TidBITS#1091/29-Aug-2011
========================
  Issue link: <http://tidbits.com/issue/1091>


  The big news this week is of course Steve Jobs’s resignation from the
  CEO position at Apple. We cover all the basics, and go beyond them
  with two additional articles. First, Jeff Carlson has composed The
  Steve Jobs Resignation FAQ, with short answers to questions that those
  not involved with Apple might ask after seeing clueless mainstream
  coverage. Second, as the Web has flooded with remembrances, tributes,
  and speculations evoked by Jobs’s announcement, we’ve compiled a list
  of those that caught our attention. As we keep learning more about Mac
  OS X 10.7 Lion, we’re continuing to share our discoveries — Adam
  explains how to fax in Lion, and Glenn Fleishman looks at two
  tremendously useful new features in Lion’s Screen Sharing. In other
  news, we’re pleased to publish Glenn’s “Take Control of Your 802.11n
  AirPort Network, Second Edition,” which is an essential resource for
  anyone working with wireless networking on the Mac. We also welcome a
  new sponsor — the video tutorial company Noteboom Productions — and
  announce the winners of last week’s DealBITS drawing for the iTunes
  library syncing tool SuperSync (along with a 20-percent-discount
  offer). Notable software releases this week include DragThing 5.9.7,
  iTunes 10.4.1, Evernote 3.0, Mellel 2.9, and Typinator 4.5.

Articles
    Steve Jobs Resigns as Apple CEO
    The Steve Jobs Resignation FAQ
    Steve Jobs Resigns: Reactions and Remembrances
    Master Your Wi-Fi Network with Updated Take Control Book
    Noteboom Productions Sponsoring TidBITS
    DealBITS Discount: Save 20% on SuperSync 4.1
    How to Fax in Lion
    Two Important Screen Sharing Changes in Lion
    TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 29 August 2011


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Steve Jobs Resigns as Apple CEO
-------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12444>
  3 comments

  We don’t know Steve Jobs, any of us. The closest most of us can 
  claim is mere proximity: we have on several occasions found 
  ourselves a few feet away from him at an Apple press event or in an 
  Apple Store, and Adam and Tonya met him briefly in 1988 when he cut 
  the ribbon on the first public room of NeXT machines at Cornell 
  University. But we’ll feel his last departure from Apple as much 
  as any acquaintance can, having spent much of our collective adult 
  lives using computers and software guided largely by his vision, and 
  writing about the company he founded and its iconic products.

  Last week, Apple released a brief statement that Jobs had sent to 
  Apple’s board of directors indicating his resignation as CEO. 
  Former Chief Operating Officer Tim Cook was immediately appointed as 
  head of the firm, continuing the role he has held since Jobs 
  announced his most recent hiatus from the CEO position (see “Steve 
  Jobs to Take Medical Leave of Absence,” 17 January 2011). Jobs 
  will assume a new role as chairman of Apple’s board of directors.

<https://www.apple.com/pr/library/2011/08/24Letter-from-Steve-Jobs.html>
<https://www.apple.com/pr/library/2011/08/24Steve-Jobs-Resigns-as-CEO-of-Apple.html>
<http://tidbits.com/article/11896>

  Cook also acted as interim CEO during previous medical absences by 
  Jobs, and was in charge during several key product introductions and 
  development cycles. By all accounts, Cook has the same attention to 
  detail from top to bottom, and he is supported by an experienced 
  Apple executive team.

<http://www.apple.com/pr/bios/>

  In the letter, addressed to the “Apple Board of Directors and the 
  Apple Community,” Jobs wrote, “I have always said if there ever 
  came a day when I could no longer meet my duties and expectations as 
  Apple’s CEO, I would be the first to let you know. Unfortunately, 
  that day has come.”

  The letter suggests what many have feared for some time: that 
  Jobs’s health has been declining, and that despite a liver 
  transplant in 2009 (see “Apple: Jobs Back on the Job,” 30 June 
  2009), the toll taken on his body by pancreatic cancer and the 
  surgery to remove it is catching up with him. Jobs gave no word, and 
  we are likely to receive none, whether he is in his last days, or 
  simply cannot sustain the kind of mental and physical effort 
  necessary to run the most valuable company in the world.

<http://tidbits.com/article/10387>

  Jobs worked in a subtle slap at analysts and pundits who have 
  criticized Apple for not having made public the plan for who would 
  replace him as CEO: “I strongly recommend that we execute our 
  succession plan and name Tim Cook as CEO of Apple.” That criticism 
  came despite the fact that Cook has remained at Apple, when he could 
  undoubtedly have taken a CEO job at any of numerous other technology 
  companies. Apple also awarded Tim Cook 1,000,000 shares of stock, 
  contingent on him remaining with Apple through 2021.

<http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/320193/000118143111047179/rrd320651.htm>

  We won’t recapitulate the history of Apple and Jobs’s journey 
  into the wilderness and back here. You can find a thousand accounts 
  of that elsewhere, and we’re collecting some of the more 
  interesting stories that have come out after the announcement in 
  “Steve Jobs Resigns: Reactions and Remembrances” (25 August 
  2011). But on a personal note, we at TidBITS have seen our lives 
  shaped by Apple’s products, in our choice of work and play, and in 
  how we view the world. 

<http://tidbits.com/article/12446>

  Apple will be a different company without Jobs at the day-to-day 
  helm, in whatever role the coming days bring for him and the firm. 
  It won’t be a worse company, but it will be different. Whatever 
  the cause, and whatever state he is in, we don’t need to know. We 
  only wish him and his family the best.


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The Steve Jobs Resignation FAQ
------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12447>
  3 comments

  When important Apple news bubbles up to the mainstream media, it’s 
  often distorted — or flat-out incorrect — by the time it pops 
  out at the surface. Steve Jobs’s resignation from Apple made the 
  front pages of major news outlets, and the amount of ill-informed 
  “analysis” is piling up.

  So here’s an overview of the facts, broken down into questions and 
  answers, to make it easy to answer a friend, family member, 
  coworker, or anyone else who doesn’t follow Apple and has only 
  heard quick news snippets. Feel free to send them this article by 
  clicking the Email button if you’re reading on our Web site, or by 
  copying this link and pasting it into your favorite email program: 
  http://tidbits.com/article/12447


**Question: Is Jobs no longer involved at Apple?**

  Answer: Although he has stepped down as CEO, Jobs was elected by 
  Apple’s board of directors to be Chairman of the Board. Apple has 
  said that he will continue to contribute to Apple’s products and 
  directions, no doubt on his own schedule.

<http://www.apple.com/pr/library/2011/08/24Steve-Jobs-Resigns-as-CEO-of-Apple.html>


**Q: Who is replacing Jobs? Is he any good?**

  A: Apple’s board of directors announced that, following its 
  succession plan, Jobs will be replaced by Tim Cook, previously 
  Apple’s chief operating officer. Cook has worked at Apple for 13 
  years, and each time Jobs has taken a medical leave of absence, Cook 
  has ably taken over Apple’s reins. Apple thinks highly enough of 
  Cook to give him 1,000,000 shares of Apple stock, contingent on him 
  remaining at Apple through 2021.

<http://www.apple.com/pr/bios/tim-cook.html>
<http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/320193/000118143111047179/rrd320651.htm>


**Q: Does this mean the iPhone 5/iPad 3/Mac Pro will be delayed?**

  A: No. Apple has been functioning without Jobs as the active CEO 
  since January 2011, and they’ve done quite well, both in terms of 
  releasing products and in continued stellar financial results. (See 
  “Apple Reports Q3 2011 Record Financial Results ,” 19 July 
  2011.) 

<http://tidbits.com/article/12351>


**Q: What about future products? Can anyone replace Jobs’s vision?**

  A: No one can be the “next Steve Jobs,” and neither Jobs nor 
  Apple seems interested in finding one. Instead, new CEO Tim Cook and 
  the rest of the executive team will guide Apple according to their 
  own strengths. As John Gruber so aptly put it, “Jobs’s greatest 
  creation isn’t any Apple product. It is Apple itself.”

<http://daringfireball.net/2011/08/resigned>


**Q: Is Steve Jobs’s health suddenly dire?**

  A: We don’t know, and frankly, extensive speculation is unseemly. 
  It’s possible that Jobs is pulling back to focus on other things, 
  or that his health has gotten worse. Jobs has received treatment for 
  pancreatic cancer and undergone a liver transplant, and he stepped 
  away from active duty as CEO in January 2011 due to health reasons. 
  But he also appeared on stage to introduce the iPad 2 in March 2011 
  and at Apple’s Worldwide Developer Conference in June 2011.

  According to an article by Walt Mossberg in the Wall Street Journal, 
  “To be very clear, Jobs, while seriously ill, is very much alive. 
  Extremely well-informed sources at Apple say he intends to remain 
  involved in developing major future products and strategy and 
  intends to be an active chairman of the board… His health is 
  reported to be up and down, and even an active chairman isn’t the 
  same as a CEO.”

<http://allthingsd.com/20110824/jobs-leave-a-legacy-of-changed-industries/>


**Q: Is this The End of Apple as We Know It?**

  A: Certainly not. The executives that Jobs has surrounded himself 
  with have been with the company for many years and have been 
  executing Apple’s vision both while Jobs has been the day-to-day 
  CEO and during his leaves of absence.

  Also, if you look at Apple’s recent history of products, you’ll 
  see that _years_ of groundwork were laid to reach the point we’re 
  at now. Consider the iPad. Apple began work on the iPad well before 
  2007; the multi-touch interface and a few initial apps showed 
  promise, but the company chose to take that work and develop the 
  iPhone instead. The lessons learned from the iPhone, and the 
  foundation for creating and running the App Store, led to the iPad 
  in 2010. Compare that to companies like HP and RIM, who have 
  unsuccessfully rushed tablets to market since the iPad was 
  introduced.

  We’re certain Apple has a secret roadmap that extends a few years 
  into the future. And the company has been actively working to 
  sustain its unique corporate ethos. In 2009, former Dean of the Yale 
  School of Management Joel Podolny joined Apple to head Apple 
  University, which, according to an extensive feature in Fortune 
  magazine is an internal program that documents and teaches how the 
  company functions and makes important decisions.

<http://tech.fortune.cnn.com/2011/08/25/how-apple-works-inside-the-worlds-biggest-startup/>

  Of course it’s possible, even likely, that Apple will change over 
  the years, but that’s to be expected. The Apple of today is 
  significantly different from the Apple of 1985, when Jobs last left 
  Apple, the Apple of 1996 when he returned to Apple, and even the 
  Apple of 2006, before the iPhone was released. But change is one of 
  the things Apple has done best.

  As ever, we wish Jobs the best possible health, and if you have any 
  other questions, please ask them in the comments and we’ll address 
  them as is feasible. 


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Steve Jobs Resigns: Reactions and Remembrances
----------------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12446>

  Even when you’ve been watching the darkening sky assiduously, the 
  lightning bolt still comes as a shock. So it was last Wednesday when 
  Steven P. Jobs, CEO of Apple, submitted his resignation to Apple’s 
  board of directors (see “Steve Jobs Resigns as Apple CEO,” 24 
  August 2011). Although we all knew it was coming — that it had to 
  come, sooner or later, especially given Jobs’s medical leave of 
  absence from Apple this year — it was still unexpected.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12444>

  But, as the technology community always does, after a few moments of 
  silence and deep breaths, it began to flood the Web with 
  remembrances, tributes, and speculations evoked by the announcement. 
  Here are just a few of the articles and posts that have caught our 
  attention.

  Vic Gundotra, a senior vice-president of engineering at Google who 
  worked closely with Apple on mobile applications a few years ago, 
  offered his “Icon Ambulance” memory of Jobs’s attention to 
  detail, recounting the Sunday that Steve called him to discuss a 
  small matter of a yellow gradient in a logo that would appear on the 
  new iPhone.

<https://plus.google.com/107117483540235115863/posts/gcSStkKxXTw>

  David Cairns remembers his early love of Apple technology, and how 
  it led to both a job and a polite encounter that he humorously 
  estimates may have cost Apple a lot of money.

<http://tumblr.davidcairns.org/post/9359368094/so-steve-jobs-has-left-his-role-as-apples-ceo>

  Princeton student Allen Paltrow relates his close encounter of the 
  Jobsian kind, and provides the pictures to prove it.

<http://allenpaltrow.tumblr.com/post/9375814057/my-experience-with-jobs-and-apple>

  Normally a politically oriented online publication, Talking Points 
  Memo took a break from politics to collect some of the best tweets 
  about Jobs’s resignation.

<http://idealab.talkingpointsmemo.com/2011/08/steve-jobs-resigns-the-top-tweets.php>

  In 1999, after it was clear that Jobs’s return to Apple had 
  returned the company to profitability, the inimitable David Pogue, 
  now of the New York Times, crafted for Macworld a takeoff on the 
  classic poem “Casey at the Bat” — “Steven Saves the Mac” 
  is well worth the read.

<http://www.macworld.com/article/15358/1999/10/desktopcritic.html>

  The New York Times offers a fascinating interactive chart of the 
  patents assigned to Jobs, including one for the ornamental design of 
  the famous glass staircases in some Apple retail stores.

<http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2011/08/24/technology/steve-jobs-patents.html>

  Also by way of the New York Times, Steven Heller collects the 
  thoughts of ten designers on Jobs’s contributions to the design 
  community.

<http://tmagazine.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/08/25/the-job-jobs-did/>

  For those who enjoy slideshows, there’s a short pictorial 
  retrospective at Macworld of “Apple’s Greatest Hits under Steve 
  Jobs.”

<http://www.macworld.com/article/161984/2011/08/apples_greatest_hits_under_steve_jobs.html>

  Long-time friend of TidBITS, Macworld’s Lex Friedman, never met 
  Jobs, but that doesn’t mean that Jobs didn’t change his life for 
  the better, as he explains in his essay, “Steve Jobs’s impact 
  goes beyond technology.”

<http://www.macworld.com/article/161970/2011/08/steve_jobs_impact.html>

  Last week, of course, was not the first time that Jobs left Apple, 
  as Andy Hertzfeld, an early Apple employee, recounts in this article 
  from Folklore.org.

<http://folklore.org/StoryView.py?project=Macintosh&story=The_End_Of_An_Era.txt>

  It’s also interesting to look back at Jobs’s own words — in 
  his 2005 commencement address at Stanford University — about his 
  beginnings, how he was fired from Apple, and what it was like being 
  diagnosed with pancreatic cancer.

<http://news.stanford.edu/news/2005/june15/jobs-061505.html>

  Speaking of Jobs’s own words, All Things D has compiled a set of 
  videos of Jobs’s appearances at various All Things Digital 
  conferences, which include a few amusing-in-retrospect statements 
  such as one from a 2003 appearance in which he said, “We looked at 
  the tablet, and we think it’s gonna fail.” Did Jobs really 
  believe that, or was it a case of misdirection?

<http://allthingsd.com/20110826/steve-jobs-through-the-years-highlights-from-the-d-conference/>

  Meanwhile, Jobs’s hand-picked successor to the CEO post, Tim Cook, 
  has addressed the Apple staff with his thoughts on Apple’s future.

<http://arstechnica.com/apple/news/2011/08/tim-cook-e-mail-to-apple-employees-apple-is-not-going-to-change.ars>

  Finally, although we’ve never met Tim Cook, Michael Grothaus of 
  TUAW (The Unofficial Apple Weblog) provides his personal 
  remembrances of Apple’s _new_ CEO to illustrate why he isn’t 
  worried about Apple’s future.

<http://www.tuaw.com/2011/08/25/tim-cook-my-first-person-impression-of-apples-new-ceo/>

  As for us? We honor Steve Jobs, respect him for the work he has 
  done, and offer him our best wishes for good health and a long 
  tenure in his new role as chairman of Apple’s board of directors. 


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Master Your Wi-Fi Network with Updated Take Control Book
--------------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12445>

  It has been a dozen years since Apple debuted Wi-Fi networking with 
  its AirPort-equipped iBook, and during that time Glenn Fleishman, 
  TidBITS editor and Take Control author, has covered more of the 
  Wi-Fi beat than nearly anyone else. But Glenn goes deeper than the 
  news, and he is widely acknowledged to be among the world’s 
  foremost experts on consumer-level Wi-Fi networking, having 
  distilled his expertise into various Take Control books that have 
  helped many thousands of readers over the years. 

  Glenn has now completed the second edition of his best-selling 
  title, “Take Control of Your 802.11n AirPort Network,” bringing 
  it up to date with the most current information available about 
  Apple’s Wi-Fi networking gear and how to use it in current 
  operating systems. The 234-page book is available now for $20.

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/airport-n?pt=TB1091>

  In “Take Control of Your 802.11n AirPort Network, Second 
  Edition”, Glenn provides in-depth advice for setting up Apple’s 
  latest 802.11n Wi-Fi devices, including the AirPort Express, AirPort 
  Extreme, and Time Capsule, and he describes the latest Wi-Fi 
  features in Mac OS X 10.7 Lion — though he doesn’t forget the 
  networking needs of those running 10.6 Snow Leopard and 10.5 
  Leopard. 

  Along with giving readers a conceptual boost up the Wi-Fi spectrum, 
  Glenn explains how to handle AirPort-related tasks such as:

* Planning and configuring a multi-base station network 
* Replacing an old base station with a new model
* Sharing USB disks and printers
* Getting started with a Time Capsule and Time Machine backups
* Making a Time Capsule archive/offsite backup
* Erasing a Time Capsule drive
* Setting your band and channel
* Running a guest network 
* Configuring complex Internet addressing
* Connecting from Mac and Windows clients
* Securing your wireless network
* Sending media to a 2nd-generation Apple TV or AirPort Express
* Using AirPlay to stream media from one device to another
* Finding out which Macs work with Lion’s AirDrop
* Setting up wireless bridging
* Turning a Mac into an access point with software base station 
* Using ad hoc wireless networking
* Solving problems with interference, conflicting channels, and more
* Understanding what your base station’s light is trying to tell you

  Networking can often be among the most puzzling and confusing 
  aspects of modern computing, but Glenn’s clear, friendly, and 
  informative book dispels many Wi-Fi mysteries. Whether you have just 
  one computer and a single AirPort base station, or multiple devices 
  and access points scattered around your home or workplace, “Take 
  Control of Your 802.11n AirPort Network, Second Edition” can make 
  you a master of the digital airwaves. 


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Noteboom Productions Sponsoring TidBITS
---------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12455>

  We’re pleased to welcome as our latest long-term TidBITS sponsor a 
  small company you may not have heard of before — Noteboom 
  Productions. Founded by Dan Wassink, Noteboom produces video 
  tutorials for Mac and iPad apps, sold exclusively through the Mac 
  App Store and iOS App Store.

<http://www.noteboomproductions.com/tb>

  Dan Wassink, who has been reading TidBITS for years, told me that he 
  came up with the idea for his video tutorials while working as an 
  Apple Genius; he found himself answering the same questions, over 
  and over again. The same thing happened when he was helping friends 
  and family, as we’ve all done.

  Dan’s teaching experience comes through in the videos I’ve 
  watched — you really get the feeling that he’s sitting next to 
  you, telling you about the software in question. The audio and video 
  quality of the tutorials is high, but Dan very much comes off as a 
  guy who’s interested in explaining things to you, rather than a 
  slick professional working from a carefully crafted script. On the 
  content side, Noteboom’s tutorials are aimed at beginners; 
  they’re designed to get new users up and running, not to teach 
  experienced users new tricks. Those I’ve watched have been 
  extremely solid, presenting good advice clearly and carefully. 
  That’s borne out in their App Store reviews, over 80 percent of 
  which are 4 or 5 stars (and most of those are 5 star reviews).

  The user experience is good — each tutorial is a standalone Mac or 
  iPad app, with a list of 20 to 30 topics in a left-hand sidebar and 
  the rest of the window or screen devoted to the video. Each topic 
  plays a 2 to 5 minute video, and while you certainly can move 
  through them sequentially, nothing prevents you from jumping around 
  as well. The iPad app is of course always full-screen; the Mac app 
  can run in a window or be zoomed to full screen.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-08/Tutor-for-Keynote.png>

  Overall, I was impressed by Noteboom’s “Tutor for” products, 
  and Dan is hard at work adding more titles to the current 
  collection, which covers common apps like Keynote, iPhoto, iMovie, 
  iWeb, and Bento, with some general titles explaining Lion, Snow 
  Leopard, and the iPad. If you’re looking to get started with an 
  app that Noteboom covers, or you know someone who is, their video 
  tutorials are well worth a look. That’s especially true given how 
  inexpensive they are, with prices ranging from $1.99 to $4.99.

  Thanks to Noteboom Productions for their support of TidBITS and the 
  Apple community! 


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DealBITS Discount: Save 20% on SuperSync 4.1
--------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12454>

  Congratulations to Gregory C. Taylor at earthlink.net, Anita 
  Vleugels at masteluin.be, Kadrin Kavlakov at yahoo.com, Lyen Huang 
  at gmail.com, Nat Stevens at cox.net, and Pedro Gelabert at 
  sbcglobal.net, whose entries were chosen randomly in the last 
  DealBITS drawing and who each received a copy of SuperSync 4.1, 
  worth $35. But don’t fret if you didn’t win, since SuperSync is 
  offering a 20-percent-off discount to all TidBITS readers through 14 
  September 2011. To take advantage of this offer, which drops the $35 
  list price to $28, use coupon code “superbits” when ordering. 
  Thanks to the 693 people who entered this DealBITS drawing, and we 
  hope you’ll continue to participate in the future!

<http://tidbits.com/article/12397>
<http://supersync.com/>


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How to Fax in Lion
------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12431>
  16 comments

  Faxing has been around in one form or another since the mid-1800s, 
  and while there’s no question that it’s disappearing from many 
  businesses around the world, there are still industries that rely 
  heavily on faxed documents, notably real estate and construction, 
  where paper trails of signed documents remain important. Standalone 
  fax machines aren’t going away any time soon, it’s relatively 
  easy to find multifunction print/scan/fax devices, and Internet 
  faxing has become commonplace, but it has become more difficult to 
  fax using a modem attached to your telephone line.

<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fax#Wire_transmission>

  That’s especially true for users of Mac OS X 10.7 Lion, which 
  deprecates faxing in several ways. First, the Print & Fax preference 
  pane from 10.6 Snow Leopard is now called Print & Scan, but when you 
  click the + button to add a device, you can still add a fax modem. 
  Second, the Apple USB Modem (discontinued in 2009) won’t work in 
  Lion because it relies on 32-bit drivers that don’t work (and thus 
  aren’t included) in the 64-bit Lion. 

  Though I haven’t tested this, you can supposedly start Lion in 
  32-bit mode with these instructions for 10.6 Snow Leopard, and user 
  moonchilddave reported in the MacRumors forum that the old 32-bit 
  drivers for the modem can be copied over from Snow Leopard to Lion. 
  Others had trouble with his procedure, but if you have an Apple USB 
  Modem that you need for a very occasional fax, it’s worth a try 
  moving the drivers over and restarting in 32-bit mode.

<http://support.apple.com/kb/ht3773>
<http://forums.macrumors.com/showthread.php?t=1193996>

  A better solution that doesn’t require restarting or fussing with 
  old kernel extensions is simply to buy a new USB modem that does 
  work in Lion. Reader James Cutler has confirmed for us that the US 
  Robotics USR5637 modem works perfectly in Lion (you can download 
  possibly unnecessary firmware and modem script updates from the US 
  Robotics Web site, which previously reported this model as being 
  “Lion 10.7 Ready”). In a thread in the Apple Support 
  Communities, the Zoom 3095 modem is also reported to function under 
  Lion. Both of these modems cost about $45.

<http://www.amazon.com/dp/B0013FDLM0/?tag=tidbitselectro00>
<http://www.usr.com/support/product-template.asp?prod=5637>
<https://discussions.apple.com/thread/3164614>
<http://www.amazon.com/dp/B001FCIOSW/?tag=tidbitselectro00>

  These changes in Lion don’t affect us, since we rely on a 
  now-discontinued Epson AcuLaser CX11NF multifunction printer for 
  outgoing faxes of physical documents, and the MaxEmail Internet fax 
  service for incoming faxes, which appears to be one of the cheapest 
  around at $24 per year (for the “Lite Non-Local” fax-only plan). 
  But your needs may vary, and if that includes sending and receiving 
  faxes from your Mac running Lion, a compatible modem may be your 
  best option.

<http://www.epson.com/cgi-bin/Store/consumer/consDetail.jsp?oid=58311371>
<http://www.maxemail.com/>

  I’ve received several queries about alternatives to Smile’s 
  PageSender, which is full-featured fax software that provides 
  capabilities well beyond just printing to fax in Mac OS X’s Print 
  dialog. Smile tells me that they will continue to maintain 
  PageSender for use with Snow Leopard, but have no plans to update it 
  for Lion. As far as I’ve been able to discover, there is no 
  comparable Lion-compatible fax software for individuals still in 
  development; for groups that need a fax server, Soft Solutions has a 
  beta of 4-Sight Fax Server that claims to be compatible with Lion. 
  However, the cheapest package of 4-Sight Fax costs $495, so if you 
  really don’t need a group fax solution, you might find it easier 
  to set up an old Mac mini with Snow Leopard and PageSender.

<http://www.smilesoftware.com/PageSender/>
<http://www.4sightfax.com/>


  ----
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Two Important Screen Sharing Changes in Lion
--------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12443>
  2 comments

  Mac OS X 10.7 Lion’s marquee features hide some of the fine subtle 
  changes to existing capabilities. A good case in point is Screen 
  Sharing, the software and underlying service used to provide remote 
  control and viewing of other computers on your local network or out 
  on the Internet. One Lion-wide feature and one improvement in the 
  Screen Sharing application make controlling remote Macs far more 
  fluid.

<https://www.apple.com/macosx/whats-new/features.html#screensharing>


**Full-Screen Mode Puts a Remote Mac in a Desktop Space** -- Lion 
  makes available to apps a new full-screen mode, which makes a Mac 
  app feel a bit like using an iPad, since the program fills the 
  screen, hiding both the otherwise omnipresent menu bar and the Dock. 
  Most of Apple’s own apps offer full-screen mode already, and 
  we’re gradually seeing third-party programs updated for 
  full-screen mode as well. There’s a big difference between “fill 
  the screen” and full-screen mode, and software needs to be revised 
  to work effectively in a menu-free, full-screen interface.

  Screen Sharing uses full-screen mode in association with the 
  multiple-desktop feature in Mission Control, previously known as 
  Spaces. When you click the full-screen button in the upper right 
  corner of the Screen Sharing app, it moves into a new desktop space, 
  devoting the entire view to the remote Mac. Subsequent 
  screen-sharing sessions open on your main desktop initially, but you 
  can click the full-screen button to put them in their own desktop 
  spaces as well.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-08/lion-ss-lineup.png>

  For a remote screen, full-screen mode makes perfect sense: you want 
  the remote system to fill the screen and let you act like you’re 
  sitting in front of that other computer. Better yet, using Mission 
  Control to swap screens becomes a natural way to move among 
  desktops. You can switch back and forth between desktop spaces with 
  Control-left and right arrows, or, with a trackpad, a three or four 
  (depending on your settings) finger swipe left or right. Plus, 
  invoking Mission Control with a four finger swipe up shows the 
  desktop spaces at the top of the screen. With such frictionless 
  switching and a fast-enough network, you might even forget which 
  desktop space represents your own screen.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-08/lion-ss-mission-control.jpg>

  Unlike the next feature I’ll discuss, the capability to put a 
  remote Mac into its own desktop space via full-screen mode works 
  fine if the remote Mac is running a version of Mac OS X other than 
  Lion.


**Share “Screens” with Inactive Accounts** -- The other 
  significant change enables you to use Screen Sharing on one Mac 
  running Lion to control the account of a user other than the 
  currently active user on another Mac also running Lion. That is, 
  your screen-sharing session doesn’t interrupt the current active 
  user, but gives you live access to another account that’s not 
  currently in use. It’s like fast user switching with two or more 
  users at once — old-fashioned time sharing makes a return! Using 
  this feature can negatively impact the remote Mac’s performance, 
  of course, because whatever applications you use as a second user 
  must share processor time with those being used by the active user.

  To use this new capability in Lion, start in the Finder. Select the 
  remote Mac in the Shared list in the Finder sidebar, then click the 
  Share Screen button in the upper right of the Finder window. (If 
  you’re in column view, the button sits below the Mac’s icon.) 
  Enter the user name and password of the secondary account you want 
  to connect as. Once connected, you can use the secondary account on 
  the remote Mac just as you would if it were the active account on 
  that Mac.

  (A handy utility for sharing screens is the free (donations 
  accepted) ScreenSharingMenulet, which adds an icon to the menu bar 
  that lists local Macs or favorites you specify to establish a screen 
  sharing connection quickly and easily.)

<http://www.klieme.com/ScreenSharingMenulet.html>

  One note. If you previously stored credentials to connect to that 
  remote Mac, you won’t be given the option to enter the user name 
  and password of the secondary account. To regain this capability, 
  launch Keychain Access (from Applications/Utilities), search on the 
  name of the remote Mac, and delete the stored entry or entries 
  corresponding to it. Then make sure you’re disconnected from the 
  remote Mac and click the Share Screen button again.

  I find that the combination of these two new Lion-specific features 
  mean less fiddling around and more productive use of remote 
  sessions. I sometimes find that I’m managing sessions on four or 
  more Macs at a time, and Lion’s screen-sharing enhancements make 
  switching among them far more fluid.


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://tidbits.com/e/12443#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://tidbits.com/t/12443>


TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 29 August 2011
--------------------------------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12450>

**DragThing 5.9.7** -- TLA Systems has released DragThing 5.9.7, a 
  small but significant update to its popular application launcher. 
  The most significant change in this release is compatibility with 
  Mac OS X 10.7 Lion, which comes in the form of several 
  user-interface tweaks and the correction of a number of Lion-related 
  bugs, three of which could cause crashes. It’s also worth noting 
  that DragThing 5.9.7 now requires Mac OS X 10.6.8 or later. ($29 
  new, free update, 5.1 MB, release notes)

<http://www.dragthing.com/>
<http://www.dragthing.com/english/history.html>

  Read/post comments about DragThing 5.9.7.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12453#comments>


**iTunes 10.4.1** -- Apple has released iTunes 10.4.1, a minor update 
  that addresses a number of bugs. These include issues with the media 
  keys on some third-party keyboards, a problem with adding artwork to 
  songs and videos, and a problem with VoiceOver support. Rounding out 
  the update are fixes that resolve issues related to purchasing HD 
  movies and the speed with which iTunes opens after a Mac wakes from 
  sleep. (Free, 90.26 MB)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1426>

  Read/post comments about iTunes 10.4.1.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12442#comments>


**Evernote 3.0** -- Evernote has released version 3.0 of its eponymous 
  app for Mac OS X. The new release comes with a redesigned user 
  interface that emphasizes simplicity and elegance, and more thorough 
  support for Mac OS X 10.7 Lion. This includes support for Lion’s 
  full-screen mode and the introduction of Lion-specific 
  user-interface elements. Evernote also features an all-new Favorites 
  Bar, which enables users to jump quickly to categories of notes that 
  are relevant to them. (Free from the Evernote Web site or the Mac 
  App Store, 17.5 MB)

<http://www.evernote.com/>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/evernote/id406056744?mt=12>

  Read/post comments about Evernote 3.0.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12441#comments>


**Mellel 2.9** -- RedleX has released Mellel 2.9, updating the 
  company’s word processor with new features and enhancements, 
  including a customizable toolbar, line numbering, and better ways to 
  edit headers and footers. A revised user interface simplifies 
  manipulating a document’s margins, tabs, and other page 
  parameters. The app also comes with many smaller improvements 
  designed to improve its responsiveness, reliability, and user 
  experience. ($29 new from RedleX’s Web site or the Mac App Store, 
  free update, 37 MB, release notes) 

<http://www.mellel.com/mellel.html>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/mellel/id415467848?mt=12>
<http://www.mellel.com/releasenoteslatest.html>

  Read/post comments about Mellel 2.9.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12440#comments>


**Typinator 4.5** -- The latest update to Ergonis’s typing expansion 
  utility, Typinator 4.5, boasts more than 50 enhancements. Most are 
  relatively small tweaks, such as expansions being inserted in upper 
  case if the Caps Lock key is active, but some are more significant, 
  such the capability to import auto-correct lists from Microsoft 
  Office and support for abbreviations when working in right-to-left 
  languages like Arabic and Hebrew. The update, which is compatible 
  with Mac OS X 10.7 Lion, also fixes small conflicts with Safari, 
  BBEdit, Sparrow, Google Earth, TweetDeck, Coda, and more. (€19.99 
  new, free update, 3.9 MB, release notes)

<http://www.ergonis.com/products/typinator/>
<http://www.ergonis.com/products/typinator/history.html>

  Read/post comments about Typinator 4.5.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12439#comments>




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