TidBITS#1102/07-Nov-2011
========================
  Issue link: <http://tidbits.com/issue/1102>


  Looking to write a novel during November’s National Novel Writing
  Month event? Try Scrivener’s free NaNoWriMo trial, and get more help
  from our heavily discounted “Take Control of Scrivener 2.” Also this
  week, Matt Neuburg reminds Lion users that TinkerTool can reverse some
  of Apple’s annoying changes, Rich Mogull shares the story of how he
  accidentally deleted all his iCloud data and was forced to figure out
  a non-trivial restoration method, and we have a DealBITS drawing for
  Tom Bihn’s latest Apple-focused laptop bag. Finally, Adam pores
  through release dates to determine just how long Apple supports Macs
  and iOS devices with new system software — you might be surprised at
  the results. Notable software releases this week include Adobe
  Photoshop Elements 10 Editor, Premiere Elements 10 Editor, Sandvox
  2.2, and Aperture 3.2.1.

Articles
    Scrivener NaNoWriMo ’11 Trial Now Available
    DealBITS Drawing: Win a Tom Bihn Cadet Laptop Bag
    Lion Frustrations? Don’t Forget TinkerTool
    How to Lose and Recover iCloud Data
    Apple’s Planned Obsolescence Schedule
    TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 7 November 2011
    ExtraBITS for 7 November 2011


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Scrivener NaNoWriMo ’11 Trial Now Available
-------------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12605>
  1 comment

  November 1st marked the first day of this year’s National Novel 
  Writing Month, or NaNoWriMo. If you’re one of the thousands of 
  people worldwide attempting to write 50,000 words that may (or may 
  not; quality is optional) somewhat resemble a novel by the end of 
  the month, Literature & Latte is offering a special NaNoWriMo ’11 
  trial version of Scrivener for free. (For more on NaNoWriMo, check 
  out “Write a Novel in 30 Days with NaNoWriMo” by Jason Snell, 
  Macworld Editorial Director and board member of the Office of 
  Letters and Light, the non-profit organization that operates the 
  writingfest.)

<http://www.nanowrimo.org/>
<http://www.literatureandlatte.com/nanowrimo.php>
<http://www.macworld.com/article/163311/2011/10/write_a_novel_in_30_days_with_nanowrimo.html>

  Unlike many word processors, Scrivener is designed for long-form 
  writing such as novels, screenplays, and essays. It features 
  extensive tools for gathering and organizing research, templates for 
  composing a work, and export options that include EPUB, Word, PDF, 
  HTML, and Mobipocket. (It’s so useful, in fact, that we published 
  Kirk McElhearn’s $10 “Take Control of Scrivener 2” and we’re 
  running a 50-percent-off sale on that book and Michael Cohen’s 
  “Take Control of TextExpander” through the end of November.)

<http://tid.bl.it/nanowrimo-sale>

  Although Literature & Latte normally offers a 30-day trial of its 
  writing software, this version has been modified to expire on 7 
  December 2011 so participants don’t find themselves with 
  nonfunctional software near the end of November. NaNoWriMo writers 
  who break the 50,000 word mark by the end of the month can buy the 
  software for 50 percent off its $45 price (for the Mac version; the 
  Windows edition costs $40). Everyone else is eligible for a 20 
  percent discount using a code at checkout. 


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DealBITS Drawing: Win a Tom Bihn Cadet Laptop Bag
-------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12611>
  1 comment

  If you’re looking for a new laptop bag, Seattle-based Tom Bihn has 
  a new one that’s expressly designed for holding Apple’s laptops 
  and iPads, along with a few files or magazines, power supplies, 
  pens, notebooks, and small accessories. Called the Cadet, the bag 
  comes in two sizes, a 15/13 and an 11/iPad. Both include the Cadet 
  Cache, an appropriately sized removable laptop sleeve for the 
  15-inch MacBook Pro; the 13-inch MacBook Pro, MacBook Air, and 
  MacBook; and the 11-inch MacBook Air or an iPad. It has three 
  exterior access compartments, six interior organizer pockets, and 
  one exterior open-top pocket, along with a shoulder strap.

<http://www.tombihn.com/page/001/PROD/700/TB0740>
<http://tidbits.com/images/dealbits/tom-bihn-cadet.jpeg>

  With details that sound as though they were pulled from a James Bond 
  novel, the Cadet is built from 1050d U.S. ballistic nylon and lined 
  with ultralight Japanese Dyneema nylon, and it boasts an 
  Ultrasuede-lined iPhone pocket and YKK splash-proof Uretek zippers. 
  Depending on the size, it weighs between 1.6 pounds (725 g) and 2.1 
  pounds (945 g) before you start adding your gear (for more thoughts 
  about laptop bag weight, see “Why Laptop Bags Are So Heavy,” 21 
  May 2011). It has a lifetime guarantee and is made in Seattle. 
  Colors include Black/Steel, Black/Iberian, Steel/Solar, 
  Forest/Steel, Navy/Solar, and Cardinal/Steel — check the Cadet’s 
  Web page to translate the Crayola names to something you’ll 
  recognize.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12192>

  One especially nice feature is the way the Cadet is checkpoint 
  friendly for going through airport security. The bottom edge of the 
  Cadet Cache sleeve attaches to the Cadet, so you can slide your 
  laptop out of the bag — leaving it in the sleeve — for X-ray 
  inspection without exposing it or detaching it from the Cadet.

  So if you want to win a Tom Bihn Cadet, worth $170, enter at the 
  DealBITS page. Although we do have a deal for everyone who doesn’t 
  win, as usual, it won’t be available to TidBITS readers generally, 
  so be sure to enter! All information gathered is covered by our 
  comprehensive privacy policy.

<http://tidbits.com/dealbits>
<http://tidbits.com/privacy.html>


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Lion Frustrations? Don’t Forget TinkerTool
------------------------------------------
  by Matt Neuburg <matt@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12601>
  8 comments

  When it comes to undocumented system tweaks, we at TidBITS tend to 
  take a fairly conservative stance. After all, your system is a 
  _system_. It’s responsible for running your whole computer. You 
  wouldn’t want to break it accidentally, and we wouldn’t want to 
  give you any advice that might cause you to do so. Also, 
  undocumented tweaks are _undocumented_; this means that Apple could 
  withdraw their effectiveness at any time (and has indeed sometimes 
  done so; see, for example, “Leopard Screen Sharing Loses Hidden 
  Features,” 29 September 2008).

<http://tidbits.com/article/9787>

  Sometimes, however, Apple backs us into a corner, producing a system 
  that does something so blatantly annoying or even downright moronic 
  that we can’t resist advising you to fix it by giving some 
  mystical and unsupported incantation at the command line. For 
  example, when Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard introduced the transparent menu 
  bar, I couldn’t get any work done, and rejoiced the moment a trick 
  was discovered for making it opaque again (“Transparent Menu Bar, 
  Die Die Die!,” 16 November 2007). Apple later saw the error of its 
  own ways (for once!) and provided an official interface for doing 
  the same thing, which remains to this day. And when 10.7 Lion 
  deviously hid your user Library from you, Adam immediately told you 
  how to show it again (“Dealing with Lion’s Hidden Library,” 20 
  July 2011).

<http://tidbits.com/article/9320>
<http://tidbits.com/article/12306>

  When it comes to undocumented system tweaks, what most users want, I 
  think, is two things:

* Give me a graphical interface. Don’t make me type directly into 
  Terminal; I’m afraid I might mess something up accidentally. And 
  if I don’t like a change I’ve made, I want a simple way to undo 
  it immediately.

* Give me a conservative list. I don’t want to go wild and hack my 
  system; I just want to know what’s well-tested and safe that I can 
  tweak, even though Apple doesn’t provide an interface in System 
  Preferences to let me do so.

  If that’s how you feel, you can’t do better than to download 
  Marcel Bresink’s freeware TinkerTool. TinkerTool is a brilliant 
  one-window application that presents itself as a series of panes, 
  rather like System Preferences, each pane providing checkboxes or 
  other interface for toggling undocumented under-the-hood switches in 
  your system and in some Apple-provided software, such as the Finder 
  and Safari. It customizes itself automatically to the particular 
  system and version you’re using, so the options you’ll see are 
  always the right options. And, like TidBITS, it takes a conservative 
  stance; its only options are those that have been determined to be 
  safe and useful.

<http://bresink.de/osx/TinkerTool.html>

  You can get a sense of what TinkerTool might be able to do for you 
  by looking at the online list of TinkerTool’s options in 10.6 Snow 
  Leopard and 10.7 Lion. For example, I always check the option listed 
  here as “Disable the three-dimensional glass effect of the 
  Dock”; this allows me to keep the Dock at the bottom of the screen 
  while using the more compact, pleasing appearance that it 
  automatically takes on when it’s at one side of the screen. In 
  Snow Leopard and before, I always checked “Place both scroll arrow 
  buttons of any scroll bar at both ends of the bar,” giving me both 
  an up arrow and a down arrow at each end of the scroll bar. (In 
  Lion, there are no scroll arrow buttons in a scroll bar, so that 
  option no longer applies.) And the option listed as “Control the 
  style and degree of font smoothing (optimized for CRT or LCD)” has 
  saved my eyes through many system generations; because of a bug in 
  the system, my LCD monitor is not seen as an LCD, so that Apple’s 
  own system preference panes (Appearance or General) don’t allow me 
  to increase the font smoothing far enough to make text legible — 
  whereas TinkerTool does.

<http://bresink.de/osx/0TinkerTool/details.html>

  For Lion in particular, I’d call your attention to several 
  settings you might consider:

* Lion has a feature, copied from iOS, where holding down a letter on 
  your keyboard can summon a popover listing alternate versions of 
  that letter, from which you can then choose. For example, the 
  popover that appears when you hold down “e” includes “e” 
  with an acute accent, “e” with a grave accent, and so forth. The 
  price of this feature, however, is that you can no longer hold 
  “e” to achieve multiple repeated “eeeeee”, as you could with 
  previous systems. Users writing horror stories might object to that. 
  TinkerTool lets you access the setting that restores the old 
  behavior (“Re-enable the key repeat feature”); you will then 
  lose the popover, but of course you can still type alternate letter 
  forms just as before, using the Character Viewer, the Keyboard 
  Viewer, or a modifier-key combination or sequence.

* When you close a window containing unsaved changes and the dialog 
  appears asking whether you want to save, you might have a muscle 
  memory telling you that you can dismiss the dialog without saving by 
  pressing Command-D, for “Don’t Save.” In Lion, that keyboard 
  shortcut no longer works; you can restore it with the TinkerTool 
  option listed as “Re-enable the keyboard shortcut for Don’t Save 
  in save sheets”. (Of course, that little dialog about unsaved 
  changes itself appears less than it used to, because of Lion’s 
  Auto Save feature. But that’s a horror story of a different kind.)

* Most Lion users are aware by now that when an application is 
  launched, whatever windows were open when that application was 
  previously quit will automatically re-open, thanks to Resume. If you 
  don’t like this, you can turn off Resume at a global level; it is 
  also possible, even if Resume is globally turned on, to turn off 
  Resume for a particular application on a one-time basis, by holding 
  Option as you quit it (or vice versa). But what if you’d like, 
  say, to turn off Resume globally but turn it on by default for 
  certain particular applications? It turns out that there is a way to 
  do this, but Apple doesn’t provide access to it; TinkerTool does 
  (“Control the Resume setting individually per application”).

  TinkerTool is not the only system-tweaking game in town. There are 
  other applications that do the same sort of thing TinkerTool does. 
  For certain settings, they might provide a better interface; for 
  example, in the case of the per-application Resume setting, I rather 
  prefer Erica Sadun’s Resuminator. For other settings, they might 
  provide graphical access to something that TinkerTool doesn’t; for 
  example, Lion Tweaks lets you enable AirDrop on unsupported hardware 
  (providing a graphical interface to the trick discussed by Glenn 
  Fleishman in Macworld) and get rid of the iCal and Address Book 
  leather appearance (though I’m not sure I can recommend that one, 
  as it involves meddling with the internals of these applications).

<http://www.tuaw.com/2011/07/26/dear-aunt-tuaw-help-me-fine-tune-session-window-restores/>
<http://ifredrik.com/applications/>
<http://www.macworld.com/article/162407/article.html>

  Nevertheless, I always find myself returning to TinkerTool as my 
  under-the-hood control panel of choice. It’s a utility that I’ve 
  used since the early days of Mac OS X, and I recommend that you try 
  it out if you haven’t already. You might be surprised at some of 
  the simple ways in which it can make your Mac more usable, more 
  comfortable, or more powerful.

  TinkerTool is a 1.5 MB download; the current version requires Snow 
  Leopard or Lion, but earlier versions have been spun off into 
  separate applications (TinkerTool Classic and TinkerTool Classic 
  Generation 2), still available to those using older systems.

<http://www.bresink.com/osx/0TinkerTool/download.php5>
<http://www.bresink.com/osx/LegacyProducts.html>


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How to Lose and Recover iCloud Data
-----------------------------------
  by Rich Mogull <rich@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12607>
  5 comments

  Although I migrated most of my systems to iCloud on the same day, 
  one laptop I use only occasionally for certain work projects lagged 
  behind. When I finally had the time to update the system, I made a 
  critical mistake and nearly lost all my calendars, including my 
  essential work calendar, forever. But thanks to a little trial and 
  error, I managed to pull back from the brink of disaster, and in the 
  process discovered a useful technique for every iCloud user’s 
  recovery kit.


**Trial and Error... and Error** -- My first mistake was completely 
  avoidable. After updating the laptop to Mac OS X 10.7 Lion, I opened 
  System Preferences and started the iCloud migration. Since that 
  computer had previously been linked to MobileMe, I chose the option 
  to merge my data. In the old MobileMe days you could choose to 
  replace your local data with the data stored up in MobileMe, but 
  that’s no longer available for iCloud. Since I had followed the 
  same process on all my other computers, I figured it would be smart 
  enough to avoid duplicates, and I proceeded.

  I left the Mac running in the background as I went back to work, and 
  a little later checked in on it only to discover duplicates of every 
  single calendar entry. Looking at the calendar list in iCal I saw 
  calendars for both MobileMe _and_ iCloud. It seemed as if both were 
  running side by side. 

  I falsely assumed that, unlike my other systems, this Mac kept the 
  old MobileMe data while also connecting to iCloud. That’s when I 
  made my critical mistake... I deleted _all_ the calendars listed 
  under MobileMe. 

  Immediately iCal looked happier, with all the duplicates removed and 
  matching my other device’s calendars. But within minutes I 
  realized the enormity of my error as all my calendars, on all 
  devices, simultaneously disappeared. Lacking a corporate calendar 
  server, this meant years of old appointments, and months of upcoming 
  appointments, were all gone. As a coworker posted on Twitter, 
  “@rmogull doesn’t exist. iCloud has spoken.”

  Since I’m good about backups, I figured I could restore from Time 
  Machine. In a few minutes my calendars were back to normal... and a 
  few seconds later they were all gone again. “This,” I thought to 
  myself, “is bad.”


**iCloud Is Not MobileMe** -- Back in the days of MobileMe, this 
  problem wouldn’t have been that big of a deal. With MobileMe (and 
  .Mac before that) every device was its own authoritative source. 
  Data was synchronized across all devices, but as anyone who 
  experienced a sync conflict could tell you (which was pretty much 
  _everyone_) each device maintained its own data and made its own 
  decisions.

  Thus, if you accidentally deleted a calendar, you could just re-sync 
  from any device that still had the data and propagate it out to all 
  your other devices. Even if you deleted everything from all devices, 
  simply restoring the data on one device could then send it to the 
  others.

  But iCloud uses an entirely different architecture. iCloud is the 
  _authoritative source_ for all data on all devices. Local copies 
  always reflect what’s in the cloud. This approach dramatically 
  reduces sync errors and increases consistency and reliability. But 
  it comes at a cost — should you lose data in iCloud, it’s gone 
  forever. And somewhat to my surprise, there’s no backup within 
  iCloud, and thus no way to restore prior states. This is unlike 
  cloud services such as Dropbox that back up everything stored on the 
  cloud servers and allow you to restore selectively using a Web 
  interface.

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

  (I assume Apple backs up or replicates iCloud data somehow in case 
  of server hardware failure; there just isn’t a way for users to 
  access that backed-up data.)

  If you attempt to restore data as I did, iCloud sees it as 
  out-of-sync with the authoritative version in the cloud and removes 
  it every time you load it back in. That’s because when you restore 
  data with a tool like Time Machine, you also restore all the file 
  metadata we don’t normally deal with, and that metadata likely 
  tells iCloud that it’s older than the cloud version, which results 
  in the local data being continuously deleted.


**How I Saved My Day** -- After even more trial and error, I next 
  attempted a more-complex process that, to be honest, made me a 
  little nervous. Restoring data directly wasn’t working, but I most 
  definitely still had my old calendars. Even disconnecting from 
  iCloud, restoring my data, and reconnecting didn’t hold, since 
  iCloud still saw the restored data as stale and removed it.

  The trick was to disconnect from iCloud, restore the calendars, 
  _stay disconnected from iCloud_, export the calendars, reconnect to 
  iCloud, and then import the just-exported calendars. Here’s the 
  process in more detail:

1. Go into System Preferences > iCloud and sign out of iCloud, which 
   deletes _all_ iCloud data from the device (including documents, 
   contacts, and email). But don’t worry, it’s all still safe at 
   Apple’s data center.

2. Using Time Machine (or your backup program of choice) restore the 
   missing data. In my case this was the ~/Library/Calendars 
   directory. (In Lion the Library folder is hidden by default; in the 
   Finder, hold Option and choose Go > Library before activating Time 
   Machine. Or, you can reveal it using a third-party tool or the 
   command line; see “Dealing with Lion’s Hidden Library,” 20 
   July 2011).

<http://tidbits.com/article/12306>

3. Open the application that uses the data (iCal, in my case). Then 
   export the data. For calendars, you can export an entire calendar 
   as an .ics file by using iCal File > Export > Export; I saved my 
   calendars to the Desktop. (iCal also supports exporting an iCal 
   Archive, but I didn’t test that.) Other applications — such as 
   exporting contacts from Address Book — will have different 
   processes. 

4. Go back into System Preferences and sign into iCloud again.

5. Watch as your data disappears again. It’s mesmerizing. In a bad 
   way.

6. Create _new_ iCloud calendars with the same names as your old ones 
   (I had one name that iCloud kept changing on me, so I picked a new 
   one that was almost the same. I suspect this was due to how quickly 
   I was making these changes). For the rest of these steps, I’m 
   going to focus on iCal, but a similar process should work for other 
   applications.

7. Import the calendar files on your Desktop _into the new, empty 
   iCloud calendars_. If you try to import the calendars without 
   creating iCloud homes for them, you will be able to import them 
   only locally, and not to iCloud.

8. Re-share any shared calendars and send out invitations. I share my 
   work calendar with my coworkers and my home calendar with my wife, 
   and when I initially deleted my calendars I disappeared from their 
   systems (prompting my coworker’s tweet).

9. Ask everyone to send you sharing invitations again so you can see 
   their calendars. Yes, I deleted my shared calendars, which 
   fortunately (even though I had write access) deleted only _my_ 
   access and not my coworkers’ futures.

  The entire process didn’t take long, but it was nerve-wracking 
  considering how much important information I keep in those 
  calendars. After I posted about my travails, fellow TidBITS staffer 
  Michael Cohen wrote:
      
      What I always do when making major changes to my calendar 
      setup is to first export my iCal data. That makes it much 
      easier to repopulate iCal (and, thus, iCloud) with my data if 
      I have a brain freeze or other calamity.

  What a good idea! I was hoping I could use AppleScript to automate 
  this process and make non-iCloud backups of my calendars, but 
  unfortunately the iCal export feature isn’t 
  AppleScript-accessible. I’ll just learn my lesson and make sure I 
  manually export backup copies of important data before mucking 
  around with anything major in iCloud in the future.

  iCloud data isn’t necessarily at greater risk than it was in 
  MobileMe, but when you delete it from iCloud, it’s gone from the 
  source, and recovery is definitely more difficult than it used to 
  be. And than it should be. 


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Apple’s Planned Obsolescence Schedule
-------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12599>
  30 comments

  It has long been a staple among the Mac faithful that Macs may cost 
  more than equivalent Windows-based PCs, but (along with many other 
  advantages) they retain their utility longer. I’m certainly guilty 
  of such statements, and I’ve backed them up over the years by 
  keeping my SE/30 (upgraded from an SE in 1991) in useful service 
  until 2001, at which point I replaced it with a Performa 6400 that 
  was at least five years old.

  That said, hardware longevity — how long the actual hardware 
  continues to function using the software of its era — is being 
  undermined by the need to maintain software compatibility, 
  particularly with networked software. For many years, an elderly Mac 
  could remain useful even in the face of new and incompatible system 
  updates because computers were relatively isolated from one another; 
  as long as file formats remained compatible, older machines 
  maintained their utility. The first hint that networked software was 
  going to become important came from Web browsers, older versions of 
  which weren’t always able to load Web sites using the latest Web 
  design techniques. 

  But Web browser compatibility is nothing compared to the 
  compatibility issues Apple has raised with iCloud, which works only 
  with Mac OS X 10.7.2 Lion and iOS 5. Suddenly, older Macs and iOS 
  devices that aren’t compatible with Lion and iOS 5 have been 
  excluded from life in the cloud, regardless of how well they run 
  other software and even modern Web browsers. In short, the effective 
  life of hardware is now determined by Apple’s corporate fiat, 
  rather than organically as the Macintosh industry gradually shifts 
  away from supporting older machines.

  This got me thinking. When some new version of Mac OS X or iOS comes 
  out, we always report on the hardware with which it’s compatible, 
  but we’ve never brought all the different operating systems 
  together. To do that, I pulled out MacTracker, which provides 
  introduction and discontinuation dates, and used EveryMac’s 
  Ultimate Mac Sort Tool to determine which Macs were made obsolete by 
  each subsequent version of Mac OS X. 

<http://mactracker.ca/>
<http://www.everymac.com/ultimate-mac-sort/>

  The aim here is to figure out just how long you will likely be able 
  to continue installing operating system upgrades (and thus software 
  that requires those OS versions) after you purchase a Mac or iOS 
  device. In particular, I’m interested in the minimum lifespan — 
  how long a particular device would be supported by Apple if you 
  bought near the end of that model’s lifespan.

  First, though, to address an early comment, it is true that Apple 
  continues to support the previous version of Mac OS X (though not 
  iOS) with security updates. So, during the reign of Mac OS X 10.7 
  Lion, Apple will release security updates for 10.6 Snow Leopard, 
  though not for 10.5 Leopard or anything earlier. While this is a 
  welcome policy, I don’t see it changing the functional lifespan of 
  a Mac, since you don’t get your work done with security updates, 
  you get it done with a functioning operating system and supported 
  applications.


**Mac OS X** -- Here’s what I found, starting with 10.4 Tiger, which 
  was released in April 2005. Tiger supported all PowerPC G3-, G4-, 
  and G5-based Macs, and was the first version of Mac OS X to run on 
  Intel-based Macs. There’s little utility in going back any 
  earlier, since previous versions of Mac OS X (with 10.0 released in 
  March 2001) also supported all PowerPC G3-based Macs with the lone 
  exception of the original PowerBook G3.

  Tiger was superseded by 10.5 Leopard in October 2007, when Apple 
  started to drop support for installing new operating system updates 
  on some older Macs. In particular, Leopard swept off the shelf all 
  PowerPC G3-based Macs and slower PowerPC G4-based Macs whose clock 
  speed was less than 867 MHz. Most of those Macs had been 
  discontinued by October 2003, except for a lone 800 MHz iBook G4, 
  which held on until April 2004. So Leopard supported all Mac models 
  introduced as far back as 7 years earlier, but the last Mac sold 
  that couldn’t run Leopard was taken off the market just 3.5 years 
  before Leopard shipped.

  Next up was 10.6 Snow Leopard, which Apple released in August 2009. 
  With Snow Leopard, Apple drew a line in the sand at the Intel 
  transition, eliminating all PowerPC-based Macs. Looking back in 
  time, the iMac was the first Intel-based Mac in January 2006 and the 
  Power Mac G5 was the last of Apple’s product line to make the jump 
  to Intel, sold as a new product until August 2006. (The 
  PowerPC-based Xserve remained available until November 2006, but it 
  wasn’t aimed at the consumer market.) That sets Snow Leopard’s 
  backwards compatibility to as little as 3 years, a year less than 
  Leopard’s. This is understandable given the enormity of the 
  architectural change.

  With 10.7 Lion, which came out in July 2011, Apple consigned a few 
  early Intel-based Macs to the dump heap of history. To be specific, 
  Lion requires an Intel Core 2 Duo processor or faster, which left a 
  number of models out in the cold because they relied on the Intel 
  Core Solo or Core Duo processor. The last of these to go was the 
  Core Duo-based Mac mini, in August 2007, putting Lion’s backwards 
  compatibility at just under 4 years. The first Core 2 Duo systems 
  were sold in September 2006, which adds almost another year to those 
  Macs’ upgradable lifetime.


**iOS** -- What about iOS? The first version of iOS to drop support 
  for earlier models was iOS 4, which appeared in June 2010, and 
  wouldn’t run on the original iPhone and iPod touch from 2007. 
  Apple stopped making those devices after a single year of production 
  in June 2008 and September 2008, respectively, giving iOS 4 a 
  backwards compatibility of 24 to 27 months.

  iOS 5, released in October 2011, also tossed an iPhone and iPod 
  touch over the side: the iPhone 3G and the second-generation iPod 
  touch. (To be fully accurate, these devices actually first bit the 
  dust with the release of iOS 4.3 in March 2011, but that was a 
  relatively minor update and including it would muddy the analysis 
  significantly.) The iPhone 3G survived for 2 years, remaining for 
  sale as a low-cost alternative even after Apple introduced the 
  iPhone 3GS in June 2009. It was eventually discontinued in June 2010 
  when the iPhone 4 came out.

  Similarly, the second-generation iPod touch was introduced in 
  September 2008, and while the 16 and 32 GB versions were pulled from 
  sale a year later in 2009, the 8 GB version held on for 2 years 
  before Apple stopped offering it in September 2010. 

  Technically speaking, that gives iOS 5 a backwards compatibility of 
  only 15 or 16 months, to the last date the iPhone 3G was on sale as 
  a new product. But it also marks the first time Apple introduced a 
  new product while continuing to sell its direct predecessor. On 
  those grounds, you could argue that the real backwards compatibility 
  of iOS 5 is 27 or 28 months, for the iPhone and iPod touch, 
  respectively.

  (Michael DeGusta worked up a fascinating chart comparing iOS and 
  Android OS upgradability by phone model up until June 2010. He chose 
  to look at the span of time from a phone’s introduction to three 
  years after release — less for phones released in the last three 
  years, of course. He depicts across that period how long a phone was 
  for sale, how long updates were available, and how far behind a 
  phone was compared to the current version of the operating system.)

<http://theunderstatement.com/post/11982112928/android-orphans-visualizing-a-sad-history-of-support>


**Support Summary** -- To summarize, then, it seems safe to say that 
  if you buy a new Mac now, it’s a good bet that Apple will support 
  it with new software releases for 4 to 5 years, depending on when 
  you buy in a given model’s lifetime. Snow Leopard cut the time to 
  a low of 3 years for some outlying models, but the desire to focus 
  on Intel-based Macs easily explains that. 

  Things become more complex with iOS. If you’re buying the current 
  generation of iPhone, you’ll have 2 to 3 years of support from 
  Apple — the longer period if you buy a new model immediately — 
  before you’re left by the wayside. The lower end of the range 
  syncs up with the length of most mobile phone contracts.

  However, this will fall down with new purchases of the iPhone 3GS, 
  which Apple is now giving away for free to anyone who will sign a 
  two-year contract with AT&T. It seems entirely likely that the 
  iPhone 3GS won’t survive the next revision of iOS, which means 
  that iOS 6 could be a non-starter for phones that were sold just 
  before the release of iOS 6. (Apple might signal iOS 6 by 
  discontinuing the iPhone 3GS several months ahead to avoid causing 
  some degree of buyer’s remorse.)

  The iPod touch seemed to follow the same pattern as the iPhone for 
  the first few generations, but when Apple released the iPhone 4S, 
  there was no associated fifth-generation iPod touch, meaning that 
  the fourth-generation iPod touch, introduced in September 2010, is 
  still current (albeit in both black and white versions now). That 
  may mean that today’s iPod touch will have a much longer lifespan, 
  if we assume it tracks with the iPhone 4, perhaps even approaching 
  the 4-year upgradability mark that nearly all Macs have enjoyed.

  It’s also hard to know what will happen with the iPad. The 
  original iPad was released in January 2010 and replaced by the 
  current iPad 2 in March 2011, but both can run iOS 5. The original 
  iPad and iPhone 4 use the same processor — see below — while the 
  iPad 2 and iPhone 4S use a later version. That processor difference 
  could be the trigger that starts the clock on the last possible 
  update. The original iPad and iPhone 4, despite introduction dates 
  offset by several months, may both be thrown under the train with 
  iOS 7. That’s certainly no sooner than 2 years from now. If this 
  wild speculation is on target, that would give the iPad a Mac-like 
  longevity of about 4 years.


**Dark Clouds Rising** -- The wild card in all of this is iCloud, 
  which requires iOS 5 and Lion’s 10.7.2 release. It’s not so much 
  that iCloud is itself uninterested in the past, since Lion works on 
  all Macs sold in the last 4 years or so. The problem is iOS 5, and 
  the way Apple is keeping obsolete products for sale at lower price 
  points. The iPhone 3G can’t run iOS 5 and thus can’t participate 
  in iCloud, but you could have bought an iPhone 3G as recently as 15 
  months ago. Thus, you may be able to connect a 4-year-old Mac to 
  iCloud, but not an iPhone that’s less than 2 years old and still 
  under contract. Since the entire point of iCloud is to route data 
  among your many devices, this discrepancy is troubling lots of 
  people.

  It may seem that iCloud (via iOS 5) is a bit like Snow Leopard, in 
  that it’s making arbitrary decisions about who’s in and who’s 
  out. But with Snow Leopard, those decisions were based on an obvious 
  technical difference — PowerPC versus Intel processors. With iOS 
  5, though, there’s no such distinction. It runs on the iPhone 3GS 
  and the third-generation iPod touch, which reportedly use the 
  Samsung S5L8920 CPU, whereas the iPhone 4 and original iPad use 
  Apple’s A4 chip, and the iPhone 4S and iPad 2 rely on the A5. 
  Perhaps iOS 5’s system requirements are based purely on overall 
  performance, which isn’t something that users can see or that we 
  can estimate based on known specs. Certainly, iOS 4 on an iPhone 3G 
  was nearly unusable for a while, until Apple released an update with 
  performance tweaks, and even then it wasn’t snappy.

  If we’re lucky, the real boon of iCloud will be Apple moving 
  additional processing into the network, as Siri does, enabling iOS 
  devices to maintain their utility longer than in the past. Apple may 
  be trying to push the iPad and iPod touch longevity into  the 4-year 
  range enjoyed by Macs. If you consider the iPhone 3GS and 4S as 
  intermediate versions of the iPhone, it’s possible we could see 
  iPhones lasting somewhat longer as well. 

  As long as Apple continues to sell vast quantities of iOS devices to 
  new buyers, everyone is happy. But should Apple feel the need for 
  more upgrade revenue at any point, it seems clear that the company 
  can arbitrarily declare the obsolescence of an entire generation of 
  devices and potentially enforce that obsolescence with some sort of 
  networked service that works only on the most recent devices.


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://tidbits.com/e/12599#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://tidbits.com/t/12599>


TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 7 November 2011
---------------------------------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12618>

**Adobe Photoshop Elements 10 Editor and Premiere Elements 10 Editor** 
  -- Adobe has released the latest versions of its consumer photo and 
  video editing software via the Mac App Store. Photoshop Elements 10 
  Editor expands its array of Guided Edits to help you create shallow 
  depth of field effects, dreamy Orton effects, and more. It also adds 
  the capability to align text to a path, paint using new Smart Brush 
  designs, and recompose photos using crop guides. Premiere Elements 
  10 Editor represents the first time the video editor is available 
  via the Mac App Store, and features one-click video color 
  correction, new InstantMovie themes, and easy pan and zoom motions. 
  Notably, neither app includes Elements Organizer, the software 
  bundled with the boxed versions for managing one’s media library. 
  ($79.99 new for each program; 1.21 GB for Photoshop Elements, 924 MB 
  for Premiere Elements)

<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/adobe-photoshop-elements-10/id465291110?mt=12>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/adobe-premiere-elements-10/id463401023?mt=12>

  Read/post comments about Adobe Photoshop Elements 10 Editor and 
  Premiere Elements 10 Editor.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12616#comments>


**Sandvox 2.2** -- Karelia Software has released Sandvox 2.2, a new 
  version of its popular Web site creation software. The update comes 
  with a few new features, starting with support for maps, which can 
  be added to a Web page just by providing a location or address, and 
  several new formatting options, including lists and strikethrough 
  text. The new release also comes with improved connectivity with 
  servers using SFTP and WebDAV, enhanced media handling tools, and 
  better support for HTML 5. ($79.99 new from Karelia or the Mac App 
  Store, free update, 32 MB)

<http://www.karelia.com/sandvox/>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/sandvox/id455413521?ls=1&mt=12>

  Read/post comments about Sandvox 2.2.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12610#comments>


**Aperture 3.2.1** -- Apple’s professional photo editor gained a 
  small bug-fix update that sounds like a relief for many users. 
  Aperture 3.2.1 fixes a problem where the application could crash at 
  launch on Macs with Intel Core Duo processors and tackles two issues 
  related to the Crop tool: switching to an incorrect orientation or 
  resizing improperly, and rendering images when cropping while 
  Onscreen Proofing is enabled. This version also displays location 
  menus correctly in the Places view when “Photos” is selected in 
  the Library Inspector. ($79.99 new from the Mac App Store, free 
  update, 635.76 MB)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1463>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/aperture/id408981426?mt=12>

  Read/post comments about Aperture 3.2.1.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12606#comments>




ExtraBITS for 7 November 2011
-----------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12617>

  To continue your technology reading for this week, we have a bunch 
  of interesting links, including thoughts about sandboxing in the Mac 
  App Store, Macworld Expo’s name change, MacTech’s benchmarking 
  of Parallels Desktop 7 and VMware Fusion 4, upcoming fixes in iOS 
  5.0.1, and Amazon’s addition of ebook lending for Kindle device 
  owners in the company’s Prime program.


**Sandbox or Catbox?** -- Apple has postponed the announced date when 
  all Mac App Store applications must be sandboxed, from November 2011 
  to March 2012. Maybe that’s because sandboxing isn’t working 
  either for Apple or for developers. Developer Wil Shipley ruminates 
  on why requiring application sandboxing is the wrong strategy for 
  Apple.

<http://blog.wilshipley.com/2011/11/real-security-in-mac-os-x-requires.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/12615#comments>


**Macworld Expo Becomes Macworld|iWorld** -- Macworld (the 
  publication, not the conference) covers the name change for Macworld 
  (the conference, not the publication), talking with 
  Macworld|iWorld’s vice president and general manager, Paul Kent. 
  Along with the name change come some format changes, with more focus 
  on music, art, and film. Training sessions, now called Tech Talks, 
  now come at the lower price of $75. All in all, the changes appear 
  to be the most significant since Apple pulled out several years ago.

<http://www.macworld.com/article/163225/2011/10/as_registration_opens_macworld_expo_unveils_new_name_focus.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/12614#comments>


**MacTech Updates Virtualization Benchmarks** -- Although performance 
  is only one of many criteria involved with choosing a virtualization 
  program, MacTech’s latest virtualization benchmarks clearly give 
  the nod to Parallels Desktop 7 over VMware Fusion 4, a fact that 
  should interest gamers and those doing CPU-intensive tasks in 
  Windows. But do remember what Joe Kissell noted recently, “The 
  fact that a Porsche can go faster than a pickup truck doesn’t mean 
  it’s better; it’s only better if you’re planning on driving 
  faster than the pickup’s top speed, and you value speed more than 
  cargo capacity.”

<http://www.mactech.com/2011/11/01/mactech-labs-virtualization-benchmarks-fall-2011>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/12613#comments>


**iOS 5.0.1 to Fix Caching and Battery Life Bugs** -- Earlier, we 
  referred you to a blog post by Marco Arment showing that iOS 5 could 
  delete the contents of an app’s caches folder and temporary folder 
  behind the app’s back, thus leaving the app with no safe place to 
  store data. Now, MacRumors reports that the release notes for the 
  beta of iOS 5.0.1 say that it “introduces a new way for developers 
  to specify files that should remain on device, even in low storage 
  situations.” This should fix the problem Marco described. iOS 5 
  will also bring multitasking gestures to the original iPad, and is 
  said to address the battery life issues.

<http://www.macrumors.com/2011/11/02/apple-posts-ios-5-0-1-beta-for-developers/>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/12609#comments>


**Amazon Gives Free Ebook Loans to Primed Kindle Owners** -- Amazon 
  keeps ladling on benefits for its Prime subscription, which launched 
  years ago to provide free two-day shipping in the United States for 
  $79 per year and later added video streaming from a subset of 
  Amazon’s film and television catalog. The latest update brings 
  free ebook loans from a selection of thousands of titles, allowing 
  up to one loan per month with no due date. The offer is available 
  only to owners of Kindle hardware, not Kindle apps.

<http://www.amazon.com/gp/feature.html/?docId=1000739811>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/12608#comments>




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