TidBITS#1115/27-Feb-2012
========================
  Issue link: <http://tidbits.com/issue/1115>


  In the category of articles we hate to have to write, Adam leads off
  this week’s issue with a detailed look at the Flashback malware, which
  has morphed from masquerading as a Flash Player installer to
  exploiting Java vulnerabilities and suckering users with a fake
  self-signed certificate prompt. For the rest of the issue, put your
  feet up and read along with Michael Cohen as he shares his story of
  getting Find My Mac to work, and with Steve McCabe as he ponders how
  best to replace a dying iMac — it’s an interesting thought experiment
  to imagine how you might solve a similar problem. Notable software
  releases this week include iMac Wi-Fi Update 1.0; Firmware Updates for
  iMac, Mac mini, MacBook Air, and MacBook Pro; ScreenFlow 3.0.5; Camino
  2.1.1; and PDFpen and PDFpenPro 5.7.2.

Articles
    Beware the Morphing Flashback Malware
    Fixing Find My Mac
    Puzzling Through Mac Replacement Possibilities
    TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 27 February 2012
    ExtraBITS for 27 February 2012


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Beware the Morphing Flashback Malware
-------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12818>

  As TidBITS Security Editor Rich Mogull wrote in “Gatekeeper Slams 
  the Door on Mac Malware Epidemics” (16 February 2012), the most 
  significant security hole on the Mac stems from users being tricked 
  into installing something malicious, and once OS X 10.8 Mountain 
  Lion sees widespread adoption later this year, Mac users will have 
  additional protection from at least malicious downloaded 
  applications. 

<http://tidbits.com/article/12795>

  But even Gatekeeper won’t protect from malware that worms its way 
  into Macs in other ways, such as Flashback, malware that may have 
  started out life masquerading as a Flash Player installer but can 
  now infect Macs through sneakier means. (Thanks to TidBITS sponsor 
  Intego for many of the details in this article, which Intego was the 
  first to publish in its Mac Security Blog.)

<http://blog.intego.com/>


**Infection Vectors** -- In Flashback’s original approach (variants 
  Flashback.A, Flashback.B, and Flashback.C), a malicious or hacked 
  Web site would display what looks like a Flash error, and if you 
  were to click it, an installer package pretending to be Flash Player 
  would be downloaded. If “Open ‘safe’ files after downloading” is
  selected in Safari’s General preferences, the bogus installer would
  be launched automatically, and your Mac would be infected. 
  (Tip #1: Disable that option in Safari!)

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-02/Flashback-installer.jpeg>

  The new Flashback.G instead employs a two-pronged approach that’s 
  completely different from the fake Flash Player installer, though 
  the malicious code that’s installed is essentially the same (hence 
  the continued use of the Flashback name). First, it attempts to 
  install code on your Mac silently through one of two known Java 
  vulnerabilities. (Luckily, Macs running 10.7 Lion don’t have Java 
  installed by default, and those who have installed all available 
  Java updates in either Lion or 10.6 Snow Leopard are immune from 
  such attacks.) Failing that, Flashback next displays a fake 
  self-signed certificate purporting to be from Apple Inc.; if you 
  were to click the Continue button, your Mac would be infected.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-02/Flashback-certificate-prompt.png>

  It’s clear that Flashback is in active development, not just from 
  the arrival of this new attack vector, but because it intentionally 
  tries to avoid detection. Some variants check to see if the user is 
  running Mac OS X in VMware Fusion and won’t execute if so. They do 
  this because many security researchers test malware in virtual 
  machines, rather than risk infection of full installations of Mac OS 
  X, since it’s easier to delete a virtual machine and start over 
  with a clean copy. The most recent Flashback.G variant won’t even 
  attempt to install if Intego’s VirusBarrier X6 or certain other 
  security programs are present, presumably since there’s no point 
  in bothering with Macs that are already protected. 


**Infection Effects** -- Flashback’s goal is to capture user names 
  and passwords, which it accomplishes by inserting its code into Web 
  browsers like Safari and Firefox and other network applications like 
  Skype. It monitors network traffic and looks for connections to a 
  number of domains — sites such as Google, Yahoo, CNN, PayPal, 
  numerous banks, and many others. Presumably, the bad guys behind 
  Flashback are looking for user names and passwords that they can 
  exploit immediately — such as for a bank Web site — and those 
  that may be reused across different sites. (Tip #2: Don’t use the 
  same password for all Web sites!)

  Because Flashback’s code can interfere with its host programs, it 
  tends to cause crashes. If a network-related program starts crashing 
  regularly, that may be a clue that your Mac has been infected.

  Flashback needs both a way to transmit these stolen login 
  credentials back to the mothership and a method of updating its 
  code. It does this via a set of command and control servers that 
  were initially inoperable when Intego discovered Flashback in late 
  September 2011. They were brought online at some point in October 
  2011 and have been sending updates to infected Macs since. In 
  theory, Flashback can also download additional software, although 
  Intego hasn’t yet seen such activity.

  Exactly what code Flashback installs on infected Macs has changed 
  over time. At first, it installed a dynamic loader library and 
  auto-launch code into a file at ~/Library/Preferences/Preferences.dylib.
  That backdoor code communicated with remote servers using RC4 
  encryption and sent information such as the infected Mac’s unique
  hardware ID, version of Mac OS X, hardware architecture, and more.

  Subsequent variants of Flashback moved away from the easy-to-delete 
  Preferences.dylib file and instead install the backdoor code inside 
  the application package for Safari and Firefox, modifying the 
  app’s Info.plist file with the location of the backdoor and 
  storing the actual code deep within the application itself at 
  /Applications/Safari.app/Contents/Resources/UnHackMeBuild. (For 
  Firefox, replace “Safari.app” with “Firefox.app” in all the 
  commands and paths below.) 

  Just removing that file from within the app isn’t sufficient to 
  eliminate the infection; it’s also necessary to delete the 
  following lines from the Info.plist, and to do that, you must either 
  open it in BBEdit, or first convert the file to XML with this 
  Terminal command:

      plutil -convert xml1 /Applications/Safari.app/Contents/Info.plist

  Once that’s done, look for and delete these lines.

      <key>LSEnvironment</key>
      <dict>
          <key>DYLD_INSERT_LIBRARIES</key>
      <string>/Applications/Safari.app/Contents/Resources/UnHackMeBuild</string>
      </dict>

  But Flashback didn’t stop there. According to Intego, a later 
  variant installs an executable file in the /tmp directory, applies 
  executable permissions, and then launches the executable. The 
  Flashback backdoor thus becomes active with no indication that 
  anything untoward has happened.

  Intego has determined that the most recent Flashback.G variant 
  changes approaches yet again, installing itself into an invisible 
  file in the /Users/Shared directory. This file can bear many names, 
  but all the ones seen so far have a .so extension. Unfortunately, it 
  seems likely that Flashback will continue to rotate the names and 
  locations of where it stores its backdoor code, making it difficult 
  to provide reliable removal instructions.

  This latest variant also creates a file at /Users/Shared/.svcdmp and 
  a plist file, used to patch applications, at ~/.MACOSX/environment.plist,
  along with a log stored at ~/Library/Logs/vmLog.

  Some of Flashback’s early variants (but not Flashback.G) go beyond 
  just patching network-aware applications, and intentionally damage 
  system files. In particular, these early variants of Flashback 
  disable Mac OS X’s built-in XProtect malware detection system by 
  deleting some key files:

* /System/Library/LaunchDaemons/com.apple.xprotectupdater.plist
* /usr/libexec/XProtectUpdater

  This intentional file deletion is particularly concerning not just 
  because it prevents XProtect from working (Apple has updated 
  XProtect to detect the earlier variants of Flashback), but also 
  because it means that antivirus software cannot repair the damage; 
  doing so would entail installing entirely new copies of the affected 
  files, rather than just restoring them to their pre-infection state. 

  It is possible to repair the damage manually, by restoring files 
  from Time Machine or another backup program, but it’s essential to 
  do so from within the backup program to get the original 
  permissions, which likely wouldn’t happen with a simple Finder 
  copy.


**Our Advice** -- Intego tells me that the rate of infection by 
  Flashback has increased significantly since it started using the 
  combination of the Java vulnerabilities and the fake self-signed 
  certificate. What I don’t yet have a sense of is how easy it is to 
  run across a Web site that hosts Flashback, but there are both ways 
  that users can be fooled into visiting such sites and ways 
  legitimate sites can unwittingly end up hosting such malware.

  Regardless, it is certainly possible to avoid infection by 
  Flashback. Apple’s own XProtect has been updated to detect and 
  protect against Flashback’s early variants, so as long as that’s 
  active, you’re probably safe from any of those that may still 
  exist. Nonetheless, to guard against the later variants, you must 
  make sure you have either not installed Java in Lion, or kept your 
  Java installation in Lion or Snow Leopard up to date. And barring 
  that, if you get a prompt to approve a self-signed certificate from 
  Apple, you must deny it.

  Similarly, it’s possible to remove Flashback infections manually, 
  if you have a fairly high level of technical sophistication (the 
  information above should give you what you need to know, though 
  I’d also recommend searching the Web for updated information about 
  future Flashback changes). 

  But I must admit, just as with the MacDefender situation, I’m 
  driven to say that anyone who doesn’t feel they have the technical 
  awareness to detect Flashback’s infection attempts or to repair an 
  infected Mac manually should be running up-to-date security software 
  like Intego’s VirusBarrier X6. 

<http://www.intego.com/virusbarrier/>

  (There are of course other antivirus tools available for the Mac, 
  some of which are free, like ClamXav and Sophos Anti-Virus for Mac 
  Home Edition, but VirusBarrier provides additional security-related 
  capabilities, such as a configurable port-based firewall, the 
  capability to detect spyware activity and prevent software from 
  “phoning home,” network traffic monitoring tools, network attack 
  detection, anti-phishing protection, cookie filtering, and more.) 

<http://www.clamxav.com/>
<http://www.sophos.com/en-us/products/free-tools/sophos-antivirus-for-mac-home-edition.aspx>

  Much as I would like to say that users should just be careful out 
  there, it’s simply too easy for someone who doesn’t know what a 
  self-signed certificate looks like to click through such a prompt, 
  and even allowing a fake Flash Player installer to run is the sort 
  of thing that many less-experienced users wouldn’t think twice 
  about doing.


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://tidbits.com/e/12818#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://tidbits.com/t/12818>


Fixing Find My Mac
------------------
  by Michael E. Cohen <mcohen@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12817>

  Although I have numerous Macs buried at various levels of strata in 
  my Midden Heap of Antiquity, I have only one that is running Mac OS 
  X 10.7 Lion: the 27-inch mid-2011 iMac that I purchased last summer. 
  Lion, in fact, was my main reason for buying it; my main machine 
  before the purchase was an older aluminum iMac, a 24-inch Core 2 Duo 
  model that was capable of running Lion. But I wanted to keep that 
  one around to run 10.6 Snow Leopard and, with it, all the Rosetta 
  software that Lion was promising to kick quietly to the curb.

  When I got the new machine, though, Lion was not yet out: the new 
  iMac came with Snow Leopard installed, which made (or should have 
  made) migrating to it from my older iMac a snap. As it turned out, 
  though, the Migration Assistant failed repeatedly with both FireWire 
  and Ethernet connections. Instead, for some reason I still don’t 
  understand, the Migration Assistant was able to work only via an 
  AirPort connection, so it took me a couple of days and a few false 
  starts before my new iMac was ready to rock and roll. This all 
  happened right around the time that Apple made the GM (“golden 
  master”) version of Lion available to developers for download.

  This, in fact, seemed perfect timing: I could see what Lion was like 
  on a Mac that was not a test machine but one that was configured 
  with my usual working environment. Fortunately, the GM release 
  installed without problem, and I was able to try out Lion with all 
  my apps and workflows, but still switch back to my comfortable Snow 
  Leopard iMac at need (such as when I wanted to use my copies of 
  FileMaker 8 or Word 2004 or Photoshop CS 1). When the official 
  release version of Lion came along a few days later, I discovered 
  that the GM I had installed really was the same version, so I had no 
  reason to reinstall: I was already running the real deal, with all 
  the quirks and foibles of a point-zero Mac OS X release.

  Why am I taking you on this meander down memory lane? Because of a 
  problem I encountered when Mac OS X 10.7.2 appeared several months 
  later, bringing with it support for Find My Mac via iCloud (see 
  “Meanwhile, Back at the Lion Ranch…,” 15 October 2011). The 
  problem was this: the Find My Mac option in the iCloud preference 
  pane was dimmed, with a note saying that I needed to update the 
  recovery system. What’s more, the Update button that accompanied 
  this warning launched Software Update, which frustratingly returned 
  with a message that all of my software was up to date.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12559>

  I figured that my somewhat abortive migration from my older iMac and 
  my subsequent install of the GM developer release of Lion had 
  somehow bollixed things up, but I didn’t want to spend the time 
  right then tracking the problem down and possibly having to back up 
  and reinstall everything on my new iMac. After all, aside from the 
  inability to use Find My Mac (a feature that is almost useless for 
  me because my desktop Mac never goes anywhere anyway), everything 
  else continued to function well.

  Then, right around the same time, Apple released Lion Recovery 
  Update 1.0, and I thought, “Aha! This could fix that Find My Mac 
  problem.” After all, it was an update for the recovery system 
  itself, which is exactly what the error message was telling me I 
  needed. But it didn’t work. The dimmed message and 
  tantalizing-but-useless Update button remained in my iCloud 
  preference pane. It was annoying, but had no real impact on my 
  day-to-day use of the iMac, and I quickly forgot about it.

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1464>

  I remembered it recently, though, when Apple released OS X 10.7.3 
  (see “Mac OS X 10.7.3 Fixes Bugs, Improves Lion Server,” 1 
  February 2012).  I dutifully installed the update and then I thought 
  to check whether this version finally fixed the problem. After all, 
  it was an update, and Find My Mac wanted an update; maybe it was 
  _this_ update for which Find My Mac yearned. But it wasn’t. I 
  still had the dimmed message, and the accompanying Update button 
  still mocked me.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12764>

  Finally, last week Apple released EFI firmware updates for certain 
  recent Macs including my mid-2011 iMac (see “Firmware Updates for 
  iMac, Mac mini, MacBook Air, and MacBook Pro,” 24 February 2012). 
  “Aha!” I thought. Maybe what my iMac really wanted was a 
  _firmware_ update to fix the problem. So I installed it, and, lo and 
  behold… nothing. Find My Mac was still missing in action.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12813>

  “Enough is enough,” I thought (well, there may have been a 
  couple of expletives mixed in). I was going to get to the bottom of 
  the problem! I did what I should have done long before and undertook 
  one of the simplest of troubleshooting exercises: I copied the error 
  message and did a Web search for it.

  Color me chagrined: the problem was a well-known one, and one that 
  had been long solved. The top hit on my Google search for the phrase 
  “recovery system update required” took me to a post on Apple’s 
  discussion boards from October 2011, and, in it, the solution to my 
  unfindable Mac issue.

<https://discussions.apple.com/thread/3374411?start=0&tstart=0>

  Here’s what I had to do: Reboot my iMac with both the Command and 
  R keys held down so it would boot into the Recovery partition that 
  Lion installs on the Mac. Once booted, I had to run the Disk Utility 
  program included in the recovery system and have it check and repair 
  my system drive. I did so: Disk Utility found one small problem (a 
  one-block file allocation mismatch) and fixed it.

  That wasn’t quite all. I still needed to download and reinstall 
  the Lion Recovery Update that I had installed months previously. 
  Interestingly, though the download was hundreds of megabytes in 
  size, when the time came to install it, only a few dozen kilobytes 
  actually had to be installed. Once that installation completed and 
  my iMac rebooted, Find My Mac was finally enabled in my iCloud 
  preferences. The entire fix took about an hour from start to finish.

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1464>

  What did I learn? Nothing that I didn’t already know, but I repeat 
  it here because it’s an important lesson I relearned: when you see 
  an error message and you aren’t sure what it means, it only takes 
  a few moments to do a Web search for that message. In a large number 
  of cases, you’ll find others bedeviled with the same problem who 
  have found a solution.

  What kept me from doing this earlier was what I think of as 
  toothache terror: one’s imagined fear of the dentist (that is, my 
  imagined fear of having to back up, reinitialize, and reinstall all 
  my software on my iMac) can keep you suffering from a toothache far 
  longer than is necessary, and the trip to the dentist usually ends 
  up being much less unpleasant than the weeks of pain you spend 
  avoiding it. 


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://tidbits.com/e/12817#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://tidbits.com/t/12817>


Puzzling Through Mac Replacement Possibilities
----------------------------------------------
  by Steve McCabe <steve@stevemccabe.net>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12816>
  6 comments

  There I was at school, patrolling the playing fields as we teachers 
  are required to do a couple of times a week, when a few high school 
  girls who’d had me for Japanese last year asked to me to show them 
  Siri on my iPhone. Oohs and aahs duly delivered, one of them asked 
  why I had an iPhone, given how terrifyingly expensive they are.

  I gave my well-rehearsed answer, the one that explains how an 
  international tech megastar like her Japanese and physics teacher 
  (it’s important to maintain professorial reputation) must keep up 
  with the latest kit in order to be able to speak authoritatively, 
  and she was satisfied with this answer. 

  But I knew I was prevaricating. Staying current with the tech world 
  requires continual investment, which has become a problem for me, 
  given that, as a teacher in New Zealand, I’m not as flush as once 
  I was.

  I got into computers, and tech, and Apple in particular, back in the 
  1990s, when I lived near Tokyo and made a rather generous Japanese 
  salary. When the tech itch needed scratching, a quick trip took me 
  to the famed Akihabara electronics shopping district.

<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Akihabara>

  But now I’m in New Zealand, making a Kiwi teacher’s wage, and 
  while I’d not give up the life here for anything, maintaining 
  familiarity with Apple’s latest products has become increasingly 
  challenging. Especially now. I find myself in something of a tech 
  crunch, and I don’t know what the correct path is. Let me explain, 
  and perhaps my ponderation can help you with any similar decisions 
  you may have.

  When I moved to New Zealand in 2009, I brought with me three Macs. 
  My 20-inch iMac, an original Intel Core Duo model, is the oldest, 
  dating back to 2006. I purchased it with the payment from my first 
  paid FileMaker job, so it has some sentimental value. My Mac mini 
  was bought in 2007, partly with the refund check that Apple issued 
  to early iPhone adopters like me. Then there was the MacBook Pro 
  that I bought in 2008 and donated to a friend’s daughter last year 
  when she went away to boarding school. It was replaced with a new 
  Thunderbolt-equipped 15-inch MacBook Pro, leased for three years 
  under the New Zealand Ministry of Education’s excellent Laptops 
  for Teachers program.

<http://www.minedu.govt.nz/NZEducation/EducationPolicies/Schools/Initiatives/ICTInSchools/ICTInitiativesAndProgrammes/LaptopsForTeachers.aspx#WhosEligible>

  (The MacBook Pro I lease from my school for the entirely reasonable 
  price of NZ$52 per month over a three-year period has enabled me to 
  use a high-end laptop for an affordable price, one I likely would 
  have struggled to justify otherwise. The lease payments work out to 
  NZ$1,876, whereas buying that Mac outright would cost NZ$2,999. I 
  don’t get to keep the Mac after the three years are up, but I hope 
  I’ll be able to lease another one at that point.)

  Apart from a hard disk failure about two years into its run, the 
  iMac has served me well until recently. However, due to a power 
  supply that has developed the disconcerting habit of turning off 
  randomly, the iMac has become increasingly unusable as a working 
  computer. 

  And so I find myself, for the first time in several years, seriously 
  considering a major overhaul of my computer systems. Budget is the 
  primary consideration, of course, but I would prefer not to give up 
  having a desktop Mac for serious work, a laptop Mac for portability, 
  and my own server for my Internet presence. How might I best juggle 
  all the possibilities?


**Replace the iMac** -- If money were no object, the answer would be 
  simple. A new iMac, preferably a 27-inch model, would be arriving 
  from the online Apple Store tomorrow. But relax, Courier Post, I’m 
  a teacher, so you won’t be making that delivery.

  I have toyed with the idea of a second-hand Mac. My first two Macs 
  were a IIsi that was given to me by a relative who couldn’t be 
  bothered to get it to work properly (I fixed it up in an afternoon) 
  and a IIvx I bought used in Japan. That might well be the route I 
  take if I decide to replace my iMac. Certainly the second-hand 
  market here in New Zealand is healthy enough to offer some 
  attractive deals. 


**Repair the iMac** -- If my iMac were a more recent machine, I would 
  be taking it in to the nearest Apple Store for repair. But it’s an 
  old computer, and my nearest Apple Store isn’t even an Apple 
  Store. Apple has no retail presence here in New Zealand, putting my 
  nearest genuine Apple Store in Sydney, Australia, 2,100 kilometers 
  away across the Tasman Sea.

  Instead, the inexplicably named YooBee, the main chain of 
  Apple-authorised resellers here, charges what I consider to be 
  unreasonable sums, including a fee simply for taking a look at an 
  ailing computer. It’s simply not realistic to consider a repair to 
  an old iMac under such terms. 

  What’s more likely is that I’ll self-diagnose the power supply 
  problem and then buy and install the necessary parts to keep the 
  iMac running a little longer (iFixit has instructions, though they 
  don’t look easy). Then I can consider the next possible strategy.

<http://www.ifixit.com/Guide/Installing-iMac-Intel-20-Inch-EMC-2105-and-2118-Power-Supply/1098/1>


**Repurpose the iMac as a Server** -- It would be heartless, not to 
  mention extravagant, to retire the iMac while it could still be 
  useful. Perhaps I could put it to some other use.

  My Mac mini is my Internet server, dishing up Web pages and managing 
  email from my various blogs and domains. It’s also the newest 
  computer I own, and there is a degree to which it’s not really 
  pulling its weight. While I am proud of each of the dozens of page 
  views my blogs receive on a normal day, my Moving to New Zealand 
  blog doesn’t require significant processing power. If that’s the 
  main task of my most powerful desktop computer, maybe it’s time to 
  put the Mac mini to work as my main production machine and repurpose 
  the iMac as my server.

<http://mccabe.net.nz/>

  But it’s not quite that simple. While the Mac mini has an Intel 
  Core 2 Duo processor and runs Lion Server, my iMac has only an Intel 
  Core Duo, without that magic number 2. While the iMac still has all 
  the processing oomph that I need for my Web design and FileMaker 
  work, Apple has decreed it is unworthy of Lion, so using the iMac as 
  a server would force me to revert to Snow Leopard Server, which I 
  find lacking in some areas, virtual mail hosting in particular. So I 
  could step back down to Snow Leopard Server, but I’d prefer not to. 

  I’d also prefer not to outsource my Web hosting and email server 
  needs. While I’m fully aware that relying on something like Google 
  Apps might give me similar functionality for less money, I’m not 
  yet willing to hand my Web and email serving over to someone else. 

  That leads into the next possibility.


**No Desktop Mac** -- There was a time when a laptop was a lesser 
  computer, a compromise in a clamshell case. But no longer — my 
  Thunderbolt-equipped MacBook Pro is, without doubt, the most 
  powerful computer I’ve ever used. So do I really need a desktop 
  computer any longer? I like the larger screen, and find having a 
  mouse or trackpad next to a full-sized keyboard a convenient and 
  comfortable way to work. So why not sell the iMac for parts, and 
  make the MacBook Pro my main computer?

  Apple’s new 27-inch Thunderbolt Display offers an interesting 
  possibility. For a decent chunk of cash (NZ$1,649), albeit less than 
  the cost of a new iMac (NZ$2,799), I could buy a new display and use 
  it as a docking station for the MacBook Pro. I’d have access to my 
  couple of terabytes of external storage when I was working at my 
  desk, and still have a laptop to work on at school or whenever I was 
  away from my office. 

  Realistically, do I need two computers, a laptop and a desktop? For 
  years, I had only one or the other; it’s only since 2008 that 
  I’ve had the luxury of both. The power of my laptop, when I’m 
  using it as a laptop, is largely redundant — Microsoft Word, 
  Safari, Mail, and QuickTime Player are its main duties, with the odd 
  bit of Skype to talk with my family back in England. 

  So maybe the Thunderbolt Display is a viable option. I get a screen 
  roughly the size of Liechtenstein, a simple one-cable docking 
  solution, and the productivity boost of dual monitors, a feature I 
  first came to love in the mid-1990s when I wrote my master’s 
  dissertation (about the linguistic features of email, with one Adam 
  Engst among the primary sources) on a PowerBook 1400 connected to 
  the 13-inch AppleColor RGB display.

  However, the approach isn’t without its flaws, not the least of 
  which is that NZ$1,649 I’d have to cough up for the Thunderbolt 
  Display. Plus, although I’m sure I’d adapt, it feels fussy to 
  have to plug the MacBook Pro into the Thunderbolt Display regularly, 
  at least in comparison to just sitting down at the iMac. One 
  possible workaround that I might try is using software like 
  ScreenRecycler or Air Display to turn my iMac into an external 
  monitor for the MacBook Pro. It would still be annoying if its power 
  supply shut off while it was acting as a display, but at least I 
  wouldn’t lose any work.

<http://www.screenrecycler.com/ScreenRecycler.html>
<http://avatron.com/apps/air-display>


**Next Steps** -- Buying a new Mac is not a decision one makes without 
  a significant degree of contemplation and consideration. My days of 
  near-unlimited tech funds are long gone, and so I have to weigh no 
  end of issues. I’ve managed to whittle them down to two possible 
  paths. 

  Financial constraints tell me that the smart move is to connect an 
  old display to my Mac mini, and use it as my desktop machine, 
  repurposing the iMac as my server (it could even double as a second 
  monitor for the Mac mini while it was serving Web pages). Or, if the 
  iMac proved unfixable, the Mac mini could probably continue to act 
  as my server even as I was using it as my main desktop Mac. As long 
  as the Ministry of Education is willing to let me lease my MacBook 
  Pro, I have my portability requirements sorted, too.

  On the other hand, my iMac, at six years old (that’s almost a 
  hundred in human years) really is nearing the end of its useful 
  life, especially if I don’t devote more time and money to 
  repairing its dodgy power supply. So perhaps I can justify replacing 
  it, at which point putting the Mac mini on TradeMe (a New Zealand 
  version of eBay) might be a good way of subsidising the purchase. 
  This would, of course, leave me without the full trio of desktop, 
  laptop, and server that I’ve so enjoyed having these many years. 
  And that in turn might be addressable by having a new iMac do double 
  duty as a desktop and server. Or by winning the lottery.

<http://www.trademe.co.nz/>

  All that said, I can’t ignore the allure of an elegant and 
  inexpensive repurposing of the machines I have, and bringing the Mac 
  mini into service as my desktop Mac currently feels like the best 
  option. But I’ve had so much fun contemplating all the 
  possibilities that I wanted to throw the entire puzzle open to 
  others as well. What would you do if you were in my shoes, with my 
  needs and limited budget? 

  [Steve McCabe is a Mac consultant, tech writer, and 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://stevemccabe.net/>


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://tidbits.com/e/12816#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://tidbits.com/t/12816>


TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 27 February 2012
----------------------------------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12820>

**iMac Wi-Fi Update 1.0** -- Apple has released the iMac Wi-Fi Update 
  1.0, which is recommended for all iMacs released since late 2009 
  that are running Mac OS X 10.7.3. The update resolves an issue that 
  can prevent an iMac from automatically connecting to a known Wi-Fi 
  network after waking from sleep. It’s available for direct 
  download, but it’s easier to get through Software Update, where it 
  will appear only if it’s necessary for your iMac. (Free, 25.81 MB)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1501>

  Read/post comments about iMac Wi-Fi Update 1.0.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12821#comments>


**Firmware Updates for iMac, Mac mini, MacBook Air, and MacBook Pro** 
  -- Apple has released a quartet of firmware updates for models 
  released in 2011: iMac EFI Firmware Update 1.9, Mac mini EFI 
  Firmware Update 1.6, MacBook Air EFI Firmware Update 2.4, and 
  MacBook Pro EFI Firmware Update 2.7. Each update improves 
  reliability when booting from the network, addresses issues with 
  HDCP authentication after rebooting, and fixes a problem with boot 
  device selection when a USB storage device is hot-plugged. As with 
  any firmware update, you should read the installation instructions 
  carefully before installing and avoid interrupting the update 
  process. 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, each 
  approximately 4 MB)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1498>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1500>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1497>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1499>

  Read/post comments about Firmware Updates for iMac, Mac mini, 
  MacBook Air, and MacBook Pro.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12813#comments>


**ScreenFlow 3.0.5** -- Telestream has released ScreenFlow 3.0.5, a 
  maintenance update to the screencast recording app that offers a 
  plethora of fixes and improvements. Among the highlights, the new 
  release resolves a problem with logging in to and publishing to 
  Vimeo, modifies the iPhone export preset for Mac OS X 10.7 Lion to 
  480 by 320, and fixes an issue that caused occasional errors when 
  recording PowerPoint presentations. The update includes many more 
  minor fixes and subtle improvements. ($99 new from Telestream or the 
  Mac App Store, free update, $29 upgrade from 2.x or 1.x, 14.1 MB)

<http://www.telestream.net/screen-flow/overview.htm>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/screenflow/id422025166?mt=12>
<http://www.telestream.net/screen-flow/upgrade.htm>

  Read/post comments about ScreenFlow 3.0.5.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12812#comments>


**Camino 2.1.1** -- The Camino Project has released version 2.1.1 of 
  its eponymous open-source Web browser, which includes a number of 
  updates and fixes. The release includes an upgraded Mozilla Gecko 
  rendering engine (1.9.2.27) and now blocks older versions of Adobe 
  Flash Player 10 and 11 (10.3.183.15 and 11.1.102.62 and earlier, 
  respectively) due to security issues. The update also includes 
  several tweaks for using AppleScript scripts, correctly checks for 
  the presence of a Java plug-in on Mac OS X 10.7 Lion, and provides 
  several other fixes. (Free, 18.5 MB, release notes)

<http://caminobrowser.org/>
<http://caminobrowser.org/releases/2.1.1/>

  Read/post comments about Camino 2.1.1.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12811#comments>


**PDFpen and PDFpenPro 5.7.2** -- Preparing for the release of OS X 
  10.8 Mountain Lion, Smile has released PDFpen 5.7.1 and PDFpenPro 
  5.7.1, both of which are updated with the Smile developer ID that is 
  used by Mountain Lion’s Gatekeeper security feature (see 
  “Gatekeeper Slams the Door on Mac Malware Epidemics,” 16 
  February 2012). The updates to the PDF manipulation tools also fix a 
  gradual shift in color when using comments and an issue with the 
  text tool when object stroke is set to none. A quick 5.7.2 release 
  fixes a potential issue with saving, primarily on 10.6 Snow Leopard, 
  and another issue with localization of page numbering. 
  ($59.95/$99.95 new with a 20-percent discount for TidBITS members, 
  free update, 47 MB)

<http://www.smilesoftware.com/PDFpen/>
<http://www.smilesoftware.com/PDFpenPro/>
<http://tidbits.com/article/12795>
<http://tidbits.com/member_benefits.html>

  Read/post comments about PDFpen and PDFpenPro 5.7.2.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12809#comments>




ExtraBITS for 27 February 2012
------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12819>

  Two quick bits for you this week — Serenity Caldwell’s 
  highlights of new features in OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion over at 
  Macworld, and Chris Foresman’s article at Ars Technica about the 
  new Mastered for iTunes section of the iTunes Store.


**System Change Highlights in OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion** -- While much 
  of the chatter over the upcoming release of OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion 
  has focused on the Gatekeeper security feature and unifying the Mac 
  and iOS experience, Macworld’s Serenity Caldwell delves into ten 
  less-heralded system changes, including multi-disk Time Machine 
  backup, draggable files in screen sharing, and a Dashboard overhaul.

<http://www.macworld.com/article/165496/2012/02/ten_exciting_system_changes_in_mountain_lion.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/12815#comments>


**Mastering the Audiophile Experience for iTunes** -- Apple recently 
  debuted a Mastered for iTunes section in the iTunes Store, where 
  audiophiles can discover releases that have been optimized for 
  playback within its 256 kbps AAC format. Chris Foresman at Ars 
  Technica delves into what goes into the mastering process for 
  compressed digital audio files, including a discussion with 
  Masterdisk Chief Engineer Andy VanDette (who recently completed a 
  remastering project for Rush’s back catalogue).

<http://arstechnica.com/apple/news/2012/02/mastered-for-itunes-how-audio-engineers-tweak-tunes-for-the-ipod-age.ars>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/12814#comments>


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