TidBITS#1107/02-Jan-2012
========================
  Issue link: <http://tidbits.com/issue/1107>


  Happy New Year! There was a surprising amount of news over the holiday
  break, and Glenn Fleishman was quick off the mark to cover Intuit’s
  plans to release a Lion-compatible version of Quicken 2007,
  GadgetTrak’s new CameraTrace service for tracing stolen cameras,
  LogMeIn’s new remote-access app for iOS, GoDaddy’s dropping of support
  for the Stop Online Piracy Act, and Apple’s addition of a “Complete My
  Season” option for iTunes Store-purchased TV shows. Glenn also
  collected the top 10 most-read TidBITS stories of 2011, Adam followed
  up on the success of our TidBITS membership program and wrote the most
  popular story of the year about Google’s “Let It Snow” Easter egg, and
  Michael Cohen tracked down how iCloud’s Photo Stream interacts with
  multiple iPhoto libraries. Notable software releases since our last
  issue include Piezo 1.1 and iTunes 10.5.2.

Articles
    TidBITS Memberships Off to a Great Start
    Intuit Plans Lion-Compatible Quicken 2007 Update
    Type “Let It Snow” into Google
    CameraTrace Tracks by Serial Number in Photos
    LogMeIn App for iOS Set Free and Gains Pro Upgrade
    iTunes Adds Complete My Season Purchases
    GoDaddy Drops Support for SOPA, Sort Of
    The Top 10 TidBITS Stories of 2011
    Photo Stream and Multiple iPhoto Libraries
    TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 2 January 2012
    ExtraBITS for 2 January 2012


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TidBITS Memberships Off to a Great Start
----------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12698>

  Thank you.

  Seriously, those keys on my keyboard are showing significant wear 
  after the reaction from nearly 1,200 TidBITS readers to the 
  unveiling of our new TidBITS membership program (see “Support 
  TidBITS by Becoming a TidBITS Member,” 12 December 2011). Between 
  the incredibly kind messages from many longtime readers and notes 
  from people who had problems due to multiple accounts or other 
  quirks, it took me almost a week to regain control of my email. But 
  that’s good, and for those who have become TidBITS members, thanks 
  again.

<http://tidbits.com/members.html>
<http://tidbits.com/article/12508>

  But as gratifying as hitting 1,200 members in a few weeks has been, 
  that’s less than 5 percent of the 25,000 people who receive 
  TidBITS via email each week, not to mention the tens of thousands of 
  people who read our articles via our Web site. So, if you haven’t 
  yet joined the TidBITS membership program (and especially if you 
  tried, but were stymied by glitches that affected some people in the 
  first week), won’t you help us increase our membership to 2,000 by 
  the time we cover Macworld Expo for you at the end of January? We 
  also now have member-only discounts on over 25 top Mac programs, 
  including the newly added PDFpen, TextExpander, DiscLabel, 
  SpamSieve, EagleFiler, DropDMG, and Fetch — see our Member 
  Benefits page for the full list. (And let me know if you’d like to 
  offer a discount on your product.)

<http://tidbits.com/member_benefits.html>

  Thanks to the whirlwind of responses in December, we discovered (and 
  fixed) a few mistakes, made some changes, and learned some lessons. 
  In the interests of transparency and helping others avoid our 
  missteps, here’s what we’ve learned.


**People Like the Option of Manual Renewals** -- This is the biggest 
  one, and it wasn’t even really news to us, since a good friend of 
  TidBITS who runs a subscription service had encouraged us to offer 
  both manual and automatic renewals. With four renewable membership 
  levels ($20, $50, $100, and $250), though, we felt that eight 
  options was overwhelming, so we initially opted for making the two 
  lower levels renew automatically, and the two higher levels renew 
  manually. 

  After hearing from some people who dislike automatic renewals on 
  principle, we posed the problem to our friends at eSellerate, who 
  suggested we use a feature of their system that was new to us. With 
  it, all our memberships default to manual renewals but give those 
  who prefer not to run through the cart every year an option to 
  switch to automatic renewal.


**Offer Multiple Levels of Membership** -- Speaking of the different 
  membership levels, it turned out to be incredibly important to offer 
  widely varying levels so people could choose how much they wanted to 
  contribute. Although the vast majority of people joined at the lower 
  membership levels, when I compare what percentage of revenue each 
  level generated, it’s remarkably even, apart from the $250 Patron 
  level that has primarily been used by companies and user groups.

      Level              % Revenue
      ----------------------------
      Contributor ($20)     26%
      Supporter ($50)       28%
      Benefactor ($100)     19%
      Patron ($250)          6%
      Angel ($1,000)        21%

  While we are grateful to each and every person who becomes a TidBITS 
  member, I particularly want to thank all the people who contributed 
  $20 and then sent me email apologizing for not being able to give 
  more. Believe me, we appreciate everything, and in this tough 
  economy, it means all the more to us that our work is considered so 
  valuable. On the other extreme, for all the Angel-level members, 
  we’re truly overwhelmed at your generosity.


**Currency Conversion Is Confusing** -- Although we pride ourselves on 
  trying to treat readers in other countries as first-class citizens 
  when it comes to things like including metric measurements and 
  avoiding season references that are backward for our Southern 
  Hemisphere readers, currency exchange still throws us. 

  Initially, we let the eSellerate system handle currency conversion, 
  since then the amount you see in the cart matches the amount that 
  appears on your credit card statement, no matter what currency 
  conversion fee your card charges. But it turns out that the service 
  eSellerate relies on for that feature charges a fairly steep 
  “hedging” fee to ignore any exchange rate changes between when 
  you place your order and when the transaction clears the credit 
  card.

  That’s still an option, but after we realized the extent of the 
  issue via an alert Canadian reader, we’ve tweaked the cart so U.S. 
  dollars is the default currency, meaning that your credit card will 
  perform the currency exchange, likely at a reduced rate from what 
  eSellerate would otherwise charge.


**Seek Help from Support Ahead of Time** -- We tested all the Web 
  pages and code involved with the memberships system until we were 
  blue in the face. But what we forgot to do was ask our friends at 
  eSellerate support to take a look at what we were doing, which 
  turned out to be an unfortunate oversight, since most of the 
  problems we encountered (and which they helped us fix) could have 
  been avoided if I’d asked them first.

  It wasn’t that what we were doing was actually incorrect, or our 
  testing would have found it. Instead, we’d done things in some 
  non-optimal ways that exposed limitations in various Web browsers 
  and in eSellerate’s systems with edge-case data. The moral of the 
  story is to talk to support people before unveiling a new system.


**Looking Forward to Memberships in 2012** -- I’ll admit it — 
  we’re jazzed by the initial success of the TidBITS membership 
  program, and now our goal is to keep it growing while continuing to 
  publish the content you’ve come to expect from us.


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Intuit Plans Lion-Compatible Quicken 2007 Update
------------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12689>
  12 comments

  Color me surprised! When an unexpected email from Intuit sent to all 
  Quicken for Mac customers landed in my inbox, I assumed it was more 
  warnings about avoiding an upgrade to Lion or discounts off other 
  Intuit products to which I could migrate. Quicken for Mac 2007 and 
  earlier versions were engineered for PowerPC-based systems, and 
  require the Rosetta compatibility layer to run, which Apple neither 
  updated for nor includes with Mac OS X 10.7 Lion.

  Instead, Intuit’s Aaron Forth, the general manager for the 
  personal finance group, signed a letter (not available online) that 
  reads in part:
      
      I am happy to announce that we will have a solution that 
      makes Quicken 2007 for Mac “Lion-compatible” by early 
      spring. There are still details to be worked out, so I ask 
      your continued patience as we work through these.

  The company has posted a FAQ about the “Lion Compatible Quicken 
  for Mac 2007.” You will be able to convert data files created in 
  Quicken for Mac 2005, 2006, and 2007 editions with the 
  Lion-compatible version while booted into Lion. Interestingly, 
  Intuit will also let you convert Quicken Essentials for Mac data 
  files to work with the Lion-compatible version of Quicken for Mac 
  2007. (Importing those data files into Quicken Essentials for Mac 
  requires 10.6 Snow Leopard or earlier, as noted in a now-outdated 
  FAQ.)

<http://quicken.intuit.com/support/help/lion-compatible-quicken-for-mac-2007/GEN83769.html>
<http://quicken.intuit.com/support/help/install--register--and-convert/quicken-for-mac-compatibility-with-mac-osx-10-7-lion/GEN83208.html>

  This is great news for those who rely on Quicken and haven’t been 
  able to find a Lion-compatible replacement. I’m running Snow 
  Leopard Server in VMware Fusion to maintain access to Quicken 2007, 
  since I haven’t yet found a replacement that meets my personal and 
  small-business needs with the right mix of recording and reporting.

  Of course, for those who have already switched to another financial 
  application, Intuit’s announcement is too little, too late. And 
  even then, a number of commenters expressed long-standing 
  frustration with Intuit’s lackluster support for the Mac versions 
  of its products. Perhaps this announcement marks a notable change of 
  heart for Intuit, but we are still talking about merely making the 
  2007 version compatible with the version of Mac OS X released in 
  2011.

  We’ve written three articles about Quicken and Lion this year. The 
  first explains Intuit’s notions about how to deal with a lack of a 
  Lion-compatible version, and the other two suggest how you would go 
  about finding a replacement for Quicken.

* “Intuit Reminds Quicken Users of Lion Danger,” 6 July 2011

<http://tidbits.com/article/12303>

* “Finding a Replacement for Quicken,” 5 August 2011

<http://tidbits.com/article/12392>

* “Follow-up to Finding a Replacement for Quicken,” 20 September 
  2011

<http://tidbits.com/article/12503>


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Type “Let It Snow” into Google
------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12685>
  14 comments

  It has been an unusually warm fall and winter here in upstate New 
  York, with only a few dustings of snow so far, and many sunny days. 
  But I’m feeling a little more weather-engaged with the holiday 
  season thanks to Google’s latest Easter egg… or perhaps 
  “stocking stuffer” would be a better analogy. 

  Just type “let it snow” into a Google search field in most 
  browsers (not all versions of Internet Explorer may work), and along 
  with the results for Dean Martin and Frank Sinatra performing in 
  YouTube videos, snowflakes will start to fall gently from the top of 
  the window. Leave it for a few more seconds and the window will 
  start to fog up. You can clear it by clicking and “scrubbing” 
  with the cursor, or just click the Defrost button for an instant 
  fix. Now if only this worked with weather.com!

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-12/Google-Let-it-snow.png>

  If you’d like to decorate your search window for the holidays, 
  just type either “Christmas” or “Hanukkah” into a Google 
  search field; the results page displays a row of Christmas tree 
  lights or Star of David symbols at the top. Alas, I couldn’t 
  figure any way to get Google to snow on either Christmas or 
  Hanukkah. (After I wrote this, Google also added multicolored 
  candles to the search results page if you enter “Kwanzaa”.)

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-12/Google-Christmas.png>
<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-12/Google-Hanukkah.png>

  Google has a history of little tricks like this, like knocking your 
  window off-kilter when you search on “askew” or “tilt”. 
  Mashable has a presentation of a number of other Google tricks.

<http://mashable.com/2011/12/17/type-let-it-snow-on-google/>
<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-12/Google-askew.png>


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CameraTrace Tracks by Serial Number in Photos
---------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12693>
  6 comments

  Over 300 models of higher-end digital cameras embed the camera’s 
  unique serial number into the metadata of every photo taken. If 
  those photos are uploaded without that embedded tidbit being 
  scrubbed, the data ends up being available for publicly posted 
  photos at sites like Flickr and 500px. GadgetTrak has leveraged this 
  fact with its just-out-of-testing service CameraTrace.

<http://www.cameratrace.com/>

  The service has been in testing for several months, and GadgetTrak 
  has scoured photo-sharing services to collect data from billions of 
  pictures (including all public Flickr photos since 2006) that 
  represent 11 million unique camera serial numbers. The beta service 
  allowed searching by serial number, and that remains as a free 
  option in CameraTrace.

<http://www.cameratrace.com/trace>

  The full service, which requires a one-time $10 fee per camera 
  registered, monitors photo-sharing sites and notifies you of newly 
  posted pictures taken with your camera after you report it as being 
  stolen. It can also be used to see whether your photos with embedded 
  serial numbers have been used without your permission, assuming the 
  unauthorized posters didn’t remove the metadata before posting.

  GadgetTrak includes a metallic lost-and-found sticker to attach to 
  your camera, to help those with good intentions to return your 
  camera via a Web form that uses anonymous two-way communication to 
  protect the privacy of both parties. As with laptops and phones, 
  GadgetTrak also gets involved in helping to make a recovery by 
  facilitating contacts with local police.

  CameraTrace competes with a longer-running service offered in the UK 
  called stolencamerafinder. That service provides free checking 
  against its database by uploading a photo from which the metadata is 
  extracted. A free account allows basic searching, while either a Pro 
  (£4.99 per month, or about $7.80) or Business (£99.99 per month, 
  or roughly $157) account allows more-extensive searches and provides 
  more-advanced features.

<http://www.stolencamerafinder.com/>


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LogMeIn App for iOS Set Free and Gains Pro Upgrade
--------------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12691>

  Remote-access apps for iOS let you control your desktop computer’s 
  screen, keyboard, and mouse (and sometimes transfer files and engage 
  in other activities) over 3G and Wi-Fi. LogMeIn has pupped a new 
  version of its LogMeIn Ignition app with a new name, just plain 
  LogMeIn, and a new price: $0.00. The free app works with both the 
  free and paid desktop versions of LogMeIn’s screen-sharing and 
  remote-control software. LogMeIn is the most reliable way I remotely 
  access my systems through firewalls, NAT, and other network 
  obstacles.

<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/logmein/id479229407?mt=8>

  In making the app free, LogMeIn pulled one feature from the formerly 
  $29.99 Ignition: file transfer. That option is available only with a 
  $39.99-per-year upgrade to LogMeIn Pro. That seems a fair tradeoff, 
  based on my usage. (I use Dropbox for files I might need to reach 
  via iOS if I’m not in front of one of my computers.)

  The LogMeIn Pro upgrade includes, in addition to file transfer, 
  integration with Dropbox and Google Docs, access to WebDAV servers, 
  remote AirPrint printing, and tools to manage photos in the iOS 
  Photos app. The Pro upgrade also works with a new feature in the 
  subscription-based LogMeIn Pro for desktop software to stream HD 
  video and high-quality audio to an iOS device. Streaming is 
  available in the Windows desktop version, and the Mac version is 
  coming “soon.” (LogMeIn has a strong history in supporting Mac 
  OS X, so I believe “soon” really will be soon.) 

  LogMeIn also made a very nice and smart move for previous buyers of 
  the Ignition app, which remains for sale at a higher price. First, 
  it will continue to be upgraded. Second, you receive an automatic 
  lifetime-of-the-app upgrade to LogMeIn Pro app features. The new 
  price for Ignition is $99.99, which includes the same lifetime 
  license granted to existing owners. The company tells me that 
  someone might pay $100 for Ignition instead of ponying up for the 
  yearly Pro upgrade with the LogMeIn app — you break even after 2.5 
  years.

<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/ignition/id299616801?mt=8>

  Both LogMeIn and Ignition are universal apps that work on both the 
  iPhone and iPad. 


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iTunes Adds Complete My Season Purchases
----------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12688>
  1 comment

  The iTunes Store makes TV shows available for purchase either by 
  individual episode or entire season. For seasons currently underway, 
  you can buy a Season Pass in advance, which automatically downloads 
  new episodes as they became available in iTunes. But if you had 
  bought some episodes in a season and then wanted to get the whole 
  run, you would either have to purchase each episode you did not 
  already own, or pay the full-ticket price for a Season Pass.

  No more. Apple quietly added Complete My Season (originally reported 
  in MacRumors via a tip from one of their readers). This option lets 
  you pay the difference between what you’d paid and the full cost 
  of the season. Apple offers a full FAQ with details about how it 
  works.

<http://www.macrumors.com/2011/12/20/apple-rolls-out-complete-my-season-pass-for-tv-shows/>
<https://support.apple.com/kb/HT5070>

  Although it originally appeared that you could complete seasons only 
  by purchasing the HD (high-definition) episodes, Apple says in the 
  FAQ that it’s not the case. If you have purchased only SD 
  (standard-definition) episodes, you can opt to complete the 
  less-expensive SD season, but not upgrade to HD. If you have bought 
  only HD episodes, you’re offered only an HD completion. However, 
  if you have paid for a mix of SD and HD episodes, you’re offered 
  the option to complete either an SD or HD season.

  Apple doesn’t provide a list of which shows are eligible, although 
  they appear to be mostly drawn from current seasons. Some past 
  seasons of certain shows are also available if you’ve purchased 
  episodes from them, and Apple says any episodes of currently 
  eligible shows you buy will allow you to complete the season later. 
  “There is no expiration date,” the FAQ notes.

  Free shows (via a credit or a promotion code) aren’t eligible for 
  credit against a season purchase, and when shows are pulled from 
  iTunes, even though you can retain the episodes you have, you 
  can’t get the rest of a season later.

  The Complete My Season option appears when you’re logged into a 
  copy of iTunes using an account at which you’ve previously 
  purchased episodes, and only for eligible shows in which you meet 
  the various prerequisites. 


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GoDaddy Drops Support for SOPA, Sort Of
---------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12692>
  15 comments

  GoDaddy is often in the doghouse of public opinion. Whether it’s 
  making leering television ads, promoting its chairman and founder 
  shooting elephants in Africa, or supporting points of view 
  antithetical to the nature of a free and open Internet, the company 
  doesn’t seem to back down. Or does it?

<http://google.com/search?q=godaddy+sexy+ad>
<http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/04/01/us-media-godaddy-idUSTRE7307FH20110401>

  GoDaddy was criticized last month after Gizmodo published a list of 
  firms that were on record as supporting the Stop Online Piracy Act 
  (SOPA). The list comes from the U.S. House of Representatives’ 
  Judiciary Committee, which was shepherding the bill into law. SOPA 
  would give unprecedented powers to copyright holders to demand that 
  seemingly infringing Web sites be shut down without any process to 
  determine whether the request is valid. (That list appears to also 
  include firms that don’t support SOPA.)

<http://gizmodo.com/5870241/>
<http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20111222/16384317175/gibson-guitar-others-sopa-supporters-list-say-they-never-supported-bill.shtml>

  In its original form, SOPA would kill a targeted site, block any 
  payments made to it by ad networks or charge processors, and remove 
  the site from search engines. All of these measures would be backed 
  by extreme penalties. Most sensible people — including a host of 
  Internet gurus — say this could enable censorship of the nature 
  perpetuated by totalitarian governments, like China. If enacted, 
  SOPA would have huge repercussions for all Web site operators of all 
  sizes, including the millions hosted by GoDaddy. Facebook, Google, 
  and Twitter are among the many Internet firms that oppose SOPA, 
  while record labels, film studios, and publishers are on the list of 
  supporters.

<http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/news/2011/10/house-takes-senates-bad-internet-censorship-bill-makes-it-worse.ars>
<https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2011/12/internet-inventors-warn-against-sopa-and-pipa>

  GoDaddy’s founder, Bob Parsons, filed a statement back in November 
  with Congress that outlined the company’s broad support for a 
  number of previous measures as well as SOPA that break the Internet 
  and block free speech in the narrow interest of defending the 
  limited rights of copyright holders to protect their work against 
  unauthorized distribution:
      
      ...our company strongly supported the Ryan Haight Online 
      Pharmacy Consumer Protection Act of 2008, the Protect Our 
      Children Act of 2008, and the Preventing Real Online Threats 
      to Economic Creativity and Theft of Intellectual Property Act 
      of 2011 (PROTECT IP). GoDaddy has always supported both 
      government and private industry efforts to identify and 
      disable all types of illegal activity on the Internet. It is 
      for these reasons that I’m still struggling with why some 
      Internet companies oppose PROTECT IP and SOPA.

<http://www.thedomains.com/2011/11/15/here-is-godaddys-statement-in-support-of-the-stop-online-privacy-act-house-hearing-tomorrow/>

  After receiving a combination of withering scorn and the threat of 
  mass domain name transfers, including the 1,000 operated by the 
  Cheezburger Network, GoDaddy appeared to back down, and pulled its 
  support for SOPA. (It’s unclear how many domain names were 
  transferred, of course, and whether the firm was motivated by public 
  opinion or the potential for customer defection.)

<https://twitter.com/#!/benhuh/status/149965881479397376>
<https://www.godaddy.com/newscenter/release-view.aspx?news_item_id=378>

  Read GoDaddy’s statement, but I don’t precisely accept this 
  change of heart. First, while GoDaddy claims to repudiate SOPA, that 
  is only in its current form, which now has seemingly no chance of 
  advancing into law. Second, the firm doesn’t repudiate its backing 
  of previous flawed efforts, many of which are now in law. Third, it 
  holds out support for the bill in the future: “Go Daddy will 
  support it when and if the Internet community supports it.” Who is 
  this “Internet community?” It’s a rather nebulous concept, 
  easily defined in whatever way GoDaddy chooses. GoDaddy’s CEO (who 
  took on the job a week ago) told Gizmodo that GoDaddy would be 
  willing to resume its support of SOPA if there were a 
  “consensus” among “internet leadership,” but wouldn’t say 
  what such a consensus would even resemble.

<http://gizmodo.com/5870920>

  Finally, GoDaddy wants to revise history. This specious note in its 
  press release is risible:
      
      In changing its position, Go Daddy remains steadfast in its 
      promise to support security and stability of the Internet. In 
      an effort to eliminate any confusion about its reversal on 
      SOPA though, [General Counsel Christine] Jones has removed 
      blog postings that had outlined areas of the bill Go Daddy did 
      support.

  I left GoDaddy hosting years ago when it failed to perform seemingly 
  minor technical tasks in a competent fashion, once denying that a 
  top-level domain registrar had the authority to vouch for me owning 
  a domain in that hierarchy. But if I had an account with them, I 
  would leave now. The firm opposes the very nature of the beast that 
  bore them.

  If you’d like advice on transferring your domain name registration 
  and other hosting from GoDaddy (or any firm), you can read a long 
  piece I wrote for Macworld that has all the details. 

<https://www.macworld.com/article/164499/article.html>


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://tidbits.com/e/12692#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://tidbits.com/t/12692>


The Top 10 TidBITS Stories of 2011
----------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12694>

  We typically eschew simple numbered lists of things at TidBITS in 
  exchange for bigger-picture articles. But as 2011 rolled to a close, 
  we started wondering which of our articles garnered the most page 
  views during the year. Poring through our Google Analytics stats 
  shone a light on a truly varied bunch, in part because nearly half 
  of them were published in previous years! 

  One story that I want to call out specially didn’t make the list: 
  Michael Cohen’s “Rosetta and Lion: Get Over It?” (23 May 
  2011). Of all the articles we published in 2011, his exegesis on 
  being told to ignore his feelings of being let down about Lion not 
  including Rosetta emulation for PowerPC programs received the most 
  comments — over 200. While many people agreed with Michael’s 
  point, others told him to, you know, “get over it.”

<http://tidbits.com/article/12191>

  Let’s count down the top 10 articles, starting at the bottom.


**No. 10** “Find Your Lost iPhone or iPod touch with iPhone OS 
  3.0,” 17 June 2009. This article introduced Find My iPhone, a new 
  feature in iOS 3.0 that apparently remains a popular topic despite 
  the age of the article and iOS now being at version 5.0.

<http://tidbits.com/article/10359>

**No. 9:** “Mac OS X’s Mouse Acceleration Problem,” 4 March 
  2007. Get into the WABAC Machine, Sherman, as we find that a 2007 
  guest article by Parrish S. Knight about an issue with mouse 
  movements must still be irking people enough to turn to search 
  engines to find an old answer. The article received a notable edit 
  from Joe Kissell, who has mouse expertise dating from his years at 
  Kensington.

<http://tidbits.com/article/8893>

**No. 8:** “New iMac Gains Thunderbolt, FaceTime HD, and Quad-Core 
  CPUs,” 3 May 2011. There was nothing terribly special about this 
  article, a solid rundown of the changes in a new model of the iMac, 
  but it must have hit the sweet spot of being both concise and 
  comprehensive to merit a mention on Daring Fireball.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12150>
<http://daringfireball.net/>

**No. 7:** “Achieving Email Bliss with IMAP, Gmail, and Apple 
  Mail,” 2 May 2009. One of Joe Kissell’s most popular articles, 
  this piece stands the test of time because of the extensive advice 
  Joe offers to solve several interlocking problems related to email 
  access. We’ve left comments open on this article because it’s 
  such an evergreen, and it garnered over 100 comments in 2011 alone!

<http://tidbits.com/article/10253>

**No. 6:** “Let’s Stop with the Siri Baiting,” 1 December 2011. 
  A recent article, Adam’s irritation with misleading and pointless 
  complaints about the Siri voice-processing system definitely hit a 
  nerve. Siri is in beta, but advertised alongside other fully 
  realized features, which is part of the perception problem. Unlike 
  the articles up to this point, “Siri Baiting” readers came 
  mostly from Daring Fireball and direct discovery, rather than via 
  search engines. This was also one of our top-commented articles, 
  with 88 rejoinders.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12653>

**No. 5:** “Lion Is a Quitter,” 5 August 2011. Matt Neuburg 
  answered a question on many Lion users’ minds: Why were 
  applications quitting in the background and relaunching when needed? 
  Matt tracked down how Lion frees up memory by dumping programs that 
  aren’t in active use, and sorted out the logic of what happens 
  behind the scenes. A good third of readers for whom we know the 
  source came from Hacker News, part of Y Combinator, but we have no 
  idea why that particular article garnered attention there. Matt 
  answered tons of questions in the comments, which currently number 
  159.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12398>
<http://news.ycombinator.com/>

**No. 4:** “Secrets of Thunderbolt and Lion,” 27 February 2011. An 
  early article I contributed on Thunderbolt and Lion answered many 
  readers’ questions about the new hardware port and the (at the 
  time) upcoming Mac OS X revision. Google News drove about a quarter 
  of readers to our doorsteps for this item, which generated 72 
  comments.

<http://tidbits.com/article/11993>

**No. 3:** “How to Replace a Cracked iPhone 3G Screen,” 30 June 
  2009. Jeff Carlson’s 2009 article remains widely consulted for 
  fixing a problem that’s otherwise expensive to solve, and it 
  carried nearly 2 percent of TidBITS’ 2011 page views — even 
  though the advice isn’t applicable to the iPhone 4 or 4S. Google 
  searches deliver the lion’s share of readers to this page. In 
  fact, this is our most popular article since we started using Google 
  Analytics in 2005.

<http://tidbits.com/article/10389>

**No. 2:** “Our Favorite Hidden Features in Mac OS X Lion,” 20 
  July 2011. The TidBITS staff felt that there were so many exhaustive 
  articles published about Lion that we wouldn’t attempt to write 
  yet another one, but would instead look at the fiddly bits of Lion 
  that we liked best. Daring Fireball gave the article its initial 
  push, but search engines have kept it an evergreen since then.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12320>

**No. 1:** “Type “Let It Snow” into Google,” 21 December 2011. 
  This article from late Decemeber, which Adam penned for fun, quickly 
  became our most viewed page of the year, thanks to ending up as the 
  top news match on Google’s search results for the better part of a 
  day. Google interleaves news and other results as appropriate into 
  its general search, and news results for the phrase “let it 
  snow” were shown before Web page matches, with Adam’s article on 
  top. At times, we had 1,200 simultaneous users reading the article. 
  We’d prefer that our more weighty prose received this kind of 
  attention, but the Internet is all about accidents. Interestingly, 
  the piece also received 500 “likes” on Facebook, but only 
  160-some page views could be traced back to Facebook users. 

<http://tidbits.com/article/12685>


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://tidbits.com/e/12694#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://tidbits.com/t/12694>


Photo Stream and Multiple iPhoto Libraries
------------------------------------------
  by Michael E. Cohen <mcohen@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12690>

  For the casual photographer, Apple’s iCloud Photo Stream service 
  offers great convenience, bringing, as Apple puts it, your photos 
  “everywhere you want them.” And the marketing slogan, within 
  limits, is more or less true.

<http://www.apple.com/icloud/features/photo-stream.html>

  For example, I recently went on a two-week vacation to Great Britain 
  and brought along with me my old Canon PowerShot SD800, my iPhone 4, 
  an iPad 2, and the Apple Camera Connection Kit. Each day, I would go 
  out, take some pictures with my iPhone (usually to obtain GPS 
  information for a particular location) and others with my Canon, and 
  then, later, import the Canon pictures to my iPad with the 
  connection kit. I had no need to import my iPhone pictures, though; 
  as soon as my iPhone was within range of the Wi-Fi network in the 
  flat where I was staying, the day’s iPhone pictures began arriving 
  on my iPad as well. With very little effort on my part, my iPad 
  became the portable photo library for all of my vacation photos.

<http://store.apple.com/us/product/MC531ZM/A>

  And when I got home and fired up iPhoto on my iMac, all of those 
  vacation pictures — both the ones from my iPhone and those I 
  imported onto the iPad from my Canon — were all there in the Photo 
  Stream in iPhoto, ready to be divvied up into various vacation 
  picture albums. Photo Stream, in my experience, was working exactly 
  as described, supplying me with my photos everywhere I wanted them.

  But, it turns out that “everywhere you want them” is not 
  necessarily true for everyone. A few days after I got back I was 
  forwarded an email from a Take Control reader who said that, in his 
  experience, Photo Stream did not work between multiple Macs. This 
  baffled us at TidBITS since we had not seen that to be the case. So, 
  naturally, we began some experimenting to find out why Photo Stream 
  was failing for our correspondent.


**What Did Work** -- The first experiment was a simple one. With 
  iPhoto in one user account on my iMac already connected to my Photo 
  Stream, I logged in to a second user account on my iMac (I always 
  keep a second user account on my iMac available for testing and 
  troubleshooting purposes), launched iPhoto in that account, and set 
  it up to use my iCloud Photo Stream as well. That worked fine: the 
  photos in my iCloud Photo Stream began downloading to the iPhoto 
  library in my second iMac user account, even though iPhoto in my 
  primary iMac user account was open and connected to that same 
  stream. No error messages were seen.

  So, one Mac and one Photo Stream had no problem with two different 
  iPhoto libraries in two different Mac OS X user accounts.

  The next experiment was run by Tonya Engst. She had an iPhoto 
  library on her MacBook that she had just migrated, via Migration 
  Assistant, to her new MacBook Air. Both MacBooks used the same user 
  account name, and both iPhoto libraries were identical. She then 
  proceeded to enable Photo Stream on both her MacBook and her MacBook 
  Air, and, like me, had no problem. Even though both libraries had 
  the same name, and were running in Mac OS X user accounts that also 
  had the same name, iCloud was able to tell them apart and supply her 
  Photo Stream to each of them.

  So, two Macs, and two identical iPhoto libraries on two identically 
  named Mac OS X user accounts had no problem with simultaneously 
  connecting to the same stream.


**What Didn’t Work** -- My next experiment was to switch libraries 
  in iPhoto after I had enabled Photo Stream. To do that, with my 
  Photo Stream still connected to the iPhoto library I normally use, I 
  quit iPhoto, and then relaunched it with the Option key held down. 
  Doing that prompts iPhoto to ask you to choose an iPhoto library to 
  open; it’s how you switch between iPhoto libraries if you happen 
  to have more than one. I chose a test library I had created a while 
  ago, and then, finally, I saw an error message much like one that 
  our correspondent had seen.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-12/iPhoto_photo_stream_conflict.jpg>

  So, here was the restriction: in any one Mac user account, iPhoto 
  can only connect an iCloud Photo Stream to one iPhoto library at a 
  time. You can’t have two iPhoto libraries in the same Mac user 
  account connected to the same stream.

  But this restriction was not, it seemed, what was affecting our 
  correspondent: he was running iPhoto on two different Macs, using 
  two different iPhoto libraries, but he saw the same message. What 
  was going on?


**What Was Going On** -- After a couple more email exchanges, we got a 
  full picture of how our correspondent’s experience differed from 
  ours. Here’s what he had done.

  He first set up iPhoto to connect his Photo Stream to his iPhoto 
  library. He then copied that library to a different Mac. He then 
  launched iPhoto on that second Mac to see if the copied library was 
  intact. It was. Finally, he enabled his iCloud Photo Stream on that 
  second Mac and _that_ was when he got the multiple library error 
  message.

  While we’re still not quite sure what is going on under the hood 
  with Photo Stream and his library, it seems reasonably clear that 
  copying a library that _is still connected_ to Photo Stream to a 
  different Mac and then trying to connect that copy to the same 
  stream can confuse iCloud.


**The Moral of the Story?** -- If you want to copy your iPhoto library 
  to another Mac, or to another user account on the same Mac, 
  disconnect it from your Photo Stream _first_. Although Photo Stream 
  can connect to multiple Macs, it gets confused when you move an 
  already-connected iPhoto library among Macs.

  Or, as Dr. Egon Spengler succinctly put it in Ghostbusters, 
  “Don’t cross the streams.” 

<http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0087332/quotes?qt=qt0475898>


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://tidbits.com/e/12690#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://tidbits.com/t/12690>


TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 2 January 2012
--------------------------------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12697>

**Piezo 1.1** -- Rogue Amoeba has updated their minimalist audio 
  recording app Piezo to offer better support for recording from 
  voice-over-IP apps like Skype, iChat, and FaceTime. Previously, 
  recording a conversation with Piezo caused you to hear yourself as 
  well, which was extremely disconcerting. Piezo 1.1 now records local 
  audio to the left channel and your caller to the right channel. It 
  also supports drag-and-drop of source apps to the Piezo window, 
  illuminates the Dock icon when recording, no longer prevents sleep 
  when it’s not recording, and improves the VU meters slightly. Not 
  yet fixed is the problem I reported in “Piezo Makes Audio 
  Recording Dead Simple” (8 December 2011) whereby Piezo plays 
  incoming audio from VoIP apps through the device selected in the 
  Sound preference pane’s Output screen, rather than through the 
  device selected in Skype or iChat. ($10 new, free update, 2.8 MB, 
  release notes)

<http://rogueamoeba.com/piezo/>
<http://tidbits.com/article/12664>
<http://rogueamoeba.com/piezo/releasenotes.php>

  Read/post comments about Piezo 1.1.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12699#comments>


**iTunes 10.5.2** -- iTunes Match has been finicky for many people 
  since its launch, but as with any service that includes both local 
  and remote components, there’s no telling where the problems lie. 
  Apple has now released iTunes 10.5.2, advertising it as providing 
  “several improvements for iTunes Match,” so perhaps we’ll see 
  some of the iTunes Match oddities disappearing (like why does it 
  sometimes match all but one song on an album?). Also fixed in iTunes 
  10.5.2 is an audio distortion problem when playing or importing 
  certain CDs. Apple doesn’t explain what “certain” means, but 
  it does make one wonder if the music companies are trying some sort 
  of copy-prevention hackery. (Free, 102 MB)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1426>

  Read/post comments about iTunes 10.5.2.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12679#comments>




ExtraBITS for 2 January 2012
----------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12696>

  That’s Sir Jonathan Ive now, but even he still can’t use an iPad 
  during takeoff and landing on a commercial flight, though American 
  Airlines pilots can. Also, Glenn and Adam discussed our new TidBITS 
  membership program on MacVoices, and Apple announced that the Mac 
  App Store has passed 100 million downloads.


**Jonathan Ive Honored with Knighthood** -- Apple’s senior vice 
  president of industrial design, Jonathan Ive, can now demand that 
  his employees and everyone else address him as “Sir.” He’s 
  been made a Knight Commander of the British Empire for his design 
  work at Apple. Although Ive worked at Apple for several years before 
  the arrival of Steve Jobs as CEO in 1995, Jobs and Ive launched an 
  industrial design revolution at the company that has dramatically 
  influenced products and design aesthetics worldwide.

<http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-16367022>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/12695#comments>


**Pilots Can Use iPads During Takeoff and Landing, but You Can’t** 
  -- The Federal Aviation Administration’s restriction on electronic 
  devices — even those that don’t have internal radios or are in 
  Airplane Mode — during takeoff (including sitting on the runway 
  for hours) and landing has always seemed unnecessarily cautious, and 
  Nick Bilton of the New York Times has explored that in the past. But 
  his latest blog post makes the restriction seem even more 
  ridiculous, since the FAA is now allowing American Airlines pilots 
  to use iPads in the cockpit at all times. The only defense given is 
  that it might be different if everyone was using a device during 
  takeoff or landing, but that seems eminently testable. Wouldn’t it 
  be refreshing if flying could become more convenient for a change?

<http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/12/14/f-a-a-approves-ipads-in-cockpits-but-not-for-passengers/>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/12682#comments>


**TidBITS Membership Program Discussed on MacVoices** -- Curious about 
  how we came up with the idea for our new membership program, and why 
  we designed it the way we did? This is inside baseball, of course, 
  but if you like peeking behind the curtain, you’ll enjoy hearing 
  Adam Engst and Glenn Fleishman discuss the hows and whys with 
  MacVoices host Chuck Joiner. And yes, there is stuff in here that we 
  haven’t said elsewhere.

<http://www.macvoices.com/wordpress/macvoices-11104-adam-engst-and-glenn-fleishman-discuss-the-new-tidbits-membership-program/>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/12681#comments>


**Mac App Store Passes 100 Million Downloads** -- Apple has announced 
  that over 100 million apps have been downloaded from the Mac App 
  Store in just under a year since the online store opened on 6 
  January 2011. The company did not break out the difference between 
  free and paid apps, nor was the number of apps (beyond 
  “thousands”) shared. Although inclusion in the Mac App Store is 
  by no means a guarantee of sales success, it has proven to be a boon 
  for many Mac developers.

<http://www.apple.com/pr/library/2011/12/12Apples-Mac-App-Store-Downloads-Top-100-Million.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/12678#comments>




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