about.

<http://www.macintech.org/content/12-april-meeting>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/12101#comments>


**Joe Kissell Discusses Mac Maintenance on Tech Night Owl Live** -- 
  After releasing an update to “Take Control of Maintaining Your 
  Mac, Second Edition,” Joe Kissell joins host Gene Steinberg of the 
  Tech Night Owl Live radio show to discuss his recommendations for 
  keeping your Mac running smoothly.

<http://www.technightowl.com/radio/podcast/now-playing-april-9-2011-%E2%80%94-joe-kissell-karen-combs-and-jason-snell/>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/12101#comments>


**Happy Birthday, iPad, from MacJury** -- Chuck Joiner hosts a 
  wide-ranging MacJury discussion, surveying the iPad’s past and 
  considering its future, with a panel including TidBITS’s own Matt 
  Neuburg.

<http://www.macjury.com/macjury-1103-the-ipad-at-one-an-examination-of-the-first-year-of-the-ipad/>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/12101#comments>




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