TidBITS#1082/27-Jun-2011
========================
  Issue link: <http://tidbits.com/issue/1082>


  We focus on new and upcoming releases this week, with details on the
  just-released Mac OS X 10.6.8, Final Cut Pro X, and Firefox 5.0, and
  more answers to questions about the MobileMe-to-iCloud transition. In
  honor of the recent Bloomsday, Michael Cohen shares his recollections
  of the early days of the electronic book, Jeff Porten reports on teen
  privacy and data retention issues from the CFP 2011 conference, and
  Marshall Clow explains how he managed to recover from disk corruption
  on a MacBook Pro without a SuperDrive. Notable software releases this
  week include Security Update 2011-004 (Leopard/Leopard Server);
  ClamXav 2.2; 1Password 3.6; Flash Player 10.3.181.26; PDFpen and
  PDFpenPro 5.4; Microsoft Office 2011 14.1.2, 2008 12.3.0, and 2004
  11.6.4; Acrobat Pro 10.1, 9.4.5, and 8.3; Evernote 2.2.1; and Audio
  Hijack Pro 2.9.12.

Articles
    Mac OS X 10.6.8 Update Preps for Lion
    Apple Details Transition from MobileMe to iCloud
    Firefox 5 Brings Under-the-Hood Improvements
    CFP 2011: Teens and Data Retention
    Nora Barnacle and the Birth of the Ebook
    Apple Starts Over with New Final Cut Pro X
    Recovering from Disk Corruption Without a SuperDrive
    TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 27 June 2011
    ExtraBITS for 27 June 2011


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Mac OS X 10.6.8 Update Preps for Lion
-------------------------------------
  by Michael E. Cohen <lymond@mac.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/article/12276>
  4 comments

  With the sound of Mac OS X 10.7 Lion roaring in the distance, Apple 
  has released Mac OS X 10.6.8 Update. The update addresses some bugs, 
  improves some networking features, provides additional security 
  improvements, and paves the way for the release of Lion next month. 

  Among the bugs that Apple states have been resolved in this update, 
  according to the linked support document, are the following:

* Resolves an issue that may cause Preview to unexpectedly quit.
* Corrects timezone data in iCal for Lisbon-Portugal.
* Fixes an issue when saving documents from Xcode or TextEdit when 
  using an NFS home directory.
* Fixes an issue when importing certain media files into Final Cut 
  Pro.

<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT4561>

  The update also tosses in raw image support for additional digital 
  cameras.

  On the networking front, the update improves VPN reliability and, 
  especially important given the imminent exhaustion of the IPv4 
  address pool, provides improved support for the new Internet 
  protocol, IPv6. Although this fact is in Apple’s release notes, 
  Contributing Editor Mark Anbinder tells us that 10.6.8 also resolves 
  a significant problem related to compatibility with Microsoft 
  Exchange Server 2010 that had prevented some organizations from 
  migrating from Exchange Server 2007.

  As is common with this sort of update, there are numerous 
  security-related fixes addressing vulnerabilities in the App Store 
  (where your password could be logged to a local file in certain 
  circumstances), ATS, Certificate Trust Policy, CoreFoundation, 
  CoreGraphics, FTP Server, ImageIO, International Components for 
  Unicode, the kernel, MobileMe, MySQL, OpenSSL, patch, Quick Look, 
  QuickTime, servermgrd, and Subversion. Mac OS X 10.6.8 also provides 
  all previous security enhancements released to date, and it detects 
  and removes all known variants of the MacDefender malware.

<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT4723>

  For those who were troubled by 10.6.7’s font-related problems (and 
  who might have stayed with 10.6.6 as a result; see “Apple Releases 
  Snow Leopard Font Update,” 26 April 2011), the 10.6.8 update 
  includes all of the fixes provided in the Mac OS X v10.6.7 Snow 
  Leopard Font Update.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12131>

  The most tantalizing feature of 10.6.8, however, is the first one 
  that Apple mentions in its support document: “Enhancements to the 
  Mac App Store to get your Mac ready to upgrade to Mac OS X Lion.” 
  We’re not quite sure what these enhancements are, but given that 
  the Mac App Store is the only venue by which existing Mac OS X users 
  will be able to obtain Lion upon its release, we’re reassured to 
  know that Apple is working to make the multi-gigabyte purchase and 
  download process as smooth as possible.

  As usual, Apple suggests you back up your system with Time Machine 
  before applying the update, and notes that the update provided by 
  Software Update varies in size depending on the Mac you are running. 

  If you wish to install the update manually, the following versions 
  are available:

* Mac OS X 10.6.8 Update (474.2 MB)
* Mac OS X 10.6.8 Server Update (542 MB)
* Mac OS X 10.6.8 Update Combo (1.09 GB)
* Mac OS X 10.6.8 Server Update Combo (1.27 GB)
* Server Admin Tools 10.6.8 (for remote administration of Mac OS X 
  Server 10.6.8; 255.9 MB)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1400>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1401>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1399>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1402>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1403>


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Apple Details Transition from MobileMe to iCloud
------------------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/article/12280>
  8 comments

  When Apple announced its new iCloud service, the future of many 
  MobileMe features was up in the air. Now, the company has posted a 
  MobileMe Transition page with details. Several days ago, in 
  “MobileMe-to-iCloud Transition Messaging Provokes Confusion” (13 
  June 2011), we asked a whole passel of questions, supplemented by 
  more from our readers. Let’s see how well Apple has answered those 
  so far.

<http://www.apple.com/mobileme/transition.html>
<http://tidbits.com/article/12244>

  In the transition article, Apple distinguishes between two kinds of 
  changes, those that take effect when you sign up for iCloud using an 
  existing MobileMe account, and those that don’t take effect until 
  30 June 2012, when MobileMe effectively shuts down.

* __Web apps, Including Find My iPhone:__ Contrary to This Is My 
  Next’s report, and as we and many others suspected, Web app 
  versions of Mail, Contacts, Calendar, and Find My iPhone will be 
  available at icloud.com. This makes sense, and we’re glad Apple 
  hadn’t lost its mind about requiring a device to access these 
  iCloud-synced services.

<http://thisismynext.com/2011/06/13/icloud-apple-strategy-flaw/>
<http://icloud.com/>

* __iWeb Hosted Sites and Personal Domains, Gallery, and iDisk:__ 
  Apple says these three services won’t waft their way into iCloud 
  but will work precisely as they do today through 30 June 2012, even 
  after you move your MobileMe account to iCloud. iWeb sites and a 
  domain you set up to work with MobileMe may be migrated elsewhere, 
  and Apple explains how in a separate article. Gallery images and 
  videos may be downloaded or synced via iPhoto. iDisk files uniquely 
  stored there must be retrieved before the shutoff date. (Despite 
  recent security problems, we remain big fans of Dropbox for syncing 
  and storing files.)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT4686>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT4702>
<http://www.dropbox.com/>

* __Back to My Mac:__ Without elaboration, Apple says that Back to My 
  Mac will be part of iCloud. That could mean a dramatic expansion of 
  Back to My Mac usage, since anyone signed up with a free iCloud 
  account will be able to use an Apple ID to access computers logged 
  into the same account from anywhere on the Internet. We wonder if 
  Back to My Mac will tie into iOS 5 as well, providing a virtual 
  network of computers and devices that can access resources from one 
  another?

* __Widgets, Keychains, Dock items, and System Preferences:__ Few of 
  us have synced these types of data via MobileMe because, outside of 
  passwords, we don’t necessary want precisely the same information 
  on every computer we use. Nonetheless, these types of synchronized 
  data are all wiped away with iCloud, and will disappear as soon as 
  you migrate from MobileMe to iCloud. If you maintain your MobileMe 
  account without migrating, they will function through the cutoff 
  date.

* __Merging Accounts:__ We’ve heard the most concern from people who 
  have MobileMe aliases; distinct Apple ID, iTunes Store, and MobileMe 
  accounts; and other combinations of identities. Apple clarified this 
  slightly. As some subscribers have been told by MobileMe customer 
  service, Apple will not merge accounts, such as an iTunes Store 
  account and a MobileMe account. But you can move a MobileMe account 
  to iCloud, and continue to use a separate iTunes account to handle 
  purchases and iTunes in the Cloud synchronization. This also likely 
  answers the question about merging or migrating Apple Communities 
  data associated with an Apple ID (as in, no, it won’t be 
  possible).

* __Family Pack Accounts:__ Accounts in a Family Pack can be 
  individually migrated to iCloud as long as you do it before 30 June 
  2012. Apple made no mention of MobileMe aliases, however.

* __Storage Amounts:__ Apple confirmed you will be able to buy storage 
  beyond the free 5 GB included in every iCloud account when it 
  launches. The company did not provide pricing details.

* __Remaining Questions:__ We still have no answer about what new iOS 
  device purchasers can do for data synchronization until iCloud 
  ships, assuming that they won’t be able to get a MobileMe account. 
  Nor did Apple say what will happen after 30 June 2012 for pre-Lion 
  Mac OS X users currently using MobileMe (likely “Web apps or 
  nothing”), or for those who want to use online syncing with the 
  original iPhone and iPhone 3G.

  We’ll keep watching for answers to these questions. 


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Firefox 5 Brings Under-the-Hood Improvements
--------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/article/12273>
  3 comments

  Normally, a major release — sometimes called an integer release 
  because the first number of the version changes — comes with 
  significant features that will compel users to upgrade. But the 
  release of Firefox 5.0, which appears less than three months after 
  Firefox 4.0 hit the Internet (see “Firefox 4 Improves, But Not 
  Radically,” 2 April 2011), lacks any such marquee features. So if 
  Firefox 5.0 doesn’t provide major new features, why is Mozilla 
  bumping the version number so high?

<http://www.mozilla.com/en-US/firefox/fx/>
<http://tidbits.com/article/12077>

  The true story will likely never be known, but there are probably a 
  number of interacting reasons. First, with Microsoft’s Internet 
  Explorer now at version 9, it’s possible Mozilla wanted to 
  increase Firefox’s version number more quickly to make it seem 
  more mature. Then there is Mozilla’s move to a rapid release 
  development cycle, although I see no inherent reason that should 
  require version number inflation. And lastly, one of the major 
  changes is increased exposure in the interface for Firefox’s 
  support for the Do Not Track feature — the 5.0 version may be one 
  way for Mozilla to increase pressure on advertising networks and 
  other sites that use behavioral tracking to support the Do Not Track 
  header. (For more about Do Not Track, see “CFP 2011: “Do Not 
  Track” Debate,” 14 June 2011.)

<http://blog.mozilla.com/blog/2011/04/13/new-channels-for-firefox-rapid-releases/>
<http://dnt.mozilla.org/>
<http://tidbits.com/article/12247>

  Besides the increased exposure of the Do Not Track header preference 
  (it’s in the Privacy pane now), the rest of Firefox 5.0’s 
  release notes list little that most users will notice. There are 
  some performance improvements, support for CSS animations, and 
  improved standards support. Spell checking is improved for some 
  locales, WebGL content can no longer load cross-domain textures, and 
  several security issues have been fixed. And, well, that’s about 
  it. (Of course, the complete list of changes includes nearly 1000 
  items, but most won’t even be understandable to users, much less 
  noticed by them.)

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-06/Do-Not-Track-pref.png>
<http://www.mozilla.com/en-US/firefox/5.0/releasenotes/>
<http://www.mozilla.com/en-US/firefox/5.0/releasenotes/buglist.html>

  So again, version 5.0? There’s nothing wrong with the release, and 
  it seems to be working fine for me, but it seems as though it really 
  should have been a 4.1. 

  Firefox 5.0 is a 27.8 MB download when gotten from Mozilla’s site, 
  though only 9.2 MB when acquired through Firefox 4.0.1’s Check for 
  Updates mechanism (choose Firefox > About Firefox > Check for 
  Updates). As with Firefox 4.0, 5.0 requires Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard or 
  later, but running on an Intel-based Mac; if you’re using a 
  PowerPC-based Mac, you can get TenFourFox 5, which uses almost 
  exactly the same code as Firefox 5.0.

<http://www.floodgap.com/software/tenfourfox/>


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CFP 2011: Teens and Data Retention
----------------------------------
  by Jeff Porten <jporten@gmail.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/article/12250>
  2 comments

  After the first-day debate over the Do Not Track header at the 
  Computers, Freedom, and Privacy 2011 conference (see “CFP 2011: 
  “Do Not Track” Debate,” 14 June 2011), I managed to sit in on 
  two other talks. The first, about teen attitudes toward privacy, was 
  refreshing in that it’s clear that teenagers aren’t clueless; 
  they have significant — if different — beliefs about maintaining 
  a public/private split in their lives. The second, about data 
  retention policies, is one of those CFP conference topics that can 
  make the most rational of us start lining our hats with tinfoil.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12247>


**Teens and Privacy** -- First, Danah Boyd of Microsoft Research 
  presented her ethnographic research on teen use of Facebook. Despite 
  adult (and mostly parental) fears that “kids today” are letting 
  it all hang out online, with no thought to personal privacy, her 
  research shows that teenagers are acutely aware of the distinction 
  between public, semipublic, and private spaces. Facebook is one of 
  the few places where teens are allowed to enter into a semipublic 
  space, and they do so with a great deal of thought and effort about 
  cultural norms that apply in each of these spaces.

  For example, Facebook posts and comments are used to create a 
  semipublic arena for a group of peers who are mostly known to each 
  other in real life. The norms and social rules for online spaces are 
  largely negotiated between peers through extensive offline 
  discussions; the transgressors aren’t usually their peer group, 
  but parents and teachers using Facebook as a means of remote 
  surveillance. One student Boyd interviewed said that she begged her 
  mother to stop commenting on her Facebook posts; the appearance of 
  an adult had the effect of chasing away comments from her friends. 
  But since she was close to her mother, she invited her to send 
  private messages when her mother wanted to comment on her 
  activities.

  Boyd’s research also dispels other common myths, such as the 
  “pandemic” of teen sexting. Many of her interviewees report that 
  the first time they’re exposed to sexting is when they borrow a 
  parent’s cell phone, and come across texts and images sent by the 
  adults that they’d really rather not see.

  If you’re interested in significantly more detail about how 
  teenagers think about online privacy, read Boyd’s draft paper 
  “Social Privacy in Networked Publics: Teens’ Attitudes, 
  Practices, and Strategies” (PDF).

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-06/SocialPrivacyPLSC-Draft.pdf>


**Data Retention Policies** -- Were you disturbed by the kerfuffle 
  about your iPhone seemingly storing your recent location information 
  (see “Apple Addresses Location Controversy Questions,” 27 April 
  2011)? If so, you probably don’t want to see this mashup of data 
  collected by Deutsche Telekom about German Green Party board member 
  Malte Spitz, who sued the firm for the data they had stored about 
  him, then turned the information over to Zeit Online for 
  publication.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12133>
<http://www.zeit.de/datenschutz/malte-spitz-data-retention>

  It turns out that all cell phone companies need to have location 
  information about your cell phone in order to route information back 
  to you, and most store these records for a lengthy period of time. 
  In the European Union, this is required by law; a 2006 EU directive 
  requires telecommunications companies and email providers to keep 
  various records for 6 to 24 months, depending upon the data in 
  question. In the United States, there are no federal laws in place 
  requiring data retention, so it’s largely up to the policies of 
  individual companies — but a bill currently in the House of 
  Representatives would require Internet data to be stored for 18 
  months, as a means of combatting child pornography, or so the 
  sponsors claim.

<http://thehill.com/homenews/house/150607-lawmakers-push-for-bill-to-fight-online-child-porn>

  Notably, the U.S. regulations above refer only to laws that are 
  publicly known. It’s still rather unclear the extent of the 
  information being captured under the PATRIOT Act, and whether such 
  activities fall under any kind of oversight. So take your pick: 
  either your monolithic telecommunications conglomerate has large 
  amounts of data on you, or your monolithic government does. Most 
  likely, both.

<http://www.democracynow.org/appearances/mark_klein>

  And if you’re wondering why this might be an issue, research by 
  the MIT Media Lab shows that with access to recent data, your 
  _future_ activities over the next 12 hours — such as who you’ll 
  meet, where you’ll be, and what you’ll be doing — can be 
  predicted with 80- to 95-percent accuracy. Which raises the rather 
  creepy idea that AT&T or the NSA might know what you’ll be doing 
  before you do.

<http://reality.media.mit.edu/dyads.php>

  The EU legislation is up for review in 2012, and several bodies in 
  the European Parliament are on record as stating that data retention 
  policies, at best, cannot be proven to have a protective function. 
  In the United States, the picture is much murkier, as no one has any 
  information on which companies and government institutions have this 
  data, or how long it is being retained — especially in regards to 
  national security collection. But insofar as this debate is being 
  held in public, Lee Tien from the Electronic Frontier Foundation 
  says that the discussion is entirely “data-free,” with no 
  research or claims being made as to the efficacy of any such 
  measures for national security or anti-crime purposes. 


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Nora Barnacle and the Birth of the Ebook
----------------------------------------
  by Michael E. Cohen <lymond@mac.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/article/12257>
  5 comments

  On June 16, 1904, a young James Joyce went on his first date with 
  Nora Barnacle, the woman who would eventually become his wife. Years 
  later, Joyce set the action of his novel “Ulysses” on that date, 
  and the day eventually became known as “Bloomsday” (named after 
  the main character of the book, Leopold Bloom) to Joyce scholars and 
  fans.

  Eighty-six years later, on Bloomsday 1990, the Voyager Company, a 
  small video and digital media company housed in a condemned building 
  just north of Santa Monica Pier on Pacific Coast Highway, held a 
  private meeting to which various scholars and academics were 
  invited. Voyager had recently received a great deal of attention for 
  developing one of the first commercial CD-ROM publications, a CD 
  audio recording of Beethoven’s Symphony #9 and an accompanying 
  HyperCard stack on floppy disk that synchronized the performance 
  with a detailed and lively discussion of the work by UCLA professor 
  Robert Winter. Now Bob Stein, the president of the Voyager Company, 
  wondered if it was possible to do for classic literature what 
  Winter’s “CD Companion” had done for classical music.

<http://www.futureofthebook.org/blog/archives/2009/11/published_by_the_voyager_compa.html>

  Among those invited to the meeting was Professor Richard Lanham of 
  UCLA’s English Department. A specialist in rhetoric, Lanham had 
  become interested both in computer-assisted writing instruction and 
  in the new kinds of expressivity that digital technology promised to 
  create. I was a former student of Dick’s, and had helped him 
  create some rudimentary interactive writing software. At the last 
  minute, he asked me if I wanted to tag along to the meeting.

<http://computersandcomposition.osu.edu/archives/v4/4_2_html/4_2_5_Little.html>

  I remember that meeting only dimly, but I do recall that it was a 
  wide-ranging, sometimes heated, discussion about whether or not 
  anyone would _ever_ want to read from a computer screen instead of 
  from a printed page. The consensus finally reached was that the only 
  way a computer-based reading experience would be even remotely 
  attractive would be if the software compensated for the 
  inconvenience and limitations of the then-current computer and 
  display technologies by providing a lot of “extras” — deep and 
  plentiful annotations, search capabilities, linked ancillary 
  materials, animated illustrations, and so on.

  (Coincidentally, at the same time that Voyager held its Bloomsday 
  digital book meeting, halfway around the world, Tim Berners-Lee was 
  busy crafting software that a year later would debut as HTML 1.0 and 
  lead to the creation of something called the “World Wide Web” 
  — chances are, you’re reading this on a screen using software 
  that is a descendent of Berners-Lee’s invention.)

  At the end of the meeting, Bob Stein pulled me aside and asked, 
  jokingly (I thought), if I was interested in working for Voyager. He 
  wasn’t joking: a few months later, I found myself working 
  part-time at UCLA and part-time at Voyager, and, a few months after 
  that, full-time at Voyager. My ostensible Voyager assignment: to 
  come up with ideas and concepts that would lead to the creation of a 
  CD-ROM-based interactive edition of Shakespeare’s “Macbeth.” I 
  say “ostensible” because, in fact, I had to table that 
  assignment almost immediately in order to participate in a different 
  digital book project. (“Macbeth” was not tabled forever, though: 
  the CD-ROM was released a few years later.)

<http://www.digitalmedievalist.com/bibs/mackers.html>

  What changed? Between the Bloomsday 1990 meeting and the time I 
  began working at Voyager, Apple had begun to develop its first 
  PowerBooks. Unlike today, back then Apple often seeded promising 
  developers with prototypes of new hardware. Voyager was seeded with 
  an early PowerBook 100, and figurative light-bulbs went off over the 
  heads of various Voyager employees. Here was a machine that could 
  possibly be used as a digital book reader: it had a clear, readable 
  screen (640 by 400 pixels, much more spacious than the more common 
  512 by 342 compact Macintosh screens of that era), it didn’t 
  tether the user to a wall-socket for power, and was lightweight 
  enough to be carried around rather like one would carry a book — 
  albeit a large, fragile, and expensive book.

<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PowerBook_100>

  Bob Stein marshaled as many Voyager resources as possible, including 
  me, for this new book project. Using HyperCard, Voyager’s 
  programming platform of choice, we developed prototype after 
  prototype of something that we would eventually come to call (after 
  much vociferous debate) Expanded Books. Everything was up for 
  discussion: would an Expanded Book have pages? If so, how would they 
  turn? Would there be page numbers? Would there be any way to write 
  notes? Share notes? What reading tools would be provided? Everyone 
  who happened by was invited to participate: programmers, producers, 
  graphic artists, even the bookkeeper and receptionist. Eventually, 
  we came up with the set of features that we thought a basic Expanded 
  Book should have (though even those were subject to change until 
  just hours before we released our first ones).

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-06/eb_features.jpg>

  As the prototypes became more polished and consistent, we also 
  debated what we would publish, and eventually decided upon three 
  titles. One would be a simple, purely textual novel: Douglas 
  Adams’s “Complete Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy”.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-06/hh_eb.jpg>

  One would be a popular novel to which we could add certain special 
  features. We chose Michael Crichton’s newly published “Jurassic 
  Park” for that, and the special features would include 
  illustrations of dinosaurs, sound effects based upon the dinosaur 
  calls Crichton described in the text, and animated fractal chapter 
  openers taken from the fractal graphics that were printed in the 
  hardcover edition. 

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-06/jp_eb.jpg>

  The final book was a genuine literary classic, full of footnotes and 
  all sorts of opportunities for special features: a book that 
  combined Martin Gardner’s two editions of Lewis Carroll’s 
  “Alice” books, “Annotated Alice” and “More Annotated 
  Alice,” into one digital volume.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-06/aa_eb.jpg>

  Even as we worked on refining the feature set of the Expanded Books, 
  my job was to painstakingly copy the text of each of these books 
  into a HyperCard stack, a process we called “flowing the text.” 
  This included hand-adjusting the spacing between words, adding in 
  clickable notes (an epic endeavor in the case of Martin’s books), 
  and even producing some of the special effects. I remember spending 
  a day or two writing the HyperCard scripts that would make John 
  Tenniel’s Cheshire Cat illustration in “Through the Looking 
  Glass” dissolve in and out on the digital page and another day 
  recording dinosaur sounds with an audio engineer (the tyrannosaurus 
  in “Jurassic Park” was a lion’s roar mixed with an industrial 
  vacuum cleaner).

  In January, 1992, the first three Expanded Books were introduced at 
  Macworld Expo in San Francisco. Each book was packaged in a slim, 
  shrink-wrapped, custom-designed stiff-paper folder, with pockets 
  containing a feature guide, installation instructions, and a floppy 
  disk on which the HyperCard stacks and fonts that made up the 
  digital books resided (interestingly, the standard font we chose for 
  the Expanded Books was a version of Palatino, which today is the 
  default font used for Apple’s iBooks app). The Expanded Books met 
  with great success and even won a coveted MacUser’s Editors’ 
  Choice Award (for Best Information Product) at the Expo.

  Voyager went on to strike publishing deals with a number of authors 
  over the next several years, and produced dozens of Expanded Books, 
  including selected books from the acclaimed Random House Modern 
  Library series. It also produced an Expanded Book Toolkit so people 
  could build their own Expanded Books. My work on the Expanded Books 
  led me to rethink completely the tabled “Macbeth” project, and 
  that project eventually became what we thought at the time would be 
  an example of the next stage of the Expanded Book.

  Unfortunately, a combination of partnership disagreements and the 
  rise of the World Wide Web, with its concomitant devastation of the 
  “New Media” CD-ROM market, led to the eventual break-up of the 
  Voyager Company and the demise of the Expanded Books project. 
  However, two decades after the project’s inception, and over a 
  century after James Joyce’s momentous date with Nora Barnacle, the 
  ebook has become an overnight sensation. Although the Expanded Books 
  are now only a footnote in ebook history, many of the interface 
  ideas that we developed are still in use — Bob Stein never 
  considered patenting any part of the Expanded Books interface: he 
  wanted to publish books, not platforms, and felt that digital books 
  would succeed only if there was a basic set of features that every 
  publisher could freely adopt and use.

  So the next time you dog-ear a digital page’s corner, or drag a 
  page indicator at the bottom of an ebook page, think of James, and 
  Nora, and the crazy people in the condemned building on the beach in 
  Santa Monica, all of whom, in their own ways, helped make the 
  miracle of modern ebooks possible.

  Happy Bloomsday! 


  ----
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Apple Starts Over with New Final Cut Pro X
------------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/article/12274>
  5 comments

  Apple did a very un-Apple-like thing in April: It revealed the next 
  version of Final Cut Pro during a user group gathering at the 
  National Association of Broadcasters show (see “Apple Previews 
  Final Cut Pro X: New, Faster, and Cheaper,” 13 April 2011).

<http://tidbits.com/article/12112>

  Normally, Apple stays mum about new products until they’re 
  officially released (or are soon to be released), at which point the 
  company’s marketing machine kicks into high gear. Teasing a 
  dedicated audience of video professionals in a public forum just 
  isn’t the company’s style, especially for software that hadn’t 
  seen major updates in two years and was at one point rumored to be 
  discontinued.

  With Apple’s release of Final Cut Pro X last week, I think the 
  company chose to soft-announce its high-end video editing 
  application so it wouldn’t come as such a shock to many of its 
  power users. This version is a complete rewrite, emphasizing speed 
  and flexibility and a new platform on which to build future 
  versions. It also lacks some important features and capabilities on 
  which current Final Cut Pro 7 owners rely.

<http://www.apple.com/finalcutpro/>

  (This pattern will sound familiar to iMovie users following the 
  demise of iMovie HD 6 and iMovie ’08. Hopefully, it won’t take 
  three years for Final Cut Pro X to catch up with some of the 
  features that were left out of the initial rewrite.)

  I haven’t used Final Cut Pro X yet, but looking at its 
  capabilities and reading hands-on reports from others, I can tell 
  that Final Cut Pro X isn’t yet ready for everyone. However, for 
  people who don’t operate at the highest end of the production 
  process, this version looks quite welcome and has a lot of promise.

  If you’re accustomed to iMovie and looking for more editing power, 
  Final Cut Pro X is now the next step up; Final Cut Express (formerly 
  $199.99) has been discontinued. Fortunately, that step from iMovie 
  to Final Cut Pro is also now much cheaper than in the past: Final 
  Cut Pro X costs $299.99, compared to $999.99 for Final Cut Studio.

  Apple also released two complementary applications: Motion 5 and 
  Compressor 4, each priced at $49.99. 


**A New Show** -- The Final Cut Pro X section of Apple’s Web site is 
  a fun introduction to the software’s major features (the videos 
  solidify some of the editing concepts such as the Inline Precision 
  Editor and Auditions), and Apple has also posted a detailed list of 
  features, but here are some highlights:

<http://www.apple.com/finalcutpro/top-features/>
<http://www.apple.com/finalcutpro/all-features/>

* The traditional multi-track timeline has been replaced by the 
  Magnetic Timeline, which offers more smarts about how to arrange 
  clips when you add or move other clips. It promises more time spent 
  putting together the movie’s narrative and less time spent making 
  fiddly adjustments to avoid clip collisions or gaps.

* Clip connections keep clips and audio elements together when 
  they’ve been added together. For example, adding a sound effect to 
  the middle of a clip establishes a connection, and moving one 
  element later automatically keeps the other in place. You can also 
  group a series of complex edits into a Compound Clip, which can be 
  moved as a single grouped item.

* Auditions is a new tool for experimenting. Add clips to an existing 
  clip as an audition, and then preview the sequence without having to 
  re-edit the section several times. 

* Final Cut Pro X gains the same type of media management as iMovie, 
  importing footage into events and making all footage available in a 
  central library. There’s also a robust system for tagging clips 
  with metadata to find them easily later. For example, you can create 
  a smart collection that displays only footage containing specific 
  keywords, shot on a certain day, from a single camera type.

* During the import process, Final Cut Pro X automatically analyzes 
  the footage to identify clips that include people, that are closeup 
  shots and wide shots, and that match other criteria.

* Everything has been designed to take advantage of modern Mac 
  architectures, with 64-bit processing (enabling larger projects and 
  the capability to throw more memory at a project), resolution 
  independence up to 4K, ColorSync color management, and extensive 
  background processing for immediate feedback (no more waiting for 
  rendering bars to complete before you can view effects and 
  transitions).

* Many of the features of Soundtrack Pro, Color, and DVD Studio Pro, 
  formerly independent applications, are now built into Final Cut Pro 
  X. For titles and motion graphics, Motion 5 is still a separate 
  application. Compressor 4 encodes and delivers output, and is also a 
  separate application.

<http://www.apple.com/finalcutpro/motion/>
<http://www.apple.com/finalcutpro/compressor/>

  For many more details on what’s new and different from 
  professional editors who have been using Final Cut Pro X during its 
  development, be sure to check out Philip Hodgetts’s “What are 
  the Answers to the Unanswered Questions about Final Cut Pro X?” 
  and Steve Martin’s “Final Cut Pro X — A First Look.”

<http://www.philiphodgetts.com/2011/06/what-are-the-answers-to-the-unanswered-questions-about-final-cut-pro-x/>
<http://www.kenstone.net/fcp_homepage/fcp_x_first_look_martin.html>


**How “Pro” is Pro?** -- In the video editing realm, the needs of 
  production editors can be quite specific, and involve more than just 
  a single application. On the Mac App Store, Final Cut Pro X is 
  getting hammered by reviewers who note that this version is missing 
  some key features of the previous Final Cut Studio.

  For instance, Final Cut Pro X doesn’t support multi-camera 
  editing, a marquee feature of Final Cut Pro 7 that makes it easy to 
  combine footage of the same scene from several cameras, synchronize 
  their timing, and switch between cuts. Apple has acknowledged that 
  the feature will make its way back into Final Cut Pro X. Tape-based 
  import is limited to a streaming, “capture now” mode, leaving 
  behind the granular method of assigning in points and out points and 
  then batch-importing selections.

  Final Cut Pro X also does not currently import projects created with 
  Final Cut Pro 7, although it does open iMovie projects. (However, 
  seasoned editors will tell you that it’s always best to finish a 
  project in the software it was started in.)

  For high-end production houses, the lack of support for EDLs (Edit 
  Decision Lists), OMF (Open Media Framework) files, and XML import or 
  export threatens established workflows. For example, editors often 
  hand off OMF files to sound professionals who sweeten the audio 
  using other pro tools. Currently, Final Cut Pro X is comparatively 
  self-contained, but reports indicate Apple is working on conversion 
  utilities until the features can be incorporated into the 
  application. (In the meantime, Pro Export FCP by Automatic Duck 
  offers this capability.)

<http://www.automaticduck.com/products/pefcp/>

  Apple strongly recommends that you do not run Final Cut Pro X on the 
  same system as Final Cut Studio, although pros such as Larry Jordan 
  claim no problems having both versions on the same system.

<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT4722>
<http://www.larryjordan.biz/app_bin/wordpress/archives/1505>


**Available from the Mac App Store** -- Unlike the hefty boxes that 
  held older versions, Final Cut Pro X is available only from the Mac 
  App Store. Final Cut Pro X costs $299.99 and is a 1.33 GB download. 
  Motion 5 costs $49.99 and is a 1.09 GB download. Compressor 4 also 
  costs $49.99 and is a comparatively paltry 261 MB download. After 
  installing the software, additional downloads are available: Final 
  Cut Pro X Content (637.5 MB), Motion 5 Content (1.15 GB), and 
  ProApps QuickTime Codecs (1.2 MB).

<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/final-cut-pro/id424389933?mt=12>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/motion/id434290957?mt=12>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/compressor/id424390742?mt=12>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1394>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1395>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1396>

  If you want to preserve your current Final Cut workflows, you can 
  still buy the full version of Final Cut Studio (which includes Final 
  Cut Pro 7, Motion 4, Soundtrack Pro 3, Color 1.5, Compressor 3.5, 
  and DVD Studio Pro 4) from Amazon.com and other outlets; an upgrade 
  from earlier versions of Final Cut is also available. Apple is no 
  longer offering those packages directly.

<http://www.amazon.com/dp/B002J1UJ4A/?tag=tidbitselectro00>
<http://www.amazon.com/dp/B002J0EOI8/?tag=tidbitselectro00>


  ----
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Recovering from Disk Corruption Without a SuperDrive
----------------------------------------------------
  by Marshall Clow <marshall@idio.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/article/12239>
  8 comments

  Last Wednesday afternoon, when I tried to empty my MacBook Pro’s 
  Trash, I got an error message. The message said that an error had 
  occurred, and gave me an error code: -36. This disturbed me greatly, 
  since, as an old-time Mac developer, I know that -36 is a serious 
  error. In old Mac (Carbon and pre-Carbon) header files, this error 
  was described as “I/O error (bummers)”, and that’s usually 
  what it means — some serious general error has occurred.

  My MacBook Pro is not quite stock; I have replaced its internal 
  SuperDrive with a 120 GB solid-state drive (SSD), leaving the 500 GB 
  internal hard drive in place. This hardware configuration would 
  affect my efforts to repair the damage. Lest you think I have a 
  truly weird setup, consider the fact that Apple currently sells two 
  Macs — the MacBook Air and the server configuration of the Mac 
  mini — that also lack an optical drive.

  Concerned for the health of my disk, I fired up Disk Utility and had 
  it check my startup disk. It found several minor issues, and one 
  that it described as an “invalid sibling link.” At this point, I 
  went into recovery mode. I shut down my MacBook Pro, and restarted 
  it in FireWire Target Disk Mode, and plugged it into the Mac Pro I 
  have at work.

  The first thing I did after connecting the MacBook Pro as a disk to 
  the Mac Pro was to run Disk Utility again and confirm that the SSD 
  was, in fact, corrupted, and that the hard disk was not. I 
  immediately started making a disk image of the SSD, and while that 
  was running, considered my situation.

  I back up my laptop to an external hard drive using Time Machine, 
  but thinking back on it, I realized that the last time I plugged in 
  the MacBook Pro was Sunday night, so my backup was about 60 hours 
  old. I had written a bunch of code Monday and Tuesday, but it was 
  all in a source control system on a server, and thus safe. Most of 
  my email is server-based (Exchange at work and Gmail for personal 
  stuff), but I still have two POP accounts that I read using Eudora, 
  and that mail is stored locally. So there was definitely mail that I 
  needed to recover. There were also a few other minor things that I 
  had done on my MacBook Pro since the last backup (new entries in 
  Address Book, and so on) that would be annoying, but not disastrous, 
  to lose.

  When the disk image was complete, I locked the resulting file, 
  mounted it, and had Disk Utility check the image. It had the same 
  “invalid sibling link” that the original disk did — no 
  surprise there. I then made another image of just the Users folder, 
  locked it, and checked it with Disk Utility — it was fine.

  At this point I could see three options:

* Repair the disk. This would be the simplest and easiest way to get 
  back to where I was when the problem cropped up, but it’s not 
  always possible.

* Restore from the Time Machine backup, and then lay recent changes 
  from the disk images on top of the restored system. This would take 
  a bit of effort, but I was pretty sure that it would work.

* Erase the disk and install a fresh version of Mac OS X. Then use 
  Migration Assistant to copy my applications, data, and configuration 
  files from the Time Machine backup, and then manually recover recent 
  files from the disk images. Again, this would likely work, but it 
  seemed like the most effort. (I considered using Migration Assistant 
  to recover everything from the backup disk image, but the fact that 
  it had corruption made me worry that something would be messed up in 
  the process.)

  At this point, it was 10 PM, so I copied the two disk images I made 
  onto the MacBook Pro’s internal hard disk and went home. Once 
  there, I started the MacBook Pro up in FireWire Target Disk Mode 
  again, and connected it to an iMac. I ran Disk Utility and checked 
  again — still bad. I told it to repair the disk. It spun for 
  several minutes, and announced that it was unable to repair the 
  disk. I said some bad words, and went to bed.

  Thursday, I had to teach an all-day class at work, so I fired up 
  DiskWarrior and started it on the disk before I left. It ran for 
  about 30 minutes before I had to leave, and was still going when I 
  came back 9 hours later. I took this as a sign that I needed to 
  update my copy of DiskWarrior from 4.2 to 4.3. The new version took 
  only about 2 hours to run, but was not able to repair the damage. I 
  googled “invalid sibling link”, and found several suggestions 
  that the command-line tool fsck_hfs would be able to fix it. I tried 
  that — no dice either. So my first option — repairing the disk 
  — wasn’t going to happen. On to restoring from Time Machine.

  The recommended way to restore from a Time Machine backup is to boot 
  from a Mac OS X Install DVD, erase the destination disk with 
  Utilities > Disk Utility, and then choose Utilities > Restore from 
  Time Machine. I couldn’t do this, having replaced my SuperDrive 
  with the SSD that was having the problem. Then I remembered that the 
  Intel-based Macs can boot from USB, so I put the contents of a Snow 
  Leopard Install DVD onto a 16 GB USB flash drive.

  Unfortunately, my MacBook Pro wouldn’t boot from the USB drive — 
  I could pick the volume if I held down the Option key at boot, but 
  it would never progress past the gray screen. Holding down v (for a 
  verbose boot) or s (to boot into single user mode) didn’t work 
  either. Flummoxed, I installed Snow Leopard onto the MacBook Pro’s 
  internal hard disk as well, but it never got past the gray screen. 
  At this point, I was starting to wonder if there was something else 
  wrong with the MacBook Pro, so I stepped back and did other stuff 
  for a couple of hours to clear my head. I could have removed the 
  SSD, reinstalled the SuperDrive, and replaced the internal hard 
  drive with the SSD such that I could have booted from DVD and 
  restored to the SSD, but I decided to hold that out as a last 
  resort.

  After lunch and some yard work, I had an “Aha!” moment. I had 
  put 10.6.0 onto the USB drive (and the internal hard drive), and my 
  2010 MacBook Pro shipped _after_ Snow Leopard came out. It’s not 
  at all unusual for Macs to refuse to boot from versions of Mac OS X 
  that predate them. I dug out my MacBook Pro’s original discs, 
  noted that they were 10.6.3, and put _that_ onto the USB drive, 
  plugged it into the USB port, and turned the Mac on. Lo! It booted! 
  (And I was very relieved that there wasn’t some more serious 
  problem.)

  Now I could proceed. I erased the SSD and checked it. Still 
  corrupted. How can that be — it was empty! After more googling, 
  and a suggestion from OWC tech support, I learned that I had to 
  repartition the drive to get it to write a fresh volume onto the 
  drive. Then I was able to restore from Time Machine, which took 2 
  hours. Once the restore had finished, I checked again with Disk 
  Utility and the disk was fine. I rebooted, logged in, and verified 
  that there were no problems in Disk Utility once again. I may be 
  paranoid, but I was also almost done.

  The final task was to find the files on my disk image that were 
  newer than my Time Machine backup. I used the find command-line 
  tool. First, I mounted the locked disk image that I made Wednesday 
  night, fired up Terminal, and typed:

      find /Volumes/SSD/Users -mtime -5

  That printed out the paths of all the files with a modification date 
  less than five days before (by this point, it was Friday night). I 
  ended up with a long list, most of which I could ignore; files in my 
  Safari cache, for example. However, the find command found all the 
  modified files in my Eudora Folder (which I copied over in its 
  entirety), iChat transcripts, a few files in my Downloads folder, 
  and a few photos in my iPhoto Library. I examined those by hand, and 
  copied them into the right places on my laptop, and all was well 
  again.

  At this point, I had been without my laptop for 48 hours, and I had 
  about 600 email messages waiting for my attention. But in case my 
  experience can be of use to others, I thought I would recap what I 
  had learned.

* Having a backup is vital, even if it is not completely up to date. I 
  wish I had plugged in my Time Machine disk more recently, but at 
  least I had a more-or-less recent backup that put a floor under what 
  I would lose. The way Lion will allow Time Machine backups to 
  continue even when the destination disk isn’t present might have 
  saved me, as would a backup program like CrashPlan that backs up 
  constantly to an offsite destination. Backups should not rely on 
  manual intervention.

* When faced with potential data loss, Don’t Panic! Instead, stop, 
  take a breath, and think about what can you do, and what data is 
  most important. For me, the important data were those last few days 
  of email and my set of highly configured applications.

* Don’t do anything that’s even potentially destructive without 
  first making a copy. If things don’t go your way, or you 
  inadvertently do something wrong, it’s a lot easier to cheerily 
  say “Oops!” if you are working on a copy instead of on the 
  “one and only.”

* Having another Mac with lots of disk space is a huge advantage. At 
  the least, you may need access to Google to search for solutions to 
  the problems you’re experiencing. FireWire Target Disk Mode is 
  also a boon, if both of your Macs have FireWire, so make sure you 
  have a FireWire cable around to use it.

* If you try something, and it doesn’t work, attempt to figure out 
  why rather than just moving on. If I hadn’t realized why my 
  attempts to install a working system on the MacBook Pro were 
  failing, I might have wasted a lot of effort moving on to rebuilding 
  the contents of the SSD from scratch.

* Having an independent way to boot your Mac is key — I’ve ordered 
  an 8 GB flash drive that I’ll put a bootable system on, and carry 
  it in my backpack from now on. Although Lion will have a recovery 
  partition, that won’t help if the drive itself goes south, whereas 
  my USB flash drive will always work. 


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://tidbits.com/article/12239#comments>
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TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 27 June 2011
------------------------------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/article/12283>

**Security Update 2011-004 (Leopard/Leopard Server)** -- While Mac OS 
  X 10.6.8 resolves numerous security vulnerabilities for Snow Leopard 
  users, those still using Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard should download and 
  install Security Update 2011-004. The most important fix is to 
  AirPort, and it prevents an attacker on the same Wi-Fi network from 
  causing your Mac to reboot. Other affected aspects of Mac OS X 
  include ColorSync, CoreGraphics, ImageIO, MySQL, patch, Samba, 
  servermgrd, and Subversion. Separate standalone updates are 
  available for Leopard and Leopard Server, though it’s still easiest
  to let Software Update do its thing. (Free; 256.4 MB, 499.8 MB)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT4723>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1404>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1405>

  Read/post comments about Security Update 2011-004 (Leopard/Leopard 
  Server).

<http://tidbits.com/article/12279#comments>


**ClamXav 2.2** -- Mark Allan has released version 2.2 of the 
  malware-protection ClamXav app based on the open source ClamAV 
  antivirus engine. According to the release notes, ClamXav 2.2 
  introduces support for OS X Lion and fixes miscellaneous unspecified 
  bugs. The underlying ClamAV virus-detection engine has also been 
  upgraded to version 0.97.1, and the author has added a direct link 
  to the software’s online documentation, along with adding 
  Command-click on Ignore Warning as a better way to dismiss multiple 
  warnings. ClamXav is free, though donations are requested. 
  (Free, 13 MB)

<http://www.clamxav.com/>
<http://www.clamav.net/lang/en/>
<http://www.clamxav.com/download.php>

  Read/post comments about ClamXav 2.2.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12278#comments>


**1Password 3.6** -- AgileBits has introduced 1Password 3.6, a 
  significant update to its password- and identity-management 
  software. According to the company’s blog post, this update adds a 
  few important features — notably, support for the just-released 
  Firefox 5 and the upcoming OS X Lion and Safari 5.1. 1Password is 
  now also compatible with the site-specific browser Fluid, a program 
  that lets users create instances of the browser to use with specific 
  Web-based apps like Gmail. Alas, some functionality is also going 
  the way of the dodo, as AgileBits has dropped support for Mac OS X 
  10.5 Leopard and PowerPC-based Macs in this release. Full release 
  notes are also available. ($39.99 new, free update, 17.2 MB)

<http://agilebits.com/products/1Password>
<http://blog.agilebits.com/2011/06/1password-3-6-shakes-hands-with-firefox-5-lion-and-fluid/>
<http://fluidapp.com/>
<http://agilebits.com/products/1Password/versions#v31043>

  Read/post comments about 1Password 3.6.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12277#comments>


**Flash Player 10.3.181.26** -- Adobe recently added automatic update 
  notifications to Flash Player, via a System Preferences pane, and 
  it’s none too soon, since the critical vulnerability fixed by 
  Flash Player 10.3.181.26 is, according to the non-profit group 
  Shadowserver, being exploited in the wild on a fairly large scale. 
  In other words, you really want to update to the latest Flash Player 
  right away, and use the automatic update notification to stay up to 
  date. If you’re using a PowerPC-based Mac that can’t run the 
  latest Intel-only Flash Player version, it’s probably best to rely 
  on ClickToFlash and load Flash elements only on select sites that 
  you absolutely trust.

<http://www.adobe.com/support/security/bulletins/apsb11-18.html>
<http://www.shadowserver.org/wiki/pmwiki.php/Calendar/20110617>
<http://clicktoflash.com/>

  If you’re using a version of Flash prior to 10.3.181.14, when 
  automatic notifications were first added, you can determine what 
  version of Flash Player you do have by visiting the Adobe Flash 
  Player page. Then download the latest version from the Adobe Flash 
  Player Download page. (Free, 6.08 MB)

<http://www.adobe.com/software/flash/about/>
<http://get.adobe.com/flashplayer/>

  Read/post comments about Flash Player 10.3.181.26.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12275#comments>


**PDFpen and PDFpenPro 5.4** -- Only a month after the last update, 
  Smile has released new versions of PDFpen and PDFpenPro, their PDF 
  manipulation software. Version 5.4 adds the capability to extract 
  and edit files from PDF portfolios (collections of PDF files bundled 
  together), fixes post-OCR selection in certain situations, and 
  provides other minor fixes and changes. Also notable in PDFpenPro 
  only is the significantly improved interface for creating tables of 
  contents (what Acrobat calls bookmarks; the navigational aids that 
  appear in Preview’s sidebar). New commands enable the creation of 
  “child” and “aunt” entries, and keyboard shortcuts help 
  users make entries much more quickly. ($59.95/$99.95 new, free 
  update, 41.2 MB)

<http://smilesoftware.com/PDFpen/>
<http://smilesoftware.com/PDFpenPro/>

  Read/post comments about PDFpen and PDFpenPro 5.4.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12272#comments>


**Microsoft Office 2011 14.1.2, 2008 12.3.0, and 2004 11.6.4** -- New 
  from Microsoft are updates to the last three versions of its 
  flagship Office for Mac suite. According to the company, the three 
  releases, labeled 14.1.2 for Office 2011, 12.3.0 for Office 2008, 
  and 11.6.4 for Office 2004, are all aimed at security, addressing 
  eight important vulnerabilities focused on specially crafted Excel 
  files that an attacker could use to overwrite the contents of a 
  computer’s memory with malicious code. Office for Mac 2011 14.1.2 
  also fixes several bugs in Outlook and Word. (Free updates; 109 MB, 
  333 MB, 13 MB)

<http://www.microsoft.com/mac/downloads?pid=Mactopia_Office2011&fid=3C58555C-1EBA-42FE-A10F-B30AF9031E44#viewer>
<http://www.microsoft.com/mac/downloads?pid=Mactopia_Office2008&fid=9E2D348B-C753-4EAB-838C-370CD5AF5E14#viewer>
<http://www.microsoft.com/mac/downloads?pid=Mactopia_Office2004&fid=D12D0868-4F28-4C0A-AB61-338878064B70#viewer>
<http://www.microsoft.com/technet/security/bulletin/ms11-045.mspx>
<http://support.microsoft.com/kb/2555784>

  Read/post comments about Microsoft Office 2011 14.1.2, 2008 12.3.0,
  and 2004 11.6.4.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12269#comments>


**Acrobat Pro 10.1, 9.4.5, and 8.3** -- Adobe has released a trio of 
  updates for Acrobat Pro, its PDF creation and manipulation software. 
  The three updates, designed for versions 8, 9, and 10 of the app, 
  bring security improvements, bug fixes, and a few feature 
  improvements — see Adobe’s release notes for details. Acrobat X 
  Pro 10.1 has feature improvements surrounding security, browser 
  support, digital signatures, and Flash. For owners of Acrobat Pro 9, 
  the 9.4.5 update is limited to security and stability enhancements, 
  as is version 8.3 for users of the software’s previous 
  incarnation. ($449 new; free updates; 134 MB, 91.7 MB, 29.81 MB)

<http://www.adobe.com/products/acrobatpro.html>
<http://kb2.adobe.com/cps/837/cpsid_83708.html>
<http://www.adobe.com/support/downloads/detail.jsp?ftpID=5136>
<http://www.adobe.com/support/downloads/detail.jsp?ftpID=5119>
<http://www.adobe.com/support/downloads/detail.jsp?ftpID=5125>

  Read/post comments about Acrobat Pro 10.1, 9.4.5, and 8.3.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12268#comments>


**Evernote 2.2.1** -- Evernote has introduced version 2.2.1 of its 
  eponymous note-taking software. Despite the minor version bump, the 
  update has several major changes, starting with the capability to 
  create links to any note that can be shared with others or embedded 
  in other notes. A new “snippet view,” combined with improved 
  history navigation features, gives users a better at-a-glance 
  overview of their note taking. And finally, the latest release of 
  Evernote comes with better integration with VoiceOver and several 
  bug fixes. (Free from Evernote’s site or the Mac App Store, 19.2 MB) 

<http://evernote.com/>
<http://blog.evernote.com/2011/06/15/big-evernote-desktop-update-windows-and-mac-get-note-links-note-copying-and-much-more/>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/evernote/id406056744?mt=12>

  Read/post comments about Evernote 2.2.1.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12267#comments>


**Audio Hijack Pro 2.9.12** -- Rogue Amoeba has released Audio Hijack 
  Pro 2.9.12, a fairly significant update to the audio recording 
  program. According to the release notes, the new version no longer 
  requires relaunching Safari in 32-bit mode to capture audio as long 
  as Instant On is installed, can capture audio from Google Chrome and 
  Firefox with no additional setup, and can record to the WAV audio 
  format. A number of minor bugs have also been fixed, and preliminary 
  support for Mac OS X 10.7 Lion has been added; currently the app 
  requires Mac OS X 10.6.0 or later. ($32 new, free update, 6.2 MB)

<http://www.rogueamoeba.com/audiohijackpro/>
<http://www.rogueamoeba.com/audiohijackpro/releasenotes.php>

  Read/post comments about Audio Hijack Pro 2.9.12.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12266#comments>




ExtraBITS for 27 June 2011
--------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/article/12282>

  Among much else, we spent last week reading about the New York 
  Public Library’s digital initiatives, a possibly revolutionary new 
  camera, ways of extending iPhone battery life, Verizon Wireless’s 
  move to tiered data plans, and larger Time Capsules.


**The Atlantic on What Big Media Can Learn from the NYPL** -- Alexis 
  Madrigal has written a fascinating article for The Atlantic about 
  how the New York Public Library is not only not floundering in this 
  digital age, but is flourishing in ways that the beleaguered 
  newspaper, magazine, and television industries would do well to 
  examine.

<http://www.theatlantic.com/technology/print/2011/06/what-big-media-can-learn-from-the-new-york-public-library/240565/>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/12254#comments>


**Lytro Promises to Revolutionize Photography** -- By recording and 
  processing the direction of light rays entering its sensor, the 
  forthcoming Lytro camera promises to provide previously impossible 
  features, such as the capability to focus on any part of a photo, at 
  any time, or even bring an entire photo into focus at once. The 
  camera isn’t slated for release until later in 2011, but you can 
  play with refocusing photos and read more about the technology on 
  Lytro’s site now (the picture gallery requires Flash on a Mac, but 
  does work in iOS via HTML5).

<http://www.lytro.com/picture_gallery>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/12253#comments>


**Pogue’s Tips for Extending iPhone Battery Life** -- This blog post 
  from David Pogue of the New York Times offers some useful tips for 
  how to extend iPhone battery life. Nothing truly surprising, but 
  it’s a great reminder to check on push, location, and notification 
  settings to make sure you’re not allowing apps to waste battery 
  life working unnecessarily in the background.

<http://pogue.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/05/23/four-ways-to-make-your-battery-last-longer/>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/12254#comments>


**Verizon Wireless Switches to Tiered Plans in July** -- Verizon 
  Wireless told AllThingsD that the current unlimited mobile broadband 
  plan for iPhone subscribers would be replaced with tiered offerings. 
  These would affect new subscribers and those changing their plans. 
  Verizon didn’t confirm a report that plans would range from $30 
  per month for 2 GB of data to $80 per month for 10 GB, similar to 
  their iPad 2 data offerings.

<http://allthingsd.com/20110620/if-you-want-that-verizon-unlimited-data-plan-you-really-need-to-hurry/>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/12271#comments>


**Time Capsule Capacity Boosted to 3 TB** -- Apple has made a minor 
  change to its Time Capsule base station and backup system. Apple 
  formerly offered 1 and 2 TB models, and the new models bump the Time 
  Capsule’s storage to 2 TB ($299) and 3 TB ($499).

<http://www.macworld.com/article/160646/2011/06/new_time_capsule.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/12270#comments>




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