TidBITS#1096/03-Oct-2011
========================
  Issue link: <http://tidbits.com/issue/1096>


  The big news this week is Amazon’s announcement of the new Kindle Fire
  tablet, which Glenn Fleishman believes is the first viable tablet from
  a company other than Apple. But is it competition for the iPad? Also
  this week, Adam reviews the impressive group photo sharing site
  ZangZing, Tonya tells how the Fujitsu ScanSnap is simplifying her life
  as the mother of a 7th grader, and we welcome as our latest TidBITS
  sponsor the Mac and iOS app developer Global Delight. Last, but not
  least, we’ve published the new “Take Control of Backing Up Your
  Mac,” Joe Kissell’s definitive guide to backups. Notable software
  releases this week include Adobe Photoshop Lightroom 3.5 and Camera
  Raw 6.5, Firefox 7.0, PopChar X 5.3, and Teleport 1.1.

Articles
    New Take Control Book Provides Easy, Comprehensive Backup Advice
    Global Delight Sponsoring TidBITS
    Amazon’s Kindle Fire Lights Tablet Competition
    Dragging School Papers into the 21st Century with a ScanSnap
    Group Photo Sharing Grows Up with ZangZing
    TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 3 October 2011


------------ This issue of TidBITS sponsored in part by: --------------

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New Take Control Book Provides Easy, Comprehensive Backup Advice
----------------------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12527>

  I think it’s telling that our best-selling ebook of all time has 
  been Joe Kissell’s “Take Control of Mac OS X Backups.” Quite 
  simply, there is no more important topic for anyone who, like us, 
  relies on a Mac for business, for important communication, or for 
  irreplaceable data like personal photographs and videos. Over a 
  hundred backup programs of every ilk vie for your attention, from 
  Apple’s Time Machine to the simplest synchronization program. And 
  then there are the online backup services, each promising more than 
  the next. Through all this, Joe is the only person who has made a 
  systematic study of the field, and his hard-won experience accounts 
  for the popularity of his book. 

  Now, with the release of Mac OS X 10.7 Lion and numerous other 
  changes in the backup world in the past year, Joe has updated all 
  the details and distilled his various advice in “Take Control of 
  Mac OS X Backups” and its younger sibling, “Take Control of Easy 
  Mac Backups,” to provide a single, unified set of recommendations 
  that will serve the needs of nearly any Mac user. The result is the 
  210-page “Take Control of Backing Up Your Mac,” available now 
  for $15.

<http://tid.bl.it/backing-up>

  In “Take Control of Backing Up Your Mac,” Joe provides, as he 
  puts it, “a modern approach to Mac backups that covers the bases 
  but doesn’t overwhelm you with extraneous details.” Although 
  it’s carefully designed so you can read just the parts that are 
  important to you, the full ebook describes how to design a reliable 
  backup system, understand backup lingo, shop for hardware, choose 
  backup software, manage Time Machine (and determine whether Time 
  Machine is a good option and what to do if it’s not), make 
  backups, deal with any special backup needs, and — most 
  importantly — recover lost data after a crash or other 
  catastrophe.

  Readers of “Take Control of Backing Up Your Mac” will learn how 
  to:

* Understand the three components of a successful backup strategy.

* Reassess an existing backup strategy in light of changing habits or 
  newly available options.

* Choose a “versioned” backup program like Time Machine, and 
  determine what to do if Time Machine doesn’t meet your needs.

* Shop for and prepare a backup hard drive (or drives).

* Set up backup software to make backups work smoothly and reliably.

* Make offsite backups in various ways, including backing up to an 
  online service.

* Handle special backup needs like huge quantities of photos, or 
  backing up several Macs in a home. 

* Restore backed up data after disaster strikes! 

  As we have learned all too many times over the years, when a Mac 
  breaks down it can be a major inconvenience, but when it breaks down 
  and takes irreplaceable data with it, it’s a heart-breaking 
  disaster. With Joe’s highly considered and time-tested guidance in 
  “Take Control of Backing Up Your Mac”, you can avoid calamity 
  without busting your budget or wasting your time. And if you want to 
  hear more about backups and the book, tune into Joe’s MacVoices 
  interview with Chuck Joiner!

<http://www.macvoices.com/wordpress/macvoices-1185-joe-kissell-takes-control-of-backing-up-your-mac/>


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Global Delight Sponsoring TidBITS
---------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12530>

  We’re pleased to welcome as our latest TidBITS sponsor Global 
  Delight, an Indian company that has been making a name for itself in 
  the Apple world over the last few years. Their first program was 
  Voila, a screenshot utility that has evolved from a rather simple 
  program into a full-featured package that enables you to capture 
  still and video images of your screen, organize them, annotate and 
  edit them, and share them through a variety of methods. 

<http://www.globaldelight.com/voila/voila_overview.html>

  More recently, Global Delight has come up with Boom, a one-trick 
  pony that boosts the volume of sound played through your Mac. While 
  that may not seem compelling at first glance, I found Boom essential 
  just recently while straining to hear the audio track of a Netflix 
  movie streamed to my 13-inch MacBook — some Netflix streamed 
  movies just aren’t loud enough without Boom or powered speakers, 
  which weren’t available in this situation. I’ve also experienced 
  similar volume problems on occasion with voice-over-IP programs. (On 
  the Mac App Store, Voila costs $29.99, and Boom is $8.99.)

<http://www.globaldelight.com/boom/>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/voila-powerful-screen-capture/id407741870?mt=12>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/boom/id415312377?mt=12>

  On the iOS side, Global Delight is best known for Camera Plus Pro, 
  which provides a wide variety of welcome features for photo and 
  video recording from recent models of the iPhone and iPod touch. You 
  can now apply live filters while taking photos or video, edit and 
  retouch photos, share photos via a number of Web services, keep a 
  private collection of photos and videos, take up to 40 photos in 
  burst mode, use the anti-shake option to reduce blur, and much more. 

<http://www.globaldelight.com/iPhone/camerapluspro/>

  The company also makes the colorizing app Photo Delight. (On the App 
  Store, Camera Plus Pro is on sale for only $0.99 through 6 October 
  2011, and Photo Delight costs $1.99.)

<http://www.globaldelight.com/ipad/photodelight/>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/camera-plus-pro/id345752934?mt=8>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/photo-delight-colorize-your/id402383950?mt=8>

  Thanks to Global Delight for their support of TidBITS and the Apple 
  community! 


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Amazon’s Kindle Fire Lights Tablet Competition
----------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12526>
  4 comments

  Amazon doesn’t go in by halves. The company’s announcement of a 
  tablet device designed to compete with — but not “kill” — 
  Apple’s iPad also included details on two other new Kindles 
  available in three models. The big reveal, of course, was of the 
  Kindle Fire, a 7-inch, full-color, touchscreen model with Wi-Fi 
  retailing for $199 and shipping 15 November 2011. The Kindle Touch, 
  a grayscale touchscreen model, ships a week later, while a new 
  entry-level Kindle is available now.

<http://www.amazon.com/dp/B0051VVOB2/?tag=tidbitselectro00>

  As expected, the Kindle Fire isn’t a direct competitor to the 
  iPad. It’s more of an alternative, or perhaps even a complement. 
  Its smaller screen and Amazon’s emphasis of reading, watching, 
  listening, and gaming features make it clear how much this slate is 
  designed to compete as a device to consume media. It also lacks a 
  camera, microphone, and Bluetooth networking. How creative one can 
  be with a Fire will emerge when people get their hands on it.

  Oh, and it runs Flash.


**Lighting Up** -- The Kindle Fire is a 7-inch full-color tablet with 
  a capacitative touchscreen like other tablets, and an IPS (in-plane 
  switching) LCD for wide angles of viewing. It weighs under 15 ounces 
  (a bit over 400g), and uses Amazon’s cloud services for 
  downloading and streaming media. It includes only Wi-Fi in this 
  first version, which also has a fixed 8 GB of storage, and the 
  retail price (the only price, since it’s sold exclusively by 
  Amazon) is $199. Amazon says the Fire allows 8 hours of continuous 
  reading or 7.5 hours of video playback — with Wi-Fi turned off. 
  The first version is available for only U.S. customers. 

<http://g-ecx.images-amazon.com/images/G/01/kindle/otter/dp/KO-aag-mag._V166939188_.jpg>

  The Kindle Fire is also notable for what it lacks. There is no 
  camera. It has a headphone jack and built-in speakers, but no 
  microphone. And there’s no Bluetooth for use with external audio 
  devices or keyboards. It does sport a micro-USB port, but it won’t 
  be clear until the device is released if that can be used for 
  purposes other than connecting to a computer (to mount as a drive) 
  or for charging. 

  While the Kindle Fire runs Google’s Android operating system, a 
  fact confirmed by Amazon, you will not see a bit of Google or 
  Android branding on the device or in its interface. While I 
  suspected Amazon would opt for a full operating system fork, in 
  which it took a specific version of Android and then went down its 
  own path, it appears that the changes are all at the top level where 
  users interact with the device. (You can read my take on what I 
  thought Amazon would do in a piece for The Economist, “Forking 
  Android.”)

<http://www.economist.com/blogs/babbage/2011/09/tablets>

  This approach with Android keeps Amazon at arm’s length from 
  Google, while still allowing it to work with all existing Android 
  developers. Assuming the Kindle Fire sells well, which is a 
  reasonable expectation, developers will have a reason to make sure 
  that all their apps work perfectly on the Fire, perhaps to the 
  detriment of other Android models. 

  Because Amazon isn’t buying into Android-as-an-ecosystem, the 
  Kindle Fire will not feature the Android Marketplace as an app, 
  since Amazon has its own Android app store. But many Android models 
  allow “sideloading,” in which an app is purchased in one place, 
  and then loaded through a few steps onto the device on which it is 
  to run. Amazon could facilitate this to make sure to tap into the 
  larger market and emphasize the one aspect of Android’s openness 
  that’s legitimately open in comparison to Apple’s closed app 
  installation process. However, a New York Times article says that 
  Amazon will allow only “Android apps approved by Amazon and 
  distributed through its Amazon Android Store.” Some Android phone 
  makers and carriers also prevent sideloading.

<https://market.android.com/>
<http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/29/technology/amazon-unveils-tablet-that-undercuts-ipads-price.html>

  Apple claimed in the past that a 7-inch screen didn’t meet its 
  smell test for being useful, but that might be merely a convenient 
  excuse from a firm that has a ready supply of 10-inch touchscreens, 
  and that wanted to develop a programming framework around just a few 
  sizes of device: the original iPhone/iPod touch dimensions, the iPad 
  size and resolution, and the four-times-denser Retina Display 
  upgrade to the iPhone and iPod touch. 

  Amazon, by contrast, is coming out of several years of selling 
  mostly 6-inch screen devices, and it has seemingly good feedback 
  about what you can do in that amount of space. Amazon has also been 
  able to watch the missteps of early Android and other tablet 
  competitors, and avoid many of those problems.

  Notably, at least from the images released, the Kindle Fire 
  doesn’t have a Springboard-style home screen interface like that 
  in iOS; a similar interface is also found in most other mobile 
  platforms, including Android. Instead of presenting the user with a 
  grid of app icons, Amazon focuses the Fire on media and tasks. The 
  home page has a Cover Flow-style presentation of everything that’s 
  available on the device. A menu bar at the top lets you choose among 
  media types, viewing documents, listing apps, and browsing the Web. 

<http://g-ecx.images-amazon.com/images/G/01/kindle/otter/dp/KO-aag-spin._V166735073_.jpg>
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SpringBoard>

  With the Kindle Fire, Amazon has eschewed physical connections in 
  favor of its cloud services. There’s no computer component for the 
  Fire, as noted amusingly in the technical specs part of the product 
  page: “System Requirements: None, because it’s wireless and 
  doesn’t require a computer.” All media is downloaded over Wi-Fi 
  from Amazon’s cloud. You can delete and restore items at will, and 
  either download or stream programming. (Amazon typically prevents 
  books from being resident on more than six Kindle devices at once.)

<http://www.amazon.com/gp/help/customer/display.html?nodeId=200505520>

  The 8 GB of included storage and lack of a memory expansion slot, 
  along with the Wi-Fi–only wireless connectivity, means you need to 
  plan what items to keep on your Kindle Fire for those times when 
  you’re not connected to a Wi-Fi network. Amazon claims the Fire 
  can hold 10 movies, 80 apps, 800 songs, or 6,000 books. A two-hour 
  movie would need to fit into about 700 MB for that to work, which 
  assumes optimized compression for the 7-inch screen and its 
  resolution.

  The Kindle Fire comes with a 30-day free trial of Amazon Prime, 
  which was introduced years ago as a way to get free 2-day shipping 
  on any item stocked in an Amazon warehouse. It’s normally $79 per 
  year. But Amazon Prime now includes free streaming of over 11,000 
  movies and TV shows from Amazon’s much larger catalog of video. I 
  imagine many Fire buyers will already be Amazon Prime customers, and 
  many of those who aren’t will find the video and shipping 
  compelling. (My wife and I use Amazon Prime a ridiculous amount, 
  because when you eliminate shipping charges, even items such as 
  toothpaste are cheaper from Amazon than the local drugstore or 
  Costco. We pay sales tax, as Amazon is headquartered in our home 
  state of Washington.)

  I expect that Amazon decided to hold off on a 3G model of the Kindle 
  Fire before the holidays to get the Fire to market faster, and to 
  avoid the complexity of 3G service plan deals with carriers. While 
  all the Kindle devices that include 3G incorporate data charges into 
  purchases, the Fire is a multi-purpose tablet that will use 3G 
  connectivity for much more than purchases, and cloud-based 
  synchronization plus Web browsing mean that a 3G model of the Fire 
  will have to work within carriers’ service plans.


**Smooth as Silk** -- Amazon also claims time (and thus bandwidth) 
  savings in browsing. Instead of having the built-in browser directly 
  connect to Web sites, Amazon is introducing Silk with the Kindle 
  Fire, a sort of Web proxy with optimization that has a resemblance 
  in part to Opera Software’s Opera Turbo. Where Turbo focuses on 
  compressing images and reducing unnecessary data flow to a browser, 
  Silk does quite a bit more.

<http://www.amazon.com/gp/help/customer/display.html//ref=amb_link_357584342_3?ie=UTF8&nodeId=200775440&pf_rd_m=ATVPDKIKX0DER&pf_rd_s=center-21-0&pf_rd_r=09A9QQV0P1SJEW5D3BDX&pf_rd_t=201&pf_rd_p=1321395082&pf_rd_i=B0051VVOB2>
<http://www.opera.com/browser/turbo/>

  In the simplest explanation, Silk uses Amazon’s Elastic Compute 
  Cloud (EC2), its high-performance virtual machine system, to 
  retrieve requested Web pages and repackage them for more efficient 
  delivery to the Kindle Fire. An EC2 proxy will shoot the entire page 
  as an optimized single stream to the Fire browser, and it will 
  apparently keep that connection open between the browser and EC2 all 
  the time. Silk will also apparently predictively load pages based on 
  the behavior of other Fire users as to what page you might click on 
  next. 

  By contrast, a normal Web browser opens a connection to the remote 
  Web server when a page is requested, and has to pull down most or 
  all of an HTML page before it can start grabbing JavaScript files, 
  images, and other embedded content. The connection may persist for 
  just a single request, or sometimes for multiple files. Amazon has 
  said, in response to privacy concerns about the firm having its 
  fingers on all the browsing performed by its customers, that the 
  Silk browser can be configured to work just like a normal browser 
  and bypass EC2 entirely.

  Amazon’s Silk job listings — thanks, Shawn Medero! — show that 
  Silk programmers use Google’s SPDY, an open-source method of 
  making Web connections vastly more efficient, and WebKit, the 
  underlying browser rendering engine used in Safari and Android’s 
  browser, to which Apple has contributed enormous resources. (Silk 
  might be a joke on the Web and on Google’s SPDY, which sounds like 
  “Spidey” when pronounced aloud. Take that, webslingers!)

<https://aws.amazon.com/amazonsilk-jobs/>
<http://twitter.com/soypunk/status/119086037610938369>
<http://www.chromium.org/spdy>


**The Other Kindles** -- Let’s not ignore what have suddenly become 
  the Kindle Fire’s little siblings. Amazon also introduced two new 
  Kindle readers while retaining the two existing models. Both new 
  models omit keyboards, making them smaller and lighter. They’re 
  also both cheaper. All the Kindles except the DX and the Fire use a 
  6-inch E-Ink grayscale screen.

  The basic Kindle now costs $79, and has only Wi-Fi. With no keyboard 
  and no touchscreen, a few buttons on the front enable you to 
  navigate. It weighs a smidgen under 6 ounces (170g), and is about 80 
  percent of the size of the previous smallest Kindle. It has 2 GB of 
  storage, compared with 4 GB for all other Kindle e-reader models.

<http://www.amazon.com/dp/B0051QVESA/?tag=tidbitselectro00>

  The new Kindle Touch uses an infrared touch-sensitive screen, and 
  retails at $99 in a Wi-Fi-only model . It’s nearly as small, and 
  weighs under 8 ounces (under 225g). The Wi-Fi+3G Kindle Touch model 
  works in 100 countries and costs $149. The Touch addresses one of 
  the most irritating parts of touch-based reading, which is hitting 
  the next page area. With a touchscreen, it was simple matter to fix: 
  Amazon has made most of the book’s page into a next-page tap, so 
  books can be easily read right- or left-handed.

<http://www.amazon.com/dp/B005890G8Y/?tag=tidbitselectro00>

  The Kindle Touch has one exclusive feature. Called X-Ray, it 
  incorporates a kind of skeleton of the book as easily available 
  graphical metadata. Using Wikipedia and Shelfari (owned by Amazon), 
  you can tap to see where ideas, characters, places, and other sorts 
  of information are referenced throughout the book. It’s an 
  intriguing idea, especially for long Russian novels, in which 
  characters recur after absences of hundreds of pages. And I am the 
  only one who can’t recall which Bennett sister is which in 
  “Pride and Prejudice”?

<http://www.amazon.com/Kindle-Touch-Free-Wi-Fi-Display/dp/B005890G8O/ref=pd_rhf_p_t_2#xray>
<http://www.shelfari.com/>

  The former base-level Kindle has been rebranded as Kindle Keyboard, 
  and comes in Wi-Fi-only ($99) and Wi-Fi+3G versions ($139). The 
  Kindle DX remains on sale, too, with its 9.7-inch E-Ink screen and 
  built-in 3G (no Wi-Fi).

<http://www.amazon.com/dp/B004HFS6Z0/?tag=tidbitselectro00>
<http://www.amazon.com/dp/B002GYWHSQ/?tag=tidbitselectro00>

  Now a proviso on the pricing. Amazon is promoting these Kindle 
  models at the prices mentioned, but there’s a catch: all prices 
  include savings based on the Special Offers editions in which 
  advertising and sponsored messages are shown. That may sound 
  irritating, but ads don’t interrupt you while reading; they appear 
  only when a Kindle is in sleep mode, a state in which the E-Ink 
  display shows a static (and non-battery-draining) image.

  Amazon’s Special Offers reduce the price of a Kindle by a 
  significant amount: $30 (Kindle), $40 (Kindle Touch, Kindle Keyboard 
  with Wi-Fi), and $50 (Kindle Keyboard with 3G). Former TidBITS 
  contributor and current Macworld editor Lex Friedman said on Twitter 
  the ads aren’t bad. “The ads are really, really minimal though 
  — and generally even worth it. They never interrupt the reading 
  process.” 

<http://twitter.com/lexfri/status/119089779697655808>

  Nevertheless, a $79 Kindle brings the price down to that of a 
  stocking stuffer in some families, or a nice gift for a student or 
  dear friend. Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos openly said they would sell 
  millions of them, something a publicly held company CEO would hold 
  his mouth over unless he was confident of such a prediction. Having 
  sold millions at much higher prices, I think he’s right.


**We’re Number Two** -- The Kindle Fire occupies a new and different 
  niche in the mobile device environment. It can’t kill the iPad 
  because of its form factor and lack of inputs for audio and video. 
  But it’s likely to become the second-best-selling tablet device 
  quickly, and it will certainly attract those for whom the cost and 
  size of the iPad are deterrents to purchase. I can also see people 
  owning a smartphone, a Kindle Fire, and an iPad, all intended for 
  slightly different purposes, trips, and occasions. The lack of media 
  recording and low price might make the Fire more appropriate than 
  iPod touch for parents concerned about children sharing 
  inappropriate audio and video.

  The reason I’m so confident about Amazon, where I have been so 
  scornful of the Samsung Galaxy S, Motorola Xoom (4G coming only 
  several months later than promised), HP TouchPad (dead), and RIM 
  BlackBerry PlayBook (dying), is because none of these devices that 
  were ostensibly great for viewing video had a media ecosystem behind 
  them. How do you buy or load the movies and TV shows you want to 
  watch? The answer was always a silence interrupted by crickets, a 
  nervous mention of Netflix, and future partnerships. But Amazon? 
  Amazon has apps, music, books, TV shows, and movies already in 
  place. 


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Dragging School Papers into the 21st Century with a ScanSnap
------------------------------------------------------------
  by Tonya Engst <tonya@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12522>
  8 comments

  I bought a Fujitsu ScanSnap S1300 because I want to have less paper 
  piling up in my house and more access to documents when I’m not at 
  my desk, whether I’m in Staples working through the list of 
  required school supplies for my 7th grader, being the secretary at a 
  PTA meeting, or putting in work hours while traveling away from 
  home.

<http://www.fujitsu.com/us/services/computing/peripherals/scanners/scansnap/s1300.html>

  The ScanSnap is addictive, and I’ve hardly begun to learn how to 
  use it. Here’s how cool it is: My son comes home from the first 
  day of school with a fistful of forms and handouts. I open the 
  scanner, stick them in, choose an option from the ScanSnap icon in 
  the Dock, and push the big blue button on the scanner. Within 
  moments (or minutes if I chose to run OCR) the entire pile is 
  onscreen, even the double-sided forms and the pages that emerge from 
  the backpack slightly crumpled. 

  (OCR stands for “optical character recognition,” a fact that I 
  mention here only because at least one smart person at my recent PTA 
  meeting didn’t know it, so obviously it’s a geek term that’s 
  not as widespread as I had thought. When you run OCR on something, 
  you convert its scanned image into actual text that you can edit, 
  copy and paste, and search.)

  For forms that obviously need to be filled out again and again, I 
  fill in the bits that won’t change and then print them as needed. 
  These include medical permission forms that come home a half-dozen 
  times each year, and the school district’s repeated requests for 
  permission to put my son’s photo on the Web. Yes. It’s fine. But 
  if you ask one more time, I’m gonna say no for variety’s sake.

  (I haven’t yet worked up the courage to ask if I could, you know, 
  return these forms via email. Our school district is big on 
  “preparing students for the 21st century,” which is a buzzphrase 
  for “helping them graduate with real-world technology skills,” 
  so I think we adults could set an example here, since we’re 
  already well into the 21st century.)

  I then tag each file with a handful of tags using Tagit, a free 
  utility from Ironic Software, to make it even easier to find them 
  later, and then I stick the files in a shared Dropbox folder that my 
  husband can access from any computer or from his iPhone or iPad. If 
  a document seems like something my son might want, I stick a copy in 
  his Dropbox folder. Some of these paper documents now land in the 
  recycling box, but others go back to my son, who will likely crumple 
  them up and store them in his backpack for the rest of the school 
  year.

<http://www.ironicsoftware.com/tagit/>
<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-09/Tagging-with-Tagit.png>

  (Something that’s new this year is that my son may be allowed use 
  a portable digital device in school, but only for a specific 
  approved educational purpose, such as sharing a favorite song from 
  his iPod touch during music class. It would be neat if he could load 
  some of the documents into his iPod touch and generally carry it 
  around — or even load them onto an iPad or one of the old Kindles 
  kicking around the house, but the school hasn’t reached the point 
  of generally allowing a piece of hardware to replace a paper 
  notebook. But, it feels funny turning papers into digital objects 
  and then giving them back to my son to carry around in perpetuity in 
  his backpack — like many students, my son is locker-adverse, 
  because, apparently, you never know when a teacher will want you to 
  produce a protractor or a purple pen.)

  To do all the above with flair, it helps that I know how to use 
  Smile’s PDFpen, which makes it easy to combine PDFs and to move 
  individual pages out of PDFs. I chose the $295 ScanSnap S1300 
  because I read Joe Kissell’s “Take Control of Your Paperless 
  Office,” and his descriptions of various scanners made me think 
  that it would be a good choice for my modest needs and small desk. 
  If I had a bigger desk, larger budget, and more papers to scan, the 
  $495 ScanSnap S1500M would be a better choice, since it appears more 
  robust overall for handling a lot of paper. Also, the ScanSnap’s 
  Amazon reviews are excellent, and the unit was available via Amazon 
  Prime. (Disclaimer: I didn’t just read “Take Control of Your 
  Paperless Office,” I edited it. Twice.)

<http://www.smilesoftware.com/PDFpen/>
<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/paperless-office?pt=TB1096>
<http://www.fujitsu.com/us/services/computing/peripherals/scanners/scansnap/scansnap-s1500m.html>

  You may be wondering why I chose Dropbox and the Finder as my filing 
  repository for scanned documents. After all, there are many 
  alternatives. You can put your scanned files into all sorts of 
  software, including favorites like EagleFiler, Yojimbo, and 
  DEVONthink (about which Joe Kissell has also written a book — 
  “Take Control of Getting Started with DEVONthink 2”), and that 
  list only skims the surface of the possibilities. In fact, you could 
  spend months evaluating the options and learning how to use your 
  eventual choice. And, in a case like mine, you could spend even more 
  time discussing options with your spouse and teaching your 
  homework-laden 12-year-old how to use it. That’s just not 
  happening. In our household, we all know how to use the Finder, we 
  have modest needs, and the extra boost of tagging that I’m adding 
  with Tagit should help us find stuff if the simple folder hierarchy 
  that I’m using proves insufficient (another ebook that I edited 
  recently, “Take Control of Spotlight for Finding Anything on Your 
  Mac,” taught me how to type queries like the one in the screenshot 
  below). If we find that we need a more sophisticated tool, we can 
  always switch later.

<http://www.dropbox.com/>
<http://c-command.com/eaglefiler/>
<http://www.barebones.com/products/yojimbo/>
<http://www.devon-technologies.com/products/devonthink/>
<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/devonthink-2?pt=TB1096>
<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/spotlight?pt=TB1096>
<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-09/Searching-via-Spotlight.png>

  A downside of the Dropbox iOS app is that it doesn’t load all your 
  files onto the device all the time, so the app can be slow to access 
  a file over a cellular data network. Also, the iOS app can’t find 
  a file based on the tags that I apply with Tagit. Two of the 
  programs that I mentioned above, Yojimbo and DEVONthink, have mobile 
  apps that can sync stored documents on a Mac to an iOS device, so 
  it’s possible that we’ll want to move to one of those in the 
  future; however, I worry that three people attempting to share a 
  single data repository will complicate matters. Also, Code 42 
  Software just announced a CrashPlan iOS app that offers remote 
  access to files in CrashPlan Central backups, and although it 
  currently won’t help us (since we back up to a friend’s 
  computer, not to CrashPlan Central), it’s possible a future 
  version will provide access to our backed-up data.

<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/crashplan/id462565520>

  Meanwhile, the only thing that would be better than the ScanSnap is 
  to not have to use it at all because the information was all online 
  and presented in a lovely way. Maybe that’ll happen in the real 
  world outside the technology industry by the 22nd century. 


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://tidbits.com/e/12522#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://tidbits.com/t/12522>


Group Photo Sharing Grows Up with ZangZing
------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12507>
  4 comments

  With the proliferation of digital cameras and cell phone cameras, 
  some events may seem to have more photographers than participants. 
  But with our imperfect memories, it’s hard to argue with the value 
  of a photograph for helping to jog recollection of those special 
  days. Plus, the low barriers to taking digital photos mean that 
  parties, weekend outings, and sporting events can generate many 
  hundreds of snapshots. Luckily, we have decent tools for managing 
  oodles of photos on our own computers, and there are numerous online 
  services to which we can upload photos and show them off to friends 
  and family. As suggested to me by various friends, Flickr, 
  Shutterfly, Picasa Web Albums, SmugMug, Posterous, and Facebook 
  would all work for this, as would even Google+ and Dropbox.

<https://plus.google.com/106741850554591477322/posts/UiccCNB7cFg>
<http://www.flickr.com/>
<http://www.shutterfly.com/>
<http://picasaweb.google.com/>
<http://www.smugmug.com/>
<https://posterous.com/>
<http://www.facebook.com/>
<https://plus.google.com/>
<http://www.dropbox.com/help/18>

  But what I hadn’t found — until now — is a Web site that’s 
  designed explicitly for group photo sharing, enabling multiple 
  people to upload photos of a shared event for all to see, without 
  needing a central administrator to manage usernames and passwords. I 
  went looking for such a tool because a friend recently left my High 
  Noon Athletic Club running group after 30 years, and his traditional 
  last run was well documented by a number of people. At the end, one 
  friend taking photos handed me his camera’s SD card and said, 
  “Here, you take this, since you’ll get the photos up for 
  everyone to see way sooner than I would.” Possibly true, but I’m 
  equally at fault for sitting on event photos for months before 
  uploading them, largely because the traditional sites feel like 
  they’re missing the mark for me.

  Here’s what I realized I wanted from a group photo sharing site:

* Easy upload of photos. For me, that means uploading from iPhoto, but 
  it should be equally easy to upload from any folder. If uploading is 
  too hard, it simply won’t happen. Ideally, uploading photos 
  shouldn’t even require an account, since that’s a significant 
  hurdle for many people.

* The capability for multiple people to upload to the same album. This 
  should be the killer feature, since the entire goal is to collect 
  photos from different photographers.

* URL-based sharing of individual albums. I want to be able to share 
  the album with people via email, often on mailing lists, so I want 
  to be able to send it myself rather than relying on the service to 
  do it for me.

* Simple access controls for both viewing and uploading. Some events 
  are completely public, like a major festival. Others are public, but 
  the participants may behave (and thus be photographed) in ways they 
  wouldn’t want just anyone seeing — consider a large Halloween 
  party. And while posting compromising photos (“Our Trip to the 
  Brothel!”) is clearly just dumb, it’s still conceivable that you 
  might want to share photos with a small group and password-protect 
  access to them.

* The capability for anyone to edit a photo’s metadata. Here, I’m 
  mostly thinking about the names of people in the photo — at many 
  events, only some people will know who certain people are.

* Social features, such as commenting. Many photos are improved with 
  the context that can be provided by a brief description, and photos 
  may also serve as launchpads for conversation.


**Enter ZangZing** -- After I posted on Google+ and read through the 
  responses I got, I went looking for a site that would come closer to 
  meeting my desires. Rather quickly, I ran across a new site 
  inexplicably called ZangZing that comes extremely close to meeting 
  all my needs. Founded by Kathryn Corro, Mauricio Alvarez, and Joseph 
  Ansanelli (Joseph’s first company was bought by Apple/Claris as 
  the basis for Claris Organizer and he went on to work on the Newton 
  at Apple), ZangZing appeared in public beta only in April 2011. It 
  received attention from the technology press at launch, but I 
  haven’t seen significant mention of it in the intervening months.

<http://www.zangzing.com/>

  ZangZing may be new, but it is for the most part exceptionally well 
  thought-out and implemented, and using it is more like using a 
  standalone app than nearly any other Web site I can think of. Most 
  impressive is that it doesn’t rely on Flash, so it works 
  surprisingly well on iOS devices despite not being optimized for 
  smaller screens. I imagine even better mobile support is on 
  ZangZing’s development list.

  ZangZing’s interface is based around the concept of albums, 
  presumably under the assumption that you would create an album per 
  event, and indeed, most of what you’ll do in ZangZing involves 
  albums (and more on that shortly). The main part of the interface is 
  sandwiched by top and bottom toolbars, and the controls in each 
  remain relatively consistent as you move through the different 
  views. But before I explain the rest of the interface, let’s look 
  at how you upload photos.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-09/ZangZing-main-window.png>


**Uploading Photos** -- To get started with ZangZing, you’ll want to 
  set up an account, which is tremendously easy and just requires a 
  quick email verification. It is worth putting some thought into your 
  username, since it will appear in all the URLs to your shared 
  albums. 

  Once you’re logged in, you create a new album by clicking the New 
  button in the lower left corner of the interface, which starts a 
  four-step process of creating a new album. 

1. In the first screen, you select the source of your photos, which 
   can be a folder on your computer, iPhoto, Picasa, Facebook, Flickr, 
   Instagram, Picasa Web, Shutterfly, Kodak Gallery, SmugMug, 
   Photobucket, Dropbox, or even another ZangZing album.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-09/ZangZing-new-album-1.png>

  In each case, ZangZing then lets you navigate within the source to 
  select an album or individual photos; I’m quite impressed that 
  they can look inside iPhoto from a Web browser, for instance. Once 
  you can see the photos you want, you click an individual photo to 
  add it, or an Add All Photos button to snag everything.

  At this point, ZangZing will upload photos via your Web browser, 
  which can be a lengthy process. If you don’t want to sit and wait, 
  you can instead download the ZangZing Desktop Photo Uploader (for 
  Mac OS X and Windows). Contrary to what you might expect, it does 
  nothing but handle the uploading process in the background; you 
  still initiate the upload from the ZangZing Web site. In Mac OS X, 
  it puts a small icon in the menu bar; a pair of green chasing arrows 
  indicates when it’s uploading, and you can click it to reveal a 
  menu item that tells you how many it has left.

<http://help.zangzing.com/entries/20144013>

2. Once your photos are uploaded, it’s time to name the album. The 
   name is important, since it’s used in the URL to the album that 
   you’ll share with others, and for the email address to which 
   photos can also be sent to be uploaded. ZangZing automatically 
   removes characters that aren’t appropriate for URLs and email 
   addresses.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-09/ZangZing-new-album-2.png>

3. Although ZangZing lets you pick albums or individual photos and 
   brings titles over from the originals, it’s not uncommon to want 
   to upload all the photos in an album or event, except for one or 
   two. And you might discover that some titles are missing or wrong. 
   That’s what you can fix in Step 3, where you edit your album, 
   changing titles, deleting unwanted photos, and rearranging the sort 
   order manually. If everything is as desired, you can just move on 
   to the next step quickly.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-09/ZangZing-new-album-3.png>

4. Lastly, you need to adjust privacy, sharing, and access control 
   settings. Albums can be Public, at which point anyone who visits 
   your account can see them; Hidden, such that no one will stumble 
   across them without knowing the URL; or Invite Only, at which point 
   you must set up and invite a group. 

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-09/ZangZing-new-album-4.png>

  In terms of sharing, you can have a preset group receive email about 
  new photos, and you can automatically share new photos on Facebook 
  or Twitter. Frankly, those worry me a bit — I don’t want to post 
  willy-nilly.

  The access controls are next, and control who can add photos to your 
  album (either Everyone or just people you’ve designated in the 
  group as Contributors), and who can download full-resolution photos 
  (Everyone, Contributors, or No One).

  So far, I’ve made most of my albums hidden, since they fall into 
  the category of pictures from a Halloween party. They’re from 
  Ithaca school cross-country races (and hence include pictures of 
  children), or other running events I’ve participated in (some 
  involving costumes), and so on. However, for the purposes of this 
  article, I posted a public album of photos I took at Macworld Expo 
  2008; if anyone wants to add a few photos from that year to test the 
  experience, feel free, since I’ve set the access controls so 
  anyone can add.

<http://www.zangzing.com/adamengst/macworld-expo-2008>

  The only worry I have is that, because this is a public album and 
  anyone can upload, it’s conceivable I could end up with spam 
  photos (photos of spam?). I can delete those, but obviously, if it 
  gets out of hand, I’ll just restrict uploads. With my hidden 
  albums, I’m not concerned about spam photos because only people 
  involved in the event are likely to have access.

  Once you’re done uploading photos, you can share the album (if 
  it’s Public or Hidden) merely by copying the album’s URL and 
  sending it to interested parties. Invite Only albums are accessible 
  only to the group you create.


**Viewing and Working with Photos** -- Whenever you’re viewing an 
  album or a photo, the top-left area provides a button to move back 
  up the hierarchy to the photo’s album, or to the list of all your 
  albums. On the top in the middle is an icon and the name of the 
  person whose photos you’re viewing, and if it’s not you, 
  there’s a button that lets you follow that person, such that 
  you’ll be alerted to new public albums that person creates. 

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-09/ZangZing-top-bar.png>

  The top-right area provides a Help button that pops up an integrated 
  Zendesk-based knowledgebase along with an Account button that’s 
  actually a menu providing access to settings and the option to sign 
  out. But most interesting in this top-right area is a segmented 
  button that toggles the content of the main part of the window 
  between photos, people, and activity. More on that shortly.

  In the bottom-left area are one to three buttons, depending on 
  context: New, Edit, and Add. Whenever you’re logged in, the New 
  button starts the four-step album creation process. If you’re 
  viewing an album you’ve already created, Edit brings up the same 
  interface so you can modify an album’s settings or tweak its 
  contents. Finally, Add appears if you’re viewing either one of 
  your own albums or someone else’s album to which you’re allowed 
  to add photos. 

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-09/ZangZing-bottom-bar.png>

  In the middle of the bottom toolbar is a graphical play button that 
  starts a slideshow; if you’re viewing a single photo, it’s 
  joined by forward and back buttons that move to the next and 
  previous photos. In the bottom-right area are three or four buttons, 
  again depending on context: Comment, Share, Like, and Buy. Comment 
  appears only if you’re viewing an individual photo, and clicking 
  it toggles the visibility of a pane where you can add a comment to 
  the photo. The Share and Like buttons appear whenever you’re 
  viewing an album or a photo, and let you share the album or photo 
  via email, Facebook, or Twitter, or just note that you like it. 
  “Liked” photos are called out in the activity stream for that 
  album, and you can share the fact that you like the photo on 
  Facebook or Twitter. If you click the Like button accidentally, you 
  can click it again to undo. Lastly, the omnipresent Buy button does 
  nothing now, but will shortly enable you to purchase prints in 
  various forms.

  The main part of the ZangZing window is reserved for content, which 
  comes in three forms: albums and photos, people, and activity, 
  switched via that segmented button I mentioned earlier. Albums and 
  photos are quite obvious — at the top level you see all your 
  albums, and albums you have either liked or public albums of people 
  you are following. Click an album and you see the photos in it, 
  click a photo and it takes up the entire window. Notice the strip of 
  tiny thumbnails at the very bottom of the photo window!

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-09/ZangZing-album+photo-views.png>

  When you’re viewing the photos in an album, hovering over a photo 
  reveals photo-specific controls that let you share it, “like” 
  it, comment on it, buy it (soon), like it on Facebook, or tweet it. 
  These controls are self-explanatory because they duplicate features 
  in the toolbars; the one that’s not is the little “i” button 
  that displays a menu from which you can choose to download the photo 
  (in full resolution, if the album is so enabled) and, if it’s in 
  an album you own, rotate it, set it as the cover photo for the 
  album, and delete it. One important tip: if you click the heart ♥ 
  icon to “like” a photo (or an album, for that matter), and wish 
  to take it back, just click the icon a second time.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-09/ZangZing-photo-controls.png>

  When you’re viewing an individual photo, clicking it moves you to 
  the next one; you can also use the left and right arrow keys to 
  navigate through the strip of photos. Or, if you prefer not to 
  control the movement manually, you can click the triangular play 
  button to start a slideshow that blacks out the window and displays 
  just the photos. On computers, you can make the slideshow take over 
  the entire screen; that button doesn’t appear on an iOS device. 
  Graphical slideshow controls are provided, the Space bar pauses and 
  restarts the slideshow, and both clicking and the left and right 
  arrow keys continue to work as they do when viewing an individual 
  photo. The only remaining option is that you can hide or show the 
  photo’s title; this button is the same as the one used elsewhere 
  for commenting, in an unusual lapse of interface consistency.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-09/ZangZing-slideshow.png>

  If you want to see who has uploaded which photos, click the 
  silhouette button in the segmented button in the top toolbar to 
  switch to people view. It lists the contributors to the album, and 
  lets you see all the photos they’ve uploaded, at least in 
  thumbnail view. One problem, and this is something ZangZing needs to 
  address in general, is that if you click a thumbnail of another 
  person’s photo and then navigate to subsequent photos, the sorting 
  can be sufficiently random that there’s no guarantee you’ll see 
  only that person’s photos. Similarly, in the album view, the 
  photos sort seemingly randomly; in both cases, ZangZing is actually 
  sorting by time, but people often fail to set the date and time in 
  their cameras correctly. Ideally, you as the user would want to sort 
  by contributor, by time, or by photo title.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-09/ZangZing-people-view.png>

  The final view is activity view, accessed from the rightmost button 
  in the segmented control. It lists activity in the album, such as 
  people “liking” photos, adding photos, commenting on photos, and 
  so on. If you’re the owner of an album, or in the group for an 
  album, you’ll also receive email whenever these actions occur. 
  Nonetheless, activity view is key, since without it, it can be 
  difficult to determine which photos have comments, or which are most 
  popular. I’d like to see ZangZing reveal some of that metadata in 
  the album view without requiring the user to hover over a photo.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-09/ZangZing-activity-view.png>

  Speaking of email notifications, in the Settings screen accessible 
  from the Account button, you can control which events — 
  invitations, social actions, upload confirmations, news, and 
  marketing messages — will send you email. You can also tweak your 
  personal information here, and link your account with other photo 
  and social networking services for uploading and posting of social 
  activities.


**Rough Edges** -- I’ll be honest: I like ZangZing immensely. But 
  it’s not surprising that such a new service would still be working 
  through a few rough spots. Here are some I’ve encountered.

* The Buy buttons that appear throughout the interface aren’t yet 
  wired in. Once they are, you’ll be able to buy prints, framed 
  prints, gallery-wrapped canvases, and framed poster prints of the 
  photos you see. I wouldn’t be surprised to see ZangZing let you 
  print on various other objects as well. This is part of ZangZing’s 
  eventual business model.

* Right now, ZangZing is free, and it will remain so. However, at some 
  point, there will be limitations on how much you can upload with a 
  free account, and a fee will be necessary to regain unlimited 
  uploads. I don’t believe the fee has been decided on yet, but 
  since Flickr and similar sites are in the $25 per year range, I’d 
  expect something similar from ZangZing.

* There’s no provision for a true group account, at the moment, 
  which would be ideal for a club. For the Ithaca cross-country teams, 
  I created a new account that I control with the expectation that I 
  could give the password to someone else if they were going to take 
  over the task of creating a new album for each race. That’s a fine 
  workaround, but not entirely ideal; ZangZing is pondering the 
  concept of a group account that would be linked to a personal 
  account, but with additional access privileges.

* Better sorting is essential. As noted previously, it’s 
  chronological or manual at the moment, which can feel random, and 
  thus disorienting in an album containing hundreds of photos.

* Although you can see who uploaded a photo in the people and activity 
  views, there’s no way when viewing an album or an individual photo 
  to know who uploaded it (apart from the photo’s title, which often 
  gives it away). It would be nice to have that as optional 
  information displayed along with the photo title.

* There aren’t any options for what metadata displays, so most 
  uploaded photos just have the ugly camera default names associated 
  with them, and there’s no way to hide them. Similarly, as I noted 
  above, it would be nice in the album view to be able to see at a 
  glance which photos had been liked or commented on.

* Although the owner of an album can rotate and delete photos, and the 
  contributor of an album’s photos can do the same to their photos 
  after the fact, there’s no option for anyone who’s viewing the 
  album to be able to rename photos. Album owners can rename photos in 
  Step 3 of the Edit Album process. Ideally, anyone who has access (at 
  least in Hidden and Invite Only albums) should be able to rename a 
  photo directly from the album view.

* Currently, even if you set an album to accept uploads from Everyone, 
  people who want to upload via the Web still need to have an account. 
  Not surprisingly, anyone can submit photos via email, regardless of 
  whether or not they have an account. It would be ideal to allow Web 
  uploads from people who don’t want accounts.

* Videos aren’t supported right now, though ZangZing has told me 
  that they’re on the list to be added.

  As much as the ZangZing team has their work cut out for them, the 
  service as it stands right now is extremely usable, and by far the 
  best solution I’ve seen for group photo sharing. The Ithaca cross 
  country teams previously used to trade photos around manually on USB 
  flash drives, with the goal of getting everything on a DVD that 
  could live in the library at the end of the season. Now parents can 
  upload all their photos immediately after every race, parents and 
  runners alike can view them, and the yearbook adviser is ecstatic 
  about having such a collection to choose from. Everyone’s happy. 


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://tidbits.com/e/12507#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://tidbits.com/t/12507>


TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 3 October 2011
--------------------------------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12529>

**Adobe Photoshop Lightroom 3.5 and Camera Raw 6.5** -- After seeding 
  release-candidate versions of Photoshop Lightroom and Camera Raw a 
  few weeks ago, Adobe has now made the final versions available. 
  Photoshop Lightroom 3.5 and Camera Raw 6.5 add raw support for 
  several new cameras, such as the Fuji FinePix F600EXR, Nikon Coolpix 
  P7100, Olympus E-PL3, and Sony SLT-A77. New lens profiles are also 
  added, making it easy to correct distortion and chromatic aberration 
  inherent in those lenses, and bugs have been fixed. (Free updates: 
  Lightroom 3.5: 103 MB; Camera Raw 6.5: 93.1 MB)

<http://www.adobe.com/support/downloads/detail.jsp?ftpID=5255>
<http://www.adobe.com/support/downloads/detail.jsp?ftpID=5259>

  Read/post comments about Adobe Photoshop Lightroom 3.5 and Camera 
  Raw 6.5.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12528#comments>


**Firefox 7.0** -- Continuing their new silly version numbering, 
  Mozilla has released Firefox 7.0 (think of it as 4.3 in the real 
  world), once again adding no real new features to the 
  organization’s Web browser. Memory handling is supposedly 
  “drastically improved” for certain use cases, Firefox Sync is 
  faster, the http:// URL prefix is hidden by default in the address 
  bar, MathML support has been enhanced, and there are a few other 
  minor changes. Walk, don’t run, to download it. Also note that the 
  just-released Firefox 7.0.1 fixes a rare bug that could hide add-ons 
  after the 7.0 update was installed; if you’re not seeing the 
  problem, it’s safely ignored for now. (Free, 28.2 MB, release 
  notes)

<http://www.mozilla.org/firefox/>
<http://www.mozilla.org/firefox/7.0.1/releasenotes/>

  Read/post comments about Firefox 7.0

<http://tidbits.com/article/12523#comments>


**PopChar X 5.3** -- If you find yourself regularly needing to find 
  and enter special characters in different fonts, that task has now 
  become easier in Mac OS X 10.7 Lion, with Ergonis Software’s 
  release of PopChar X 5.3. The new release supports colored symbols 
  in the new Apple Color Emoji font; these can now be browsed and 
  searched for, and inserted as characters in applications that know 
  how to handle color fonts. Some additional tweaks, such as reduced 
  CPU load in the background and better compatibility with Lion’s 
  desktop spaces, round out the update. (€29.99 new, free update, 
  2.3 MB, release notes)

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

  Read/post comments about PopChar X 5.3.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12524#comments>


**Teleport 1.1** -- For those who would like to control multiple 
  networked Macs from a single mouse and keyboard, Julien Robert of 
  Abyssoft has now updated his donationware utility Teleport to be 
  compatible with Mac OS X 10.7 Lion (for a review of an earlier 
  version, see “Tools We Use: Teleport,” 27 August 2007). Other 
  new features in Teleport 1.1 include the capability to jump directly 
  to a controlled Mac by pressing a keyboard shortcut, significantly 
  faster file transfers, multiple item file transfers, support for all 
  available screens on Macs with more than one, full support for 
  gestures, encrypted file transfers, and more. (Free update, 706 KB)

<http://abyssoft.com/software/teleport/>
<http://tidbits.com/article/9125>

  Read/post comments about Teleport 1.1.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12521#comments>




$$

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