TidBITS#1136/30-Jul-2012
========================
  Issue link: <http://tidbits.com/issue/1136>


  Don’t say we haven’t been warning you! This issue focuses on OS X 10.8
  Mountain Lion, released last week. We have three new Take Control
  ebooks about upgrading to Mountain Lion, using Mountain Lion, and
  Apple Mail in Mountain Lion to help you get started, but if you want
  to read something a little shorter to whet your appetite, Jeff Carlson
  offers a long list of interesting details about Mountain Lion, Sharon
  Zardetto contributes a review of the new Safari 6, Adam Engst looks
  briefly at the OS X Mountain Lion Up-to-Date Program for those who
  purchased Macs recently, and Glenn Fleishman is particularly pleased
  to share the news that Software Base Station in Mountain Lion finally
  offers decent security. On the only unrelated note, Michael Cohen runs
  down Apple’s Q3 2102 financial report. Lastly, Agen Schmitz does
  yeoman service in covering Apple’s Mountain Lion update to the iWork
  suite, along with a slew of notable software updates, most of which
  also relate to Mountain Lion. They include Fantastical 1.3.2, Firefox
  14.0.1, Nisus Writer Pro 2.0.3 and Express 3.4.2, SuperDuper 2.7,
  Yojimbo 3.0.4, LaunchBar 5.3, Scrivener 2.3.1, MacBook Air SMC Updates
  1.5 and 1.6, BusyCal 1.6.4, Aperture 3.3.2, iPhoto ’11 9.3.2, and
  iMovie ’11 9.0.7.

Articles
    Get Mountain Lion for Free with Recently Purchased Macs
    iPads, iPhones Propel Apple’s $8.8 billion Q3 2012 Profit
    Three Take Control Books Prepare You for Mountain Lion
    Apple Updates iWork Suite for Mountain Lion
    Software Base Station in Mountain Lion Adds Modern Encryption
    OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion, the Little Details
    What’s New in Mountain Lion’s Safari 6
    TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 30 July 2012


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Get Mountain Lion for Free with Recently Purchased Macs
-------------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst: <ace@tidbits.com>, @adamengst
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13169>

  There’s always a lag between when Apple releases a new version of 
  Mac OS X and when Macs start shipping with it. To address that, 
  Apple has long made free updates available to those who buy a Mac 
  after a certain date, and this is once again true of OS X 10.8 
  Mountain Lion, via the OS X Mountain Lion Up-to-Date Program.

<http://www.apple.com/osx/uptodate/>
<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-07/Up-to-Date-Program.png>

  If you purchased a new Mac between 11 June 2012 and 25 July 2012, 
  you must enter your purchase details by 24 August 2012 to claim your 
  free upgrade to Mountain Lion, normally $19.99. Apple has a separate 
  link on the Up-to-Date Program page for those who buy a Mac that 
  doesn’t come with Mountain Lion on or after 26 July 2012. In this 
  second case, you must apply within 30 days of your purchase.

  The Up-to-Date Program also applies to the recent purchase of any 
  Mac server that ships with Mac OS X 10.7 Lion Server — you can 
  apply to get both a free copy of Mountain Lion and a free copy of OS 
  X Server, which is normally a $19.99 add-on from the Mac App Store. 
  Scroll down on the Up-to-Date Program page to find the OS X Server 
  offer.

  Discussion on TidBITS Talk suggests that Apple will send email 
  containing the necessary codes to redeem in the Mac App Store, but 
  that it may take up to 72 hours for them to arrive.

<http://talk.tidbits.com/10-8-via-Up-to-Date-Program-td4655232.html>


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iPads, iPhones Propel Apple’s $8.8 billion Q3 2012 Profit
---------------------------------------------------------
  by Michael E. Cohen: <mcohen@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13146>

  Apple has reported slightly lower-than-expected profits for many of 
  its products during its Q3 2012 time period. With revenues of $35 
  billion and net profits of $8.8 billion ($9.32 per diluted share), 
  the company’s revenues are up 22.4 percent compared to the 
  year-ago quarter (see “Apple Reports Q3 2011 Record Financial 
  Results,” 19 July 2011). Although the results disappointed 
  analysts, who had expected even higher profits, and drove Apple’s 
  share price lower in after-hours trading, Apple did record its 
  highest June quarter earnings ever. 

<http://www.apple.com/pr/library/2012/07/24Apple-Reports-Third-Quarter-Results.html>
<http://tidbits.com/article/12351>

  During the quarter, Apple sold 4 million Macs, a 2 percent increase 
  over last year, compared to a decline in PC sales during the 
  quarter. This is the 26th consecutive quarter that Mac sales have 
  outperformed competitors in the PC market. Moreover, according to 
  Apple management during the call with analysts after results were 
  announced, Mac sales would have been higher in the quarter if the 
  recently released Macs like the MacBook Pro with Retina Display had 
  come out earlier in the reporting period. In particular, portables 
  represented about 75 percent of Mac education sales.

  Though iPod sales continue their slow decline in a saturated market, 
  the decline was less than expected, with 6.8 million sold; analysts 
  had predicted 5.9 million in iPod sales.

  iPhone sales increased 28 percent over the year-ago quarter with 26 
  million sold (analysts had predicted 29 million), bringing in $16.2 
  billion. Sales of the device to Fortune 500 companies more than 
  doubled. In the analyst call, both CEO Tim Cook and COO Peter 
  Oppenheimer pointed to “rumors and speculation” about new 
  products, but the lower-than-expected iPhone sales figures can also 
  be attributed to Apple’s established timeline of iPhone releases. 
  It’s also impressive that 26 million iPhones were sold, even with 
  the expectation that a new iPhone is likely to appear in the next 
  three months; the iPhone 4S arrived in October 2011.

  iPad sales continued to shine, with 17 million sold as compared to 
  9.2 million sold in the same quarter last year. iPad sales brought 
  in $9.2 billion in revenue. Sales of iPads to education purchasers, 
  especially the low-cost model, were high: iPads outsold Macs in 
  education by a two to one ratio. Apple’s recent refocusing on 
  education was also reflected in the 14 million downloads of the 
  educationally oriented iTunes U app.

  Apple TV still remains “a hobby,” said Cook, with 1.3 million 
  sold during the quarter; 4 million of the devices have been sold 
  this fiscal year. Cook said that Apple “continue(s) to pull the 
  string to see where it takes us. We’re not ones to keep around 
  products we don’t believe in.”

  Overall, Apple sold 45 million iOS devices during the quarter, which 
  is almost 11 percent of the 410 million iOS devices that have been 
  sold since Apple started making them. This should please developers, 
  who have received a total $5.5 billion from App Store sales since 
  inception. The iTunes Store (which includes music and video in the 
  iTunes Store, apps in App Store and Mac App Store, and books in the 
  iBookstore) accounted for $1.8 billion in sales this quarter.

  The retail Apple Stores saw slightly increased sales year over year, 
  bringing in $4.1 billion in revenue. Once again, about 50 percent of 
  the sales through the retail stores were to first time Apple buyers.

  Apple ended the quarter with $117.2 billion in cash ($81 billion of 
  which was held offshore), and, in an announcement that should please 
  stockholders if not analysts, said that a quarterly dividend of 
  $2.65 per share would be paid out on 16 August 2012 (see “Apple to 
  Pay Quarterly Dividends and Repurchase Stock,” 19 March 2012). 
  Future dividend amounts and dates will be announced at the same time 
  as quarterly results from now on.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12875>

  All in all, even in the face of a strong dollar (resulting in lower 
  international revenues), even with the anticipated release of the 
  next iPhone adversely affecting sales of the current model, and 
  despite the overenthusiastic analyst expectations, it was yet 
  another exceptional quarter for Apple.


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://tidbits.com/e/13146#comments>
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Three Take Control Books Prepare You for Mountain Lion
------------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst: <ace@tidbits.com>, @adamengst
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13148>
  4 comments

  Now that Apple’s OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion has left its cage and is 
  prowling toward the hard drives and SSDs of millions of Mac users, 
  we’re pleased to announce that we’ve kept up the tradition we 
  started with 10.3 Panther and maintained through every subsequent 
  big cat: releasing essential ebooks simultaneously with the new 
  operating system.

  This year we have three Take Control ebooks to help Mac users make 
  Mountain Lion purr: Joe Kissell’s “Take Control of Upgrading to 
  Mountain Lion,” Matt Neuburg’s “Take Control of Using Mountain 
  Lion,” and Joe’s “Take Control of Apple Mail in Mountain 
  Lion.” Available individually and in various discounted bundles, 
  these three books provide Mac users with the essential information 
  they need to install Mountain Lion, master its new and revised 
  features, and make use of the latest refinements in what is probably 
  Mac OS X’s most-used application, Apple Mail.


**Upgrade to Mountain Lion** -- The latest entry in Joe Kissell’s 
  long-running Upgrading series, “Take Control of Upgrading to 
  Mountain Lion,” takes users through the steps that will result in 
  the optimal installation of Mountain Lion for them, whether they are 
  upgrading from Leopard, Snow Leopard, or Lion. Nor are those 
  migrating from older, incompatible Macs left out: Joe provides the 
  best methods for moving from an old Mac to a new Mountain Lion Mac. 
  The $15, 168-page ebook provides up-to-the-minute guidance for those 
  who are impatient to take the upgrade plunge, and is a free upgrade 
  for those who bought the 1.0 version (look for email from us, or 
  click the “access extras related to this ebook” link in the 
  “About This Book” chapter).

<http://tid.bl.it/tco-upgrading-mountain-lion-tb>


**Use Mountain Lion** -- Once they’ve upgraded or migrated to 
  Mountain Lion, Mac users can turn to Matt Neuburg’s “Take 
  Control of Using Mountain Lion,” which takes them on an insightful 
  journey through Mountain Lion’s features and idiosyncrasies. Matt 
  helps users decide what they want out of Mountain Lion and then 
  explains how they can get it. As he has for the other books in his 
  Customizing/Using Mac OS X series, Matt brings a keen eye and a 
  razor wit to his exploration of Mountain Lion’s capabilities, 
  whether they are important system-wide additions, such as 
  Notifications, Gatekeeper, Voice Dictation, and AirPlay Mirroring, 
  or fundamental changes, such as Mountain Lion’s new “modern 
  document model” and how it gives you three ways to save documents: 
  the old way, the new way, and the new way with iCloud. The $15, 
  204-page ebook (free to those who purchased the pre-order 1.0 
  version) compiles key information about Mountain Lion that will help 
  both those familiar with Lion and those making the jump from a 
  pre-Lion system.

<http://tid.bl.it/tco-using-mountain-lion-tb>


**Master Mountain Lion Mail** -- Rounding out the trio of Mountain 
  Lion releases is Joe’s “Take Control of Apple Mail in Mountain 
  Lion.” This title, the latest in a series that stretches back to 
  10.3 Panther, gives users a thorough guide to Apple Mail’s 
  sometimes hidden and occasionally surprising features. Drawing upon 
  his extensive knowledge of Mail, Joe shows users how to adapt Mail 
  to their needs, whether they are integrating Mail with Gmail, using 
  search tokens and Boolean searches, exploiting the new VIP 
  mailboxes, constructing powerful smart mailboxes, using encryption, 
  canning spam, or managing Mail notifications. Available for $15, the 
  143-page ebook is by far the most comprehensive resource about Apple 
  Mail available.

<http://tid.bl.it/tco-apple-mail-mountain-lion-tb>

  Each of these books stands on its own, of course, but we’ve also 
  designed them to work together, and because of that, we’re 
  offering two discounted bundles: a $5-off “Two to Tango” bundle 
  that brings together Joe’s “Upgrading” and Matt’s 
  “Using” ebooks for only $25, and a 30-percent-off “Ménage à 
  Mountain Lion” bundle that provides all three Mountain Lion ebooks 
  for $31.50 instead of $45 (save $13.50). And of course, TidBITS 
  members save 30 percent on all Take Control orders.

<http://tid.bl.it/mountain-lion-duo-tb>
<http://tid.bl.it/mountain-lion-trio-tb>

  Finally, remember that owners of either “Take Control of Upgrading 
  to Mountain Lion” or “Take Control of Using Mountain Lion” and 
  TidBITS members are invited to join us live for an upcoming online 
  TidBITS Presents session about Mountain Lion. If you miss the live 
  event, you can still watch later. For details, see “TidBITS 
  Presents “Upgrading to and Using Mountain Lion”” (16 July 
  2012), and check your email, since we’ve already sent schedule 
  details to invitees once and will do so again on the day of the 
  presentation.

<http://tidbits.com/member_benefits.html>
<http://tidbits.com/article/13123>


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Apple Updates iWork Suite for Mountain Lion
-------------------------------------------
  by Agen G. N. Schmitz: <agen@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13149>
  1 comment

  To complement the release of its latest big cat into the wild, Apple 
  has updated its iWork suite of productivity apps to version 9.2, as 
  well as individual apps purchased through the Mac App Store (Keynote 
  5.2, Numbers 2.2, and Pages 4.2). The updates are focused on 
  bringing support for Mountain Lion’s Documents in the Cloud 
  feature, which enables you to store files in iCloud and 
  automatically keep them synced across any Mac or iOS device that is 
  linked to your iCloud account (and has the appropriate app 
  installed). Accordingly, the iOS versions of Keynote, Numbers, and 
  Pages have also been updated to version 1.6.1.

<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/keynote/id409183694?mt=12>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/numbers/id409203825?mt=12>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/pages/id409201541?mt=12>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/keynote/id361285480?mt=8>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/numbers/id361304891?mt=8>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/pages/id361309726?mt=8>

  The shift to Documents in the Cloud also puts the final nail in the 
  coffin of iWork.com (see “Apple Finally Puts iWork.com Out of Its 
  Misery,” 12 March 2012), which is scheduled for closure on 31 
  July, 2012. If you have any documents saved at iWork.com, Apple 
  recommends that you sign into the site and download all files to 
  your computer.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12860>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT5042>

  In addition to iCloud compatibility, the iWork updates can now use 
  Mountain Lion’s Dictation feature, and they’ve been enhanced to 
  take advantage of the MacBook Pro with Retina Display. All updates 
  are free and require at least Mac OS X 10.7.4, though you’ll need 
  to be running Mountain Lion in order to use the Documents in the 
  Cloud and Dictation features. The iWork update weighs in at 317.7 MB 
  via Software Update, or 302 MB via direct download from Apple’s 
  Support Web site. If you purchased the apps individually, you can 
  download the updates from the Mac App Store.

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1563>


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Software Base Station in Mountain Lion Adds Modern Encryption
-------------------------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman: <glenn@tidbits.com>, @glennf
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13158>
  7 comments

  For years, I have been railing against a security flaw in Internet 
  Sharing in Mac OS X. This service, found in the Sharing preference 
  pane, lets you turn a Mac into a router, sharing access from one 
  network interface (like Ethernet) to another (such as Wi-Fi). It’s 
  a basic feature with no options except for the way in which Wi-Fi is 
  shared to other devices. In OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion, Apple has 
  finally upgraded a lingering bit of legacy software that supported 
  only an old, broken security method. This older technology could 
  expose you to risk in public places or if you used it to connect 
  devices to the Internet on your home network.

  When you share from a method other than Wi-Fi (select the adapter 
  from the Share Connection From pop-up menu), a Wi-Fi Options button 
  becomes active. Click it, and you see the same setup that’s been 
  in place for nearly a decade. Pick a network name, choose a channel, 
  and opt for a security method (including “None”). 

  10.7 Lion added the option to select channels 36, 40, 44, and 48, 
  all of which are in the 5 GHz band, and can be connected to with 
  802.11n dual-band devices. Because the iPhone and iPod touch don’t 
  support the 5 GHz band (although the iPad does), using 5 GHz isn’t 
  always advisable, but it’s a less-crowded chunk of spectrum, and 
  thus nice to have as an option. I choose 5 GHz when I’m sharing to 
  other people with laptops nearby. I know some people without an 
  AirPort base station rely on Internet Sharing over Wi-Fi in their 
  homes, too, to avoid the expense of buying a physical base station.

  But Internet Sharing’s security options were left firmly mired in 
  the 1990s until Mountain Lion. For years, Apple offered only 40-bit 
  and 128-bit WEP (Wired Equivalent Privacy). WEP was the original 
  “link-layer” encryption built for 802.11b, the first widespread 
  wireless local area networking protocol put into use, starting in 
  1999. WEP had a lot of compromises, partly because of encryption 
  export restrictions at the time and partly to accommodate the 
  minimal computational power available in router-sized devices. WEP 
  was shown to be thoroughly broken by about 2003, and subsequent 
  years have brought tools that can extract a WEP key and see all the 
  traffic on a network in a matter of seconds.

  WEP was replaced by 802.11i, a much-improved security protocol that 
  was turned into something manufacturers could build and test against 
  as Wi-Fi Protected Access (WPA). An interim version, released in 
  2003, was called just “WPA” and could work with new 802.11g 
  devices (the latest standard at the time) and upgraded 802.11b 
  devices. WPA2, the full version of the 802.11i spec, started 
  appearing in 2004, and nearly every computer and Wi-Fi router sold 
  since 2003 shipped with WPA2 baked in or could be upgraded to WPA2. 
  (The original AirPort Base Station could not be upgraded even to 
  WPA, but the AirPort Extreme Base Station, released in early 2003, 
  supported WPA initially and was upgradable to WPA2.)

  The fact that anybody with free software can break into your 
  communications with nearly no effort may not worry you. Much of our 
  interaction over the Internet (whether via applications or through a 
  Web site) has a security overlay, although sometimes you must enable 
  a setting (as in Facebook and Twitter). But not being able to create 
  a fully secure network using Internet Sharing’s software base 
  station while in a public place, and therefore having to believe 
  that no one in the vicinity would ever attempt to snoop, is a 
  significant deterrent to using the feature. Those who don’t know 
  they’re at risk from using WEP are in an even worse position, 
  relying as they are on what they erroneously think of as a secure 
  method.

  Apple lagged on enhancing security in the software base station in 
  Internet Sharing for internal reasons: the company simply didn’t 
  devote sufficient resources to this part of Mac OS X even while it 
  pushed the message elsewhere that we should all be using WPA2. 
  It’s not that hard, and open-source software used in Linux works 
  with many generations of Wi-Fi chips. 

  There’s another reason to want this change, though, too. 802.11n 
  cannot work using older security standards. If you enable WEP 
  security in Internet Sharing’s software base station in a 
  pre-Mountain Lion version of Mac OS X, an 802.11n-capable computer 
  has to step down to 802.11g or 802.11a for the connection, dropping 
  from 75–450 Mbps of raw speed all the way down to 54 Mbps! (This 
  also led to the situation where some devices, such as certain 
  Android phones, couldn’t connect to a Mac OS X software base 
  station because the base station contradictorily claimed it could 
  talk 802.11n and WEP at the same time. See my Macworld article that 
  explains the issue.)

<https://www.macworld.com/article/1158987/android_wep_base_station.html>

  This situation has at last been resolved in Mountain Lion, although 
  it’s not listed among the 200+ features that Apple trumpeted. The 
  Security pop-up menu in the Wi-Fi Options dialog now has just two 
  items: None and WPA2 Personal. Pick a passphrase of perhaps 10 to 12 
  characters, which can include letters, numbers, and punctuation, and 
  you’re good to go. If you must use WEP for backwards compatibility 
  with ancient hardware, hold down the Option key before selecting the 
  Security menu, and the two old WEP options appear, too. (The WPA2 
  Enterprise flavor, which uses a login account or other 
  authentication instead of a passphrase, requires an authentication 
  server, although Apple could implement it very easily using Mac OS X 
  accounts!)

<https://www.apple.com/osx/whats-new/features.html>
<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-07/wifi-options-with-wpa2.png>

  Note that this software base station feature in Internet Sharing is 
  distinct from the Wi-Fi menu’s Create Network feature. While these 
  may seem equivalent, they use different parts of the Wi-Fi spec. The 
  software base station is, quite literally, a base station in 
  software, using _infrastructure_ mode, which is how dedicated 
  hardware Wi-Fi routers also work. In that mode, a central base 
  station coordinates the activity for all clients. 

  The Create Network command in the Wi-Fi menu uses the alternative, 
  creating an _ad hoc_ network, in which each computer or device is a 
  peer, and network traffic passes among participants in the network. 
  Create Network offers just 40-bit and 128-bit WEP because WPA2 
  requires a central encryption host to manage keys, which can’t 
  exist in an ad hoc network. 

  Why create an ad hoc network with Create Network instead of using 
  Internet Sharing for an infrastructure network? Ad hoc networks once 
  made sense for simple workgroup connections – to enable Bonjour 
  among people working together, for instance — where software base 
  station was the right choice for sharing one connection to the 
  Internet. Now, because of the security difference, I recommend 
  always choosing Internet Sharing.

  It’s taken too long for Apple to make sure its Mac OS X users have 
  the same level of security that’s offered in hardware base 
  stations, but I’m glad I no longer have to rant about the issue. 


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OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion, the Little Details
-------------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson: <jeffc@tidbits.com>, @jeffcarlson
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13147>
  54 comments

  You might look at the list of new features in OS X 10.8 Mountain 
  Lion and think, “Ho hum, no big deal,” but a lot goes into a 
  major update to an operating system. Rather than write yet another 
  comprehensive review (see the work of our friends Jason Snell, John 
  Siracusa, and Matthew Panzarino for that), we want to touch on 
  features and shortcuts that you might not easily encounter on your 
  own — or that we think are so cool they deserve mention.

<http://www.apple.com/osx/whats-new/>
<http://www.macworld.com/article/1167804/mountain_lion_apple_gets_its_operating_systems_in_sync.html>
<http://arstechnica.com/apple/2012/07/os-x-10-8/>
<http://thenextweb.com/apple/2012/07/25/tnw-review-os-x-10-8-mountain-lion/>

  If you’re interested in Safari specifically, Sharon Zardetto has 
  written up notable changes in her article, “What’s New in 
  Mountain Lion’s Safari 6” (27 July 2012).

<http://tidbits.com/article/13153>


**Save As Saved from the Dustbin** -- In 10.7 Lion, applications that 
  used Auto Save lacked a Save As command. Although you could work 
  around this disappearance, many experienced Mac users found it 
  annoying (see “Subtle Irritations in Lion,” 17 August 2011, and 
  “The Problem with Lion’s Duplicate Command,” 27 October 2011). 
  Now in Mountain Lion, Save As is back! To access it, hold down the 
  Option key while you open the File menu.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12412>
<http://tidbits.com/article/12593>


**Auto Save Auto Locking** -- Under Lion, Auto Save included an auto 
  lock capability — after a period of time, such as two weeks, a 
  document would be locked automatically to prevent accidental editing 
  should you open it later. (Strangely, the preference to control this 
  behavior was in the Time Machine pane of System Preferences.) Apple 
  must have gotten the message that the nanny-esque feature was more 
  annoyance than improvement, so in Mountain Lion the automatic lock 
  feature is gone. You can still lock a document manually: position 
  the mouse pointer over a document’s title bar, click the little 
  triangle that appears, and choose Lock from the menu.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-07/ml_details_auto_lock.png>


**Turn Off All Notification Alerts and Banners at Once** -- Mountain 
  Lion’s new Notifications feature pops up alerts and banners for a 
  variety of actions, such as new messages in the Mail and Messages 
  apps, Game Center alerts, and Twitter mentions and direct messages. 
  If you’d prefer to hide them, you can do it in two ways:

* Click the Notification Center icon at the right edge of the menu 
  bar. Then — and this is a sneaky approach — drag the pane down 
  to reveal a hidden Show Alerts and Banners toggle switch. Click the 
  switch to Off, which pauses the notifications for a day.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-07/ml_details_notifications_disable.png>

* Much easier, and less sneaky, is to Option-click the Notification 
  Center icon to turn the alerts on or off.


**Make Notification Center Appear Reliably with a Trackpad** -- Apple 
  makes viewing Notification Center sound easy: “just swipe to the 
  left from the right edge of the trackpad.” After scrolling the 
  Safari window to the right repeatedly, we figured out that Apple 
  really means from the edge. Position your fingers _off the right 
  side_ of a Magic Trackpad or a laptop’s built-in trackpad, and 
  then swipe onto the pad’s surface.


**Access Accessibility Options Quickly** -- Press Command-Option-F5 
  and you’ll immediately see a pop-up dialog where you can turn on 
  and off core accessibility options, such as those for zooming and 
  VoiceOver.


**Incorporate Twitter Info into Your Contacts Database** -- With 
  built-in support for Twitter, Mountain Lion enables you to compose 
  and send tweets from the Share button in many applications, such as 
  Safari, as well as from Notification Center. But you can also pull 
  information from your Twitter account into the Contacts application 
  (formerly known as Address Book). Twitter photos and other 
  information available from the people you follow can be imported, 
  although not using the Contacts app itself.

  (Before you do this, we suggest you back up your Contacts data: 
  Choose File > Export > Contacts Archive.)

  Go to the Mail, Contacts & Calendars preference pane and click your 
  Twitter account (assuming you’ve already set it up). Then, click 
  the Update Contacts button. This capability will work for Facebook, 
  too, when support is added in a few months.


**Share System Audio to AirPlay Devices** -- In addition to the new 
  AirPlay Video Mirroring feature in Mountain Lion, which uses AirPlay 
  to stream your entire screen to a second- or third-generation Apple 
  TV and thence to an HDTV, AirPlay adds new audio-only options as 
  well. AirPlay has long enabled you to stream music from your Mac to 
  a device such as a second- or third-generation Apple TV or AirPort 
  Express, but before Mountain Lion you could stream only from an 
  application that had a specific AirPlay output feature. Now, in 
  Mountain Lion, you can also send your Mac’s system audio. 
  Option-click the Sound control in the menu bar, where you’ll see a 
  single (the first alphabetical, or the last used) AirPlay device 
  show up as an audio destination. You can find all available AirPlay 
  devices and additional audio AirPlay options in the Sound preference 
  pane under the Output tab. 

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-07/ml_details_airplay_audio.png>

  Speaking of AirPlay Video Mirroring, be aware that not all Mountain 
  Lion-capable Macs can take advantage of it. Specifically, you need:

* iMac (Mid 2011 or newer)
* Mac mini (Mid 2011 or newer)
* MacBook Air (Mid 2011 or newer)
* MacBook Pro (Early 2011 or newer)

<http://www.apple.com/osx/specs/>


**Share Items from Quick Look** -- When you select an item in the 
  Finder and press the Space bar to open a Quick Look preview, 
  you’ll find a handy Share button present, just like in Finder 
  windows.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-07/ml_details_share_quicklook.png>


**Tighter Screen Sharing** -- If you often use Screen Sharing to 
  control remote computers, a pair of improvements will save you a lot 
  of aggravation. When a Screen Sharing session is active, anything 
  you copy on your computer is automatically sent to the Clipboard of 
  the remote computer when you switch to its Screen Sharing window — 
  you don’t have to transfer the contents manually. 

  This option can be disabled by choosing Edit > Disable Shared 
  Clipboard, but that applies only to the current session. To make the 
  change permanent for future screen sharing sessions, choose Screen 
  Sharing > Preferences and disable the Use Shared Clipboard option.

  Also, you can now copy files from your computer to the other using 
  drag-and-drop.


**Semi-Smart Reminders** -- When you create an item in the Reminders 
  application, it can pick up context from what you type. For example, 
  typing “Pick up cake tomorrow at 4” creates a reminder of 
  “Pick up cake” scheduled for the next day at 4:00 PM. However, 
  the feature is still spotty — it doesn’t recognize geofencing, 
  and sometimes it doesn’t properly recognize the time that was 
  typed.


**Change the Dictation Shortcut** -- The default keyboard shortcut for 
  enabling the Dictation feature is to press the Fn (Function) key 
  twice. If you don’t like that, or your keyboard lacks the Fn key, 
  you can change it in the Dictation & Speech preference pane by 
  choosing an alternative from the Shortcut pop-up menu, or specifying 
  your own.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-07/ml_details_dictation_key.png>


**New Finder Progress Indicator** -- Is that large file copied yet? 
  You can quickly see how much has completed by observing the new 
  progress bar that appears on icons or next to file names during copy 
  operations. It appears in all Finder views.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-07/ml_details_progress_icon_view.png>


**New Desktop Wallpapers** -- It wouldn’t be a proper Mac OS X 
  update without a few new desktop wallpaper images added to the 
  Desktop & Screen Saver preference pane. Some of the photos have 
  their own interesting stories, too. The default desktop image, 
  Galaxy, was enhanced by Apple from a NASA photo, and in the process 
  a few galaxies disappeared.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-07/ml_details_wallpapers.png>
<http://www.theverge.com/2012/3/26/2903508/apple-removes-galaxies-mountain-lion-wallpaper>

  Apple doesn’t create all of the images in-house; read about how 
  the Zebra image used in the Retina MacBook Pro ads was shot.

<http://www.dpreview.com/articles/2709572707/zebras-on-the-macbook-pro-how-the-picture-was-taken>


**Create a Bootable Mountain Lion USB Drive** -- Having an external 
  method of installing Mountain Lion is essential, in the event that 
  your hard drive fails and you can’t access the Recovery HD 
  partition to perform disk repairs or reinstall the operating system. 
  If you ever created a bootable USB drive that contained the Lion 
  installer, the steps are nearly the same, but with one key change: 
  When you access the InstallESD.dmg disk image from the Mountain Lion 
  installation package, you must first mount that image before 
  restoring its data to the USB drive. Dan Frakes at Macworld has the 
  full rundown of steps required to create the drive.

<http://www.macworld.com/article/1167857/how_to_make_a_bootable_mountain_lion_install_drive.html>


**Easily Open Unsigned Apps** -- Mountain Lion’s Gatekeeper feature 
  is designed to prevent malware from running on your system (see 
  “Answering Questions about Sandboxing, Gatekeeper, and the Mac App 
  Store,” 25 June 2012). The default behavior is to allow any 
  application downloaded from the Mac App Store and any application 
  whose developer has received a Developer ID from Apple. In the 
  Security & Privacy preference pane, you can also choose whether to 
  allow only apps from the Mac App Store to be run, or allow any 
  application to run. The latter is how Mac OS has always acted, but 
  it’s the least secure option.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13071>

  It’s possible to keep your security level as it is, but also open 
  unsigned applications without going into the Security & Privacy 
  preference pane to change the system-wide setting. Right-click or 
  Control-click an application you’ve downloaded and choose Open 
  from the contextual menu. Mountain Lion asks you to confirm that you 
  want to open the file; click the Open button. This is necessary only 
  the first time you open an application — after that it’s 
  considered safe.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-07/ml_details_gatekeeper_dialog.png>


**Multi-volume Time Machine** -- Michael Rose at TUAW pointed out via 
  Twitter that one of his favorite features is Time Machine support 
  for multiple volumes. Instead of relying on a single hard disk 
  dedicated to Time Machine, you can rotate others into your backup 
  system to ensure a level of redundancy (and keep a drive offsite for 
  further safety).

<http://www.tuaw.com/2012/07/25/mountain-lion-101-multi-volume-time-machine/>


**More Tips** -- We’re sure that additional Mountain Lion tips and 
  tricks will be discovered now that the teeming masses of Mac users 
  can start poking and prodding at Apple’s latest big cat. If you 
  discover any good ones, let us know in a comment and we’ll see 
  about adding them to this article or a future one.


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://tidbits.com/e/13147#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://tidbits.com/t/13147>


What’s New in Mountain Lion’s Safari 6
--------------------------------------
  by Sharon Zardetto: <szardetto@szardetto.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13153>
  10 comments

  Safari has never been a revolutionary browser, even if, at its 
  debut, it outclassed others in terms of look-and-feel. Safari 6 
  merely continues the app’s evolutionary development, introducing a 
  few new traits, tweaking others, and totally dropping one that I 
  depended on. In all, it feels much more like a 5.5 version than a 
  leap to a new number.


**The Address-Search Combo Field** -- Let’s start with the most 
  obvious change, an overdue interface adjustment: there’s no 
  separate search field. Its functionality has been rolled into the 
  address field, which is now referred to with the catchy moniker 
  “address and search field.” (While Firefox’s multi-function 
  “Awesome Bar” grates on my nerves because it sounds like it was 
  named by an unimaginative teenager, Safari’s is worse — 
  apparently involving an unimaginative, overly pedantic adult.)

  Type something into that field and Safari plucks a Top Hit 
  suggestion from your history and bookmarks as well as providing a 
  list of matches; now, it also starts a Google search. The drop-down 
  menu lists its suggestions in categories, limiting the number in 
  each to keep the menu to a reasonable size. You can search your 
  history more thoroughly with a “Search for… in History” 
  command at the bottom of the menu. A nice, subtle touch: the menu 
  also includes a “Find… on this page” command that displays the 
  number of matches on the page. (The standard Command-L and 
  Command-Option-F shortcuts now both make the address field active; 
  you can still search within the page using the search bar invoked 
  with Command-F.)

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-07/Safari6-SearchMenu.png>

  The combined address and search field means we’ve lost the 
  previous search field’s special drop-down for changing your 
  default search engine; that option now requires a trip to Safari’s 
  General preference pane (where Google, Yahoo, and Bing remain the 
  only choices; without an extension or other hack, you can’t add 
  your own search engines, such as Google’s Browse By Name service; 
  see “Surf Faster in Google Chrome and Safari 5 with Browse By 
  Name,” 6 April 2011).

<http://tidbits.com/article/12099>

  There are many cosmetic changes in the new address field, resulting 
  in an overall much cleaner look. The http:// URL prefix doesn’t 
  show, and everything after the domain name is in gray text. The Add 
  Bookmark button has been detached from its left edge and promoted to 
  toolbar-button status (although it is not part of the default set). 
  The Reader button is integrated into the right edge of the field 
  instead of floating there loose — it’s merely dimmed when the 
  feature isn’t available for a Web page — and it no longer flips 
  to an RSS button because… well, I’ll get to that in a bit. No 
  progress gear spins while a page loads any more, and the blue 
  background that fills the field as a progress indicator takes a 
  distinctly different visual approach. Along with the new Show iCloud 
  Tabs and Share buttons, be sure to note the “Add…” notice in 
  the status bar in this picture; for the screenshot, the Shift key 
  was down, so a click on that link would add the page to the Reading 
  List.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-07/Safari6-window-callouts.png>


**View Multiple Tabs. (Sort Of.)** -- There’s finally a way to view 
  all the open tabs in a window: Tab View! That’s a sardonic 
  exclamation point, because while there is a way to view them, it’s 
  not a great way. It is, at least, slightly better than nothing. The 
  View > Show All Tabs command or toolbar button, or a pinch gesture, 
  puts all the tabbed pages into the body of the window, where you can 
  scroll horizontally to view them by swiping or using the left and 
  right arrow keys; the dots at the bottom of the window indicate how 
  many tabs there are, and clicking a dot also scrolls you to the 
  appropriate tab.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-07/Safari6-AllTabs.png>

  But you can see only one complete window at a time — the size of 
  the tabbed page changes with the size of the window — limiting the 
  usefulness of Tab View. It didn’t occur to anyone to use the Top 
  Sites visual approach, with multiple thumbnails showing?

  Another drawback of Tab View as implemented is the use of a pinch as 
  a way to trigger it: it quickly becomes a natural-feeling gesture, 
  but if you’ve pinched to zoom the text in the window and then zoom 
  back a few levels with more pinching, it’s easy to slip into Tab 
  View accidentally.


**Read Your Reading List Offline** -- The Reading List was born as 
  nothing more than a special kind of bookmark — you stored an 
  informative link to a page so you could go back to it later when you 
  had time. In Safari 6, it has matured into what it should have been 
  all along: a way to store the page itself, so you can read it later 
  when you’re offline. While Safari 6’s Reading List will sync 
  with your iOS device, Safari there still treats it as a list of 
  links at this point; it’s a good bet that offline reading will 
  appear in the version of Safari in iOS 6.


**Share and Share Alike** -- I hope you’re not tired of sharing 
  stuff, or having stuff shared with you, because there’s no end in 
  sight. The Share button — the arrow curving out of a box that’s 
  all over iOS — has made its way into many places in Mountain Lion, 
  including the Safari toolbar, where it provides a menu that’s 
  echoed in the new File > Share submenu. Stretching the definition of 
  “share,” the button’s menu starts with Add To Reading List and 
  Add Bookmark. Both menus provide Email This Page, Message, and 
  Twitter commands; a Facebook option is scheduled to be added in a 
  couple of months.


**Features-in-Waiting** -- Two items are ready for prime time, but 
  prime time’s not quite ready for them:

* iCloud Tabs: Open Safari tabs on one device and see them on your 
  other devices through the miracle of iCloud. But you’ll need a 
  mobile device running the yet-to-be-released iOS 6, or a second Mac 
  with Mountain Lion on it, for this particular miracle to occur. I 
  have neither at this point, so I’ll just point out that this 
  feature is part and parcel of Safari bookmark syncing, and that you 
  access it by clicking the new Show iCloud Tabs button in the 
  toolbar.

* Notifications: We have a chicken-and-egg problem here. Not many 
  sites use the HTML5 notifications capability. When they do, you’ll 
  be able to allow them to send alerts to Notification Center, and 
  manage those permissions through Safari’s Notifications preference 
  pane.


**RSS RIP** -- I’d like to rant about Apple’s having pulled RSS 
  support from Safari, but “rant” implies something a little 
  lengthier (along the lines of a Louis Black tirade on The Daily 
  Show) than what I have to say, which is: What the _heck_ were they 
  _thinking_? RSS support has also been pulled from Apple Mail, 
  meaning you must use a third-party app to handle RSS feeds on your 
  Mac. I don’t use RSS for lots of sites, but for the sites I 
  subscribe to, I use it a lot, so I’m quite… _miffed_ at this 
  downgrade. (Hmm… perhaps Apple was thinking that Notification 
  Center could display RSS feeds?)


**New Preference Panes** -- Web site sign-ins are the chief cause of 
  password proliferation, and concomitant hair-pulling when you lose 
  track of which one goes where. If you don’t use a third-party 
  password manager like 1Password or LastPass (which work in multiple 
  browsers, if you ever switch back and forth), the Mac’s Keychain 
  Access utility has been the crutch to get you through. But now 
  Safari provides a Passwords preference pane that gives you faster 
  (it’s right there) and easier (it’s a straightforward list) 
  access to your Web site usernames and passwords. There’s no 
  password hint option as there is in Keychain Access, but entering 
  your system password temporarily displays all the passwords in the 
  list, so I don’t miss the hints.

  The Privacy preference pane lets you remove or block cookies, limit 
  a site’s access to location services, and tell (or “ask”) 
  sites not to track you.

  As mentioned above, the Notifications preference pane enables you to 
  manage permissions for Web site notifications. It also provides a 
  shortcut to the Notifications pane in System Preferences.

  The Appearance preference pane is gone — no more identifying your 
  default monospaced and proportional fonts and their sizes; it is, 
  after all, the twenty-first century. If you want to override a 
  site’s font choices, you must create a CSS style sheet and specify 
  it through the Advanced preference pane. The Default Encoding menu 
  that used to live in Appearance has also moved to the Advanced pane.


**Mac OS X Compatibility** -- While Safari 6 is installed along with 
  OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion, it’s also compatible with 10.7 Lion. For 
  the latter, use Software Update to download the latest version. Lion 
  users won’t get Mountain Lion-level features such as sharing, 
  notifications, and iCloud Tabs; they won’t get Tab View, either. 
  10.6 Snow Leopard and earlier are stuck with Safari 5.

  Oh, and while we’re on the topic of operating system 
  compatibility, Apple confirmed to Macworld that Safari 6 is not 
  available for Windows, and it’s easy to assume that it never will 
  be. Safari 5.1.7 remains available for Windows users who can find it 
  on Apple’s Support site.

<http://www.macworld.com/article/1167904/safari_6_available_for_mountain_lion_and_lion_but_not_windows.html>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1531>


**A Few More Things…** -- Some quick observations and tips, and if 
  you’ve run across any other neat stuff in Safari 6, please leave a 
  comment!

* There’s a new visual effect when you’re downloading — the item 
  jumps to the Downloads folder in the Dock rather than to the 
  Downloads button in the toolbar. Remove the Downloads folder from 
  the Dock, and the jump target reverts to Safari’s Downloads 
  button.

* Shift-click a link to send the page to the Reading List; 
  Option-click a link to download it.

* Pressing the Delete key no longer triggers the Back command, 
  displaying the previous page in the window. (Some people considered 
  that convenient, but I always felt it was a bit of an interface sin. 
  Venial, but a sin nonetheless.) Use the alternatives of Command-left 
  arrow or Command-[ if you want a keyboard option instead of using 
  the Previous button.

* You can edit bookmark names directly in the Bookmarks bar either 
  when you first drag them there or afterward, by a click-and-hold on 
  the name until it’s activated for editing. Super convenient!

* Installing an extension from a downloaded file instead of through 
  the Extension Gallery is slightly streamlined. Double-clicking the 
  file switches you to Safari with its single confirmation dialog 
  instead of going through two such dialogs. (The rest of the 
  extension management interface is still half-hearted at best.)

* The View Source command that used to be in the View menu now exists 
  only in the Develop menu, which is still hidden until you turn it on 
  in the Advanced preference pane. You can view the source code — 
  now colorized for easier reading — either in a separate window or 
  in a split pane; the split-pane view offers several tools that 
  should make troubleshooting your page design a little easier.

* The Email This Page command — from the File > Share submenu or the 
  Share button’s menu — seems to limit you to emailing the page 
  instead of only the link. Pressing Shift, however, changes the Share 
  submenu item to Email Link To This Page (or you can use 
  Command-Shift-I). You can’t change the command in the Share 
  button; however, a Control-click on the URL in the address field 
  provides a menu from which you can select Share > Email, which gives 
  you only the link. In addition, once you’re in Apple Mail with the 
  page or the link in the message window, you can change your mind 
  about how you want to send the information. The nifty Send Web 
  Content As menu in the bar just above the message area lets you 
  choose to send the information as a page, a link, a PDF, or as 
  “Reader” (formatted in the body of the message the way an 
  article is formatted in Safari’s Reader).


**Version Envy or Pragmatism?** -- At this point, Web browsers are a 
  mature class of software — note that none of the three major 
  browsers has any notable feature that the others lack. Safari 6 
  seems to have earned its version number largely through its 
  inclusion in Mountain Lion; from a feature standpoint, it rates no 
  more than a 5.5, and that mainly because we get an offline Reading 
  List. 

  But it’s also possible that Apple wanted to avoid falling too far 
  behind Firefox, whose version number Mozilla has artificially jacked 
  up to 13.0.1 (whoops, that’s now 14.0.1!) to compete with 
  Microsoft’s Internet Explorer 10 and Google Chrome, which never 
  advertises its version number (understandably, since it’s 
  currently at 20.0.1132.57 on the Mac). 

  Or perhaps we assign too much importance to version numbers these 
  days. They’ve historically been a signal of how significant an 
  upgrade is deemed to be, but the truth is that without them, it’s 
  difficult to be accurate when talking about changes or 
  troubleshooting problems (“the new iPad,” anyone?).


  [Sharon Zardetto wrote several dozen Mac books when they were still 
  produced only on paper. She has since moved to ebooks, with her most 
  recent titles being “Take Control of Safari 5” (which is in the 
  process of being revised for Safari 6; everyone who purchases now 
  will get a free upgrade) and “Take Control of Spotlight for 
  Finding Anything on Your Mac.” Follow her on Twitter at 
  @SharonZardetto.]

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/safari?pt=TB1136>
<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/spotlight?pt=TB1136>
<http://twitter.com/SharonZardetto>


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://tidbits.com/e/13153#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://tidbits.com/t/13153>


TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 30 July 2012
------------------------------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff: <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13167>

**Fantastical 1.3.2** -- Flexibits has updated its Fantastical 
  calendar and reminders app to version 1.3.2, offering compatibility 
  with OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion and user interface enhancements for the 
  MacBook Pro with Retina Display. After adding support for both iCal 
  and iOS reminders in its previous version, Fantastical 1.3.2 adds 
  support for simple repeating reminders, improves performance for 
  those with thousands of reminders, and fixes a problem that occurred 
  when setting the next due date of certain reminders. The update also 
  fixes a potential problem for iCloud users who have a pre-MobileMe 
  account that was originally set up with mac.com. Normally priced at 
  $19.99, Flexibits is offering Fantastical at half price ($9.99) for 
  a limited time from both its Web site and the Mac App Store. ($19.99 
  new, free update, 11 MB, release notes)

<http://flexibits.com/fantastical>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/fantastical/id435003921?mt=12>
<http://flexibits.com/fantastical_releasenotes>

  Read/post comments about Fantastical 1.3.2.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13165#comments>


**Firefox 14.0.1** -- Adding a bit of confusion to its already 
  inscrutable release pattern, Mozilla has released the latest update 
  to Firefox as version 14.0.1 — even though there wasn’t a 
  version 14.0. According to Ghacks.net, this was done to keep both 
  the Mac desktop and Android mobile versions of the Web browser 
  synchronized with the same release numbering. Offering a variety of 
  security and privacy improvements, the desktop browser now uses 
  HTTPS by default when searching Google to improve security and 
  privacy and adds a “click-to-play” option that can block the 
  automated display of a plug-in (such as Adobe Flash) until the 
  content is specifically activated by a click. Additionally, it 
  improves the way a Web site’s verified identity icon is displayed 
  in the Awesome Bar (i.e., the address field) to indicate whether or 
  not the site uses SSL encryption or has an Extended Validation 
  certificate. Other additions include auto-completion for URLs typed 
  into the Awesome Bar, a native full-screen mode in Mac OS X 10.7 
  Lion and later, a new API to prevent your display from sleeping, 
  text-transform and font-variant CSS improvements for Greek and 
  Turkish localizations, and support for a Pointer Lock API that 
  provides enhanced mouse control for applications (such as 
  first-person games). (Free, 31 MB, release notes)

<http://www.mozilla.org/firefox/fx/#desktop>
<http://www.ghacks.net/2012/07/17/firefox-14-0-1-available-why-there-wont-be-a-firefox-14-0-release/>
<http://www.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/14.0.1/releasenotes/>

  Read/post comments about Firefox 14.0.1.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13164#comments>


**Nisus Writer Pro 2.0.3 and Express 3.4.2** -- Nisus Software has 
  released updates to both its word processing apps — Nisus Writer 
  Pro 2.0.3 and Nisus Writer Express 3.4.2. Both apps are code-signed 
  using an Apple Developer ID for compatibility with OS X 10.8 
  Mountain Lion’s Gatekeeper security feature, and both now require 
  Mac OS X 10.6.6 or later. Additionally, both fix an issue where a 
  splash screen stayed visible after Nisus Writer launched and fix a 
  possible hang when switching to the stylesheet view while running 
  Mountain Lion. Plus, both the Pro and Express apps improve 
  hyphenation for many non-English languages (including Danish, 
  French, German, Italian, Polish, Portuguese, Spanish, and more).

<http://nisus.com/pro/>
<http://nisus.com/Express/>

  Amongst the voluminous changes, Nisus Writer Pro 2.0.3 fixes a 
  variety of issues related to creating a PDF and printing (including 
  incorrect page numbers appearing in the generated TOC, index, or 
  cross-references), ensures that floating images won’t go missing 
  when exporting to HTML or EPUB, preserves page breaks in exported 
  EPUBs, and ensures that chapter headings trigger a page/chapter 
  break in an EPUB. Similarly, Nisus Writer Express 3.4.2 fixes some 
  of its own issues with creating PDFs and printing (such as errant 
  white space near the bottom of pages) plus a problem with some 
  semibold font faces being converted to full (or “faked”) bold. 
  Note that neither the Mac App Store versions of Nisus Writer Pro or 
  Nisus Writer Express have been updated to their most recent versions 
  as of this writing. (For Nisus Writer Pro: $79 new, free update, 137 
  MB, release notes. For Nisus Writer Express: $45 new, free update, 
  37.7 MB, release notes.)

<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/nisus-writer-pro/id454320900?mt=12>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/nisus-writer-express/id470342969?mt=12>
<http://nisus.com/update/pro.php>
<http://nisus.com/pro/releasenotes/releasenotes203.php>
<http://nisus.com/update/express.php>
<http://nisus.com/Express/releasenotes/releasenotes342.php>

  Read/post comments about Nisus Writer Pro 2.0.3 and Express 3.4.2.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13163#comments>


**SuperDuper 2.7** -- Shirt Pocket has released version 2.7 of its 
  SuperDuper drive-cloning and backup software with support for the OS 
  X 10.8 Mountain Lion’s Gatekeeper security feature. Additionally, 
  the new release should start more quickly (even with unresponsive 
  network volumes) and copy files faster, and it improves the copying 
  of active files from apps that rapidly create and delete files 
  during a backup (which could cause some files to vanish from a 
  backup). The status window has been updated to show what’s going 
  on while larger files are being copied, diagnostics have been 
  improved to more accurately return errors when drives can’t be 
  read or written to, and local Time Machine snapshots 
  (.MobileBackups) are no longer copied to reduce backup failures. 
  SuperDuper has also been updated to support the latest version of 
  Growl (which also provides support for Mountain Lion’s 
  Notification Center). However, SuperDuper isn’t “fully 
  compatible” with Mountain Lion, as Shirt Pocket notes in its 
  announcement blog post that it couldn’t complete work for 
  supporting the automatic mounting of local volumes in time for this 
  release. SuperDuper 2.7 requires Mac OS X 10.4.11 or later (which 
  means it still supports both Intel- and Power PC-based Macs). (Free 
  for basic functionality, $27.95 for additional features, free 
  update, 3.2 MB)

<http://www.shirt-pocket.com/SuperDuper/SuperDuperDescription.html>
<http://www.shirt-pocket.com/blog/index.php/shadedgrey/comments/silence_is_golden_but_its_time_to_talk/>

  Read/post comments about SuperDuper 2.7.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13162#comments>


**Yojimbo 3.0.4** -- Bare Bones Software has released Yojimbo 3.0.4, a 
  maintenance update that adds no new features but instead fixes a 
  crash that occurred when displaying certain Web archives in OS X 
  10.8 Mountain Lion, a problem that prevented pairing with an iPad 
  running the Yojimbo iPad app, and a bug that caused drawing glitches 
  and crashes when displaying a PDF. The update also enables you to 
  choose a new export folder if the Sidekick export folder isn’t 
  available at launch or to turn Sidekick off completely, adjusts the 
  PDF importer to adhere to a “slightly less-strict” 
  interpretation of the PDF header format, and removes references and 
  mechanics related to MobileMe synchronization. ($38.99 new, free 
  update, 5.6 MB, release notes)

<http://www.barebones.com/products/yojimbo/>
<http://www.barebones.com/support/yojimbo/arch_yojimbo304.html>

  Read/post comments about Yojimbo 3.0.4.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13161#comments>


**LaunchBar 5.3** -- Objective Development has released LaunchBar 5.3, 
  offering improved compatibility with OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion 
  (including compliance with the Gatekeeper security feature). The 
  update improves access to 1Password bookmarks, tags, and folders 
  (which may require a new 1Password indexing rule), adds Growl 
  notifications for new events and reminders, makes a distinction 
  between reminders and calendar items, speeds up the sending of files 
  or text to contacts from your address book, and now indicates 
  whether an application’s recent documents list is located in 
  iCloud. LaunchBar offers built-in support for Apple Mail, Mailplane, 
  Microsoft Outlook, Postbox, and Sparrow, and your default email 
  client can either be chosen automatically or selected manually in 
  LaunchBar’s preferences. On the fix front, LaunchBar 5.3 addresses 
  issues related to indexing applications via Spotlight and indexing 
  contacts in Mountain Lion, plus it now displays phone numbers 
  labeled as “iPhone” as a mobile number. ($35 new with a 
  20-percent discount for TidBITS members, free update, 2.3 MB, 
  release notes)

<http://www.obdev.at/products/launchbar/>
<http://tidbits.com/member_benefits.html>
<http://www.obdev.at/products/launchbar/releasenotes5.html>

  Read/post comments about LaunchBar 5.3.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13160#comments>


**Scrivener 2.3.1** -- Literature and Latte has released Scrivener 
  2.3.1, offering a number of improvements that take advantage of some 
  of the new features in OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion. You can now easily 
  tweet your daily writing session goal via the Twitter icon in the 
  Project Targets panel, use Notification Center if Growl isn’t 
  installed (or force Scrivener to use Notification Center even with 
  Growl installed), and bring up a QuickReference or Quick Look panel 
  from the binder, corkboard, outliner, or synopsis search results 
  using Quick Look gestures (three-finger taps by default). 
  Additionally, the app has been code-signed to comply with the new 
  Gatekeeper security feature. The update also adds a new option for 
  saving KindleGen source files along with the .mobi file, and 
  improves the “Capitalize ‘i’” function. Among many other 
  fixes, the release works around a system bug that added extra 
  spacing above images when a line height multiple is applied, and 
  squashes a bug with new .doc, .docx, and .odt importers that could 
  cause a hang with certain files. It’s available in two versions 
  from the Literature and Latte Web site’s downloads page — one 
  for 10.6 Snow Leopard and later (also available from the Mac App 
  Store) and one for 10.4 Tiger and 10.5 Leopard. ($45 new from 
  Literature and Latte and the Mac App Store, free update, 30.4 MB 
  (32.5 MB for OS X 10.4/10.5 version), release notes)

<http://www.literatureandlatte.com/scrivener.php>
<http://www.literatureandlatte.com/download_mac.php>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/scrivener/id418889511?mt=12>
<http://www.literatureandlatte.com/scrivChangeList.php>

  Read/post comments about Scrivener 2.3.1.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13159#comments>


**MacBook Air SMC Updates 1.5 and 1.6** -- Apple has issued two System 
  Management Controller (SMC) updates for the MacBook Air — version 
  1.5 for models released in June 2012 and version 1.6 for models 
  released in 2011. Both updates enable Power Nap support when running 
  OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion, while the version 1.5 update for mid-2012 
  MacBook Air models also fixes several sleep and wake issues that 
  should improve overall stability. Version 1.6 (for mid-2011 models) 
  requires 10.8, while version 1.5 (for mid-2012 models) requires 
  10.7.4 or later. To ensure you get the firmware update for your 
  specific model, we recommend relying on Software Update. (Free, 
  698 KB/663 KB)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1558>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1560>

  Read/post comments about MacBook Air SMC Updates 1.5 and 1.6.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13157#comments>


**BusyCal 1.6.4** -- BusyMac has released BusyCal 1.6.4, which lands 
  just two days after the release of version 1.6.3. That update 
  provided support for the Gatekeeper security feature in OS X 10.8 
  Mountain Lion, as well as a few minor fixes (a dock icon redraw bug 
  on the MacBook Pro with Retina Display and a 403 error when syncing 
  an iCloud WebDAV calendar). It also added support for the Daylite 
  CalDAV server. Version 1.6.4 was released quickly to fix a 
  Gatekeeper code-signing bug that caused some installation errors. 
  ($49.99 new, free update, 6.7 MB, release notes)

<http://www.busymac.com/busycal/>
<http://www.busymac.com/busycal/releasenotes.html>

  Read/post comments about BusyCal 1.6.4.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13154#comments>


**Aperture 3.3.2** -- In addition to adding compatibility with OS X 
  10.8 Mountain Lion, Apple has updated Aperture to version 3.3.2 with 
  a smattering of improvements. The professional photo organizer now 
  enables you to sort projects and albums in the Library Inspector by 
  date (in addition to name and kind), and adds the capability for 
  Auto White Balance to correct color using Skin Tone mode (even when 
  Faces is disabled). The update also fixes an issue that affected 
  performance when entering or exiting Full Screen mode. ($79.99 new 
  in the Mac App Store, free update, 530 MB)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1561>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/aperture/id408981426?mt=12>

  Read/post comments about Aperture 3.3.2.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13152#comments>


**iPhoto ’11 9.3.2** -- Apple has released iPhoto ’11 9.3.2, a 
  small update that brings compatibility with the new sharing features 
  in OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion. In addition to performance and stability 
  improvements, the update now enables you to share photos via Twitter 
  as well as Messages, Mountain Lion’s replacement for iChat. 
  ($14.99 new from the Mac App Store, free update, 637 MB)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1562>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/iphoto/id408981381?mt=12>

  Read/post comments about iPhoto ’11 9.3.2.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13150#comments>


**iMovie ’11 9.0.7** -- Amidst an onslaught of updates geared toward 
  Mountain Lion, Apple has released iMovie ’11 9.0.7 with nary a 
  mention of the big cat. Instead, the update focuses on improving 
  overall stability with fixes for preventing a crash that could be 
  caused by third-party QuickTime components, previewing MPEG-2 video 
  clips in the Camera Import window, and not including audio when 
  importing MPEG-2 video clips from a camera. It also bundles in the 
  improvements — including support for the MacBook Pro with Retina 
  Display — found in the last update (see “iMovie ’11 9.0.6,” 
  13 June 2012). ($14.99 new from the Mac App Store, free update 
  through Software Update or the Mac App Store, 1.01 GB)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1566>
<http://tidbits.com/article/13068>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/imovie/id408981434?mt=12>

  Read/post comments about iMovie ’11 9.0.7.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13151#comments>


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