TidBITS#1094/19-Sep-2011
========================
  Issue link: <http://tidbits.com/issue/1094>


  Parallels Desktop versus VMware Fusion. Which is best? And what about
  VirtualBox? Joe Kissell provides an overview of the increasingly
  mature field of virtualization on the Mac — read on for his sensible
  thoughts on the matter. Also this week, Glenn Fleishman looks at the
  new role played by the Apple ID (yes, you probably have one) in Lion,
  and Jeff Carlson shares his impressions of Printopia, which does more
  than just letting you print from your iOS device to any Mac-connected
  printer. Finally, we’re pleased to announce a book that anyone who has
  ever said bad words about Spotlight’s search results needs to read:
  Sharon Zardetto’s “Take Control of Spotlight for Finding Anything on
  Your Mac.” Notable software releases this week include DEVONthink and
  DEVONnote 2.3, Camino 2.0.9, Microsoft Office for Mac 2011 14.1.3/2008
  12.1.3/2004 11.6.5, VMware Fusion 4, and a trio of firmware updates
  for recent models of the Mac mini, MacBook Pro, and MacBook Air.

Articles
    New Take Control Ebook Helps You Find Anything on Your Mac
    Print and More from iOS with Printopia 2
    Apple ID Becomes Mac OS X and iCloud Glue
    Mac Virtualization Update: VMware, Parallels, and VirtualBox
    TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 19 September 2011
    ExtraBITS for 19 September 2011


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New Take Control Ebook Helps You Find Anything on Your Mac
----------------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12497>

  Long-time Mac expert Sharon Zardetto has now illuminated one of Mac 
  OS X’s shadowy corners: Spotlight searching. In her latest book, 
  “Take Control of Spotlight for Finding Anything on Your Mac,” 
  she explains how to use Spotlight in Mac OS X 10.7 Lion to find 
  almost anything on a Mac — files, folders, contacts, appointments, 
  songs, or even pictures of a particular size — no matter where 
  they are hidden. Most importantly, this new 158-page ebook reveals 
  the secret grammar behind Spotlight searches so you can search 
  directly using Spotlight’s internal query language. 

<http://tid.bl.it/spotlight-finding>

  Sharon first explains how Spotlight indexes data, describes the 
  concepts underlying Spotlight searches, and then illustrates the 
  many ways one can start Spotlight searches, whether by way of the 
  magnifying glass in the menu bar, the search field in Finder windows 
  or the Open and Save dialogs, a keyboard shortcut, a contextual 
  menu, or customized and saved searches that you can make for 
  yourself. She then turns to how you can find exactly what you’re 
  looking for, by employing keyword searches, multiple-criteria 
  searches, Boolean searches, and more. 

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/tc-graphics/spotlight-examples.png>

  Remember, searches aren’t just about finding lost files, they’re 
  also useful for selecting a set of matching files to work on. For 
  instance, we’ve used Spotlight to identify which photos in a 
  folder are small thumbnails or which of our ebooks lack a certain 
  phrase. You can even do things like find every GarageBand song in 
  the key of E-flat.

  Readers of “Take Control of Spotlight for Finding Anything on Your 
  Mac” will learn essential search-related techniques, including how 
  to:

* Improve search accuracy by limiting Spotlight to searching just 
  where you want.

* Reduce result clutter by choosing which categories appear in the 
  Spotlight menu.

* Learn what to do when the Spotlight menu doesn’t list an item that 
  it should be able to find.

* Use criteria bars (and even the elusive Boolean bars!) to create 
  complex search queries.

* Bypass criteria bars by typing complex, powerful queries in any 
  Spotlight search field.

* Build Boolean searches with AND, OR, and NOT to narrow search 
  results precisely.

  In addition, you will discover how to make files even easier to find 
  with these techniques:

* Customizing a file’s metadata.

* Employing free third-party utilities to give files useful, 
  searchable tags.

* Setting up sophisticated smart folders that provide dynamic file 
  organization.

  In these days of terabyte drives, your Mac has enormous storage 
  capacity, and you may have many thousands of files squirreled away 
  (we don’t even want to admit to how many hundreds of thousands of 
  files are filling up our disks!). But with the expertise you’ll 
  gain from “Take Control of Spotlight for Finding Anything on Your 
  Mac,” you’ll be able to retrieve whatever you need from your 
  Mac, no matter how deeply it’s buried or how specific you need to 
  make your search. 


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://tidbits.com/e/12497#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://tidbits.com/t/12497>


Print and More from iOS with Printopia 2
----------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12460>

  Printing from an iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch. The idea sounds 
  anachronistic: Why, with a device that delivers everything 
  digitally, would you want to sully the experience with the 
  inconvenience of paper?

  Well, sometimes you need to review something on paper instead of 
  scrolling around on an iPhone screen, or perhaps you need to hand a 
  copy to a colleague who lacks ready access to a computer or 
  handheld. 

  Or maybe, like me, you’re lazy. I’ve purchased airline tickets 
  using my iPad in the living room and needed to print boarding 
  passes. I could have gone upstairs to my computer, but when I’m 
  nestled into a corner of the couch late in the evening, extricating 
  myself and trudging to my upstairs office sounds like an awful lot 
  of work. (The printer is up there, too, but I can grab the printouts 
  later, or even the next morning.)

  In iOS 4, Apple introduced AirPrint, a technology for printing 
  directly to a printer from an iOS device — that is, as long as you 
  have a specific AirPrint-enabled HP printer. I don’t print nearly 
  enough to buy a new printer just for iOS wireless printing.

<http://www.apple.com/iphone/features/airprint.html>

  Before you start to worry, let me assure you that I did not have to 
  force myself off the couch. Instead, I printed the tickets using 
  Ecamm’s Printopia 2. But that’s not all Printopia can do. In 
  fact, I’ve only rarely used Printopia to output something to 
  paper, as you’ll soon discover.

<http://www.ecamm.com/mac/printopia/>


**Print to a Printer** -- Perhaps surprisingly, Printopia is a Mac OS 
  X preference pane, not an iOS app, and luckily, it requires little 
  setup on the Mac and none on iOS. After you install Printopia on 
  your Mac, it recognizes any printer that the computer can print to. 

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-09/printopia_prefpane.png>

  On an iOS device, open a document, email message, Web page, or other 
  content that you want to print. Provided the app you’re using 
  supports the print functionality of iOS, tap the Share button 
  (sometimes known as the Action button, a rectangle with a curved 
  arrow coming out of it) and then tap the Print button.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-09/printopia_share_button.png>

  In the Printer Options popover that appears, tap the Printer button 
  to choose the printer accessible by your Mac, choose the number of 
  copies to make, and then tap the Print button. The print job is sent 
  over your wireless network to your Mac, which then prints the pages 
  in the background.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-09/printopia_print_popover.png>


**Send to Folders on Dropbox or a Mac** -- As I noted earlier, much of 
  the world is moving on from paper, so Printopia offers ways to 
  “print” a document to digital destinations. For me, the most 
  useful alternative has been to save a file to my Dropbox folder. 
  When I’m creating a lot of iOS screenshots, such as those for my 
  book “Take Control of Media on Your iPad,” this feature enables 
  me to bypass the need to connect the iPad or iPhone via USB. 
  (Printopia wouldn’t be necessary if the Photos app supported 
  sharing directly to Dropbox, but it doesn’t, unsurprisingly for 
  Apple.)

<http://www.dropbox.com/>
<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/ipad-media?pt=TB1094>

  After you take a screenshot (by pressing the Home and Sleep buttons 
  simultaneously), the image is saved to the Camera Roll, which is 
  accessible within the Photos app. Tap the image to open it, tap the 
  Share button, and specify the Send to Dropbox on Mac option before 
  tapping Print.

  Better yet, you can send a bunch of images at once. Instead of 
  viewing one image at a time, tap the Share button when viewing the 
  Camera Roll (or any album). Tap to select all the images you want to 
  send, then “print” them. In a few seconds, the files appear in 
  your Dropbox folder.

  One downside is that the images appear as “Photo.png” and 
  “Photo-1.png” and so forth, so you need to rename the files on 
  the Mac. Printopia also has a preference to open each file 
  automatically as it arrives, which quickly becomes annoying. 
  However, that’s easily fixed. In the Printopia preference pane, 
  select the Dropbox option, click the Action pop-up menu (with the 
  gear icon) below the list, choose Printer Properties, and turn off 
  the Open Sent Files Automatically option.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-09/printopia_open_auto.png>

  Printopia places the files it receives in a new Printopia folder 
  within your Dropbox folder, but you can specify a different folder 
  by clicking the Change Save Location button.

  If you don’t have a Dropbox account, another option is to 
  “print” to any folder of your choosing on your Mac. I prefer the 
  Dropbox approach, because then the files are backed up and 
  automatically copied to other computers I’ve set up.

  Particularly helpful is Printopia’s capability to set up multiple 
  Dropbox or Mac folders as possible destinations. Click the Add (+) 
  button and choose either Save to Folder on Mac or Save to Folder in 
  Dropbox to specify a new location. If you work on multiple projects, 
  or want to separate personal and work items, for instance, you can 
  create multiple print destinations.


**Send to an Application or PDF Workflow** -- Often, the destination 
  you choose when sending a file from an iOS device to your Mac is a 
  waystation before you open the file in some other application. 
  Printopia can bypass that step by sending jobs directly to a 
  program. For example, suppose you purchase something online and want 
  to “print” a receipt to a snippet-keeper such as Evernote or 
  Yojimbo on your Mac?

  In the Printopia preference pane, add a new printer, but choose Send 
  to Application and choose the destination app. When you print to 
  that application, an image file or PDF is sent directly to the app.

  Another option is to pass the job to an Automator workflow by 
  choosing Add PDF Workflow when setting up a new printer in the 
  Printopia preference pane. You could send print jobs directly to the 
  Web Receipts folder that Mac OS X put in your Documents folder if 
  you’ve ever chosen Save to Web Receipts Folder from the PDF pop-up 
  menu in a print dialog. Or, use Automator to create your own Print 
  Plugin that acts on the PDF file that you send.


**Password Optional** -- When Printopia is running on your Mac, you 
  can turn off sharing for any of the services by clicking the 
  checkbox to the left of the printer name. But what if you want to 
  restrict who can print to your printer, or if you don’t want just 
  anyone saving files to your Mac or Dropbox folder? Every virtual 
  printer can be password-protected by choosing Setup Password in the 
  preference pane. When it’s enabled, you must first provide a user 
  name and password to be able to print.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-09/printopia_password.png>

  When Printopia first appeared, I thought it would be helpful every 
  once in a while when I needed to push something to a printer, but 
  the utility has turned out to be much more useful. It has saved me 
  hours of work dealing with screenshots, and also made it possible 
  for my wife (or anyone else visiting our house with an iOS device) 
  to print documents or easily send them to Dropbox.

  Printopia costs $19.95; a demo version that works for 7 days is also 
  available. 


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://tidbits.com/e/12460#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://tidbits.com/t/12460>


Apple ID Becomes Mac OS X and iCloud Glue
-----------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12457>
  10 comments

  The humble Apple ID has expanded over the years from its origins as 
  a way to purchase music from iTunes or log in to a developer account 
  to live up to its name: nearly everything that requires credentials 
  at Apple uses the Apple ID — which must be a valid email address 
  — as the key, including the lame duck MobileMe and the upcoming 
  iCloud. Mac OS X 10.7 Lion has expanded the use of the Apple ID even 
  further, however, using it as a useful but optional adjunct to user 
  accounts.

  The Apple ID will become even more important with the advent of 
  iCloud, as it will be the key to the many different services Apple 
  is bundling together under the iCloud rubric. Some of these, like 
  syncing calendars and contacts, Find My iPhone, and Back to My Mac, 
  were formerly under MobileMe. Others, such as iTunes in the Cloud 
  and wireless backups of iOS devices, will be entirely new. And of 
  course, the Apple ID remains in use for the iOS App Store, Mac App 
  Store, developer accounts, online Apple Store, and more, too.

  For the moment, though, let’s look at how you can use your Apple 
  ID in Lion, and then discuss some of the problems that the Apple ID 
  system suffers from now — and what Apple could do to address its 
  limitations.


**The Key to Bypass Accounts in Lion** -- In Lion, an Apple ID may be 
  set up as a secondary identity for an account, allowing access to 
  anything that user account can access. That includes services like 
  screen sharing, file sharing, and account recovery.

  To set this up, start in the Users & Groups preference pane, click 
  the Apple ID’s Set button, and enter your Apple ID and password. 
  Any account other than the special Guest account can have an Apple 
  ID set to go along with it. Once you associate an Apple ID with an 
  account, it becomes another option that you can use for remote 
  access to that account. You can even associate multiple Apple IDs 
  with a particular account by clicking the Change button after 
  setting the initial Apple ID.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-09/lion_user_apple_id.jpg>

  Screen sharing and file sharing are the two most obvious places 
  where you can use an Apple ID for remote access. When you select a 
  computer from the Shared part of the sidebar in any Finder window 
  and then click either Share Screen or Connect As, and you haven’t 
  previously stored a password for an account, you’re prompted to 
  connect as a guest (file sharing only), as a registered user 
  account, or using an Apple ID. If your current account has one or 
  more Apple IDs associated with it, the IDs are shown in a pop-up 
  menu. (Either or both buttons will be available depending on the 
  remotely activated services.)

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-09/lion_user_apple_id_popup.jpg>

  Also new in Lion is that you can use the Apple ID to reset your user 
  account’s password from the login sheet that appears at startup 
  (unless you’re set to login automatically), if you log out of an 
  account, or by choosing Login Window from the fast user switching 
  menu. We can’t see this being necessary all that often, but it’s 
  a nice fallback.

<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT4798>

  You should consider security issues here: if you use an Apple ID to 
  which you’ve given someone else the password, or add an Apple ID 
  that belongs to someone else (having them enter the password), your 
  account on a Lion-based Mac can be accessible over a local network 
  or even remotely if the right setup is in place, such as via Back to 
  My Mac. It’s also a problem if you have a weak Apple ID password 
  that someone might be able to guess along with knowing your email 
  address. That could also allow remote screen, file, and account 
  access.


**A Lack of Help with Multiple Accounts for One Person** -- Even as 
  Apple wants us to rely even more on the Apple ID system, it has 
  become clear that it lacks what would be welcome flexibility. A 
  clear case in point is if you ended up with multiple Apple IDs after 
  many years and purchases. Apple offers no help in consolidating 
  purchases and other registered items into a single account, and has 
  no plans to do so at this writing, according to a FAQ offered by 
  Apple about its universal login identifier. (The FAQ has tips for 
  handling common account changes, too.) That will become a bigger 
  issue when iCloud launches and people realize that they have 
  purchased apps, music, and other items across multiple accounts when 
  it didn’t matter as much.

<https://support.apple.com/kb/he37>

  This isn’t hypothetical. Let’s say you have purchased items from 
  the Apple online store using your ISP-given email address. That’s 
  one Apple ID. Then let’s say you have an active MobileMe account 
  that you created before 2008. That’s another Apple ID. And even 
  Apple has required separate Apple IDs in the past; TidBITS Publisher 
  Adam Engst had an iTunes Connect account (for managing the TidBITS 
  iOS app) associated with his main Apple ID, but when Apple opened 
  the iBookstore, he was forced to create a second Apple ID to log in 
  to the version of iTunes Connect that acts as the back end for the 
  iBookstore.

  There’s also the confusion of the .Mac/MobileMe transition of 
  2008, which left those of us with .Mac accounts prior to that point 
  with two valid login identities: _account_@me.com and 
  _account_@mac.com. They aren’t precisely both Apple IDs — they 
  were originally used for Web access, sync, and iChat — but can be 
  used as an Apple ID. I can never recall what I used @me.com for 
  instead of @mac.com. Plus, we’ve seen situations where, for 
  instance, iChat would accept only the mac.com version.

  (To toot our own horn, when we designed the unified TidBITS and Take 
  Control account system, we set it so every email address would be 
  associated with a separate account, but then built in account 
  consolidation so our readers could claim all their email addresses 
  and merge all their associated ebook purchases into a single 
  account. We did this because, looking back over 8 years of Take 
  Control orders, it is clear that the email address is often a poor 
  unique identifier: people graduate from schools, change jobs, and 
  move to new locations, all of which result in new email addresses.)

<http://tidbits.com/account>
<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/account>

  Apple’s My Apple ID Web site provides access to your Apple ID 
  account information, and does allow you to change the email address 
  registered with the account, as well as associate additional email 
  addresses with it (assuming they aren’t already associated with 
  another Apple ID). If you set up an Apple ID account using a 
  non-email-based username years ago, you can’t change it, except to 
  an email address. 

<http://appleid.apple.com/>


**The Unitary Position** -- Beyond the functional annoyance of not 
  being able to merge Apple IDs, I continue to have trouble with 
  Apple’s ongoing conflict between the notion of home sharing and 
  the company’s insistence on a single ID. It’s part of the 
  firm’s ongoing myopia about how families share media. Apple’s 
  “sharing,” as in its Home Sharing option in iTunes, is 
  “sharing among devices registered to the same person’s single 
  Apple ID account.” 

  Apple does let you use media, apps, and other items across devices 
  and computers associated with different Apple IDs. However, in order 
  to access these items — except DRM-free music, which lacks 
  account-locked copy protection — you must enter the password of 
  the accounts from which the other items were purchased or 
  downloaded. This password has to be made available not just when 
  installing or playing, but with apps, whenever an app upgrade is 
  installed.

  Apple loves to talk about how its products encourage sharing, but as 
  even cursory investigation shows, Apple’s idea of sharing is a 
  one-way, one-time transfer. That’s “giving,” not 
  “sharing,” which is by definition a multi-party, bidirectional 
  process. Whether you look at sharing of media in iTunes, photos in 
  iPhoto, or documents on the lame iWork.com service, Apple isn’t 
  comfortable with the inherent lack of control that true sharing 
  involves.

  Some families rely on a single Apple ID account for all purchases. 
  And one can use one Apple ID for buying things, and another for 
  MobileMe and iCloud sync. But it’s still jury-rigged and 
  irritating. It would be far better to have a way to associate 
  multiple Apple IDs with a single group account with easy-to-set 
  policies in iTunes or via an iCloud interface. 

  For instance, let’s say my wife, Lynn, and my two children all had 
  separate Apple ID accounts. We’d want separate accounts for the 
  kids so that we could control purchases and give them gifts of 
  credit. We wouldn’t want to simply merge all the content from our 
  various purchases onto an account to which they had access. Rather, 
  I would like to be able to say, “merge into the family account all 
  G-rated movies and music without an Explicit rating.” These sorts 
  of controls are available for syncing and for purchasing on 
  individual devices; why not have them available to families, too?

  The other notable advantage of a group account would be to bypass 
  the requirement for any family member to have to know the password 
  of any other, a concern that’s especially an issue with children 
  with whom you would ostensibly not want to share your schedule, 
  email, and contacts. Nor would you necessarily want to allow them 
  unfettered access to your credit card-backed Apple ID.

  However useful a family-level umbrella account might seem or even 
  the capability to merge Apple ID accounts, I fear that Apple simply 
  doesn’t care. They would rather pursue a course of simple action 
  than provide assistance to millions of people who want group 
  accounts for a family or to merge multiple accounts. It’s too much 
  individual hand-holding for a company that thinks like Apple. Sadly, 
  as far as I can tell from past performance, Apple doesn’t think 
  anything is broken at all. 


**Evolving Notions of Identity** -- By having an Apple ID serve every 
  function related to Apple — operating system, purchasing, and 
  cloud-stored data — our friends in Cupertino may have bitten off 
  too much. Simplicity is a wonderful concept, and we support it 
  fully. Apple’s integration of the Apple ID into Lion shows how 
  well it can be done as an adjunct and support, while allowing 
  multiple identities in one place. If the company could only bring 
  that same level of consideration to the broader use of Apple IDs, it 
  would make many of us a little more sane. 


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://tidbits.com/e/12457#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://tidbits.com/t/12457>


Mac Virtualization Update: VMware, Parallels, and VirtualBox
------------------------------------------------------------
  by Joe Kissell <joe@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12498>
  4 comments

  When the first edition of my book “Take Control of Running Windows 
  on a Mac” came out, just over 5 years ago, running Windows at 
  anything approaching full speed on a Mac was still a novelty. At 
  that time, the leading options were Apple’s Boot Camp dual-boot 
  system and Parallels Desktop, a virtualization program that let 
  Windows run within Mac OS X — but without the heavy performance 
  penalty of PowerPC-based software like Virtual PC. Then VMware got 
  into the game with their own virtualization program, Fusion, and 
  things started to get really interesting. Every few months or so 
  since then, either Parallels or VMware has rolled out an upgrade 
  that made their product the apparently superior choice for a while. 
  The two companies have battled on features, performance, and price, 
  and that competition has raised the level of quality of 
  virtualization on the Mac. It’s been a good thing. (The emergence 
  of a solid yet free competitor, Oracle’s VirtualBox, hasn’t hurt 
  either! I’ll get back to VirtualBox later in this article.) Of 
  course, Apple has consistently improved Boot Camp as well — and 
  Windows itself has become much, much better too.

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/windows-on-mac>
<http://www.apple.com/support/bootcamp/>
<http://www.parallels.com/products/desktop?icid=1479>
<http://www.vmware.com/products/fusion/overview.html>
<http://www.virtualbox.org/>

  What hadn’t happened until this month was major releases of both 
  Parallels and Fusion appearing at almost exactly the same time. 
  I’ve used both Parallels Desktop 7 and VMware Fusion 4, and I 
  thought this would be an appropriate time to offer a brief “state 
  of the union” on virtualization software for the Mac. Before I 
  begin, I want to make a few things clear:

* This is not a review; it’s an overview. Although I’ll mention 
  some of my real-world experiences, in this article I’m not going 
  to get into the detailed analysis and testing that a proper review 
  requires.

* Although I have a bit more in-depth experience with Fusion, on 
  account of having written a book about it (“Take Control of VMware 
  Fusion 3”), I use both Parallels and Fusion about equally on my 
  own Macs. (And, by the way, I would happily write a book about 
  Parallels, too, if the opportunity presented itself.)

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/vmware-fusion-3>

* I’m not going to talk about CodeWeavers’ CrossOver products 
  here. CrossOver lets you run selected Windows apps on your Mac 
  without having Windows itself installed, and that may be exactly 
  what some people need. But it’s a different category of product 
  — with its own virtues and limitations — and not comparable to 
  full virtualization software.

<http://www.codeweavers.com/products/crossover/>

* Everyone’s experience is different, mine (obviously) included. 
  You’re entitled to your opinions, but let’s not clutter the 
  comments with complaints or partisan sniping. And if you have an 
  affiliation with either developer, it’s only proper to disclose 
  that fact in your remarks.


**The Similarities** -- As I write this, I have yet to see a complete, 
  objective feature comparison chart for Parallels 7 and Fusion 4. A 
  checklist on the Parallels Web site hasn’t yet been updated to 
  reflect the changes in Fusion 4 (and would, naturally, be expected 
  to favor Parallels regardless). The Wikipedia comparison page, too, 
  still reflects Fusion 3.1. In any case, checklists of this sort can 
  be difficult to interpret when applications implement similar 
  features differently; they can be spun all too easily to make it 
  appear as though any application is superior; and they seem to give 
  equal weight to all features, whereas most users care about only a 
  few. Rather than attempt to create my own table comparing features 
  exhaustively, I want to concentrate on the highlights.

<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_VMware_Fusion_and_Parallels_Desktop>

  Both Parallels 7 and Fusion 4 can do all of the following:

* Run under Lion, with full support for gestures, Mission Control, 
  full-screen mode, and Launchpad (even for individual Windows 
  applications).

* Run nearly any version of Windows or Linux — plus Lion, Lion 
  Server, and Snow Leopard Server (but _not_ regular Snow Leopard) — 
  as a guest operating system.

* Run a copy of Windows on a Boot Camp partition as a virtual machine.

* Run Windows applications that use OpenGL 2.1 or DirectX 9 with 
  Shader Model 3.

* Install and configure a new copy of Windows in a highly automated 
  manner.

* Assign up to 8 virtual processors and up to 8 GB of RAM to any 
  virtual machine.

* Easily import or migrate an installation of Windows from a real PC, 
  from a Boot Camp partition, or from a competing virtualization 
  program.

* Mirror common user folders (such as Desktop, Downloads, and 
  Pictures) between Mac OS X and Windows.

* Disappear into the background so that Windows applications 
  intermingle with Mac applications.

* Use Mac apps to open Windows files and hyperlinks, or vice-versa.

* Use standard Mac or Windows keyboard shortcuts, as you prefer.

* Move text and graphics between Windows and Mac environments using 
  copy-and-paste (and, in some cases, drag-and-drop).

* Print from Windows applications to shared Mac printers without 
  having to install Windows printer drivers.

* Let you choose whether USB devices should be assigned to the host 
  Mac or to the guest operating system.

* Store snapshots of your Windows state in a Time Machine-friendly 
  way, to reduce the time and space required for backups.

* Encrypt virtual machines.

  (Again, I’ll say a few words about how VirtualBox stacks up later 
  on.)

  Running Parallels 7 and Fusion 4 side by side on my Mac, I’m 
  struck by how similar they are. Their terminology and user 
  interfaces differ somewhat — but much less than in years past, and 
  little enough that I can easily lose track of which application 
  I’m running at any given time.


**The Differences** -- With so much the same, it seems that the two 
  developers are increasingly struggling to come up with new ways to 
  differentiate their products; there’s just not much left that one 
  could ask from a virtualization program. However, I can still point 
  to some spots in which one or the other appears to have the upper 
  hand.

  Parallels 7 lets you share video cameras (including built-in iSight 
  or FaceTime cameras and external USB video cameras) between Mac OS X 
  and Windows. In Fusion 4, by contrast, you can use a camera in 
  either host or guest operating system but not both at the same time. 
  For people who don’t already have Windows 7, Parallels offers a 
  way to purchase and download it from within the application. I 
  haven’t tried this myself, but I’ve heard the process is far 
  from user-friendly. Parallels also offers an iOS app called 
  Parallels Mobile ($19.99, but currently on sale for $4.99) that lets 
  you open, suspend, resume, and interact with virtual machines 
  running on your Mac — as well as with Mac OS X itself. That’s 
  nifty, but not extraordinary; you can use any VNC client (including 
  some iOS clients that are free) to connect to any Fusion virtual 
  machine, although configuration requires a few less-than-obvious 
  steps. Parallels also lets you suspend a Boot Camp virtual machine, 
  whereas in Fusion you can suspend only guest operating systems with 
  their own virtual disks.

<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/parallels-mobile/id295531450?mt=8>

  Fusion 4 offers a few nice capabilities not found in Parallels 7, 
  too. Fusion is now a self-contained application that you can install 
  or uninstall by drag-and-drop or even run from a USB flash drive, 
  and when you quit it, no background processes remain active. 
  (Parallels 7 insinuates itself more deeply into your system, and 
  leaves some bits running after you quit.) Fusion 4 also supports 
  virtual Bluetooth (letting a virtual machine directly access 
  Bluetooth devices) and Remote Disc (so you can access a DVD or CD on 
  another Mac or PC on your network), both capabilities Parallels 7 
  lacks. Both applications let you shrink virtual disks to save space; 
  in Fusion 4 you can do so even if the virtual machine has snapshots, 
  while in Parallels 7 you must delete all snapshots before shrinking 
  the disk. And Fusion doesn’t restrict your choices to shutting 
  down or suspending a virtual machine; you can also pause it, 
  temporarily freeing up system resources, and then resume it 
  instantly. Finally, Fusion can claim to be a completely 64-bit, 
  Cocoa application, while Parallels has some 32-bit components and 
  uses Cocoa along with a couple of other frameworks. I’m at a loss 
  to know how being a 64-bit Cocoa app affects any ordinary user’s 
  everyday experience, but it does at least seem to be a good 
  foundation for the future.


**Performance** -- The very first version of Parallels I used — on a 
  Mac that is now too old even to run Lion — ran Windows so fast I 
  could hardly believe my eyes. It felt, to me, just like running 
  Windows on modern PC hardware. I experienced no lags, no delays — 
  nothing to complain about at all. So, when the next version of 
  Parallels touted vastly improved performance, I didn’t see what 
  was interesting about that. I hadn’t felt anything I needed to do 
  was too slow, so I didn’t need or notice faster speed. Now that 
  both Parallels and Fusion are many times faster than they were in 
  the early days, and my hardware itself is also faster, I find almost 
  all claims about speed to be meaningless in my particular case.

  Now, understand that I’m not a gamer. (And if I were a gamer, I 
  wouldn’t be the sort who’d get hung up about minuscule 
  differences in frame rate.) I don’t edit video or render 3D 
  animations or perform complex mathematical modeling in Windows. 
  Maybe the users who do those sorts of things can genuinely feel the 
  difference between one version of Parallels or Fusion and the next, 
  but I can’t. What I have done is run office applications such as 
  Outlook and Word, Web browsers such as Internet Explorer and Safari, 
  and video apps such as the Amazon Unbox Video Player. For uses like 
  those, even older versions of both Parallels and Fusion felt 
  perfectly peppy to me — and even when running on much slower 
  hardware than I have today. In short, for the ways in which I use 
  Windows, I couldn’t care less about whether X is 10 percent faster 
  than Y in some benchmark or other. It doesn’t affect me, and 
  I’ll bet that the same is true for a large number of Mac users who 
  run Windows.

  I say all that to put my remarks about performance in perspective.

  In 2010, MacTech did a series of benchmark tests comparing the 
  performance of then-current versions of Parallels (version 5) and 
  VMware Fusion (version 3). In that comparison, Parallels soundly 
  beat Fusion in all but a tiny handful of tests. It wasn’t close, 
  and it wasn’t ambiguous: Parallels was definitively ahead in terms 
  of objective speed tests. That fact apparently led a lot of people 
  to conclude that Parallels 5 was therefore _better_ than Fusion 3, 
  and I thought that represented unsound reasoning. The fact that a 
  Porsche can go faster than a pickup truck doesn’t mean it’s 
  better; it’s only better if you’re planning on driving faster 
  than the pickup’s top speed, and you value speed more than cargo 
  capacity. I do not in any way dispute the benchmark results; I 
  simply want to point out that for many users, they’re irrelevant.

<http://www.mactech.com/articles/special/1002-VirtualizationHeadToHead/index-001.html>

  Anyway, that was then; what about now? Both Parallels 7 and Fusion 4 
  claim much better performance than their predecessors, but what 
  everyone wants to know is how they compare to each other. VMware 
  sent me a reviewer’s kit that contained a bunch of benchmarks 
  comparing Fusion 4 and Parallels 7. According to those test results 
  — which VMware has not yet made public — Fusion 4 is _very 
  slightly_ ahead of Parallels 7 in most respects, and _very slightly_ 
  behind it in a few. On the whole, these tests suggest that the two 
  applications are so close to each other in terms of overall 
  performance that the differences are statistically insignificant. 
  Naturally, I take test results with a grain of salt when they come 
  from a developer comparing its own product to the competition’s. I 
  have no reason to mistrust VMware, but it’s only natural to cast 
  one’s own product in the best possible light. One of these days, 
  MacTech (or another independent tester) will publish their own 
  results, and we’ll be able to evaluate the comparative performance 
  with greater objectivity. I can’t predict how those tests will 
  turn out, but I can predict that they won’t change my perception 
  of how fast I can type or check my email. For all practical 
  purposes, these two programs are equally fast.

  And that’s the real point. Benchmarks test specific, objective, 
  measurable things. They may have no bearing whatsoever on the tasks 
  you personally find important. A commenter on my announcement about 
  Fusion 4’s release claimed, and I confirmed, that in certain 
  situations, Parallels 7 can resume a suspended virtual machine more 
  quickly than Fusion 4 can. That’s the sort of thing that may or 
  may not show up in benchmark tests. And maybe it’s extremely 
  important to you; it happens not to be important to me. As with all 
  such statistics, I urge you not to get caught up in abstract 
  numbers.

  Instead, I suggest — as I have done for years — that you 
  download the free trial versions of each app and try them out for 
  yourself, running the kinds of software you need and doing the sorts 
  of tasks that are important to you. If you can’t feel a difference 
  in performance, then for you, there is no difference. And if you do 
  feel a difference, that’s useful to know; but use your time with 
  the trial versions to evaluate their other features, their 
  interfaces, their documentation, and their technical support too. 
  You may find that factors such as these tip the balance in one 
  direction or the other.


**Pricing and Licensing** -- For a long time, Parallels and Fusion 
  have had the same retail price, $79.99, but thanks to various widely 
  available coupons, sales, bundles, and other promotions, the typical 
  street price for either has been closer to half that. With their 
  latest releases, upgrade pricing for both apps has raised some 
  eyebrows.

  Parallels charges $49.99 for an upgrade from versions 5 or 6 (it’s 
  free for those who purchased Parallels after 1 August 2011) while 
  offering registered Fusion users a competitive crossgrade price of 
  only $29.99. I can’t help but notice an interesting trend here. 
  Parallels has had paid upgrades each of the past 5 years; all were 
  $49.99 except the upgrade to version 4.0, which was $39.99. If you 
  had purchased Parallels 1.0 for full retail price and bought every 
  upgrade thereafter, you would have paid a total of $559.91 to date 
  (not counting the cost of Parallels Mobile, if you purchased that 
  too). That makes Parallels an expensive product to keep up with, and 
  the fact that Fusion owners get a lower price than those who have 
  been giving Parallels their money every year is bound to feel a bit 
  harsh to those long-time customers.

  Meanwhile, VMware is selling Fusion 4 to everyone — upgrading or 
  not — for the reduced price of $49.99 through the end of the year 
  (it’s free for those who purchased Fusion 3 after 20 July 2011, 
  the day Lion was released). Bafflingly, this promotion has provoked 
  an outcry that VMware isn’t offering special “upgrade” 
  pricing. But they are; it’s just that they’re offering that 
  lower price to new purchasers too for a limited time. In its entire 
  history, Fusion has had only two paid upgrades, the previous one 
  being to version 3.0 (for $39.99). So a Fusion owner who bought the 
  original release at full retail price and every subsequent upgrade 
  would have paid only $169.97 to date, a mere 30 percent of what a 
  Parallels owner would have paid. Moreover, Fusion’s new license 
  agreement says that, except for commercial and educational settings, 
  one license is good for all the Macs you own or control; the 
  Parallels license requires you to buy a separate copy for each Mac. 
  And to top it off, a coupon code has been making its way around the 
  Internet; you can save 20 percent ($10) on your purchase of Fusion 4 
  by entering the code FUSION20 at checkout.

  In summary, someone with Parallels 6 must pay $49.99 to upgrade to 
  Parallels 7, but can get Fusion 4 for $10 less — $39.99 — while 
  someone with Fusion 3 can upgrade to Fusion 4 for $39.99 or switch 
  to Parallels 7 for $10 less — $29.99. But if Parallels continues 
  its past upgrade pattern, switchers enticed with this low pricing 
  will be invited to lay out another $50 next year for version 8 (and 
  likewise in future years), which seems to me to blunt the offer’s 
  appeal somewhat.


**What about VirtualBox?** -- I promised I’d have a few things to 
  say about VirtualBox. VirtualBox started as an open-source project, 
  and even though it’s now owned by Oracle, it’s still available 
  in an open-source version (you compile the code yourself) or in 
  precompiled, free-for-personal-use forms for various platforms. Much 
  is made of its (lack of) cost, but keep in mind that the $50 you 
  could pay for Fusion is a fraction of what you’ll have to pay for 
  Windows itself. In other words, free is good, but running Windows on 
  a Mac means shelling out some cash anyway; and to a certain extent, 
  you get what you pay for.

  Don’t get me wrong: VirtualBox is no slouch, and it’s gotten 
  dramatically better since its early days. It supports a wide variety 
  of host and guest operating systems and has a long feature list. 
  Like Parallels and Fusion, it offers a mode in which the 
  virtualization environment mostly disappears, putting Windows 
  applications on the same visual footing as Mac apps; it also 
  features shared folders, snapshots, 3D graphics acceleration, and 
  support for most common hardware — including multiple displays. 
  Its performance is solid, if not quite to the level of its 
  commercial peers. And it even lets you assign up to 32 virtual CPU 
  cores to a virtual machine.

  So what’s not to like? Well, as of version 4.1.2, VirtualBox runs 
  just fine under Lion but it doesn’t take advantage of 
  Lion-specific features such as Mission Control, Launchpad, and 
  full-screen mode; nor does it support running Lion or Lion Server as 
  a guest operating system. It lacks automated setup of Windows 
  virtual machines, won’t run Windows from your Boot Camp partition 
  or use your Mac printers automatically, and has less integration 
  overall with Mac OS X. And the user interface, as well as the 
  documentation, betrays the software’s open-source roots: it just 
  isn’t pretty to look at.

  And yet, VirtualBox truly is adequate — and I don’t mean that as 
  a dig. It gets the job done, and for those who need only occasional 
  access to Windows on a Mac, giving up certain features for a savings 
  of $50 might be an excellent compromise. You have nothing to lose by 
  trying it, even for an extended period of time, and you can always 
  migrate to a commercial alternative later if you want to.


**Final Thoughts** -- With each passing year, the number of tasks that 
  can be accomplished only in Windows, and not natively in Mac OS X, 
  decreases. This is due in part to the rise of Web applications, in 
  part to Windows apps being ported to Mac OS X, and in part to new 
  Mac-only or cross-platform applications that are superior to the 
  older Windows-only options. Lots of people still legitimately need 
  to run Windows on a Mac, but that number is certainly shrinking.

  Boot Camp continues to work fine, but I gave up on it long ago. I 
  consider it unnecessarily awkward and inflexible compared to 
  virtualization software. Plus, the performance gap between Boot Camp 
  and virtualization has shrunk significantly, and very few 
  applications and external devices work under Boot Camp but not in a 
  virtual machine. The only real question for the vast majority of 
  people who still need to run Windows on their Mac is which 
  virtualization program to use. As of Parallels 7 and Fusion 4, 
  that’s more of a toss-up than ever. Although I’m sure both 
  developers can still squeeze out a few more percentage points of 
  performance, my sense is that we’re close to reaching the 
  theoretical limit of how fast Windows can run on a Mac (and it’s 
  plenty fast). In addition, improvements in Windows itself and in the 
  various virtualization programs have made setting up and using 
  Windows on a Mac so easy and seamless that users can often ignore 
  the differences between operating systems, freely downloading and 
  running nearly any software without regard for the platform it was 
  written for.

  Over the years, I’ve read hundreds of comments all over the 
  Internet by users of one of these products or another who became 
  disenchanted with their first choice for some reason and decided to 
  switch to another one. Complaints have ranged from bugs and missing 
  features to poor customer service to user interface aesthetics. 
  Although I’ve never tried to calculate the totals, my impression 
  is that users have historically been more likely to become unhappy 
  with Parallels and switch to Fusion than the other way around, and 
  that more people have switched from VirtualBox to a commercial 
  alternative than the reverse. But as I said earlier, everyone’s 
  experience is different. I wouldn’t try to convince you that any 
  of these options is superior all around or the best choice for 
  everyone. You’ve got to decide what’s best for you — and maybe 
  that’s different now from what it was last year; maybe it’ll be 
  different again in another year. If you’re happy with what you 
  have already, you’ll be happier still after upgrading to the 
  latest version of the same program. If you’re unhappy, this is the 
  ideal time to check out the competition.

  But be circumspect when you read claims about this type of software. 
  I’m aware of some misinformation being spread deliberately, of 
  some unscrupulous tactics being used to promote one of these 
  products. That’s a pity; Parallels, Fusion, and VirtualBox are all 
  fine programs that should be able to compete solely on their merits. 
  Try them yourself and make up your own mind — remember, your 
  experience is the only one that truly counts. 


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://tidbits.com/e/12498#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://tidbits.com/t/12498>


TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 19 September 2011
-----------------------------------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12501>

**DEVONthink and DEVONnote 2.3** -- DEVONtechnologies’ information 
  management applications DEVONthink and DEVONnote have once again 
  been updated, this time to version 2.3. Lion users will now find 
  full-screen mode available for main windows as well as Quick Look 
  support for attachments and links in rich text documents. Address 
  Book importing has been improved, as has email archiving in 
  DEVONthink Pro Office, and a number of other changes and bug fixes 
  have been made. (All updates are free. DEVONthink Pro Office, 
  $149.95 new; DEVONthink Professional, $79.95 new; DEVONthink 
  Personal, $49.95 new, release notes; DEVONnote, $24.95 new, release 
  notes)

<http://www.devon-technologies.com/products/devonthink/>
<http://www.devon-technologies.com/products/devonnote/>
<http://www.devon-technologies.com/products/devonthink/releasenotes.html>
<http://www.devon-technologies.com/products/devonnote/releasenotes.html>

  Read/post comments about DEVONthink and DEVONnote 2.3.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12499#comments>


**Camino 2.0.9** -- Following quick on the heels of version 2.0.8, the 
  Camino Project has released version 2.0.9 of its Camino for Mac OS X 
  Web browser. The updates provide improved handling of invalid SSL 
  certificates, as well as better localization of the email field in 
  the Camino Crash Reporter. A new version of the Java Embedding 
  Plugin is included, and Camino now provides better ad-blocking 
  capabilities.The 2.0.9 release fixes build issues with the previous 
  version which caused some formerly fixed crashing bugs to reappear. 
  In addition, 2.0.9 fixes both a Netflix-related crashing bug and a 
  hang that occurs when Camino is asked by another application to open 
  a URL using an unknown protocol. It also updates the code that the 
  browser uses to block Flash animations. (Free, 15.8 MB)

<http://caminobrowser.org/releases/2.0.8/>
<http://caminobrowser.org/releases/2.0.9/>
<http://caminobrowser.org/>

  Read/post comments about Camino 2.0.9.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12496#comments>


**Microsoft Office for Mac 2011 14.1.3/2008 12.1.3/2004 11.6.5** -- 
  Microsoft has released a trio of updates for Office for Mac 2004, 
  2008, and 2011. The Office 2004 update and the Office 2008 update, 
  versions 11.6.5 and 12.1.3 respectively, address security issues 
  that allow an attacker to overwrite the contents of a Mac’s memory 
  with malicious code. The Office 2008 update also includes a fix that 
  makes Word’s help work in all languages, and it updates 
  Entourage’s time zone information. (Free updates through Microsoft 
  AutoUpdate; 333 MB for 2008, 9 MB for 2004)

<http://support.microsoft.com/kb/2598782>
<http://support.microsoft.com/kb/2598781>

  The Office 2011 update, version 14.1.3, makes improvements to most 
  of the suite’s apps, starting with PowerPoint and Excel, where 
  issues that cause the programs to crash have been addressed. For 
  Word, PivotTable field settings are now enabled, and citations in 
  Dutch now appear correctly. For Outlook, the update fixes an issue 
  that prevented contact images from displaying properly. It also 
  provides improved handling options for shared Outlook calendars, and 
  it updates Outlook’s time zone information. Notably, the update 
  disables Outlook’s capability to import from Apple Mail because 
  “it does not work as expected in Mac OS X 10.7 Lion.” (Free 
  update through Microsoft AutoUpdate, 112 MB)

<http://support.microsoft.com/kb/2598783>

  Read/post comments about Microsoft Office for Mac 2011 14.1.3/2008 
  12.1.3/2004 11.6.5.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12494#comments>


**Firmware Updates for Mac mini, MacBook Pro, and MacBook Air** -- 
  Apple has released a trio of seemingly identical updates for recent 
  Macs, including the Mac mini EFI Firmware Update 1.3, the MacBook 
  Pro EFI Firmware Update 2.2, and the MacBook Air EFI Firmware Update 
  2.1. The updates improve the stability of Internet-based recovery 
  operations under Max OS X 10.7 Lion, resolve unspecified issues when 
  connecting to Thunderbolt displays, and improve the performance of 
  Thunderbolt Target Disk Mode. As with any firmware update, you 
  should read the installation instructions carefully before 
  installing. To ensure you get an update only if it’s necessary, we 
  recommend relying on Software Update; if an update doesn’t appear 
  for you, it’s not appropriate for your Mac. (Free, 4 MB)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1449>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1450>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1448>

  Read/post comments about MacBook Air EFI Firmware Update 2.1.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12492#comments>


**VMware Fusion 4** -- Hot on the heels of last week’s release of 
  Parallels 7 comes VMware Fusion 4.0, a major upgrade to the popular 
  virtualization program that lets Mac users run Windows, Linux, and 
  other operating systems side-by-side with Mac OS X. Fusion 4 
  includes more than 90 new features; as in Parallels 7, some of the 
  biggest changes include full support for Lion capabilities such as 
  Mission Control, full-screen mode (even for individual Windows 
  applications), and gestures; you can also run Mac OS X 10.7 Lion and 
  Lion Server as guest operating systems, and you can choose which 
  Windows apps you want to appear in Launchpad, the Applications 
  folder, and Spotlight. When running in single-window mode, Fusion 4 
  makes better use of screen real estate, which is helpful for Macs 
  (such as the MacBook Air) with small displays. A variety of other 
  changes make both Fusion itself and Windows apps running in a 
  virtual machine more Mac-like and better integrated into Mac OS X. 
  Fusion 4 now works better with Time Machine, supports Remote Disc, 
  and offers virtual Bluetooth support.

<http://www.vmware.com/products/fusion/overview.html>
<http://communities.vmware.com/docs/DOC-17077>

  Fusion is now a self-contained, 64-bit Cocoa application, so you can 
  install or uninstall it by drag-and-drop and run it from any 
  location; in addition, it uses no system resources at all when not 
  running. The program features significantly improved performance, 
  too, especially in 2D and 3D graphics. According to VMware’s 
  benchmark testing, overall performance is neck-and-neck with 
  Parallels 7 — Fusion’s advantage averages about 2 to 4 percent, 
  depending on the hardware and the test (although it does fall 
  slightly behind Parallels in certain tests). Although not currently 
  sold through the Mac App Store, Fusion 4 now uses a similar license 
  model; except in business and educational settings, a single license 
  is now valid for all the Macs a user owns or controls. Promotional 
  pricing — the same price for upgrades and new purchases — is 
  $49.99 through the end of the year. ($49.99 new or upgrade, 399 MB)

  Read/post comments about VMware Fusion 4.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12491#comments>




ExtraBITS for 19 September 2011
-------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12500>

  It’s always interesting to hear what CEOs really think, and this 
  week we ran across Netflix CEO Reed Hasting’s explanation for how 
  Netflix is going to self-destruct, plus an interview with former 
  Apple CEO John Sculley. Also this week, Google Docs gains a 
  comment-only access option and Apple receives a fascinating 3D 
  display and imaging system patent.


**Netflix CEO Explains Price Increase, Renames DVD Service** -- After 
  a nearly inexplicable 60 percent price increase in July 2011 was 
  followed by a drop in customers, Netflix CEO Reed Hastings has 
  written an apology and explanation that was posted on the 
  company’s blog and sent to all customers in email. In it, Hastings 
  reveals that Netflix will be separating the DVD and streaming sides 
  of the business even more, rebranding the DVD-delivery service to 
  “Qwikster.” Responses (over 10,000 so far) on the company’s 
  blog seem to be universally negative, with customers expressing 
  unhappiness (to put it mildly) with the future separation of 
  services and the pricing. Might be time for Netflix to consider an 
  about-face before it’s too late.

<http://blog.netflix.com/2011/09/explanation-and-some-reflections.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/12502#comments>


**John Sculley Interviewed about Steve Jobs** -- John Sculley, the man 
  Steve Jobs recruited to run Apple in 1983, is still around, 
  investing in and mentoring startups. In this interview, he talks 
  about his background, how he got his start at Pepsi, why he chose to 
  go to Apple, and how things worked between him and Steve Jobs.

<http://it-jobs.fins.com/Articles/SBB0001424053111903285704576560420813121788/John-Sculley-on-Apple-s-Jobs-and-the-Experience-of-a-Lifetime>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/12495#comments>


**Google Docs Gains Comment-Only Access Option** -- Until now there 
  has been no way to give people comment-only access to a document in 
  Google Docs. That’s a problem because you may want feedback on a 
  document without letting someone actually change it. According to 
  this Google Docs blog post, Google Docs accounts will start gaining 
  the option of sharing a document with people in such a way that all 
  they can do is add a comment. You can even set public documents such 
  that anyone can comment. With this change, Google Docs becomes an 
  even more valuable collaboration tool — there’s almost no reason 
  to mail Word documents around for comment any more.

<http://googledocs.blogspot.com/2011/09/comment-only-access-in-google-documents.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/12490#comments>


**Apple Receives 3D Display and Imaging System Patent** -- Patently 
  Apple reports on a new patent granted to Apple that describes a 3D 
  display and imaging system. It apparently watches a space in front 
  of the user, enabling her to work with holographic images or virtual 
  representations of her hands that can manipulate virtual objects. 
  It’s hard to see this appearing in a shipping product soon, but 
  Apple’s research labs clearly understand the need to define new 
  forms of virtual interaction that go beyond the keyboard, mouse, and 
  touchscreen.

<http://www.patentlyapple.com/patently-apple/2011/09/whoa-apple-wins-a-3d-display-imaging-system-patent-stunner.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/12477#comments>




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