TidBITS#1105/05-Dec-2011
========================
  Issue link: <http://tidbits.com/issue/1105>


  We find ourselves in the middle of a pair of controversies this week.
  First, an iPhone app that promises (and delivers) tethering for a
  one-time $14.99 fee is approved in the App Store and becomes an
  instant hit, but Apple quickly pulls it, citing a weak excuse. And
  then there’s the hullabaloo about Siri supposedly toeing an
  anti-abortion line with responses to particular queries; Adam explains
  why it’s unreasonable to attribute Apple corporate policy to anything
  Siri says. Also this week, Jeff Carlson looks at several iOS apps that
  work by listening to the world outside, and Adam shares his
  surprisingly smooth experience getting his iCloud calendars to sync
  with Macs that can’t run Lion, thanks to BusyCal. Finally, we’re
  pleased to announce not one, but two new ebooks covering iOS 5: Tonya
  Engst’s “Take Control of Your iPad” and Joe Kissell’s “Take Control of
  Mail on the iPad, iPhone, and iPod touch, Third Edition.” Notable
  software releases this week include Cyberduck 4.2, MarsEdit 3.4.1,
  Camino 2.1, and Safari 5.1.2.

Articles
    Let’s Stop with the Siri Baiting
    Two New Take Control Ebooks Cover iOS 5
    The iPad’s Helpful Ears
    iTether Approved, then Pulled
    BusyCal Brings iCloud Calendars to Snow Leopard
    TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 5 December 2011
    ExtraBITS for 5 December 2011


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Let’s Stop with the Siri Baiting
--------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12653>
  66 comments

  Immediately upon the release of the iPhone 4S with Siri, Apple’s 
  speech-driven virtual assistant, people started asking Siri all 
  sorts of questions and posting Siri’s often-hilarious responses 
  (there are plenty more sites with names and URLs that will get our 
  email issue marked as spam). 

<http://stuffsirisaid.com/>

  Now, however, toying with Siri has taken a darker turn, with people 
  reading all sorts of things into Siri’s responses. Most recently, 
  a kerfuffle erupted over Siri’s inability to find an abortion 
  clinic in New York City, while a similar request for Washington, 
  D.C. resulted in directions to anti-abortion centers. (Apple quickly 
  responded to the New York Times, attributing the problem to “kinks 
  in the product” and the fact that Siri is still in beta.)  

<http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/11/29/siri-struggles-to-serve-up-certain-results/>
<http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/11/30/apple-says-siris-abortion-answers-are-a-glitch/>

  In a move reminiscent of how Greenpeace harangued Apple for the PR 
  value (see “Greenpeace Hitching Itself to Apple’s Star?,” 2 
  February 2010), MoveOn.org even sent out email encouraging people to 
  sign a petition asking Apple to modify how Siri works, claiming that 
  Siri “won’t tell you where you can get an abortion or even 
  emergency contraception — instead she’ll promote anti-abortion 
  pregnancy ‘crisis’ centers.” MoveOn went on to say, “When a 
  user asked her why she is anti-abortion, she replied, ‘I just 
  am.’” Oh, please.

<http://tidbits.com/article/10974>

  Siri is neither a comedienne nor an Apple spokesdroid. Apple has 
  cleverly programmed Siri with a wide variety of chatty responses to 
  give the impression of personality and make people more comfortable 
  speaking to what is essentially a chatterbot. The technique is of 
  course not entirely successful; just like the original algorithmic 
  psychoanalyst ELIZA (created by Joseph Weizenbaum in 1966 at MIT), 
  Siri can’t hope to understand and respond to your every question 
  or comment, and must therefore waffle to avoid disappointing you 
  with flat, robotic answers.

<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chatterbot>
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ELIZA>

  Siri is most helpful when what you say contains keywords that enable 
  Siri to pass off what you said to one of the supported apps or 
  services. Apple provides a list of these in the Siri FAQ. But even 
  then, Siri is limited by the capabilities and information 
  encapsulated in those apps and services. (AI programmer and teacher 
  Jeff Wofford has an interesting blog post speculating on how Siri 
  works, though it’s worth remembering that he wrote it before the 
  iPhone 4S came out.)

<http://www.apple.com/iphone/features/siri-faq.html>
<http://www.jeffwofford.com/?p=817>

  So it shouldn’t be a surprise that Siri will fail to provide the 
  desired responses to certain questions. Presumably, whatever Yellow 
  Pages-like database Siri uses currently lacks a category for 
  abortion-related services, an omission that Apple can and should 
  address. In contrast, the YellowPages.com Web site has an 
  “Abortion Services” category. But very few of the organizations 
  appearing in that category use “abortion” in their names. When I 
  asked Siri for directions to the few that did, Siri had no trouble 
  finding them in the Maps app.

  In short, Siri is only as good as the underlying databases that 
  Apple baked in. (Luckily, because Siri’s processing happens on 
  Apple’s servers, not on the iPhone, Apple can continue to improve 
  and extend Siri’s capabilities.) When I scanned the list of 
  organizations that YellowPages.com returned for Manhattan under 
  “Abortion Services,” I didn’t see any mention of Planned 
  Parenthood. So I did another search in YellowPages.com for Planned 
  Parenthood around Manhattan, and of the 98 hits, found that they 
  were variously categorized under “STD Testing Centers,” 
  “Family Planning Information Centers,” and “Birth Control 
  Information & Services.” In other words, metadata matters, and if 
  you don’t have good metadata, you don’t get good results.

  This is actually a serious issue in one respect, since it shows just 
  how important technology has become in shaping our impressions of 
  the world around us. And that in turn points to how essential it is 
  that we continue to scrutinize how well search-related technologies 
  work and remain aware of those technologies’ inescapable 
  limitations. Just as you shouldn’t believe everything you read on 
  the Internet, you shouldn’t believe everything Siri tells you.

  Oh, and MoveOn’s snarky report that Siri self-identifies as being 
  against abortion? That’s one of those chatty responses that Siri 
  throws in to seem more human. I asked Siri, “Why are you 
  anti-abortion?” and got back Popeye’s standard retort, “I am 
  what I am.” Of course, I got the same answer when I asked, “Why 
  are you against kittens?” and “Why are you a cannibal?” 
  Similar questions generated a few equally fluffy responses, 
  including: 

* “Why, indeed?”
* “I can’t answer that.”
* “I don’t know.”

  So can we stop pretending that Siri is anything more than ELIZA’s 
  chatterbot daughter? Siri can be useful, and is a whole lot of fun 
  to demo, but it’s unreasonable to read anything more — certainly 
  not Apple corporate policy — into Siri’s successes, failures, 
  and little asides. Heck, we can’t even get Apple PR to say what 
  Apple policy is most of the time. At least Siri always responds to 
  our questions.


  ----
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Two New Take Control Ebooks Cover iOS 5
---------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12660>

  With iOS 5 and iCloud, Apple significantly expanded all that you can 
  do on the iPad, iPhone, and iPod touch, but those new features 
  require us end users to learn new skills and habits. We’ve been 
  pushing the pixels day and night to update our iOS-related books, 
  and we’ve just put the finishing touches on a pair of them: 
  “Take Control of Your iPad” and “Take Control of Mail on the 
  iPad, iPhone, and iPod touch, Third Edition.”

<http://tid.bl.it/your-ipad-tidbits>
<http://tid.bl.it/ipad-mail-tidbits>

  “Take Control of Your iPad” is a big, broad title about iOS 5 on 
  the iPad, written by the lovely and talented Tonya Engst. It’s 
  essentially the second edition of her “Take Control of iPad 
  Basics,” but since the iPad has been out for over a year and a 
  half, millions of people have already learned the basics of iOS — 
  we now assume that most people understand the concept of tapping and 
  dragging, which wasn’t true at the iPad’s launch. To keep the 
  title fresh and useful, Tonya tore out huge swaths of material aimed 
  at complete novices to make room for more advanced discussions, with 
  a special focus on setup and syncing. She also added tips for 
  getting more out of core Apple apps, including Safari, Contacts, 
  iBooks, and Music. 

  You can dip into “Take Control of Your iPad” on any iOS device 
  or computer to use as a handy reference whenever you need fill a gap 
  in your iPad know-how, or you can read it from front to back to 
  qualify for your iPad expert secret decoder ring. You’ll benefit 
  from the many hours that Tonya has spent editing Joe Kissell’s 
  “Take Control of iCloud” ebook, plus the innumerable times she 
  has made her iPads jump through the Setup Assistant’s hoops and 
  configured — and reconfigured — syncing with iTunes, iCloud, 
  Google Sync, and more. The ebook covers the original iPad and iPad 
  2, with iOS 5.

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/icloud?pt=TB1105>

  “Take Control of Mail on the iPad, iPhone, and iPod touch, Third 
  Edition” comes from the lovely and talented Joe Kissell (I’m an 
  equal-opportunity flatterer when it comes to our authors). Where 
  Tonya spreads her net wide, Joe focuses tightly on how to devise and 
  manage an effective mobile email strategy for any device running iOS 
  5. His thoughtful and thorough coverage provides practical, 
  real-world recommendations about the best ways to use the Mail app 
  on the iPad, iPhone, and iPod touch, and you’ll get advice and 
  directions for how to set up your accounts, receive and read email, 
  compose and send messages, and file important correspondence. 
  You’ll also learn to solve connection problems and work around 
  feature limitations — despite the significant improvements in iOS 
  5’s version of Mail, it’s still not up to the level of Apple 
  Mail on the Mac. 


  ----
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The iPad’s Helpful Ears
-----------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12663>

  I often listen to music on my iPad, but I forget that the iPad can 
  listen as well. I discovered this recently when my brother-in-law 
  recommended a TV show called “From the Edge with Peter Lik.”

<http://www.weather.com/tv/tvshows/peter-lik>

  The show is about Lik, an accomplished landscape photographer, and 
  how he gets his amazing shots. To be honest, it’s less about the 
  particulars of photography and almost entirely focused on how the 
  adventuresome Australian goes out to scenic locations and, 
  sometimes, the difficulties he runs into, such as waiting all night 
  in freezing Arctic weather for auroras that never appear. (Also, no 
  disservice to Lik, but the real star of the show is the breathtaking 
  video his crew produces of each location.) It’s fun, and makes you 
  want to explore beautiful remote areas of the world.

  Watching my first episode, I noticed that a free companion iPad app 
  was available, offering the photos that Lik ends up with, behind the 
  scenes material, and the like. Being a photographer, I couldn’t 
  resist downloading it.

<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/from-the-edge/id424094923?mt=8>

  What I didn’t expect is that the app is meant to be used while you 
  watch the show. And it does so in a novel way: Using the iPad’s 
  microphone, the app listens for the show in the room’s audio and 
  synchronizes its content with what’s happening on screen. As you 
  watch, you can flip through images taken from the shoot, and see 
  which one Lik chose as his favorite.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-12/peterlikapp_listen.png>

  Unfortunately, the app now includes a note that “This app will not 
  be supported after Dec. 31,” suggesting that the show has already 
  been cancelled.

  I’m surprised (or perhaps just unaware) that more TV shows or 
  other media don’t take advantage of this technique. 

  Something similar is IntoNow, a Yahoo app that isn’t restricted to 
  a single show. Like music-discovery apps such as Shazam and 
  SoundHound, IntoNow can identify nearly any television show from its 
  audio. It works whether you’re watching live television or 
  something streamed or stored, such as using Hulu or iTunes.

<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/intonow/id406436404?mt=8>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/shazam/id284993459?mt=8>
<http://itunes.apple.com/app/soundhound/id355554941>

  Tapping a large green button makes IntoNow start listening, and in 
  less than a minute it returns a result if it finds a match. From 
  there you can view related Twitter messages, see who else has 
  watched the show recently, and otherwise connect with people you 
  know who enjoy television. Since I don’t watch much TV, the app is 
  purely a novelty, but the technology is certainly interesting.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-12/intonow.png>

  In looking for other listener apps, I did find one that sounds 
  interesting, peculiar, and extremely specific: the $1.99 Melon 
  Meter. You place your iOS device on a watermelon with the microphone 
  touching the outside rind, and then rap on the melon. The app 
  allegedly tells you whether the melon is fresh based on the thumping 
  sound. (I admit I didn’t buy and test the app — I was a little 
  worried that the grocery store’s produce department might not 
  appreciate my test matrix.)

<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/melon-meter/id450015952?mt=8>

  It’s easy to pay attention to an iPad’s large colorful screen, 
  but seeing is just one of our senses that an iOS device can enhance. 
  I don’t look forward to any odor-related apps or accessories, but 
  I do like the fact that the iPad can listen intelligently and 
  improve an experience such as watching TV. If you can recommend 
  other apps that perform similar feats, please share them in this 
  article’s comments on the Web. 


  ----
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iTether Approved, then Pulled
-----------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12651>
  7 comments

  [Update: As I was putting the finishing touches on this article, 
  Apple woke up and pulled iTether from the App Store, citing load on 
  the carrier network. That’s a truly lame excuse, since carriers 
  are happy to charge customers for the extra usage; worse, the 
  iTether developers claim that their average user consumes less than 
  200 MB per month. The developers also say that they were entirely 
  upfront with Apple about the purpose of the app, even providing 
  Apple a video of how it worked. Nevertheless, I downloaded and 
  tested the app, and wrote the article, so you can read what would 
  have been true if Apple hadn’t gotten all protectionist on us. 
  Those who bought the app before it was pulled can continue using 
  it.]

<http://tether.com/apple-pulls-itether>

  For many of us, being able to tether a Mac or iPad to an iPhone to 
  share the iPhone’s 3G-based Internet connection would be 
  compelling, if only we needed it regularly. For the occasional quick 
  use, paying for the necessary data tethering plan is simply 
  overkill. 

  In the United States, AT&T charges $45 per month for the DataPro 4GB 
  plan, which provides 4 GB of data with tethering (additional 
  gigabytes are $10 each). On Verizon Wireless, tethering (the Mobile 
  Hotspot feature) costs $20 on top of an existing data plan (the 
  cheapest is $30 per month for 2 GB) and includes an additional 2 GB. 
  So we’re talking an additional $20 to $30 per month, just to share 
  your Internet connection, regardless of whether you even need the 
  extra few gigabytes that come with the tethering connection.

<http://www.att.com/wireless/iphone/>
<http://www.verizonwireless.com/b2c/splash/iphone.jsp>

  If you’re as offended as we are by these unnecessary charges — 
  why can’t we just be charged for how much data we use, regardless 
  of how we use it? — there’s a new option, iTether.

  iTether, an iOS app that works hand-in-hand with special Mac or 
  Windows software, enables tethering for a single $14.99 fee. 
  What’s surprising about iTether is not that it works, though it 
  does, but that it was approved for sale in the App Store, given 
  Apple’s protectionist policies toward apps that compete with 
  built-in features. Nevertheless, the company behind iTether, called 
  Tether, has been selling BlackBerry and Android versions of the 
  software for several years, so it seems unlikely that Apple could 
  have failed to realize what the app does.

<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/itether/id477971193?mt=8>
<http://tether.com/>

  That said, iTether isn’t quite what you might expect. It works 
  only over a USB connection, so you can’t use it directly with an 
  iPad. The Android version of Tether has the same limitation, though 
  the BlackBerry version can also work via Bluetooth. 

  The free Mac OS X software is tiny — only about 1.5 MB — but 
  Tether’s Web site was so overwhelmed with traffic that I had to 
  ask a friend for a copy. It installs several kernel extensions in 
  /System/Extensions, along with the Tether application in 
  /Applications. It also creates an Ethernet (en4) adapter in the 
  Network preference pane (you may get a different number).

  Once it’s installed, using iTether was easy. I made sure my 
  MacBook was disconnected from my Ethernet network and I turned off 
  Wi-Fi on both the MacBook and the iPhone, to ensure I was getting 
  the correct results. Then I launched the Tether application on my 
  MacBook and tapped the iTether app on my iPhone. The two look quite 
  similar, showing some basic data transfer states and connection 
  status. The Tether application automatically enabled the Ethernet 
  (en4) network adapter, and the iTether app on the iPhone made the 
  connection to the Internet via 3G.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-11/Tether-and-iTether.png>

  I didn’t perform extensive testing, since I pay for only 200 MB of 
  data per month, but I had no trouble using Safari to load Web pages. 
  I even did a speed test and found that I was getting about 1.5 Mbps 
  down and 600 Kbps up, which isn’t bad. 

  But what about my Wi-Fi iPad? Harking back to the days when 
  networking was far funkier, I gleefully opened the Sharing 
  preference pane and turned on Internet Sharing to share the Internet 
  connection coming in on Ethernet (en4) out via Wi-Fi. Then I forced 
  both my iPad and my Mac Pro to connect to this new network, and lo 
  and behold, it all worked.

  (To be fair, this is a slightly abbreviated version of actual 
  events, since I had to restart my MacBook to get past Mac OS X 10.7 
  Lion being slow, and I had to remember that I wanted Internet 
  Sharing instead of a computer-to-computer network, and I had to try 
  Internet Sharing twice to get the Mac Pro and iPad to pick up IP 
  addresses properly, and so on. It was fiddly, but funky networking 
  always is.)

  To maintain the Internet connection, the Tether application on the 
  Mac had to stay running, and the iTether app on the iPhone had to 
  remain the frontmost app. It was all too easy to forget that and 
  switch to another app on the iPhone, thus breaking the connection, 
  but it reconnected well.

  The big unknown is if carriers will notice that their customers are 
  using it to avoid paying for tethering. I don’t have a sense of 
  whether or not they can unpack the network traffic sufficiently to 
  determine that, but it might be possible. I’ve seen carriers 
  threaten to switch customers to tethering plans automatically in the 
  past. Or, it may be one of those situations where they are unlikely 
  to notice if you use iTether sparingly enough to avoid setting off 
  warning bells. 


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BusyCal Brings iCloud Calendars to Snow Leopard
-----------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12662>

  True confession time here. While I have upgraded to Mac OS X 10.7 
  Lion on my MacBook, I’m still running 10.6 Snow Leopard on my Mac 
  Pro. The reasons shouldn’t surprise anyone: Rosetta, needing a 
  Snow Leopard test machine, and not needing Lion’s new features. 
  Oh, and inertia — I have work to do, and installing Lion on my Mac 
  Pro in the way I want to do it will take some time. None of these 
  problems are insurmountable, and while Lion doesn’t do much for me 
  when I use my MacBook, I don’t have anything against it either — 
  I get my work done with applications, not the operating system.

  But lagging behind Lion also meant I was hesitant to upgrade my 
  MobileMe account to iCloud, since I didn’t want to lose access to 
  my shared MobileMe calendars on my Mac Pro. That wasn’t the only 
  machine in the mix, since I also access those calendars on an 
  original MacBook Pro that can’t upgrade past Snow Leopard, and our 
  Power Mac G5 file server that’s stuck at 10.5 Leopard. Also 
  included are my iPhone 4 and iPad, but since both of those run iOS 
  5, iCloud presents no problems for them.

  Pushing the upgrade was the household tension created by Tonya 
  upgrading her MobileMe account to iCloud while writing “Take 
  Control of Your iPad.” We normally rely heavily on shared 
  calendars, but her upgrade to iCloud meant that she could no longer 
  share my MobileMe calendars, and sooner or later, that was going to 
  result in an awkward scheduling conflict. 

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/ipad?pt=TB1105>

  I’ll bet there are people out there who have put off iCloud 
  upgrades for similar reasons, but to reveal something I didn’t 
  realize until the end of the process, the most recent version of 
  BusyMac’s BusyCal simply solves the problem, enabling Macs running 
  Mac OS X 10.5 or later to share iCloud calendars. (BusyCal costs 
  $49.99 for one Mac, or $79.99 for up to five Macs.) That doesn’t 
  mean you should just switch to iCloud without considering other 
  aspects of the move, for reasons I’ll discuss later, but BusyCal 
  1.6.1 does remove one significant barrier to the transition. Before 
  finishing the process, I had thought I would bring my older Macs 
  into the mix by publishing my shared iCloud calendars using 
  BusyCal’s local network-based BusyCal-to-BusyCal sharing. Although 
  that would have worked, it turned out to be unnecessary.

<http://www.busymac.com/busycal/>

  Thanks to Rich Mogull’s near disaster with iCloud (see “How to 
  Lose and Recover iCloud Data,” 2 November 2011), I wanted to 
  perform my move extremely carefully. To that end, I pored over the 
  relevant section in Joe Kissell’s “Take Control of iCloud,” 
  which has helped thousands of Mac users make the iCloud transition, 
  and then I correlated his instructions with those that BusyMac 
  provides for BusyCal users making the jump.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12607>
<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/icloud?pt=TB1105>
<http://www.busymac.com/faq/caldav-upgrade.html>

  I won’t reiterate everything I learned from those two sources, but 
  here’s the basic approach I took, and what I’d recommend to 
  others in similar situations:

1. On each of my Macs, I backed up BusyCal (File > Back up BusyCal), 
   iCal (File > Export > iCal Archive), Address Book (File > Export > 
   Address Book Archive), and Safari bookmarks (File > Export 
   Bookmarks). I have plenty of system-wide backups, but my experience 
   is that if you prepare for problems, you won’t have any.

2. On BusyMac’s advice, I reset BusyCal (Help > Reset > Reset 
   BusyCal) on each of my Macs to ensure that each one would be 
   starting with a clean slate. 

3. On my MacBook running Lion, I opened the MobileMe preference pane, 
   and clicked the Move to iCloud button. That loads a Web page at 
   https://www.me.com/move/, where the next steps take place.

4. I worked through a number of Web pages that merely confirmed that I 
   was using the desired account, that my calendars would be moved to 
   iCloud, that I could keep using certain MobileMe legacy features 
   until 30 June 2012, that MobileMe syncing would stop working, that 
   my Macs and iOS devices were running the right operating system 
   versions, that contacts and bookmarks would come from my devices 
   and not me.com, that I had a backup, and that I had agreed to the 
   iCloud terms of service. Phew! After I had acknowledged all that, 
   my MobileMe content was moved to iCloud relatively quickly.

5. Once it finished, on BusyMac’s suggestion, I next launched iCal 
   on my Lion-equipped MacBook, and let it sync entirely with iCloud. 
   (Remember, iCal under Snow Leopard and Leopard cannot communicate 
   with your iCloud account.)

6. Still on the MacBook, I launched BusyCal itself, and it connected 
   to iCloud and synced all my calendar data.

7. I went to all the other Macs and launched BusyCal on them, and 
   acknowledged alerts on my iOS devices that I’d switched from 
   MobileMe to iCloud. This was the point where I was surprised, since 
   BusyCal on my Mac Pro automatically connected to my iCloud account 
   and brought in my calendars, eliminating the need for me to publish 
   them from my MacBook. On the other two Macs I had to choose 
   Calendar > Connect to iCloud/CalDAV Server and enter my iCloud 
   account information to get them to make the connection.

8. Lastly, I shared the calendars that Tonya and I use together; this 
   can be done from either iCal or the Web-based Calendar app on 
   iCloud — I think it’s a testament to how confusing iCal has 
   become that I found it much easier to share the calendars from 
   iCloud’s Web app. (In the Web app, you just click the little 
   radio wave broadcast icon next to the calendar name in the sidebar; 
   since iCal replaces the sidebar with a funny popover, it’s 
   difficult to figure out how to select a calendar and choose 
   Calendar > Share Calendar.)

  Again, I’m a little embarrassed that I had equated iCloud 
  compatibility so completely with Lion that I didn’t realize 
  BusyCal would enable me to access all my iCloud calendars from my 
  Leopard- and Snow Leopard-based Macs. 

  There are a few casualties associated with switching to iCloud, only 
  one of which is a significant concern. A number of types of data, 
  including Dashboard widgets, Dock items, Keychains, Preferences, and 
  Mail accounts, rules, signatures, and smart mailboxes, can no longer 
  be synced after you move to iCloud. That’s also true of 
  independent applications that rely on Mac OS X’s sync services to 
  sync data across Macs — Transmit, Yojimbo, TextExpander, and more. 
  None of this is a problem for me, and Dropbox often provides a 
  viable alternative for MobileMe syncing. It’s likely that future 
  versions of MobileMe-savvy apps will eventually support iCloud 
  syncing.  

<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT4898>
<http://www.dropbox.com/>

  More concerning is that I lose Address Book syncing with any Macs 
  that are not running Lion. Contact syncing with non-Lion Macs is 
  much less important to me than calendar syncing, so I’m willing to 
  live with it until I get around to upgrading my Mac Pro to Lion. 

  There’s also one workaround for contact syncing that I’m 
  investigating, and I’ll write more about it once I’ve had a 
  chance to test it. Address Book Server (it predates Apple’s use of 
  the name in Snow Leopard Server) promises to enable contact and 
  calendar syncing on a local network, and better yet, it’s 
  currently free. From what I can tell from the product’s Web site, 
  it would enable me to set up my Power Mac G5 as a server, share 
  contacts to it from my iCloud-connected MacBook, and then have my 
  older Macs connect to the server for changes. Leave a note in the 
  comments if you have any experience with Address Book Server.

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

  In the end, although the move to iCloud would have eliminated 
  calendar sharing were I relying on iCal, the fact that I far prefer 
  BusyCal in every way means that the transition was easier than I had 
  anticipated. 


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://tidbits.com/e/12662#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://tidbits.com/t/12662>


TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 5 December 2011
---------------------------------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12659>

**Cyberduck 4.2** -- The Cyberduck team has released version 4.2 of 
  their open source file transfer app. Cyberduck 4.2 improves 
  compatibility with Amazon Web Services, including support for 
  server-side encryption and for Amazon’s US-West storage facility 
  in Oregon. The app can now also better interact with Google’s 
  Cloud Storage service, where Cyberduck supports connecting to 
  multiple projects, configuring the access logs for storage buckets, 
  and using the OAuth 2.0 authentication mechanism. For more 
  traditional connection mechanisms based on SSH, Cyberduck can better 
  interact with OpenSSH. Several bug fixes and performance 
  improvements round out the update. (Free, 23.6 MB, release notes)

<http://cyberduck.ch/>
<http://cyberduck.ch/changelog/>

  Read/post comments about Cyberduck 4.2.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12656#comments>


**MarsEdit 3.4.1** -- Red Sweater Software has released MarsEdit 3.4 
  and 3.4.1, bringing significant enhancements to the blogging app’s 
  media-management capabilities. These include better compatibility 
  with Flickr, compatibility with iPhoto’s face-recognition 
  features, support for Lightroom, and a new zoom control for browser 
  thumbnails. The new release is rounded out by several bug fixes, 
  some of which address crashes when dealing with Flickr photos. 
  ($39.95 new, free update, 6.3 MB, release notes)

<http://www.red-sweater.com/marsedit/>
<http://www.red-sweater.com/marsedit/whatsnew.html>

  Read/post comments about MarsEdit 3.4.1.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12655#comments>


**Camino 2.1** -- After over two years in development, the open source 
  Camino 2.1 Web browser has made a long-awaited appearance, complete 
  with numerous bug fixes and performance improvements. Most notable 
  is a completely rewritten autocomplete feature that now searches 
  both bookmarks and browsing history, and can match against both Web 
  addresses and page titles. But other changes aren’t to be sneezed 
  at either, including better support for Web standards like HTML5 and 
  JavaScript thanks to Mozilla’s Gecko 1.9.2 engine, full-screen 
  compatibility with Netflix, and improvements in the browser’s 
  security and privacy system. (Free, 18.5 MB, release notes)

<http://caminobrowser.org/>
<http://caminobrowser.org/releases/2.1/complete.php>

  Read/post comments about Camino 2.1.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12654#comments>


**Safari 5.1.2** -- Apple has released Safari 5.1.2 for Mac OS X 10.7 
  Lion and 10.6 Snow Leopard. The minor version bump reflects the fact 
  that the updated Web browser introduces no major functionality, but 
  rather addresses a number of issues related to memory usage, where 
  it should now be more conservative, and application stability, along 
  with a fix for a bug that could cause Web pages to flash white. 
  Safari also now supports display of PDF files embedded directly 
  inside a Web page. (Free update via Software Update, 38.7 MB 
  Lion/47.1 MB Snow Leopard)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1070>

  Read/post comments about Safari 5.1.2.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12652#comments>




ExtraBITS for 5 December 2011
-----------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12658>

  We have three additional bits for you to read this week, including a 
  critical examination of browsing versus searching in iOS lists, a 
  look back at QuickTime on its 20th anniversary, and a reality check 
  on just how massive tech company data centers affect employment 
  where they’re located.


**Bruce Tognazzini Discusses Browse vs. Search in iOS** -- The 
  venerable interface designer Bruce Tognazzini devotes his latest 
  “Ask Tog” column to the question of whether it’s better to 
  browse or search lists in iOS, such as in the Contacts app. It’s a 
  fascinating read, not so much for his proposed redesign, but for the 
  background of why aspects of iOS can be so frustrating for some 
  people.

<http://www.asktog.com/columns/085BrowseVsSearch.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/12661#comments>


**QuickTime Turns 20** -- Hard to believe, looking at the modern Web, 
  that playing video clips on a computer was once reserved for the 
  jetpack-wearing future. But then, on 2 December 1991, Apple released 
  QuickTime 1.0. Twenty years on, QuickTime can barely remember when 
  it was a much smaller window.

<http://www.reghardware.com/2011/12/02/apple_quicktime_multimedia_software_turns_20/>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/12657#comments>


**Few Jobs for North Carolinians in the iCloud** -- According to this 
  Washington Post article, Apple’s massive new data center in North 
  Carolina created only 50 jobs associated with running the facility, 
  and Google and Facebook data centers in the state have also failed 
  to dent the unemployment rate due to a lack of technical skills 
  among local residents. Construction-related jobs are created, but 
  they’re temporary. That’s not to say the data centers won’t 
  help the local economies some, but not as much as it might seem, 
  especially in light of the massive tax breaks used as lures.

<http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/economy/cloud-centers-bring-high-tech-flash-but-not-many-jobs-to-beaten-down-towns/2011/11/08/gIQAccTQtN_print.>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/12650#comments>




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