TidBITS#1076/09-May-2011
========================
  Issue link: <http://tidbits.com/issue/1076>


  The big news this week is Apple’s release of new iMac models, and Adam
  has all the details. He also indulges his annoyance with the relative
  cost of SMS text messages by reviewing the free Textie iOS app and
  service that allows text messages to be sent for free. Finally, as the
  “summer” release date for Mac OS X Lion approaches, Matt Neuburg
  explains how to figure out if you rely on PowerPC applications that
  may not be supported under Lion, if speculation about Rosetta’s demise
  are accurate. Notable software releases this week include Skype
  5.1.60.947, MacBook Pro Software Update 1.4 and MacBook Pro EFI Update
  2.1, Mac OS X 10.6.7 for iMac (Early 2011) and iMac EFI Update 1.6,
  Neat Image 7.0, Photoshop CS5 12.0.4, Dreamweaver CS5 11.0.4, and iOS
  4.3.3 and 4.2.8.

Articles
    New iMac Gains Thunderbolt, FaceTime HD, and Quad-Core CPUs
    Preparing for Lion: Find Your PowerPC Applications
    Textie Offers Free SMS Text Message Alternative for iOS
    TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 9 May 2011
    ExtraBITS for 9 May 2011


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New iMac Gains Thunderbolt, FaceTime HD, and Quad-Core CPUs
-----------------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/article/12150>
  24 comments

  The integration of the new Thunderbolt I/O technology into the Mac 
  line is continuing, with Apple releasing a new model of the iMac 
  that features Thunderbolt, along with quad-core Intel Core i5 and i7 
  processors, faster AMD graphics processors, and the new FaceTime HD 
  camera. The industrial design of both models remains unchanged.

<http://www.apple.com/imac/>

  Previously, the only way to get a quad-core processor in an iMac was 
  in the 27-inch iMac, which could be ordered with either an Intel 
  Core i5 or i7. Now the quad-core processors are standard across the 
  line, with the 21.5-inch model offering options of 2.5 GHz and 2.7 
  GHz quad-core i5 processors, or a 2.8 GHz quad-core i7 (for $200 
  more). The new 27-inch model’s choices are either a 2.7 GHz or 3.1 
  GHz quad-core i5, or a 3.4 GHz quad-core i7 (for an extra $200).

  Also supporting Apple’s claim that the new iMacs are up to 70 
  percent faster are the new AMD Radeon HD graphics processors. As 
  with the CPUs, the details vary by model, with the 21.5-inch iMac 
  offering either an AMD Radeon HD 6750M with 512 MB of GDDR5 memory 
  or an AMD Radeon HD 6770M with the same memory configuration, 
  depending on which CPU choice you make. The 27-inch iMac starts with 
  the 6770M and 512 MB of GDDR5 memory, but the fastest CPU choice 
  jumps to the AMD Radeon HD 6970M with 1 GB of GDDR5 memory, and as a 
  build-to-order option, you can double that to 2 GB of GDDR5 memory 
  for $100.

<http://www.apple.com/imac/performance.html>

  As on the most recent MacBook Pro models (see “Apple Updates 
  MacBook Pro Line with Thunderbolt,” 24 February 2011), the 
  Thunderbolt port on the new iMacs provides both compatibility with 
  the few Thunderbolt peripherals available and Mini DisplayPort 
  output for connecting external displays. The 21.5-inch iMac features 
  a single Thunderbolt port; the 27-inch model offers two. Other ports 
  are unchanged, with both models providing a single FireWire 800 
  port, four USB 2.0 ports, an SDXC card slot, audio line in and out, 
  and a Gigabit Ethernet port. Also unchanged are the iMac’s support 
  for 802.11n Wi-Fi and Bluetooth 2.1+EDR wireless connectivity.

<http://tidbits.com/article/11989>
<http://www.apple.com/imac/specs.html>

  Although Apple doesn’t mention the previous 27-inch model’s 
  capability of accepting DisplayPort input and acting as an external 
  monitor, MacRumors has written that the Target Display Mode feature 
  is still available, and Dan Moren of Macworld says Apple confirmed 
  that the feature remains, though only via a Thunderbolt cable, from 
  a Thunderbolt Mac. Plus, GigaOM reports that the 27-inch iMac can 
  run two external monitors, one through each of its Thunderbolt 
  ports.

<http://www.macrumors.com/2011/05/03/2011-imac-notes-magic-trackpad-option-display-connectivity-boot-camp-update/>
<http://www.macworld.com/article/159616/2011/05/imacs_thunderbolt_target_display_mode.html>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/TS3775>
<http://gigaom.com/apple/new-27-inch-imac-supports-dual-external-display-output/>

  Also like the recent MacBook Pros, the new iMacs replace the old 
  iSight camera with a new FaceTime camera that supports video calls 
  at up to 720p. I haven’t had the opportunity to see a FaceTime 
  call with one of these new cameras, but I do wonder how bandwidth 
  limitations will degrade quality, as they do with iChat and Skype.

  Both models ship with 4 GB of RAM and are expandable to 16 GB, but 
  for the 21.5-inch model, the Apple Store offers only the option of 
  upgrading to 8 GB for $200, about double what you would pay 
  elsewhere. The Apple Store does offer the option of upgrading the 
  27-inch model to either 8 GB or 16 GB, the latter for a whopping 
  $600; about four times more than other memory vendors.

  The low-end 21.5-inch model ships with a 500 GB hard drive by 
  default and can’t be upgraded as part of the order. But the 
  more-expensive 21.5-inch model and both 27-inch models include a 1 
  TB drive and offer various storage alternatives, as outlined below. 
  Both models include a slot-loading 8x SuperDrive with 4x 
  double-layer burning.

* 2 TB hard drive for $150
* 256 GB solid-state drive for $500
* 1 TB hard drive plus a 256 GB SSD boot drive for $600
* 2 TB hard drive plus a 256 GB SSD boot drive for $750

  Thanks to Apple’s emphasis on multi-touch gestures in the upcoming 
  Mac OS X Lion, you can purchase the iMac with a wired Apple Mouse, a 
  wireless Magic Mouse, or the wireless Magic Trackpad. For $69 more, 
  you can get both the Magic Mouse and the Magic Trackpad, assuming 
  you can handle that much magic in your life. Also standard is the 
  Apple Wireless Keyboard, though you can opt for the wired Apple 
  Keyboard instead, if you want a numeric keypad or don’t want to 
  mess with batteries.

  Prices start at $1,199 for the low-end 21.5-inch iMac and range up 
  to $1,999 for the basic configuration of the high-end 27-inch iMac, 
  although a fully tricked-out 27-inch iMac can exceed $3,700. Apple 
  says that the new iMacs are available now.

  As usual with Apple’s performance-related model updates, there’s 
  little not to like about the new iMacs, since they’re faster and 
  more capable for basically the same prices as before. It is a little 
  too bad that the 27-inch model loses the capability of acting as a 
  display via anything but Thunderbolt, and it’s also odd that the 
  Apple Store offers only the 8 GB upgrade option for the 21.5-inch 
  model, but neither is a significant issue. 


  ----
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Preparing for Lion: Find Your PowerPC Applications
--------------------------------------------------
  by Matt Neuburg <matt@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/article/12156>
  49 comments

  The history of Mac development is not like a plant that grows and 
  branches and produces leaves and flowers. It’s more like a series 
  of rubber bands that get stretched to the breaking point and 
  eventually snap. The 68000 processor was dropped; then the whole 68K 
  processor family was superseded by Macs using PowerPC processors. 
  Snap! When Mac OS X came along, all applications had to be 
  rewritten, except for the lucky ones that could operate correctly 
  inside the Classic emulator. Snap! When Macs started relying on 
  Intel processors, support for Classic was dropped. Snap!

  Now it was PowerPC that was emulated, using Rosetta. In Snow 
  Leopard, the first Intel-only version of Mac OS X, Rosetta wasn’t 
  installed by default; it would be downloaded and installed 
  automatically the first time a PowerPC application launched, but the 
  hand was already writing its ominous message on the wall. The rumor, 
  which has become as loud as a roar, is that Mac OS X Lion will not 
  support Rosetta. Snap!

  No bad thing will happen to your Mac the day Lion goes final. Your 
  current hardware won’t refuse to boot. Your current system won’t 
  stop working. Your favorite applications will still be your favorite 
  applications. But suppose, just for the sake of argument, that you 
  become interested in upgrading to Lion. And suppose, for the sake of 
  even further argument, that Lion lacks Rosetta. What might the loss 
  of Rosetta mean to you?

  To find out, you need to know what PowerPC-only applications you 
  currently depend on. The easiest way to learn that is through System 
  Profiler. This application resides in your /Application/Utilities 
  folder, but there’s a shortcut; choose About This Mac from the 
  Apple menu, and when the dialog appears describing your system and 
  hardware, click the More Info button to launch System Profiler. Even 
  faster, Option-click the Apple menu and choose System Profiler 
  directly.

  System Profiler displays its information in three categories, listed 
  in a pane down the right side of its window: Hardware, Network, and 
  Software. For the fullest display of categories, choose View > Full 
  Profile. Now, under Software (click the triangle to open it if 
  necessary), select Applications.

  Now go make yourself another espresso from your handy-dandy Pavoni 
  Napolitana, because it could take a while for anything to appear in 
  the window. System Profiler is going to walk through all mounted 
  hard disks looking for applications, and if you’re anything like 
  me, it’s a long walk (a big disk containing a lot of 
  applications). When System Profiler finally finishes, your 
  applications will be listed, along with several columns of 
  information about them. The column you’re most interested in right 
  now is the Kind column (you can drag it to the left to move it next 
  to the Application Name column, if that makes parsing the results 
  easier). It will say one of four things:

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-05/System-Profiler-applications.png>

* Classic: These are 68K applications. What are you, some kind of 
  sentimental wacko? These applications may have run under System 7 or 
  as late as Mac OS 9, but under Mac OS X the only way they’ve ever 
  run, _if_ they’ve ever run, is in the Classic environment. If 
  you’re running Snow Leopard, or even Leopard on any Intel-based 
  Mac, there is no Classic. So why do you still have them around? 
  Actually, a few of these applications are occasionally still 
  important to me, and I run them using SheepShaver, as I explained in 
  “SheepShaver Brings Classic Mac OS to Snow Leopard” (23 October 
  2009). So far be it from me to criticize.

<http://tidbits.com/article/10679>

* Intel: These are Intel-native applications. They’ll probably 
  continue to work reasonably well on Lion, though of course there can 
  be glitches caused by the introduction of a new system. They are 
  probably actively developed, though, so with luck any such glitches 
  will be ironed out by their developers.

* Universal: These are “universal binaries” that contain both 
  PowerPC code and Intel code, so if you’re running Snow Leopard, 
  which means you must be using an Intel-based Mac, they behave like 
  Intel-native applications as far as you’re concerned.

* PowerPC: Aha! These _are_ the droids we’re looking for. They 
  contain PowerPC code and _no_ Intel code. So if, as is commonly 
  expected, Lion doesn’t support Rosetta, these applications will be 
  pushing up daisies. They will be pining for the fjords. They will 
  have gone to meet their maker. They are even now crying out, “Ave 
  Caesar! Nos morituri te salutamus!” Which means, roughly (and 
  bearing in mind that I have a PhD in Classics and you probably 
  don’t): “Stab me in the back! Stab me in the head! Farewell, 
  Caesar! Dead dead dead!”

  The list of applications presented by System Profiler may be very 
  long and intractable. One way to make it more tractable is to sort 
  the list: click the Kind header at the top of its column. Now your 
  PowerPC applications are listed together in alphabetical order. If 
  you’d like a more conveniently searchable record of this 
  information, you can copy a subset of this list as a text file. With 
  the list sorted by Kind, click the first PowerPC application to 
  select it, then scroll down and Shift-click the last one to select 
  all the PowerPC applications in between. Now click in the 
  description pane at the bottom of the System Profiler window, press 
  Command-A to select all the text, copy, switch to your favorite text 
  editor, and paste.

  If you’re like me, you’ll find that the way forward isn’t 
  quite so gloomy as you may have anticipated. I have lots and lots of 
  PowerPC applications, but most of them I haven’t used in years. 
  Here’s a quick survey of my situation:

* I’ll miss Alco Blom’s URL Manager Pro, but in anticipation of 
  Rosetta’s loss I’ve already moved that data into Safari itself, 
  which turns out to be quite a good bookmark manager in its own 
  right. Similarly, I’ve moved my data out of Alco’s Web 
  Confidential, confiding the exported data to Panorama.

* I’ve already explained how I’ve replaced Remember? with iCal; 
  see “Freeware Coolness Crushes iCal Shortcoming” (4 August 
  2010).

<http://tidbits.com/article/11491>

* Solitaire Till Dawn is a big worry. It’s a perennial favorite here 
  at TidBITS and among our readers. You might like to look at 
  developer Rick Holzgrafe’s blog post on its history and his plans; 
  it presents an even longer list of snapped rubber bands (he calls 
  them dead horses).

<http://rixjoint.blogspot.com/2011/04/unplanned-obsolescence.html>

  Those are the only serious problems on my machine. Most of the other 
  PowerPC applications on my machine have names I don’t even 
  recognize. A few of them are games that I remember enjoying at one 
  time, but I suppose I can live without; those sorts of games play 
  better on the iPad anyway.

  The story will, of course, be different for different users. 
  Microsoft Office 2004 is likely to be a serious stumbling block for 
  many folks, who will reason that to move to Office 2008 will mean 
  loss of Visual Basic, and that to move to Office 2011 will mean loss 
  of good old-fashioned usability. (I’ve already told how I migrated 
  out of Office as a mail program; see “Escape from Outlook 
  2011!,” 26 October 2010.)

<http://tidbits.com/article/11696>

  I expect that this article will be just one in a series, as various 
  TidBITS editors chime in with tales of their preparations for Lion 
  compatibility. As we wait for the fateful day, I comfort myself with 
  the thought that, if I really need it, I have an Intel-based Mac 
  that can boot into Snow Leopard, a PowerPC-based Mac that can boot 
  into Leopard and use Classic, and a couple of really old machines 
  that can even boot into Mac OS 9 (not to mention SheepShaver). 
  Lion’s roar can’t scare me! 


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Textie Offers Free SMS Text Message Alternative for iOS
-------------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/article/12155>
  7 comments

  I’m continually fascinated by how some people — myself included 
  — fret over relatively small expenses because they seem out of 
  proportion, and nothing winds me up like SMS text messages. These 
  160-character messages cost cellular carriers literally next to 
  nothing, and yet they’re priced so usuriously that they give new 
  meaning to being “nickeled and dimed.” One researcher even 
  calculated that it’s significantly cheaper to communicate with the 
  Hubble Space Telescope, and there’s a wonderful article that 
  calculates that it would cost nearly $6000 to transmit a 4 MB MP3 
  via SMS.

<http://www2.le.ac.uk/ebulletin/news/press-releases/2000-2009/2008/05/nparticle.2008-05-12.4476906328>
<http://gthing.net/the-true-price-of-sms-messages>

  Of course, if your thumbs have dents from hundreds of thousands of 
  text messages, the cost is probably immaterial — you’re likely 
  happy paying a fixed monthly fee for unlimited text messaging (and 
  the cellular carriers are still making plenty of profit from you). 

  No, the people who cringe every time the iPhone buzzes with a new 
  text message are those, like me, who use text messaging sufficiently 
  infrequently that it doesn’t make financial sense to buy even the 
  smallest bundle of text messages.

  (From AT&T, bundles cost $10 per month for 1000 SMS or MMS messages, 
  $20 for unlimited, or $30 for unlimited for the entire family. 
  Verizon Wireless charges $5 per month for 250 SMS or MMS messages, 
  $10 for 500 messages, or $20 for 5000 messages. If you don’t 
  choose a plan, you’ll pay AT&T $0.20 per SMS text message or $0.30 
  per MMS multimedia message; Verizon’s equivalent charges are $0.20 
  and $0.25. And remember, you’re charged to send _and_ to receive. 
  iPhone users in other countries may now commence giggling at us poor 
  U.S. provincials.)

  So those of us who can’t stomach coughing up nearly as much for 
  text messages as we pay for far-more-useful 3G data are stuck paying 
  $0.20 to $0.30 per message. Many of us begrudge the cell carriers 
  every penny of it, especially when we never come close to using all 
  the voice minutes or megabytes of data we’re required to pay for 
  as well. It’s not that a quarter is a lot of money; it’s the 
  unholy combination of knowing that the resources consumed cost as 
  close to zero as possible and that the value to us is nearly as low. 

  If my math is right, sending 160 characters (140 bytes, due to 
  SMS’s 7-bit encoding) via AT&T’s DataPlus plan ($15 for 200 MB) 
  would cost $0.00001 (1500 cents divided by 209715200 bytes, 
  multiplied by 140 bytes and divided by 100 to get it back into 
  dollars). That’s a thousandth of a cent! So an SMS message costs 
  20,000 times more than the equivalent amount of data via the same 
  carrier.

  Don’t get me wrong — I’m not arguing from any sort of a 
  Luddite position here. I know full well _how_ to send and receive 
  text messages, and Tonya and I have even spoken with our parents 
  about how texting is now a required 21st century skill, since text 
  messages can slip through when the cellular coverage is minimal or 
  in disaster scenarios when cell networks are otherwise overwhelmed 
  (see “Peering Inside a Mobile Phone Network,” 6 October 2008).

<http://tidbits.com/article/9796>

  Nonetheless, since there are so few people I communicate with 
  regularly via text message, I’ve started using a service and iOS 
  app combination called Textie that uses your Internet connection to 
  send messages. Textie is free, supporting itself via ads 
  interspersed within the messages you view and via direct payments 
  from those who are willing to pay $1.99 to turn the ads off. 
  Although I’ve mostly used Textie on the iPhone, it also works on 
  the iPad, where it has a full native interface, and the iPod touch, 
  neither of which can normally use SMS messaging. 

<http://textie.me/>

  Once you download and install the Textie app, setup involves 
  teaching it your email addresses and phone numbers, since that’s 
  how Textie knows to route incoming messages to your copy of the app, 
  alerting you via push notification, just as an SMS text message 
  would. (Tip: If you get a new iPhone, note that you must sign into 
  Textie before you’ll receive push notifications again.) If another 
  Textie user sends you a message via an unknown phone number or email 
  address, Textie will still deliver it, but via normal SMS or email 
  instead.

<http://itunes.apple.com/app/textie-messaging/id353912946?mt=8>

  After that, using Textie is eerily like using Apple’s Messages 
  app. The main screen listing existing conversations is nearly 
  identical, with the only notable differences being Textie’s 
  Settings button and refresh button at the bottom of the screen. An 
  Edit button lets you delete unwanted conversations and a compose 
  button lets you start a new conversation, messages in which can 
  contain both text and an attached picture.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-05/Textie-vs-Messages-main.png>

  Within a conversation, the look is just a little different, with 
  Textie going beyond Messages by offering three different text sizes 
  and conversation bubble colors, selectable in Textie’s Appearance 
  settings. And of course, there are the ads, which are custom 
  designed to mingle within the messages and thus don’t bother me at 
  all. If they bother you, they can be turned off for a $1.99 in-app 
  payment. Textie mimics the Call and Contact Info buttons at the top 
  of the conversation, and adds a Load Older Messages button for 
  pulling older messages back out of Textie’s local database. In 
  both the wide-screen iPad interface and the smaller iPhone 
  interface, you can even swipe over any individual message to delete 
  it, as you can see in the iPad screenshot.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-05/Textie-vs-Messages-messages.png>
<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-05/Textie-on-iPad.jpg>

  Textie’s settings also let you turn off the message preview in 
  push notifications (in case you don’t want others to be able to 
  read the message without unlocking the phone) and display the 
  sender’s verified address for additional identification. I hate 
  getting SMS messages from unknown numbers since people seldom 
  identify themselves. You can also turn message sounds on or off.

  One neat Textie feature in the Social Networking settings is the 
  capability to see which of your friends already use Textie. The way 
  this works is particularly clever, and much better than the way many 
  services import your entire address book. First, Textie reads and 
  scrambles all the email addresses in Contacts with a one-way hash, 
  meaning it can’t be reversed (for privacy reasons). Then it 
  compares those scrambled addresses with equivalently scrambled 
  addresses for all users on the Textie server and displays a list of 
  those addresses in Contacts that match addresses of Textie users.

  You can use Textie to send and receive text messages with anyone who 
  has an email address anywhere in the world, and you can also use it 
  to send text messages to many U.S.-based mobile phone numbers 
  (Textie doesn’t work with Sprint or T-Mobile right now). 
  Apparently, international cellular carriers generally lack the email 
  gateways that Textie relies on in the United States.

<http://textie.me/sms>

  With email, Textie appears to deliver the message from your 
  “sending as” address, but sets the Reply-To header such that 
  replies should go back through Textie. Textie messages to normal 
  mobile phones are similar, in that replies also come back through to 
  Textie even though they appear to come from some random phone number 
  (they include your name, so the recipient knows who the message is 
  from). The very first mobile phone text message someone receives 
  from a Textie user includes some text explaining what Textie is, 
  since recipients were being confused. Subsequent messages to the 
  same number don’t include the explanation.

  Overall, Tonya and I have found Textie extremely easy to use and 
  entirely reliable, with one unsurprising exception. While we were on 
  our recent trip to Boulder, I got up early one morning to run the 
  famous Magnolia Road. I didn’t think my iPhone would have good 
  coverage and didn’t want to carry it on a 15-mile run, but it was 
  important that Tonya knew when I started so she could call out the 
  dogs if I didn’t come back in a reasonable amount of time.

<http://www.runcolo.com/content/running-magnolia-road-boulder-colorado-271/>

  When I arrived at the start of the run, up an insanely steep and 
  switchbacked road that climbed to an elevation of over 8000 feet, my 
  iPhone was desperately trying to hold onto a single bar of signal, 
  and when I attempted to use Textie to send Tonya a message that I 
  was starting the run, it failed. Textie was happy to let me retry 
  the message, but since it relies on an Internet connection rather 
  than the SMS network, it stood no chance of working without a data 
  signal.

  I switched to the Messages app, sent Tonya an SMS text message for 
  $0.40 ($0.20 for me to send, $0.20 for her to receive) and headed 
  out on my run. I repeated the process when I was done, and with her 
  eventual reply to me, we racked up $1.20 for what was probably less 
  than 400 bytes and fewer words than are in this sentence. 

  With Textie, the cost of those three sent-and-received messages 
  might have been $0.00012 (Textie messages aren’t quite as small as 
  SMS messages, but they’re so small even the developers haven’t 
  bothered to check, given server compression and other 
  message-related communications). Or, since our AT&T family plan 
  offers free mobile-to-mobile calling within AT&T’s network and 
  free unlimited calling to a set list of numbers, had there been 
  voice coverage, I could have talked to Tonya and others for the 
  entire 2 hour run for free.

  So no, $1.20 isn’t a lot of money, until you start comparing it to 
  $0.00012 via Textie. If we both sent and received just 50 normal SMS 
  text messages per month, it would be worth paying $10 per month each 
  for AT&T’s 1000-message bundle, and that’s $240 per year for the 
  two of us, which counts as real money in my book. Especially when 
  compared with the $0.14 — or less, since some would be sent while 
  using Wi-Fi instead of 3G data — that the same 1200 text messages 
  might cost us via Textie.

  $240 for SMS versus 14 cents for Textie. I’ll be using Textie. 


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TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 9 May 2011
----------------------------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/article/12162>

**Skype 5.1.60.947** -- Skype has released Skype 5.1.60.947 to block a 
  critical vulnerability related to receiving a malicious file via an 
  instant message. Also resolved are problems with video freezing in 
  networks with high packet loss, and unspecified minor bugs. 
  Unfortunately, the horrid design of Skype 5 remains in place, but, 
  luckily, the still-functional Skype 2.8 does not suffer from Skype 
  5’s security vulnerability. So, you can either upgrade to Skype 
  5.1.60.947 or stick with (or downgrade to) Skype 2.8. I recommend 
  downloading manually; the automatic updater failed when I chose 
  Skype > Check for Updates. (Free, 20.2 MB)

<http://www.skype.com/intl/en-us/get-skype/on-your-computer/macosx/>
<http://blogs.skype.com/garage/2011/05/2nd_hotfix_for_skype_51_for_ma_release_notes.html>
<http://www.skype.com/intl/en-us/get-skype/on-your-computer/macosx/2-8>

  Read/post comments about Skype 5.1.60.947.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12164#comments>


**MacBook Pro Software Update 1.4 and MacBook Pro EFI Update 2.1** -- 
  Apple has released two updates for recent MacBook models that 
  address several stability and reliability issues. The MacBook Pro 
  Software Update 1.4 introduces changes that improve the reliability 
  of graphics rendering and external display support, as well as 
  Thunderbolt device support. The MacBook Pro EFI Update 2.1 seems to 
  have a similar set of targets, but also resolves an issue with Turbo 
  Mode in Boot Camp. As always with firmware updates, do not disturb 
  or power down your MacBook Pro while installing, since it could 
  leave the Mac in a non-functional state. Both updates can be 
  downloaded and installed via Software Update, or through their 
  individual pages on Apple’s Web site. (Free, 132.69 MB and 3.06 MB 
  respectively)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1382>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1381>

  Read/post comments about MacBook Pro Software Update 1.4 and MacBook 
  Pro EFI Update 2.1.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12160#comments>


**Mac OS X 10.6.7 for iMac (Early 2011) and iMac EFI Update 1.6** -- 
  On the heels of the recent iMac refresh (see “New iMac Gains 
  Thunderbolt, FaceTime HD, and Quad-Core CPUs,” 3 May 2011), Apple 
  has released a couple of iMac-specific updates that address 
  stability-related issues with several apps and interfaces, with a 
  particular focus on Thunderbolt. Mac OS X 10.6.7 Update 1.0 for iMac 
  (Early 2011) 1.0 introduces fixes that improve the reliability of 
  Back to My Mac, App Store, and FaceTime, and corrects issues in 
  Windows file sharing, graphics and video display, and the new 
  Thunderbolt interface. The latter is also the main target of the 
  iMac EFI Update 1.6, whose release notes mention no changes beyond 
  Thunderbolt. But according to Other World Computing, the EFI update 
  also unlocks the full 6 Gbps SATA 3.0 capabilities of the two 
  internal drive bays, though the optical drive bay remains at 3 Gbps. 
  As always with firmware updates, do not disturb or power down your 
  iMac while installing, since it could leave the Mac in a 
  non-functional state. Both updates can be downloaded and installed 
  via Software Update, or through their individual pages on Apple’s 
  Web site. (Free, 382.56 MB and 6.1 MB respectively)

<http://tidbits.com/article/12150>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1383>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1380>
<http://blog.macsales.com/10050-firmware-update-enables-6gbs-in-2011-imacs>

  Read/post comments about Mac OS X 10.6.7 for iMac (Early 2011) and 
  iMac EFI Update 1.6.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12159#comments>


**Neat Image 7.0** -- ABSoft has released Neat Image 7.0, a new major 
  release of its noise reduction software. This version is notable for 
  the fact that it makes use of the GPU built into every Mac to 
  increase the performance of its de-noising operations, making it, 
  according to the company, the first such app on the market. In 
  addition, the Pro edition now supports 32 bits per channel, which is 
  ideal for HDR photography. Neat Image comes as a standalone app or 
  as a plug-in for Photoshop or Aperture, in both Home and Pro 
  editions; the latter offers more advanced features and can 
  manipulate pictures with more bits per pixel. ($39.90–$79.90 new, 
  free upgrade from v6, 10 MB)

<http://www.neatimage.com/>
<http://www.neatimage.com/doc/Press-release-Neat-Image-7.pdf>
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High_dynamic_range_imaging>
<http://www.neatimage.com/mac/download.html>

  Read/post comments about Neat Image 7.0.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12158#comments>


**Photoshop CS5 12.0.4** -- Adobe has released an update to Photoshop 
  CS5, its popular image-editing app. The Adobe Photoshop 12.0.4 
  Update addresses several potential security issues and fixes crashes 
  in a number of different filters, including Sharpen and Quick 
  Selection. The big news, however, is the introduction of Remote 
  Connections, a new feature that makes it possible for external 
  mobile apps to connect and communicate with Photoshop, including 
  several iPad apps that Adobe itself is planning to release through 
  the App Store “in the future.” (Free update, 19.7 MB)

<http://www.adobe.com/products/photoshop.html>
<http://www.adobe.com/support/downloads/thankyou.jsp?ftpID=4972&fileID=4689>
<http://www.adobe.com/support/downloads/detail.jsp?ftpID=4972&PID=3146232>
<http://help.adobe.com/en_US/photoshop/cs/using/WS2bacbdf8d487e582-30e9846212e1679fbfd-8000.html>

  Read/post comments about Photoshop CS5 12.0.4.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12154#comments>


**Dreamweaver CS5 11.0.4** -- Adobe has released a minor update to its 
  Dreamweaver CS5 Web development tool. The Dreamweaver CS5 11.0.4 
  Updater provides new code required to make Dreamweaver work with the 
  latest incarnation of BrowserLab, the company’s Web-based 
  cross-browser testing app. Included in the patch is also a fix to a 
  critical bug related to the SFTP protocol, as well as other 
  enhancements included in the previous 11.0.2 and 11.0.3 updates. 
  (Free update, 14.12 MB)

<http://www.adobe.com/products/dreamweaver.html>
<http://www.adobe.com/support/dreamweaver/downloads_updaters.html?PID=3146232>
<https://browserlab.adobe.com/>

  Read/post comments about Dreamweaver CS5 11.0.4.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12153#comments>


**iOS 4.3.3 and 4.2.8** -- In response to the recent kerfuffle 
  surrounding the way its mobile devices collect and store location 
  data (see “Apple Addresses Location Controversy Questions,” 27 
  April 2011), Apple has released the promised update to iOS that 
  limits the location information the operating system gathers and 
  caches. The new release is available in two versions: iOS 4.2.8 for 
  the CDMA iPhone that operates on Verizon Wireless’s network, and 
  iOS 4.3.3 for all other compatible iOS devices; these latter devices 
  include the GSM iPhone 3GS and iPhone 4, the iPad and iPad 2, and 
  the third- and fourth-generation iPod touch. (Older devices limited 
  to iOS 3 don’t suffer the same problems.) When updated, the iOS 
  device retains a shorter history of location data than it previously 
  did, and it does not back up that data to the user’s computer when 
  the device syncs with iTunes. In addition, the device no longer 
  collects any location information at all when Location Services is 
  turned off. The updates are installed via iTunes. (Free)

<http://tidbits.com/article/12133>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1373>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1358>

  Read/post comments about iOS 4.3.3 and 4.2.8.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12152#comments>




ExtraBITS for 9 May 2011
------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/article/12161>

  Our coverage of last week’s news — the new iMacs and two 
  security-related stories — featured in a pair of online 
  appearances for Adam, on MacBreak Weekly and the Tech Night Owl 
  Live. And while it was pre-recorded, Tonya also made a video op-ed 
  for Your Mac Podcast Now.


**Adam Participates in Star-Studded MacBreak Weekly** -- MacBreak 
  Weekly with Leo Laporte and Andy Ihnatko is always informative and 
  entertaining, but with a panel that included Adam, Macworld’s 
  Chris Breen, and John Gruber of Daring Fireball, this show turned 
  out to be one for the record books. The excellent discussions 
  covered the new iMac, last week’s security news, more on 
  Location-gate, the thickness of the white iPhone 4, and what we 
  might see from Apple as the next cloud-based service.

<http://twit.tv/mbw245>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/12157#comments>


**Tonya Talks about the Geek Generation Gap** -- Tonya Engst made a 
  video appearance as the Op-Ed guest in last week’s “Your Mac 
  Podcast Now” episode. Tune in for a review of recent news and then 
  watch Tonya (at 3:30 in) talk about the geek generation gap and how 
  she thinks there’s an important change on the horizon.

<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fRWhDv9vJp8>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/12151#comments>


**Adam Talks Security on the Tech Night Owl Live** -- If you can’t 
  get enough of last week’s security news about the Weyland-Yutani 
  “crimekit” and the MACDefender “scareware,” tune in to this 
  segment of the Tech Night Owl Live podcast with Gene Steinberg.

<http://www.technightowl.com/radio/podcast/now-playing-may-7-2011-%E2%80%94-kirk-mcelhearn-adam-engst-kyle-wiens-and-jason-snell/>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/12163#comments>




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