TidBITS#1153/10-Dec-2012
========================
  Issue link: <http://tidbits.com/issue/1153>


  There’s something for users of each of Apple’s hardware platforms in
  this week’s issue. For the Mac, Glenn Fleishman leads off with a look
  at what’s new in BBEdit 10.5, and Adam Engst runs down the features
  that Apple actually removed from iTunes 11 (and how to work around
  those changes, where possible). For the iPad, Michael Cohen shares his
  favorite tools for drawing cartoons, despite years of practice failing
  to give him any artistic ability. And Josh Centers joins us with a
  look at five apps Apple could delete from the iPhone without many
  users noticing — you may agree or disagree, but we’ll bet you have
  your own list of default iPhone apps you never use. Lastly, we’re
  going to update the free TidBITS News app for iOS 6 soon, so if you
  ever want to use it in iOS 4.2 or iOS 5, download it now. Notable
  software releases this week include SOHO Organizer 9.3.1, OmniFocus
  1.10.4, PopChar X 6.1, ChronoSync 4.3.6 and ChronoAgent 1.3.7, Final
  Cut Pro X 10.0.7, Mactracker 7.0, and iWork 9.3.

Articles
    Get the TidBITS News App for iOS 4.2 and iOS 5 Now
    BBEdit 10.5 Adds Versions and Brings Web Sites into Projects
    iTunes 11: The Features Apple Removed, and Alternatives
    iPad Tools for Bad Cartoonists (and Good Ones, Too)
    Five Apps Apple Could Delete from the iPhone
    TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 10 December 2012
    ExtraBITS for 10 December 2012


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Get the TidBITS News App for iOS 4.2 and iOS 5 Now
--------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst: <ace@tidbits.com>, @adamengst, Matt Neuburg: <matt@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13446>
  3 comments

  The free TidBITS News app for iOS, written by our own Matt Neuburg, 
  presents the current titles, blurbs, and stories from our Web site 
  in a standard master-detail view, and also saves all that 
  information on your iPad, iPhone, or iPod touch for convenient 
  offline reading. It also lets you listen to any of those stories for 
  which a podcast recording has been created, though that feature does 
  require a live Internet connection.

<https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/tidbits-news/id348629441?mt=8>

  The current version of TidBITS News (1.4) was created for iOS 4.2 
  way back in January 2011, and works fine under iOS 5 as well. 
  However, iOS 6 radically changes the way iOS lays out text, and 
  therefore introduces a bug in the display of titles and blurbs. To 
  squash this bug, Matt had to rewrite the text display code in iOS 6 
  terms. But as long as he was doing that, he took advantage of the 
  moment to rewrite the _entire_ codebase from the ground up, 
  eliminating all sorts of accumulated cruft, and taking advantage of 
  features in iOS 5 and iOS 6 that weren’t available when he created 
  version 1.4.

  All of that is great, and we’ll say more about what’s new when 
  the new version 1.5 becomes available. Right now, though, we wanted 
  to give a heads-up encouragement to anyone and everyone who 
  doesn’t have the TidBITS News app already, and who thinks they 
  might want to run it on an older iPhone or original iPad (really, 
  any device that’s limited to iOS 4.2 or iOS 5) to download version 
  1.4 from the App Store now if they haven’t done so already, 
  because:

* Version 1.5 will require iOS 6, and thus won’t install on a device 
  that isn’t running iOS 6 or later.

* Once version 1.5 is released, version 1.4 will no longer be 
  available at the App Store.

  Here’s a quick word about each of those points.

  Why remove backward-compatibility with iOS 4.2 and iOS 5 in the new 
  version of our app? Hey, don’t look at us! It’s Apple’s fault. 
  Apple makes writing backward-compatible code just too difficult. The 
  current version of Xcode, needed in order to link your app against 
  iOS 6, drops support for ARMv6, meaning any device that can’t be 
  upgraded from iOS 4.2 to iOS 5. And given the plethora of changes 
  from iOS 5 to iOS 6, writing code that would run equally well under 
  both systems, taking advantage of iOS 6 features where they exist, 
  laying out the text in two completely different ways depending which 
  system you’re on, and so forth, is just too time-consuming and 
  picky. It would be full of complicated conditional code (whereas the 
  whole point of this rewrite was to simplify the code), and it would 
  be difficult to test. Since version 1.4 runs fine under iOS 5, it 
  makes more sense for version 1.5 to move on and require iOS 6.

  Why remove version 1.4 from the App Store when version 1.5 comes 
  out? Hey, don’t look at us! It’s Apple’s fault. (Isn’t it 
  great, being able to say that twice in one article?) This an App 
  Store policy, and represents a problem faced by _all_ iOS 
  developers. It’s entirely common for Mac developers to drop 
  backward compatibility with an older version of Mac OS X in a new 
  version of an application while keeping older application versions 
  available for download by users with older systems or hardware, but 
  that’s not possible with the App Store (or the Mac App Store). As 
  usual, Apple demonstrates here how it increasingly cares only about 
  current products, regardless of how users and developers might be 
  happy to continue using and supporting older devices.

  So, users whose devices have come to the end of the line with iOS 
  4.2 and iOS 5, download the TidBITS News app now if you haven’t 
  done so already, because once Apple approves the new version, you 
  won’t be able to get the old version.


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://tidbits.com/e/13446#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://tidbits.com/t/13446>


BBEdit 10.5 Adds Versions and Brings Web Sites into Projects
------------------------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman: <glenn@tidbits.com>, @glennf
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13433>
  1 comment

  BBEdit may be a hoary old beast, but you wouldn’t know it to look 
  at the just-released version 10.5, a free update for owners of 
  BBEdit 10. Bare Bones Software regularly gives its flagship program 
  youth treatments that slough off the crufty parts and invigorate the 
  program with new life. In the latest release, those treatments 
  include automatic versioning, integration of Web site management 
  into its Projects feature, and a new Go menu. There’s also a long 
  list of minor improvements, and an even longer list of bug fixes.

<http://www.barebones.com/products/bbedit/>

  BBEdit 10.5, also refreshed to look crisp on Retina displays, 
  simplifies. The toolbar now takes up less vertical space and has 
  fewer discrete icons on it (bye bye, pencil), but maintains the same 
  functionality. Plus, controls have been shuffled and combined to 
  remove redundancy in menus and dialogs. For instance, Convert to 
  ASCII is now part of Zap Gremlins. (Pew! Pew! Got ’em!)

  This release ties into the Versions feature of Mac OS X 10.7 Lion 
  and 10.8 Mountain Lion without borrowing Apple’s interface. As you 
  would expect, all files saved locally have each subsequent save 
  recorded as a new version. But to access these versions, BBEdit 10.5 
  provides a new Search > Compare Against Previous Versions menu item 
  to select a version by date and time, and then manage a comparison 
  using BBEdit’s familiar difference engine. The date and time of 
  the most recent document version are shown in the status bar, along 
  with a lock icon that may be toggled to protect against changes. If 
  you don’t want anything to do with Apple’s Versions, you can 
  turn the feature off using a supplied command in Terminal.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-12/BBEdit-versions.jpg>

  This is a nice addition to BBEdit’s long-time support for 
  version-control systems like Subversion (SVN) and Perforce (P4). 
  While Apple’s Versions isn’t nearly as powerful as such 
  developer-focused systems, the automatic commit on each save will 
  prevent a lot of heartache as a no-effort recourse to older 
  renditions of files you’re working on. BBEdit has always done a 
  great job in “journaling,” or keeping a per-keystroke record of 
  file changes that are recovered automatically in the event of a 
  program or system crash or power outage, and this new feature fits 
  right in. (While on the topic of version-control systems, BBEdit 
  10.5 drops support for the elderly CVS system that launched in the 
  mid-1980s and has largely been supplanted by Subversion, Perforce, 
  and git, the last of which BBEdit does not yet support.)

  Managing the many files associated with a Web site in previous 
  versions of BBEdit required using a separate palette and then 
  linking folders in the Finder. I found it usable, but awkward to set 
  up and manage changes, and apparently so did Bare Bones. In BBEdit 
  10.5, the Sites palette is gone, and site features appear directly 
  in Project windows.

  BBEdit’s Project feature already lets you reference local folders 
  and files as well as ones stored remotely (using FTP and SFTP). 
  It’s a natural way, too, to organize Web site parameters (like 
  login identity and file paths), which are found by clicking a 
  rain-cloud icon. (We have a query out as to why it’s a rain 
  cloud.) The Sites dialog also includes automated pre-flight features 
  to check syntax and other factors before uploading. Previously, 
  BBEdit’s pre-flight features were split up and required manual 
  selection.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-12/BBEdit-deploy-site.jpg>

  The Go menu should be a hit with anyone writing code, including 
  JavaScript. It consolidates and expands navigation options to help 
  you find your way through code functions, line numbers, and “jump 
  points” that you can mark in a file. A Go > Named Symbol menu item 
  shows every kind of element BBEdit can identify in a file, such as 
  functions and global variables.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-12/BBEdit-go-to-symbols.jpg>

  Some users may find a new addition to preview windows useful as 
  well. BBEdit already let you create CSS and HTML templates to apply 
  against documents and create a preview as they would appear on a Web 
  site. Now, you can pass a BBEdit file through an AppleScript script, 
  binary executable, or shell script before it’s shown in the 
  preview window. For TidBITS, I could imagine connecting a database 
  and template component with our back-end systems that would enable 
  BBEdit to preview an article as it would appear on the TidBITS site 
  in a way that was previously impossible without staging the article.

  The one problem introduced in this release is that the file list in 
  the left-hand side of a Project window cannot be scrolled by using a 
  mouse with the scrollbar (either by clicking or grabbing the thumb). 
  Instead, you must use a scroll-wheel on a mouse. The company’s 
  tech support says the problem is known and will be fixed in a 
  maintenance release, and I’ve confirmed this is so by testing a 
  beta release with the fix in place.

  Although those are the highlights, there is much more in this 
  update, including fixes for Fortran formatting bugs. The full list 
  of release notes is, as always, a good read, especially for 
  long-time users. Note that the change from a pencil to a lock icon 
  involved a potential homicide — averted for now. Whew!

<http://www.barebones.com/support/bbedit/arch_bbedit105.html>

  BBEdit 10.5 costs $49.99, upgrades from pre-10 versions cost $39.99, 
  and updates for owners of BBEdit 10 are free. A free trial is 
  available as a 13.2 MB download. BBEdit 10.5 requires Mac OS X 10.6 
  Snow Leopard or later and is fully compatible with 10.8 Mountain 
  Lion.


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://tidbits.com/e/13433#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://tidbits.com/t/13433>


iTunes 11: The Features Apple Removed, and Alternatives
-------------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst: <ace@tidbits.com>, @adamengst
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13432>
  22 comments

  iTunes 11 is such a major interface change that it has generated two 
  common refrains among users. Some people have exclaimed about this 
  or that “new” feature, when it was actually present in iTunes 10 
  all along and they simply hadn’t noticed it before. Others have 
  emoted about the loss of beloved features, when those features have 
  merely moved to a different location, or are available only in 
  certain scenarios. (For details of new features, see “Redesigned 
  iTunes 11 Brings iCloud Streaming and New MiniPlayer,” 30 November 
  2012.)

<http://tidbits.com/article/13419>

  But at the risk of opening myself up to being told that I just 
  didn’t look in the right place or hold down the necessary modifier 
  keys, there are a number of features that Apple really did remove 
  from iTunes 11, much to the consternation of some users. What should 
  you do if you’re missing these features? It’s possible, though 
  not likely, that Apple will bring these features back in a future 
  version of iTunes 11, but more realistically, you can:

* Avoid upgrading to iTunes 11. The train may have left the station 
  for many people, but if you haven’t yet upgraded, you may not want 
  to. But remember, you’re just delaying the inevitable, since 
  iTunes updates are often necessary for new iOS devices.

* Downgrade to iTunes 10.7. Unfortunately, it doesn’t seem as though 
  iTunes 10 and iTunes 11 can coexist on the same disk, and 
  downgrading isn’t easy.

* Switch to an alternative media management tool. Given the 
  competition from the free and ubiquitous iTunes, there aren’t many 
  options here for Mac users, most notably Songbird and doubleTwist.


**Missing in Action** -- I’ll discuss those options in more detail 
  later, but let’s first consult the back of some milk cartons to 
  see what features are missing from iTunes 11. Note that I’m 
  intentionally not including features that are present, but are more 
  awkwardly accessed or displayed differently in iTunes 11. (For an 
  example, consider album artwork, which no longer appears at the 
  bottom of the sidebar and can be added by dragging an image either 
  to the song information display at the top of the window or to the 
  Artwork view of the song’s Get Info window.)

* Playlists can’t be opened in their own windows, which makes 
  comparing playlists nearly impossible and thus significantly reduces 
  the utility of iTunes when it comes to managing large or complex 
  collections of music. This is a big deal for some people, and the 
  best workaround suggested (by Chris Pepper) is to export the 
  playlists as text (Control-click the playlist in the sidebar and 
  choose Export) and then compare the text files using BBEdit or a 
  similar tool. It might also be possible to load a copy of your 
  iTunes library on another Mac, share that Mac’s screen, and then 
  compare playlists. Either way, moving tracks between playlists will 
  be awkward.

* Cover Flow view, which showed a carousel of album covers and 
  scrolled the list of songs to focus on the centered album, is gone. 
  This is odd, given that Apple made such a fuss about Cover Flow when 
  they introduced it in iTunes 7, and Cover Flow later migrated to 
  iPods, Mac OS X (starting with 10.5 Leopard), Safari, and even 
  independent apps like Panic’s Transmit. The iTunes Store even 
  still uses a Cover Flow-like mode. If Apple wanted to bring Cover 
  Flow back, it would fit nicely in the various list-based views.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-12/Cover-Flow.png>

* While you can still choose whether or not the Column Browser shows 
  in list views, it appears only at the top, as three scrolling lists. 
  In iTunes 10, you could put it on the left, as a second sidebar that 
  showed only one of the three lists when on the top. That’s gone in 
  iTunes 11, not surprisingly, since it could have resulted in three 
  left sidebars in certain views, which would have made usability 
  engineers cry.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-12/Left-Column-Browser.png>

* Apple clearly wasn’t listening to Tom Petty’s “The Last DJ” 
  when they let iTunes DJ go in favor of Up Next. While Up Next lets 
  you fiddle with the order of what tracks will play in the future, 
  based on your current album or playlist selection, iTunes DJ 
  algorithmically selected upcoming tracks, let you restrict selected 
  tracks to a specific playlist, and enabled party guests with the iOS 
  Remote app to request songs. My suspicion is that the party features 
  of iTunes DJ were almost never used (clearly, I was never invited to 
  the right parties!), and the combination of Genius and Up Next was 
  deemed sufficient.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-12/iTunes-DJ.png>

* Although iTunes 11 retains its equalizer (Window > Equalizer), the 
  spectrum analyzer display that was available by clicking a tiny 
  left-pointing triangle in the song information area is gone. It was 
  useful for visually verifying the changes you’d made in the 
  equalizer, plus it provided separate displays for the left and right 
  channels. There is an LED Spectrum Analyzer visualizer for iTunes 
  from Graham Cox, but unfortunately, it doesn’t seem to work in 
  iTunes 11. Perhaps those who want it back can prevail upon Graham to 
  update it.

<http://apptree.net/ledsa.htm>
<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-12/Spectrum-analyzer.png>

* Power Search for the iTunes Store (Store > Search) has disappeared. 
  I’d guess that relatively few people used its field-specific 
  queries in favor of the standard search field in the upper right 
  corner of the iTunes window, so Apple pulled it. It’s a shame, 
  since although advanced search features aren’t commonly used, 
  they’re nice to have on occasion.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-12/Power-Search.png>

* The File > Display Duplicates feature (and its Option key-enhanced 
  Display Exact Duplicates) has disappeared. That’s nominally a 
  shame, but there are lots of utilities that do a better job anyway, 
  including the $15 Dupin and $7.99 Dupin Lite from Doug Adams, whose 
  Doug’s AppleScripts for iTunes site has long helped iTunes users 
  extend the app’s capabilities. To find others, search Google for 
  “iTunes duplicate finder Mac OS X” and be sure to look for 
  comments about iTunes 11 compatibility.

<http://dougscripts.com/itunes/>
<http://dougscripts.com/apps/dupinapp.php>
<https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/dupin-lite/id425268142?mt=12>

* The “Part of a gapless album” checkbox has disappeared from the 
  Options view of the Get Info window for songs. Its purpose — when 
  checked — was to prevent the Crossfade Songs option (in 
  Preferences > Playback) from working on sequential tracks with the 
  same album. It also prevented non-iOS iPods from inserting space 
  between songs. Got that? No, neither did hardly anyone else. (I had 
  to look it up in “Take Control of iTunes 10: The FAQ, Second 
  Edition.”)

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/itunes?pt=TB1153>


**Downgrading to iTunes 10** -- If one or more of these features is 
  essential to your iTunes usage patterns, it is theoretically 
  possible to downgrade to iTunes 10. It’s not easy, though, and 
  there may be problems that aren’t initially apparent. The problem 
  is that iTunes is essentially part of OS X now, so getting iTunes 10 
  back involves more than just reinstalling the application. Several 
  people in an Apple Support Communities thread have posted sets of 
  directions: one relies on pulling necessary framework files back via 
  Time Machine, and the other relies on the Pacifist utility that 
  makes it possible to install older files over newer ones.

<https://discussions.apple.com/thread/4556384>
<http://www.charlessoft.com/>

  I must admit, I’m leery of this approach, for two reasons. First 
  is the concern that it may not work as well as initially thought. 
  But second, and more important, it’s only staving off the 
  inevitable. Apple won’t continue supporting iTunes 10, and it’s 
  only a matter of time before you buy a new iPhone or do something 
  else that requires iTunes 11.


**iTunes Alternatives** -- A better approach might be to stick with 
  iTunes 11 for working with your iOS devices, but switch to a 
  different application for playing music. There aren’t many options 
  here, but I found two that replicate many of the features of iTunes 
  (but alas, not playlists in separate windows). Whether they’ll 
  meet your needs is a question only you can answer, but both are free 
  so you can test them easily.

  Songbird can import all your media (and playlists, though not smart 
  playlists, which must be recreated) from iTunes and can also export 
  any new media added to Songbird back to iTunes, thus ensuring that 
  you don’t get out of sync. It doesn’t duplicate files, but 
  instead just points at them, so you don’t have to worry about it 
  consuming vast amounts of disk space. In my initial usage, Songbird 
  appears to be a reasonably full-featured music player that mimics a 
  lot of what iTunes has done (note the three-pane column browser in 
  the screenshot) though with less depth. As a cross-platform app, it 
  also doesn’t look particularly Mac-like, though you can download 
  and install themes (called “feathers”). It also sports a full 
  Web browser (a version of Firefox, I think) inside, and can open 
  multiple tabs to different pages and aspects of its interface. I 
  worry a little, based on the way the Songbird site focuses on the 
  company’s Web, Android, and iOS apps, that the desktop version may 
  not get much attention, but that’s just an impression at this 
  point.

<http://getsongbird.com/desktop/>
<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-12/Songbird.png>

  doubleTwist looks far more Mac-like than Songbird, but has fewer 
  options. It too builds its music library from the contents of your 
  iTunes library (as well as browsing videos from either iTunes or 
  your Movies folder, and photos from iPhoto or your Pictures folder) 
  without duplicating files. You’ll find features like support for 
  manually defined and smart playlists, a three-pane column browser, 
  and an album thumbnail view. doubleTwist also lets you browse the 
  contents of physically connected iOS devices (although it saw only 
  photos on my devices), but what really sets it apart is its 
  capability to sync music, photos, and videos to Android devices. To 
  that end, it provides access to the Android Market (now called 
  Google Play) and the Amazon MP3 store (another top-level Podcasts 
  Search item has been deprecated in favor of the doubleTwist for 
  Android app). As with Songbird, I get a sense that the people behind 
  doubleTwist may be focusing more on Android than on the Mac.

<http://doubletwist.com/>
<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-12/doubleTwist.png>

  Let me close by saying that I don’t think Apple has done a bad job 
  with iTunes 11. It’s a beefy program that does many different 
  things, and some of the features that failed to make the leap from 
  iTunes 10 didn’t make sense within iTunes 11’s new interface. 
  It’s also not necessarily a bad thing to remove features from an 
  application over time; sometimes the new must sweep away the old. 
  But none of that will make you feel better, or work as productively, 
  if you’ve become reliant on one of those now-defunct features. 
  Hopefully one of the options I’ve laid out above will meet your 
  needs. 


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://tidbits.com/e/13432#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://tidbits.com/t/13432>


iPad Tools for Bad Cartoonists (and Good Ones, Too)
---------------------------------------------------
  by Michael E. Cohen: <mcohen@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13416>

  I have been drawing cartoons most of my life, and in that time I 
  have proven conclusively that the saying “practice makes 
  perfect” is a lie: decades of practice have done little to improve 
  my drawing abilities. As my friends with whom I have shared my 
  artistic endeavors can attest, my cartoons, while occasionally funny 
  (so they tell me), are seldom technically competent, let alone 
  beautiful. Nonetheless, I have persisted with my cartooning habit 
  because it is enjoyable and a change from the kind of thinking that 
  I do in my day job. 

  However, I probably would have given the habit up long ago were it 
  not for the modern miracles of drawing software and graphics
  tablets —they have made it possible for me to draw well enough that
  my cartoons don’t require industrial strength eye-bleach after 
  viewing. Over the years, though my physical drawing skills have not 
  improved, my cartoons have become more ambitious and technically 
  sophisticated as I migrated from one drawing application to another 
  and from one graphics tablet to another. By the middle of 2011, my 
  cartooning toolset consisted of Photoshop CS1 and a great big Wacom 
  Intuos 2 tablet: even though both the software and the hardware had 
  been superseded by even newer, more powerful, versions, what I had 
  was more than enough for my primitive needs. With them I could 
  produce cartoons that would not produce an immediate emetic reaction 
  in the viewer. 

  Then I moved from Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard to 10.7 Lion and from 
  my old sit-down desk to a standing desk, and my cartooning came to a 
  halt: my copy of Photoshop CS was a PowerPC application, which kind 
  of application, as we all know, is incompatible with the last two 
  versions of Mac OS X, and by the time I leaped to Lion there 
  wasn’t an upgrade path from Photoshop CS1 to a later 
  Intel-compatible version. Furthermore, my standing desk lacked the 
  physical space to accommodate my massive Intuos tablet.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12191>

  Of course, I didn’t require the full panoply of Photoshop 
  capabilities for my cartooning efforts — a low-cost graphics app 
  like Acorn or Pixelmator could easily provide the functionality I 
  needed. However, the impracticality of using my tablet with the 
  standing desk I’d purchased was a much less tractable problem. 
  (Yes, I should have considered my drawing habit when I purchased the 
  desk… but I didn’t.)

<http://www.flyingmeat.com/acorn/>
<http://www.pixelmator.com>

  So, as a result, the world had been spared since that time from 
  being subjected to new examples of my artless craft. 

  That is, until a friend of mine offered to buy me an iPad stylus for 
  my birthday.


**The Graphic Needs of a Bad Cartoonist** -- As I mentioned, the 
  features I need in a graphics app in order to produce my cartoons 
  are few and easily met.

  I need layers. I don’t need a huge number of them, but I do need a 
  few. I typically use one or two for the sketch itself, a couple more 
  for coloring, and maybe one or two for tracing purposes — that’s 
  right, my drafting skills are so undeveloped that I occasionally 
  stick a photo onto a layer and then, on a separate layer, draw a 
  sketch based upon the photo. It doesn’t necessarily have to be a 
  direct copy: just something that I can use as a guide. (To 
  paraphrase what Pablo Picasso may or may not have said, good artists 
  copy, great artists steal, and bad cartoonists trace.)

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-11/bad-cartoon-example1.png>

  I need brushes. I don’t need a lot of them, just a few, with 
  control over diameter and softness.

  I need control over opacity, both for coloring and for layers.

  And, of course, I need multiple levels of undo. (What part of “bad 
  cartoonist” didn’t you understand?)

  When it comes to a drawing tablet, I simply need a reasonably 
  comfortable stylus of some sort and a reasonably sized drawing area: 
  something about the size of a steno pad will do. Although pressure 
  sensitivity would be nice, it’s not essential: my manual dexterity 
  is not so well-developed that I can truly exploit such a feature 
  anyway.


**What I Tried** -- Before the idea of getting a stylus for my iPad 
  emerged, I had tried a number of drawing apps for the iPad. Some 
  were free, some were cheap, but none of them really captured my 
  interest. For example, Paper, a fine drawing app with lots of 
  sophisticated paint features and a large number of enthusiastic 
  users, failed to meet my need for layers. Although a real artist can 
  easily produce stunning compositions with it, for someone lacking 
  fine motor skills and the rudiments of artistic ability (that is, 
  me), it is tantalizingly frustrating. Most other drawing apps I 
  tried were similar: suitable for someone with real skill, but almost 
  useless for someone with my lack of expertise.

<http://www.fiftythree.com/paper>

  In addition, I just can’t draw with my fingertips: even in 
  kindergarten, my finger paintings were the ones that were hung 
  low-down on the wall, behind the hamster cage, where they wouldn’t 
  easily be seen and could be nibbled.

  Choosing a stylus was easy: my friend sent me a list of comparably 
  priced styli with links to reviews, and I chose the one that had a 
  consensus of good ones: the $29.95 Wacom Bamboo Stylus Solo. It 
  doesn’t have a lot of features, but it is a good general purpose 
  stylus, and, given that I wasn’t quite sure to what uses I would 
  end up putting it, “general purpose” was exactly what I wanted.

<http://www.wacom.com/en/products/stylus/bamboo-stylus>

  On the other hand, Wacom’s Bamboo Paper app suffered from the same 
  drawback as the other drawing apps I tried: it had a feature set 
  that a skilled artist could exploit, but lacked the 
  bad-artist-friendly features that I needed (again, layers was a big 
  omission).

<http://www.wacom.com/en/products/software/bamboo-paper>

  Then I came upon Autodesk’s SketchBook Pro app.

<https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/sketchbook-pro-for-ipad/id364253478?mt=8>


**The SketchBook app** -- SketchBook Pro turned out to have the 
  features that I needed. It has multiple brushes and powerful 
  controls to adjust them, it has a color picker that I can use 
  easily, it has multiple undos and redos, and it has layers with 
  opacity controls.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-11/sketchbook-shot.PNG>

  The app’s gestural controls are part of what sold me: a 
  three-finger swipe to the left is an undo, a three-finger swipe to 
  the right is a redo, three fingers swiped down elicits the color 
  picker and brush controls, three fingers swiped up calls up the 
  layers palette. Zooming is a breeze, too, since it uses the standard 
  iPad pinch gestures — and you can zoom in _very_ deeply with the 
  app.

  This particular capability is a real advantage for me, for several 
  reasons. First, it makes it much easier for me to do detailed 
  cleanup of my various missteps. Second, it makes the stylus much 
  more controllable. Let me explain what I mean: the Bamboo stylus 
  (like many other styli I’ve seen) doesn’t have a fine point. 
  It’s more like a small finger, meaning that it is difficult to see 
  exactly where the point of contact is on the iPad screen. When I use 
  a fine-point brush and I want to extend a line or place a small dot 
  of color (say, the pupil in a cartoon character’s eye), I can’t 
  easily tell where the brush will actually draw. However, I can zoom 
  far enough in so that the brush’s fine point is no longer quite so 
  fine at the scale I have chosen, making positioning of the brush 
  point far easier for me. 

  And the app has another convenient feature: a hand guard. This tool 
  is a round transparent disc that you can slide around the screen to 
  protect the image under it from accidental touches. This means I can 
  rest my hand on one part of the image without its touch registering, 
  just like I can rest my hand on a physical drawing pad or like I 
  could on my Intuos tablet. Being able to rest my hand on the drawing 
  as I hold the stylus means that I have much better control of the 
  stylus.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-11/hand-guard.PNG>

  Finally, SketchBook has the capability to save sketches to various 
  places like iTunes, Dropbox, or iCloud, in either flattened versions 
  or in Photoshop-compatible layers, so I can bring the drawing into 
  another program, like Comic Life for adding captions, or Pixelmator 
  on my Mac for additional final manipulations.

<http://comiclife.com/>
<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-11/NaNoWriMo-toon-2012.jpg>


**Bad Cartoons are Alive and Well** -- Even though I have long known 
  that the iPad has drawing apps galore, I really have no excuse for 
  not having tried to migrate my bad cartooning habit to my iPad 
  sooner, other than that I was so focused on my old workflow on my 
  Mac that adopting a different workflow on a different device never 
  occurred to me. It should have. 

  My experience certainly makes this clear: if the Bamboo stylus and 
  SketchBook app can help a bad cartoonist like me create credible 
  drawings, I have no doubt that, in the hands of artists with actual 
  talent and drawing ability (such as, perhaps, you, dear reader), 
  they can lead to the creation of stunning works of grace and beauty 
  on Apple’s tablet. But whether or not I ever manage to ascend to 
  those heights (and the smart money is on “not”), I am delighted 
  for now to be able to draw just as easily, and just as badly, on my 
  iPad as I ever did with my big-screen iMac and giant Wacom tablet.

  You have been warned. Get the eye-bleach ready.


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://tidbits.com/e/13416#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://tidbits.com/t/13416>


Five Apps Apple Could Delete from the iPhone
--------------------------------------------
  by Josh Centers: <josh@joshcenters.com>, @jcenters
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13437>
  20 comments

  Bundled apps. There’s no question that some are essential, whether 
  we’re talking Mac OS X or iOS. Safari? Sure. Mail? No problem. But 
  while most of the less useful apps that Apple bundles into Mac OS X 
  are out of sight, out of mind in the Utilities folder (when was the 
  last time you used, or even noticed, Grapher or Audio MIDI Setup?), 
  it’s harder to avoid the iPhone’s crufty default apps. They 
  might have been worthwhile — or at least novel — when the 
  original iPhone shipped, but now they sit firmly unused on many 
  iPhones, taking up valuable space. I can’t help you delete these 
  apps (it’s impossible, so just toss them in a folder labeled 
  “Barnacles” and squirrel it away on your last home screen page), 
  but I can make some recommendations for how to put them to use or 
  replace them with something that’s more useful.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-12/Barnacle-folder.png>


**Compass** -- When it first appeared with the iPhone 3GS, Compass was 
  a neat proof-of-concept for the iPhone’s then-new sensors, but 
  most of us have as much use for a compass as we do for a sextant. If 
  you just need to know which way is north, Maps has a built-in 
  compass: just tap the arrow in the lower-left corner twice.

  _Make it useful:_ If you’re a cord cutter, you may have a niche 
  use for the Compass app: aligning a television antenna. Using the 
  data from AntennaWeb and the degree readings from the app, you can 
  easily optimize your TV reception without shelling out for a real 
  compass. Just don’t drop your iPhone off the roof.

<http://antennaweb.org/Address.aspx>
<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-12/Compass-and-Maps.png>


**Weather** -- Although Weather is a simple, competent app, almost all 
  of its functionality has been supplanted by the Weather widget 
  introduced with Notification Center in iOS 5. For casual users, the 
  widget tells them everything they need to know: current temperature 
  and a five-day forecast. And for anyone who is more involved with 
  the weather — outdoor athletes, students walking among classes, 
  farmers, and construction workers, to name a few — Weather is 
  cold, dreary, and unsatisfying.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-12/Weather-and-widget.png>

  _Replace it with:_ Although there are oodles of weather apps for 
  iOS, and Adam Engst is fond of WeatherBug (see “WeatherBug Elite 
  1.0,” 4 March 2010), let me recommend the $1.99 Check the Weather. 
  It’s everything you could want in a weather app. Its design is 
  simple and gorgeous, with a terrific use of typefaces like Idlewild, 
  Futura, Helvetica, and Avenir Next. Rather than screen-hungry 
  toolbar buttons, Check the Weather relies on gestures: swipe right 
  for an hourly forecast, swipe left for a 12-day forecast, and swipe 
  up for a short-term precipitation forecast powered by the 
  also-amazing Dark Sky.

<http://tidbits.com/article/11055>
<http://checktheweather.co/>
<http://www.typography.com/fonts/font_overview.php?productLineID=100043>
<http://www.linotype.com/2090/avenirnext.html>
<http://darkskyapp.com/>
<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-12/CheckTheWeather.png>


**Stocks** -- Like Weather, Stocks is a holdover from the launch of 
  the original iPhone. It too is simple and competent, yet horribly 
  outdated (what would the default stocks be today?). And while nearly 
  everyone outside of Southern California wants to know about the 
  weather, far fewer people want to keep close watch on their stocks. 
  Stocks pleases no one. Traders and those with significant portfolios 
  will want something more robust, while the vast majority of iPhone 
  users — who likely don’t own or watch any individual equities — 
  will bury Stocks in a folder, never to be seen again. And the 
  Stocks widget is more annoying than useful. Unlike everything else 
  in Notification Center, it’s constantly ticking off stock prices, 
  which is distracting when you just want to check the weather or see 
  your latest messages. If you’re a serious trader, you’d be 
  better off with something that actually notifies you of market 
  changes.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-12/Stocks-and-widget.png>

  _Replace it with:_ Most investors are invested in mutual funds 
  inside a 401K or IRA. If that’s you, then you’re probably best 
  served by your financial institution’s official app. It’s 
  probably free, more useful than Stocks, and will let you make trades 
  and adjustments. However, if you want to keep a closer watch on your 
  stock portfolio, the $1.99 StockWatch is an easy  investment. It 
  offers detailed statistics, push notifications, and can be locked 
  with a PIN. Additionally, it can update quotes once every 15 
  seconds, and can even calculate commission fees. There’s an 
  ad-supported free version without push notifications if you’d like 
  to try it out.

<http://stockwatch.toughturtle.com/iPhoneVersion/>
<https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/stockwatch-lite-portfolio/id342543060?mt=8>
<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-12/Stockwatch-on-AAPL.png>


**Voice Memos** -- When you need to record a voice memo, Apple’s 
  Voice Memos app will do the job. It’s even one of Apple’s better 
  uses of skeuomorphic design (where the app looks like a real-world 
  object). The problem is, when was the last time you had to take a 
  voice memo? If you had to record something, would you even remember 
  that Voice Memos is standard on every iPhone, or where you buried it 
  when you last cleaned up your home screen? You could dedicate a spot 
  on your home screen for it, but, let’s be honest, you don’t want 
  to take up valuable real estate with something you might use once a 
  year. Worse, if you’re the type who would use it frequently, Voice 
  Memos will frustrate you. Memos are easy to record, but hard to 
  move. You only have three options to export notes: email, text 
  message, or iTunes sync. If the recording is too big, your only 
  option is iTunes.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-12/Voice-Memos.png>

  _Replace it with:_ For an option that provides voice memos and much 
  more, consider the free Evernote. The cloud-based note service’s 
  newly redesigned iOS app can capture not only voice, but text and 
  photos as well. It even supports OCR for images, so you can snap a 
  picture of a business card, then find it by searching for its 
  contents later. You can access your notes near-instantaneously via 
  Evernote’s Web site or the recently redesigned Mac app. With its 
  slew of note-taking capabilities, you won’t mind keeping Evernote 
  on your home screen. However, unless you shell out $44.95 per year 
  for a paid account, you’re going to come up against some 
  limitations. Until you pay, each note has a 25 MB limit, and you 
  have a usage cap of 60 MB per month, which could go quickly if you 
  take a lot of voice notes.

<http://evernote.com/>
<http://evernote.com/evernote/whats_new/ios/>
<http://evernote.com/evernote/whats_new/mac/>
<https://support.evernote.com/link/portal/16051/16058/Article/532/Overview-of-Account-Data-Limits>
<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-12/Evernote-recordings.png>

  If you’re not comfortable with keeping your recordings in the 
  cloud or are unhappy about Evernote’s cost, the $0.99 Audio Memos 
  is a solid voice recorder with local Wi-Fi and USB syncing, plus a 
  slew of advanced features available as in-app purchases (there’s 
  also a free version, plus a $9.99 Pro version that includes all the 
  features at once). On the other hand, if you’d just like an easier 
  way to get recordings onto your Mac, the $1.99 DropVox is a 
  dead-simple app that saves your recordings to Dropbox. You can even 
  set it to record when the app launches, and it can record while the 
  screen is locked. Unfortunately, it can only record, you’ll have 
  to use the free Dropbox app to listen to your notes on the iPhone.

<http://imesart.com/products.php?pid=1>
<http://www.irradiatedsoftware.com/dropvox/>
<https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/dropbox/id327630330?mt=8>
<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-12/Audio-Memos-and-DropVox.png>


**Game Center** -- Introduced with fanfare in iOS 4.1 (and joined by a 
  Mac version in OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion), Game Center promised to 
  bring an Xbox Live-style experience to iOS, with matchmaking, 
  achievements, and leaderboards. In reality, it’s as much fun to 
  use and code for as peeling potatoes with a spork. Developers have 
  been slow to do much with Game Center outside of achievements. It 
  doesn’t help that the app itself is a confusing mess of green felt 
  (one of Apple’s worst uses of skeuomorphic design). The only 
  reason I ever open it is to add friends, and I get back out as 
  quickly as possible. Fortunately, for the handful of apps that use 
  Game Center, all the required bits are accessible inside the game. 
  If they work.

  _How to make it useful:_ Install the free Letterpress, which is the 
  best use of Game Center I’ve seen, using it for matchmaking and 
  gameplay. In fact, Letterpress’s popularity seemed to take Apple 
  by surprise, and Game Center has had frequent outages since 
  Letterpress’s release. Fortunately, these issues have been mostly 
  resolved since the release of Letterpress 1.1, which handles server 
  errors better. Unfortunately, you’ll still have to launch Game 
  Center to add friends. While the basic Letterpress app is free, 
  you’re limited to two games at a time, and can use only the 
  default red, white, and blue theme. Pay a mere $0.99 to play as many 
  games as you want simultaneously and to unlock another six color 
  schemes. Even if you’re like me and don’t care for the other 
  themes, $0.99 is a bargain for the hours of fun you’ll have 
  playing the game.

<http://www.atebits.com/letterpress/>
<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-12/Game-Center-and-LetterPress.png>

  Of course, there’s nothing really wrong with any of these default 
  apps — they won’t crash your iPhone or kick your dog — but 
  they’re neither good examples of design nor particularly useful 
  for many iPhone users. And you know what? We wouldn’t care, if 
  only Apple didn’t treat them as special, and refuse to let us 
  delete them. Sure, Settings, Phone, Safari, Mail, and so on need to 
  be protected, but vastly fewer people would miss Compass, Weather, 
  Stocks, Voice Memos, or Game Center, either from lack of interest or 
  thanks to a better replacement. Given the hundreds of millions of 
  iPhone users, it’s inevitable that people will disagree with us, 
  but do consider our suggested replacements, and if you have your own 
  unused Apple apps (Newsstand, anyone?), let us know in the comments. 


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://tidbits.com/e/13437#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://tidbits.com/t/13437>


TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 10 December 2012
----------------------------------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff: <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13443>

**SOHO Organizer 9.3.1** -- Chronos has released SOHO Organizer 9.3.1, 
  a minor update to the contact and calendar management suite. The 
  latest version adds a warning if you try to create a repeating task 
  in an iCloud or OS X Server CalDAV account (as neither of these 
  servers support this feature), improves display of overlapping 
  events in Day and Week views, fixes an errant “your accounts 
  aren’t configured” message under OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion and 
  10.7 Lion, fixes an issue where events would sometimes disappear 
  under 10.5 Leopard, and fixes a problem with CalDAV accounts where 
  changes made in offline mode wouldn’t sync to the server. ($99.99 
  new, free update, 78 MB, release notes)

<http://www.chronosnet.com/Products/sohoorganizer.html>
<http://www.chronosnet.com/Products/sohoorganizer/releasenotes.html>

  Read/post comments about SOHO Organizer 9.3.1.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13441#comments>


**OmniFocus 1.10.4** -- The Omni Group has released OmniFocus 1.10.4 
  to fix a few specific compatibility issues in the GTD-inspired task 
  management utility with OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion. The update fixes a 
  bug that neglected to include alarms in Due reminders published to 
  Calendar, fixes a crash caused by using the contextual menu on an 
  item’s notes, and works around a problem that caused the sync 
  button to blink when using small toolbar icons. Additionally, the 
  release addresses a problem that caused the Dock icon to render at 
  the wrong size when using OmniFocus with OS X 10.7 through 10.7.2. 
  ($79.99 new, free update, 22.6 MB, release notes)

<http://www.omnigroup.com/products/omnifocus/>
<http://www.omnigroup.com/products/omnifocus/download/releasenotes/>

  Read/post comments about OmniFocus 1.10.4.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13440#comments>


**PopChar X 6.1** -- Ergonis Software has brought a sprinkling of new 
  features to the font discovery utility PopChar X 6.1, including a 
  new Font Info view that displays details such as version number, 
  supported language, number of characters and glyphs, copyright, info 
  about the designer, and more. The update also provides custom tuning 
  for more than 600 fonts (including the BeLight Font Kit and some 
  foreign language fonts), which also includes tuning to fix the 
  vertical positioning of certain non-standard fonts. Additionally, 
  PopChar X now remembers selected fonts after quitting or 
  relaunching, and it initiates background version checks only when 
  your Mac has been idle for some time. (€29.99 new, free update, 
  €14.99 upgrade from version 5.x or earlier, 3.2 MB, release notes)

<http://www.ergonis.com/products/popcharx/>
<http://www.ergonis.com/products/popcharx/history.html>

  Read/post comments about PopChar X 6.1.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13439#comments>


**ChronoSync 4.3.6 and ChronoAgent 1.3.7** -- Econ Technologies has 
  updated its ChronoSync synchronization/backup application to version 
  4.3.6, which now funnels more information to the ChronoAgent remote 
  helper app to improve monitoring tools (such Econ’s ChronoMonitor 
  iOS app). The ChronoSync update also fixes several bugs, including a 
  potential crash that occurred when agents left or joined a network 
  before a sync document was finalized. ChronoAgent gets bumped up to 
  version 1.3.7 with improved self-diagnostics and a fix for incorrect 
  translations in the French and German localizations. Full release 
  notes for ChronoSync and ChronoAgent are available. ($40 new for 
  ChronoSync, $10 new for ChronoAgent; free updates; 28.9 MB, 8.3 MB)

<http://www.econtechnologies.com/pages/cs/chrono_overview.html>
<http://www.econtechnologies.com/pages/ca/agent_overview.html>
<https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/chronomonitor-for-iphone/id567631388?mt=8>
<http://www.econtechnologies.com/pages/cs/chrono_notes4.html>
<http://www.econtechnologies.com/pages/ca/agent_releasenotes.html>

  Read/post comments about ChronoSync 4.3.6 and ChronoAgent 1.3.7.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13438#comments>


**Final Cut Pro X 10.0.7** -- Apple has released Final Cut Pro X 
  10.0.7 with a small grab bag of fixes to improve stability and 
  performance. Amongst the tweaks, the update restores the Letterbox 
  effect “Offset” slider, fixes a problem with uploading clips 
  larger than 1 GB to Vimeo, and fixes an issue in which an incorrect 
  frame size is used with filters on two adjacent clips with different 
  pixel aspect ratios. It also deals with an issue where some 
  third-party effects caused the app to stop responding during 
  background rendering and another where third-party transitions 
  incorrectly used black instead of source media. ($299.99 new in the 
  Mac App Store, free update, 1.53 GB, release notes)

<http://www.apple.com/finalcutpro/>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/final-cut-pro/id424389933?mt=12>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT4589>

  Read/post comments about Final Cut Pro X 10.0.7.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13436#comments>


**Mactracker 7.0** -- Ian Page has released Mactracker 7.0, the 
  popular encyclopedia of Apple products. It has been updated with 
  Apple’s operating system and hardware releases from the last 
  couple of months, including iOS 6, the iPhone 5, iPad mini, 
  fourth-generation iPad, 13-inch MacBook Pro with Retina display, and 
  the latest iPod nano and iPod touch models. The release also adds 
  available marketing taglines for recent hardware models, adds a 
  separate entry for SIM information to iPad and iPhone models, and 
  updates support status for the latest Vintage and Obsolete products. 
  The Mactracker app is now built using a Cocoa framework, requires OS 
  X 10.7 Lion or later, and is optimized for Retina displays. (Free, 
  30.1 MB, release notes)

<http://mactracker.ca/>
<http://mactracker.ca/releasenotes-mac.html>

  Read/post comments about Mactracker 7.0.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13435#comments>


**iWork 9.3** -- iWork, Apple’s long-neglected suite of office apps 
  (originally released in January 2009), gets updated to version 9.3 
  with no feature additions or fixes on the desktop side. Rather, the 
  release is focused solely on adding support for the update to 
  version 1.7 for the trio of iWork apps for iOS (Pages, Numbers, and 
  Keynote). If you purchased the apps separately from the Mac App 
  Store, they’ve been updated to Pages 4.3, Numbers 2.3, and Keynote 
  5.3. The iWork 9.3 suite is available as a free update via the Mac 
  App Store (OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion), Software Update (10.7 Lion), 
  and direct download. (Free update, 380 MB)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT5534>
<http://tidbits.com/article/9986>
<https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/pages/id409201541?mt=12>
<https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/numbers/id409203825?mt=12>
<https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/keynote/id409183694?mt=12>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1563>

  Read/post comments about iWork 9.3.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13434#comments>


ExtraBITS for 10 December 2012
------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff: <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13442>

  Just one quick bit this week — an extended interview that 
  Bloomberg Business did with Tim Cook.


**Tim Cook Opens Up in First Extended Interview** -- More than a year 
  after becoming Apple CEO, Tim Cook has granted an extended interview 
  with Bloomberg Business that reveals more personal detail. Although 
  it’s clear that Cook isn’t baring his soul — he’s very savvy 
  about reinforcing Apple’s marketing messages and knows how to 
  evade tricky questions — we do get a better sense of how this 
  normally private man is dealing with the massive attention being 
  Apple’s CEO brings.

<http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-12-06/cook-says-lives-enriched-matters-more-than-money-made-interview.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/13444#comments>


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