TidBITS#1113/13-Feb-2012
========================
  Issue link: <http://tidbits.com/issue/1113>


  Finally, a breather from non-stop breaking news! This week we step
  back a bit to share some useful evergreen content from a variety of
  contributors. Glenn Fleishman leads with a short article pointing to a
  15-minute screencast he has created to walk users through the new
  AirPort Utility 6.0, and Marshall Clow joins us with a review of the
  improbably named iSesamo (it’s a spudger, and if that doesn’t help,
  you’ll really have to read the article). While trudging through an
  hour-long installation process to get a Fujitsu ScanSnap scanner
  working, Michael Cohen points out that hardware companies need to
  devote just as much attention to their software. Steve McCabe
  contributes a look at FileMaker Go for the iPhone, which lets you use
  FileMaker Pro databases while out and about. Finally, Tonya anchors
  the issue with a detailed look at some of the real-world strategies
  she has developed for switching from Microsoft Word to Apple’s Pages.
  Notable software releases this week include Bookle 1.0.3; Piezo 1.1.2;
  Firmware Updates for iMac, MacBook Pro, and MacBook Air; Carbon Copy
  Cloner 3.4.4; and ChronoSync 4.3 and ChronoAgent 1.3.

Articles
    AirPort Utility 6.0 Screencast Walkthrough
    iSesamo: Building a Better Spudger
    Installing ScanSnap Not a Snap
    FileMaker Go Brings FileMaker Databases to iOS
    Strategies for Switching from Word to Pages
    TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 13 February 2012
    ExtraBITS for 13 February 2012


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AirPort Utility 6.0 Screencast Walkthrough
------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12783>

  After receiving quite a few questions about the new AirPort Utility 
  6.0 for Mac OS X 10.7 Lion, I’ve recorded a 15-minute screencast, 
  available via YouTube, showing all the ins and outs of the new 
  version. Some people like 6.0 and others do not, but I find it has a 
  lot to recommend it, especially for people setting up a new network. 
  (Those with existing networks can still use the 5.x versions.)

<https://support.apple.com/kb/DL1483>
<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8gKG0oa8Cp0>

  I’ve embedded the video in the Web version of this article, but 
  because it’s recorded at a high resolution, I recommend clicking 
  through to view it at YouTube, where you can use the resolution 
  picker to choose 1080p HD. In that view, the text on the screen is 
  readable.

  For a text walkthrough of AirPort Utility 6.0, consult “AirPort 
  Utility 6.0 Adds iCloud Support but Removes Many Features,” 1 
  February 2012.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12760>


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iSesamo: Building a Better Spudger
----------------------------------
  by Marshall Clow <marshall@idio.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12717>

  Every now and then, I have to disassemble some electronic gadget. 
  Sometimes it’s easy — the Mac Pro, for example, is beautifully 
  designed to come apart with the flip of a latch and the removal of 
  its side panel. The Mac mini — particularly the older models — 
  is harder. [Having spent the better part of an hour installing an 
  SSD in Tonya’s 2010 Mac mini just recently, I can attest to that! 
  -Adam] Tougher yet are most MacBooks and all iPods; in general, 
  they’re designed to snap together at the factory and never be 
  taken apart other than by Apple-trained technicians.

  Sometimes, however, the rest of us just gotta get inside, a task 
  that’s a whole lot easier thanks to resources like iFixit and 
  Other World Computing’s Install Videos. To break into and work on 
  one of these sealed devices, you also need the right tools, 
  including a collection of straight blade, Phillips, and Torx 
  screwdrivers in different sizes. (If you don’t have a set already, 
  Newer Technology has a $17.95 11-piece portable toolkit that 
  contains the basics.) But while you might think you could use 
  straight blade screwdrivers to separate two pieces of an iPod case, 
  for instance, they don’t work well. Normal-sized screwdriver 
  blades are too thick to slip between the pieces, and thin 
  jewelers’ screwdrivers are too pointy — they poke holes in the 
  plastic rather than providing the even leverage necessary to 
  separate the pieces.

<http://www.ifixit.com/>
<http://eshop.macsales.com/installvideos/>
<http://www.newertech.com/products/11pctoolset.php>

  The solution is a remarkably simple tool commonly called a 
  “spudger.” It’s a thin metal or plastic blade, whose edge fits 
  between the two plastic pieces and lets you lever them apart without 
  breaking anything.

  I had a set of plastic spudgers that I got from the discount site 
  Meritline. They were indeed incredibly cheap — $1 including free 
  shipping from China — and they worked great… once. After using 
  both of them on that first job, they were ruined thanks to being 
  made from too-soft plastic (and even Newer Technology is up front 
  about the limited lifespan of their plastic spudgers). So when the 
  folks at Newer Technology offered to let me play with one of their 
  new iSesamo spudgers, I was eager to give it a try.

<http://www.meritline.com/>
<http://www.newertech.com/products/isesamo.php>

  The iSesamo is a very thin, flexible piece of steel, about 5 inches 
  long and .75 inches wide (12.7 by 1.9 cm), with a soft rubber 
  covering in the center to provide a firm grip. One end is rounded, 
  the other comes to a gentle (but not sharp) point. The uncovered 
  parts on the end slide between pieces of plastic, and the metal 
  flexes enough to pry open all the different things I tried: a 
  MacBook, an original white iPod, and even a beer tap at my local 
  nano-brewery.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-01/iSesamo.jpeg>
<http://www.hessbrewing.com/index2.html>

  The iSesamo currently costs $8.79 at Other World Computing, and is 
  easily nine times better than the plastic $1 spudger that I had 
  before. It’s a one-trick pony, but without that trick, you won’t 
  be getting into your iPod or iPhone. Do note that “spudger” is a 
  rather general term, and Other World Computing sells another one — 
  the $3.95 Apple Nylon Probe Tool — that won’t work as well as 
  the iSesamo for opening cases, but will be better for levering tiny 
  wires from their sockets without damaging or scratching nearby 
  components.

<http://eshop.macsales.com/item/NewerTech/TOOLISESAMO/>
<http://eshop.macsales.com/item/Apple/9225065/>


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Installing ScanSnap Not a Snap
------------------------------
  by Michael E. Cohen <mcohen@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12766>
  11 comments

  At the recently concluded Macworld | iWorld 2012 conference (see 
  “Macworld | iWorld 2012: In a Word, Confident,” 30 January 2012) 
  I spent some time chatting with vendors of various products, often 
  by invitation (those who have never attended such an event as a 
  media representative have no idea how many email invitations you get 
  requesting such tête-à-têtes). One such chat was with the Fujitsu 
  representatives, who gave me a quick demo of their various scanning 
  products, something I found interesting because of my work helping 
  to produce Joe Kissell’s book, “Take Control of Your Paperless 
  Office,” in which scanners are prominently featured. At the end of 
  our chat I was surprised to be given a review unit of the Fujitsu 
  ScanSnap S1100, a tiny scanner designed for the digital road 
  warrior.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12756>
<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/paperless-office?PT=TB1113>
<http://www.fujitsu.com/global/services/computing/peripheral/scanners/product/s1100/>

  First, the good news. This little item weighs slightly under 
  three-quarters of a pound (0.35 kg) and is very slim, easily fitting 
  into a backpack or briefcase. It’s completely USB-powered, so it 
  doesn’t require a power brick, and the included USB cable even has 
  an attached Velcro tie, making it, well, a snap to coil and store. 
  Although the ScanSnap S1100 can handle only one sheet at a time, and 
  scans only a single side at a time, feeding sheets through it does 
  not require you to line them up precisely, and the scanning process 
  is quick. The quality of the scans, while not super high-end (600 by 
  600 pixels per inch), is more than adequate for my needs. Once I got 
  it home and set it up, I found it works well enough for me to take 
  my first steps toward, if not a paperless office, an office that has 
  much less paper cluttering it.

  Ah, but setting it up: that was the rub. As you may recall, 
  Apple’s Mac OS X 10.7 Lion was released in the July of last year, 
  and was in developer testing for months prior to that. Yet the 
  ScanSnap S1100 still comes with a DVD-ROM for setup that contains 
  software compatible with only Mac OS X 10.4 through 10.6. And 
  Fujitsu does mean it: the Getting Started guide actually tells you 
  that one of the bundled applications, Cardiris 3.6, requires 
  Rosetta, which, as we all know, became an ex-parrot pining for the 
  fjords under Mac OS X 10.7. (Note that different ScanSnap scanner 
  models may well come with different software bundles, so my 
  description applies only to the S1100 unit I received.) 

  However, a flimsy sheet tucked away in the packaging does say, “To 
  use the ScanSnap on Mac OS X v10.7 (Lion), you first need to update 
  the bundled software,” and the sheet provides a (rather long) URL 
  that you need to type into a Web browser to find out more. The 
  referenced page, though, provides only a set of links; you must 
  click the S1100 link to get to another page that provides even more 
  links to the required updates, and you must scroll a ways down that 
  page to find them. And, yes, it is “them” — there are two 
  separate updates that need to be downloaded, one for the ScanSnap 
  Manager software and another for the bundled Cardiris software. It 
  gets even better (and by “better” I mean something rather the 
  opposite): you can’t just download the Cardiris software, but, 
  instead, must register a request for the software and wait for a 
  confirmation email message that provides a link to get the update.

<http://www.fujitsu.com/global/support/computing/peripheral/scanners/ssfaq/lion.html>

  What the flimsy sheet with its single line of Lion instructions (in 
  eleven languages) does not make clear is the order in which you 
  should do things to make the ScanSnap software happy under Lion. 
  Should you just bypass the DVD and download the updates, or should 
  you install the software on the DVD first and then download and run 
  the updaters? I made an educated guess and ran the installer that 
  was on the DVD first, since the scanner comes with a big warning 
  piece of tape on it that tells you not to connect the scanner until 
  the software is installed.

  The installer allows you to choose which components to install: 
  since I knew that Cardiris would not run on my Lion-ized iMac, I 
  unchecked that component — a mistake, I soon discovered, since the 
  Cardiris updater requires the older version be present, even though 
  the older version cannot run at all under Lion. I also discovered 
  that the ScanSnap installer is one of those that requires a reboot 
  upon completion. Sigh. Double sigh, because I had to run the 
  installer again to get the Rosetta-requiring Cardiris application 
  installed so I could update it after I jumped through the email 
  hoops to obtain it.

  The entire out-of-the-box experience took me well over an hour. At 
  the end, I had a functioning scanner and the requisite software to 
  use it. Not to say that the software is perfect: though it is 
  usable, portions of it look like they escaped from the earliest days 
  of Mac OS X, and other parts look like the barest of old-school 
  gray-dialog utilities. What’s more, the pieces are spread around 
  in various components, some in your face and others behind the 
  scenes, and you never know which one is in charge at any given time: 
  you really do have to read the online help to know who’s on first 
  and what’s the name of the guy on second. Nonetheless, I can use 
  the scanner to create PDFs (searchable ones, courtesy of the bundled 
  ABBYY FineReader OCR) and even send documents directly to Word or 
  Excel or Google Docs (though not to any of Apple’s own office apps 
  like Pages). For my needs, the ScanSnap, now that the hurdles have 
  been overcome, works well enough.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-02/scansnap-manager.jpg>

  But when it comes to hardware peripherals, it doesn’t matter how 
  good the hardware is (and the ScanSnap hardware seems very good) if 
  the software is lacking. Software that drives a peripheral should 
  either get completely out of the way (hiding behind the scenes, 
  doing its job silently and efficiently), or it should provide a user 
  experience that is as simple and as seamless as possible. The 
  ScanSnap software I received does not deliver on that score. And 
  there’s really no reason in 2012 for a major player like Fujitsu 
  to be giving such short shrift to its Mac software when smaller, 
  more agile players like Doxie can produce a roughly equivalent 
  mobile scanner that doesn’t even need a cable (it can scan to 
  memory and wirelessly transmit scans to a Mac, PC, iOS device, or 
  the cloud), and drive it with easy-to-use software that looks like 
  it was designed for a Mac in 2012, not 2002.

<http://www.getdoxie.com/product/doxie-go-wifi/>

  I’m grateful to Fujitsu for providing me with a review unit, and I 
  hope to make good use of it. The hardware really is polished but the 
  ScanSnap S1100 could benefit from a complete software makeover. 


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FileMaker Go Brings FileMaker Databases to iOS
----------------------------------------------
  by Steve McCabe <steve@stevemccabe.net>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12725>
  4 comments

  It’s easy to forget that FileMaker, Inc., is a wholly owned 
  subsidiary of Apple. The direct successor to Claris, FileMaker has, 
  to a degree that saddens its main product’s many dedicated users, 
  become something of a red-headed stepchild within the Apple 
  universe. In many ways, FileMaker (the database program) is an 
  anomaly in that universe, a throwback to the days when Apple’s 
  software bore the Claris label.

  Since 1998, Claris has been FileMaker, Inc., a company so utterly 
  separate from its sole owner that one could easily be forgiven for 
  imagining that the two companies have no connection at all. While 
  you can find reference to FileMaker, Inc., at the Apple Web site if 
  you search for it, it’s not easy to find. In fact, only Bento, 
  Filemaker’s personal database, is available on the Mac App Store 
  while its grown-up stablemates are not. And nowhere has the distance 
  between the two corporations been more clear than on the iPhone. 

  When Apple unveiled the iOS App Store in 2008, FileMaker devotees 
  were sure that Apple’s very own purveyor of fine database software 
  would be among the first to place products in the App Store. 
  FileMaker, after all, wasn’t a total stranger to the mobile 
  market: FileMaker Mobile provided a solution to Palm and Pocket PC 
  users as early as 2006. But it took the company two years after the 
  opening of the App Store to release FileMaker Go in July 2010. 
  I’ve been using it for some time, and wanted to share my 
  impressions.

<http://www.filemaker.com/products/filemaker-go/>

  FileMaker Go for the iPhone is not an impulse purchase. At $19.99, 
  it’s not the cheapest app in the App Store, and it’s not even 
  the cheapest FileMaker client — FMTouch costs half that amount. 
  And $19.99 gets you only the iPhone version — FileMaker Go for the 
  iPad costs $39.99. (Note: This article focuses on the iPhone app, 
  but the conceptual issues, if fewer of the screen size concerns, are 
  the same.)

<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/filemaker-go/id379686220?mt=8>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/fmtouch/id286468161?mt=8>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/filemaker-go-for-ipad/id379690325?mt=8>

  FileMaker Go is essentially a FileMaker thin client — data within 
  FileMaker databases can be manipulated quite easily on the iPhone 
  using the onscreen keyboard. You enter fields by tapping them; 
  absent a Tab key, you move between fields by tapping the Next 
  button. Buttons trigger scripts as they do on a desktop machine. 
  Calculations, well, calculate. Overall, the software’s 
  functionality, once a database is open, is quite acceptable.

  Where a FileMaker developer will find new challenges is in 
  configuring a database for an iOS device, and, in particular, an 
  iPhone. While a desktop-based FileMaker solution can take advantage 
  of relatively large expanses of screen, an iPhone held in portrait 
  view has a limited available display area. FileMaker’s design 
  guidelines recommend limiting layouts to 312 pixels in width to 
  avoid forcing users to zoom out in order to view an entire layout.

  The small iPhone screen means less data is visible, and scrolling 
  lists of related data presented in a portal can be viewed only with 
  difficulty — the scrolling navigation cues that are comfortable on 
  a desktop or laptop computer’s screen don’t scale well to the 
  iPhone’s screen. Therefore, layouts have to be designed carefully, 
  and cunningly scripted sequences of forms become the most practical 
  way of manipulating data. To help with that, FileMaker’s 
  Get(SystemPlatform) and Get(ApplicationVersion) script functions can 
  be called to identify an instance of the database running on 
  FileMaker Go, and the database can then be scripted to switch to a 
  mobile-friendly layout. Compare the top (desktop FileMaker Pro) and 
  bottom (FileMaker Go on the iPhone) screenshots below.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-02/Database-on-FMPro.png>
<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-02/Database-on-FMGo.png>

  Data structures also need to be prepared quite thoroughly, because 
  once a database has been loaded onto an iPhone, its database schema 
  can’t be changed there. Although records in any FileMaker table 
  can be modified (if the user has the right access privileges), that 
  is the extent to which FileMaker Go can interact with the data. 
  Tables can’t be added or deleted, nor can fields, and 
  relationships between tables cannot be modified. Scripts can be run, 
  but cannot be written or edited. Similarly, any layout can be made 
  accessible to the iPhone (although not all layouts will be 
  suitable), but they cannot be modified on the iPhone. 

  Databases, therefore, need to be prepared in FileMaker Pro on a 
  desktop computer and then transferred to the iPhone via one of two 
  methods. If a database is shared, either using FileMaker sharing 
  under FileMaker Pro or via FileMaker Server, then FileMaker Go can 
  access it in much the same way that a desktop version of FileMaker 
  Pro would; that is, by using a file-browser interface on the iPhone 
  that offers a list of all available files on a selected server. The 
  major advantage of this method is instant updating — since 
  FileMaker Go is interacting directly with the database on the 
  server, updates made to the data with the iPhone app are 
  automatically updated live on the server, and those updates are then 
  reflected on any other clients that happen to have the database 
  open. 

  FileMaker Go can access shared databases over a Wi-Fi or a cellular 
  data connection. This means that a salesman on a sales call, for 
  example, can check inventory or the status of an order from his 
  iPhone — provided that he has a decent Internet connection and his 
  company’s database is shared over the Internet, of course.

  Databases can also be synced to an iPhone via the Apps tab in 
  iTunes. Databases installed this way reside entirely on the device, 
  not on a server, and so changes made locally stay local until the 
  file is copied back to the computer to which the device syncs. 

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-02/FMGo-and-iTunes.png>

  Layout compromises aside, FileMaker Go does offer a couple of new 
  opportunities for capturing data. Container fields in FileMaker Go 
  databases can contain the same variety of data as their desktop 
  counterparts, but data entry becomes a little more interesting. 

  Tap a container in Browse mode and, in addition to the obvious 
  Choose From Library option, two new data sources are available. Take 
  Photo enables the user to take a photo — but not a video — with 
  the iPhone’s built-in camera (front or back, if it’s an iPhone 4 
  or 4S), with a button offering a choice of full, large, medium or 
  small file sizes and resolutions. A third choice, Get Signature, 
  offers a plain white screen with a horizontal (in landscape mode) 
  line labeled “Sign Here.” Sign with your fingertip (or a 
  stylus), and then tap either Clear to try again — it’s not easy 
  to sign legibly with your finger — or Accept to place your 
  signature in the container field. Once a container field is filled, 
  a tap on its contents reveals two additional options, Email and 
  Open.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-02/Container-Field-Signature.png>

  The ability to use fully scriptable databases on an iPhone offers 
  interesting possibilities beyond simple database manipulation. There 
  is a small degree to which FileMaker Go could be considered a 
  development platform for iOS, offering developers, as it does, the 
  capability to build rich and complex solutions that can then be 
  ported to the iPhone simply by syncing, rather than having to 
  develop from scratch using Objective-C. 

  Database-like applications have been available on the desktop for 
  some time now, with FileMaker Pro Advanced, née Developer, having 
  the capability to generate stand-alone applications encapsulating 
  the functionality of a database. The significant difference with iOS 
  devices is the fact that stand-alone solutions are not possible — 
  you must be running FileMaker Go on your iPhone or iPad in order to 
  access the database, but that’s not a massive price to pay in 
  order to develop, quickly and quite easily, a custom iOS “app.” 
  FileMaker claims they’re apps; they’re not, of course — 
  they’re documents. They’re rich and complex documents, granted, 
  but they’re still documents.

  Unlike Bento, the iOS versions of which are limited to sharing data 
  only with Bento on the Mac, FileMaker Go is a solution many 
  FileMaker users have been waiting for since the day Steve Jobs 
  announced third-party apps on the iPhone. (For more about Bento, see 
  the various articles TidBITS has published about the software.) 
  Despite the inevitable layout and design compromises that the small 
  size of the iPhone imposes on the FileMaker developer, FileMaker Go 
  for the iPhone is a solid piece of software that integrates well 
  with the existing FileMaker universe. Why Apple keeps it at arm’s 
  length remains a mystery.

<http://tidbits.com/search/Bento>

  [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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Strategies for Switching from Word to Pages
-------------------------------------------
  by Tonya Engst <tonya@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12718>
  15 comments

  Last year, when the Take Control ebook series migrated from 
  Microsoft Word 2008 to Pages ’09, I faced the challenge of not 
  only acquainting myself with an unfamiliar piece of software, but 
  also of helping a group of authors make the switch, all while under 
  time pressure to keep up with Apple’s breathless product-release 
  schedule. (If you are curious about why we chose to switch, or about 
  our EPUB-savvy production process, see “How Take Control Makes 
  EPUBs in Pages,” 30 September 2011.)

<http://tidbits.com/article/12472>

  Now that the commotion from the transition has died down, I want to 
  share the strategies we used in switching from Word to Pages, along 
  with some of my favorite Pages tips. 


**Look at the Bottom** -- A classic mistake of the long-time Word user 
  switching to another program is to assume that if you look long 
  enough in the menus and dialogs, you’ll encounter all the 
  important commands available (that’s even more true if you include 
  Word’s Customize Keyboard dialog, which lists a wealth of obscure 
  commands). In Word, you can use the menus and dialogs as training 
  wheels and pretty soon you’ll start using keyboard shortcuts for 
  commands that you choose often. 

  This approach failed dismally in Pages. In Pages, key functions are 
  stuck hither and thither in the user interface and there is no 
  apparent reference that lists them all.

  Important options appear at the lower left of a Pages document, in a 
  location that is precariously close to the Dock with a full-height 
  Pages window and a horizontal Dock. I’ll explain the three options 
  I use, but note that there is also a checkbox in the Pages General 
  preference pane to show the word count in this lower area; I work 
  with that turned off.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-01/Pages-bottom-left.png>

  The leftmost pop-up menu lets you change your zoom level and how 
  many pages are showing at once. Although Pages does have a Zoom 
  command in the View menu, it won’t let you choose a specific zoom 
  percentage and it lacks the pop-up menu’s One-Up and Two-Up 
  commands that control how many pages appear. I like to work at 100% 
  with two pages showing, but many other Take Control folks prefer a 
  higher zoom level in only a single page, so each time one of us 
  opens the file, the zoom and display layout must be adjusted, which 
  can be done only from this little pop-up menu. 

  The Pages area in the bottom window border turns out to be 
  clickable. Click it, and a “Go to Page” box appears where you 
  can type the page number that you want to move to. Again, you 
  can’t access this navigational control from any normal menu, 
  dialog, or keyboard command.

  The Scroll To triangles and associated gear menu that appear next 
  are incredibly valuable. You use the gear menu to set what the 
  triangles do. For instance, they can advance you to the next comment 
  in the document, or the next hyperlink. If you want to flip through 
  all the comments in a document quickly, this is where to work.


**Reveal Hidden Track Changes Toolbar** -- Another popular chunk of 
  interface real estate for a group of people working on a document is 
  the Track Changes toolbar, which you can bring up by choosing Edit > 
  Track Changes or by clicking the Track Changes button on the main 
  toolbar. The Track Changes button isn’t present on the main 
  toolbar by default, but you can customize the toolbar with View > 
  Customize Toolbar or by Control-clicking it and choosing Customize 
  Toolbar, just like in other Apple applications. 

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-01/Pages-track-changes-toolbar.png>

  The Track Changes toolbar has two pop-up menus on its right side 
  that most Take Control people failed to spot on their first few 
  rounds of writing or editing. The View Markup menu controls the 
  extent of tracked changes that you can see, which is essential for 
  hiding your tracked deletions (you might think you could hide them 
  using the Deleted Text menu in the General preference pane, but 
  you’d be wrong). The gear menu gives you commands to accept or 
  reject changes wholesale, and it is useful for picking the color of 
  your change-tracked text. (I have a great deal of fun monkeying with 
  the colors; the second figure below shows Adam editing in purple and 
  me editing in green; comments are always in yellow.)

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-01/Pages-track-changes-gear-menu.png>
<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-01/Pages-colorful-edits.png>

  To establish a comfortable workflow with the commands available only 
  in the Track Changes toolbar, I had to extend myself outside the 
  confines of Pages because I needed keyboard shortcuts for some of 
  its functions, particularly for accepting changes and for toggling 
  track changes on and off, both functions that I might invoke 
  hundreds of times in a typical day. I finally turned to Keyboard 
  Maestro to create macros that give me keyboard shortcuts for those 
  actions.

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

  One warning. It’s not uncommon in a workgroup situation to end up 
  with two copies of a file, each with marked changes. There is, 
  unfortunately, no way in Pages to copy text between files and retain 
  marked changes, or to compare two documents to identify changes 
  between them.


**Inspect the Inspector** -- The Inspector is a panel that comes up if 
  you choose View > Inspector (Command-Option-I) or click the 
  Inspector button on the toolbar. Many Pages options are available 
  only from the Inspector, and the Inspector has a bank of tiny 
  buttons at its top, which you click to switch between the different 
  panes of options. I find working with the Inspector easy now, but 
  for the first month it felt slow and cumbersome.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-01/Pages-inspector.png>

  Frustratingly, each of the Inspector panes is a different size. I 
  like to keep the Inspector open, for faster access, but it seems 
  that as soon as I get it in the right spot on my screen, I switch 
  panes and it becomes the wrong size for that spot. Some authors get 
  around this by opening multiple copies of the Inspector with View > 
  New Inspector. Personally, I wish the Inspector would open to one 
  size and then lock onto an edge of the Pages window in a neat way, 
  as palettes in InDesign do, since all too often I wind up with it in 
  the way of something else. (Word has a similar problem with its 
  Formatting Palette, but since most of its functions are available in 
  other ways, you can keep it closed most of the time.)


**Rummage around in the Styles Drawer** -- Another exciting chunk of 
  Pages real estate is the Styles drawer, which can be opened from the 
  View menu, with a keyboard shortcut, from a button on the Format 
  bar, or with a non-default toolbar button. Within the Styles drawer, 
  it took me a while to realize that an accurate hover over the right 
  of a style name would reveal a tiny triangle pop-up menu and it also 
  took a while to be able to click that minuscule menu reliably on the 
  first click. It all seems easy now, but at first it required 
  persistence.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-01/Pages-style-drawer.png>

  Eventually, I made that menu open enough times and absorbed its 
  capabilities to the point where I tried the Hot Key command, which 
  lets you assign a function key (like F3, say) to a style, so that 
  you can apply it by pressing a key on your keyboard. However, most 
  of the Take Control crew already have our function keys assigned to 
  other functions. Third-party software again came to the rescue, this 
  time in the form of AppleScripts for popular styles — each writer 
  could install the scripts on his or her Mac and then use a macro 
  utility (such as Keyboard Maestro or QuicKeys) to assign a keyboard 
  shortcut to each script. In case you’d like to try this, here’s 
  an example:

      tell application "Pages"
        set mySel to (get selection of front document)
        set paragraph style of mySel to "Chapter Name"
      end tell

  (Chapter Name is the “Heading 1” style that you must assign to 
  your top level headings when exporting an EPUB from Pages.)

  Although we read the manual and searched high and low in Pages, 
  we’ve yet to find a way to _configure_ a paragraph or list style 
  by hand, by selecting the various attributes that we’d like it to 
  include. This is sort of possible when creating (but not editing) a 
  new character style by choosing Create New Character Style from 
  Selection from the None character style’s pop-up menu and then 
  expanding the Include All Character Attributes control. But there is 
  no equivalent to the technique in Word where you choose Format > 
  Style, then click New or Modify and select all the style details via 
  checkboxes and menus. Instead, you must make a paragraph or list 
  look the way you want and then redefine the existing style. Wacky.


**My Kingdom for an Outline!** -- A great feature in Word, and one 
  that I am sorry to have left behind, is the Navigation bar, which 
  has been given different names in different versions of Word, all 
  while remaining functionally the same. You open it as a left-hand 
  bar in the Word window, and it shows the outline of your entire 
  document, as long as you’ve used Word’s built-in heading styles 
  (any experienced Word user will always use those built-in styles — 
  they are Word’s crown jewels with their elegant integration with 
  the Table of Contents feature and full, useful Outline view; Pages 
  has a decent Table of Contents feature, but doesn’t begin to 
  compete with Word’s Outline view). 

  In Word’s Navigation bar, you can see the “forest” surrounding 
  the “trees” of what you are reading at all times, and you can 
  even edit the headings right in the Navigation bar. So, if you are 
  in the middle of a chapter and deeply into a set of Heading 3 level 
  topics, and suddenly the manuscript starts alternating between 
  Heading 2 and Heading 4 level topics, you know you are in trouble 
  and can adjust immediately. You can also click any line in the 
  Navigation bar to jump to the corresponding heading. 

  Alas, Pages has no such organizational navigation interface, Also, 
  because Pages has neither a Back command after clicking a link nor 
  any other sensible way to jump back and forth between two sections 
  of a document, we are finding it challenging to get around in longer 
  documents.

  To simulate the Navigation bar in Pages, some of us have taken to 
  displaying the View > Page Thumbnails bar at the left, expanded as 
  large as possible (drag its right border). It gets large enough that 
  you can read the text in its thumbnails. I like to open it to the 
  table of contents pages, so I can see the “outline” there, and 
  sometimes I open another copy of the manuscript in a separate 
  document window so that I can more fully view the outline or a 
  second portion of a manuscript. 

  Unfortunately, all of these workarounds pale in comparison to 
  Word’s Navigation bar and, frankly, the quality of the link-based 
  user navigation in the Take Control series has decreased slightly 
  because of this, because it is so much more difficult for authors 
  and editors to determine where a possible link might lead.


**Find the Documentation** -- Another classic strategy for learning a 
  program deeply is to read the manual or some other form of 
  documentation. I have read the entire Pages manual, and I found it 
  frustrating because, while it does document how Pages is supposed to 
  operate, it doesn’t clarify which features that you might expect 
  in a word processor are not present. (To be fair, very few programs 
  document their shortcomings.) Also, I’ve found some features to be 
  a bit dodgy, most notably section breaks and style modifications, 
  and I can’t figure out if it’s me or a bug in Pages; the manual 
  doesn’t provide examples or describe common use cases.

  You can find the manual by choosing Pages > Help, but if you plan to 
  refer to it often, I suggest downloading the PDF and storing it 
  somewhere handy.

<http://manuals.info.apple.com/en_US/Pages09_UserGuide.pdf>

  A useful resource for ebook publishers is a short document published 
  by Apple called “ePub Best Practices for Pages,” which you can 
  download from a link in the Apple support note “Creating ePub 
  files with Pages”. The document mentions the handful of styles 
  that you need to use in a Pages document slated for EPUB export and 
  notes the all-important fact that graphics in such a document must 
  be inline, not floating. 

<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT4168>

  It took time to learn that the best way to place a figure-sized 
  graphic as inline is to first create a paragraph formatted so that 
  the “Line” is “At Least” a specified line height; the “At 
  Least” setting allows the line height to increase to the height of 
  the graphic (open the Inspector, click the T (for Text) button, 
  click the Text button). Once you have the proper line height format 
  set, press Command while you drag the image file in from the Finder.

  Another useful resource is the Pages Apple Support Community, which 
  I’ve visited several times to ask questions and to try to help out 
  by answering a few. If you have Pages questions, this is a good 
  place to ask.

<https://discussions.apple.com/community/iwork/pages?categoryID=225>


**Work with Great People** -- Although it was fairly easy to write 
  this article, it was not easy to learn everything that I’ve 
  mentioned in it. It would have been all the harder had I not been 
  part of a small working group of smart and good-spirited people who 
  could commiserate with my woes and sometimes point out options that 
  I’d overlooked. 

  I could write a great deal more about the fine points of Pages and 
  working with change tracking, about how I had to make a macro in 
  order to insert a comment without the timestamp being 
  pre-highlighted (such that when you start typing the timestamp 
  disappears, unless the first key you press is the Right arrow key), 
  about Pages versus Word templates, and more, but I have covered the 
  main high (and low) points for now. If you have a Pages tip to 
  share, please let us know in the comments. 


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://tidbits.com/e/12718#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://tidbits.com/t/12718>


TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 13 February 2012
----------------------------------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12785>

**Bookle 1.0.3** -- Stairways Software has released Bookle 1.0.3, the 
  recently debuted EPUB reader for the Mac that was developed in 
  collaboration between TidBITS’s own Adam Engst and Peter Lewis of 
  Stairways Software (see “Introducing Bookle, an EPUB Reader for 
  Mac OS X,” 6 February 2012). This update fixes an issue where EPUB 
  files could have “-Temporary” added to their display name as 
  well as a bug that could cause the table of contents to disappear 
  after resizing the window when using Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard. 
  Additionally, this release improves the discovery of display names 
  for older EPUB files. ($9.99 new from the Mac App Store, free 
  update, 2.6 MB) 

<http://bookle.stairways.com/>
<http://tidbits.com/article/12774>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/bookle/id496158508>

  Read/post comments about Bookle 1.0.3.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12781#comments>


**Piezo 1.1.2** -- Rogue Amoeba has released a minor update to their 
  minimalist audio recording app Piezo, which fixes an issue that 
  prevented the application from recording audio from Skype on the 
  just-released Mac OS X 10.7.3. Piezo 1.1.2 also brings compatibility 
  with recording audio from the Toktumi and MagicJack VoIP apps. The 
  update is rounded out by an assortment of bug fixes and 
  improvements. ($10 new, free update, 2.8 MB, release notes)

<http://rogueamoeba.com/piezo/>
<http://rogueamoeba.com/piezo/releasenotes.php>

  Read/post comments about Piezo 1.1.2.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12780#comments>


**Firmware Updates for iMac, MacBook Pro, and MacBook Air** -- Apple 
  has released another batch of firmware updates similar in scope to 
  the trio of updates from several weeks ago (see “Firmware Updates 
  for Mac mini, MacBook, and 13-inch MacBook Pro,” 25 January 2012). 
  The new iMac EFI Firmware Update 1.8 (mid 2010 models), MacBook Pro 
  EFI Firmware Update 2.6 (early 2010 models), and MacBook Air EFI 
  Firmware Update 2.3 (late 2010 models) updates, like the previous 
  set, enable Lion Recovery from an Internet connection (and all of 
  them require Mac OS X 10.7.3 or later). Additionally, the MacBook 
  Air update fixes an issue where the system could restart if the 
  power button was pressed while waking from deep sleep. As with any 
  firmware update, you should read the installation instructions 
  carefully before installing. To ensure you get an update only if 
  it’s necessary, we recommend relying on Software Update; if an 
  update doesn’t appear for you, it’s not appropriate for your 
  Mac. (Free, 3 MB)

<http://tidbits.com/article/12751>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1493>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1492>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1494>

  Read/post comments about Firmware Updates for iMac, MacBook Pro, and 
  MacBook Air.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12779#comments>


**Carbon Copy Cloner 3.4.4** -- To celebrate the 10th anniversary of 
  Carbon Copy Cloner, Bombich Software has released Carbon Copy Cloner 
  3.4.4 with a myriad of new features, tweaks, and fixes. The popular 
  donationware disk cloning and backup utility now provides support 
  for archiving and cloning the Lion Recovery HD partition, and it can 
  now clone a Lion Installation disk image onto a physical volume. You 
  can also configure scheduled tasks to wake or boot the system. The 
  update also fixes bugs associated with remembering the last preset, 
  scheduling tasks on the first of the current month, mounting a disk 
  image under uncommon permissions conditions, and many more. (Free 
  update, 6.0 MB, release notes)

<http://www.bombich.com/ccc_features.html>
<http://www.bombich.com/software/updates/ccc-3.4.4.html>

  Read/post comments about Carbon Copy Cloner 3.4.4.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12778#comments>


**ChronoSync 4.3 and ChronoAgent 1.3** -- Econ Technologies has 
  released ChronoSync 4.3 and ChronoAgent 1.3, both major updates that 
  feature extensive refinements to the link between the 
  synchronization/backup application and its remote helper app. New 
  features for ChronoSync include using SSL encryption when connecting 
  to ChronoAgent 1.3, the capability to change the target 
  folder/volume without losing state information from previous 
  synchronizations, custom sync target names, and a function for 
  restoring previously synchronized files. In addition to gaining SSL 
  support over multiple platforms, ChronoAgent has been updated to 
  better handle multiple, simultaneous connections. Additionally, both 
  titles are updated with Spanish, Portuguese, and Brazilian 
  Portuguese localizations. Full release notes for ChronoSync and 
  ChronoAgent are available. ($40 new for ChronoSync, $10 new for 
  ChronoAgent; free updates; 29 MB, 8.1 MB)

<http://www.econtechnologies.com/pages/cs/chrono_overview.html>
<http://www.econtechnologies.com/pages/ca/agent_overview.html>
<http://www.econtechnologies.com/pages/cs/chrono_notes4.html>
<http://www.econtechnologies.com/pages/ca/agent_releasenotes.html>

  Read/post comments about ChronoSync 4.3 and ChronoAgent 1.3.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12777#comments>




ExtraBITS for 13 February 2012
------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12793>

  This week we have some good stuff for you! Adam and his Bookle 
  collaborator Peter Lewis joined Chuck Joiner of MacVoices to share 
  the story behind their new EPUB reader for the Mac, Apple has 
  announced special voluntary audits of Apple suppliers by the Fair 
  Labor Association, our friend Dan Frakes at Macworld has finally 
  figured out how to make a bootable Lion installer for new Macs, 
  Instapaper developer Marco Arment blows the whistle on how apps are 
  allowed free access to your iOS contact and calendar databases, and 
  we learn that iTunes Match really is paying some royalties to 
  copyright holders.


**Learn More about Bookle’s Background on MacVoices** -- Peter Lewis 
  of Stairways Software may be in Australia, but that didn’t stop 
  Chuck Joiner from bringing him together with Adam Engst to talk 
  about their joint release of the Bookle EPUB reader for the Mac. If 
  you want to hear some of the background story about how Bookle came 
  to be, what restrictions are placed on it by the Mac App Store, and 
  how the large companies are using DRM these days, tune into this 
  MacVoices podcast.

<http://www.macvoices.com/wordpress/macvoices-1270-adam-engst-and-peter-n-lewis-introduce-bookle-a-new-way-to-read-ebooks-on-your-mac/>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/12792#comments>


**Fair Labor Association to Inspect Apple Suppliers** -- Following 
  weeks of heated discussion over working conditions that included 
  some protests, Apple announced that it has asked the Fair Labor 
  Association (FLA) to begin special voluntary audits at the 
  company’s final assembly suppliers, including Foxconn, Quanta, and 
  Pegatron.

<https://www.apple.com/pr/library/2012/02/13Fair-Labor-Association-Begins-Inspections-of-Foxconn.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/12791#comments>


**Action-Packed Instructions for Creating a Bootable Lion Install 
  Drive** -- Dan Frakes at Macworld details the steps for creating a 
  bootable installer disc or drive for Mac OS X 10.7 Lion, which is 
  important especially for Macs that debuted after the release of Lion 
  (as they don’t include a downloadable version of the installer). 
  While nicely thorough and practical, it’s also notable for a 
  hair-raising maneuver to avoid re-installing Mac OS X and zapping 
  your Mac’s PRAM.

<http://www.macworld.com/article/165337/2012/02/create_a_bootable_lion_install_drive_for_newer_macs.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/12790#comments>


**Does iOS Give Apps Too Much Access to Your Data?** -- Instapaper 
  developer Marco Arment says iOS gives him “far too much access to 
  [the data in the user’s] Address Book without forcing a user 
  prompt.” TidBITS staffer Matt Neuburg has said much the same thing 
  in his Programming iOS book: what sense does it make that an app has 
  to pass through all those Core Location permission gateways in order 
  to access your photos, yet can freely and without notice examine, 
  copy, and delete the information in your Contacts and Calendar 
  databases?

<http://www.marco.org/2012/02/09/ios-address-book-should-prompt-users>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/12788#comments>


**iTunes Match a (Small) Moneymaker for Copyright Holders** -- 
  Subscribers to Apple’s iTunes Match service are sending copyright 
  holders “magic money,” writes Jeff Price at the blog for the 
  TuneCore online music distribution service. And while not an 
  overwhelming amount ($10,000 in the first two months, spread out 
  across 55,000 TuneCore artists), Price points out that it is more 
  than the null sum that artists were previously receiving.

<http://blog.tunecore.com/2012/02/apple-imatch-the-first-royalties-are-in.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/12782#comments>




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