TidBITS#1142/17-Sep-2012
========================
  Issue link: <http://tidbits.com/issue/1142>


  Apple last week showed off the iPhone 5 and iOS 6, with both slated to
  appear in the real world this week. In specific, iOS 6 will ship on 19
  September 2012, with the iPhone 5 coming on 21 September 2012. We have
  all the details, along with how to work around Apple’s PO box-related
  ordering problems, a look at the new iPods that are due in October,
  Adam Engst’s fix for a wonky Mac App Store update error, and Glenn
  Fleishman’s explanation of how world travelers can pick the right
  iPhone 5 model. Jeff Porten wraps up the issue with a report from a
  security conference where cyber attacks are labeled “the biggest
  threat we face.” How should we react to such news? Notable software
  releases this week include DEVONthink and DEVONnote 2.4.2, PopChar X
  6.0.1, and iTunes 10.7.

Articles
    iOS 6 to Ship 19 September 2012
    Solving the App Store’s NSURLErrorDomain Error
    Change PO Box Billing Address to Order an iPhone
    iPhone 5: Taller, Faster, and More Pixels
    Apple Redesigns iPod touch, iPod nano, and iTunes
    Which iPhone 5 Lets You Roam Where You Want?
    Pondering Cybersecurity in the Real World
    TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 17 September 2012
    ExtraBITS for 17 September 2012


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iOS 6 to Ship 19 September 2012
-------------------------------
  by Tonya Engst: <tonya@tidbits.com>, @tonyaengst
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13251>
  1 comment

  During Apple’s press event to announce the iPhone 5, the company 
  showcased a few iOS 6 apps and confirmed plans to make the new iOS 6 
  mobile operating system available on 19 September 2012.

<http://www.apple.com/ios/>

  iOS 6 will run on the just-announced iPhone 5 and the 
  fifth-generation iPod touch (coming in October 2012), as well as on 
  the iPhone 3GS, 4, and 4S, the fourth-generation iPod touch, and the 
  iPad 2 and third-generation iPad.

  If you saw Apple’s June announcement of iOS 6 (see “Apple 
  Previews iOS 6 for Fall Release,” 11 June 2012), nothing about 
  Apple’s iOS 6 demo last week was especially surprising. Much of 
  the demo was devoted to showing the attractive new Maps app, which 
  is entirely redesigned and no longer uses Google’s mapping 
  service. It features audible turn-by-turn navigation, enhanced 
  zooming and panning with vector-based images, and Siri integration 
  for locating nearby services. (Your experience will vary depending 
  on which device you have: turn-by-turn navigation won’t work on 
  the iPhone 3GS and 4, and fourth-generation iPod touch, and Siri 
  isn’t available on the iPhone 3GS and 4, iPad 2, and 
  fourth-generation iPod touch.)

<http://tidbits.com/article/13056>
<http://www.apple.com/ios/maps/>

  Apple also noted that in iOS 6, Notification Center can post to 
  Twitter and Facebook; the Safari Web browser has a new fullscreen 
  landscape mode; with iCloud Tabs, iCloud can now list your open 
  Safari tabs among devices running iOS 6 or OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion; 
  and the VIP feature introduced in Mountain Lion’s version of Apple 
  Mail will make its way into the iOS 6 Mail app, and those VIP lists 
  can sync between devices. Siri remains in beta but has become more 
  capable: the service can now launch apps via voice, get sports 
  information, list movie times at nearby theaters, and post updates 
  to Facebook. In addition, the iTunes Store, App Store, and 
  iBookstore apps have been redesigned to make them easier to 
  navigate.

  Passbook, the only entirely new Apple app in iOS 6, will help you 
  organize and use digital coupons, gift cards, tickets, and airplane 
  boarding passes. The app uses 2D barcodes to encapsulate information 
  that can be scanned in order to, for example, redeem a coupon, show 
  purchased movie tickets, or board a plane.

<http://www.apple.com/ios/whats-new/#passbook>


  ----
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Solving the App Store’s NSURLErrorDomain Error
----------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst: <ace@tidbits.com>, @adamengst
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13259>
  15 comments

  All I really wanted to do was check the size of the iTunes 10.7 
  update for the TidBITS Watchlist item that I was editing, but the 
  App Store app wasn’t cooperating. (For those who haven’t run 
  into this in OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion yet, choosing Software Update 
  from the Apple menu no longer runs a separate Software Update 
  application; instead, App Store launches and shows the Updates 
  screen.) Instead of giving me the iTunes update, or even a sensible 
  error message, the App Store app displayed the thoroughly 
  inscrutable message “The operation couldn’t be completed. 
  (NSURLErrorDomain error -1100.)” As far as I can tell from 
  Apple’s developer documentation, this basically means that some 
  requested file doesn’t exist.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-09/App-Store-error.png>
<https://developer.apple.com/library/mac/#documentation/Cocoa/Reference/Foundation/Miscellaneous/Foundation_Constants/Reference/reference.html>

  After moaning about Apple’s uncharacteristically poor error 
  message on Twitter, I got a note from Dennis Wurster, a friend and 
  Mac consultant in Rochester, NY, saying that he’d solved the 
  problem by switching his DNS settings to use Google’s public DNS 
  servers (8.8.8.8 and 8.8.4.4). I’ve been using OpenDNS’s servers 
  (208.67.222.222 and 208.67.220.220) for some time now with no 
  problems (for a reason why, see “OpenDNS Blocks Flashback and 
  Other Threats,” 16 May 2012), but when I changed the order of my 
  DNS servers in the Network preference pane (select your current 
  network adapter, click Advanced, then click DNS) to put Google’s 
  public DNS servers at the top, the App Store app was able to find 
  and download the update with no problem. To avoid pointing the 
  finger of blame too specifically, the problem was not related to 
  using OpenDNS servers, since others reported experiencing it with 
  other DNS servers as well.

<https://developers.google.com/speed/public-dns/>
<http://tidbits.com/article/13006>
<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-09/DNS-server-view.png>

  Other people have had success with this trick as well, and Kevin 
  Bush reported back to me on Twitter that when he switched back to 
  his previous DNS servers after the App Store app found the iTunes 
  10.7 update, it could still see it (perhaps due to caching) but 
  couldn’t download it. In the comments, Mike Polinske also reported 
  that he had success with flushing the DNS cache manually using this 
  Terminal command:

      sudo killall -HUP mDNSResponder 

  In the end, I’m still quite uncertain as to how DNS is related to 
  this problem, but I hope that switching DNS servers or flushing the 
  DNS cache resolves it for anyone else experiencing it. 


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://tidbits.com/e/13259#comments>
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Change PO Box Billing Address to Order an iPhone
------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst: <ace@tidbits.com>, @adamengst
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13267>
  2 comments

  If you live in a rural part of the United States, you might use a 
  post-office box as your billing address, since it’s a more-secure 
  destination for important letters such as bills, and it can be 
  usually differentiated from a shipping address that you point at 
  your home or office, depending on what’s most convenient.

  But as TidBITS reader John Hinckley, who lives in a small town in 
  Vermont, pointed out to me, those who do rely on a PO box  may have 
  trouble ordering an iPhone from Apple, because Apple won’t ship to 
  PO boxes. The fact that you’re not shipping to such an address is 
  irrelevant because, at least in the case of the iPhone, Apple 
  reportedly picks up your AT&T billing address as the default 
  shipping address. Presumably, the same applies to Verizon Wireless 
  and Sprint customers in the United States; I imagine the situation 
  may vary in other countries.

<http://store.apple.com/us/help/shipping_delivery>
<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-09/Apple-shipping-policy.png>

  When John called the Apple Store to resolve the problem, the sales 
  rep said she was unable to help, but she had spoken to a number of 
  customers with the same problem. Luckily, he hit upon a workaround, 
  which was to change his billing address on the AT&T Web site 
  temporarily and then place his order for the iPhone 5. Once it 
  arrives, he plans to change the AT&T billing address back to his PO 
  box.

  If you run into a similar problem, John’s workaround is worth a 
  try. It might also be worth trying to order from your carrier 
  directly to see if they will let you differentiate between billing 
  and shipping addresses. I ended up ordering from AT&T, not because 
  of any address snafus, but because AT&T was still promising that my 
  iPhone 5 would arrive on 21 September 2012 when I placed my order 
  early on the first day of pre-orders, whereas Apple was already 
  saying I’d have to wait until some time in October. 


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://tidbits.com/e/13267#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://tidbits.com/t/13267>


iPhone 5: Taller, Faster, and More Pixels
-----------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff: <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13252>
  3 comments

  Following what has become a familiar script, Apple unveiled a new 
  iPhone at a special media event on 12 September 2012. The new model, 
  which Apple is thankfully calling the “iPhone 5” rather than 
  “the new iPhone,” became available for pre-order on September 
  14th and will start shipping a week later on September 21st. 
  Pre-orders exceeded two million units in the first 24 hours, more 
  than double the previous record set by the iPhone 4S, and since 
  demand outstripped Apple’s initial supply, many pre-orders won’t 
  be delivered until early October. Pricing remains the same, at $199 
  for 16 GB of storage, $299 for 32 GB, and $399 for 64 GB — all 
  prices assume a two-year cellular contract.

<http://www.apple.com/iphone/>
<http://www.apple.com/pr/library/2012/09/17iPhone-5-Pre-Orders-Top-Two-Million-in-First-24-Hours.html>


**Industrial Design and New Display** -- Whereas the iPhone 4S shared 
  the same industrial design as the iPhone 4 (as did the 3G and 3GS), 
  the iPhone 5 debuts in a new form factor that’s slightly taller 
  and thinner, and noticeably lighter. Specifically, it’s 7 percent 
  taller (4.87 inches/123.8 mm versus 4.5 inches/115.2 mm for the 
  iPhone 4 and 4S), the same width (2.31 inches/58.6 mm), 18 percent 
  thinner (0.30 inches/7.6 mm versus 0.38 inches/9.3 mm), and 20 
  percent lighter (3.95 ounces/112 grams versus 4.9 ounces/140 grams).

<http://www.apple.com/iphone/design/>

  The added height is necessary to accommodate the new 4-inch 
  (diagonal) Retina display; all previous iPhones have sported 
  3.5-inch displays. Instead of being proportionally larger, the 
  iPhone 5’s screen boasts more vertical pixels with a resolution of 
  1136 by 640, up from 960 by 640. Apps will have to be rewritten to 
  take advantage of the extra pixels — those that aren’t will be 
  letterboxed with black bars on the top and bottom of the screen. 
  Apple’s apps have been updated — with Pages, Keynote, Numbers, 
  iMovie, and GarageBand being called out in particular.

<http://www.apple.com/iphone/features/>

  The most immediate thing you’ll notice, though, is that the main 
  iPhone screen now has room for five rows of icons instead of just 
  four, which should make it just a little easier to navigate for 
  people with lots of apps. 

  Although the specs for brightness and contrast remain the same, 
  Apple claimed that the new display has 44 percent better color 
  saturation and because the touchscreen is integrated into the 
  display, it will be sharper and suffer less from glare in sunlight.

  Perhaps more significant is the new connector that replaces the 
  hoary dock connector that we’ve become so accustomed to with the 
  iPod, iPhone, and iPad. Called Lightning, the new all-digital 
  connector is both thinner and smaller — Apple claims 80 percent 
  smaller. The most welcome change is that it’s reversible, so it 
  won’t matter which side is up when you try to plug in your iPhone. 
  Apple also claims it will be more durable.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-09/Lightning-and-Dock-connectors.png>

  The problem, of course, is that we all have multiple dock connector 
  cables strewn throughout our homes and offices, so it’s easy to 
  plug in any iPod or iOS device. And worse, numerous speakers, docks, 
  car adapters, and the like all rely on the dock connector.  Apple 
  isn’t leaving us in the lurch, but you’re not going to like the 
  solution: an adapter that looks tremendously awkward. The adapter is 
  available as a $29 single standalone piece or as a $39 0.2 meter 
  cable.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-09/Lightning-adapter.jpg>
<http://store.apple.com/us/product/MD823ZM/A/lightning-to-30-pin-adapter>
<http://store.apple.com/us/product/MD824/lightning-to-30-pin-adapter-02-m>

  As with previous models, the iPhone 5 comes in two colors: black and 
  white. But it’s not quite the same as before, since the black 
  model has a black anodized back, whereas the white model features a 
  raw aluminum back. In either case, the metal back should prove more 
  durable than the glass back in the iPhone 4/4S.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-09/iPhone-5-black.png>
<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-09/iPhone-5-white.png>


**Ultrafast Wireless** -- “Ultrafast” is Apple’s term, not ours, 
  but the iPhone 5 sports two notable improvements to its wireless 
  networking capabilities. First is support for LTE, which comes on 
  top of the previously supported alphabet soup of cellular data 
  protocols. When supported by cellular carriers, LTE offers up to 100 
  Mbps of downlink bandwidth, more than twice as much as DC-HSDPA (42 
  Mbps) and almost five times as much as HSPA+ (21 Mbps). What actual 
  difference this will make in real-world usage undoubtedly depends 
  hugely on specific situations, but it seems safe to say that 
  downloading can be much faster. Those with limited data plans may 
  wish to be careful, since it will be possible to suck down more data 
  more quickly than in the past.

  LTE band support varies by country, so there are actually three 
  versions of the iPhone 5, a GSM model sold in the United States and 
  Canada, a CDMA model sold in the United States and Japan, and a GSM 
  model that works in European and Asian countries (the CDMA model and 
  this GSM model are physically the same, but differ based on how 
  they’re activated). As a result, if you buy the GSM iPhone on sale 
  in the United States and Canada, it won’t work on most LTE 
  networks worldwide. The CDMA model of the iPhone 5 available in the 
  United States and Japan does supports the LTE bands used in other 
  countries, however. (For many more details on this topic, see 
  “Which iPhone 5 Lets You Roam Where You Want?,” 13 September 
  2012.)

<http://www.apple.com/iphone/LTE/>
<http://tidbits.com/article/13258>

  The other useful wireless change is support for 802.11n in both the 
  2.4 GHz and 5 GHz bands. Although both the iPhone 4 and 4S supported 
  802.11n, they did so only in the 2.4 GHz band, forcing everyone with 
  iPhones to keep 2.4 GHz active on their networks even if it might 
  otherwise have worked better to rely on 5 GHz. It probably isn’t 
  safe for any network used by multiple people to turn off 2.4 GHz, 
  but it’s at least now possible for specific situations. Plus, the 
  iPhone 5’s dual-channel support in the 5 GHz band has the 
  potential to increase throughput when on an appropriately configured 
  Wi-Fi network. 

  It’s worth noting that the CDMA model of the iPhone 5 for use with 
  Verizon Wireless still won’t support simultaneous voice and data, 
  even when used on Verizon’s LTE network. The problem apparently 
  has to do with the iPhone 5 lacking a third antenna to handle LTE 
  data at the same time as voice, according to Brian X. Chen at the 
  New York Times.

<http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/09/13/iphone-5-calls-data/>


**A6 Processor** -- Providing processing power for the iPhone 5 is the 
  A6 chip, Apple’s custom-built successor to the A5 chip that powers 
  the iPhone 4 and 4S, the iPad 2 and third-generation iPad, and the 
  forthcoming fifth-generation iPod touch. Apple continues to rely on 
  its own chip designs instead of incorporating a CPU from an outside 
  chip developer, as most other smartphone vendors do. 

  The new A6 has a CPU that doubles the speed of the previous model, 
  and that provides double the speed of graphics processing as well. 
  At the same time, the chip is 22 percent smaller than the A5, 
  freeing up room for the other components within the thinner iPhone 5 
  housing.

  Apps should show marked improvement in performance with this new 
  chip and should launch faster as well. In the presentation, Apple 
  noted that Pages launches over twice as fast on the new processor 
  and Keynote launches 1.7 times faster.

  The ramped-up processing power also benefits the camera and audio 
  systems in the iPhone 5. The chip has a new image signal processor 
  that helps the camera perform better noise reduction in images, 
  handle low-light situations better, and capture images as much as 40 
  percent faster (see below). The improved noise-canceling and 
  voice-recognition capabilities (Siri, can you hear me now?) and the 
  new wideband audio feature for phone calls, which makes the sound on 
  phone calls richer, all make use of the advanced signal processing 
  power of the chip as well. Note, however, that wideband audio 
  requires carrier support; we’ll be interested to discover which 
  carriers provide it, and in which countries.


**iSight Camera** -- When the iPhone 4S was introduced last year, we 
  knew people who were excited to buy a high-quality digital camera 
  that also happened to work as a phone. Having a good camera with you 
  at all times makes a huge difference in being able to capture the 
  photos you want, and the iPhone 4S fit the bill.

  The iPhone 5 makes small improvements to the camera hardware. It 
  captures photos with 8 megapixels of data at a resolution of 3264 by 
  2448 pixels, using a backside-illuminated sensor, the same as the 
  iPhone 4S. The lens is made up of five elements; it includes an 
  infrared filter; and it features an aperture of f/2.4. Video records 
  at 1080p, also just like the iPhone 4S. However, although this 
  doesn’t matter to consumers, it’s worth pointing out that these 
  specs now come out of an assembly that’s 25 percent smaller.

  If your current iPhone’s camera now shoots Instagram-style photos 
  by default due to a scratched lens, you’ll be happy to hear that 
  the new camera is covered by hard and clear sapphire crystal.

  Where the iPhone 5’s iSight camera improves on its predecessor is 
  in the software and the A6 processor at the heart of the device. A 
  dynamic low light mode improves capture of dimly lit situations, 
  evaluating nearby pixels to give up to two f-stops of better 
  low-light performance, and Apple claims that noise reduction is 
  improved. A smart filter feature also analyzes the scene and 
  determines how much noise reduction should be applied, which areas 
  need uniform color, and other aspects.

  Better still, it boasts 40 percent faster image capture, reducing 
  the dreaded shutter lag that plagues most digital cameras.

  As you’d expect, Apple has posted an iPhone image gallery showing 
  off photos unedited from the device.

<http://www.apple.com/iphone/gallery/>

  One brand new feature is Panorama, which captures panoramic photos 
  as you move the phone horizontally. The software guides you and 
  stitches images together as the panorama is captured, with up to 240 
  degrees of rotation.

  The iPhone 4S also added 1080p video recording to the iPhone’s 
  capabilities. In the iPhone 5, image stabilization is improved, and 
  face detection can identify up to 10 people in the frame as focus 
  points. Apple says that you can also snap photo stills while 
  recording video without disrupting the video capture, which is very 
  neat.

  The front-facing camera is now improved with 720p resolution to take 
  advantage of FaceTime video conferencing, which will now work over 
  cellular connections (provided the feature is allowed by cellular 
  carriers — we’re looking at you, AT&T).

  Although not specific to the cameras themselves, Apple touted the 
  new Shared Photo Stream feature of iCloud and iOS 6. No longer will 
  your Photo Stream be limited to just your devices. You’ll be able 
  to share photos with friends, and they can comment or mark photos as 
  favorites.


**Sound** -- Previous versions of the iPhone had two microphones: one 
  on the bottom, used for phone calls and other voice input, and 
  another on the top used for capturing ambient sound as part of the 
  phone’s noise-canceling capabilities and for capturing video. (See 
  “Where to Speak on Your iPhone 4,” 21 March 2012.) The iPhone 5 
  features three microphones: the traditional bottom mic, and one each 
  on the front and on the back which can help in both speakerphone 
  mode and for FaceTime use, as well as for providing additional audio 
  input for noise reduction. The three microphones also allow the 
  iPhone to triangulate on the main audio source dynamically, so that 
  phone calls from crowded noisy rooms should sound better at the 
  other end. We can’t wait to see if that’s true.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12878>

  The iPhone 5’s internal speaker is both smaller and more powerful 
  than that in the iPhone 4S. The speaker’s transducer uses five 
  magnets (Apple must have a lock on the world’s magnet supply at 
  this point) and, according to Apple, produces a better frequency 
  response than its predecessor while being 20 percent smaller.

  The iconic earbuds are gone. In their place are EarPods, earphones 
  that look like tiny alien eggs and that have been designed to fit 
  better in the ear — Apple says its designers scanned hundreds of 
  different shaped ears to come up with the design over a three-year 
  period (Hear Different?). The EarPods also incorporate a microphone 
  that feeds into the iPhone 5’s noise-canceling capability, the 
  first time that Apple-supplied earphones have supported the 
  iPhone’s noise-cancellation feature.


**When, Where, and How Much?** -- The iPhone 5 keeps the same pricing 
  as last year’s iPhone 4S: $199 for 16 GB of storage, $299 for 32 
  GB, and $399 for 64 GB (those are subsidized prices with cellular 
  contracts). Although Apple isn’t currently showing these prices on 
  their site, TechCrunch took a screenshot of the Apple site showing 
  unlocked pricing of $649 for 16 GB, $749 for 32 GB, and $849 for 64 
  GB, and those prices seem likely, since they’re the same as they 
  were for the iPhone 4S. No-contract pricing from AT&T and Verizon is 
  identical.

<http://techcrunch.com/2012/09/13/iphone-5-unlocked-u-s-pricing-649-16gb-749-32gb-and-849-64gb/>

  The iPhone 4S remains available in just the 16 GB capacity, and 
  drops to $99 with a contract. The iPhone 4, also in the 16 GB model, 
  is now free with a contract, replacing the iPhone 3GS, which 
  disappears. All models are available in black or white.

  Shipping and in-store pickup begin September 21st in the United 
  States, Canada, United Kingdom, Germany, France, Australia, Japan, 
  Hong Kong and Singapore. On September 28th, 22 more countries will 
  join the list, including Austria, Belgium, Czech Republic, Denmark, 
  Estonia, Finland, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, 
  Luxembourg, Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Poland, Portugal, 
  Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden and Switzerland. If you’d rather 
  have the Apple Store lineup experience, in-person sales begin at 
  8:00 AM on September 21st.


  ----
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Apple Redesigns iPod touch, iPod nano, and iTunes
-------------------------------------------------
  by Agen G. N. Schmitz: <agen@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13254>

  While the iPhone has hogged the spotlight the last two years, Apple 
  brought back a bit of the music theme of yesteryear to its September 
  media event with the release of new iPod models, as well as a brief 
  introduction to the newly redesigned iTunes desktop software. 
  Interestingly, neither the new iPods nor the new version of iTunes 
  will be available until October (though pre-orders for the iPods 
  began on 14 September 2012), which led some to wonder if another 
  iOS-based product (i.e., the rumored “iPad mini”) may be 
  announced in the intervening weeks.


**iPod touch** -- The fifth-generation iPod touch adopts the same 
  4-inch Retina display (1136 by 640 pixels) of the iPhone 5 and 
  similarly grows taller and slimmer due to the shared form factor. In 
  particular, the iPod touch grows to 4.86 inches/123.4 mm tall 
  (compared to the 4.4-inch/58.9-mm fourth-generation iPod touch) 
  while remaining essentially the same width (2.31 inches/58.6 mm). It 
  also shaves off a bit of depth (0.24 inches/6.1 mm versus 0.28 
  inches/7.2 mm) and weight (3.1 ounces/88 grams versus 3.56 
  ounces/101 grams).

<http://www.apple.com/ipod-touch/>

  Although it doesn’t go all the way to the iPhone 5’s A6 chip, 
  the iPod touch does get a processor bump to the older A5 chip — 
  enabling it to run Siri — and upgrades its wireless capabilities 
  to dual-band 802.11n Wi-Fi (2.4 GHz and 5 GHz bands) and Bluetooth 
  4.0. Both front and back cameras have been updated, with the rear 
  iSight camera moving up to 5 megapixels and 1080p HD recording and 
  the front FaceTime HD camera improving to 1.2 megapixels and 720p HD 
  video resolution. Like the iPhone 5, the iPod touch includes the new 
  Panorama feature that stitches images together into a panoramic 
  photo.

  In addition to the standard black and white case options, the iPod 
  touch now comes in pink, silver and blue, plus a red model that 
  donates some of its profits to the Product (Red) anti-AIDS effort. 
  The fifth-generation iPod touch is available for pre-order with 
  pricing remaining the same as the previous model: $299 for 32 GB and 
  $399 for 64 GB. The fourth-generation iPod touch remains a part of 
  Apple’s product mix, with black and white models available at $199 
  for 16 GB and $249 for 32 GB (the 8 GB model has been discontinued).

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-09/iPod-touch-colors.png>
<http://www.joinred.com/>


**iPod nano** -- The seventh-generation iPod nano has once again been 
  given a drastic redesign, returning to the slim, tall profile of the 
  fifth-generation iPod nano after the sixth generation’s square 
  shape (you won’t be wearing this one like a watch). This latest 
  iteration measures 3.01 inches/76.5 mm tall, 1.56 inches/39.6 mm 
  wide, and 0.21 inches/5.4 mm thin. With the larger body, it has also 
  grown in weight to a “hefty” 1.1 ounces/31 grams (up from 0.74 
  ounces/21.1 grams).

<http://www.apple.com/ipod-nano/>

  The iPod nano sports a 2.5-inch Multi-Touch display (240 by 432 
  pixels), a home button on the front, and volume and play/pause 
  buttons on the right side. Although it has a touch-sensitive display 
  and a home screen with icons, its capabilities are still limited to 
  audio, video, photos, and fitness tracking. It keeps the FM radio of 
  its predecessor (though adding DVR-like pause and rewind 
  capabilities) while also including Bluetooth 4.0 and improving its 
  battery life to 30 hours. You have eight choices of colors — pink, 
  yellow, blue, green, purple, silver, and slate, along with the 
  Product (Red) model — but only a single choice of storage capacity 
  (16 GB). Retailing for $149, the iPod nano will also be available in 
  October (with pre-orders having started 14 September 2012).

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-09/iPod-nano-colors.jpg>


**New Accessories** -- Like the iPhone 5, both the latest iPod touch 
  and iPod nano adopt the new Lightning connector, which replaces the 
  long-in-the-tooth 30-pin dock connector that we’ve used since 
  2003. Of course, a new adapter can play havoc with the iPod 
  accessories you’ve become accustomed to, but Apple is offering two 
  versions of a Lightning-to-30-pin adapter that’s available as a 
  $29 single standalone piece or as a $39 0.2 m cable.

<http://store.apple.com/us/product/MD823ZM/A/lightning-to-30-pin-adapter>
<http://store.apple.com/us/product/MD824/lightning-to-30-pin-adapter-02-m>

  Both additions to the iPod family also include Apple’s EarPods, a 
  replacement for the oft-maligned earbuds. The new EarPods have been 
  designed to (thankfully) fit better in the ear and provide deeper 
  bass — we’ll see how they work when they arrive.


**The iPod Survivors** -- The iPod shuffle doesn’t receive any 
  improvements, but it’s now available in colors that match the new 
  iPod nano — pink, yellow, blue, green, purple, silver, and slate, 
  plus Product (Red). It’s available immediately at $49 for 2 GB of 
  storage. Additionally, the iPod classic survives another product 
  cycle, with no changes to capacity (160 GB) or price ($249). 

<http://www.apple.com/ipod-shuffle/>
<http://www.apple.com/ipodclassic/>
<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-09/iPod-shuffle-colors.jpg>


**iTunes Goes to 11 (Or Does It?)** -- While Apple hasn’t officially 
  assigned the version 11 number to the new iTunes (perhaps in order 
  to avoid endless Spinal Tap references), the updated desktop 
  software seems to be taking design cues from the redesigned iOS 
  iTunes app. The new desktop iTunes has been given a cleaner 
  edge-to-edge design that echoes its iOS compadre (which is where 60 
  percent of all downloads are made, according to Eddy Cue, Apple 
  senior vice president of Internet software and services). It also 
  adds a new Up Next feature that displays upcoming songs and enables 
  you to add songs or albums to the queue. 

<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/These_go_to_eleven>
<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-09/iTunes-11.png>

  Other improvements include a redesigned MiniPlayer mode with 
  built-in search and support for Up Next, and searches that span 
  across your entire library (rather than having to choose a 
  particular playlist or category to search within). iCloud is further 
  integrated into iTunes, with all iTunes purchases now viewable in 
  your library.

  However, the new iTunes won’t be released until late October. In 
  the meantime, Apple has released iTunes 10.7 to bridge the 
  compatibility gap for iOS 6 (see “iOS 6 to Ship 19 September 
  2012,” 12 September 2012).

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1576>
<http://tidbits.com/article/13251>


  ----
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Which iPhone 5 Lets You Roam Where You Want?
--------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman: <glenn@tidbits.com>, @glennf
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13258>
  13 comments

  The iPhone 4S was simple: a single model covered the whole world. 
  The iPhone 5 comes in two models, however, with three potentially 
  significant variants based on activation. The iPhone 4S can be used 
  worldwide; the iPhone 5 can too, but not for the fast LTE networking 
  flavor everywhere you go. If you’re trying to break this down to 
  figure out which iPhone 5 model or activation to purchase, let me 
  pick apart how it works.

  The iPhone 4S’s supported networks can be explained with a bit of 
  effort. If purchased unlocked from Apple or from a GSM-based carrier 
  or under contract to a GSM carrier, the iPhone 4S will be GSM 
  forever, and will work on all 2G, 3G, and 4G GSM bands nearly 
  everywhere in the world. An identical iPhone 4S can be sold to a 
  Verizon Wireless or Sprint Nextel customer and activated for CDMA, 
  and then used outside the United States with the proper SIM (the GSM 
  subscriber identification module) on 2G, 3G, and 4G networks.

  Once activated for GSM, however, an iPhone 4S can never be used for 
  CDMA. If an iPhone 4S is activated for CDMA, GSM remains available, 
  although apparently not in the United States.

  The iPhone 5 has all the iPhone 4S GSM and CDMA support, and adds 
  LTE. It comes in three flavors, via two models (explained a little 
  obscurely on its LTE page):

<http://www.apple.com/iphone/LTE/>

* The A1428, which is sold for AT&T in the United States, and Bell, 
  Rogers, and Telus in Canada. It includes LTE support for two 
  spectrum bands that are used among those networks. (Canadian 
  providers also have other spectrum bands they use for LTE.)

* The A1429, which is like the iPhone 4S in that it can be activated 
  for either a CDMA network (Verizon and Sprint in the United States 
  or KDDI in Japan) or a GSM network (10 GSM networks across 7 
  countries), and then never switched.

  Here’s the complicating factor. The A1429 activated for CDMA 
  supports two U.S. LTE bands and three bands used in combination 
  across the other 10 carriers supported outside the United States. 
  But when it’s activated as a “world” GSM phone, LTE support 
  drops to include just the 10 international carriers’ LTE 
  deployments. (Neither model includes two bands that will be used 
  extensively in Europe in upcoming deployments.)

  As before, U.S. activations of the iPhone 5 cannot be used with 
  competitive carriers in the United States. An AT&T model can’t use 
  a nano-SIM (the new tiny form factor it uses) for a regional GSM 
  provider, nor can a Verizon or Sprint CDMA model be switched between 
  each other or over to Cricket Wireless, among other regional CDMA 
  telcos. And you can’t use the CDMA-activated phone (A1429) on 
  AT&T’s LTE network nor the North American GSM one (A1428) to roam 
  between AT&T and either Verizon or Sprint because they don’t 
  include common frequency bands. (T-Mobile has an incompatible 3G/4G 
  GSM approach and hasn’t built LTE networks yet.)

  Verizon does plan to allow GSM roaming outside the United States, 
  and should, as both it and Sprint offer for the iPhone 4S, allow the 
  SIM slot to be unlocked after 60 days (Verizon) or 90 days (Sprint) 
  of service for use with nano-SIMs from other carriers outside 
  America. AT&T won’t unlock a SIM until well into a two-year 
  contract if it’s a subsidized purchase, and I’m unaware of a 
  stated policy about if or when a phone purchased from AT&T at full 
  price may be unlocked.

  So how do you figure out which model and activation to buy? The 
  calculus has everything to do with how much you travel and where, 
  and whether you care that you’re achieving LTE speeds when you 
  travel. (There’s also a timing issue: two LTE bands being deployed 
  by European carriers aren’t supported by the 7-country GSM model, 
  which may have to wait for an iPhone 5S or 6!)

<http://www.infoworld.com/d/mobile-technology/apples-lte-move-iphone-5-leaves-europe-the-back-burner-202298>

* I live in an LTE-supported country (the United States or any 
  other), and I don’t travel at all. 

  Pick the best service plan, as whatever iPhone 5 model you pick will 
  be dependent on that. AT&T and Verizon will, by around 2014, have 
  comparable LTE networks, but Verizon is ahead on its footprint for 
  now. Worldwide, most LTE networks are in the early stages of being 
  built out. Check with individual carriers for coverage maps.

* I live in the United States, and travel frequently to Canada, but 
  rarely elsewhere. 

  AT&T is the best option for an iPhone 5, because you’ll get LTE 
  support in the United States and Canada, and AT&T has voice and data 
  roaming add-ons for Canada as well as a two-country voice/messaging 
  plan that’s surprisingly affordable. It may be worthwhile to 
  purchase a fully unlocked iPhone 5 (which won’t be available the 
  same day as carrier-supplied phones in the United States), and use 
  separate AT&T and Canadian carrier SIMs. However, it’s unclear 
  whether Apple will offer that for sale, or when carriers will make 
  nano-SIMs available on a pay-as-you-go or subscription basis.

<http://www.wireless.att.com/learn/international/roaming/affordable-world-packages.jsp>
<http://www.att.com/shop/wireless/plans/individualplans.html>
<http://www.theverge.com/2012/9/13/3328556/unlocked-iphone-5-not-immediately-available-united-states-price>

* I live in the United States, and travel all over the darned globe.
 
  AT&T is a poor choice, because it won’t unlock SIMs (at least 
  initially, see above), and you have to pay its high voice and data 
  roaming fees outside the United States. Opting for Sprint (unlimited 
  U.S. data) or Verizon (best U.S. coverage for voice and LTE) and 
  getting the nano-SIM slot unlocked is the optimum solution so long 
  as you are in an LTE coverage area for most of the time you use it 
  in the United States.

* I live in Canada, God’s Country, the Great White North (McKenzie 
  Brothers’ noise here) and travel beyond its borders regularly. 

  The only option is the AT&T/Canada (A1428) iPhone 5 to get LTE 
  speeds, but that won’t allow you to use LTE when traveling further 
  afield than your neighbor to the south. You can purchase an unlocked 
  iPhone 5 from Apple in Canada, or get an iPhone from a carrier, each 
  of which has varying policies for unlocking. An unlocked 7-country 
  (A1429) iPhone 5 would keep you from having LTE access at home, but 
  enable it in those roaming countries.

<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bob_and_Doug_McKenzie>

* I don’t live in the United States or Canada, and may or may not 
  choose to travel much.

  Apple or a domestic carrier may be willing to sell you only the 
  three-band (A1429) GSM/LTE model. Unlocking a SIM for use outside 
  your carrier’s home country depends on its policies and those of 
  the national regulator’s. You will not be able to use this model 
  with any LTE networks in the United States or Canada.

* I just want to buy an unlocked iPhone 5.

  We’ll have to wait and see what Apple offers, and how readily 
  available nano-SIMs become for travelers to foreign lands.

  For a carrier-by-carrier examination, read James Duncan Davidson’s 
  detailed accounting. He travels extensively around the world, which 
  gives him better insight into the costs of roaming data.

<http://duncandavidson.com/blog/2012/09/which_iphone5>

  (If you don’t care about LTE speeds, and the new features of an 
  iPhone 5 aren’t compelling, pick an iPhone 4S if you need a new 
  phone, since those are the same great devices as a few days ago, but 
  now cost less.)

  There is one more special case I’ll mention. Our own Joe Kissell 
  and his family are returning from five years in France this winter 
  to live in the United States. Joe would dearly love to purchase an 
  iPhone 5 when it goes on sale, but the unlocked, plan-free model he 
  can purchase in France likely won’t allow him to use LTE when his 
  clan returns stateside, and it would stick him with AT&T as a 
  carrier and no choice for voice and data. My advice to Joe: wait 
  until you’re back.


  ----
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Pondering Cybersecurity in the Real World
-----------------------------------------
  by Jeff Porten: <jporten@gmail.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13257>
  2 comments

  About five minutes into U.S. Secretary of Homeland Security Janet 
  Napolitano’s speech to a large banquet hall full of security 
  professionals, watching her over the plated tiramisu I was socially 
  restrained from eating, I was struck by the mental image of 2,000 
  Dobermans sitting patiently in rows, each with a doggie treat 
  balanced on its nose.

  The speech was long and unilluminating, and the tiramisu tasted like 
  it came out of the world’s largest Sara Lee box, but even bad 
  tiramisu is better than no tiramisu.

  Napolitano was addressing the combined conventions of ASIS and ISC2, 
  which aren’t officially acronyms, but which focus on generalized 
  security issues and information security respectively. My press pass 
  admitted me to a dizzying and somewhat chilling range of talks and 
  panel discussions; for example, one afternoon’s “Security in the 
  Cloud” was counter-programmed against “Analyzing Verbal 
  Statements” and “Mass Homicides in the Workplace.”

<http://www.asisonline.org/>
<https://www.isc2.org/>
<http://www.asis2012.org/conference-program/Pages/>

  I’ll freely admit: it’s odd to be at this conference. On the one 
  hand, any number of private companies and governmental organizations 
  have serious security concerns, and you would expect (and want) 
  professionals in the industry to band together to share best 
  practices or take certification programs. On the other hand, the 
  category list of the exhibit floor reads like the signs at the 
  Post-9/11 World OfficeDepot: Access Control, Biometrics, Blast 
  Mitigation, Bullet Resistant Systems, Citywide CCTV, and so on. 
  Browsing through the catalog, I found a full-page ad encouraging 
  exhibitors to advertise in two security trade periodicals in India — 
  “a US$1 billion... huge opportunity.” This is why I’m opening with
  coverage of how the security industry talks to itself, with the
  impressions I got from Napolitano’s speech.

  By way of introduction, suppose you asked a Mac expert, “Hey, how 
  safe is my hard drive?” Almost all of us will say, “Extremely 
  reliable,” especially if we’ve been around long enough to 
  remember Jaz cartridges, floppy disks, or even punch cards. But we 
  experts will all immediately add, “but be sure to back up 
  regularly, preferably in several different ways.” That’s because 
  the expert is considering everything ranging from hardware crashes 
  and firmware malfunctions to theft and fires.

  A file on a hard drive or SSD can be rendered unreadable by a cosmic 
  ray from outer space. Yes, really (PDF). When dealing with that kind 
  of problem, security experts develop a healthy sense of paranoia, 
  and that’s what you pay them for, so you can take just the 
  sensible precautions and get on with your life.

<http://www.ewh.ieee.org/r6/scv/rl/articles/ser-050323-talk-ref.pdf>

  Now ramp that up so instead of dealing specifically with computer 
  security, you’re approaching all kinds of security threats, 
  including small arms and large conventional explosives. It’s 
  natural to want to have experts in society whose job it is to 
  protect against these attacks, and to have well-informed laypeople 
  know what to do in the event of trouble. But at the same time, 
  it’s smart to be aware of whether assessing everyone as a 
  potential threat can lead to the sort of professional paranoia that 
  computer experts have about cosmic rays and electromagnetic fields.

  This brings me to Napolitano’s speech. I’m on record criticizing 
  political speeches to expert communities (see “CFP 2011: Shine On, 
  You Crazy Senator!,” 16 June 2011), and here I was disappointed by 
  more of the same: congratulating the audience on being themselves, 
  without discussing the topic at an expert level. Public-private 
  partnerships are crucial to the nation’s security, and the 
  assembled experts in the room are an important part of that. The 
  Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is working with private 
  companies and nonprofit organizations to protect national 
  infrastructure and promote cybersecurity. The DHS Computer Emergency 
  Response Team (CERT) responded to over 100,000 incidents last year 
  and issued over 5,000 alerts.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12261>

  Napolitano opened her speech by calling cybersecurity “one of the 
  most” important issues facing the nation, but closed in a 
  less-qualified way, saying (I’m forced to paraphrase here) that 
  these virtual attacks are the biggest threat we face. As I see it, 
  there are three ways we can respond to such a statement.

  First, we can be very scared by this — surely our biggest threat 
  must be countered by the public and private groups who protect us —
  and we can invest large amounts of time, money, and resources into
  protection.

  I’m not going to argue against this — but at the same time, some 
  problems shouldn’t be solved with billion-dollar hardware. The 
  best encryption in the world won’t help you when you don’t 
  bother to use it at all. Critical infrastructure attacks over the 
  Internet are up 17-fold — to which one might justly reply, 
  “Wait, why exactly is a power grid control system connected to the 
  Internet at all, rather than being isolated on a private network?”

<http://www.wired.com/dangerroom/2009/12/insurgents-intercept-drone-video-in-king-sized-security-breach/>
<http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/07/26/cyber-attacks-us-infrastructure_n_1708051.html>

  More to the point, without some details about the 160 attacks on 
  “critical infrastructure” in 2011, it’s impossible to evaluate 
  whether the solution is stronger hardware, better training, or 
  advanced deep-breathing relaxation techniques. Some Internet attacks 
  are the equivalent of trying a door handle to see if it’s 
  unlocked. These might be targeted against millions of computers in 
  numeric sequence, and happen to include “critical 
  infrastructure” only by accident.

  Or an attack could be directed at specific targets with dozens of 
  distributed expert criminals trying to crack into a particular 
  control system. That’s a different kettle of “phish.” I think 
  Napolitano’s subtext is to say that CERT’s 100,000 incidents are 
  in this category, and we should all be very, very worried. But the 
  track record of several administrations is to lump both meaningless 
  and terrifying attacks together into the biggest possible number, 
  which leaves me skeptical of sweeping statements about the risks we 
  actually face.

  Second, we can give some thought to what private resources we need 
  to increase, and whether it’s a weakness in our national security 
  that the general population isn’t educated on these issues. 
  Napolitano cited the “If You See Something, Say Something” 
  program, which has alerted the public to report suspicious behaviors 
  to the police, without providing much training on what an expert 
  would deem suspicious. Anecdotally, I’ve seen a large bag left 
  unattended by a passenger for over 20 minutes in front of one of 
  those “Say Something” videos on an endless loop at a major train 
  station, and I’ve had a dispiriting interaction with the Amtrak 
  police at that same station when my own bag was stolen a few months 
  later.

<http://www.aclu.org/spy-files/more-about-suspicious-activity-reporting>

  Not to put too fine a point on it, but when half of your neighbors 
  think bad weather can affect iCloud, there’s also some basic 
  education necessary before we can secure the millions of computers 
  being used for crucial everyday activities. Most of the increased 
  security we’re enjoying today comes from the simple design 
  decision to make higher security the default in new operating 
  systems; likewise, a lack of security in a common protocol like 
  Wi-Fi leaves many people vulnerable. Few people are aware that 
  anything they send or receive over their corporate email system is 
  legally owned by their employers, or can be read by the IT 
  department pretty much whenever, even if the corporate encryption 
  strategy protects against outsiders.

<http://www.cnet.com.au/51-of-americans-believe-storms-affect-cloud-computing-339341445.htm>
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Firesheep>

  Personally, I’m more encouraged by security that stems from widely 
  disseminated education. We can (and should) spend the next 20 years 
  improving our anti-spam methods to near-perfection, but if you know 
  basic English business grammar, then you can spot today when that 
  email purporting to be from PayPal wasn’t actually written by 
  someone at PayPal.

  Third and finally, there’s one major response we can have to 
  “our biggest threat is cyber attacks,” and that is wild 
  cheering.

  I rarely make friends by saying this, but the biggest revelation I 
  had after 9/11 was just how powerful and safe people in Western 
  nations actually are. The most significant attack on the United 
  States since Pearl Harbor was emotionally devastating, but we got 
  through it, and we were back to some semblance of normal far faster 
  than many people would have predicted. All of our societal changes 
  to the new post-9/11 normal were of our own choosing — and it’s 
  past time we had a more complete and open debate about which of 
  these actually make us safer.

  I grew up during the end of the Cold War, and learned military 
  strategies involving nuclear weapons that would cause deaths in the 
  tens or hundreds of millions. The United States has faced 
  non-nuclear existential threats in at least three wars. Compared to 
  the experience that most adults over 40 have lived through, or what 
  a sixth-grader should know about history, terrorism doesn’t come 
  close as a danger to who we are or what we value. Contrast that with 
  the daily experience of many people in the rest of the world; as an 
  Argentinean friend once told me, “I can always tell who’s 
  American when I travel; they’re the ones who will walk up to a 
  police officer to ask for directions.”

  If the biggest threats we face are to our data, then we should take 
  a moment to enjoy the security of our persons. Certainly, when the 
  way we use data affects our physical security (whether we’re 
  talking about the power grid or air traffic control), that’s a 
  problem we need to fix — but let’s focus on whether that lack of 
  security is caused by incompetent or inattentive management before 
  we blindly hand more money to the managers.

  Quoting Bruce Schneier: “More people are killed every year by pigs 
  than by sharks, which shows you how good we are at evaluating 
  risk.” The same applies when our worst fears are Internet-based 
  and Internet-restricted. Let’s pay the experts to be paranoid on 
  our behalf, so we can live differently.

<https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Bruce_Schneier>


  ----
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TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 17 September 2012
-----------------------------------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff: <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13265>

**DEVONthink and DEVONnote 2.4.2** -- DEVONtechnologies has updated 
  all three editions of DEVONthink (Personal, Pro, and Pro Office) 
  plus DEVONnote to version 2.4.2, making it easier to scan multi-page 
  documents. Across all editions, the new release adds an option to 
  combine multiple scanned pages into a single document. This option 
  is available in PDF and TIFF formats and requires Mac OS X 10.7 Lion 
  or later. The DEVONthink Pro and Pro Office editions add scripts for 
  adding reminders to the Calendar and Reminders apps in 10.8 Mountain 
  Lion, as well as a new assistant that guides new users through the 
  initial steps and options. The DEVONthink Pro Office edition 
  improves ScanSnap and ExactScan Pro integration and makes importing 
  references from Bookends faster and more reliable. Meanwhile, 
  DEVONnote improves sorting, 64-bit support, and memory management, 
  while also fixing a number of minor issues. (All updates are free. 
  DEVONthink Pro Office, $149.95 new; DEVONthink Professional, $79.95 
  new; DEVONthink Personal, $49.95 new, release notes; DEVONnote, 
  $24.95 new, release notes)

<http://www.devontechnologies.com/products/devonthink/>
<http://www.devontechnologies.com/products/devonnote/>
<http://www.devontechnologies.com/products/devonthink/devonthink-pro-office/release-notes.html>
<http://www.devontechnologies.com/products/devonnote/release-notes.html>

  Read/post comments about DEVONthink and DEVONnote 2.4.2.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13263#comments>


**PopChar X 6.0.1** -- Ergonis Software has released PopChar 6.0, a 
  major update to the font utility that brings a streamlined user 
  interface. The new Font Preview feature displays a few 
  representative characters and a selectable sample text in multiple 
  font sizes, while the new Sample Text feature displays what the font 
  looks like when applied to typical text fragments. Additionally, it 
  gives you the capability to customize your own sample text in 
  various sizes, and you can print font sheets from both Font Preview 
  and Sample Text. The new release also includes support for Unicode 
  6.1, starts up more quickly with less background activity, detects 
  the current font in Adobe Illustrator versions CS3 through CS6, and 
  adds new keyboard shortcuts for switching the current view.

<http://www.ergonis.com/products/popcharx/>

  A few days later, Ergonis released a free update to version 6.0.1. 
  with a fix for a text layout problem in Mountain Lion’s Print 
  Preview, and with improved handling of the Start at Login setting in 
  cases where PopChar had been renamed. PopChar X 6.0.1 requires Mac 
  OS X 10.5.8 Leopard or later. (€29.99 new, €15 upgrade, 3.2 MB, 
  release notes)

<http://www.ergonis.com/products/popcharx/history.html>

  Read/post comments about PopChar X 6.0.1.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13262#comments>


**iTunes 10.7** -- In conjunction with the announcement of the iPhone 
  5 and new iPod models, Apple has released iTunes 10.7 to add support 
  for iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch models running iOS 6 (scheduled for 
  release on 19 September 2012). Additionally, it adds support for the 
  latest iPod nano and iPod shuffle models. With no new features, 
  iTunes 10.7 is just a compatibility stopgap until the next major 
  release of iTunes appears in October. (Free, 157.33 MB via direct 
  download or 163.3 MB via Software Update)

<http://tidbits.com/article/13252>
<http://tidbits.com/article/13254>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1576>
<http://tidbits.com/article/13251>

  Read/post comments about iTunes 10.7.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13255#comments>


ExtraBITS for 17 September 2012
-------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff: <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13264>

  Two quick ExtraBITS for you this week — Jeff Carlson is giving a 
  live online presentation about his “The iPad for Photographers” 
  book and Glenn Fleishman explains LTE over at the TechHive site.


**Join Jeff Carlson for a Peachpit Photo Club Presentation on 18 
  September 2012** -- On 18 September 2012, Jeff Carlson is giving a 
  free online presentation about the concepts and techniques in his 
  book “The iPad for Photographers” at 5:00 PM Pacific (8:00 PM 
  Eastern). Over the course of the hour, he’ll demonstrate how to 
  import photos wirelessly from a camera to the iPad, rate and tag 
  images while still on location, edit the photos directly on the 
  iPad, and more. This will be a live demonstration (not just a set of 
  Keynote slides), and there will be plenty of time for questions. 
  Register at Peachpit’s site and tune in Tuesday!

<http://www.peachpit.com/promotions/promotion.aspx?promo=137633>
<http://ipadforphotographers.com/>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/13261#comments>


**Understanding LTE** -- Over at Macworld’s new TechHive site, Glenn 
  Fleishman explains why LTE, the fast mobile broadband standard now 
  available in the iPhone 5, is such a complicated beast, and why a 
  “world” phone can work only across parts of the globe.

<http://www.techhive.com/article/2000514/three-minute-tech-lte.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/13260#comments>


$$

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