TidBITS#1110/23-Jan-2012
========================
  Issue link: <http://tidbits.com/issue/1110>


  Apple’s special event last week may have been targeted at the
  education market, but the new iBooks 2, iBooks Author, and iTunes U
  apps — and how they’re being seen by both those who create books and
  those who read them — dominate this week’s issue of TidBITS. Adam
  covers the basics of Apple’s announcements, and also looks at why much
  of the consternation is happening because people are missing that
  Apple is aiming everything at the education market. Michael Cohen also
  weighs in with commentary about why iBooks Author will be a big deal
  in education, but taking the opposite view is physics teacher Steve
  McCabe, who argues that iBooks textbooks offer a warmed-up take on
  twenty-year-old ideas. In our own publishing news, it may not be an
  enhanced iBooks textbook, but Glenn Fleishman’s new “Take Control of
  Screen Sharing in Lion” still has all the help you need to choose and
  use the right method of screen sharing for your needs. And speaking of
  Glenn, he also runs down the latest changes in AT&T’s data plans for
  iPhones and iPads. Notable software releases this week include iTunes
  10.5.3, Typinator 5, QuarkXPress 9.2, and Default Folder X 4.4.8.

Articles
    No TidBITS Membership Signups in Person at Moscone
    AT&T Raises Data Plan Prices for New Customers
    New Take Control Book Unveils the Magic of Screen Sharing
    Apple Goes Back to School with iBooks 2, iBooks Author, and iTunes U
    Why iBooks Author is a Big Deal
    iBooks Textbooks: Not Exactly Innovation in Education
    Examining iBooks Author from the Publisher Perspective
    TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 23 January 2012
    ExtraBITS for 23 January 2012


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No TidBITS Membership Signups in Person at Moscone
--------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12745>

  We said in “TidBITS Events at Macworld | iWorld 2012” (17 
  January 2012) that we’d be doing in-person TidBITS membership 
  signups at Moscone West on Friday at 3:00 PM. That had been a 
  last-minute decision, and it was ill-considered. Our friends at IDG 
  World Expo have asked that we don’t do this, since we’re not 
  paying for booth space, which is what’s necessary to conduct 
  business at the show, and that’s entirely reasonable. So we’ll 
  still show up near the escalators in the lobby to chat, but we 
  won’t be taking memberships in person at Moscone.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12703>

  If you see me somewhere else outside of Moscone, that’s fine, but 
  we won’t be trying to set up any other particular meeting spots 
  this year (though it would be fun to try the Square, it really is 
  easier all around if you sign up online, where we’re still gunning 
  for our goal of 2,000 members in January). Sorry if this change has 
  caused any confusion, and our apologies to the IDG World Expo folks.

<http://tidbits.com/member_benefits.html>


  ----
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AT&T Raises Data Plan Prices for New Customers
----------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12727>
  1 comment

  AT&T is raising the price of its two smartphone data plans by $5, 
  but increasing the monthly usage allotment by 50 percent at the same 
  time. iPad service plans were also modified in a more convoluted 
  way. Until 21 January 2012, the tiered smartphone plans cost either 
  $15 per month for up to 200 MB of upstream and downstream data used, 
  or $25 per month for up to 2 GB. Additional data cost $15 per 200 MB 
  on the $15 plan and $10 for 1 GB on the $25 plan.

<http://www.marketwatch.com/story/att-launches-new-data-plans-2012-01-18>

  On 22 January 2012, the lower tier rose to $20 per month, but now 
  includes 300 MB of data. Additional units of 300 MB cost $20 each. 
  The next tier jumped to $30 per month for 3 GB of data, but picked 
  up the previous plan’s $10-per-gigabyte overage charge. And 
  finally, AT&T still charges extra for tethering and the personal 
  hotspot option: it’s listed as a separate plan that costs $50 for 
  5 GB. Additional units of 1 GB also cost $10 with this tethering 
  tier.

<http://www.att.com/dataplans>

  You can remain on your current plan — whether unlimited, 200 MB, 
  or 2 GB — indefinitely, but the moment you switch to one of the 
  new options, you can never return to unlimited service or the 
  previous tiers.

  AT&T offers extremely nice options for changing your service plan 
  mid-month at no charge via the myAT&T app, its Web site, or by 
  calling customer service. You can typically back-date a data plan to 
  the first of the month, which can be a significant savings on the 
  200 MB or 300 MB plan if you burn through data, or pro-rate service 
  from the current day of your billing cycle, if you expect to use 
  much less or much more data through the end of a month. (In some 
  cases, you may need to call or use the Web site to make the change, 
  rather than modify service via the app.)

  AT&T could adjust your service level to the optimum price each month 
  with no jockeying on your part. This would increase customer 
  satisfaction, which reduces churn (the number of customers leaving), 
  and decreases marketing, retention, and account costs. But 
  apparently AT&T, like other major cellular carriers, isn’t 
  interested in this — presumably the companies feel the extra 
  income is worth the customer annoyance.

  Meanwhile, AT&T has stuck with its plan to throttle to EDGE speeds 
  (about 200–300 Kbps) the top 5 percent of bandwidth users among 
  its remaining unlimited subscribers, who pay $30 per month. Based on 
  numbers provided by AT&T in earlier press releases, 20 million plans 
  remained on the unlimited level in mid-2011. The throttling affects 
  as many as 1 million users each month. On Twitter, one such capped 
  user said he had used only a smidge above 2 GB last month and was 
  throttled.

  The new 3 GB tier at the same price as unlimited data may be an 
  attempt for AT&T to lure unlimited customers who are being throttled 
  to migrate to the metered way of doing things.

  On the tablet front, there are also new iPad plans. The lowest level 
  — 250 MB for $14.99 — remains available, but the 2 GB for $25 
  plan has been replaced by a pair of plans that cost $30 for 3 GB and 
  $50 for 5 GB. The 2 GB plan remains available only for those 
  currently using and automatically renewing at that level. 

<http://www.att.com/shop/wireless/devices/ipad.jsp>

  iPad subscribers who have postpaid accounts, where they are billed 
  each month in advance for service, may pay $10 per GB for overages 
  and be billed in a subsequent month. Those with prepaid service, in 
  which all fees are paid in advance and fixed, may start a new 250 
  MB, 3 GB, or 5 GB plan when they have exhausted the usage allotment 
  before a 30-day cycle is up.


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New Take Control Book Unveils the Magic of Screen Sharing
---------------------------------------------------------
  by Michael E. Cohen <mcohen@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12730>
  3 comments

  Sharing screens is fun: it feels almost magical to view the screen 
  of one Mac from another, and even more so to control another Mac 
  from your own. With “Take Control of Screen Sharing in Lion,” 
  Glenn Fleishman explains the many ways you can pull that rabbit out 
  of your Mac’s hat. The 103-page ebook is available today for $10.

<http://tid.bl.it/screen-sharing-lion-tidbits>

  While fun to show off to less-experienced friends, screen sharing is 
  an essential tool if you need to provide remote tech support (no 
  more asking repeatedly, “So what did the dialog say?”), 
  configure and manage remote servers, or collaborate on a document in 
  real time, passing control of the cursor back and forth as 
  necessary. That’s why Apple has provided a bunch of ways to share 
  screens, including iChat, Back to My Mac, and the Screen Sharing 
  application. Nor is Apple alone: Skype also provides Mac screen 
  sharing, as do several iOS apps (yes, you _can_ drive your Mac from 
  your iPad, or even your iPhone!). 

  Glenn helps you choose the right screen-sharing technique for 
  various situations, covering the pros and cons and what kind of 
  security each method offers. He also discusses how to share screens 
  with older Macs running 10.5 Leopard and 10.6 Snow Leopard, and how 
  to manage your Mac from an iOS device.

  Among the tricks and techniques the ebook covers are how to:

* Set up your Mac so that it can be controlled from your iPhone.
* Use screen sharing to help your confused uncle with his Mac.
* Find and launch the built-in Screen Sharing application on your Mac.
* Control an unattended Mac over the Internet.
* Turn on Back to My Mac with MobileMe or iCloud.
* Get set up and begin to share your screen through Skype.
* Give a presentation to a remote location through iChat Theater.
* Wake up a remote Mac in order to control it through screen sharing.
* Copy text from one computer to another while sharing screens.
* Put a shared screen in its own full-screen display in Lion.
* Control a far-away Mac through screen sharing when another user is 
  logged in to that same Mac with a different account.

  As the number of Macs in our extended professional and social 
  networks continues to grow, so too does the need to access them 
  quickly and efficiently from different locations. Glenn 
  Fleishman’s “Take Control of Screen Sharing in Lion” puts the 
  magic of screen sharing at your fingertips. 


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://tidbits.com/e/12730#comments>
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Apple Goes Back to School with iBooks 2, iBooks Author, and iTunes U
--------------------------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12731>
  16 comments

  In a special event in New York City, Apple’s Senior Vice President 
  of Worldwide Marketing Phil Schiller and VP for Productivity 
  Software Roger Rosner unveiled a pair of free apps aimed at 
  reinventing the textbook market: iBooks 2 and iBooks Author for the 
  Mac. Not content to stop there, Senior VP of Internet Software and 
  Services Eddy Cue and VP of iTunes Jeff Robbin then introduced the 
  free iTunes U app for iOS.

<http://www.apple.com/apple-events/education-january-2012/>


**iBooks 2** -- iBooks 2 is an update to Apple’s free ebook reading 
  app for the iPad, enabling users to read specially created enhanced 
  ebooks containing rich multimedia elements and interactivity, along 
  with gorgeous layouts. Apple is focusing the new capabilities of 
  iBooks on the textbook world, where videos, interactive images, 3-D 
  graphics, and embedded review questions can significantly enhance 
  the learning experience. 

<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/ibooks/id364709193>

  These features enable zooming into the image of a chromosome to get 
  a better look, for instance, or rotating a 3-D model of a molecule. 
  Or, an interactive graphic might enable you to tap the parts of an 
  insect’s body, highlighting them in other photos elsewhere on the 
  screen. Switching orientations changes the display from a scrolling 
  approach (portrait) to a page-based design (landscape) with multiple 
  columns and in-text graphics.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-01/iBooks2-multimedia.png>

  The iBooks textbooks that Apple showed off included a built-in 
  glossary; you can browse through it or tap bolded words to look up 
  their definitions in the glossary (which can even include images) or 
  in a dictionary. Searching remains, of course, and is improved — 
  when you tap a word, you can search for it in the textbook, in both 
  text and media (presumably mediated by a search index), or extend 
  the search to Wikipedia or the Web. If the textbook’s glossary 
  includes the word, the glossary entry will also come up as a search 
  result.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-01/iBooks2-glossary.png>

  Another nut that Apple has apparently cracked is that of pagination 
  — it’s important in a class for everyone to be literally on the 
  same page, and these books have fixed pagination in landscape mode. 
  You can’t change fonts or sizes in landscape mode, but those 
  standard iBooks controls appear once again in portrait mode.

  More interesting are iBooks 2’s new note-reviewing capabilities, 
  which work only in iBooks textbooks. Just as with iBooks previously, 
  you can tap and hold or swipe to highlight text, and then tap the 
  highlighted text to add a note. But with an iBooks textbook, notes 
  can be used in a study card format where you see the highlighted 
  text on the “front” of a virtual index card and your note on the 
  “back,” which you reach by tapping it. The stack of cards can 
  even be shuffled to aid in studying for tests.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-01/iBooks2-notes.png>

  Although iBooks 2 remains a universal app that runs on all iOS 
  devices, the iPhone and iPod touch versions cannot display these new 
  iBooks textbooks (they don’t even appear, which is good, since 
  they’re huge). Plus, several times when I tried to view the 
  “Life on Earth” textbook in iBooks 2 on my original iPad, all I 
  got was the introductory audio on a gray screen — I had to shut my 
  iPad down and restart it before iBooks 2 would show the book 
  properly. (“Life on Earth” is currently available for free; 
  it’s a nearly 1 GB download.)

<http://itunes.apple.com/us/book/id490270998>


**iBooks Author** -- Previously, iBooks was relatively limited in what 
  it could display, and adding audio and video to an EPUB was 
  difficult at best. Creating iBooks textbooks is where the second new 
  app — iBooks Author — comes in. It’s a Mac application, 
  available for free from the Mac App Store as a 136 MB download, and 
  compatible only with Mac OS X 10.7 Lion. (It turns out that iBooks 
  Author can be run in 10.6 Snow Leopard, but doing so requires some 
  trickery. Digital Tweaker has the details.)

<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/ibooks-author/id490152466>
<http://www.digitaltweaker.com/mac/mac-tips/2012/01/how-to-install-ibooks-author-on-os-x-snow-leopard/>

  Not surprisingly, iBooks Author is reminiscent of Apple’s iWork 
  applications, providing a number of templates to start. As in 
  Keynote, you add pages to your book, putting text, graphics, and 
  multimedia elements on each. You can import text from Pages or Word, 
  and iBooks Author honors a set of styles for creating items such as 
  headings, sections, and so on. You can even import Keynote 
  presentations as interactive elements.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-01/iBooks-Author.png>

  Like Pages, iBooks Author can build the table of contents 
  automatically, based on styles that you use for headings in the 
  manuscript, and you can create glossary entries from the Glossary 
  toolbar or by Control-clicking a term and choosing from the 
  contextual menu. Then you bounce over to the Glossary interface to 
  enter a definition.

  Unfortunately, iBooks Author doesn’t appear to have the change 
  tracking and commenting tools that are necessary in any professional 
  publishing situation, which means that text will have be pretty much 
  final when it is flowed into iBooks Author, and any collaboration on 
  layout and object placement will have to be done manually.

  iBooks Author can export three types of files: text, PDF, and 
  iBooks. The text export is likely good only for extracting text from 
  an existing file, the PDF export appears to be useful only for a 
  certain level of proofing, and the iBooks format is apparently 
  slightly mangled EPUB, with a different MIME type (drop one on 
  BBEdit if you want to look inside). You can export directly to a 
  connected iPad for testing, which is far easier than the normal 
  convoluted process for syncing ebooks to the iPad.

  However, don’t get your hopes up for being able to use iBooks 
  Author for EPUB in general — the license agreement states that 
  files created with iBooks Author must either be made available for 
  free or sold only through the iBookstore, and they will likely 
  display only in iBooks on the iPad without some hacking. In short, 
  if TidBITS wanted to create an enhanced Take Control ebook using 
  iBooks Author, the only way for readers to purchase it would be 
  through the iBookstore, which makes it much harder for us to 
  communicate with readers and provide outside-the-book features as we 
  do now. It would also make it harder for us to provide a similar 
  ebook in other formats, such as one that can be read directly on the 
  Mac or on the Kindle. I’m not saying we won’t try iBooks Author, 
  but it won’t be a sea change for our publishing model.


**iTunes U** -- Apple’s third app — which requires iOS 5 and is 
  available for not only the iPad but also the iPhone and iPod touch 
  — does for online course content what iBooks 2 does for textbooks. 
  Apple has long provided lectures from numerous colleges and 
  universities in audio and video format via iTunes U, and with over 
  700 million downloads, it has been successful. The iTunes U app can 
  play the simple audio and video for existing courses, but it gets 
  far more interesting when used with a newly enhanced course (it also 
  gets flakier — as with iBooks 2, I experienced a number of 
  crashes; you can expect minor updates to both apps as Apple works 
  out the bugs). If you want a sample, check out Duke’s Core 
  Concepts in Chemistry. 

<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/itunes-u/id490217893?m>
<http://itunes.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewCourse?id=495047302&s=143441>

  The iTunes U app breaks an enhanced course into four sections: Info, 
  Posts, Notes, and Materials, and you switch between them using tabs 
  on the right side of the screen (iPad) or bottom of the screen 
  (iPhone/iPod touch). The Info tab provides subsections for things 
  like a course overview, an instructor bio, and the outline of the 
  course. 

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-01/iTunesU-iPhone-Info.png>

  The heart of the course lies in the Posts tab, which brings together 
  text, audio, and video lectures and assignments, along with the new 
  iBooks textbooks created with iBooks Author (which can be read only 
  on an iPad, remember). Although the Core Concepts in Chemistry 
  course I looked at seemed fully fleshed out, for courses that are in 
  progress, new posts alert you to their presence via notifications. 
  You can even play an audio or video lecture and listen in the 
  background while in a different part of the interface, such as the 
  Notes tab. When you complete an assignment, you can check it off.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-01/iTunesU-iPad-Posts.png>

  In the Notes tab, you can create general course-level notes, and any 
  notes from iBooks that are part of the class will appear as well. 
  (But remember, you can make notes only on EPUB-based ebooks; 
  although iBooks can display PDFs, which will be common in courses, 
  you can’t make notes on those.) Those books may appear within the 
  assignments, and they’re all collected in the Materials tab as 
  well. The course includes (or will download) all the core materials, 
  but some supplemental materials, including books and apps, may 
  require additional purchases.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-01/iTunesU-iPad-Notes.png>

  How one creates an iTunes U course was not shared, although Apple 
  said that six schools have had access to the new tools and have 
  created over 100 new online courses. We’d like to see Apple open 
  up the tools necessary to create an iTunes U course, just like 
  iBooks Author, such that it would be possible to create — and sell 
  — training courses via iTunes, although that gets back into the 
  single-store debate.

  Ironically, the presence of all this information online may reduce 
  attendance in classes even further, something we’ve heard 
  professors in iTunes U lectures complain about with the ready 
  availability of recorded lectures.

  A more speculative question is what will happen — particularly in 
  certain subjects where collaborative scenarios or access to 
  specialized equipment aren’t important — to higher education in 
  general if it becomes possible to take most courses online in this 
  fashion. Will the intangibles of a college education — maturation, 
  networking, exposure to opportunities — and the eventual diploma 
  be seen as worth the skyrocketing tuition costs? 


**An Apple a Day for Education** -- I’ll give Apple this — they 
  don’t think small. These apps set a new bar for electronic books 
  and online courses, and the apps are all available for free. The 
  problem is that Apple also wants to own the entire pie, and in the 
  process say exactly what is and is not possible. That’s not 
  particularly different from Amazon, which tries to lock works into 
  the Kindle ecosystem by refusing to support EPUB. But at least the 
  far-less-ambitious Kindle format can be converted to from other 
  formats.

  Debates are already raging on Twitter about how iBooks Author 
  doesn’t allow works created with it to be sold anywhere but the 
  iBookstore, and we publisher types are already trying to imagine how 
  we can justify the extra effort and expense of creating iBooks 
  textbooks for a single retail outlet. Plus, Apple is talking about 
  these textbooks being inexpensive — on the order of $14.99 — 
  which may play havoc with publisher business models that rely on 
  high prices for books that are reused for multiple years. How it 
  will shake out in the publishing world remains to be seen.

  On the other side of the equation are the schools — where will the 
  budget come from to outfit students with iPads and to buy these 
  iBooks textbooks? It’s not impossible — we know of some local 
  school districts that have had great success with pilot programs for 
  tablets (Android, in this case), both in terms of student 
  achievement and cost savings. But many schools can purchase only 
  state- or district-approved textbooks, and that’s where Apple’s 
  connection with publishers may be key — it should be much easier 
  for a government entity to approve an electronic textbook if it is 
  simply the electronic version of an approved traditional textbook.


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Why iBooks Author is a Big Deal
-------------------------------
  by Michael E. Cohen <mcohen@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12739>
  15 comments

  When Apple made its education announcements last week (see “Apple 
  Goes Back to School with iBooks 2, iBooks Author, and iTunes U,” 
  19 January 2012), the Web reverberated almost instantly with a 
  deafening clamor of commentary and criticism. For some people, 
  Apple’s end-user license agreement (EULA) for its iBooks Author 
  program was a show-stopper, as well as providing corroborating 
  evidence for the theory that Apple was as mendacious and evil as 
  many had feared all along. For others, it was the new iBooks 
  multi-touch book file format, which was seen as a direct attack 
  against ebook standards and a betrayal of Apple’s commitment to 
  open standards. And for still others, including our own Glenn 
  Fleishman, it was Apple’s marketing message itself that evoked 
  frustration and disappointment.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12731>
<http://venomousporridge.com/post/16126436616/ibooks-author-eula-audacity>
<http://www.glazman.org/weblog/dotclear/index.php?post/2012/01/20/iBooks-Author-a-nice-tool-but>
<http://www.macworld.com/article/164921/2012/01/apples_textbook_plan_feels_like_a_blast_from_the_past.html>

  Although much of the criticism of Apple and iBooks Author is 
  deserved, I don’t care. Here’s why.

  First, I think that the EULA, like iBooks Author itself, is version 
  1.0, and that it will change — Apple has changed EULAs before, 
  notably with its iOS restriction against which development tools 
  were used to create apps. Second, I think the file-format issue is 
  something of a red herring: iBooks 2 still displays normal EPUBs 
  just fine, and will likely support the EPUB 3.0 standard sooner or 
  later.

<http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2010/09/apple-lifts-app-store-flash-ban-publishes-app-review-rules/>

  Third, although, like Glenn, I have heard the “students are bored 
  and software will fix it” pedagogical panacea claims all before, 
  and probably, I think, heard much more of it than Glenn: So what? It 
  was ever thus.

  I spent more than a quarter of a century in the thick of educational 
  software development and interactive multimedia production, under 
  the aegis of both educational institutions and publishing companies. 
  Most of those for whom I developed such materials claimed the same 
  magical pedagogical powers for the stuff on which I worked that 
  Apple claimed for iBooks Author last week. Then, as now, it was 
  over-reaching marketing nonsense. But most marketing is just that: 
  over-reaching nonsense.

  Teaching is hard. It was hard in a one-room schoolroom with 
  slate-toting students and it is hard in a modern, media-rich 
  classroom filled with digital tablet-bearing students. Furthermore, 
  bad teachers are bad teachers no matter what tools they have 
  available, and good teachers are good teachers, whether armed with 
  chalk or laser pointers. Creating curricula that work effectively 
  with disparate assemblages of young humans of various backgrounds, 
  home environments, and states of cognitive development is enormously 
  difficult, no matter the media used to deliver the curricular 
  materials.

  And it always will be.

  But here’s the thing: having access to good instructional 
  resources is always better for students and for teachers than not 
  having such access. And although interactive multimedia textbooks of 
  the type that iBooks Author makes so very easy to prepare probably 
  won’t make a bad teacher into a good one or a poor student into a 
  candidate for valedictorian, it is much better to have them 
  available for teachers and for students than not.

  Availability was the big stumbling block that tripped up most of the 
  instructional projects I worked on since the early 1980s. At the 
  beginning of my instructional technology odyssey, computers in 
  classrooms were very rare, and teacher familiarity with digital 
  technology all but non-existent. Back then, one really had to do a 
  Bolshoi-scale song-and-dance just to get even small instructional 
  technology pilot programs established.

  Later, the biggest availability issue lay not in convincing the 
  Powers That Be that interactive media had a place in education, but 
  in finding the financial resources to build the necessary computer 
  labs. And, just as costly — if not more so — was finding and 
  hiring the people to develop the materials for those labs: the 
  development tools were difficult to use, expensive, and hard to come 
  by, and those individuals who had both the pedagogical and the 
  technological knowledge to employ those tools effectively were just 
  as expensive and hard to find. 

  Today, however, low-cost digital media tablets herald the end of the 
  expensive dedicated computer lab. Sure, a $500 iPad is not cheap, 
  but it’s far cheaper and far more within the reach of parents and 
  schools than the bolted-down lab machines of years gone by. At the 
  same time, though, cost and difficulty of developing rich 
  instructional materials for these new devices has not seen a 
  similarly drastic decline.

  Until iBooks Author. Here is a tool that most teachers who are 
  capable of writing an email can master. Here is a tool that produces 
  something that is enough like a book that even a teacher with no 
  training in computer-based pedagogy can understand and see how to 
  use for teaching. Here is a tool that can deliver certain 
  instructional experiences that are just much harder to deliver from 
  a paper book, even when mediated by a teacher of exceptional skill.

  No, I don’t expect that iBooks Author will be the One True Magic 
  Bullet that will slay all the pedagogical woes of the world or even 
  most of them. Nor do I see it being even the one true instructional 
  material development application for the ebook generation. 

  What I do see, however, is that iBooks Author and Apple’s related 
  educational initiatives have a real chance of finally tearing down 
  the availability stumbling blocks.

  I think that’s a good thing. 


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://tidbits.com/e/12739#comments>
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iBooks Textbooks: Not Exactly Innovation in Education
-----------------------------------------------------
  by Steve McCabe <steve@stevemccabe.net>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12740>
  14 comments

  No iPhone 5, no iPad 3, no update to the Mac Pro range, at 
  Thursday’s Apple education event in New York. No, the innovations 
  Apple were unwrapping at the Guggenheim were altogether more 
  surprising. 

  Claiming to “re-invent the textbook,” Phil Schiller, Apple’s 
  senior vice president for Worldwide Marketing, portrayed Apple as a 
  crusader for educational innovation, and announced a new product 
  range that, according to one of the talking-head teachers roped in 
  to shill for iBooks textbooks, would “change my students’ lives 
  for the better.” 

  This was intended to be, clearly, a spectacular advance, a leap 
  forward in educational technology that would disrupt, innovate, 
  surprise, delight; certainly, for me, a technology commentator, and 
  a teacher since 1991, this should have been a revolutionary 
  innovation. But it didn’t, and it wasn’t.

<http://stevemccabe.net/radio.html>
<http://stevemccabe.net/mystory.html>

  A company such as Apple should, surely, have the potential not 
  simply to embellish and enhance the textbook as it exists in its 
  current paradigm; they should have it in them, especially if they 
  are to have the hubris to claim that they are “reinventing” the 
  textbook, to introduce something utterly radical, something that 
  turns the current understanding of the textbook utterly on its head. 

  Instead, Apple’s presentation should have been fronted by Rod 
  Serling. I was watching the thing on a fast, powerful, modern laptop 
  computer — an Apple MacBook Pro with a quad-core Intel processor, 
  accessing fast Internet over a wireless connection, and downloading 
  the new product as it was announced onto an Apple iPad — a tablet 
  computer! — at the same time. And yet, and yet… what was being 
  shown off, what was touted as a reinvention of the textbook, 
  belonged back in the mid 1990s. 

  An iBooks textbook, we were promised, would be interactive. 
  Interactivity in content has been a fundamental aspect of 
  computer-aided delivery for as long as we’ve had CD-ROMs — I 
  updated my Mac IIsi to a IIvx back in 1995 because I really wanted 
  the CD-ROM drive, and immediately started playing with multimedia 
  titles that were starting to appear. And what made these titles 
  attractive was the fact that they could build on simple static text, 
  offering, as it was known then, a multimedia experience — video, 
  animation, audio. 

  This was, as I say, seventeen years ago — around the time some of 
  the target audience of the iBooks textbooks were born. In those 
  seventeen years, computer-mediated instructional materials 
  (“textbook” is such an old-fashioned word) should, surely, have 
  moved on. But what I find on my iPad today, in 2012 (for, at least, 
  as long as iBooks 2 is usable; my experience so far is that it’s 
  as unstable as a hippo on rollerskates) is an experience that, other 
  than being on my ever-so-modern tablet computer, is, essentially, 
  the same as that offered by multimedia CD-ROMs back in the early 
  90s.

<http://www.questia.com/googleScholar.qst?docId=5000286649>

  It is true that iBooks textbooks offer a level of engagement that 
  paper books are unable to match, and there is definitely evidence to 
  suggest that novelty in presentation, especially when that novelty 
  involves computers, will, at least temporarily, reduce affective 
  barriers to learning. I know — I did some of the research as a 
  graduate student, again back in the mid-1990s. But those years also 
  saw an incipient movement to take the possibilities offered by 
  computers to personalise and individualise the learning experience 
  offered by technology and exploit the platforms available even 
  fifteen years ago.

  At a language-teaching conference in Japan in, I believe, 1999 or 
  2000, I listened to a presentation on adaptive language testing, a 
  system that tested, observed student performance, and then selected 
  the next instruction-testing sequence based on that performance. 
  While this was, at that point, a somewhat rudimentary application of 
  the principles involved, it at least showed that computers were able 
  to make decisions on what to do next based on what had preceded that 
  decision. iBooks 2 offers no such flexibility, as far as I can tell 
  so far. 

  Partly this is due to the fact that iBooks textbooks are a product 
  of iBooks Author, itself essentially the love child of iWork’s 
  Pages and Keynote. Absent, so far, are any programming tools, even 
  simple ones, that can allow any form of data-storing scripting, 
  which is a shame, since programs such as FileMaker Pro, SuperCard, 
  even HyperCard (of sainted memory) allow solutions to be created 
  that offer a degree of decision-based scripting. Had Apple 
  incorporated such elements into iBooks Author, a whole new level of 
  interactivity and personalised learning could have been generated: 
  “Steve, I see you’re spending a lot of time on simple harmonic 
  motion, but you’re not doing very well on the end-of-topic quiz. 
  Would you like some extra help with this topic?” But while the 
  student can interact with the content, the content remains unable to 
  interact with the student, and this seems to be an opportunity badly 
  missed; I can only hope that scripting will feature strongly in a 
  future version of iBooks Author. 

  As it stands, iBooks textbooks offers very little that hasn’t been 
  on offer for nearly twenty years. Far from reinventing the textbook, 
  Apple have simply taken an existing concept and applied it to a new 
  medium, with, it appears, relatively little in the way of points of 
  difference due to the particular nature of the iPad platform. And 
  so, instead of static text and static images on a page, we are now 
  presented with static text and some moving images on a page. This is 
  a small step forward in terms of paper textbooks, but, in terms of 
  the state of the art with regard to multimedia presentation, it is, 
  absent scripting, possibly even a retrograde step. 

  In terms of the pedagogy, too, advances are lacking. Beginning with 
  Gardner’s work on multiple intelligences back in the 1980s, 
  educational theory has emphasised learning modalities; it is 
  impossible to escape a teacher-training programme in, at the very 
  least, the United States or New Zealand, without having the concept 
  of visual, auditory, kinesthetic, and tactile learners pounded deep 
  into one’s brain; it is equally impossible to survive a lesson 
  observation without some questioning of how much a teacher has 
  addressed all of his students’ learning styles. 

  Textbooks, of course, by their very nature are limited to the visual 
  modality; that is an inescapable constraint of paper. But this 
  constraint, by and large, remains intact in an iBooks textbook, even 
  though the technology no longer imposes it. The essence of an iBooks 
  textbook is written text — everything else is an adjunct to that 
  written text.

  Being a physics teacher, I naturally downloaded a sample of McGraw 
  Hill’s physics textbook, and played with the chapters on waves and 
  vibration. This has never been the easiest topic in the world to 
  teach in the classroom; springs, ropes and waveform generators can 
  be rather temperamental, and while on a good day a standing wave can 
  be fun, I’ve yet to see a teacher actually manage a third harmonic 
  in a rope on demand. This is where the potential of iBooks 2 is 
  teased to teachers, but even then not entirely brilliantly 
  implemented, and this is a function of the file-size limitation set 
  by Apple. 

  iBooks textbooks, we have been told, can be up to 2 GB in size if 
  they are to be distributed through the iBookstore. This is 
  reasonable — Apple is hoping to sell a lot of these books, of 
  course, and so they need to make sure that their datacentres, 
  already serving up iTunes, iCloud, and two App Stores, don’t 
  suddenly start laboring under 15 GB behemoths. (This limitation, 
  though, appears not to apply, for example, to the 2.77 GB of biology 
  currently on offer from Pearson.) 

  I would like to see every photograph in my physics textbook link to 
  a video of a dynamic experiment. But while videos of projectiles, 
  and animations of graphs of their motion, would be a valuable 
  enhancement to a textbook, their creation will inevitably increase 
  production costs for the book, and slow down the editorial cycle 
  somewhat. I already use YouTube to demonstrate things I can’t 
  readily demonstrate in the classroom, such as the 
  brick-on-a-rope-not-hitting-your-face illustration of conservation 
  of energy, but I spend a lot of time doing quality control on 
  YouTube videos; having a ready-made bundle of content on an iPad 
  would be enormously beneficial. Similarly, trying to draw, on a 
  flat, two-dimensional whiteboard, a diagram of the three-dimensional 
  vectors of Maxwell’s Laws is guaranteed to give headaches — so 
  much easier simply to call up the relevant page on an iPad. But the 
  more content you include in your book, the bigger the file will be, 
  and the longer it will take to download.

  And downloading is an issue for many people. As I have written about 
  in “Paying by the Bit: Internet Access in New Zealand” (15 
  January 2010), outside the United States not everyone, including 
  schools, has access to unlimited Internet connections. If my 
  students were issued iPads next month, for the start of the new 
  school year, they would then need to download their textbooks. Would 
  they do this at home? Given that a typical home Internet connection 
  in New Zealand, assuming it even has broadband (dialup is still 
  quite widespread here), has a data cap of 5–10 GB per month, 
  it’s fair to assume that most of my students will want to download 
  their books at school. Perhaps the school would download one 
  instance of each book, and syncing could happen centrally; this 
  would, of course, require that all students sync their iPads with 
  the school’s computers, of which there are not that many; the 
  headaches are multi-layered. Or my school would have to set up and 
  maintain a Wi-FI network for this purpose; that simply becomes 
  another associated expense. 

<http://tidbits.com/article/10917>

  This is before the school has even provided the iPads. Given the 
  uproar over plans by Orewa College, a moderately well-off secondary 
  school north of Auckland, to require that all incoming students buy 
  iPads or similar, I very much doubt that my school, in the poorer 
  end of south Auckland, would fare terribly well in requiring that 
  parents purchase. This would then leave the school having to buy the 
  devices themselves, which would be difficult. My school, with its 
  socio-economic decile rating of 2, receives almost no funding from 
  the “voluntary” contributions that other schools raise from 
  parents. As a result, it is dependent almost solely on its operating 
  budget of around $1,000 per student from the Ministry of Education. 
  Given that iPads start at $799 here in New Zealand, a very generous 
  educational bulk-purchase discount from Apple would be required in 
  order to make this an even remotely feasible purchase. 

<http://www.stuff.co.nz/national/education/5859716/Orewa-College-iPad-plans-move-ahead>
<http://www.minedu.govt.nz/NZEducation/EducationPolicies/Schools/SchoolOperations/Resourcing/ResourcingHandbook/Chapter1/Appendices/Appendix1OperationalFundingRates.aspx>

  In American schools, too, where budget crunches are hurting badly, I 
  question how many schools will be able to afford this technology. 
  Pinellas County in Florida, where I once taught, is facing a budget 
  crisis such that teacher layoffs and furloughs are being proposed to 
  try to make the books balance. Last year’s budget allowed for a 
  per-student spend of $7,845; a $499 iPad would represent 6 percent 
  of the entire funding allocation for each of the 103,000 students in 
  the county. But while the per-student budget in Pinellas may seem 
  significantly more generous than a New Zealand school’s funding, 
  remember that out of that money must come teacher salaries, which 
  make up 85 percent of the district’s budget; of the remaining 
  $1,177, a $499 iPad is still a very big ask, and when teachers’ 
  salaries are being considered fair game for budget reduction cuts, a 
  five-million-dollar expenditure on iPads would not sit well. 

<http://www.tampabay.com/news/education/k12/pinellas-county-school-districts-budget-picture-gets-less-gloomy/1185324>
<http://jaxkidsmatter.blogspot.com/2011/05/pinellas-county-school-district-to.html>

  So, in the end, is it worth it? Will students benefit from iPads 
  with textbooks on them? Will they, indeed, benefit sufficiently to 
  warrant the funds outlays involved? Yes, paper textbooks are 
  expensive, and yes, they involve a buy-in that locks schools into 
  using them for maybe five years. But, in physics, for example, the 
  content being taught is not changing so rapidly that we need to 
  replace our textbooks that often, even if wear and tear make it 
  advisable. We can make do for another year; lock-in is not as 
  terrible as it might seem. 

  But while iPads make it easy and relatively affordable to update 
  content readily, how often will publishers offer free updates? By 
  the time a publisher has updated a textbook to the extent that it 
  actually exploits iBooks 2 and the iPad fully, will that then be a 
  free update? In the meantime, the hardware costs of iPads is not 
  one-off; once the up-front purchase has been made, there will be 
  service costs. Do schools buy AppleCare? What happens to 
  out-of-warranty repairs, in particular batteries wearing out? Will 
  school insurance cover accidental loss, damage, theft? 

  Had iBooks 2 and iBooks Author been released back in 1996, when 
  CD-ROMs were still a pretty neat idea, I would be writing a very 
  different article. But today, when Apple are trying to claim that 
  twenty-year-old ideas represent a “reinvention” of the textbook, 
  I am less impressed. Schiller, see me after school. Grade: C-. 
  Really must try harder. 

  [Steve McCabe is a Mac consultant, tech writer, and physics teacher 
  in New Zealand. He writes about his adventures in New Zealand, he 
  blogs about technology, and he has just finished rebuilding his 
  personal Web site.]

<http://www.mccabe.net.nz/>
<http://www.threelionstech.com/blog>
<http://www.stevemccabe.net/>


  ----
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Examining iBooks Author from the Publisher Perspective
------------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12741>
  8 comments

  Apple’s announcement last week of iBooks 2 and the iBooks 
  multi-touch textbooks, which are created in the free iBooks Author 
  app on the Mac, has generated admiration and applause simultaneous 
  with consternation and criticism. That has been true even within our 
  ranks. 

  Glenn Fleishman wrote an editorial for Macworld in which he points 
  out that technology initiatives in education have largely fallen 
  flat over time and that iBooks textbooks don’t seem to offer much 
  that’s new. Steve McCabe, a New Zealand physics teacher and 
  occasional TidBITS contributor weighs in on Glenn’s side, arguing 
  that iBooks Author merely warms up twenty-year-old ideas in 
  “iBooks Textbooks: Not Exactly Innovation in Education” (22 
  January 2012). On the other side, Michael Cohen, who has worked in 
  both educational software development and interactive multimedia 
  production, believes that having good instructional resources is 
  always better than not having them (see “Why iBooks Author is a 
  Big Deal,” 21 January 2012).

<http://www.macworld.com/article/164921/2012/01/apples_textbook_plan_feels_like_a_blast_from_the_past.html>
<http://tidbits.com/article/12740>
<http://tidbits.com/article/12739>

  I’d like to look at a different aspect of the entire scenario — 
  what these announcements mean for publishing in general — and to 
  do so from the perspective of a publisher who would dearly love to 
  have better publishing and reading tools.

  The main problem with iBooks Author is its license agreement, though 
  it may take some work to find it. When you export something you’ve 
  created in iBooks Author to the iBooks format, you’re greeted with 
  a dialog that tells you “Books can only be sold through the 
  iBookstore. To publish your book on the iBookstore choose File > 
  Publish.” Ignoring the poor placement of the word “only,” 
  which should follow “sold” to make the sentence mean what Apple 
  wants it to mean, the dialog also includes a link that explains more 
  about publishing to the iBookstore. That explanation page in iBooks 
  Author’s help says:
      
      Even if you don’t submit your book to the iBookstore, you 
      can still export a book that you can distribute yourself.
      
      Important: If you choose to distribute your book yourself, 
      be sure to review the guidelines in the iBooks Author software 
      license agreement. To see the agreement, choose iBooks Author 
      > About iBooks Author, and click License Agreement.

  And when you finally get to the PDF-based license agreement, 
  you’ll find this preamble and explanatory clause.
      
      IMPORTANT NOTE: If you charge a fee for any book or other 
      work you generate using this software (a “Work”), you may 
      only sell or distribute such Work through Apple (e.g., through 
      the iBookstore) and such distribution will be subject to a 
      separate agreement with Apple.
      
      2B. Distribution of your Work. As a condition of this 
      License and provided you are in compliance with its terms, 
      your Work may be distributed as follows: (i) if your Work is 
      provided for free (at no charge), you may distribute the Work 
      by any available means; (ii) if your Work is provided for a 
      fee (including as part of any subscription-based product or 
      service), you may only distribute the Work through Apple and 
      such distribution is subject to the following limitations and 
      conditions: (a) you will be required to enter into a separate 
      written agreement with Apple (or an Apple affiliate or 
      subsidiary) before any commercial distribution of your Work 
      may take place; and (b) Apple may determine for any reason and 
      in its sole discretion not to select your Work for 
      distribution.
      
      Apple will not be responsible for any costs, expenses, 
      damages, losses (including without limitation lost business 
      opportunities or lost profits) or other liabilities you may 
      incur as a result of your use of this Apple Software, 
      including without limitation the fact that your Work may not 
      be selected for distribution by Apple.

  I wanted to include the full path to getting the agreement, and all 
  the license text in question, to eliminate any concern that my 
  summary here is in any way inaccurate. In essence, Apple is saying, 
  “You can distribute anything you create with iBooks Author for 
  free in any way you want; if you want to sell what you create (or 
  include it as part of a subscription service), you may sell it only 
  through Apple, and even then only if Apple approves it.”

  Realizing this immediately raised my publisher hackles. “But, but, 
  but,” I spluttered, “there’s no way in hell I’m going 
  publish something that I can sell only in the iBookstore, and even 
  then only if Apple approves it. There aren’t even any guidelines 
  outlining what Apple will and will not approve!”

  And you know, for the most part, I haven’t changed my mind. I 
  think this license agreement is attempting to do something that’s 
  very seldom, if ever, been done with consumer-level software before 
  (apparently, some software development kits have similar clauses), 
  and based on my experience with selling through the iBookstore, I 
  would strongly discourage any non-textbook publisher from basing a 
  significant business decision on iBooks textbooks. Although it’s 
  likely that some early titles will sell well because of the novelty 
  value, the iBookstore doesn’t yet have a sufficiently large 
  customer base, and it would be nuts for such a publisher to bet the 
  farm on a single retailer, especially one that reserves the right to 
  reject your books. (For the record, although the trend is moving 
  upward, the iBookstore made up roughly 4 percent of Take Control 
  sales in 2011 — certainly welcome, but not a number we could use 
  to justify a major change in business model.)

  I don’t want to get further into criticism of the iBooks Author 
  license agreement, not because I think it is a good thing, but 
  because Dan Wineman has done so well in a pair of posts: “The 
  Unprecedented Audacity of the iBooks Author EULA” and “Common 
  Misconceptions about What I Wrote Yesterday.” I also don’t want 
  to criticize the iBooks Author license agreement further because 
  I’ve realized that we’re missing Apple’s point. (We may not 
  agree with it once we see, but it’s important to acknowledge it 
  first.)

<http://venomousporridge.com/post/16126436616/ibooks-author-eula-audacity>
<http://venomousporridge.com/post/16178567783/common-misconceptions>

  The trick is to remember that Apple seldom explains any of the 
  rationale behind its decisions. The famous public letters from Steve 
  Jobs were the main exceptions, and those came only when a sufficient 
  fuss was made that Apple decided to drop the curtain. So all we can 
  do is read into the tea leaves of Apple’s actions and public 
  statements. What we cannot do is read anything into Apple’s 
  inaction or silence on a particular topic — and that’s just what 
  we’ve been doing.

  The fact of the matter is that last week’s event was explicitly 
  targeted at _education_, and to be more clear, at the _education 
  market_, which is separate from the concept of _educating_ people in 
  general. While we consider our Take Control ebooks to be 
  _educational_ — they certainly attempt to impart knowledge and 
  teach skills — we are by no means part of the education market. 
  The mistake we — and so many others — have made is to assume 
  that iBooks Author is aimed at anyone other than textbook publishers 
  and teachers. It just isn’t.

  Although I’m not an expert in the textbook publishing world, I do 
  know that it’s quite different from the technical book publishing 
  world. In particular, where we sell copies of our books to 
  individuals, one at a time, textbook publishers in K-12 markets in 
  the United States sell in bulk to schools, or even entire school 
  districts, and textbooks need to be approved to qualify for state 
  financial assistance, so that a school can purchase them with 
  state-provided funds. (I suspect college textbooks are more on a 
  class-by-class basis.)

  So in a situation where every student already needs an iPad to read 
  an iBooks textbook, textbook publishers aren’t going to be at all 
  bothered by the restriction of selling only through Apple (and it 
  will be done through Apple’s Volume Purchase Program anyway). 
  It’s possible that having Apple involved in these volume buys 
  might be a benefit to the textbook publishers, since they won’t 
  have to fuss with the technical details of counting seats and the 
  like.

<http://www.apple.com/education/volume-purchase-program/>

  Another aspect of the textbook publishing world that’s quite 
  different from many other aspect of publishing is that textbooks, 
  while not entirely evergreen, tend not to need constant updates. 
  That’s due in large part to the fact that what’s taught in 7th 
  grade science, for instance, isn’t going to change much based on 
  new discoveries, and to the extent that other subjects might, 
  teachers are accustomed to supplementing textbooks with other 
  resources. Textbooks have to last at least a few years in paper, so 
  the content has to be stable. So textbook publishers can devote more 
  time and energy to creating multimedia and interactive resources 
  that would be hard to justify in a field where the book might have 
  only a 6- to 24-month lifespan before becoming painfully out of 
  date.

  In fact, textbook publishers may not have to create much new 
  content. Many paper textbooks already have Web-based adjuncts, and I 
  would assume (since it’s what I would do if I were in charge) that 
  textbook publishers will be repurposing that online content when 
  possible rather than incurring new development costs. For publishers 
  in markets like ours, the multimedia and interactivity development 
  costs would be entirely new and could be quite high, making the 
  business proposition of a $14.99 book (less Apple’s 30 percent) 
  rather tenuous. Especially for books with short shelf lives.

  What about individuals? Teachers are a dedicated lot, and I believe 
  we’ll see teachers — and other people, to be fair — creating 
  quite a number of iBooks textbooks to give away for free, just 
  because they want to share their knowledge and think that iBooks 
  Author is a cool tool to play with. This isn’t new — when I was 
  a Cornell undergraduate, I was on the receiving end of a textbook 
  (in Greek Composition, nonetheless!) written by Matt Neuburg for a 
  class of two students, simply because none of the existing books 
  explained the subject the way he felt it should be explained. This 
  is a good thing, and exactly why Michael Cohen thinks iBooks Author 
  will be a big deal.

  But I don’t see the iBooks platform becoming a significant 
  self-publishing tool for commercial books as it stands right now. 
  It’s not so much that the iBookstore is too limiting as a single 
  sales venue — self-published authors aren’t likely to be as 
  concerned about multiple sales outlets as an established publishing 
  house would be — but that the iBookstore isn’t easy enough for a 
  individual author with just a title or two. Despite how iBooks 
  Author points people to publishing through the iBookstore, it’s 
  highly non-trivial to work with the iBookstore, and internally, the 
  iBookstore itself points those intimidated by the technical and 
  business requirements to Apple-approved aggregators such as Ingram, 
  INscribe Digital, LibreDigital, Lulu, and Smashwords in North 
  America, and Bookwire and Immatérial in Europe.

<http://www.ingramcontent.com/Apple>
<http://www.ingrooves.com/inscribe_home.php>
<http://apple.libredigital.com/signup.php>
<http://www.lulu.com/apple-ipad-publishing>
<http://www.smashwords.com/about/how_to_publish_ipad_ebooks>
<http://www.bookwire.de/apple>
<http://welcome.immateriel.eu/>

  There’s one other key thing to keep in mind about how Apple is 
  focusing all this on the education market, and that’s that iBooks 
  textbooks can be viewed only on the iPad. As technical limitations 
  go, this one is a bit weak — the files are only slightly 
  customized EPUBs inside a different wrapper — but the fact remains 
  that E-Ink-based Kindles could never imagine displaying these files, 
  and while Android-based tablets (including the Kindle Fire) might 
  have the display and processing chops to do so in theory, there’s 
  no software that can show them right now. Macs and Windows-based PCs 
  are also right out at the moment.

  This all makes huge sense from Apple’s perspective — you create 
  a scenario where content can be created only on a Mac, purchased 
  only from the iBookstore, and viewed only on an iPad. What’s not 
  to like? If you’re not a textbook publisher, though, you might not 
  want to create your content on a Mac, you definitely don’t want to 
  sell only through the iBookstore, and you don’t want to restrict 
  your audience to iPad owners. That’s what’s not to like, and the 
  people I know at Apple undoubtedly realize that — they’re not 
  stupid. But again, refocus the entire initiative on the education 
  market, and those criticisms largely fall away. Even better, the 
  textbook market is dominated by a few large companies that Apple can 
  negotiate with directly — Pearson, McGraw Hill, and Houghton 
  Mifflin Harcourt. 

  Note that I’m not saying that I like things the way Apple has set 
  them up. What I would like to see instead is Apple competing 
  entirely on quality instead of platform lock-in: the quality of 
  iBooks Author and the Mac for creating content, the quality of the 
  iBookstore as a retail experience, the quality of the iPad as the 
  hardware platform, and the quality of iBooks for reading. All 
  that’s necessary for Apple to make that change is to switch to 
  standard EPUB 3.0 for the iBooks Author output format and drop the 
  iBooks Author license agreement. Apple has proven that it can 
  compete well on quality — look at the iPod and the iTunes Music 
  Store, and at the iPhone and iPad and the App Store. So when I see 
  Apple taking a different tack and competing based on platform 
  lock-in, I start wondering if Apple lacks confidence in the quality 
  of the products in question. 

  (For what it’s worth, I don’t buy the argument that the output 
  of iBooks Author is akin to an app — there’s a big difference 
  between iOS-specific code and slightly mangled EPUB when it comes to 
  platform lock-in. With iOS apps, Apple’s lock-in is largely 
  technical; with iBooks, it’s largely contractual.)

  In a world where iBooks is an open publishing platform, publishers 
  still face the hurdle of creating rich content that can’t be 
  viewed on anything other than an iPad (the Kindle can’t display 
  EPUB now, and I don’t see that changing), but they can do so 
  without fear of being rejected from or locked into the iBookstore.

  We can hold out some hope that Apple is thinking about publishers 
  outside the education market who want to create iBooks that aren’t 
  textbooks and won’t be sold in bulk to school districts. Apple has 
  on occasion changed license agreement terms, most notably relaxing 
  development tool restrictions for iOS apps. And some of the text 
  surrounding iBooks Author goes beyond the education market. First, 
  on the iBooks Author page on Apple’s site, there’s this 
  description (emphasis mine):

<http://www.apple.com/pr/library/2010/09/09Statement-by-Apple-on-App-Store-Review-Guidelines.html>
<http://www.apple.com/ibooks-author/>
      
      Available free on the Mac App store, iBooks Author is an 
      amazing new app that allows anyone to create beautiful 
      Multi-Touch textbooks — _and just about any other kind of 
      book_ — for iPad.

  And in the Mac App Store description of iBooks Author, there are a 
  number of statements that make the app sound like a publishing tool 
  for the rest of us:
      
      Now anyone can create stunning iBooks textbooks, 
      _cookbooks, history books, picture books, and more_ for iPad. 
      All you need is an idea and a Mac. Start with one of the 
      Apple-designed templates that feature a wide variety of page 
      layouts. Add your own text and images with drag-and-drop ease. 
      Use Multi-Touch widgets to include interactive photo 
      galleries, movies, Keynote presentations, 3D objects, and 
      more. Preview your book on your iPad at any time. _Then submit 
      your finished work to the iBookstore with a few simple steps. 
      And before you know it, you’re a published author._

  It’s entirely possible this is just marketing fluffery, since the 
  final bit about submitting to the iBookstore with a few simple steps 
  is pure hogwash (all File > Publish in iBooks Author does is copy 
  your book and its cover graphic into a new document in iTunes 
  Producer, one of Apple’s most misbegotten programs ever). But it 
  is a ray of hope that Apple plans to move beyond this current 
  laser-like focus on the education market to open up the entire 
  iBooks platform to the publishing world at large.

  And that, I think, would be a good thing for everyone, including 
  Apple. 


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://tidbits.com/e/12741#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://tidbits.com/t/12741>


TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 23 January 2012
---------------------------------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12742>

**iTunes 10.5.3** -- In conjunction with the unveiling of interactive 
  textbooks in iBooks 2 for the iPad (see “Apple Goes Back to School 
  with iBooks 2, iBooks Author, and iTunes U,” 19 January 2012), 
  Apple has released iTunes 10.5.3, whose only change is support for 
  syncing these new titles between iTunes and an iPad running iBooks 
  2. (Free, 102 MB new download or 10.5 MB via Software Update)

<http://tidbits.com/article/12731>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1426>

  Read/post comments about iTunes 10.5.3.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12733#comments>


**Typinator 5** -- A major new release, Ergonis’s Typinator 5 typing 
  expansion utility has been updated with a plethora of new features, 
  the biggest of which is scripting support. Text expansions can now 
  execute external scripts written in AppleScript, Perl, PHP, Python, 
  Ruby, and other shell scripting languages, and then include those 
  results in the expansion. Other new features include date and time 
  calculations, a calculator in the Quick Search field, and the option 
  to delete characters typed immediately before an abbreviation. The 
  internal expansion mechanism has been redesigned with improved 
  support for Undo and handling of fast typing during expansion 
  processing, and the update includes a variety of fixes to improve 
  stability. (€24.99 new with a 25-percent discount for TidBITS 
  members, free update for licenses purchased on or after 1 June 2011, 
  4.4 MB, release notes) 

<http://www.ergonis.com/products/typinator/>
<http://tidbits.com/member_benefits.html>
<http://www.ergonis.com/products/typinator/history.html>

  Read/post comments about Typinator 5.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12732#comments>


**QuarkXPress 9.2** -- Quark has released QuarkXPress 9.2, a free 
  update with new features focused on publishing ebooks and iPad apps. 
  In addition to creating new projects for EPUB export, you can add 
  audio and video to an EPUB ebook, specify types of content that 
  should be included in the table of contents, and store export 
  settings in an output style. On the iPad front, the update adds new 
  Actions for controlling sound and video elements in iPad apps as 
  well as Newsstand support under iOS 5. ($849 new, free update, 1 GB, 
  release notes)

<http://www.quark.com/Products/QuarkXPress/>
<http://www.quark.com/Support/Downloads/Details.aspx?fid=225>

  Read/post comments about QuarkXPress 9.2.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12729#comments>


**Default Folder X 4.4.8** -- Contextual menus have returned to the 
  latest update of St. Clair Software’s Default Folder X 4.4.8, 
  making them available in all Open and Save dialogs and enabling you 
  to rename, delete, get info, and compress any file. This release of 
  the Open and Save dialog enhancement utility also brings 
  compatibility with the latest version of Google Chrome, adds support 
  for QuickTime Player X, improves the capability to ignore certain 
  folders, and fixes a variety of bugs that caused Default Folder X to 
  crash or hang. ($34.95 new with $10 off for TidBITS members, free 
  update, 10.5 MB, release notes)

<http://www.stclairsoft.com/DefaultFolderX/>
<http://tidbits.com/member_benefits.html>
<http://www.stclairsoft.com/DefaultFolderX/release.html>

  Read/post comments about Default Folder X 4.4.8.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12724#comments>




ExtraBITS for 23 January 2012
-----------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12743>

  Read on for a collection of links to the most interesting articles 
  and resources that the TidBITS staff discovered on the Web this 
  week.


**New York Times Explains Chinese Advantage for Apple** -- The New 
  York Times has a clever feature article explaining why Apple (and 
  other firms) manufacture in China for a host of reasons, of which 
  low wages may be a relatively small part. The ability to hire a 
  massive number of trained people nearly instantly is one factor, 
  regardless of how well those people are treated by the contractors 
  Apple employs. For instance, Americans typically won’t live in 
  dormitories and work six 12-hour days in a row, which is commonplace 
  in China and other developing nations.

<https://www.nytimes.com/2012/01/22/business/apple-america-and-a-squeezed-middle-class.html?pagewanted=all>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/12738#comments>


**Apple Textbooks Repeat the Past** -- Glenn Fleishman writes in an 
  editorial at Macworld about how Apple’s “new” digital textbook 
  plan reminds him of countless efforts to push multimedia pedagogy 
  without evidence that it improves achievement in any measure. The 
  iPad is remarkable, but interactive textbooks aren’t.

<http://www.macworld.com/article/164921/2012/01/apples_textbook_plan_feels_like_a_blast_from_the_past.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/12737#comments>


**MacJury Deliberates about iBooks Author EULA** -- Just hours after 
  Apple’s education announcements on 19 January 2012, the Internet 
  began to vibrate with discussion, much of it dismayed, about some of 
  the terms in the end-user license agreement (EULA) that accompanies 
  Apple’s iBooks Author application. Take Control Books 
  editor-in-chief Tonya Engst was empaneled with other concerned 
  netizens by Chuck Joiner at MacJury to deliberate about how the 
  EULA, even more than the iBooks format itself, might affect the 
  publishing community.

<http://www.macjury.com/macjury-1202-apples-education-and-ebook-publishing-announcements-examined/>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/12736#comments>


**Supreme Court Shrinks Public Domain** -- We haven’t been following 
  the Golan case before the U.S. Supreme Court, but Techdirt explains 
  how the Court has ruled that the United States can retroactively 
  take works out of the public domain and put them back under 
  copyright. The government’s claim is that this is necessary for a 
  trade agreement to make other countries respect our copyright, but 
  the end result is that it could (and likely will) be used to shrink 
  the public domain. We’re all in favor of copyright giving 
  incentives to creators, but we can’t see how putting the works of 
  dead people back under copyright will result in any new work.

<http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20120118/09090217454/supreme-court-chooses-sopapipa-protest-day-to-give-giant-middle-finger-to-public-domain.shtml>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/12728#comments>


**Wikipedia Blackout Leaves Nagging Hole** -- David Carr of the New 
  York Times neatly explains how Wikipedia’s blackout to protest 
  poorly drafted anti-piracy bills under consideration in the U.S. 
  Congress leaves a ragged hole in the Internet. He doesn’t see 
  Wikipedia as authoritative, but as fundamental: it’s the way to 
  start to understand and research millions of topics.

<http://mediadecoder.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/01/18/how-im-surviving-or-trying-to-without-wikipedia-at-my-fingertips/>




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