TidBITS#1074/25-Apr-2011
========================
  Issue link: <http://tidbits.com/issue/1074>


  After 10 days speaking and vacationing in the Denver/Boulder area,
  we’re back in the saddle and ready to ride. Adam used the trip as an
  excuse to test the Mophie Juice Pack Air battery-powered iPhone case,
  which was a big help for ensuring that the iPhone 4 didn’t run out of
  power during long GPS navigation sessions. Also this week, Jeff
  Carlson reports on Apple’s latest record-breaking financial quarter
  and offers an excerpt about using the iPad as a remote control from
  his recent “Take Control of Media on Your iPad, Second Edition” book.
  Also, Joe Kissell shares the results of his experiment with tweeting
  the entire contents of “Take Control of Your Paperless Office.”
  Notable software releases this week include TextExpander 3.3 and
  iTunes 10.2.2.

Articles
    Apple Breaks More Records for Q2 2011
    Mophie Juice Pack Air Powers Longer iPhone GPS Use
    The Ebook Shredder: A Recap
    Use Your iPad as a Remote Control
    TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 25 April 2011


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Apple Breaks More Records for Q2 2011
-------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>, Michael E. Cohen <lymond@mac.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/article/12124>
  4 comments

  Apple’s results for the just-completed financial quarter, Q2-2011, 
  are predictably impressive. Apple earned a net profit of $5.99 
  billion on revenues of $24.67 billion ($6.40 per diluted share), a 
  record for second quarter earnings. It’s not quite a record for a 
  quarter (that honor goes to last quarter’s $6 billion profit), but 
  it is the highest year-over-year quarterly growth, at 95 percent; Q2 
  2010 saw a $3.07 billion profit (“Apple Posts $3.07 Billion Profit 
  for Q2 2010,” 20 April 2010).

<http://www.apple.com/pr/library/2011/04/20results.html>
<http://tidbits.com/article/11212>

  Looking at the backlog of iPad 2 orders (and the lines that still 
  form at Apple Stores each morning), the numbers of people showing up 
  to coffee shops with MacBook Airs, and the sheer tonnage of iPhones 
  brandished everywhere, it’s clear that Apple is selling a lot of 
  product and reaping fat profits.

  But when you dig into the other numbers Apple released, you may be 
  surprised to learn where, exactly, that profit is coming from.


**Macs** -- Remember that little computer business Apple had, the one 
  that was certainly going to be retired in the face of the new iOS 
  devices? Apple earned $4.97 billion on 3.76 million Macs sold during 
  the quarter, a 28 percent unit increase over last year, fueled by 
  updates to the MacBook Air and MacBook Pro. Portables accounted for 
  more than twice as many sales as desktops. During the conference 
  call with analysts, Apple Chief Operating Officer Tim Cook pointed 
  out that the company has outgrown the PC market 20 quarters in a 
  row, saying, “We seem to be the only guys that are really focused 
  on building innovative products in that space.”


**iPhone** -- The growth in Mac sales is impressive, but the iPhone 
  really is taking over as Apple’s primary revenue generator. Apple 
  reported sales of 18.65 million iPhones internationally, a stunning 
  113 percent growth over the year-ago quarter (in the United States 
  alone, growth was 155 percent; quite a haul less than a year after 
  “Antennagate”; see “Apple Responds to iPhone 4 Antenna 
  Issue,” 16 July 2010). Apple earned $12.3 billion from the iPhone 
  division’s sales, about half of the quarter’s overall revenues.

<http://tidbits.com/article/11434>

  When asked about Apple’s plans for launching an iPhone with LTE/4G 
  networking speeds, Cook didn’t just deflect the question (which 
  the executives usually do when asked about upcoming products; at 
  least one analyst was basically shut down when he tried to pin Cook 
  on a release schedule for the next iPhone revision). Cook reiterated 
  that the LTE chipsets in the first-generation devices now being sold 
  by competitors “force a lot of design compromises with the 
  handset, and some of those we are just not willing to make.”


**iPad** -- This quarter was the first to include the iPad 2, although 
  it appeared in only the last three weeks of the time period. Apple 
  sold a total of 4.7 million iPads in 59 countries, generating $2.84 
  billion in revenue; the company didn’t break out specific numbers 
  between the iPad 2 and original iPad. That figure is a drop from the 
  previous quarter (7.33 million iPads), which Cook attributed 
  partially to a drawdown of inventory in anticipation of the iPad 2 
  (a net reduction of 400,000 units in the channel) and also to the 
  incredible demand for the iPad 2. It’s also likely that people 
  held off on purchasing an iPad, assuming the iPad 2 was coming up 
  soon.

  “The iPad has the mother of all backlogs that we’re working 
  very, very hard to get out to customers as quickly as we can,” 
  said Cook, noting that Apple has sold all it could make.

  Looking ahead, Cook couldn’t guarantee that Apple would be able to 
  meet demand, but pointed out that the company is on track to expand 
  the iPad 2 to 13 additional countries, following the international 
  rollout to 25 countries at the end of March. “I’m very confident 
  that we can produce a very large number of iPads for the quarter,” 
  he said.


**iPod** -- Not surprisingly, iPod sales continued to drop to 9.02 
  million units and $1.6 billion in revenues. That’s not chump 
  change, and it’s undoubtedly driven largely by the iPod touch, but 
  it’s still down over 50 percent from the holiday-driven Q1 2011 
  and roughly 15 percent from the year-ago quarter. Apple will 
  undoubtedly continue to milk the classic iPod market as long as 
  it’s profitable to do so, but it’s hard to see the company 
  putting much effort into any non-iOS devices going forward.


**iTunes Store** -- We tend to think of Apple’s main revenue 
  generators as being its hardware. Longtime Apple watchers know that 
  Apple has always been a hardware company that also happens to make 
  good software to run on the hardware (which is why licensing the Mac 
  OS never took off in the 1990s.) Sure, the company makes a nice 
  amount of money on Mac OS X, iLife, and its professional 
  applications (about $743 million this quarter), but those have never 
  been the driving forces.

  It’s time to welcome digital media. The iTunes Store — 
  originally the “iTunes Music Store,” a crazy-sounding idea 
  hatched when people were downloading music illegally for free — 
  brought in more than $1.6 billion, its best quarter ever, according 
  to Apple CFO Peter Oppenheimer. A sizable chunk of that revenue is 
  likely due to iOS apps; the App Store currently carries over 350,000 
  apps, and has already paid out over $2 billion to iOS developers; 
  the store also passed its ten billionth download.

  The iBookstore may also have contributed to Apple’s profits: It 
  added 17,000 titles during the quarter, now features ebooks from 
  more than 2,500 publishers in 20 categories, and has seen over 100 
  million downloads (although that number also includes downloads of 
  free books; tellingly, Apple has not split out numbers for paid 
  iBookstore purchases).


**Apple Retail Stores** -- In less than a month, it will have been 10 
  years since the first Apple retail store opened (see “Apple 
  Announces 25 Retail Stores for 2001,” 15 May 2001), and Apple said 
  it’s about to welcome the 1 billionth visitor; retail stores 
  served 71.7 million visitors this quarter alone, and averaged $9.39 
  million of revenue per store. Store revenue exceeded $3 billion, 
  compared to $1.68 billion for the same quarter last year.

<http://tidbits.com/article/6433>

  As with previous quarterly statements since the first retail store 
  opened, Apple pointed out about half of all sales of Macs in stores 
  are to people new to the Macintosh. (We’d like to see more data on 
  this; several colleagues on Twitter pointed out that Apple does not 
  ask if someone is new to the Mac when they make a purchase, or 
  whether they used a Mac of some form many years ago. The company 
  does do after-purchase followup surveys, and it could also be 
  counting people who used Macs more than 10 years ago but had been 
  away from the platform.)

  Apple now operates 323 stores and plans to open about 40 more stores 
  this year, with three-quarters of them outside of the United States, 
  including a fifth store in China. The average volume in 
  international stores now exceeds the U.S. volume.


**China, Asia and the Japan Quake** -- Mac sales skyrocketed 76 
  percent in Asia Pacific last quarter, and also did “quite well” 
  in Japan (which Apple lists separately). It was noted that Macs have 
  a lower market share internationally than domestically, so chances 
  for growth are even greater in the future.

  As good as Mac sales increases were in Greater China, iPhone sales 
  were even better: up 250 percent in that region, which 
  “catapulted” revenue for the first fiscal half in Greater China 
  to just under $5 billion. In fact, Cook said that Apple has been 
  strongly focused on China. “We wanted to understand the market, 
  and understand the levers there,” he said. “We purposefully put 
  the bulk of our emphasis from an emerging markets point of view, in 
  China, to really learn, and then we’re going to take that learning 
  to other markets.”

  When asked about the effect of the disastrous Japanese earthquake in 
  March on Apple’s supply chain, Tim Cook remarked that the 
  earthquake and power disruptions in Japan did not affect production 
  and he did not foresee any major impact, though he did anticipate 
  somewhat smaller revenues from Japan next quarter.

  He expressed much more concern about, and sympathy for, the Japanese 
  people themselves in the face of the continuing recovery from the 
  disaster. It was a nice departure from a financial earnings call: 
  “First of all, this is an incredible tragedy and our hearts go out 
  to everyone involved. Apple as a company has a very long history and 
  has many strong ties to people in Japan, and we’re very, very 
  saddened by the situation, and we’ve undertaken various actions to 
  assist in the relief effort. The economic impact that we’ll 
  address today pales in comparison to the human impact.” 


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://tidbits.com/article/12124#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://tidbits.com/t/12124>


Mophie Juice Pack Air Powers Longer iPhone GPS Use
--------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/article/12118>

  I’ve been travelling the last 10 days, speaking at the MacinTech 
  Users’ Group in Denver and CoMUG in Boulder, before spending some 
  time with family. As usual when I’m on the road, my iPhone has 
  been tremendously helpful, from reporting on Denver’s notoriously 
  unpredictable weather to helping me navigate unfamiliar roads.

  I knew I’d be relying heavily on Navigon MobileNavigator while 
  here (see “Navigon MobileNavigator App Bests Standalone 
  Devices,” 6 December 2010), but a quick thought before I left 
  turned out to be essential. My iPhone 4, which I acquired when that 
  model came out in June 2010, seems to be losing battery life slowly. 
  It’s not a problem in normal use at home, since only occasionally 
  will I do things (playing podcasts through its internal speaker 
  while driving, or talking for long periods on Skype, for instance) 
  that drain the battery to the point where I might get a 20-percent 
  warning in the evening.

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

  But the iPhone’s GPS sucks power, draining the battery in about 
  two hours of continual use. And since I’ve become so reliant on 
  Navigon while travelling, it has become all the more important to 
  ensure that the iPhone doesn’t conk out late in the day when I 
  might still need navigation help.

  A car charger is an obvious solution, but even then, I’m not 
  always in a situation where I can dig it out and plug in the iPhone; 
  if someone else is driving, for instance, or if I’m on foot. But 
  as I was packing for the trip, I remembered that Mophie had donated 
  a Mophie Juice Pack Air battery-powered iPhone case for the Macworld 
  Expo speaker’s bag, so I tossed it in my laptop bag.

<http://www.mophie.com/mophie-juice-pack-air-iPhone-4-battery-case-p/1145_jpaxp4.htm>
<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-04/Mophie-Juice-Pack-Air-case.png>

  The Juice Pack Air contains a 1500 mAh battery, and in my usage on 
  this trip, I’ve never ended up with the iPhone below about 30 
  percent of charge at the end of the day, even when I’ve used it 
  for 60-90 minutes of GPS navigation. Mophie also makes the Juice 
  Pack Plus for the iPhone 4; it has a 2000 mAh battery and would last 
  even longer, though how much is impossible to estimate given highly 
  variable usage patterns. Mophie claims the Juice Pack Air will 
  “virtually double” the iPhone 4’s battery life, whereas the 
  Juice Pack Plus will “more than double” battery life. (There’s 
  also a Juice Pack Air for the iPhone 3G and 3GS; it’s rated at 
  1200 mAh.)

<http://www.mophie.com/mophie-juice-pack-plus-iPhone-4-battery-case-p/1160_jpplp4.htm>
<http://www.mophie.com/product-p/1059_jpa-ip3g-blk.htm>

  Four LEDs on the bottom of the Juice Pack Air display the battery 
  status, and one flashes to indicate when it’s charging. While I 
  appreciate the feedback, it would be nice to be able to turn the 
  LEDs off while the Juice Pack Air is plugged in; you have to cover 
  the case to prevent it from illuminating a dark hotel room when 
  you’re trying to get to sleep. A button next to the LEDs does let 
  you turn them on and off while the case is unplugged; ideally it 
  would work when plugged in as well.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-04/Mophie-Juice-Pack-Air-LEDs.png>

  Like at least some other battery-powered cases, the Juice Pack Air 
  drains itself first, before the iPhone 4’s battery even comes into 
  play. That’s great, because I’ve run into situations with car 
  chargers in the past where they couldn’t bring a drained iPhone 
  back to life as quickly as I needed. With the Juice Pack Air, the 
  iPhone will be working on its own battery at the end of the day, 
  rather than trying to recharge from the external battery after being 
  drained.

  However, for the best possible battery life, Mophie recommends using 
  the Juice Pack Air’s power switch, which lets you go into standby 
  mode, forcing the iPhone 4 to use its own battery. The reason, as I 
  understand it, is that the iPhone 4 uses additional power to be on a 
  constant charge. So while the set-and-forget approach I’ve been 
  using works well and is the easiest, toggling in and out of standby 
  mode might be worthwhile when you need to squeeze as much power as 
  possible out of the two batteries.

  Physically, the two-piece Juice Pack Air increases the size and 
  weight of the iPhone noticeably, bumping the height from 4.5 inches 
  (115.2 mm) to 5.07 inches (128.78 mm), the width from 2.31 inches 
  (58.6 mm) to 2.51 inches (63.75 mm), the depth from 0.37 inch (9.3 
  mm) to 0.68 inch (17.27 mm), and the weight from 4.8 ounces (137 
  grams) to 7.3 ounces (207 grams).

  But while the iPhone 4 is distinctly larger and heavier when wearing 
  the Juice Pack Air, it still fits comfortably in my jeans pocket, 
  and it’s smooth and rounded for easy insertion and extraction. 
  Unfortunately, it does not fit in the Amphipod Micropack Explorer 
  that I bought to carry the iPhone 4 on runs while I’m travelling 
  and when I might need either GPS assistance to find my way or the 
  phone to call for assistance if I get really lost. Other carrying 
  cases will undoubtedly have the same problem.

<http://www.amphipod.com/products/holders/lock-on-micropacks/micropack-explorer-0>

  (As an aside, the Amphipod Micropack Explorer generally works well 
  for carrying the iPhone in a pouch that clamps securely inside the 
  waistband. The only problem is that my 1980s-style nylon running 
  shorts aren’t tight enough to prevent the pouch from bouncing a 
  little when worn in front; it was more solid when worn on the back 
  of my waist, and was totally fine anywhere with running tights.)

  The Juice Pack Air does plug into (and thus cover) the iPhone 4’s 
  dock connector, but it provides access to all the iPhone buttons, 
  the camera, and the speakers. For syncing with iTunes, the loss of 
  the dock connector isn’t an issue, since the USB cable that comes 
  with the Juice Pack Air works fine for syncing and charging (from 
  either a computer or Apple’s USB wall adapter). And if you need to 
  get to the dock connector for another reason, it’s trivially easy 
  to slip the small top part of the Juice Pack Air off, and extract 
  the iPhone from the larger bottom piece.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-04/Mophie-Juice-Pack-Air-buttons.png>

  Mophie claims that the Juice Pack Air improves the sound from the 
  iPhone 4’s speakers by redirecting it from the bottom to the 
  front. Honestly, I haven’t noticed any difference, though I 
  suspect the position and orientation of the iPhone matters.

  In the end, the Juice Pack Air performed its given task admirably, 
  ensuring that I never ran out of battery power during normal travel 
  usage. In only one case — when Tonya and Tristan and I were hiking 
  in the Rocky Mountain National Park and I wanted to make sure the 
  iPhone didn’t waste battery power searching for nonexistent cell 
  service — did I adjust my usage patterns to conserve battery life. 
  Every other day of the trip, the iPhone just worked until bedtime, 
  doing everything I asked of it, thanks to the extra power from the 
  Juice Pack Air.

  The Mophie Juice Pack Air costs $79.95; the Juice Pack Plus costs 
  $99.95. Both are available directly from Mophie or discounted via 
  resellers like Amazon.com, where the Juice Pack Air is currently 
  priced at $58.58 and the Juice Pack Plus is $75.93 (both prices are 
  for the black models; the Juice Pack Air comes in white and red too, 
  and the Juice Pack Plus also comes in cyan, magenta, and yellow).

<http://www.amazon.com/dp/B0046EBTQ0/?tag=tidbitselectro00>
<http://www.amazon.com/dp/B004GGU8SS/?tag=tidbitselectro00>


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://tidbits.com/article/12118#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://tidbits.com/t/12118>


The Ebook Shredder: A Recap
---------------------------
  by Joe Kissell <joe@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/article/12125>
  3 comments

  A little over a month ago, I began the 17-day process of tweeting 
  the entire text of “Take Control of Your Paperless Office,” as I 
  described in “Joe Kissell Shreds an Ebook into Twitter,” 21 
  March 2011. I’ve been asked about the results of this wacky little 
  project, so I thought I’d take a moment to share them.

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/paperless-office?pt=TB1074>
<http://tidbits.com/article/12046>

  I can summarize by saying it was an interesting undertaking — fun 
  to do, and certainly well worth the effort, although not 
  spectacularly popular. That’s all fine with me; it was an 
  experiment, and as far as I’m concerned, all experimental results 
  are useful.

  At its peak, the @zapmypaper account I used to tweet the ebook had 
  around 330 followers; last time I checked, it was down to 307. 
  That’s not many by Twitter standards, but then, thousands of 
  people had already purchased the ebook, so many people who might 
  otherwise have been interested would have had no reason to 
  participate. It was fascinating, however, to watch the number of 
  followers rise and fall — people would find out about the project 
  and start following it (“Hey, cool! Some guy’s tweeting a whole 
  ebook!”), but then unfollow after a couple of hours or a day 
  (“This is silly! Who wants to read an ebook like this?”). Well, 
  they can’t say they weren’t warned.

<http://twitter.com/zapmypaper>

  In fact, I never imagined many people would _want_ to read the 
  entire ebook via Twitter, even though they _could_ (and, in fact, 
  still can — the text is still there for anyone to see). It was a 
  blatant publicity stunt; the idea was to do something unusual enough 
  to attract attention (and sales) from people who would not otherwise 
  have heard of the ebook or of the Take Control series generally.

  In those respects, the project was certainly successful. The 
  promotion generated 262 sales of “Take Control of Your Paperless 
  Office” (at a 30 percent discount), plus 64 sales of other ebooks. 
  So the total number of ebook sales was roughly equal to the total 
  number of Twitter followers, and I couldn’t ask for more than 
  that. Of these, I estimate — again, based on partial records only 
  — that about 70 had never before purchased a Take Control ebook, 
  so I’m delighted that I could introduce new readers to the series. 
  And since the project ended, the ebook has been selling at about the 
  same rate as it was previously; as far as I can tell, making the 
  ebook freely available via Twitter has only helped sales, not hurt 
  them in any way.

  On the technical side, thanks to the testing we’d done, almost all 
  the bugs were eliminated before we went live, so for the most part 
  everything simply worked as it should. There were a couple of minor 
  glitches — once or twice, the tweeting stopped for no apparent 
  reason and had to be nudged back to life, and on one occasion it 
  stalled because I’d overlooked a special character that my Python 
  script misinterpreted as taking up two of the 140 available slots, 
  thus making one tweet too long. These were all remedied easily 
  enough, and considering all the potential technical perils of doing 
  something like this, I’d have to say things went shockingly 
  smoothly.

  Apart from ebook sales and new customers, the project had a couple 
  of side benefits. For one thing, readers pointed out several typos 
  that everyone had missed during the ebook’s writing, editing, 
  technical review, and production. It’s no wonder; misspellings 
  that one might breeze right by on a full page are far more obvious 
  within a brief tweet. And, the number of people following my 
  personal Twitter account (@joekissell) increased by about 100 as a 
  result of this project.

<http://twitter.com/joekissell>

  I don’t imagine that tweeting books is going to become the next 
  big thing, because there’s a fundamental mismatch between the 
  content and the delivery mechanism. But we certainly showed that 
  it’s possible, and it was a nice diversion from my usual writing 
  routine. 


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://tidbits.com/article/12125#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://tidbits.com/t/12125>


Use Your iPad as a Remote Control
---------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/article/12126>

  Apple’s free Remote app isn’t included with the iPad, but it 
  should have been. Remote works over a Wi-Fi network, letting you use 
  your iPad as a remote control for playing audio files and videos in 
  iTunes on a computer or on an Apple TV. In this excerpt from my new 
  ebook “Take Control of Media on Your iPad, Second Edition,” 
  learn all about using your iPad as a smart (and large) media remote. 
  Although none of the steps are difficult, it can take some effort to 
  wrap your head around the best way of controlling your media with 
  the iPad.

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/ipad-media?pt=TB1074>


**Know When the Remote App Makes Sense** -- Apple has introduced a 
  number of ways to control and play media among devices, so take a 
  moment to review your options and match your needs to what Apple’s 
  Remote app can do:

* Computer: If you’re playing audio stored in iTunes on a computer 
  through that computer’s built-in speakers or through speakers 
  directly attached to the computer, you can use Remote. However, if 
  that same audio is stored on your iPad, you may prefer to play it on 
  the iPad’s speakers.

* AirPort Express or AirPlay-savvy speakers: You can use Remote to 
  control output to these speakers through iTunes on a computer. If, 
  however, the audio files are available on your iPad, you might find 
  it simpler to play them from your iPad by streaming via AirPlay.

* Second-generation Apple TV: A second-generation Apple TV doesn’t 
  store content; instead, media plays through it. If that media is not 
  on your iPad, then use the Remote app. However, if that media is on 
  your iPad, you might find it simpler to send it to the Apple TV 
  using AirPlay.

* First-generation Apple TV: Remote is a great alternative to the 
  physical remote control that comes with the first-generation Apple 
  TV. (At present, you can stream audio from iTunes on a computer to a 
  first-generation Apple TV, but you can’t stream it from an iPad or 
  other iOS device.)

  On either Apple TV, the Remote App lets you type passwords or other 
  text using the iPad’s keyboard, a notable improvement over using 
  the physical remote. Remote also lets you navigate and configure 
  various Apple TV settings, providing a trackpad-style interface to 
  the Apple TV.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-04/remote_typing.jpg>


**Control iTunes on a Computer with Remote** -- The Remote app uses a 
  Wi-Fi connection to control one local iTunes library at a time. 
  However, the Remote app and iTunes have to get to know each other. 
  The first time you launch Remote, you’ll see a screen that offers 
  two methods for acquainting them — Add an iTunes Library or Home 
  Sharing. Either option appears to work well, but Apple’s 
  knowledgebase article suggests using Home Sharing.

<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT1947>

  You can connect to only one Home Sharing account, but (at least 
  theoretically) you can also connect to one or more iTunes libraries.


**Home Sharing** -- If you are already sharing your iTunes library 
  with Home Sharing, you can connect the Remote app to the library 
  through Home Sharing. You need an active Internet connection so 
  Apple can verify the Home Sharing Apple ID.

  Follow these steps in the Remote app:

1. If you don’t currently have any active connections, tap Turn on 
   Home Sharing. Otherwise, tap the name of the active library at the 
   top of the sidebar, then tap the Settings button, and then tap the 
   switch to turn on Home Sharing.

2. In the popover that appears, enter the same Apple ID and password 
   that your iTunes library uses and then tap Done. Apple verifies the 
   Apple ID and confirms that Home Sharing is on.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-04/remote_home_sharing_turnon.jpg>

3. Tap Done again to close the popover, and then (if necessary) tap 
   your iTunes library’s icon to go to the main Remote screen.

  Now that you’ve connected with your iTunes library, you’ll see 
  the name of the library at the top of the Remote sidebar.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-04/remote_home_sharing_sidebar.png>

  Tip: If you can’t connect Remote to iTunes, first try restarting 
  your iPad and quitting and relaunching iTunes on your computer. If 
  that doesn’t help, consult this somewhat geeky Apple article for 
  more advice.

<http://support.apple.com/kb/TS1741>


**Add an iTunes Library** -- This easy method requires that you make a 
  physical connection between the iPad and the computer.

  (In my testing, I couldn’t make the steps below work if Home 
  Sharing was on in iTunes on the computer. If Home Sharing is on, in 
  iTunes on the computer, in the Advanced menu, a command will say 
  Turn Home Sharing Off.)

  Here’s how to make the connection:

1. In Remote, if you don’t currently have any active connections, 
   tap the Add an iTunes Library button. Otherwise, tap the name of 
   the active library at the top of the sidebar, tap the Settings 
   button, and tap the Add an iTunes Library button.

2. Follow the directions in the popover that appears and connect your 
   iPad to your computer just as you would if you were syncing it — 
   the iPad will be listed in the iTunes sidebar (under Devices) 
   twice; make sure the Remote listing is selected. No Remote listing? 
   If you’ve waited 30 seconds or so and you don’t see a second 
   entry for your connected iPad, try quitting and relaunching iTunes 
   on your computer. If the passcode still doesn’t work, tap outside 
   the popover on the iPad and then repeat Step 1 to get a new 
   passcode to try.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-04/remote_connection.png>

3. On your computer’s keyboard, type the passcode that appears on 
   the iPad’s screen.

4. After the verification is completed, click the OK button.

  Now that you’ve connected the Remote app with your iTunes library, 
  you’ll see the name of the library at the top of the Remote 
  sidebar.


**Disconnect Remote from an iTunes library** -- If you’ve connected 
  to more than one iTunes library, you can switch between them by 
  tapping the name of the active library at the top of the sidebar in 
  the main Remote screen. Then tap the name of the library that you 
  want to switch to.

  To disconnect Remote from an iTunes library permanently, from the 
  main Remote screen, from the top of the sidebar, tap the library 
  name. Your options are as follows:

* If you have an Edit button at the upper left, tap it and then tap 
  the X beside the library that you want to disconnect from.

* For a library that is controlled with Home Sharing, tap the Settings 
  icon and turn the Home Sharing switch off.

  Tip: To disconnect a copy of iTunes on a computer from all Remote 
  connections, open the iTunes preferences, click the Devices button 
  on the toolbar, and then click the Forget All Remotes button.


**Run iTunes with Remote** -- When Remote is connected to an iTunes 
  library, you can operate Remote on your iPad screen to play media in 
  iTunes on the computer remotely. As you tap options in Remote on the 
  iPad, you can even watch the iTunes window change on the remote 
  computer. Remote uses similar controls for locating and playing 
  music as those employed by the iPod app; in fact, you may have to 
  look closely to see the difference.

  If you’d like to use Remote to send playback from the computer to 
  some other device via AirPlay, you can — read “Control AirPlay 
  in iTunes,” ahead.

  Note that if someone quits iTunes on the remote computer, Remote 
  cannot launch the app and begin playing media.


**Control AirPlay in iTunes** -- With Remote, you can choose where 
  iTunes sends its audio via AirPlay. The AirPlay control appears in 
  two places within Remote:

* On the main Remote screen, tap the Speaker icon to the right of the 
  playback controls at the top.

* On the Now Playing screen (accessed by tapping Now Playing at the 
  lower right), tap once to review additional controls (such as the 
  Genius and Shuffle buttons), then tap the AirPlay button at the 
  right of the volume slider. Tap a device name to enable (designated 
  by a checkmark) or disable it.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-04/remote_airplay_popover.jpg>

  Notice that you can control the volume of each active AirPlay audio 
  destination from the AirPlay popover and that you can choose 
  multiple AirPlay destinations (tap Single if you want to send audio 
  to only one destination).

  If you have a second-generation Apple TV on your network with 
  AirPlay enabled, it appears as an AirPlay audio destination, too. 
  Wrap your head around that for a second: You can tell iTunes on your 
  computer to send its audio to the Apple TV via a command from your 
  iPad — that’s what I call a digital entertainment ecosystem!

  Note that when you turn an AirPlay audio destination on or off, 
  playback pauses for a few seconds while iTunes synchronizes the 
  music stream.


**Set Up a Second-Generation Apple TV with Home Sharing** -- The 
  second-generation Apple TV comes with an attractive metal remote 
  control; it almost looks like a work of art. And yet, given how much 
  more control the Remote app on the iPad gives you, the only reason 
  to keep it around is as an emergency backup. Perhaps you can put it 
  in an attractive display case on your coffee table while your iPad 
  does the real work.

  But, before you put away the metal Apple Remote, you need it to set 
  up Home Sharing on your Apple TV so that the Remote app can later 
  control the Apple TV:

1. Using the Apple Remote, navigate to the Computers column on the 
   Apple TV’s main menu.

2. In the Computers column, select Turn On Home Sharing.

3. In the onscreen keyboard that appears, use your remote control to 
   enter your Apple ID and password. (Using the buttons on the control 
   to enter characters is awkward for long IDs and passwords, but you 
   only have to do it once.)

  Once the Apple ID and password are verified (your Apple TV must be 
  connected to the Internet for that), all the iTunes libraries on 
  your home network that have Home Sharing turned on appear in the 
  Computers column of the Apple TV main menu. What’s more, your 
  iPad’s Remote app can now control your Apple TV. To make the 
  connection, follow the steps in “Home Sharing,” earlier.


**Add a First Generation Apple TV** -- Do the following to pair the 
  iTunes library on your Apple TV with the Remote app on your iPad:

1. If the Remote app isn’t currently connected to anything, tap the 
   Add an iTunes Library button that appears on the main screen. 
   Otherwise, tap the name of the currently connected library at the 
   top of the sidebar and then tap the Settings button; then tap the 
   Add Library button in the popover that appears. Remote displays a 
   screen with a passcode.

2. Using the remote control that came with the Apple TV, on the Apple 
   TV, go to Settings > General > Remotes and then choose your iPad.

3. Using the remote control, enter the passcode from Step 1.

  Yes, using the Apple remote to laboriously enter the passcode on the 
  Apple TV screen isn’t much fun, but once you’ve done so, your 
  iPad can take its place.

  To disconnect a first-generation Apple TV library from Remote, tap 
  the name of the active library at the top of the Remote sidebar. On 
  the Settings screen, tap Edit, and then tap the X button that 
  appears by a library.


**Control an Apple TV** -- You can use the Remote app to control media 
  playback as described in this chapter so far. However, another 
  option appears when you’re connected to the Apple TV: Control. To 
  access the Control screen for the Apple TV that Remote is currently 
  controlling, tap the Control button at the lower right of the main 
  Remote screen.

  The nearly blank Control screen operates as a virtual trackpad: Drag 
  to move the selection highlight among the Apple TV’s menus and tap 
  to select an item.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-04/remote_controls_screen.png>

  To navigate back one level in the menu hierarchy, tap the menu 
  button.

  If options are available (for example, to mark a TV show as 
  watched), tap the Options button at the lower left. Tap Done to 
  return to the main Remote screen.

  To switch among different organizational tabs, such as listing 
  podcasts by date, show, or watched state, flick left or right.

  The Control screen enables other non-obvious but helpful controls.

  For video, do the following:

* Play or Pause: Tap once.
* Rewind or fast-forward: Flick left or right, or drag and hold
* Jump back 10 seconds to replay: Drag two fingers to the left.
* Show chapter markers: Flick down to reveal, then flick left or right 
  to skip.

  For audio, these commands are available:

* Play or Pause: Tap once.
* Rewind or fast-forward: Drag left or right and hold.
* Previous song or next song: Flick left or right.


**Take Control of Media on Your iPad** -- The Remote app is just one 
  way to use your iPad as a media hub. By itself you can watch movies, 
  listen to music, read ebooks, view photos... and just as important, 
  wrangle the content for getting it onto your device or accessing it 
  wirelessly. I cover it all in “Take Control of Media on Your iPad, 
  Second Edition,” a 158-page ebook that’s available for only $15 
  (or less, if you bought the previous edition). 

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/ipad-media?pt=TB1074>


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://tidbits.com/article/12126#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://tidbits.com/t/12126>


TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 25 April 2011
-------------------------------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/article/12127>

**TextExpander 3.3** -- If you’ve dreamed of automating an 
  automation utility, TextExpander 3.3 is here for you. The new 
  version of Smile Software’s utility for turning short text 
  snippets into longer blocks of text (or for fixing common typing 
  errors) adds AppleScript support, along with a couple of sample 
  scripts. The update also includes toolbar customization options for 
  the Backup Now, Restore, and Logging commands; adds support for 
  guillemets (« ») as delimiter characters; allows keypress macros 
  (Tab, Return, Esc, Enter) to be nested in fill-in snippets; and 
  automatically capitalizes contractions of “I” (such as 
  “I’m” or “I’d”) at the beginning of sentences. ($34.95 
  new, free update, 5.6 MB)

<http://smilesoftware.com/TextExpander/>

  Read/post comments about TextExpander 3.3.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12128#comments>


**iTunes 10.2.2** -- The changes may be minor in Apple’s release of 
  iTunes 10.2.2, but they’re still welcome. The update addresses an 
  issue when iTunes can become unresponsive when syncing an iPad, and 
  a separate issue that could cause syncing photos with iOS devices to 
  take longer than necessary. Also corrected is an issue with skipping 
  video previews in the iTunes Store. (Free, 75.59 MB)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1103>

  Read/post comments about iTunes 10.2.2.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12123#comments>




$$

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