TidBITS#1149/05-Nov-2012
========================
  Issue link: <http://tidbits.com/issue/1149>


  Mountain Lion’s Messages app gets attention this week as we announce
  the release of Glenn Fleishman’s new “Take Control of Messages in
  Mountain Lion” ebook and our next live TidBITS Presents event on 14
  November 2012, when Glenn will explain the top three confusions people
  have been having with Messages. Also this week, don’t miss our
  coverage of iOS 6.0.1, the 50-percent DealBITS discount on BeLight
  Software’s Art Text, and Adam Engst’s look at the recent Apple
  management shakeup. Plus, Glenn shares his experience of being on the
  Jeopardy TV show and throws cold water on Apple’s claim of “doubled”
  Wi-Fi throughput in the iPad mini and fourth-generation iPad. Lastly,
  we’ve finally found room in an issue for Steve McCabe’s lengthy iPhone
  5 review, if you’re still pondering a purchase. Notable software
  releases this week include Parallels Desktop 8.0.18314, Screenflow
  4.0.1, Sandvox 2.7, Safari 6.0.2, iPhoto 9.4.2, Aperture 3.4.2, and
  PDFpen and PDFpenPro 5.9.

Articles
    iOS 6.0.1 Fixes Bugs, but Does It Prevent Excessive Data Usage?
    Communicate Better with “Take Control of Messages in Mountain Lion”
    TidBITS Presents “Explaining the Big 3 Confusions with Messages”
    DealBITS Discount: Save 50% on Art Text 2.4.2
    Apple Management Shakeup Aimed at Improving Collaboration
    Winning and Losing on Jeopardy
    How Apple “Doubled” iPad Wi-Fi Throughput
    iPhone 5: The Best Yet, But Still an iPhone
    TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 5 November 2012


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iOS 6.0.1 Fixes Bugs, but Does It Prevent Excessive Data Usage?
---------------------------------------------------------------
  by Agen G. N. Schmitz: <agen@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13367>
  4 comments

  Apple has released iOS 6.0.1 with fixes for a grab bag of 
  connectivity bugs. While no single fix in the list seems to take aim 
  at correcting the unexplained hoovering of data through cellular 
  networks (for more on this, see  Matt Neuburg’s “Mysterious iOS 
  6 Cellular Data Usage: A Deeper Look,” 24 October 2012), perhaps 
  this collective group of fixes will help to mitigate the problem. 

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1606>
<http://tidbits.com/article/13354>

  Connectivity issues addressed include improved reliability when 
  connecting to encrypted WPA2 Wi-Fi networks using the iPhone 5 and 
  fifth-generation iPod touch, the addition of a consolidated Use 
  Cellular Data switch for iTunes Match, and resolution for an issue 
  that prevented the iPhone from accessing a cellular network. On Adam 
  Engst’s iPhone 5, however, Wi-Fi (which had been working fine 
  under iOS 6.0) failed to work at all under 6.0.1 until the device 
  was powered down and rebooted.

  The update also fixes a problem where horizontal lines could be 
  displayed across the keyboard, a bug affecting Exchange meetings, a 
  bug that prevented the camera flash from operating, and a Passcode 
  Lock bug that could allow Passbook pass details to be viewed from 
  the lock screen. A couple of WebKit security vulnerabilities were 
  also closed. It does not fix a bug that causes previously played 
  audio (such as an iTunes U lecture) to start playing again 
  unexpectedly after iOS uses other audio (such as playing an alarm 
  sound).

  iOS 6.0.1 is compatible with the following models: iPhone 5, iPhone 
  4S, iPhone 4, iPhone 3GS, third-generation iPad, iPad 2, 
  fifth-generation iPod touch, and fourth-generation iPod touch. We 
  presume the iPad mini and fourth-generation iPad will either ship 
  with iOS 6.0.1, or will update to it immediately.

  You can download the 43.3 MB update either via iTunes on a computer 
  or via an over-the-air update on compatible iOS devices — initiate 
  the update in Settings > General > Software Update. However, iPhone 
  5 owners looking to update wirelessly will first need to download 
  another app called Updater for iPhone 5 before downloading iOS 
  6.0.1, since the iPhone 5 is unable to install software updates over 
  the air under iOS 6.0. This app, which shows up as iOS Updater on 
  the Home screen, disappears once 6.0.1 is installed. 


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Communicate Better with “Take Control of Messages in Mountain Lion”
-------------------------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst: <ace@tidbits.com>, @adamengst
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13366>

  In OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion, Apple replaced the long-standing iChat 
  program with Messages, which takes its interface cues from the iPad 
  version of the program. Although Messages looks easy, many people 
  have had trouble understanding how to integrate different chat 
  services and Apple devices, now that messages can appear on Macs, 
  iPhones, and iPads. 

  For instance, should you use iMessage or AIM to chat with your 
  friend? What if he’s home on his Mac or out while using his 
  iPhone? Can you add someone else to the chat? What if you want to 
  switch to an audio chat? To video? For video, should you use Google 
  Talk or FaceTime? And so on. The mechanics may be simple, but the 
  setup and human interactions can be anything but simple.

  To bring some sense to the situation, we asked networking guru Glenn 
  Fleishman to explain how you can bend Messages to your will, and the 
  fruits of his labor are now available for only $10 in the 113-page 
  “Take Control of Messages in Mountain Lion.”

<http://tid.bl.it/tco-messages-mountain-lion-tidbits>

  As noted, the basics of using Messages aren’t difficult, but 
  we’ve found all sorts of confusions and gotchas that the book 
  explains. With it in hand, you’ll discover:

* The difference between SMS, instant messaging, and iMessage — plus 
  why you should care.

* How to convert your iChat experience to the brave new world of 
  Messages.

* Why it is that Messages lets you set up accounts at five different 
  services (plus Bonjour), and how to figure out which you should use 
  in any given situation.

* In an iMessage account, how to configure which email address(es) and 
  iPhone number(s) should receive messages on your Mac.

* How to use Google Talk with Google two-factor authentication.

* How to send messages — and set your online status — with an eye 
  to etiquette and conventions.

* What an instant-message buddy is, why it’s awkward that iMessage 
  doesn’t have buddies, how to get buddies, organize buddies, and 
  even delete or block a buddy.

* How to exchange photos, videos, business documents, and other files 
  via Messages.

* The best way to add a spoken conversation or video to a connection, 
  whether through an iMessage/FaceTime chat or an instant-messaging 
  service.

* How to view and control the Mac screen of the person you’re 
  chatting with (or vice-versa). 

* And much more…

  If you’ve found Messages awkward, “Take Control of Messages in 
  Mountain Lion” has the explanations you need to make Messages work 
  for you (or, in a few cases, to say, “Sorry, that’s just not 
  possible”). 


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://tidbits.com/e/13366#comments>
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TidBITS Presents “Explaining the Big 3 Confusions with Messages”
----------------------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst: <ace@tidbits.com>, @adamengst
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13378>

  With the introduction of Messages in OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion, Apple 
  took a large step toward unifying the messaging experience between 
  OS X and iOS. But because Messages in Mountain Lion had to integrate 
  the instant messaging functionality of iChat with the 
  iMessage/FaceTime capabilities of Messages in iOS, it’s easy to 
  get confused. 

  While writing “Take Control of Messages in Mountain Lion,” Glenn 
  Fleishman poked and prodded at every part of Messages, and he’s 
  heard from numerous people (including me!) who have had trouble with 
  many different aspects of Messages. In this live TidBITS Presents 
  event on Wednesday, 14 November 2012, at 12:00 PM Eastern, he’ll 
  be explaining the three most-common confusions:

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/mountain-lion-messages?pt=TBPRESENTS>

* Since an Apple ID can be associated with multiple email addresses 
  and iPhone phone numbers, it’s easy to end up in a situation where 
  iMessages don’t arrive where you think they should, or where 
  you’re unable to contact someone at the desired device. Glenn will 
  explain how to ensure that you’ve associated the desired addresses 
  and numbers with Messages on each device.

* Many people start a conversation via text chat, but want to switch 
  to audio or video at some point in the middle. Messages makes it 
  hard on us by sporting a bit of terrible user interface reminiscent 
  of using the Windows Start button to shut a PC down. Couple that 
  with the lack of audio and video support in the iMessage system, 
  requiring a shift to the FaceTime app, and lots of people can’t 
  figure out how to move from text to talking out loud. Once Glenn 
  scrubs away the poor user interface, you’ll make the jump with 
  ease.

* Messages makes chat transcripts central to the user experience (a 
  major change from iChat), maintaining them as essentially permanent 
  conversations that you can search as desired. Many people don’t 
  understand the connection between conversations and transcripts, and 
  very few people realize just how destructive the Clear Transcript 
  command in Messages is. Glenn will explain all, and make sure you 
  understand exactly what Clear Transcript will do.

  So please join us live on Wednesday, 14 November 2012, at 12:00 PM 
  Eastern (9 AM Pacific) at the TidBITS Presents page (if you’re in 
  another time zone, check out the Every Time Zone site to convert to 
  local time). You’ll see the event on the public TidBITS Events 
  calendar (for more details, see “Subscribe to the TidBITS Events 
  Calendar,” 15 October 2012). The presentation is open to everyone. 
  We’ll be trying to keep the main discussion to 15 minutes, and 
  we’ll take questions from the live chat at the end for another 15 
  minutes. If you can’t make it live, you’ll be able to watch the 
  recorded presentation afterwards at your leisure. For additional 
  details about Messages, check out the full 113-page “Take Control 
  of Messages in Mountain Lion.”

<http://tidbits.com/tidbits_presents.html>
<http://everytimezone.com/>
<webcal://p02-calendarws.icloud.com/ca/subscribe/1/1fykyeloNsBN_opxg3XN1vHn2aNkFQXaJ4OU7qCtkByNyW66ZiQ5u45FsnrUOp12GSWenFRvinLtm6E3HdtYK1nXJlwEy1YuiJogx7aU-C0>
<http://tidbits.com/article/13334>

  We continue to learn about the best ways to use Google Hangouts On 
  Air, so be sure to scroll down and read the FAQ at the bottom of the 
  TidBITS Presents page before the presentation. See you at noon on 
  Wednesday the 14th! 


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DealBITS Discount: Save 50% on Art Text 2.4.2
---------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst: <ace@tidbits.com>, @adamengst
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13377>

  Congratulations to Dirk Paul Flach at gmail.com, David Miller at 
  mac.com, J. Sulcer at mac.com, Brent Wiese at sungecko.com, and Jane 
  Stein at gmail.com, whose entries were chosen randomly in the last 
  DealBITS drawing and who each received a copy of Art Text 2.4.2, 
  worth $39.95. But don’t fret if you didn’t win, since BeLight 
  Software is offering a 50-percent-off discount to all TidBITS 
  readers through 4 December 2012. To take advantage of this offer, 
  which drops the $39.95 list price to $19.99, use this special link 
  to purchase from the Mac App Store. Thanks to the 408 people who 
  entered this DealBITS drawing, and we hope you’ll continue to 
  participate in the future!

<http://tidbits.com/article/13363>
<http://www.belightsoft.com/products/arttext/overview.php>
<http://click.linksynergy.com/fs-bin/stat?id=L/NDMDt0ohc&offerid=146261&type=3&subid=0&tmpid=1826&RD_PARM1=http%253A%252F%252Fitunes.apple.com%252Fus%252Fapp%252Fart-text-2%252Fid404180306%253Fmt%253D12%2526uo%253D4%2526partnerId%253D30>


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Apple Management Shakeup Aimed at Improving Collaboration
---------------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst: <ace@tidbits.com>, @adamengst
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13369>
  6 comments

  It can feel like inside baseball to talk about Apple management 
  changes. After all, who heads up any given division at Apple likely 
  won’t affect your immediate experience with Apple products. Over a 
  longer term, though, those managers do make their marks, for good 
  and for ill, and I suspect that Apple’s management shakeup last 
  week may indeed be noticeable to us hoi polloi.

  Leaving Apple immediately is John Browett, who took over Apple’s 
  retail operations seven months ago. His short tenure was marked with 
  controversy, since he brought a cost-cutting philosophy from UK 
  giant Dixons Retail that prompted outrage from store employees, 
  limiting hours for part-time employees and under-staffing Apple 
  stores (Ars Technica looked in more depth at Browett’s missteps). 

<http://arstechnica.com/apple/2012/10/no-surprise-browetts-reign-over-apple-retail-a-short-7-months/>

  Particularly with Apple’s consistently massive profits and $123 
  billion in cash, nickel-and-diming retail store employees seems both 
  unpleasant and unnecessary, especially given the reputation Apple 
  stores had garnered for excellent customer service over the years. 
  (The New York Times has an interesting article on how employers in 
  general are turning to sophisticated software packages to juggle 
  numerous part-time employees rather than hire them on full time.) 
  Tim Cook is taking over Browett’s responsibilities until a 
  replacement can be found. If you’ve found service lacking at your 
  local Apple store (a theme that has popped up recently in my email), 
  hopefully you’ll see support improving with increased staffing 
  levels and hours for part-time employees.

<http://www.nytimes.com/2012/10/28/business/a-part-time-life-as-hours-shrink-and-shift-for-american-workers.html>

  More important is the departure of Scott Forstall, head of iOS 
  Software, who is staying on as an adviser to Tim Cook before leaving 
  next year (translation: Forstall is likely out except on paper, 
  likely to fulfill stock option grants and ensure a smooth transition 
  of duties). Apple’s press release announcing the shakeup was 
  titled “Apple Announces Changes to Increase Collaboration Across 
  Hardware, Software & Services,” and I think it’s worth taking 
  that statement at face value. Over the last week, stories have 
  emerged from Apple about other senior vice presidents — Jonathan 
  Ive and Bob Mansfield in particular — refusing to be in the same 
  room with Forstall, citing his confrontational style.

<http://allthingsd.com/20121101/behind-silicon-valleys-un-retirement-why-bob-mansfield-is-back-at-apple/>
<http://gigaom.com/2012/10/29/from-inside-apple-the-scott-forstall-fallout/>

  The straw that may have broken the camel’s back was Forstall’s 
  reported refusal to sign the public apology surrounding the new Maps 
  app in iOS 6, which was roundly criticized at launch. Whether or not 
  the problem was as severe as initially suggested, Apple’s focus on 
  the new Maps, when it either was known — or should have been known —
  that rough edges remained, was a mistake (see “Examining Maps in the
  Wake of Tim Cook’s Apology,” 28 September 2012). Cook’s apology was
  classic public relations, and the fact the Forstall refused to go
  along with it may have indicated his unwillingness or inability to
  be a team player.

<http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/10/29/apples-mobile-software-and-retail-chiefs-to-depart/>
<http://tidbits.com/article/13301>

  How will this make a difference to you? With our perspective 
  watching Apple over the last few years, we’ve been getting the 
  feeling that there has been little communication between Apple’s 
  different divisions, with a resultant lack of coordination and 
  reduced quality. That has been especially evident of late, as the 
  company has returned to a scheduled approach to shipping products 
  that forces technologies into the open before they’re fully ready —
  witness Maps. Freedom from scheduled releases was one of the 
  reasons Jobs pulled Apple out of Macworld Expo; it was difficult to 
  get everything ready for the July and January keynotes. Instead, 
  Jobs set Apple on a course to ship when a product or technology was 
  ready and unveil it at an Apple-controlled media event. That general 
  approach has continued, but with the number of products Apple 
  bundles into a single event, not everything can be ready at once. 
  Most recently, you can see that in the delayed ship date of the 
  iMac, creating a situation where Apple’s best-selling desktop 
  computer can’t be purchased right now because the new models 
  won’t be ready for a month or more after the announcement — 
  which coincides with the holiday shopping season. Apple needed to 
  unveil the iMac in what is surely the company’s last product 
  introduction event before the new year, or wait until January or 
  later.

  Even more troubling has been what has happened on the software side. 
  The high-profile iTunes 11 has slipped from its promised October 
  2012 ship date and is now expected sometime before the end of 
  November. Productivity software like Pages, Keynote, and Numbers 
  hasn’t seen a significant update in three years, perhaps due to 
  their teams putting out iOS versions. Small updates to Mac OS X have 
  introduced significant problems that Apple then has to scramble to 
  fix, but not before causing untold hours of lost work for users. 

  Apple possesses essentially unlimited funds at this point, but it is 
  absolutely true that you can’t just throw more resources at 
  problems. So if we assume that the various development teams have 
  the resources they need, the best explanation for the recent 
  troubles is lack of communication and coordination between Apple’s 
  various divisions. Apple’s management shakeup supports that 
  theory, both explicitly in the press release’s title, and with the 
  way that each of the remaining senior vice presidents gets more 
  responsibility. Craig Federighi takes over iOS and Mac OS X. 
  Jonathan Ive oversees Human Interface and Industrial Design. Eddy 
  Cue adds Siri and Maps to the rest of his online services group. And 
  Bob Mansfield heads up a new group, Technologies, that combines all 
  of Apple’s wireless and semiconductor teams.

  Assuming that these four men work well together and with CEO Tim 
  Cook, this move could help Apple improve software quality, 
  coordinate launches better, and bring a unified approach to software 
  and hardware design. 


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Winning and Losing on Jeopardy
------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman: <glenn@tidbits.com>, @glennf
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13357>
  6 comments

  I lost on Jeopardy, baby, but after winning twice. After a lifelong 
  interest in all things trivial, I took the screening test for the 
  long-running TV show in 2011, was called to an in-person audition 
  that August, and then was tapped to tape shows in August 2012 that 
  aired in October. (I wrote up a more complete behind-the-scenes tale 
  for BoingBoing and my strategy for studying at The Economist. I also 
  talked about the show on The Incomparable podcast.)

<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BvUZijEuNDQ>
<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-10/glenn-winners-circle.png>
<http://boingboing.net/2012/10/19/the-reality-show-that-acts-lik.html>
<http://www.economist.com/blogs/babbage/2012/10/cramming-quiz-shows>
<http://5by5.tv/incomparable/112>

  It is a fascinating thing to be sucked into a mainstream cultural 
  phenomenon, but it also tells you something about what 
  “broadcast” television has become. When I alerted folks a few 
  days before my first appearance, the outcome of which I kept secret, 
  that I would be on Jeopardy, the near-universal response among most 
  of my friends and colleagues was, “I used to watch that show all 
  the time!” It turns out that, like my household, many people I 
  know have cut the cable and satellite TV “cord,” and either 
  don’t live in broadcast range or never considered installing an 
  indoor or outdoor ATSC antenna for digital television broadcasts.

  Jeopardy is a syndicated program carried by hundreds of American 
  television stations; it used to have a worldwide reach, but in 
  recent years that has contracted back to our shores. In syndication, 
  the show sells advertising and sponsorships that appear nationally 
  as part of the program, and local stations in turn sell 
  advertisements as well. Stations pay Sony Pictures Television, the 
  production company, to air the show in their local market.

  Jeopardy isn’t streamed, sold as digital downloads, or made 
  available on DVD or Blu-ray except for a handful of episodes from 
  several years ago in a small collection. It’s a strange phenomenon 
  in the Internet era to have a program that not only must be watched 
  via a broadcast station, but can never be viewed again once it’s 
  aired unless it’s re-run. A few clips are on YouTube — including 
  the last few minutes of my first win — but the company clearly 
  monitors the Internet carefully, as I have found it impossible to 
  find complete episodes anywhere. (Jeopardy reruns are fairly 
  popular. In some markets, a station may show two reruns each day 
  plus a new episode. In others, such as Seattle, new episodes air on 
  weeknights and a rerun appears on Saturdays.)

<http://www.amazon.com/dp/B000B6CODE/?tag=tidbitselectro00>
<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uu7n4DNANO8>

  As a result, I had a huge cheering squad on Twitter and Facebook, 
  but only a subset of those people could watch any of the episodes. I 
  threw a viewing party and invited quite a few local friends and 
  family, partly so they’d get to see my first episode on Thursday, 
  18 October 2012. (My shows were aired Thursday, Friday, and Monday. 
  The program tapes five shows a day, typically on two successive days 
  every two weeks. So I taped two episodes as the last two of the day 
  on a Tuesday, and came back to lose first thing Wednesday morning.)

  Other broadcast events also prevented the show from being seen on 
  schedule or at all. On Thursday, for instance, a football game 
  preempted Jeopardy in the San Francisco Bay Area, which prevented a 
  large number of technology friends from seeing the show. In other 
  places, Jeopardy aired later that night. On Monday, the presidential 
  debates bumped or delayed the airing of my ignominious defeat. Good! 
  (I made an excessive wager on a Daily Double near the end, lost 
  everything, and came back with $2000 into the final round, where I 
  had the right answer, but wagered $0 since I couldn’t beat the 
  leader. This assured me a second-place finish, which comes with 
  $2000 rather than the $1000 that third-place contestants receive.)

  Jeopardy currently has about 9 million nightly viewers and about 25 
  million different people across a viewing week. It once had 50 
  million viewers, according to one of several books on the show. Ken 
  Jennings, the winner of 74 consecutive episodes of the show, said he 
  was recognized on the street for quite a while after his run in 
  2004, but nowadays, only 70-year-olds notice him. This is close to 
  the center demographic on the show, which I can testify to given my 
  popularity at my in-laws’ retirement home after two episodes were 
  aired.

  Given the intense interest in trivia among younger people, it’s 
  odd that Jeopardy hasn’t reinvented itself completely for a new 
  generation. While the show has a Web site, it’s mostly devoted to 
  information about the broadcast show. Its Twitter feed, with 20,000 
  followers, just posts clues and little else. There’s a Facebook 
  game, but it’s only similar in form, not nature, to the TV 
  program.

<http://www.jeopardy.com/>
<https://twitter.com/jeopardy>
<https://www.facebook.com/playjeopardy>

  Jeopardy is in its 29th season of its run with Alex Trebek in the 
  current format, and I would hate to think that it’s petering out. 
  The show is exciting, well designed, and fun to play at home. My 
  kids have developed an addiction even though they know few of the 
  right “questions.” But unless Sony figures out a way to thread a 
  path into a world of streaming, deferred, and on-demand 
  post-broadcast watching, I worry that I’ll be among the last group 
  of champions instead of part of an ongoing tradition.


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How Apple “Doubled” iPad Wi-Fi Throughput
-----------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman: <glenn@tidbits.com>, @glennf
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13353>
  5 comments

  During the launch of the fourth-generation iPad and iPad mini on 23 
  October 2012, I couldn’t help but prick up my ears when I heard 
  Phil Schiller state, at least twice, that these new models had Wi-Fi 
  that was “up to twice as fast” as earlier models. 

  My immediate supposition was that Apple had upgraded the 802.11n 
  chips to models that could handle two “spatial streams.” One of 
  the speed boosts in 802.11n over earlier versions was its 
  capability, using multiple antennas (known as MIMO for “multiple 
  in, multiple out”), to send unique streams of wireless data that 
  take different paths through space. All iOS devices were single 
  stream (really, SISO: “single in, single out”), because that 
  requires a simpler radio system and simpler antenna architecture.

  But, no, Apple actually chose a course that doesn’t truly provide 
  “up to twice” the throughput except in limited circumstances. 
  The company’s iPad features page trumpets “advanced Wi-Fi 
  technology,” which is odd, as it would mean that Apple has 
  upgraded to technology it has offered since 2006 in Macs! Apple 
  writes, “With dual-band (2.4 GHz and 5 GHz) 802.11n Wi-Fi and 
  support for channel bonding, download speeds can reach up to 150 
  Mbps.”

<https://www.apple.com/ipad/features/>

  There are problems with that statement, as clear as it might seem. 
  Channel bonding uses what Apple previously called “wide” 
  channels: it takes two separate 802.11n channels and treats them as 
  one. This feature has been in all Macs that were sold with 802.11n 
  (whether initially or through a later firmware update in 2007), and 
  is offered in all 802.11n Apple base stations, too. The raw 
  single-stream data rate for 802.11n is 75 Mbps; double the channel 
  width and you can get a raw rate of 150 Mbps. In practice, the 
  improvement is never quite that much. In my testing, I have often 
  seen 30 to 35 Mbps for an interference-free short-range connection 
  using a single stream, and more like 50 Mbps with a wide channel.

  But beyond the raw rate is where wide channels may be used. Although 
  the IEEE 802.11 committee that approved 802.11n allows wide channels 
  in 2.4 GHz, and the Wi-Fi Alliance that certifies gear with the 
  Wi-Fi label offers it as well, it’s rarely used. The 2.4 GHz band 
  is crowded with baby monitors, cordless phones, Bluetooth, and other 
  Wi-Fi networks. The algorithm that enables wide channels has three 
  separate tests in 2.4 GHz to make sure it’s not “talking over” 
  another network by bonding channels. 

  In most cases, circumstances don’t allow wide channels to kick in 
  with 2.4 GHz networks, and the Wi-Fi Alliance has been making it 
  harder to use in 2.4 GHz. Further, Apple _never_ enabled wide 
  channels for 2.4 GHz in any 802.11n base station it has sold. (There 
  used to be a switch to disable channel bonding in 5 GHz, but that 
  has been removed in AirPort Utility 6.)

<http://www.smallnetbuilder.com/wireless/wireless-features/31743-bye-bye-40-mhz-mode-in-24-ghz-part-1>

  So the wide channels are typically available only for use on base 
  stations in the 5 GHz band, where there are more channels in most 
  countries than with 2.4 GHz, and where the channels are more spread 
  out. But even though that frequency space is available, 802.11n 
  still employs a few mechanisms in the 5 GHz band (less restrictively 
  than in 2.4 GHz) that prevent bonding channels in many cases, too. 
  So long as there are other 5 GHz networks nearby, it’s unlikely 
  that wide channels will be available. (The ugly technical details 
  are in a 2007 post to my defunct Wi-Fi Networking News site.)

<http://wifinetnews.com/archives/2007/01/5_ghz_or_bust.html>

  In the end, the “up to 150 Mbps” or “2x” improvement is a 
  sort of silly marketing point that should have been confined as a 
  note in the tech specs and not trumpeted as “advanced,” 
  “new” or, in fact, in any way special during the launch event. 
  Adding two-stream or even three-stream support to future iOS devices 
  would have a greater impact on improving throughput than this 
  channel bonding tweak affords. 


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://tidbits.com/e/13353#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://tidbits.com/t/13353>


iPhone 5: The Best Yet, But Still an iPhone
-------------------------------------------
  by Steve McCabe: <steve@stevemccabe.net>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13339>

  The Web site of Telecom, one of the two cellphone networks in New 
  Zealand offering Apple’s new iPhone 5, advertises the device as 
  “the thinnest, lightest iPhone yet.” Could this really be the 
  best they could manage to say about the latest release of the most 
  successful smartphone in the short history of smartphones? I had to 
  find out.

<http://www.telecom.co.nz/>

  I wanted so badly to be impressed by the iPhone 5. I remember well —
  it was only five years ago — the excitement that surrounded the
  unveiling, and eventually the release, of the original iPhone. I 
  remember bringing mine home from the Apple Store where I used to 
  work, the unwrapping, the anticipation as I opened the box to reveal 
  the elegant packaging — the entire process was almost sacramental.

  Since then, I’ve owned three more iPhone models (I skipped the 
  iPhone 4). Even now, every time a new iPhone lands on my desk, there 
  remains something a little special about the act of opening it — 
  there is, after all, a reason why unboxing videos proliferate across 
  the internet. The iPhone 5 continues this tradition, its packaging 
  crafted almost as carefully as the device itself. 


**Out of the Box and into the Hand** -- This time, a review unit of 
  the iPhone 5 arrived courtesy of Apple New Zealand. The packaging, I 
  noticed, was a bit longer and deeper than previous boxes have been. 
  One look at the iPhone 5 suggests a possible reason. It’s tall. 
  Placed next to my iPhone 4S, it looks noticeably longer, and its 
  height also makes it look narrower, despite having the same width.

  At any rate, its appearance is something of a departure from its 
  predecessor’s. From the front, it looks quite similar, dimensions 
  notwithstanding, but from the side the differences start to show up. 
  The metal bezel that surrounds the iPhone 4 and 4S models has been, 
  at least in the black model Apple sent me, coated with black powder; 
  there have been reports of the iPhone 5 looking scuffed and with 
  powder missing out of the box, but my sample has no such flaws. As 
  we would expect from Apple, it looks, and feels in the hand, rather 
  elegant. The iPhone 4S’s glass back has been replaced with 
  aluminum, again quite stylishly powder-coated, with two black glass 
  strips, one at the top and another at the bottom, to provide radio 
  transparency for the iPhone 5’s various antennae. 

<http://allthingsd.com/20120923/scuffgate-some-early-adopters-claim-iphone-5-case-is-scratch-tacular/>
<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-10/iPhone5_AngledSharp.jpg>

  In the hand, it feels very light — almost insubstantial. While 
  Apple did the right thing in abandoning the plasticky feel of the 
  iPhones 3G and 3GS, the thinness and lack of heft of the later 
  models leaves them feeling slight. If the iPhones 4 and 4S felt 
  lightweight, the iPhone 5 is positively sylph-like. That said, the 
  impression of lightness doesn’t really last — you become 
  accustomed to it quickly.


**Lightning Strikes** -- Next out of the box is the new eight-pin 
  Lightning cable, and here again is a major change. Since 2003 and 
  the third generation of the iPod, a proprietary 30-pin dock 
  connector has become standard across not just Apple’s range of 
  iDevices, but also across an entire universe of third-party 
  accessories. Apple’s decision to abandon this entrenched 
  technology in favour of the new Lightning connector has upset a 
  large number of people who have invested in docking stations, 
  speakers, and cradles that use the old 30-pin connector.

  The new Lightning connector is surprisingly small, comparable in 
  width to a micro-USB plug, but rather thinner and flatter. Its 
  primary benefit to the user is reversibility; it can be inserted 
  either way round, makes for easier insertion in the dark or without 
  looking. I presume the benefit to Apple lies in freeing up the 
  internal and external space previously occupied by the dock 
  connector and related electronics when designing iOS devices. (At 
  least with devices like the new iPod nano, the small Lightning 
  connector feels worthwhile, as opposed to the minimally different 
  MagSafe 2 connector used in the last generation of MacBooks.) It’s 
  also likely that the new connector will make possible other 
  capabilities, such as USB 3.0 speeds (the iPhone 5 is still limited 
  to USB 2.0 performance).

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-10/iphone5_lightning.png>
<http://arstechnica.com/apple/2012/09/teardown-revives-hopes-that-lightning-might-be-usb-3-0-compatible/>

  This is a major change for the entire Apple ecosystem. Anyone who 
  owns a speaker system, a dock, or even a charging cable for an 
  existing iPhone and who hopes to use it with a new iPhone 5 will 
  either have to buy an adapter from Apple (useful for chargers, 
  perhaps; less useful for in-car systems and cradle-type devices), or 
  replace said kit, which may not even be possible for some time, 
  given that even Apple is having trouble keeping up with demand for 
  the standard Lightning-to-USB cables, along with the $29 
  Lightning-to-30-pin adapter and $39 Lightning-to-30-pin cable 
  adapter, plus the $49 HDMI and VGA adapters. Since there’s an 
  authentication chip in Lightning cables, there will likely be no 
  unlicensed Lightning options that provide full functionality.

<http://store.apple.com/us/product/MD818ZM/A/lightning-to-usb-cable>
<http://store.apple.com/us/product/MD823ZM/A/lightning-to-30-pin-adapter>
<http://store.apple.com/us/product/MD824ZM/A/lightning-to-30-pin-adapter-02-m>
<http://store.apple.com/us/product/MD826ZM/A/lightning-digital-av-adapter>
<http://store.apple.com/us/product/MD825ZM/A/lightning-to-vga-adapter>

  In the end, the 30-pin connector had a long run, but it’s not 
  surprising either that Apple would want to move to something smaller 
  or that Apple would create a custom connector in favor of using 
  something standard, like micro USB. (A $19 Lightning-to-micro-USB 
  adapter is available as a separate purchase, in part to comply with 
  European laws that require all phones to be able to charge using 
  that plug format.) Nor is it surprising that Apple would cut over so 
  completely, even when the benefit to users is relatively small. The 
  main misstep seems to have been Apple’s inability to provide 
  sufficient quantity of the various cables and adapters, and the lack 
  of even licensed third-party accessories for the iPhone 5.

<http://store.apple.com/us/product/MD820ZM/A/lightning-to-micro-usb-adapter>

  The smaller Lightning connector enabled Apple to move the headphone 
  jack to the bottom of the iPhone 5. I have yet to see an explanation 
  of this change; it seems entirely gratuitous, at least from the user 
  perspective. Having the headphone jack on the top of the iPhone made 
  sense to me at least. When my iPhone 4S is in my shirt pocket, its 
  usual out-and-about home, I can plug in a headset and still have the 
  phone right-way-up in my pocket, and when an alert calls for my 
  attention, reading the display is quite easy. Similarly, when I’m 
  driving, the iPhone 4S sits in a cupholder, connected to my car 
  stereo via the top of the phone. The relocation of the audio jack to 
  the bottom means that the iPhone 5 sits inverted in the holder, 
  which isn’t as convenient as I’d like. The main use case I can 
  think of that might support the bottom position is dropping the 
  iPhone 5 into a trouser pocket, where it makes sense to have it 
  top-down and face-in (thus exposing the bottom-located headphone 
  jack), so it is properly oriented in your hand when you pull it out. 
  I suppose there may also be people who make FaceTime calls while 
  using earbuds; the bottom position might be better if you’re 
  holding the iPhone 5 out in front of you. 

  The remaining item on the bottom of the iPhone 5 is the speaker, 
  which is a bit louder than the iPhone 4S. Whether or not it’s 
  noticeably better sounding is a different matter but the amount of 
  sound it can pump out is impressive.


**More Pixels, Scotty!** -- So let’s turn the iPhone 5 on, and see 
  how it works. Well, it’s an iPhone. All the traditional iPhone 
  features I’ve come to expect are present. The screen, of course, 
  is the first major difference, and it looks good. The colours are 
  richer, more saturated, than they were even on the iPhone 4S — a 
  screen that still looks very good. But the major draw is the size of 
  the screen. Apple has extended it vertically, enough to add an extra 
  row of app icons on the iOS home screen. This is certainly welcome, 
  but it’s not exactly revolutionary.

  In fact, another row of app icons, and folders being able to hold 
  more apps, does help the significantly overloaded home screen 
  interface, but seeing an extra email message in a list, or being 
  able to read a bit more of an ebook before I swipe to the next page, 
  hasn’t made that much of a difference to my user experience. 
  Watching video is likely the main reason for the change — the 
  screen’s proportions now match HD video, and videos can be viewed 
  full-screen, without letterboxing, a notable improvement. 

  Letterboxing is precisely what happens when an app’s developer 
  hasn’t yet caught up with the new hardware. Many apps have already 
  been updated to take advantage of the larger screen, but there are 
  plenty that still think they’re running on an iPhone 4S; the 
  iPhone 5 simply displays these apps in the centre of the screen, 
  with black bars above and below. The black bars are black enough 
  that you seldom notice, and regardless, all apps in active 
  development undoubtedly will be updated for the new screen size 
  soon.

  The larger hardware, for me at least, is quite comfortable to use. I 
  tend to use my iPhone two-handed, supporting it in my left hand 
  while operating it with the fingers of my right; for me, then, there 
  is no significant difference between this iPhone and the last. Some 
  women I know have complained that the iPhone 4 form factor was hard 
  enough to fit into the pockets of women’s clothes; the iPhone 
  5’s extra height will make that all the harder. And of course, all 
  iPhone 5 owners who want cases will have to purchase new ones; there 
  will be a plethora soon.


**Camera, Network, and Battery** -- By the time I had charged and 
  synced the phone, the weather had cleared up, so I went outside to 
  play with the camera. The camera on the iPhone 4S has been very 
  well-received, and Apple wisely refrained from tampering with the 
  4S’s camera; the iPhone 5 sports basically the same hardware. I 
  took a couple of photos of my wife’s cat, holding my iPhone 4S in 
  one hand and Apple’s loaner iPhone 5 in the other for a literal 
  side-by-side comparison.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-10/iphone5_cat_compare1.jpg>

  On the iPhones’ screens, the iPhone 5’s images were noticeably 
  richer, but when I compared the photos from both devices in iPhoto 
  on my laptop, there was little appreciable difference. The iPhone 
  4S’s camera was very good; the iPhone 5’s essentially identical 
  camera is every bit as good. Video, similarly, is comparable in 
  quality, with the addition of somewhat improved stabilisation, 
  thanks to the iPhone 5’s beefier A6 chip.

  I have so far avoided mention of Long-Term Evolution, or LTE, the 
  absurdly fast cellular-data connectivity protocol that Apple finally 
  incorporated into the iPhone 5. (LTE is often referred to as 4G, 
  though “4G” is now somewhat meaningless from a technical 
  standpoint.) That is, alas, because I have no way to test it. I have 
  the enormous good fortune to live in New Zealand, but paradise is 
  not perfect. As I have whinged about previously (see “Paying by 
  the Bit: Internet Access in New Zealand,” 15 January 2010), 
  Internet connectivity in New Zealand is not all it might be, and LTE 
  is no exception. Neither Telecom nor Vodafone, Apple’s two resale 
  partners and the two main cellphone networks in New Zealand, nor 
  indeed 2 Degrees, their only rival, have, or have plans to build, a 
  4G network in New Zealand. Thus fast networking remains a feature 
  available only to those users who happen to live in markets — the 
  United States, the UK, even Australia! — that happen to have 4G 
  connectivity. That said, I’m told that when you combine the iPhone 
  5 with an LTE-enabled carrier with sufficient backhaul bandwidth and 
  not too many other users, the performance is quite impressive. In 
  the tests of Wi-Fi and 3G cellular data I was able to perform, the 
  iPhone 5 and 4S performed identically.

<http://tidbits.com/article/10917>

  At the end of all this testing, there was one more thing to look at. 
  My iPhone 4S has, for all its many fine features, one serious 
  weakness: its battery life. I complained about this in “Apple’s 
  International Obfuscation” (28 June 2012), and I was hopeful that 
  the iPhone 5 might have the solution. 

<http://tidbits.com/article/13090>

  I question iOS’s usage reports because while watching it today, it 
  reported 6 hours and 14 minutes of use since last full charge, but 
  it hasn’t even been that long since I unplugged it after waking up 
  this morning. Nevertheless, with what seems like reasonable usage, 
  mostly on Wi-Fi, with Location Services on for a few apps, but 
  Bluetooth off, I’m down to 28 percent capacity remaining. From 
  those who have been living with the iPhone 5 for some time, it 
  sounds as though battery life is roughly similar to the iPhone 4S —
  sometimes a little better, sometimes a bit worse. For some it 
  has been much worse, but that’s iOS 6’s fault (see “Solving 
  iOS 6 Battery Drain Problems,” 28 September 2012).

<http://tidbits.com/article/13303>

  If I don’t sound entirely enthusiastic so far, then perhaps I 
  should find something I can unreservedly endorse about the iPhone 5. 
  There is one outstanding enhancement that I can wholeheartedly 
  praise, and that’s the new EarPods. They are, at least in my ears, 
  quite considerably more comfortable than previous iPhone and iPod 
  earbuds — I hardly notice their presence. Their sound, too, is a 
  marked improvement. While they’re not quite up to the quality of 
  my favourite Sony studio monitor headphones, they do reproduce a 
  degree of detail and range that I have never heard — that I have 
  never even expected — from iPhone earbuds. As I write this, I’m 
  listening to the Rolling Stones’ “Stupid Girl,” from the 1966 
  album Aftermath, and I’m hearing details of Brian Jones’ 
  acoustic guitar in my right ear that I don’t remember hearing 
  before.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-10/iphone5_earpods.jpg>

  The EarPods come in their own little plastic carrying case inside 
  the iPhone 5’s box, although I suspect few users will have the 
  patience to wrap them carefully back into the case after each use. 
  The case is also their retail packaging; yes, one of the most 
  attractive and appealing parts of the new iPhone isn’t even part 
  of the iPhone, but an accessory that can be bought separately for 
  $29. 


**Worth Upgrading?** -- I’ll be returning the iPhone 5 to Apple soon —
  sadly, they want it back. It’s always fun to have the latest, 
  shiniest kit, and I’ll miss it for sure, but going back to my own 
  iPhone 4S hasn’t been at all troubling. If I didn’t have another 
  year left on my Vodafone service contract, I might consider 
  upgrading, but I simply don’t find enough in this new release to 
  make it a compelling upgrade from the iPhone 4S at this stage. 

  Were I upgrading from an iPhone 4, which lacks Siri and doesn’t 
  have as good a camera, the iPhone 5 would be more attractive, and 
  moving up from an iPhone 3GS or earlier model would be even more 
  compelling. For anyone in the market for their first iPhone, or 
  replacing a broken iPhone, the iPhone 5 is hard to beat, with the 
  main competition coming from the $99 iPhone 4S and the free iPhone 
  4. Put simply, the iPhone 5 is the best iPhone Apple has ever 
  produced, but its improvements are worth only $100 (the price 
  difference to the iPhone 4S, which does have a comparable camera and 
  Siri).

  That’s entirely intentional on Apple’s part, as Glenn Fleishman 
  noted in “Incremental Change Wins Apple Big Gains” (29 March 
  2012). Despite what many seem to think (and a bit of what Apple 
  implies in its marketing), Apple seldom releases new products that 
  are revolutionary, and the iPhone 5 is no exception. It’s a great 
  smartphone, and the best iPhone ever, but, at the end of the day, it 
  still looks, walks, and quacks like any other recent iPhone.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12856>


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://tidbits.com/e/13339#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://tidbits.com/t/13339>


TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 5 November 2012
---------------------------------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff: <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13376>

**Parallels Desktop 8.0.18314** -- Improving support for Windows 8, 
  Parallels Desktop has been updated to version 8.0.18314 with 
  full-speed support for USB 3.0 devices, easier access to Mac OS X 
  applications from the Windows 8 Start Screen, the capability to 
  launch Windows 8 applications from the shared applications folder in 
  the Dock, and support for the Windows 8 single-finger swipe gesture 
  to display the application menu, list of running applications, and 
  Charm Bar. The update also adds download access to Kaspersky 
  Internet Security 2013 from within Parallels Desktop and improves 
  the visual process of switching Windows to Coherence. Additionally, 
  you can now assign up to 16 GB of memory to a single virtual machine 
  and support has been added for Windows Server 2012. ($79.99 new, 
  $49.99 upgrade, free update, 343 MB, release notes)

<http://www.parallels.com/products/desktop/>
<http://kb.parallels.com/en/115067>

  Read/post comments about Parallels 8.0.18314.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13375#comments>


**ScreenFlow 4.0.1** -- Telestream has released ScreenFlow 4.0 with a 
  profusion of new organization and workflow features added to its 
  popular screencast recording app. Among the new features, the 
  release adds the capability to merge multiple elements into a single 
  nested clip on the timeline (as well as apply filters and video 
  actions to nested clips), plus new organization tools to search for 
  specific clips and arrange them by name, duration, or type. It also 
  adds support for closed captioning, support for the x264 codec to 
  export higher quality MPEG-4 files, a recording timer, and a variety 
  of video effects (including advanced color adjustments, distortion 
  effects, blurring, alpha mask, color effects, and more). ScreenFlow 
  4.0 also enables dynamic updating and reloading of imported assets 
  directly into the library, timeline, and canvas — however, this 
  feature is not available in the Mac App Store version. For a 
  complete rundown of the new features, download the PDF release notes 
  from Telestream’s support page. 

<http://www.telestream.net/screen-flow/overview.htm>
<http://www.telestream.net/telestream-support/screen-flow/support.htm>

  Shortly after the initial release, Telestream issued a version 4.0.1 
  update with fixes for an issue with keystrokes displaying, a bug 
  that caused error message and sound problems when Remove Background 
  Noise was checked, a recording problem caused by disabled color 
  correction on Radeon X1xxx hardware, and an issue with performance 
  regression created by decoding video on a separate queue from audio.

  Owners of previous versions can upgrade to ScreenFlow 4.0.1 for $29 
  (without a new serial number, saved projects will contain a 
  watermark), and those who purchased ScreenFlow 3.x between 1 October 
  2012 and 25 October 2012 are eligible for a free upgrade to version 
  4.0.1. Note that ScreenFlow hasn’t yet been updated to version 
  4.0.1 in the Mac App Store as of this writing. ($99 new from 
  Telestream, $29 upgrade from 3.x, 2.x, or 1.x, 26.5 MB)

<http://www.telestream.net/screen-flow/upgrade.htm>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/screenflow/id422025166?mt=12>

  Read/post comments about ScreenFlow 4.0.1.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13374#comments>


**Sandvox 2.7** -- Updating its Web publishing tool to make it 
  compatible with a variety of features in OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion, 
  Karelia has released Sandvox 2.7 with support for Notifications and 
  Sharing. Additionally, the update saves documents more quickly when 
  the Versions feature is enabled, and it has been optimized for 
  Retina displays. A Google +1 sharing option has also been added to 
  enable site visitors to share content by clicking on a Google +1 
  button and logging in directly, and this feature offers several 
  configuration options for displaying the number of Google+ shares. 
  Other changes include support for custom private SSH keys and a 
  revamped Host Setup Assistant that simplifies entry of hosting 
  details and enables live testing and diagnostics. ($79.99 new from 
  Karelia or the Mac App Store, free update, 31.1 MB)

<http://www.karelia.com/sandvox/>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/sandvox/id455413521?mt=12>

  Read/post comments about Sandvox 2.7.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13373#comments>


**Safari 6.0.2** -- Apple fixed a couple of WebKit security 
  vulnerabilities with the release of Safari 6.0.2. Specifically, the 
  update patches two problems that could lead to application 
  termination or arbitrary code execution — one due to the handling 
  of JavaScript arrays that was addressed with additional validation 
  (CVE-2012-3748) and another due to the implementation of scalable 
  vector graphic (SVG) images that was addressed through improved 
  memory handling (CVE-2012-5112). There are no new features or other 
  bug fixes. The update is available for OS X 10.8.2 Mountain Lion via 
  the App Store app and for 10.7.5 Lion via Software Update. (Free, 
  44.8 MB)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT5568>

  Read/post comments about Safari 6.0.2.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13372#comments>


**iPhoto 9.4.2** -- Apple has updated iPhoto to version 9.4.2, adding 
  several improvements to how Photo works with iCloud’s Photo Stream 
  feature. You can now add photos to either My Photo Stream or a 
  shared stream by dragging them to Photo Stream in the source list, 
  and you can add all photos contained within a shared photo stream to 
  your iPhoto library using a new Import command in the contextual 
  menu. The update also enables you to paste multiple email addresses 
  into the “Shared with” field for shared streams, and it ensures 
  that names are correctly displayed should more than five subscribers 
  “like” a photo in a shared stream. Additionally, iPhoto 9.4.2 
  improves reliability of shared photo streams when switching to 
  Aperture with the same library, fixes an issue with Microsoft 
  Outlook that prevented it from being used to email photos, and 
  updates national holidays for use in printed photo calendars. 
  ($14.99 new from the Mac App Store, free update through the Mac App 
  Store or Software Update, 758.58 MB direct download via Apple’s 
  support page)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1608>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/iphoto/id408981381?mt=12>

  Read/post comments about iPhoto 9.4.2.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13370#comments>


**Aperture 3.4.2** -- Apple has also released Aperture 3.4.2 with a 
  number of improvements to how the professional photo organizer works 
  with iCloud’s Photo Stream feature. Like the recently released 
  iPhoto 9.4.2, the update enables you to paste multiple email 
  addresses into the “Shared with” field for shared streams, 
  ensures that names are correctly displayed should more than five 
  subscribers “like” a photo in a shared stream, and improves 
  reliability of shared photo streams when switching to iPhoto with 
  the same library. Aperture 3.4.2 also enables you to add photos from 
  My Photo Stream or a shared stream to other shared streams, and it 
  improves face detection after importing photos into a library from a 
  shared stream. The toolstrip’s status line now displays the number 
  of new photos added to a shared stream, adjusted photos are 
  published to shared streams with EXIF metadata preserved, and a 
  shared stream’s Info panel now includes an Unsubscribe button.

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1607>
<http://tidbits.com/article/13370>

  Beyond Photo Stream-related additions, the update ensures that 
  custom keyboard shortcuts are preserved when upgrading from earlier 
  versions of Aperture, fixes a bug where duplicate detection failed 
  when the Auto-Split Projects option was enabled, addresses an issue 
  where the correct color might not display after applying Auto White 
  Balance and Auto Enhance, and improves stability when working with 
  AVCHD video files (be sure to check the release notes for the full 
  rundown of changes). ($79.99 new from the Mac App Store, free update 
  through the Mac App Store or Software Update, 550.73 MB direct 
  download via Apple’s support page)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1607>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/aperture/id408981426?mt=12>

  Read/post comments about Aperture 3.4.2.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13371#comments>


**PDFpen and PDFpenPro 5.9** -- Smile has updated both PDFpen and 
  PDFpenPro to version 5.9, which improves overall performance by 
  reducing memory usage and adds the OAuth secure authorization method 
  for those using PDFpen’s Save to Evernote capability. 
  Additionally, both editions now use Apple’s sandboxing for 
  improved security and compatibility with the Mac App Store, though 
  neither PDFpen nor PDFpenPro has been updated to version 5.9 in the 
  Mac App Store as of this writing. ($59.95/$99.95 new with a 
  20-percent discount for TidBITS members, free update, 47.4/48.4 MB)

<http://www.smilesoftware.com/PDFpen/>
<http://www.smilesoftware.com/PDFpenPro/>
<http://tidbits.com/member_benefits.html>

  Read/post comments about PDFpen and PDFpenPro 5.9.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13368#comments>


$$

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