TidBITS#1100/24-Oct-2011
========================
  Issue link: <http://tidbits.com/issue/1100>


  iCloud, iOS 5, and the iPhone 4S’s Siri feature prominently in this
  week’s issue. With all the consternation iCloud has caused, we’re
  particularly pleased to have published Joe Kissell’s “Take Control of
  iCloud,” already on its way to being one of our most popular books.
  Kirk McElhearn explains how Wi-Fi syncing and iCloud backups work,
  once you have the combination of iOS 5 and iTunes 10.5, and Rich
  Mogull examines how Siri may be the first real competition that
  Internet search engines have faced so far. Also this week, Jeff
  Carlson and Michael Cohen report on yet another stellar quarter of
  financial results for Apple, and Glenn Fleishman writes about the
  innovative Lytro light-field camera, which goes on sale in 2012.
  Notable software releases include Fetch 5.7 and Fantastical 1.1.

Articles
    “Take Control of iCloud” Answers Your iCloud Questions
    Orders Start for Unique Lytro Light Field Camera
    Apple Reports $6.62 Billion Profit for Q4 2011
    Syncing iOS Devices Wirelessly with iTunes 10.5 and iCloud
    Will Siri Change the Rules of the Search Game?
    TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 24 October 2011
    ExtraBITS for 24 October 2011


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“Take Control of iCloud” Answers Your iCloud Questions
------------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12578>
  3 comments

  We’re not proud of this, but of everything Apple has done over the 
  last few years, nothing has caused us more confusion and 
  consternation than iCloud. We’ve had long staff discussions about 
  problems with multiple Apple IDs, old Apple IDs, how to switch while 
  maintaining MobileMe calendar sharing with spouses whose Macs 
  don’t run Lion, and more. We’ve even started drafting an article 
  about common (because some of us had them!) misconceptions about 
  what iCloud can and cannot do. 

  Throughout all this, Joe Kissell has been our ace in the hole, since 
  although he can’t help with things that are Apple’s problem 
  (like the inability to merge Apple IDs), he probably knows more 
  about iCloud than anyone outside Apple, thanks to spending months 
  with betas of Mac OS X 10.7.2 Lion and iOS 5 while writing his 
  latest book, the 143-page “Take Control of iCloud.” In it, he 
  explains how you get started with iCloud regardless of whether or 
  not you used MobileMe, helps smooth the transition to iCloud for 
  MobileMe users, and teaches you how to use iCloud’s features once 
  you’re up and running.

<http://tid.bl.it/icloud-tb>

  Regardless of whether or not you used MobileMe before, you’ll 
  learn:

* Exactly what capabilities iCloud provides today and how they compare 
  to previous online offerings from Apple.

* How to prepare your computers and devices for iCloud. (You’ll need 
  iOS 5 and Mac OS X 10.7.2 Lion, so you might want to read Joe’s 
  “Take Control of Upgrading to Lion” as well.)

<http://tid.bl.it/upgrading-to-lion-tb>

* What to do if you have multiple Apple IDs, and how to associate your 
  primary email address with the desired Apple ID.

  For those upgrading from MobileMe, Joe explains:

* Which MobileMe features will disappear instantly once you upgrade to 
  iCloud, and which will stick around until June 2012, when Apple has 
  announced it will shut off MobileMe.

* The best ways to handle old data stored on MobileMe, such as photos 
  in Gallery and files in iDisk, and what alternatives you can use to 
  replace that functionality.

* How to migrate MobileMe Family Pack accounts to separate iCloud 
  accounts.

* How you can replicate MobileMe-based group calendar sharing in 
  iCloud, especially if not everyone in your group can upgrade to 
  iCloud.

  Either way, once you’ve made the move to iCloud, “Take Control 
  of iCloud” covers iCloud’s core features, including:

* iCloud Web site: Learn what you can and can’t do in iCloud’s 
  Web-based interface for Mail, Contacts, Calendar, Find My iPhone, 
  and iWork documents.

* iTunes in the Cloud: Learn how to turn on automatic downloads so 
  nearly anything you buy from Apple — music, apps, and ebooks, 
  though not TV shows or movies — appears on all your devices. 
  You’ll also learn how to re-download previously purchased items 
  (including TV shows, for those with accounts in the U.S. iTunes 
  Store).

* iCloud Backup: Find out what data on your iOS device backs up, how 
  to handle your backup, and — most importantly — how to restore 
  your backup after a problem!

* Photo Stream: Having all your recent photos appear on all your 
  devices sounds great, but there are gotchas. Joe explains how the 
  1,000-photo and 30-day limits work, as well as what’s necessary to 
  get a truly embarrassing photo out of your Photo Stream.

* Documents in the Cloud: Start changing your habits and expectations 
  as your documents begin living in the cloud and within apps instead 
  of on a local disk. But beware, since Documents in the Cloud isn’t 
  always seamless, with both manual effort required and data loss 
  possible at the moment.

* Calendar and Contacts: Joe provides directions for working with 
  iCloud’s Calendar and Contacts Web applications, along with 
  pointers on the relatively few ways they differ from the Mac’s 
  iCal and Address Book and from iOS 5’s Calendar and Contacts apps. 
  You’ll learn how to handle invitations to calendar events, plus 
  get guidance on how reminders work within iCloud’s calendaring 
  system.

* Mail: As with Calendar and Contacts, Joe explains how to set up and 
  use iCloud’s Web-based Mail app, which is similar to the iPad Mail 
  app.

* Find My…: Learn how to use Find My iPhone/iPad/iPod touch/Mac to 
  locate a device that’s gone missing, and get an overview of how 
  you can keep track of friends and family with the new Find My 
  Friends iOS app.

* Back to My Mac: With Back to My Mac, you can connect to your Mac at 
  home or the office over the Internet and use both file sharing and 
  screen sharing just as though you were on the same network. Joe 
  explains the basics.

  “Take Control of iCloud” covers every platform that iCloud 
  supports, which includes Mac OS X 10.7.2 Lion, iOS 5, Windows Vista 
  and Windows 7, and even the second-generation Apple TV. If your 
  computers and devices aren’t running — or can’t run — those 
  operating systems, they won’t be able to participate in iCloud, 
  but the ebook offers some workarounds. 

  We won’t pretend that “Take Control of iCloud” is 
  comprehensive; iCloud is too new and changing too quickly for that, 
  both in terms of support from developers and bug fixes from Apple. 
  But this is the book that we at TidBITS are all reading right now to 
  learn the best ways to transition from MobileMe and get our devices 
  talking to iCloud. 


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Orders Start for Unique Lytro Light Field Camera
------------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12575>
  7 comments

  When I first heard about the Lytro camera, I assumed it was some 
  kind of snake-oil pitch or a hoax. Take a picture and _then_ adjust 
  the focus from the resulting image data? That’s un-possible! But I 
  quickly found that the camera’s technology was legitimate. Instead 
  of capturing just the intensity and color of light passing through a 
  main lens as it lands on a discrete image sensor, the Lytro captures 
  the passage of light rays, allowing the re-creation of images with 
  varying focal planes and depths of field.

  The camera was slated to ship in Q3 2011, but has just been put on 
  sale with an “early 2012” release date. The device has a 
  peculiar form factor in keeping with its unique nature: it’s a 
  squared-off cylinder that looks more like a short telescope than a 
  camera. An LCD touchscreen is on the end, a single button captures 
  photos, and there’s also a zoom (8x) slider and power switch.

<https://www.lytro.com/camera>

  The Lytro comes in three colors: a red model with 16 GB of internal 
  storage costs $499 and can store 750 pictures in Lytro’s format. A 
  graphite or blue camera with 8 GB of storage costs $399. Orders are 
  being accepted only in the United States, and the software to 
  download and view Lytro files via USB will initially be available 
  only for Mac OS X. There is no memory-card slot. I had hoped for 
  Wi-Fi for cable-free image transfers, but a USB connection is 
  required.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-10/lytro-cameras-stacked.jpg>

  The technique behind its focus-after-shooting approach has an ocean 
  of detail behind it. Lytro’s inventor, Ren Ng, who developed the 
  technology during his Ph.D. studies at Stanford, created a camera 
  that interposes a layer of microlenses between a standard image 
  sensor array and the main, standard lens of the camera.

<https://www.lytro.com/science_inside>

  Each microlens acts as a kind of light-field capture device. A light 
  field comprises not just the light falling on a given plane, but the 
  collection of light rays that combine to make up that light. The 
  microlenses each focus incoming light on a subset of image sensors. 
  Those groupings of sensors form a superpixel. With a few dozen 
  pixels, the direction of the light ray can be extracted along with 
  color and intensity detail. This turns a several-megapixel normal 
  image sensor array into one that captures a few hundred thousand 
  superpixels. 

  The resulting image is small in pixel dimensions (a few hundred by a 
  few hundred), but it has the unique property that the data are used 
  to create any focal plane you want within the entire image (and to 
  adjust the depth of field as well). You can have an infinite depth 
  of field in which everything is in focus, or you can single out 
  details. There’s also a sort of stereoscopic-3D effect in which 
  you can move planes of focus around and pan in a limited fashion 
  through the photo. (It’s unclear if that last feature will be in 
  the first release of the Lytro’s viewing software.)

  Using a ray-tracing approach essentially identical to that used in 
  computer animation, Lytro’s display engine computes an image. The 
  engine is vital. Lytro has built this computational display system 
  into the camera, where it works like a viewfinder. The engine will 
  also be available for embedding as a Flash or HTML5 viewer on Web 
  pages, and in software for viewing on a computer.

  The Lytro is an example of computational photography, which can 
  involve capturing multiple images rapidly or multiple images at once 
  (or both), and combining them into impossible results using more 
  sophisticated algorithms than are typically employed for normal 
  image adjustments. High-dynamic range (HDR) imaging is the most 
  prominent form of computational photography in wide use, combining 
  multiple images taken in rapid succession at different exposures to 
  create a near-unnatural effect of viewing a scene with tonal details 
  from the very lightest to the very darkest. (For more detail, see my 
  Economist article from 3 September 2011.)

<http://www.economist.com/node/21527019>

  I’m dying to get my hands on a Lytro, because it could change the 
  nature of snapshot photography. The approach allows relatively short 
  exposures with a wide-open (f/2) lens, which helps in low-light 
  conditions, but less so with action photographs. There’s no delay 
  for auto-focus, which Lytro says means a picture is taken the 
  instant the shutter button is pressed. But it’s all in the 
  execution. Clever is good, but the proof is in the pictures.


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Apple Reports $6.62 Billion Profit for Q4 2011
----------------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>, Michael E. Cohen <lymond@mac.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12572>

  After opening the quarterly financial conference call with a 
  memorial statement about the passing of Steve Jobs, Apple CEO Tim 
  Cook turned the floor over to CFO Peter Oppenheimer, who announced 
  the by-now-typical excellent financial results for the fourth 
  quarter of 2011:

<http://www.apple.com/pr/library/2011/10/18Apple-Reports-Fourth-Quarter-Results.html>

* $28.27 billion in revenue (last year was $20.34 billion)
* $6.62 billion in net income (last year was $4.31 billion)
* $7.05 per share profits (last year was $4.64)
* 40.3 percent gross margin (last year was 36.9 percent)

  Apple’s guidance for the quarter was $5.50 per share in profits, 
  but analysts had predicted $7.31 per share, which led to an 
  after-hours drop in Apple’s stock price: It closed the day at over 
  $422 per share, but dropped below $400 per share after the market 
  closed and the financial results began to filter out.

  As for individual product categories, it turned out that Macs had 
  their best quarter ever: 4.89 million Macs were sold, representing a 
  26 percent increase over last year’s sales numbers. The biggest 
  area of Mac sales growth was in the Asia-Pacific region, where sales 
  of Macs increased by a whopping 61 percent. Mac sales were led by 
  MacBook Air and MacBook Pro sales with 74 percent of total Macs 
  sold; the sales of desktop Macs, led by the iMac, were surprisingly 
  strong. Mac OS X Lion contributed to the party, with over 6 million 
  downloads during the September quarter.

  iPhone sales were high as well, even if not matching the rosiest 
  analyst estimates: 17.07 million of the pocketable devices were 
  sold, exceeding by more than one-fifth the number sold in the same 
  quarter last year. iPhone sales in the increasingly important 
  Asia-Pacific market doubled over the sales a year ago. Nonetheless, 
  analysts had expected as many as 22 million iPhones to be sold. 
  Oppenheimer admitted that rumors concerning the now-released iPhone 
  4S, along with a decision not to add additional carriers 
  internationally until the iPhone 4S release in October, resulted in 
  a decline in iPhone sales volume near the end of the quarter: not as 
  much as Apple had anticipated, even if it was a much higher a drop 
  than some analysts had guessed. Recognized revenue from iPhone sales 
  came in at roughly $11 billion compared to $8.8 billion last year.

  As expected, given the saturation of the music player market, iPods 
  saw a 27 percent sales decline from last year, but still managed to 
  rack up 6.62 million units sold compared to 9.1 million sold during 
  the same quarter last year. iPod touch sales accounted for over half 
  of iPods sold. Oppenheimer noted that these numbers exceeded the 
  company’s expectations, and he said that iPod still held a more 
  than 70 percent share of the music player market.

  Apple “continues to be thrilled” by the iPad’s sales momentum, 
  with a record-breaking 11.1 million of the shiny slabs sold last 
  quarter, compared to 4.2 million sold during the same quarter last 
  year. Those keeping score will note that’s an increase of _166 
  percent_. The iPad and iPad accessories brought in $6.9 billion 
  compared to last year’s $2.8 billion in quarterly revenues. The 
  iPad, it was noted, is currently available in 90 countries. 

  The iTunes Store itself generated record revenues of almost $1.5 
  billion. According to Oppenheimer, customers have downloaded more 
  than 16 billion songs to date, 650 million TV shows, and 180 million 
  books from the iBookstore.

  Oppenheimer concluded with a yearly summary: 72 million iPhones were 
  sold in fiscal 2011, 32 million iPads, and about 17 million Macs. 40 
  new Apple stores were opened during the year as well, and the 
  company generated $26 billion in net income (an 85 percent increase 
  year over year).


**Ground by the Rumor Mill** -- Rumors of upcoming Apple products are 
  a pervasive aspect of every big launch, but Apple usually doesn’t 
  acknowledge them on its earnings calls, preferring to stick to its 
  own communications. In the question-and-answer session of the call, 
  however, iPhone rumors cropped up more often than speculative iPhone 
  case designs appear online.

  When asked why Apple deferred adding new carriers (such as Sprint) 
  or countries until the next financial quarter, which led to a drop 
  in iPhone 4 sales at the end of the quarter, Peter Oppenheimer 
  mentioned that Apple wanted to time everything with the October 
  release of the iPhone 4S, “and we wanted to launch them with our 
  latest product.” But he then added that the biggest impact was the 
  very “pervasive” rumors.

  Later, when asked to speculate on how many purchases were deferred, 
  Tim Cook pulled out a favorite expression. “You can’t run the 
  experiment twice,” he said. “We can’t tell you with precision 
  how many units we would have sold if there had not been rumors and 
  people weren’t expecting a new iPhone. But I certainly believe it 
  was substantial, and that’s the reason that we called it out. And 
  I think anyone monitoring the press would probably come to the same 
  conclusion.”

  With millions of iPhone 4s still sold during the same time frame, 
  rumors aren’t significantly threatening Apple. But the rumor mill 
  is something that’s definitely on the company’s — and its 
  executives’ — radar.


**The Continued Importance of Apple Retail Stores** -- Apple’s 
  successful retail experiment, launched at a time when Gateway was 
  closing all of its stores, continues to drive customers (77.5 
  million) and money ($3.6 billion in revenue) to the company, with an 
  average of $10.7 million in revenue per store (which was down 
  slightly from the previous quarter). Apple opened 30 new stores 
  during the quarter, 21 of which are outside the United States; the 
  first Hong Kong store marked the highest opening-day traffic for an 
  Apple store.

  Looking ahead to the 2012 fiscal year, Apple reiterated its focus on 
  international expansion, expecting to open 40 stores, 30 of which 
  will be outside the United States. Oppenheimer pointed out that 
  Apple will also be expanding or replacing high volume stores that 
  are “too constrained to deliver the expected customer 
  experience,” especially in the United States.

  Apple also stuck with an earnings-call tradition, pointing out that 
  of the 1.1 million Mac sales in retail stores, about half of them 
  were to first-time Mac buyers.


**International Focus** -- China and the Asian market figured heavily 
  into April’s Q2 2011 earnings call (particularly because of the 
  earthquake and tsunami in Japan; see “Apple Breaks More Records 
  for Q2 2011,” 21 April 2011). When asked to comment on efforts 
  there for Q4, Tim Cook said that Apple’s progress in China is 
  “amazing,” accounting for $4.5 billion of Apple’s revenue for 
  the current quarter, and $15 billion in revenue for the fiscal year. 
  He noted that Apple now has six retail stores in greater China, as 
  well as over 200 “monobranded” stores (“resellers with a 
  premium shopping experience”) and 7,000 iPhone points of sale. 
  “I’ve never seen as many people rising into the middle class, 
  aspiring to buy the products that Apple makes,” Cook said.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12124>

  Other areas show promise: sales in Brazil were up 118 percent 
  year-over-year, crossing the $900 million mark, and Russia and the 
  Middle East both have significant opportunities. Cook said that the 
  iPhone is opening up markets where Apple hasn’t traditionally been 
  strong, and the iPad will do the same.

  Analysts’ questions about Asia also focused on manufacturing and 
  supplies, especially given record-breaking flooding in Thailand that 
  has shut down many factories that produce components for Apple and 
  other technology companies. Cook said that the weather has made it 
  difficult to assess the damage, and so a recovery timeline is 
  unknown. He expects the primary exposure will be on the Mac, 
  foreseeing an industry shortage of disk drives, but could not 
  speculate on how that would affect Apple.

  In terms of other components, one interesting admission from Cook 
  was that Apple doesn’t broaden its number of suppliers to meet 
  demand. “Our approach has been and I think will always be to do 
  business with as few people as we can, so we can be very ‘deep’ 
  with them and do great innovative stuff together,” he said. 
  “They give us great quality and also reasonable prices.”


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Syncing iOS Devices Wirelessly with iTunes 10.5 and iCloud
----------------------------------------------------------
  by Kirk McElhearn <kirk@mcelhearn.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12570>
  13 comments

  While iTunes 10.5 is ready for iCloud, with the arrival of iTunes 
  Match due by the end of the month, the marquee feature added to this 
  version of iTunes is the capability to sync iOS 5 devices via Wi-Fi. 
  It’s always been a bit of an annoyance to have to connect your 
  iPad, iPhone, or iPod touch with a cable to transfer media files and 
  data, making Wi-Fi syncing a big step forward in letting you manage 
  your iOS device’s content without having to connect it directly to 
  your Mac. Here’s how you set up and use Wi-Fi syncing and iCloud 
  backups.


**Get Started with Wi-Fi Syncing** -- The first thing you need to do 
  is connect your iOS device (which must be running iOS 5) to your 
  Mac; yes, the point of using Wi-Fi syncing is to no longer have to 
  do this, but you only need to tether the device the first time. Then 
  follow these steps:

1. Select the device in the iTunes sidebar.

2. If the Summary tab isn’t active, click it. 

3. Scroll down to the Options section, and check “Sync with this 
   iPhone (or iPad/iPod) over Wi-Fi.”

4. Click the Apply button at the bottom-right of the iTunes window to 
   save your changes. 

  When syncing has finished, disconnect your device. You’ll notice 
  that it remains in the Devices section of the iTunes sidebar, even 
  though you’ve disconnected it. 

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-10/Wi-Fi-sync-options.png>

  (If, by chance, you click the little eject icon next to the device, 
  have no fear — you can get it back by connecting the device to 
  your Mac again.)


**Three Ways to Sync Wirelessly** -- Once you’ve enabled Wi-Fi 
  syncing, you have three ways to sync wirelessly. (Of course, you can 
  still continue to connect your iOS device to your Mac via USB, which 
  you want to do if you have a lot of data to transfer, as you would 
  if you just ripped a lot of CDs or bought several movies. Just 
  connect your device, wait until it finishes syncing, and then 
  disconnect it without ejecting it from the iTunes sidebar.)

* The first method of syncing wirelessly is automatic and transparent: 
  connect your device to a power source, such as a charger or a dock 
  that’s connected to a charger, and it will begin syncing 
  automatically, as long as the Mac it’s linked with is on and 
  iTunes is running. 

* If you wish to force a sync from your Mac, as you might after 
  downloading or adding new content to your iTunes library, select 
  your device in the iTunes sidebar and click the Sync button in the 
  lower right corner of the iTunes window. You can continue using your 
  device during the sync; it proceeds happily in the background.

* If you’re not at your Mac but wish to sync, you can launch a sync 
  from the device, assuming you’re in range of the network your Mac 
  is on. On your device, go to Settings > General > iTunes Wi-Fi Sync, 
  and then  tap Sync Now to initiate a sync.

  If you have any problems with Wi-Fi syncing — and many users seem 
  to have, although it has worked well for me — Apple has published 
  a support document with troubleshooting steps.

<http://support.apple.com/kb/TS4062>


**Put Your Backup in the Cloud** -- In addition to syncing via Wi-Fi, 
  you can choose to back up your iOS 5-enabled device wirelessly to 
  the cloud, if you’ve set up an iCloud account, rather than to your 
  Mac. The big advantage of an iCloud-based backup is that it enables 
  you to back up data even if you’re on the road and can’t access 
  the Mac with which your device is linked, such that you won’t lose 
  anything should the device be lost or stolen. (The other significant 
  advantage is that iCloud backups enable iOS devices to be used by 
  people who don’t own suitable computers, though I expect that most 
  people reading this article have such computers available for 
  traditional USB-based backup to iTunes.) For more details about 
  iCloud, see Joe Kissell’s “Take Control of iCloud.”

<http://tid.bl.it/icloud-tb>

  On the Summary tab in iTunes, go to the Backup section, select 
  “Back up to iCloud,” and click the Apply button. You can also do 
  this from the device; tap Settings > iCloud > Storage & Backup and 
  turn iCloud Backup on, then tap the Back Up Now button. Once set up, 
  Apple says iCloud backups will happen on a daily basis as long as 
  the device is connected to the Internet via Wi-Fi, is connected to 
  power, and is screen locked. In my experience, this hasn’t always 
  been true, but perhaps that can be chalked up to iCloud launch 
  problems that will be resolved.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-10/iCloud-backup.png>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT4859>

  After the initial backup to iCloud, you’ll be able to restore 
  basic functionality to the device using the iCloud backup, without 
  needing to access your Mac. iCloud backups include settings, 
  accounts, and iTunes-purchased music, TV shows, apps, and books, 
  plus your Camera Roll. Excluded from iCloud backups are music and TV 
  shows not purchased from the iTunes Store, movies, podcasts, audio 
  books, and photos originally synced from your Mac, all of which 
  you’ll have to resync from your Mac after restoring from the 
  iCloud backup. Because iTunes-purchased items are already in iCloud, 
  they don’t have to be uploaded to be backed up — this enables 
  you to avoid uploading a massive GPS navigation app, for instance, 
  though you’ll still have to download it again if you need to 
  restore.

  Otherwise, if you leave the setting at “Back up to this 
  computer,” you’ll back up, as before, to your Mac, and you’ll 
  restore it from there as well, if necessary.

  Backups can take a long time, so you might want to choose 
  specifically what to back up and what to ignore. On your iOS device, 
  go to Settings > iCloud > Storage & Backup to see storage data — 
  the total storage available in your iCloud account, and how much is 
  currently available. Then tap Manage Storage, and then the name of 
  your device to see details on your backups. Needless to say, the 
  larger the backup, the more of your iCloud storage it will use, and 
  the longer it will take to back up, much longer than backing up to 
  your Mac via USB.

  Also in Manage Storage for your device is a listing of five apps 
  whose backup data takes up the most space, and how much storage 
  space each will use. You can turn backup off for any of them using 
  the sliders next to their names. Tap “Show all apps” to see the 
  rest of your apps and how much data they store. Some apps may store 
  a lot of data, but don’t need to be backed up. For example, I’m 
  a New Yorker subscriber, and that magazine’s app consumes about 
  125 MB per issue. If I get behind by a few issues (which is common) 
  it can take up 500 MB, and want to back up all that data. Since I 
  can always re-download issues of the magazine, there’s no point in 
  wasting both time and space, so I’ve turned off backups for the 
  New Yorker app. You may find you have similar apps whose data 
  doesn’t need to be backed up, so feel free to turn backup off for 
  those apps.


**Cutting the Cord** -- As you’ve seen, neither Wi-Fi syncing nor 
  iCloud backups are difficult to set up, nor are they hard to 
  understand or use. This simplicity belies what must have been a 
  significant engineering effort from Apple, since these technologies 
  offer such a huge improvement in usability that it’s almost hard 
  to imagine why it took Apple so long to implement them. 

  If you have an iOS device and a Wi-Fi network, you should definitely 
  see if Wi-Fi syncing in particular is for you; iCloud backups may be 
  less compelling for those who have a Mac at hand. Don’t get rid of 
  that USB cable, though — there are times when you’ll want to use 
  old-fashioned syncing.


  ----
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Will Siri Change the Rules of the Search Game?
----------------------------------------------
  by Rich Mogull <rich@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12577>
  6 comments

  There are two hallmarks of disruptive innovation that are commonly 
  misunderstood. The first is the myth of the “aha” moment that 
  tends to assign disruption to a single instant of discovery and 
  change, when, in reality, nearly all disruptive innovations are the 
  result of long-term trends, research, and investment that finally 
  culminate at an inflection point. The iPad wasn’t invented in a 
  vacuum, but was the result of decades of research, failed attempts, 
  and gradual technology advancements.

  This doesn’t diminish the value of the innovation, but even the 
  lightbulb was only possible after centuries of accretive science.

  The second myth is that a disruptive event immediately changes the 
  world. In fact, it’s only in retrospect that we acknowledge the 
  power and impact of these innovations, which were often 
  under-appreciated at the time.

  Disruptive innovation is a gradual process with a long tail both 
  before and after the inflection event. But what’s always clear is 
  that the world is never the same after that point, and those who 
  recognize the impact sooner have an advantage over the laggards who 
  fail to realize the game has changed. And I suspect we’ve just 
  seen the first major disruption in the search market since Google 
  introduced AdWords.


**The Battle for Search** -- The search market is one of the most 
  lucrative in the industry; especially for the dominating force of 
  Google, which just posted quarterly revenues of nearly $10 billion. 
  Unless you know the exact address of what you’re looking for, 
  search is almost guaranteed to be your first stop after firing up 
  your Web browser. Placing contextual ads on search results both 
  drives massive profits for the search engine and serves as a 
  supremely effective marketing tool for many companies.

  The structure of the search market is fairly straightforward. 
  Companies buy advertisements tied to keywords, demographics, and 
  user histories. The search companies try to optimize the accuracy of 
  raw search results to provide the best user experience, while 
  simultaneously tracking activity and presenting “optimized” ads. 
  The goal is to hook the users with a combination of helpful search 
  results and targeted advertising that’s most likely to appeal, and 
  get them to click. 

  Companies pay a combination of a base rate and some amount per 
  click. Since the goal is to drive these clicks and eventual 
  purchases, there is a massive incentive for search engines to 
  predict the users’ behaviors and desires as closely as possible, 
  which requires tracking their activities. Search engines like 
  Google, Bing, and Yahoo thus tie into tracking and advertising 
  networks to get the data they need, and to reach the greatest number 
  of consumers.

  Thus, today’s search game is defined by extensive user tracking 
  and profiling, funded by targeted advertising. The value of search 
  to a user is the quality of results. Since users don’t pay for 
  search, the value to those funding it is the ability to convert 
  those searches into clicks, and then into product sales. Thus the 
  users, as with any free site funded by advertising, are the product, 
  and the companies paying for the advertising are the client.

  In other words, there isn’t a search market, there is an 
  advertising market.


**Siri Thinks Different** -- Siri isn’t a search engine, although it 
  shares some of the same goals. Siri is, in essence, a new user 
  interface, whose objective is to perform tasks, not merely deliver 
  results.

  Thus Siri, even in its infancy, performs a wider set of 
  context-driven activities that range from setting an alarm, to 
  finding the nearest restaurant, to translating a user’s question 
  into a request sent to a search engine. 

  Siri is _glue_. It aggregates a diverse set of services and 
  resources into a single voice-driven interface that doesn’t 
  require the user to know exactly which site, service, or app will 
  best complete the task or deliver the most relevant results. 
  Ideally, Siri will know which of its underlying components is best 
  suited under the circumstances.

  You tell Siri _what you want_, not _how to do it_.

  Whereas a search engine crawls sites to collect data to present to 
  searchers, Siri plugs in a wider range of services and only falls 
  back on a generic search engine as the resource of last resort. This 
  allows Siri — in an ideal world — to provide more-useful data 
  more quickly. It knows Yelp is its best resource for information on 
  restaurants, Wolfram Alpha for factual data, and iOS’s own apps 
  for weather and maps.

  Siri is limited to the services that Apple has baked in and to data 
  from certain Apple apps, which is a pretty small collection right 
  now. Most search engines have similar partnerships for things like 
  flight tracking, weather, and movie times, and built-in tools for 
  maps and other features; but these results merely display on top of 
  a long list of search results. The major search engines also offer a 
  plethora of other services, like mail and calendaring, but, again, 
  these are all oriented at delivering targeted advertising.

  Siri is focused. Search is more diverse and inclusive. Siri is _task 
  oriented_, whereas search is _information oriented_. Siri is the 
  user interface, where search is the data feed.


**Different Goals, Same Target** -- Siri and search companies both 
  compete to control your contact point with the Internet. Search does 
  this through deep integration with Web browsers; even to the point 
  (with Google) of producing entire operating systems whose primary 
  goal is to serve as your conduit to the Internet and drive you 
  towards Google services. The value to Google in producing Chrome OS 
  and Android is in increasing usage of Google for the purpose of 
  gaining access to your activities and delivering more targeted 
  advertising.

  Siri is a new user interface designed to increase the usefulness of 
  the iPhone, and it’s hard to imagine it won’t eventually come to 
  other products. The Internet is only one of its potential 
  components, which also include on-device data and apps like 
  calendars and reminders. Siri tracks your activity to improve its 
  accuracy, not to deliver advertising. The value to Apple is in 
  selling more devices.

  These are completely different financial models, even though both 
  systems track and analyze your activities. One is funded by 
  advertising, the other with device sales. (And both, perhaps, with 
  licensing to drive users to particular partners.)


**How Siri Disrupts Search** --  Siri doesn’t replace search, but in 
  many cases it circumvents it by directing users straight to 
  integrated partner services. When you ask for the nearest Indian 
  restaurant there’s still a search taking place, but it’s through 
  Yelp, not a generic search engine that would include Yelp plus 
  various other results. 

  By skipping the search engine and going straight to a designated 
  source there is no place to insert advertising. If the results are 
  embedded in Siri’s response, as Yelp recommendations are now, the 
  only way for advertising to appear as part of the process is if the 
  user manually goes to the partner site.

  The model changes. For the subset of services it supports, Siri 
  could deliver more value to the user by more quickly getting them to 
  the information they need, or by completing a task for them. It 
  creates more value for Apple by selling more devices. The value to 
  the partner sites is an increase in traffic without having to pay 
  the per-click fees of a search engine, and potentially in licensing 
  fees, although the sites may lose out on their own advertising 
  opportunities, depending on how they were integrated.

  Search engines are hurt by reduced traffic, reduced user tracking, 
  and reduced opportunities to deliver advertising. Widespread 
  adoption of Siri could also hurt companies that deliver services 
  competitive with those included in Siri. It would place Apple in a 
  position of incredible power, which isn’t necessarily all 
  positive. If you compete with Yelp, you have a chance of showing up 
  in search results, but you will be completely invisible to Siri 
  users.

  Now, clearly, there aren’t yet enough Siri users to make even a 
  thumbtack-sized dent in what’s left of Yahoo, never mind Google. 
  But I’m not talking about this year or next year, but the world 
  five or ten years from now.

  If Siri succeeds, with Apple at the helm, it could potentially 
  capture and redirect a material percentage of activities that 
  currently run through search engines. Today we can get basic facts 
  and restaurant recommendations, but I won’t be surprised if 
  everything from ordering on Amazon to getting customized health 
  information migrates to Siri. The smarter Siri gets, the more 
  directly it provides information and services we need, and the wider 
  range of tasks it performs for us. 

  General-purpose search engines won’t go away, but we certainly 
  won’t interact with them directly nearly as much.

  Had Google bought Siri we would likely see it available on a wider 
  range of platforms and supported by advertising. It would have 
  enhanced the current search market model. 

  But Google didn’t buy Siri, Apple did, and despite the range of 
  software products Apple builds, its primary business model is 
  selling hardware. Apple may have an ad network, but that’s to 
  _reduce_ the intrusiveness of ads and draw more app developers to 
  its platform (and iAds isn’t exactly Apple’s most successful 
  product). 

  We will still be tracked. We will still run searches. But one 
  business model is funded by advertisements, and the other with 
  device sales. For the first time since the birth of search we have a 
  competing model. 


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://tidbits.com/e/12577#comments>
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TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 24 October 2011
---------------------------------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12583>

**Fetch 5.7** -- In line with the company’s goal of “relentless 
  improvement,” Fetch Softworks has released Fetch 5.7, further 
  refining and polishing the venerable file transfer client. Fetch 5.7 
  now provides a search field for restricting file lists to matching 
  files, displays the overall progress and time remaining for 
  multi-file transfers, preserves modification dates of uploaded 
  files, syncs shortcuts via Dropbox or a shared file server, adds a 
  Show Fetch.log In Finder command, automatically removes trailing 
  spaces from the names of uploaded files, and adds support for 
  editing remote files displayed with Quick Look. Also improved is 
  compatibility with various server packages, user interaction with 
  SFTP sites, and reliability of large transfers. A variety of bugs 
  have been fixed, too. ($29 new from Fetch Softworks or the Mac App 
  Store and free for educational users, free update from 5.5 or later, 
  $10 upgrade for earlier purchases, 11.3 MB, release notes)

<http://fetchsoftworks.com/fetch/>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/fetch/id407963172?mt=12>
<http://fetchsoftworks.com/fetch/release-notes#fetch-5.7>

  Read/post comments about Fetch 5.7.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12584#comments>


**Fantastical 1.1** -- Flexibits has released Fantastical 1.1, an 
  update to their popular calendar utility. This release adds a few 
  welcome features: It is now possible to edit and delete events, as 
  well as add and edit notes to them. Fantastical now also supports 
  iCloud calendars, and provides a number of new editing options. 
  Version 1.1 also includes bug fixes and performance improvements 
  that affect everything from graphics acceleration to the user 
  interface’s responsiveness and functionality. ($19.99 new from 
  Flexibits or the Mac App Store, free update, 1.1 MB, release notes)

<http://flexibits.com/fantastical>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/fantastical/id435003921?mt=12>
<http://flexibits.com/fantastical_releasenotes>

  Read/post comments about Fantastical 1.1.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12579#comments>




ExtraBITS for 24 October 2011
-----------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12582>

  Apple shut down the entire company for two hours last week to 
  celebrate Steve Jobs’s life; you can now watch the video of that 
  event. Also this week, we have a MacJury podcast with Tonya Engst 
  and Jeff Carlson talking about the iPhone 4S, news of a high-tech 
  security hack using an iPhone 4, a profile of the founders of 
  Dropbox, and an article about the new AirPort Utility app for iOS 5.


**Watch the 19 October 2011 Apple Event Celebrating Steve Jobs** -- 
  Two weeks after Steve Jobs’s passing, Apple shut down the entire 
  company — even retail stores worldwide — for two hours to pay 
  tribute to the founder and former CEO. The event featured 
  remembrances from Apple executives and board members, as well as 
  musical performances by Norah Jones and Coldplay. (Did you think any 
  Steve Jobs event, even posthumous, would go on without some musical 
  component?)

<http://www.apple.com/celebrating-steve/>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/12581#comments>


**Tonya and Jeff Talk iPhone 4S First Weekend on the MacJury** -- 
  Tonya Engst and Jeff Carlson both received new iPhone 4S devices 
  over the weekend, and both of them encountered activation problems 
  due to cross-grading their spouses’ AT&T accounts. Tune in to 
  learn how the problems were (easily) solved, and hear more about 
  their first impressions of Apple’s newest iPhone.

<http://www.macjury.com/macjury-1112-a-weekend-with-the-iphone-4s/>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/12574#comments>


**iPhone Used to Eavesdrop on Nearby Keyboards** -- This research 
  finding from Georgia Tech sounds like it comes from the plot of a 
  high-tech thriller — a team has figured out how to listen in on 
  what someone is typing on a nearby keyboard by using the 
  accelerometer and gyroscope of an iPhone 4 to sense keyboard 
  vibrations and decipher sentences with 80 percent accuracy. Although 
  the actual risk of this happening is essentially non-existent, 
  it’s yet another example of just how important it is that 
  smartphone security be maintained by manufacturers and users alike.

<http://www.gatech.edu/newsroom/release.html?nid=71506>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/12573#comments>


**The Inside Story of Dropbox** -- Victoria Barret of Forbes has 
  written a charming piece about the rise of Dropbox, the cloud-based 
  file sharing site that we and numerous others have come to rely on. 
  Especially interesting is her telling of the meeting the Dropbox 
  founders had with Steve Jobs, and their concern about what iCloud 
  may become. (For the moment, they have little to worry about, since 
  iCloud is for individuals syncing their own devices, whereas Dropbox 
  also enables multiple people to collaborate seamlessly.)

<http://www.forbes.com/sites/victoriabarret/2011/10/18/dropbox-the-inside-story-of-techs-hottest-startup/>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/12571#comments>


**Use the New AirPort Utility App for iOS 5** -- Apple’s release of 
  an AirPort Utility app for iOS 5 lets you leave the desktop version 
  behind for most base station configuration tasks. It’s free, and 
  has the bonus of a graphic presentation of your network layout and 
  connections among base stations. Glenn Fleishman has the details at 
  Macworld.

<https://www.macworld.com/article/163084/article.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/12569#comments>




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