TidBITS#1143/24-Sep-2012
========================
  Issue link: <http://tidbits.com/issue/1143>


  We’re continuing to focus on Apple’s releases of last week: the iPhone
  5, iOS 6, and OS X 10.8.2. Agen Schmitz leads off with an overview of
  what’s new in 10.8.2, and Glenn Fleishman rounds up the iPhone 5
  reviews from sites who received early access. Then Glenn looks at the
  new Passbook app in iOS 6, and explains how to use your iPhone’s
  number with Messages in 10.8.2, before changing gears to review the
  new Fission 2 audio editor from Rogue Amoeba. Michael Cohen piles on
  with details about how Apple has integrated Facebook into Mountain
  Lion with 10.8.2, and Matt Neuburg revisits a favorite topic in
  explaining how 10.8.2’s improvement to the Save As command makes it
  better than ever before. Notable software releases this week include
  iBank 4.6, Growl 2.0, Parallels Desktop 8.0.18101, KeyCue 6.3,
  SpamSieve 2.9.5, Typinator 5.2, Microsoft Office 2011 14.2.4 and 2008
  12.3.4, Security Update 2012-004 (Snow Leopard), Mac OS X 10.7.5 Lion
  Server, EFI and SMC Updates for MacBook Pro and MacBook Air, iPhoto
  9.4, Aperture 3.4, Mac OS X 10.7.5 Lion, TechTool Pro 6.0.5, Coda
  2.0.3, and GraphicConverter 8.3.

Articles
    OS X 10.8.2 Eases Notification Center, Messages Frustrations
    iPhone 5 Review Roundup
    Passbook’s Best Is (Probably) Yet to Come
    Use Your iPhone’s Number with Messages in OS X 10.8.2
    With 10.8.2, Mountain Lion Saves Even Better
    Fission 2: Electric Audio-Editing Boogaloo
    Facebook Integration Comes to Mountain Lion
    TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 24 September 2012
    ExtraBITS for 24 September 2012


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OS X 10.8.2 Eases Notification Center, Messages Frustrations
------------------------------------------------------------
  by Agen G. N. Schmitz: <agen@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13274>
  1 comment

  Apple released OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion’s second update with a 
  surprisingly lengthy list of changes (a nice turnabout from the 
  typical single-sentence release notes that Apple tends to publish). 
  The top-line changes for 10.8.2 Mountain Lion are largely focused on 
  sprinkling Facebook integration throughout the operating system 
  (which Michael Cohen covers in “Facebook Integration Comes to 
  Mountain Lion,” 19 September 2012) as well as adding new Game 
  Center features. But the update also hopefully puts to rest to a 
  wide assortment of frustrations that have surfaced within Mountain 
  Lion — ranging from Twitter URLs to iMessages — while also 
  bringing a few internationally oriented additions.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13278>

  One such frustration was Notification Center’s inability to 
  shorten URLs when sending tweets (noted by Kirk McElhearn in 
  “Going In Depth on Mountain Lion’s Notifications,” 11 
  September 2012). Happily, you no longer need to first run your links 
  through a URL shortening service before composing a tweet in 
  Notification Center as 10.8.2 will automatically shorten the URLs 
  (using Twitter’s own t.co shortener). Other tweaks to Notification 
  Center include receipt of Twitter notifications for mentions and 
  replies from anyone (even if you don’t follow them) and a 
  disabling of notifications when using AirPlay Mirroring.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13241>

  The 10.8.2 update also ensures that iMessages sent to your phone 
  number will now appear in the Messages app on your Mac (in addition 
  to any other iOS devices where you have the iMessage service set 
  up), a problem that vexed Glenn Fleishman recently (see “Use Your 
  iPhone’s Number with Messages in OS X 10.8.2,” 19 September 
  2012). Additionally, FaceTime will now receive calls sent to your 
  phone number.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13275>

  The new iOS 6 Passbook digital coupon and boarding pass feature 
  gains Mac support, enabling you to add passes to an iPhone or iPod 
  touch running iOS 6 from Safari or Mail on your Mac. Speaking of 
  Safari, the browser now has the option of opening previously open 
  tabs when launching, and it has been given SSL support for Google 
  searches from the Smart Search Field. 

  Other changes include the addition of Power Nap support for MacBook 
  Air models released in late 2010 (a firmware update is also 
  required), an option to discard an original document’s changes 
  when choosing Save As (see “With 10.8.2, Mountain Lion Saves Even 
  Better,” 20 September 2012), automatic opening of unsent drafts 
  when launching Mail, and new shared Reminders lists.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13284>

  On the international front, the update now enables users of the Sina 
  Weibo microblogging service to add profile photos to Contacts. 
  Additionally, Dictation now supports Mandarin, Cantonese, Spanish, 
  Korean, Canadian English, Canadian French, and Italian, plus the 
  Dictionary app has added a French definition dictionary.

  While Apple doesn’t mention any improvements to battery life 
  management in the release notes, Mac Observer reports that testing 
  of the developer build of 10.8.2 yielded much improved battery life. 
  However, the previous update to Mountain Lion also made this promise 
  (see “OS X 10.8.1 Targets Bugs, Improved Battery Life,” 23 
  August 2012), so we’ll have to wait and see how well the final 
  public build of 10.8.2 handles power management in the real world. 

<http://www.macobserver.com/tmo/article/os-x-battery-life-analysis-from-snow-leopard-to-mountain-lion>
<http://tidbits.com/article/13217>

  The free OS X 10.8.2 update is available via the Mac App Store 
  (365.42 MB) or via direct download in two versions — one for those 
  currently running 10.8.1 (665.48 MB) and one for those running 
  10.8.0 (665.39 MB). Once again, there is currently no corresponding 
  update for OS X Server, which is now a separate purchase from the 
  Mac App Store.

<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/id537386512?mt=12>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1580>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1581>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/id537441259?mt=12>


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iPhone 5 Review Roundup
-----------------------
  by TidBITS Staff: <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13273>
  5 comments

  The early reviews of the iPhone 5 from technology outlets whose 
  reviewers received pre-release models appeared on the Web shortly 
  before the device was released. For an iPhone that some called 
  “boring” before anyone had laid hands on it, reviewers seem 
  rather pleased with it.

  Most notably, reviewers found the iPhone 5’s taller screen 
  immediately useful, and didn’t feel that the extra height got in 
  the way of using the iPhone one-handed. Some critiqued the 
  “small” screen size by the standard of large Android mobile 
  phones, something we don’t see as a problem. 

  Others noted the omission of NFC (Near Field Communication) support, 
  found in many new Android phones, but which has little real-world 
  utility as yet. (Harry McCracken noted, “Judging from the week I 
  spent using an NFC-equipped phone to pay for stuff, there’s no 
  particular reason to get excited about NFC’s tap-to-pay capability 
  just yet.”)

  A legitimate criticism leveled at the CDMA activation of the iPhone 
  5 several times (including before reviews appeared) is the inability 
  to talk and use mobile data at the same time, even though other 
  LTE-capable phones on the market can do so. Apple chose a radio 
  design that allows only a single cellular connection at once.

  Reviewers also pointed out that the new eight-pin Lightning 
  connector renders obsolete lots of existing dock devices, and 
  requires a $29 adapter to use with equipment into which an adapter 
  could fit. (Some audio docks don’t have the angle or space, for 
  instance. Apple also sells a $39 adapter that is a short cable 
  instead of just the connector.) New Lightning USB cables cost $19, 
  are available only from Apple, and won’t ship for several weeks.

  iOS 6, the version that comes with the phone, came in for a few 
  knocks about the Maps app, awkwardness, and signs of age that will 
  be true for any device running the upgrade.

  Here’s a summary of initial reviews; some outfits like Macworld 
  didn’t receive a review unit this time around, and will post their 
  reviews this week:

* Jim Dalrymple of The Loop: “The iPhone is everything Apple said it 
  would be and with iOS 6 built-in, it’s clear to me that Apple has 
  another winner on its hands. I can’t think of any good reason why 
  anyone wouldn’t upgrade or purchase the iPhone 5.”

<http://www.loopinsight.com/2012/09/18/review-iphone-5/>

* John Gruber at Daring Fireball: “The iPhone 5 is really nice.” 
  Also: “The iPhone 5 is all new technically, but it’s the exact 
  same thing as an idea. Apple is simply improving upon that idea year 
  after year in infinitely finer detail, like a fractal. It’s 
  nice.”

<http://daringfireball.net/2012/09/iphone_5>

* Harry McCracken at Time Magazine: “…[T]he iPhone 5 is the most 
  artful, pleasing expression of its priorities yet.”

<http://techland.time.com/2012/09/18/apple-iphone-5-review-its-all-about-refinement/>

* MG Siegler of TechCrunch: “I won’t beat around the bush: it’s 
  fantastic. Of course, you’re probably expecting me to say that. 
  But that doesn’t mean I’m wrong. The fact of the matter is, you 
  can either listen to me or lose out. You’re going to want this 
  phone.” (TechCrunch may seem like a strange choice for a review 
  unit, but Siegler has written quite incisively about Apple’s 
  market position.)

<http://techcrunch.com/2012/09/18/iphone-5-review/>

* Tim Stevens at Engadget on the display: “How does it look? 
  Fantastic, frankly. The iPhone 4S already has one of the best 
  displays on the market with regard to things like pixel density, 
  brightness and contrast, and the iPhone 5 brings that up another 
  notch.” And: “This is without a doubt the best iPhone yet. This 
  is a hallmark of design. This is the one you’ve been waiting 
  for.”

<http://www.engadget.com/2012/09/18/apple-iphone-5-review/>

* Walt Mossberg of the Wall Street Journal: “I found the new iPhone 
  screen much easier to hold and manipulate than its larger rivals and 
  preferred it.” And: “…[U]nlike on some early LTE models, the 
  blazing cellular technology doesn’t decimate the battery life on 
  this phone.” Finally: “Apple has taken an already great product 
  and made it better, overall.”

<http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10000872396390444450004578004370248427736.html>

* David Pogue of the New York Times: “The camera is among the best 
  ever put into a phone. Its low-light shots blow away the same 
  efforts from an iPhone 4S. Its shot-to-shot times have been improved 
  by 40 percent. And you can take stills even while recording video 
  (1080p hi-def, of course).” But Pogue had conflicted feelings on 
  the connector: “…[T]hat old connector, after 10 years, 
  desperately needed an update. Still, Apple has just given away one 
  of its greatest competitive advantages.”

<https://www.nytimes.com/2012/09/19/technology/personaltech/apples-iphone-5-scores-well-with-a-quibble-review.html>

* Ed Baig at USA Today: “The iPhone 5 is a winner that should keep 
  Apple at the front of the smartphone pack. But choosing iPhone 5 vs. 
  a top-of-the-line Android alternative isn’t a cut-and-dried 
  decision, especially if you’re partial to a jumbo display.” But: 
  “People have always had lofty expectations for the iPhone 5, 
  especially as the competition stiffens. In delivering a fast, 
  attractive, LTE-capable and larger-screen handset, Apple has met 
  those expectations with a gem.”

<http://www.usatoday.com/tech/columnist/edwardbaig/story/2012-09-18/iphone-5-review/57803932/1>

* Scott Stein of CNET: “If you’re looking for a show-off gadget, 
  something with gee-whiz bells and whistles, then go somewhere 
  else… except for the fact that people will inevitably want to see 
  the iPhone 5 and grab it out of your hand. But, if you’re looking 
  for an excellent, well-conceived phone… well, here it is.”

<http://www.cnet.com/iphone-5/>

* A somewhat dissenting view from T3 in the UK: “...[W]e reckon the 
  smart money won’t all be going on a new iPhone this year, even if 
  the mass market can’t get enough of it. It’s good, very good. 
  But it’s no longer the best around.”

<http://www.t3.com/reviews/iphone-5-review>

*  Rich Jaroslovsky of Bloomberg News: “With the iPhone 5, the most 
  obvious something-special is how fast it is and how long it runs at 
  those speeds.” 

<http://www.businessweek.com/news/2012-09-18/iphone-gets-bigger-thinner-faster-rich-jaroslovsky>


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Passbook’s Best Is (Probably) Yet to Come
-----------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman: <glenn@tidbits.com>, @glennf
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13282>
  8 comments

  “The new Passbook app in iOS 6 — what’s that for, anyway?” I 
  hear you ask. Apple may have demoed the potential for Passbook to 
  manage coupons, boarding passes, tickets, affinity cards, and the 
  other identifying paraphernalia of daily life among road warriors, 
  but it seems mysteriously empty right now.

<https://www.apple.com/ios/whats-new/#passbook>

  Passbook is simultaneously looking to the future while remaining 
  firmly fixed in the past. Many transactions in our digital life that 
  require a real-world component involve printing a sheet of paper 
  that contains a barcode or a 2D tag (those areas of squares and 
  rectangles that you can see at the very bottom right of this page —
  see “Tag, You’re in 2D!,” 1 October 2009) that’s scanned by a clerk
  or gate agent. 

<http://tidbits.com/article/10616>

  You might choose to turn such a document into a PDF or open it as 
  HTML email on your smartphone, but not all scanners (still!) read 
  smartphone screens, or the display scale might not be the right 
  match with what the equipment can resolve. I often have to resort to 
  punching in a long sequence of digits. In February 2012, at 
  Pennsylvania Station in New York, I had to wait in a 20-minute line 
  because Amtrak’s “bar-code scanners” wouldn’t recognize my 
  phone’s screen, the number I typed in from it, nor the credit card 
  against which I’d charged the ticket. (Amtrak, whose budget woes 
  are deserving of pity, has upgraded its systems since).

  I have many times expressed my love for QR Codes, the most popular 
  category of 2D tags, because they provide a sort of analog glue 
  between two separate digital systems. With a QR Code, you snap a 
  picture an item in a newspaper, on a poster, in a train schedule, or 
  even off a computer monitor, and your device turns it into a URL or 
  text. In actual practice (outside Japan), this is a multi-step 
  operation: launch a special app, wait for the camera sheet to 
  appear, put the tag in its view, wait for it to resolve, and tap, 
  then wait for Safari to launch. (If Apple built 2D scanning right 
  into the Camera app, it would be a different matter. See “Apple 
  Could Make QR Codes Work with a Simple Tweak,” 2 July 2012.)

<http://tidbits.com/article/13098>

  But Passbook turns that process on its head. As a phone user, you 
  don’t have to scan anything. In most cases, you will need an iOS 
  app, like that of Fandango or United Airlines (already updated for 
  Passbook), and the app will offer to add an entry to Passbook when 
  you purchase a ticket or request a boarding pass. (The need for apps 
  is why there’s an App Store button on the main screen of the 
  Passbook app when it’s empty; tapping it displays Passbook-enabled 
  apps in the App Store app.) This process will also work on Web 
  sites, as the Passbook format is straightforward and a company has 
  already started offering to produce them for businesses as a plug-in 
  service. In theory, you can also receive a Passbook entry via email, 
  though we haven’t seen that in practice yet.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-09/Passbook-and-App-Store.png>

  Many people were disappointed that the iPhone 5 didn’t support NFC 
  (near field communication), a set of standards that enable mobile 
  devices to communicate with one another when in close proximity, and 
  whose marquee use is contactless transactions. But NFC doesn’t 
  have significant penetration in U.S. retail outlets yet, while 
  barcode scanners that work with 2D codes on smartphones and, thus, 
  Passbook are far more common. NFC may yet come to the iPhone, and if 
  it did, Passbook could evolve to transmitting the necessary data via 
  NFC rather than relying on barcode scanning. 

<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Near_field_communication>

  (NFC might be ready to make more inroads in the rest of the world 
  where so-called chip-and-PIN credit cards are in use. With these 
  cards, a merchant has to make an electrical contact to the card, and 
  a customer type in a PIN. Only if the PIN matches does the card 
  release its information for a charge. Customers and merchants are 
  already used to portable charge terminals and entering a PIN. 
  However, European colleagues tell me that the chip-and-PIN 
  switchover was recent and costly enough that merchants might resist 
  NFC, as it has no particular advantage in ease or cost savings.)

  Over time, we’ll see Passbook entries for all sorts of things. 
  Place an online order at a store with a brick-and-mortar retail 
  shop, and the Passbook entry has the code to scan to pick it up. Or 
  perhaps you’re browsing a Web site about coffee, and see a 
  Starbucks ad offering a free latte; tap it, and the coupon is added 
  to Passbook. Join an affinity program, such as a hotel-chain’s 
  loyalty program, and the card entry winds up in Passbook so you 
  don’t have to carry an extra card in your wallet. I hope my local 
  library, which has its own app that can show my barcode, adds my 
  card’s info into Passbook as well.

  The point of Passbook is to give you a single location to find all 
  of these scannable documents, no matter where they’re generated. 
  At some point in the future, there will be no more managing pieces 
  of paper, PDFs, email messages, and separate apps for these bits of 
  digitally displayed analog glue.

  The other element of Passbook that we’ll be able to see only once 
  it has really ramped up is location-based awareness. When you arrive 
  at the airport for your United flight, Passbook will automatically 
  bring up the boarding pass you need. Walk into a Starbucks store, 
  and Passbook notifies you of a 20-percent-off coupon for the new 
  triple caramel-encrusted macchiavelliano (if that’s not a 
  Starbucks drink, it should be — the coffee whose ends justify the 
  beans!). Digitally savvy muggers will be able to accost you in an 
  alleyway, and Passbook will promptly give them a code to scan to 
  empty your wallet. Perhaps that’s too speculative.

  After a decade of mostly staying put in Seattle, I’ve started 
  traveling again in the last year. I’ve been amazed at how the 
  amount of user information I have to manage in some form has truly 
  multiplied. On a single trip, I might need four boarding passes, a 
  hotel affinity card, a car-rental affinity card, and a Starbucks 
  card. Yes, yes, it’s a rough life, I know. But you may have seen 
  the same clutter in your own life. Rather than stuff your wallet 
  full of those cards and passes, why not have an app that does it for 
  you? 

  At least, that’s Apple’s intention with Passbook. We’ll have 
  to see how it plays out. Reports say Apple has major airlines, hotel 
  chains, and retailers signed up. Any Web site or app maker should be 
  able to play along easily as well, although it remains to be seen 
  what sort of oversight Apple will apply and if Passbook will be 
  truly open. The more the merrier — just as long as Passbook 
  doesn’t become so crammed that I can’t sort through it, either.

  One last note: If, like me, when you launch Passbook and tap the App 
  Store link at the bottom of the main screen, an error appears that 
  says “Cannot connect to iTunes Store,” there’s a trick to fix 
  this bug. TUAW has the details, which involve setting your clock a 
  year ahead and then back.

<http://www.tuaw.com/2012/09/20/fix-ios-6-app-store-connectivity-with-date-and-time-trick/>


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Use Your iPhone’s Number with Messages in OS X 10.8.2
-----------------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman: <glenn@tidbits.com>, @glennf
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13275>
  13 comments

  With the combination of iOS 6 and the OS X 10.8.2 update, Mountain 
  Lion’s Messages app can now send and receive iMessages using an 
  iPhone’s number as the identifier. But I found it puzzling that 
  when I went to my updated Mac’s Messages preferences, clicked 
  Accounts, and selected iMessage, I didn’t see a phone number.

  When your Mac starts up after upgrading to 10.8.2, you may receive a 
  series of messages (as I did) alerting you to all the addresses 
  associated with the Apple ID with which you use iMessage in the 
  Messages program. That’s a nice change: the iMessage account now 
  shows all associated email addresses, instead of requiring you to 
  enter them. If you have iOS 6 installed on your iPhone, the phone 
  number should appear as well; this doesn’t work in iOS 5, even 
  with 10.8.2 installed. My iPhone’s number did not show up, 
  however.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-09/Messages-List-of-Apple-ID-addrs.jpg>

  I logged out and back in using the same Apple ID on my Mac, and 
  still no luck. The trick is to log out and back in on your iPhone 
  instead. Some people have not had to do that, but based on Twitter 
  commentary, others are in the same boat. Tap Settings > Messages > 
  Send & Receive, and then tap Apple ID. Now tap Sign Out. Tap Use 
  Your Apple ID for iMessage, and log back in, then tap Next. (The 
  same procedure works for FaceTime.)

  On my Mac, as soon as I did that, I received an alert that my phone 
  number was available to use in Messages, and the iMessage account in 
  Messages showed a checkbox next to my phone number. Click Yes on the 
  alert to check that box, or you can later select the checkbox in 
  Messages’ Accounts preference pane. I also received an alert from 
  Messages containing the email addresses that were associated with my 
  Apple ID on my iPhone.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-09/Messages-add-iPhone-number.jpg>

  The iMessage system is designed to let you receive messages at any 
  Apple ID-associated email address and now also any iPhone phone 
  number. You can pick an address or a phone number to use whenever 
  you write a new message or reply. We explain that process in depth 
  in “Caller ID in Messages Helps to Direct iMessages” (7 August 
  2012), although in iOS 6, Apple has deprecated the Caller ID term in 
  favor of “Start new conversations from.”

<http://tidbits.com/article/13186>

  So far, we and others have found iMessage’s behavior to be spotty. 
  Perhaps these operating system updates will bring improvements in 
  iMessage consistency? We’ll have to wait and see. 


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With 10.8.2, Mountain Lion Saves Even Better
--------------------------------------------
  by Matt Neuburg: <matt@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13284>
  25 comments

  In “The Very Model of a Modern Mountain Lion Document” (7 August 
  2012), I noted the many improvements in OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion over 
  10.7 Lion in the document-saving behavior of those applications that 
  have been updated to use the built-in Auto Save architecture. One 
  nice touch, I mentioned, was the return of File > Save As, which had 
  been suppressed in Lion. But the _behavior_ of File > Save As in 
  Mountain Lion, I went on to say, left much to be desired. Although 
  it does allow you to give the current document a new name and 
  location, and although it does cause the current document window to 
  switch to editing the new document rather than the old one, it also 
  _saves_ the current document as the current document closes, behind 
  the scenes. This is counterintuitive and possibly dangerous 
  behavior, especially since a common reason for choosing File > Save 
  As has always been to shift unsaved changes from an open document to 
  a copy without affecting the original.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13187>

  The good news is that this problem is solved in the recently 
  released OS X 10.8.2 (see “OS X 10.8.2 Eases Notification Center, 
  Messages Frustrations,” 19 September 2012). And the even better 
  news is that it is solved ingeniously, in a way that makes everybody 
  happy. Once again, Apple has, to my astonishment, shown a 
  willingness to listen to user complaints and to resolve 
  difficulties, tardily to be sure, but with a decided degree of 
  insight and elegance.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13274>

  When you choose File > Save As in 10.8.2, a Save dialog appears. 
  This has always been the case; I stress that point, because I want 
  to impress upon you that Apple’s solution involves _no new 
  dialogs_ of any kind. The change is within that Save dialog. If the 
  current document contains unsaved changes, the Save dialog now 
  offers a checkbox, “Keep changes in original document.” 
  Moreover, that checkbox is _unchecked by default_, meaning that if 
  you do nothing, you will _not_ keep the changes in the original 
  document — thus restoring the expected behavior of Save As. And 
  this checkbox can appear _regardless_ of your settings in the 
  document management checkboxes of the General preference pane.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-09/keepinsaveas.png>

  (Some users report finding that the checkbox is checked by default. 
  I do not know what causes this difference from my own experience, 
  but it hardly matters, as you only need to change the setting once. 
  If, when you first choose File > Save As after updating to Mountain 
  Lion 10.8.2, you see the Save dialog with the checkbox checked, and 
  if, like me, you prefer it unchecked, then simply uncheck it and 
  proceed to save, and the checkbox will remember that setting the 
  next time.)

  This simple expedient puts paid to the entire matter. With the 
  checkbox unchecked (either by default or because you unchecked it 
  the first time you saw it), if you subsequently ignore the checkbox 
  and proceed simply to save the new copy of the document, File > Save 
  As will behave exactly as you expect: the new document will be 
  created and you will find you’re editing it, while in the meantime 
  the unsaved changes in the original have been retracted, reverting 
  to the state of the original either when it was opened or when you 
  last saved it manually. 

  If you’re like me, you will in fact ignore the checkbox, and thus 
  the addition of this feature will mean no more work than before: 
  you’ll be using Save As just as you’ve been using it since 
  System 6, and with the same effective results. It’s true that 
  under the hood there’s a major difference: in 10.6 Snow Leopard 
  and before, not saving changes in an edited document meant that the 
  changes never reached the disk and just vanished into thin air, 
  whereas, in Mountain Lion under Auto Save, changes are being saved 
  to disk all the time, and the document on disk must be reverted 
  (using the Versions database) if those changes turn out to be 
  unwanted when the document closes. In general, however, you won’t 
  be conscious of this; the ultimate surface manifestation is that the 
  changes are not saved.

  The really nice thing about this checkbox is that, for those people 
  or those occasions when you explicitly _do_ want to save the unsaved 
  changes in the original document, you have the option to do so. 
  Apple could have restored the original behavior of Save As, plain 
  and simple; instead, they went further, letting you set a default 
  behavior and making it easy for you to change that setting if 
  circumstances warrant. I can only applaud. This is exactly the sort 
  of thing I’d like to see more of — excellent default behavior 
  along with freedom of choice to override those defaults — in 
  contrast to the “Big Brother knows best” quality that resulted 
  in my reluctance to use Lion.


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://tidbits.com/e/13284#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://tidbits.com/t/13284>


Fission 2: Electric Audio-Editing Boogaloo
------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman: <glenn@tidbits.com>, @glennf
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13269>
  2 comments

  I have used a passel of audio editing programs over the decades, but 
  the one I turn to most frequently these days is Fission from Rogue 
  Amoeba. Why? Most notably, it can edit audio files in lossy formats 
  and save changes without re-compressing the files, and it offers a 
  simple interface for tasks that should be simple. Fission 2 
  significantly improves on the original without losing ease of use.

<http://rogueamoeba.com/fission/>

  Fission 2 retains its basic approach in this update: open an audio 
  file, which appears as a typical graphical representation of the 
  audio information. You can play, scrub, rewind, and so forth. Click 
  and drag to select a chunk of audio, and Fission will even 
  optionally play the audio as you select. Press Delete, and the 
  selection disappears, with the remainder of the sound snapping to 
  the deletion point. Fission also lets you normalize (even out the 
  sound level), divide a file into multiple pieces to save or copy 
  separately, insert silence, and export in many formats.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-09/fission-2-main-window.jpg>

  The update adds piles of new features, some of which I used 
  immediately. The first release could handle just a single file at a 
  time, possibly to keep it simple. Fission 2 lets you open multiple 
  files. In my case, I needed to append one file to another. I opened 
  both, copied the part to be appended from one, moved the playhead in 
  the other to the end, and pasted.

<http://weblog.rogueamoeba.com/2012/09/17/fission-2-fast-and-simple-audio-editing-better-than-ever/>

  While Fission always had broad support for different audio file 
  formats — reading AAC, AIFF, Apple Lossless, and MP3, and allowing 
  those to be saved without quality loss — Fission 2 also can 
  directly edit the lossless FLAC format and WAV files, and export to 
  any of these formats.

  Fission 2’s new interface is crisper, making it easier to scan 
  visually through audio sound waves; it offers two color schemes. It 
  abounds with nice new touches. Select a range of audio and a volume 
  knob appears at the bottom to adjust the volume of only that piece 
  of sound. You can also drag selection markers without moving the 
  corresponding audio to keep the length identical. Menu commands with 
  keyboard shortcuts help you preview the beginning and end of 
  recordings.

  Also new in Fission 2 is batch processing to convert files from one 
  format to another. This is particularly useful when you’ve used 
  software that produces files in a given audio format; many programs 
  omit AAC because they lack the necessary license. Plus, some 
  programs require uncompressed AIFF or WAV files for input, and you 
  can create those with Fission 2. Conversion can be either a 
  drag-and-drop operation or invoked through an Open dialog.

  For podcasters, Fission’s support for chapters in AAC eliminates 
  the need for a separate piece of software to add images and markers 
  that break up an audio file into discrete segments. This ties in 
  neatly with Fission 2’s addition of direct export to SoundCloud, 
  an audio-sharing site used by amateurs and professionals alike. 
  (SoundCloud’s free version allows 120 minutes of uploads and 100 
  downloads of each uploaded track.)

<http://soundcloud.com/>

  Rogue Amoeba has a free trial version of Fission 2 that offers full 
  functionality but inserts audio fades to prevent production use. 
  Full copies cost $32 direct from Rogue Amoeba or through the Mac App 
  Store. Owners of the previous version of Fission who purchased on 1 
  April 2012 or later are eligible for a free upgrade; for those who 
  purchased earlier, upgrades run $15. Fission 2 requires Mac OS X 
  10.6 Snow Leopard or later, and is a 5.7 MB download.

<http://rogueamoeba.com/fission/download.php>
<http://rogueamoeba.com/fission/buy.php>


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://tidbits.com/e/13269#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://tidbits.com/t/13269>


Facebook Integration Comes to Mountain Lion
-------------------------------------------
  by Michael E. Cohen: <mcohen@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13278>
  2 comments

  Unlike some cats you might know, Mountain Lion is a sociable beast, 
  and with the 10.8.2 iteration it has become even more so by adding 
  Facebook integration to its collection of big cat toys. This 
  integration gives you the capability of making Facebook posts from 
  Mountain Lion’s Notification Center, from Game Center, and from 
  the Share buttons in the Finder, in Safari, and in Quick Look 
  windows. Plus, you’ll be able to see all of your Facebook friends 
  in your Contacts app and add their profile pictures to Contacts — 
  if you so choose.

  To bring Facebook into your Mac OS X environment, take a trip to 
  System Preferences and open the Mail, Contacts & Calendars 
  preference pane. There you find Facebook as one of the account types 
  listed on the right side of the preference pane. Click the Facebook 
  logo in that list, enter your Facebook username (or the email 
  address you use to log into Facebook) and your Facebook password, 
  and then click Next. 

  When you do that, you see a list of all the things you can do with 
  Facebook. These include the following:

* Download and integrate your Facebook friends into the Contacts app
* Integrate Facebook into Notification Center and post links from 
  various apps
* Enable other Facebook-savvy apps on your Mac to work with your 
  Facebook account — only, Apple is careful to point out, with your 
  consent

  Following that list are various caveats and additional items of 
  interest concerning the integration. For example, Apple points out 
  that you can approve or deny any app’s request to use your 
  account, you can review what the requesting app purports to do with 
  your account, you can grant the app permission to use information 
  available to the app on your behalf in Facebook, and you can see 
  (and specify) whether that information is available to just your 
  Facebook friends, just you, or the entire Facebook community.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2012-09/Facebook-caveats.png>

  In the fine print, Apple also points out what granting Facebook 
  access to your apps could entail; this is well worth reading and 
  considering if you are at all concerned about maintaining a modicum 
  of privacy while interacting with Facebook from Mountain Lion. But, 
  if the fine print doesn’t scare you off, click Sign In and 
  you’re ready to go… almost: the preference then presents a pane 
  showing you the apps that have requested Facebook access. In my 
  case, the only app listed was Contacts, and the default was to allow 
  Facebook access to my Contacts list (I immediately unchecked it). 
  Even if you don’t allow Facebook access to your Contacts, you can 
  still have Contacts look through your Facebook contacts and bring 
  profile pictures from Facebook into your Contacts app and assign 
  them to matching contacts if you like.

  Posting to Facebook from Safari is much like posting to Twitter: 
  click the Share button on the Safari toolbar and choose Facebook 
  from the pop-up menu, compose your post, and click Post. Your post, 
  along with the URL of the page you are viewing, are published as 
  your current Facebook status. Similarly, posting from Notification 
  Center is much like posting to Twitter from there; in fact, the 
  Click to Tweet button at the top of the Notification Center now 
  shares space with a Click to Post button for Facebook. (For this to 
  work, you must have the Share button enabled in the Notifications 
  preference pane; for details, see “Going In Depth on Mountain 
  Lion’s Notifications,” 11 September 2012.)

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2012-09/Facebook-Notification-post.png>
<http://tidbits.com/article/13241>

  In both these cases, and, I imagine, in other situations where you 
  can post to Facebook from a Mac app, you see a small pop-up menu at 
  the top of the posting pane from which you can choose who gets to 
  see your post. Choices include Public (i.e., everyone on Facebook), 
  Friends, Only Me, Friends of Friends, and various other Facebook 
  groups to which you may belong. In fact, this menu seems to me more 
  obvious and informative than the one lurking at the bottom of the 
  Facebook posting pane in Facebook’s own Web interface.

  Posting to Facebook from the Finder or the Quick Look window is a 
  bit different, since you must first select a file, then click the 
  Share button and choose Facebook from the pop-up menu. But Facebook 
  (and this is true for Twitter and Flickr as well) appears in the 
  menu only if the file selected is a graphic file format, and 
  you’re given the additional option of posting the image to your 
  Wall or to an existing Facebook album.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-09/Facebook-Quick-Look-post.png>

  Facebook integration also includes notifications: when someone 
  comments or likes a Facebook post of yours, or sends you a message 
  via Facebook, Notification Center can let you know about it. You can 
  configure Facebook in the Notifications preference pane to choose 
  how you are notified in the usual ways — None, Banners, or Alerts —
  and you can specify how many Facebook items are listed in Notification
  Center.

  The integration that Apple and Facebook jointly provide in 10.8.2 
  seems to me to offer a good balance of utility and security. Whether 
  you are only an occasional Facebook user or a complete Facebook 
  addict, I suspect you’ll like what the cat dragged in in the 
  latest OS X update.


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://tidbits.com/e/13278#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://tidbits.com/t/13278>


TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 24 September 2012
-----------------------------------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff: <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13293>

**iBank 4.6** -- IGG Software has released iBank 4.6, which should 
  improve overall stability thanks to a long list of bug fixes. Bug 
  squashing highlights include a fix for an issue where the “actual 
  expenses” figure in a budget didn’t update immediately after 
  adding a category, resolution to a crash that occurred when 
  downloading large amounts of data from some banks (including Chase 
  and Wells Fargo), and a fix for CSV imports with unrecognizable date 
  formats that didn’t prompt a choice of format. Additionally, the 
  update brings support for Retina displays and improves overall 
  budget performance while adding the capability to edit which 
  accounts are included in budgets and to change budget periods. 
  ($59.99 new, free update, 33.1 MB, release notes)

<http://www.iggsoftware.com/ibank/>
<http://www.iggsoftware.com/ibank/version_changes_4.html>

  Read/post comments about iBank 4.6.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13291#comments>


**Growl 2.0** -- The Growl Project has released Growl 2.0, a major 
  update for the system-wide notification utility that brings 
  compatibility with Notification Center in OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion. 
  With this new release, you can set Growl to route all of its 
  notifications through Notification Center (rather than use Growl’s 
  standalone pop-up notifications). However, you’ll still find some 
  apps (including Dropbox) using Growl’s notification system instead 
  of forwarding to Notification Center due to the requirement that 
  developers update their apps to the Growl 2.0 API. The update also 
  adds support for Prowl and Boxcar, two utilities that enable you to 
  receive notifications from your Mac on your iOS device. It also 
  reportedly resolves the high CPU spikes and multiple crashes 
  suffered by the previous version. ($3.99 new from the Mac App Store, 
  free upgrade from previous Mac App Store versions, 6.1 MB)

<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/growl/id467939042?mt=12>

  Read/post comments about Growl 2.0.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13290#comments>


**Parallels Desktop 8.0.18101** -- The first maintenance release for 
  Parallels Desktop 8 (version 8.0.18101) has been released with fixes 
  for a number of issues related to the MacBook Pro with Retina 
  Display. The update improves support for multi-display 
  configurations that include Retina and non-Retina displays, fixes an 
  issue where the mouse moved too fast when SmartMouse was disabled, 
  and ensures that drag-and-drop from Mac OS X to Windows 8 works 
  correctly. Additionally, the release improves overall performance 
  for full-screen viewing in both single and multi-display 
  configurations, fixes Flash video playback in Google Chrome for 
  Windows, and resolves a keyboard malfunction while in the Coherence 
  (non-Crystal) view mode. ($79.99 new, $49.99 upgrade from previous 
  versions, free update, 346.6 MB, release notes)

<http://www.parallels.com/products/desktop/>
<http://kb.parallels.com/en/114720>

  Read/post comments about Parallels Desktop 8.0.18101.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13289#comments>


**KeyCue 6.3** -- Ergonis has released KeyCue 6.3, which adds 
  compatibility with OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion to the keyboard shortcut 
  utility and ensures that KeyCue’s new technique for adding the app 
  to the Login Items list now works with the big cat. The update also 
  fixes an issue that caused group titles to appear white on white 
  while editing custom shortcuts, improves the Start at Login setting 
  when KeyCue has been renamed, and plays the Installer’s completion 
  sound through the “sound effects” channel while respecting the 
  volume level set in System Preferences. (€19.99 new with a 
  25-percent discount for TidBITS members, free update, 2.2 MB, 
  release notes)

<http://www.ergonis.com/products/keycue/>
<http://tidbits.com/member_benefits.html>
<http://www.ergonis.com/products/keycue/history.html>

  Read/post comments about KeyCue 6.3.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13288#comments>


**SpamSieve 2.9.5** -- In answer to the recent security update 
  released for Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard (which changed how plug-ins 
  work with Apple Mail), C-Command Software has quickly updated 
  SpamSieve to version 2.9.5 to return its spam filtering to working 
  order. The company notes that if you don’t see SpamSieve commands 
  in Mail’s Message menu after updating, you may need to go to the 
  SpamSieve menu and choose Install Apple Mail Plug-In. The update 
  also fixes an issue with the AppleScript scripts that control 
  Griffin Technology’s PowerMate, which in turn caused SpamSieve to 
  crash when running 10.8 Mountain Lion (the PowerMate option has been 
  turned off but can be re-enabled in preferences). Additionally, the 
  release provides a workaround for some Macs where SpamSieve was 
  prevented from receiving training commands under Mountain Lion, and 
  the app is better at identifying from which account in Apple Mail a 
  good message has come from. ($30 new, free update, 10.4 MB, release 
  notes)

<http://tidbits.com/article/13281>
<http://c-command.com/spamsieve/>
<http://c-command.com/forums/showthread.php/3616-SpamSieve-2-9-5>

  Read/post comments about SpamSieve 2.9.5.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13287#comments>


**Typinator 5.2** -- Ergonis has updated its Typinator typing 
  expansion utility to version 5.2 with a wide-ranging list of 
  improvements and fixes. The highlights include compatibility with OS 
  X 10.8 Mountain Lion, the capability to import Spell Catcher 
  glossaries that were exported as XML files, improved import of text 
  files, and a new technique that passes context variables to 
  AppleScript scripts in Unicode format. The update also includes 
  numerous fixes for audio glitches, the timing of display elements, 
  and compatibility issues with other apps. (€24.99 new with a 
  25-percent discount for TidBITS members, free update, 4.9 MB, 
  release notes) 

<http://www.ergonis.com/products/typinator/>
<http://tidbits.com/member_benefits.html>
<http://www.ergonis.com/products/typinator/history.html>

  Read/post comments about Typinator 5.2.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13286#comments>


**Microsoft Office 2011 14.2.4 and 2008 12.3.4** -- Microsoft has 
  released Office 2011 14.2.4 and Office 2008 12.3.4, with Office 2011 
  gaining Retina display support. Additionally, version 14.2.4 brings 
  a number of improvements to Outlook, including the display of 
  reminders for calendar events on all calendars (previously, 
  reminders were only displayed in the default account’s calendar). 
  The update also changes the HTML syntax of new signatures to be 
  compatible with OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion and the latest version of 
  WebKit, improves handling of partially downloaded messages, fixes a 
  crash that occurred when some messages were moved via client-side 
  rules, and more (see the release notes for a complete rundown of 
  changes). However, Microsoft has heard that a “small number of 
  users” have been experiencing difficulty in updating to version 
  14.2.4, and the company is working with Apple to resolve the 
  problem.

<http://www.microsoft.com/en-us/download/details.aspx?id=34690>
<http://www.microsoft.com/en-us/download/details.aspx?id=34692>
<http://support.microsoft.com/kb/2742588>
<http://blog.officeformac.com/retina-display-support-is-here-for-office-for-mac-2011/>

  The Office 2008 12.3.4 update gets a fix for an issue that crashed 
  Excel after clicking Insert Object and then clicking to select the 
  Display as Icon check box in the Insert Object dialog box. It also 
  includes unspecified improvements in  stability, reliability, and 
  performance. (Free updates as a download from the Office for Mac Web 
  site or through Microsoft AutoUpdate, 111 MB/218.4 MB)

<http://www.microsoft.com/mac/downloads?pid=Mactopia_Office2011>

  Read/post comments about Microsoft Office 2011 14.2.4 and 2008 
  12.3.4.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13285#comments>


**Security Update 2012-004 (Snow Leopard)** -- Apple has released 
  Security Update 2012-004 for both Mac OS X 10.6.8 Snow Leopard and 
  10.6.8 Snow Leopard Server, both of which address the same issues. 
  Among the list of fixes, the releases update Apache 2.2.22 to 
  prevent a vulnerability that could lead to denial of service, add a 
  revoked TrustWave root certificate to a list of untrusted 
  certificates, and update the DirectoryService Proxy to prevent an 
  arbitrary execution of code due to an overflow buffer vulnerability. 
  There’s no reason to update instantly; we recommend waiting a week 
  or so and seeing if online reports note any distressing side 
  effects. Note that Apple incorrectly lists the file size of the 
  10.6.8 Snow Leopard Security Update as 2.36 MB — it is actually 
  257 MB. (Free, 257/276 MB)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1586>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1587>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT5501>

  Read/post comments about Security Update 2012-004 (Snow Leopard).

<http://tidbits.com/article/13281#comments>


**Mac OS X 10.7.5 Lion Server** -- Apple has released Mac OS X 10.7.5 
  Lion Server with fixes for a variety of commonly used services. The 
  update provides fixes for maintaining the Spotlight index when 
  changing share point settings, creating and connecting to the Open 
  Directory master, using Software Update, and using Profile Manager 
  to set how frequently the Mobility sync interacts with mobile 
  accounts. It also improves the reliability of password 
  authentication and changing an Xsan metadata controller into a 
  client. The updates come in two editions — a delta update for 
  those upgrading from 10.7.4 Lion Server (1.22 GB) and a Combo update 
  for those upgrading from previous versions of Lion Server (1.99 GB). 
  (Free update)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1584>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1585>

  Read/post comments about Mac OS X 10.7.5 Lion Server.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13280#comments>


**EFI and SMC Updates for MacBook Pro and MacBook Air** -- Apple has 
  released four firmware updates for select MacBook Pro and MacBook 
  Air models released in 2012. The MacBook Pro EFI Firmware Update 2.9 
  (4.29 MB) resolves an issue that caused the system to hang during 
  heavy processor loads. The MacBook Air EFI Firmware Update 2.5 (4.76 
  MB) fixes an issue where Turbo Boost isn’t activated while using 
  Boot Camp, and it ensures that NetBoot works properly when using an 
  Ethernet adapter. The MacBook Pro Retina EFI Update 1.0 (4.97 MB) 
  borrows a little from each of these sibling updates, addressing the 
  former’s system hangs during processor-intensive use and the 
  NetBoot issue of the latter.

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1593>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1592>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1591>

  Additionally, the MacBook Air SMC Update 1.7 (658 KB) is a System 
  Management Controller patch that enables Mountain Lion’s Power Nap 
  feature for MacBook Air models released in late 2010. As always with 
  firmware updates, we recommend relying on Software Update to ensure 
  you get the firmware update for your specific model, and be careful 
  not to interrupt the update process. (Free)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1590>

  Read/post comments about EFI and SMC Updates for MacBook Pro and 
  MacBook Air.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13279#comments>


**iPhoto 9.4, Aperture 3.4** -- Apple has updated its two photo 
  management applications to take advantage of the new Shared Photo 
  Stream feature in iCloud. Both iPhoto 9.4 and Aperture 3.4 now 
  enable you to share a selection of photos for others to view, and 
  each app includes a new File menu item for easier access to opening 
  and editing a file from the other’s library (if you have both 
  iPhoto and Aperture installed). Additionally, iPhoto 9.4 adds new 
  card and calendar themes and enables you to add comments to photos 
  after publishing them to Facebook. Both updates are also rounded out 
  by unspecified performance and stability improvements. (Free 
  updates. iPhoto, $14.99, 757.61 MB via direct download; Aperture, 
  $79.99, 554.48 MB via direct download)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1589>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1588>

  Read/post comments about iPhoto 9.4, Aperture 3.4.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13277#comments>


**Mac OS X 10.7.5 Lion** -- Apple brings an added measure of security 
  to Mac OS X Lion with the inclusion of Gatekeeper in the Mac OS X 
  10.7.5 update. (If you haven’t been keeping up with Gatekeeper or 
  other new features included in 10.8 Mountain Lion, see Rich 
  Mogull’s “Gatekeeper Slams the Door on Mac Malware Epidemics,” 
  16 February 2012.) Note, however, that Gatekeeper isn’t called out 
  very visibly on the Security and Privacy preference pane in System 
  Preferences. You’ll find it in the General pane under “Allow 
  applications downloaded from,” with “Mac App Store and 
  identified developers” being the default setting. The update also 
  resolves an issue where icons in Launchpad could be rearranged after 
  a restart, improves Wi-Fi reliability for iMac models released in 
  2009 or later, fixes an issue using Spotlight to search an SMB 
  server, and improves compatibility with Active Directory servers. 
  It’s available via Software Update (894.3 MB) or via direct 
  download in two flavors — a Client version for those running 
  10.7.4 (1.14 GB) and a Client Combo version for those running 
  previous versions of Lion (1.91 GB). (Free update)

<http://tidbits.com/article/12795>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1583>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1582>

  Read/post comments about Mac OS X 10.7.5 Lion.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13276#comments>


**TechTool Pro 6.0.5** -- Micromat has released TechTool Pro 6.0.5 
  with compatibility for OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion (including 
  Gatekeeper-approved code signing). The update also adds detection of 
  USB 3.0 connection speeds for the USB gauge, updates both creation 
  and removal routines in the eDrive tool, adds a verification check 
  to the Volume Optimization tool, and improves File Sync Cloning in 
  the Volume Cloning tool. The new version squashes a Video Memory bug 
  that caused a crash under Mountain Lion, fixes a memory leak in the 
  Video tool, and addresses Volume Rebuild issues where volumes 
  wouldn’t unmount or would skip to rechecking structures. Finally, 
  the release updates French, German, Italian, Japanese and Chinese 
  (Simplified) localizations. ($99.99 new, free update, 54.8 MB, 
  release notes)

<https://www.micromat.com/techtoolpro>
<http://www.micromat.com/downloads/techtool-pro-6-0-5-released>

  Read/post comments about TechTool Pro 6.0.5.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13272#comments>


**Coda 2.0.3** -- Panic has released Coda 2.0.3 with improvements in 
  performance and syntax highlighting for the Web site development 
  tool, as well as a number of bug fixes. The update makes importing 
  of Coda 1 sites more reliable, improves the speed of returning to 
  code when editing over a VPN connection, improves CFML HTML 
  autocomplete and syntax highlighting, improves PHP syntax 
  highlighting in certain circumstances, ensures that tabs aren’t 
  obscured by the menu bar in Full Screen mode, and adds support for 
  Notification Center. It also addresses some situations where Coda 
  could become unresponsive, fixes an issue that prevented renaming of 
  files and folders using Git, and ensures that site preview passwords 
  are remembered if needed. 

  If you own the Mac App Store edition of Coda (which is still stuck 
  at version 2.0.2 as of this writing), Cabel Sasser writes in the 
  Coda Users forum that you can unlock the direct version of Coda by 
  choosing Unlock Coda from the Purchase menu (available in Coda 
  2.0.2), and then subsequently download the 2.0.3 update. 
  Additionally, Sasser notes that Panic received word from Apple that 
  the OS X 10.8.2 update includes a fix for a WebKit-related problem 
  that has been causing the majority of crashes in Coda 2. ($99 new, 
  $75 upgrade from 1.0, free update, 48.4 MB, release notes)

<http://www.panic.com/coda/>
<https://groups.google.com/forum/?fromgroups=#!topic/coda-users/aXyzCucab54>
<http://panic.com/coda/releasenotes.html>

  Read/post comments about Coda 2.0.3.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13271#comments>


**GraphicConverter 8.3** -- Lemkesoft has released GraphicConverter 
  8.3 with a number of updates to the highly regarded graphic 
  conversion and editing utility, including support for Notification 
  Center in OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion and accessing Aperture’s 
  library. Other additions include Automator actions, shared menu 
  support, new PDF export options, the capability to copy and paste 
  GPS locations to the browser, an option to select a default display 
  in multi-display configurations, enhanced GIF export, and an 
  optimized unsharp mask. The release also includes several fixes, 
  including a bug that prevented saving an image with the original 
  creation date, crashes that occurred with Fast Preview and saving 
  grayscale GIFs, and a bug when converting movies to GIF animations. 
  ($39.95 new, free update from version 7.x, $29.95 upgrade from 
  versions 1 through 6, 128 MB, release notes). 

<http://www.lemkesoft.com/content/188/graphicconverter.html>
<http://www.lemkesoft.org/files/graphicconverter/notes/999.html>

  Read/post comments about GraphicConverter 8.3.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13270#comments>


ExtraBITS for 24 September 2012
-------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff: <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13292>

  Two quick ExtraBITS for you this week — an explanation of why the 
  CDMA iPhone 5 has an unlocked GSM SIM slot and Glenn Fleishman’s 
  Boing Boing report from the unusual XOXO conference.


**Verizon’s Unlocked iPhone 5 Due to FCC Requirement?** -- As the 
  iPhone 5 got into people’s hands last Friday, several Verizon 
  Wireless subscribers noted that their iPhones were unlocked both for 
  international use and for other U.S. carriers. James Duncan Davidson 
  explains that Verizon isn’t doing this out of the kindness of its 
  corporate heart, but rather due to an agreement with the FCC for 
  licensing the 700 MHz C block of spectrum for its LTE network.

<http://duncandavidson.com/blog/2012/09/verizon_iphone5_unlocked>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/13295#comments>


**A Conference About Tech That Is Full of Love** -- If you regularly 
  attend technology or engineering conferences, you might enjoy editor 
  Glenn Fleishman’s account at Boing Boing of the recent XOXO 
  Festival in Portland, Oregon. XOXO brought people who make things 
  together with those who have new methods of reaching customers, an 
  audience, fans, or colleagues directly, such as Kickstarter and 
  Etsy. Beyond the content, the conference captured a magic that’s 
  rarely found in such events.

<http://boingboing.net/2012/09/19/xoxo.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/13283#comments>


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