TidBITS#1157/21-Jan-2013
========================
  Issue link: <http://tidbits.com/issue/1157>


  We’re getting ready for next week’s Macworld/iWorld trade show, but in
  the meantime, you’ll learn about how to preview Markdown files via
  Quick Look, hear the TidBITS staff offering constructive criticism
  about how Apple could improve iOS, find out what features the latest
  version of Bento loses, discover what little you can do to organize
  your ebook collection in iTunes and iBooks, and choose an alternative
  to Apple’s weak Podcasts app. Notable software releases this week
  include Quicksilver β71, Sandvox 2.7.4, LaunchBar 5.4.1, and PDFpen
  and PDFpenPro 5.9.4.

Articles
    TidBITS Events at Macworld/iWorld 2013
    Netter’s Dinner Declares Success, Shuts Down
    Enable Quick Look for Markdown Files
    VidBITS: Ways that Apple Could Improve iOS
    Bento 4.1.2 Loses Live Data Links with Calendar and iPhoto
    Managing Books in iTunes: This Novel Has a Nice Beat
    Five Alternatives to Apple’s Podcasts App
    TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 21 January 2013
    ExtraBITS for 21 January 2013


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TidBITS Events at Macworld/iWorld 2013
--------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst: <ace@tidbits.com>, @adamengst
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13512>

  We’re gearing up for our annual trip to San Francisco for the 
  Macworld/iWorld exhibition and conference from Thursday, 31 January 
  2013 through Saturday 2 February 2013, and as always, a number of us 
  will be making public presentations. I’ll list them briefly below, 
  but remember, this is one of the major reasons we created the public 
  TidBITS Events calendar (see “Subscribe to the TidBITS Events 
  Calendar,” 15 October 2012), so if you’re going to 
  Macworld/iWorld, be sure to subscribe to it to learn about 
  late-breaking additions. If you want to add alarms to the events, 
  copy them to a local calendar first.

<http://www.macworldiworld.com/>
<webcal://p02-calendarws.icloud.com/ca/subscribe/1/1fykyeloNsBN_opxg3XN1vHn2aNkFQXaJ4OU7qCtkByNyW66ZiQ5u45FsnrUOp12GSWenFRvinLtm6E3HdtYK1nXJlwEy1YuiJogx7aU-C0>
<http://tidbits.com/article/13334>

  Before I get to the events, I want to note that this will be the 
  first year that the Netter’s Dinner won’t be held. It’s a 
  shame, of course, but now every good thing must come to an end — 
  for more on its passing, see “Netter’s Dinner Declares Success, 
  Shuts Down” (18 January 2013).

<http://tidbits.com/article/13505>

  Otherwise, here’s the list of where we’ll be:

* Thursday, January 31st at 2 PM: Jeff Carlson will participate in a 
  photo/video panel discussion on the Macworld Live Stage.

* Thursday, January 31st at 2 PM: Simultaneously, Joe Kissell will be 
  giving his “Getting Cozy with Siri” session in room 2022. A $100 
  iFan Pass is necessary.

* Friday, February 1st at 12 PM: Jeff will defend his 2012 title in 
  the Macworld Pundit Showdown on the Macworld Live Stage. Well worth 
  watching live (or if it appears on video later), since the pundit 
  showdowns are always fun.

<http://www.macworld.com/article/1165075/pundit_showdown_live.html>

* Friday, February 1st at 2 PM: After grabbing a quick bite to eat, 
  Jeff will move to room 2014 to give his “iPad for Photographers” 
  session, also included in the iFan Pass.

* Saturday, February 2nd at 2 PM: Both Tonya and I will join 
  Macworld’s Serenity Caldwell on the Macworld Live Stage to 
  participate in a roundtable discussion about ebook and alternative 
  Web publishing. 

  Of course, Tonya and I, along with Jeff, Joe, and Michael Cohen will 
  be on the show floor all three days, so if you see us, come and say 
  hello! 


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://tidbits.com/e/13512#comments>
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Netter’s Dinner Declares Success, Shuts Down
--------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst: <ace@tidbits.com>, @adamengst
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13505>
  11 comments

  One of the longest-running traditions in the Macintosh world — the 
  27-year run of the annual Netter’s Dinner at Macworld Expo (now 
  Macworld/iWorld) in San Francisco, has called an end to the 
  festivities, based largely on the fact that, with most Mac users on 
  the Internet and able to interact in real time, the event has 
  clearly done its job of connecting all the right people.

  Organized primarily by Mac developer Jon Pugh, the Netter’s Dinner 
  launched in 1986 as a way for early Mac users on the nascent 
  Internet to meet in person. When I first attended in 1992, I 
  remember being amiably mocked by Jon during his often lengthy and 
  always amusing audience survey — at some point in the middle, he 
  mugged for the crowd and asked “And how many people read 
  TidBITS?” only to be greeted with quite a number of raised hands. 
  (And just imagine how life would have been different if the question 
  had been met with only puzzled looks!) Other questions would reveal 
  just who had been on the Internet the longest (a few had 
  participated in its creation), who had the most bandwidth in their 
  house (networking guru Bill Woodcock always won that one), who had 
  the most storage online (I remember answers in the terabytes back 
  when hard disks were measured in hundreds of megabytes), and so on.

  The attendees at the Netter’s Dinner were a veritable Who’s Who 
  of the Macintosh community through the 1990s and 2000s. Marshall 
  Clow, who worked on StuffIt Deluxe and Eudora, among much else, is 
  the only person to have attended all 27 Netter’s Dinners, but many 
  others were nearly as regular. Kee Nethery, who worked on the Apple 
  Internet Servers and moved on to start the Kagi payment service, 
  handled the money since 1995. Then there was Mark Johnson, who was 
  responsible for starting Apple’s first Internet server 
  (ftp.apple.com) on a Mac IIci under his desk in 1989. And until the 
  last few years, Leonard Rosenthol, one of the main guys behind 
  Aladdin Systems and now the PDF Architect at Adobe, was a mainstay. 

<http://macgui.com/usenet/?group=14&id=34520#msg>

  While I could never hope to list all the other wonderful people 
  I’ve enjoyed eating with over the years at the Netter’s Dinner, 
  it’s also impossible to avoid thinking of folks like Tim Holmes 
  (an Apple evangelist now running his own coffeehouse), Jon Callas 
  (who later co-founded PGP) and his wife Tamzen Cannoy (who worked 
  with Jon on an early virtual meeting space program), Richard Ford 
  (the Open Transport product manager, now managing his own iOS device 
  stands and case company), Amanda Walker (then an Internet app 
  developer at InterCon, now a security guru at Google), Alan 
  Oppenheimer (one of the creators of AppleTalk, now the co-developer 
  of the Art Authority iOS app), David Shayer (then a disk recovery 
  utility developer, now working on iOS at Apple), Raines Cohen (a 
  BMUG stalwart), Martin Minow (a SCSI guru at Apple who died in
  2000 — see “The Passing of Martin Minow,” 1 January 2001), and Tom 
  Weyer (an Apple networking evangelist and system engineer). At its 
  peak, the Netter’s Dinner hosted about 200 people; attendance in 
  subsequent years dropped significantly, as the Apple industry 
  evolved and people moved on to different pursuits.

<http://tidbits.com/article/6255>

  One of the nice things about the Netter’s Dinner was how it was 
  always the same. We’d gather in a large group as the show was 
  closing, and then walk 1.2 miles to the Hunan on Sansome and 
  Broadway. It’s surprisingly amusing to walk in a large group of 
  geeks through crowded city streets, and for a few years when Jon 
  Pugh couldn’t make it (and before there were GPS apps or even good 
  Internet mapping services), I had the terrifying task of leading the 
  way. After everyone had gotten drinks, Betty from the Hunan would 
  open up the buffet-style service, and we’d jostle into line to 
  load our plates with hot and spicy Chinese food. Once the eating 
  slowed down, Jon or I would launch into the audience survey, taking 
  questions from the crowd and playing the audience for as many laughs 
  as possible. Eventually we’d run out of questions, and everyone 
  would trickle out to walk or cab back.

  Marshall Clow summed it up nicely when we were making the decision 
  to wrap it up this year: “A lot of fun was had; a lot of Szechuan 
  food was consumed.” 

  So long, everyone, and see you on the net. I think it’s going to 
  be more than just a geek fad. 


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://tidbits.com/e/13505#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://tidbits.com/t/13505>


Enable Quick Look for Markdown Files
------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst: <ace@tidbits.com>, @adamengst
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13499>
  6 comments

  We rely on Markdown-formatted text files for TidBITS articles, but 
  one of the slight annoyances of doing so has been that we haven’t 
  been able to use Quick Look to glance at the contents of an article, 
  even though it’s just text. Luckily, this is a solved problem (and 
  the solution isn’t even new — it’s just that I finally got 
  around to looking for it).

  Said solution is Phil Toland’s free QLMarkdown generator, which 
  has worked perfectly in my testing. To be recognized as Markdown by 
  QLMarkdown, files need to have one of the following filename 
  extensions: .markdown, .mdown, .md, .mdml, .mdwn, .mkd, or .mmd.

<https://github.com/toland/qlmarkdown/#readme>
<http://tidbits.com/resources/2013-01/QLMarkdown-preview.png>

  To install QLMarkdown, download the latest version (currently 1.3), 
  expand it, and copy the QLMarkdown.qlgenerator file to either 
  ~/Library/QuickLook (to make it available to just your user) or to 
  /Library/QuickLook (to make it available to all users). Remember 
  that if you’re using OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion or 10.7 Lion, 
  you’ll need to hold down Option and choose Go > Library in the 
  Finder to reveal the user’s hidden Library folder (for details, 
  see “Dealing with Lion’s Hidden Library,” 20 July 2011).

<https://github.com/toland/qlmarkdown/downloads>
<http://tidbits.com/article/12306>

  If you don’t like the look of the text in the previews, you can 
  change nearly everything by modifying the built-in CSS stylesheet. 
  Follow these steps:

1. Control-click the QLMarkdown.qlgenerator file and choose Show 
   Package Contents.

2. Navigate to /Contents/Resources.

3. In a text editor like BBEdit or TextWrangler, open styles.css, make 
   your desired changes (I chose a different font and increased the 
   font size), and save. In my testing, there was no need to do 
   anything else to have the new styles honored — just preview 
   another file to see them. 


  ----
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VidBITS: Ways that Apple Could Improve iOS
------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst: <ace@tidbits.com>, @adamengst
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13503>
  4 comments

  On the one hand, given how magical the iPhone and iPad remain, it 
  almost seems ungrateful to cavil about problems in iOS 6 that we’d 
  like to see Apple address, but on the other, we’re as much 
  Apple’s customers as anyone else, and probably more so than most. 
  And so, constructive criticism is the goal of this 45-minute staff 
  roundtable in which we run through a number of suggestions for ways 
  that Apple could improve iOS for our everyday use, if only they’d 
  listen to feedback (which Matt Neuburg equates, memorably, to the 
  lack of feedback in the toilet industry). A lot of the suggestions 
  fall under the general rubric of making iOS more flexible and 
  acknowledging the fact that some people really do have more 
  significant needs than others, something that Apple seems to have 
  lost track of while focusing on the lowest-common-denominator 
  market. The discussion hit the following main points:

<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hub9l9iU1cU>

* Centralized file system. Apple has long avoided allowing iOS apps to 
  access any sort of central file storage area, forcing each app to 
  maintain separate copies of its documents and relying on the clumsy 
  Open In system for copying documents between apps. Increasingly, 
  Dropbox has become the de facto file system for iOS, with numerous 
  apps integrating support. If Apple wanted to regain control over 
  this space from Dropbox and move away from the per-app file storage 
  approach, we could imagine an iCloud-based service that goes beyond 
  the traditional folder-based filesystem by automatically scanning 
  files for malicious code, presenting only appropriate file types to 
  different apps, and generally updating the conceptual model that we 
  use to think about documents.

* Open Siri up to other apps. As we’ve become more accustomed to 
  using Siri, the technology’s limitations become increasingly 
  obvious. Most notably, why can’t we use Siri to work in apps other 
  than Apple’s? Apple could allow iOS apps to register a Siri 
  dictionary of sorts, in much the same way a Mac app can have an 
  AppleScript dictionary, that would lay out what phrases Siri would 
  recognize and what actions those phrases would trigger. We’d also 
  like to see Siri gain some alternative voices.

* Extend the home screen. The iOS home screen — technically known as 
  the Springboard — is completely broken. It’s nearly impossible 
  to find any apps after the first screen or two, and many of us have 
  fallen back on Spotlight and Siri to open apps. Worse, unlike 
  Android and Windows Phone, iOS can only display app icons on the 
  home screen, which seems downright quaint in a world where 
  information rules. There’s a site displaying Android home screens 
  that puts iOS to shame, given how gorgeous and useful these screens 
  look. Apple needs to make some serious strides in this area, if iOS 
  is to continue to compete against the alternatives.

<http://mycolorscreen.com/popular/>

* Fix the bugs! From what we can tell, iOS 6 is the buggiest version 
  of iOS yet. Matt explains one of the low-level bugs he’s run into, 
  and notes that he has reported more bugs against iOS 6 than all 
  other versions of iOS combined. Our theory is that the problems stem 
  from a lack of communication within teams at Apple, and the hope is 
  that the shakeup that ousted Scott Forstall might improve internal 
  communication. But even still, we’d like to see more resources 
  devoted to testing.

* Give us a look under the hood. There’s no question that Apple has 
  done, and should continue to do, a good job of hiding complexity in 
  iOS. But that has come at the cost of technical transparency for 
  those of us who both want more detail and aren’t offended by 
  complexity. For instance, we’d like to be able to find out exactly 
  what is taking space in that “Other” category (which often seems 
  unreasonably large), we’d like to have an Activity Monitor-like 
  app that would show which apps were using a lot of CPU or battery 
  power, we’d like more feedback about and control over the Wi-Fi 
  networks to which we connect, and we desperately want to be able to 
  find out exactly which individual apps are consuming cellular 
  bandwidth (Apple has once again removed DataMan Pro from the App 
  Store — see “Track Per-App Data Usage in iOS with DataMan 
  Pro,” 20 November 2012). We’re fully aware that this goes 
  against Apple’s grain, but hey, as long as we’re wishing for 
  things that would make our iOS lives better, more visibility into 
  the workings would certainly do so.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13402>

* More-granular parental controls. Apple acknowledges that parents 
  might want some control over how their children use iOS devices, but 
  iOS’s current parental controls aren’t nearly focused enough to 
  be useful. We’d like to see the capability to restrict particular 
  apps by time (no game playing after bedtime) and by overall usage 
  amount (no more than 30 minutes of a particular game per day). Plus, 
  it would be nice to be able to eliminate the possibility of cellular 
  data overuse.

* A more-coherent approach for Settings. It has become increasingly 
  difficult to find any given setting in the Settings app, 
  particularly on the iPhone, because there are so many, and if you 
  return to the Settings app from another app, it’s difficult to 
  figure out where you are.

* A unified approach to alarms and reminders. With iMessage and 
  iCloud-synced reminders, we’re all being inundated with 
  notifications on multiple devices, with very little acknowledgment 
  that if you’ve seen an alarm on one device, you don’t need to 
  see it on all the others. iMessage even does a little of this, but 
  Apple needs to extend iCloud’s awareness of what device is 
  currently in use appropriately so we aren’t just being nagged 
  non-stop.

  Though it may be easier to figure out who is talking by watching the 
  video, you won’t miss anything important if you instead listen to 
  the audio-only version, which you can do by clicking the Listen link 
  above, or by subscribing to the TidBITS podcast to listen during 
  your commute or workout.

<https://itunes.apple.com/podcast/tidbits/id276986548?mt=2>


  ----
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Bento 4.1.2 Loses Live Data Links with Calendar and iPhoto
----------------------------------------------------------
  by Alicia Katz Pollock: <alicia@royalwise.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13511>

  Users of the Bento personal database software from FileMaker beware! 
  Through Bento 4.1.1, one of the hallmarks of the program was its 
  capacity to maintain live data links to iPhoto, Calendar and 
  Reminders/iCal, and Contacts/Address Book. Changes made to photo 
  metadata, appointments, tasks, and contact cards from within Bento 
  were reflected in each native program, significantly extending 
  Bento’s capabilities. However, with Bento 4.1.2, released 25 
  September 2012, those features changed. (We’re aware this isn’t 
  new, but it only recently came to our attention.)

<http://www.filemaker.com/products/bento/>

  According to FileMaker, Bento uses unique identifiers associated 
  with the items to synchronize data with Calendar/iCal and iPhoto. 
  The emergence of cloud-based computing reportedly makes it possible 
  for these unique identifiers to change, resulting in incomplete 
  synchronization and prompting FileMaker to start removing support 
  for such live data links in Bento.

<http://help.filemaker.com/app/answers/detail/a_id/11076/>

  When updating to Bento 4.1.2 from any previous version of 4.x, any 
  data stored in the Bento iPhoto library will be migrated to a new 
  Photos library and disconnected from iPhoto. It’s still possible 
  to add photos from iPhoto to Bento media fields, but they don’t 
  retain a link to the original photo in iPhoto. Also, watch for a 
  prompt about migrating your tasks and events during the update. If 
  you choose to migrate this data, it too will be copied into Bento 
  Tasks and Events libraries that aren’t linked to Calendar and 
  Reminders/iCal. Skip this migration step to maintain live links, but 
  note that FileMaker warns about “potential data issues” in the 
  future if you do so.

<http://help.filemaker.com/app/answers/detail/a_id/10702/>

  Those potential data issues are likely related to a different 
  problem. Apple has long provided the Sync Services API to enable 
  other applications on the Mac to access Calendar’s data, but the 
  company is deprecating this API, which no longer works reliably, 
  suggesting that it will be removed entirely from a future version of 
  OS X. Because of this, future versions of Bento will also remove the 
  Calendar synchronization feature. FileMaker isn’t alone in 
  suffering from this removal; the Omni Group has already removed 
  similar support from OmniFocus, and BusyMac’s BusyCal 2 dropped 
  the capability to sync local On My Mac calendars with Calendar for 
  the same reason.

<http://www.omnigroup.com/support/omnifocus-ical-sync>
<https://support.busymac.com/tickets/10983>

  Luckily, maintaining a link between Bento and Contacts/Address Book 
  isn’t nearly as much of a problem. All versions of Bento 4.x for 
  Mac, and Bento 1.x for iPhone, can synchronize contacts with 
  Contacts/Address Book. There is one gotcha, but it’s not new. If 
  you were using Bento 1 for iPad and you upgrade to Bento 4 for iPad, 
  Bento 4 can import data from Bento 1 or from the Contacts app, but 
  it can’t maintain a link for future changes. However, it is 
  possible to run both Bento 1 and Bento 4 concurrently on your iPad, 
  enabling you to use Bento 1 together with Bento 4 on your Mac to 
  manage your iPad’s Contacts.

  [Alicia Katz Pollock has been working with computers since designing 
  a database on an Apple IIc for her father’s dental practice when 
  she was 13. Today she is a consultant at Royalwise Solutions and a 
  course author for Lynda.com. She holds a variety of Apple, 
  Microsoft, and Intuit certifications.]

<http://royalwise.com/>


  ----
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Managing Books in iTunes: This Novel Has a Nice Beat
----------------------------------------------------
  by Michael E. Cohen: <mcohen@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13494>
  2 comments

  A Take Control reader recently asked if we could provide any tips 
  for using iTunes on a Mac to organize books in iBooks, since it is 
  awkward to organize them directly on an iOS device. The request was 
  forwarded to me, and, after some thought, I came up with a few 
  recommendations, though they are, to my mind, clumsy and 
  unsatisfying, suggesting areas where Apple could improve the 
  experience.


**Leveraging the Possible** -- The biggest obstacle to book-organizing 
  paradise on an iOS device is that the iBooks app provides few ways 
  of arranging and organizing books. Here’s what iBooks gives you:

* The familiar shelf view, which is the default. It shows books by 
  thumbnails of their covers, arranged on a set of skeuomorphic 
  bookshelves in an infinitely tall bookcase. You can organize the 
  books on the shelves by dragging them around manually, one at a 
  time. Just as on an iOS home screen, you can’t leave empty spaces 
  on a shelf: they close up automatically, so you can’t dedicate a 
  particular shelf, or set of shelves, to a particular set of books.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2013-01/iBooks-shelf-view.png>

* List view, which provides a scrolling list of the books in a 
  bookcase sorted in one of four ways:

    * Bookshelf: This view lists books in the same order as they 
  appear on the bookcase.

    * Titles: This view lists books alphabetically by their titles.

    * Authors: This list is sorted alphabetically by the books’ 
  authors.

    * Categories: This displays the list alphabetically by the 
  books’ categories (more on that later), with each category in the 
  list headed by a separator bar that displays the name of the 
  category.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2013-01/iBooks-list-category.png>

* Collections, which are separate bookcases to which you can move one 
  or more books, and to which you can give names, such as Previously 
  Read or Short Story Collections.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2013-01/iBooks-collections.png>

  When you edit a list view by tapping the Edit button in iBooks, you 
  can select books only for moving to another collection or for 
  deletion — except for the Bookshelf list view, which provides drag 
  handles for books so you can drag a book up or down in the list and 
  so change the order shown in the shelf view. 

  That’s it: no other organizing and viewing tools are offered. You 
  can’t even edit titles, authors, or categories in iBooks. For 
  that, you need iTunes.

  So here’s one useful book organizing thing you can do in iTunes: 
  normalize the books’ categories and authors to get rid of 
  variants, which will allow you to better use the paltry few viewing 
  and organizing options that iBooks does provide. Here’s what I 
  mean:

1. In iTunes, show the books in List view. Using View > View Options, 
   display the Category heading. This displays the genre associated 
   with each book, such as Fiction or Romance. (Genre? Category? More 
   below on this nomenclatural inconsistency.)

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2013-01/ViewOptions-mec.png>

2. Sort the list by Category by clicking the Category column heading.

3. Scan the list and for each book that doesn’t have a category, 
   assign one: click once to select the book, pause for a moment, then 
   click near the left edge of the Category column to get an insertion 
   point and start typing; iTunes auto-completes what you type if it 
   can. (Yes, this text-editing interface for iTunes’ list views is 
   worthy of a usability case study in how best to baffle users.) 

4. For books that have the “wrong” category (in your opinion, 
   which is the only one that matters, since you are organizing your 
   books for yourself), select the book, pause briefly, click the 
   displayed category to make it editable, and type something else.

5. Sort the list by author, and then edit the author names so they are 
   consistent; for example, “J.R.R. Tolkien” is not, as far as 
   iTunes and iBooks are concerned, the same author as “J. R. R. 
   Tolkien” — spaces and punctuation matter.

6. For each author, select all the books, choose File > Get Info, 
   click the Sorting tab, and, in the Sort Artist field, type how you 
   want that author’s work sorted; for example, you might specify 
   “Tolkien, J.R.R.” for books that have “J. R. R. Tolkien” 
   listed as author so his books sort among the Ts instead of the Js 
   in Authors list view — iBooks respects the Sort Artist field in 
   that view. (Artist? Author? More about _that_ nomenclatural 
   inconsistency below, too.)

  Once you have the metadata (that is, data that describes the data) 
  for your books squared away in iTunes, the list views available in 
  iBooks become far more useful. In addition, you can make use of the 
  list views in iBooks as an aid to organizing your books into 
  separate collections. 

  For example, you could create a new collection for each author in 
  iBooks, list the books in the default Books collection by author, 
  select the books by each author, and then move them to the new 
  collection named for that author: voilà, you now have an iBooks 
  library with a collection bookcase dedicated to each of your 
  authors.

  Similarly, you could create collections for each category, and move 
  books belonging to each category to the appropriate collection (in 
  this case, of course, you may want to create more fine-grained 
  categories than, for example, Fiction and Nonfiction for your books 
  in iTunes — or maybe not, if that’s how you roll).

  (Note, by the way, that recent versions of iBooks can sync your 
  collections, and the books within them, among multiple iOS devices: 
  you can find that option in Settings > iBooks on your iOS device.)

  If you decide to parcel your books into separate collections as 
  I’ve just described, you have to do a little housekeeping whenever 
  you add books to your library in iBooks: sync your iOS device with 
  iTunes, get the book metadata in order there, resync your device, 
  and, back in iBooks, move the books where they belong.

  Like I said, clumsy and not very satisfying. Incredibly 
  unsatisfying, in fact, for a librarian, archivist, bibliographer, or 
  bibliophile.


**What iTunes Ignores** -- As it happens, the EPUB standard used by 
  ebooks in iBooks (I am ignoring for now the fact that iBooks also 
  can handle PDFs and iBooks Author books) has a robust specification 
  for including metadata in an ebook. This information is usually 
  found in the .opf file that each EPUB includes, and it goes, not 
  surprisingly, by the name “metadata.” For example, here’s the 
  metadata included with one of my Take Control books:

      <metadata xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:opf="http://www.idpf.org/2007/opf">
        <dc:title>Take Control of TextExpander (1.1)</dc:title>
        <dc:creator opf:role="aut">Michael E. Cohen</dc:creator>
        <dc:contributor opf:role="bkp">Pages v4.2</dc:contributor>
        <dc:date>2012-07-26</dc:date>
        <dc:subject>Reference</dc:subject>
        <dc:identifier id="BookId">2E23AA4C-86F2-40D4-863B-5073862969C8</dc:identifier> 
        <dc:language>en</dc:language>
        <meta name="cover" content="cover-image"/>
      </metadata> 

  In it you can find the book’s title, author, subject, and a bunch 
  of other stuff: the metadata included in an EPUB can be quite 
  extensive. iTunes and iBooks, in fact, are both capable of finding 
  the .opf file inside of an EPUB and reading the metadata from it. In 
  fact, that’s how iBooks and iTunes “know” the title of a newly 
  added book. However, unlike the extensive use that iTunes makes of 
  tags in your music collection, neither iTunes nor iBooks makes much 
  use of book metadata.

  In the case of a book that you add directly to iBooks, iBooks 
  extracts the title, the category (labeled in the metadata as 
  “subject”), and the author so it can sort its list views 
  appropriately. 

  iTunes also reads these particular metadata items, and a couple more 
  if they are present, and then places a new file inside the EPUB 
  named iTunesMetadata.plist that contains the information that iTunes 
  has extracted. From then on, if you change a book’s metadata in 
  iTunes (for example, the name of the author or the category of a 
  book), iTunes modifies it in the iTunesMetadata.plist file and 
  leaves the .opf file intact.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2013-01/Property_List_EditorScreenSnap-mec.png>

  One consequence of this approach is that other ebook reading apps 
  won’t see the metadata changes you make to an EPUB in iTunes. 
  Another, of interest probably only to ebook publishers, is that when 
  iTunes adds the iTunesMetadata.plist file to an EPUB, it doesn’t 
  modify the “manifest” that’s also part of the .opf file to 
  note the inclusion of the new file, so any EPUB-validating software 
  reports its presence with a warning.

  Also note that iTunes extracts only a few of the EPUB’s metadata 
  items. For instance, there is an optional metadata item, 
  “description,” often used by publishers to provide a capsule 
  summary of an ebook, but iTunes ignores it. If you add a comment 
  about a book in iTunes (File > Get Info, and then put something in 
  the Comments field on the Info pane of the Get Info window), iTunes 
  puts it in the iTunesMetadata.plist file, but it won’t pre-fill 
  that field with any description metadata that the book already 
  contains.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2013-01/GetInfo-info_pane-mec.png>

  The Get Info window’s interface with which you can modify the 
  iTunesMetadata.plist file, in fact, is strongly biased in favor of 
  audio media — in particular, individual songs. The Genre field is 
  used for songs; the iTunes Books library uses that field for a 
  book’s Category, but iTunes doesn’t bother to relabel the field 
  when you are editing a book’s information. Similarly, songs are 
  performed by “artists,” and books are written by “authors,” 
  but in the iTunes Get Info window for an ebook, the author name goes 
  in the Artist field. (And don’t even get me started on the 
  inability of Get Info’s artwork pane to show a book’s cover!)


**Bake It Longer** -- With the major overhaul that Apple gave to the 
  look and feel of iTunes in iTunes 11, Apple had a chance to revamp 
  the Get Info interface to handle the different kinds of media that 
  iTunes manages more fluidly and accurately. Instead, Apple left Get 
  Info virtually unchanged, so that you have to guess that authors are 
  really artists, that categories are really genres, and that books 
  don’t have anything corresponding to Beats Per Minute (yes, you 
  can set that field in Get Info for a book, though why you would want 
  to do that – or why iTunes even allows you to do it — beats me).

  More sadly, Apple has done little in iBooks to provide readers with 
  the ability to see or to search through their books by any metadata 
  beyond titles, categories, or authors, nor has Apple provided any 
  organizing tools in iBooks other than those I described earlier. For 
  the only ebook-reading software that Apple provides on any of its 
  platforms, the lack of basic organizing tools in iBooks is 
  embarrassing.

  Apple has said on more than one occasion that it views its Apple TV 
  product as a “hobby” — from the short shrift that iTunes gives 
  to book metadata and the needs of book lovers to organize their 
  libraries, it seems that ebooks remain only a hobby with Apple as 
  well.


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://tidbits.com/e/13494#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://tidbits.com/t/13494>


Five Alternatives to Apple’s Podcasts App
-----------------------------------------
  by Josh Centers: <josh@tidbits.com>, @jcenters
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13475>
  17 comments

  As I’m a daily commuter, podcasts are my lifeblood, so I’m 
  particular about the software I use to listen to them. I’ve been 
  listening to podcasts since Adam Curry popularized them a decade 
  ago, and I have yet to find the perfect podcast client.

  At its heart, a podcast client is nothing more than an RSS reader 
  that can play audio. It should be a simple app that does one thing 
  extremely well. As I (and many other people) often listen to 
  podcasts in the car, it should have a simple interface that 
  doesn’t require careful tapping. Most of us have mobile bandwidth 
  caps these days, so it needs to be able to download and store 
  episodes when I’m on Wi-Fi. At the same time, it also needs to be 
  able to stream those I forget to download before leaving the house. 
  As I often miss things while concentrating on what I’m doing 
  (driving!), I need to be able to rewind a few seconds to catch up. 
  And as I’ve listened to some of the same ads hundreds of times, I 
  need the capability to skip past them. I don’t want to have to 
  fumble with my iPhone to do these things either, especially when 
  I’m on the road, so I need lock screen and headphone controls that 
  let me rewind and fast forward within an episode.

  It’s befuddling how many of these apps get this simple stuff 
  wrong. For instance, in my days as an Android user, I tried Google 
  Listen. At the time it streamed everything in lieu of downloads, 
  which was okay because my bandwidth was unlimited. Unfortunately, it 
  did a bad job of it. It had a nasty habit of losing its place in the 
  middle of a podcast, so while the timeline would appear to be in the 
  middle, the show would start playing from the beginning. I would 
  have to exit the app and restart the podcast, which was 
  unacceptable. Google never quite got it right, and put Listen out to 
  pasture earlier this year.

  Then there’s Apple’s Podcasts app. If Apple had merely 
  implemented podcast downloading inside the iOS Music app, I would 
  have been ecstatic. Instead, they moved all podcast management into 
  this rather quirky app. Unfortunately, as our own Glenn Fleishman 
  discovered, Podcasts tends to gobble data randomly (see “Does 
  Apple’s Podcasts App Suck Cellular Data?,” 17 September 2012). 
  As of this writing, it appears that the problem still exists. 
  Bandwidth usage will be normal, then out of nowhere DataMan Pro will 
  inform me that I’ve suddenly used 150 MB of data (for details on 
  DataMan Pro, see “Track Per-App Data Usage in iOS with DataMan 
  Pro,” 20 November 2012).

<http://tidbits.com/article/13266>
<http://tidbits.com/article/13402>

  The good thing is, you don’t have to settle for Apple’s 
  lackluster app. iOS has no shortage of respectable podcast clients. 
  None are perfect, but none will unexpectedly wreck your bandwidth 
  cap either. All of them have simpler interfaces than Apple’s 
  Podcasts, and are easy to use. I’ve investigated five of them, and 
  with the exception of PodCruncher and Pocket Casts, I’ve used each 
  on and off for years.


**Instacast** -- Vemedio’s Instacast ($4.99), a long-time favorite 
  of podcast fans, has just been updated to version 3. Instacast 2 was 
  a controversial release because, while it was a free update for 
  existing customers, it locked many features behind a $1.99 in-app 
  purchase. This time around, Vemedio instead opted to require all 
  users to purchase the app again, but bundled in all the former Pro 
  features.

<http://vemedio.com/products/instacast3>
<http://vemedio.com/blog/posts/instacast-2-0-available>

  Instacast’s claim to fame is its simple, elegant interface. 
  Long-time users won’t find any surprises in version 3. It’s 
  still split into the same three tabs at the top: Subscriptions, 
  Playlists, and Bookmarks. A button in the upper right takes you to 
  the currently playing podcast, where you can play or pause the 
  podcast, or skip forward or backward by a user-defined number of 
  seconds. You can swipe this set of controls to the left to expose a 
  second layer of controls that includes playback speed, AirPlay, and 
  more.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-12/Instacast-subscriptions-and-controls.png>

  This second set of controls is one interface change I’m not crazy 
  about. In the previous version, there were two “hamburger 
  buttons” on each side of the controls that could be slid up to 
  reveal the extra controls. This worked well, because you could 
  access all controls at once, and there was a clearly defined area to 
  drag your finger on. In Instacast 3, it’s hard to slide back to 
  the main set of controls without accidentally tapping something. 
  However, this is more of a nitpick, as in practice, it hasn’t been 
  an issue.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-12/Old-and-new-controls.png>

  You can create a new playlist by tapping the plus sign in the lower 
  left while in the Playlists tab. There are two types of playlists: 
  regular and smart. Regular playlists are just a manual selection of 
  episodes. Smart playlists sound intriguing, but in reality aren’t 
  that smart. Your options are limited to Unplayed, Favorites, 
  Downloaded, Partially Played, Recently Played, and Most Recent. I 
  really wish they could be smarter, like a playlist for 5by5 shows or 
  a list of every podcast featuring Merlin Mann. However, what’s 
  there is simple to use and gets the job done. Instacast 3 includes 
  three default playlists: Unplayed, Downloaded, and Favorites. I 
  spend most of my time in the Downloaded playlist, which features 
  every podcast episode currently on my iPhone.

  Bookmarks sound great in theory, but in practice I almost never use 
  them. The only way I have found to make one is to tap the info 
  button while in the player screen, tap the Bookmarks tab inside, and 
  then tap Add Bookmark. It’s cumbersome to navigate to, so I almost 
  never use this feature. Besides, Instacast does a pretty good job of 
  keeping my place.

  Instacast has a few nagging quirks. I’ve found a number of minor 
  bugs, such as interface elements disappearing or freezing. However, 
  it’s being constantly updated, so I’m confident that those bugs 
  will be short-lived. A longer-term problem is its streaming 
  performance. Streaming has always been one of Instacast’s weak 
  points, and continues to be so. On my iPhone 4, Instacast 2 would 
  often fail to stream at all on AT&T’s 3G network, while Podcasts 
  or Downcast had no problem doing so. This has improved since I moved 
  to Verizon LTE, but cellular dead zones remain a problem. While 
  Podcasts or Downcast will happily play for a few minutes without 
  cellular coverage, Instacast stops almost immediately. There is no 
  option to adjust the cache to improve this.

  So, if you’re already an Instacast user, is it worth $4.99 to 
  upgrade? Probably not, unless you were planning to buy the iPad 
  version. The biggest change in the new Instacast is that it’s now 
  a universal app. Previously, the iPad version was a separate $4.99 
  purchase. The iPad version has been redesigned to more closely match 
  the iPhone interface, though there are still some minor differences.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-12/Instacast-iPad.png>

  The other major change is that Vemedio has abandoned iCloud for its 
  own syncing solution, citing reliability concerns and Apple’s 
  difficult API. While I can’t blame them for doing so, users now 
  have to create a username and password to sync podcasts between 
  devices, which is a pain compared to Apple’s baked-in solution. 
  Also, Vemedio’s servers have had a hard time keeping up with the 
  load, making syncing sometimes inaccessible for early adopters. I 
  personally am still unable even to sign up for an account. 
  Fortunately, previous Instacast users can import their data from 
  iCloud. For users who’d like to run their own server, Vemedio has 
  promised to provide a server for the Mac, as well as an eventual Mac 
  client.

<http://vemedio.com/support/instacast#faq3|14>
<http://vemedio.com/support/instacast#faq3|16>

  My favorite new feature is automatic file management. Simply set a 
  storage limit of anywhere from 512 MB to 10 GB, and Instacast will 
  automatically manage your downloaded podcasts to fit inside that 
  space, with no micromanagement required.

  Users on iOS 5 or below should be cautioned that Instacast 3 only 
  works on iOS 6 or later. This means that those still using the 
  iPhone 3G and original iPad are out of luck.


**Downcast** -- Jamawkinaw Enterprises’ Downcast ($1.99) is the 
  podcast client for power users. While not as pretty or elegant as 
  Instacast, Downcast has every option and feature you could dream of 
  in a podcast client.

<https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/downcast/id393858566?mt=8>

  The basic interface itself is simple. There are five tabs at the 
  bottom: Podcasts, Playlists, Add Podcast, Downloads, and More, which 
  includes settings. The Now Playing button in the upper right shows 
  the current episode, where you have all of the usual controls, plus 
  buttons that let you skip forward or back 30 seconds, back 15 
  seconds, or 2 minutes forward.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-12/Downcast-subscriptions-and-controls.png>

  There are no default playlists, but Downcast gives you the power to 
  make any kind you wish. You can include or exclude shows, make video 
  or audio-only playlists, and include only new episodes or partially 
  played episodes. You can even set podcast priorities so that new 
  episodes of certain shows will always play first.

  One of Downcast’s weaknesses is the built-in directory. It’s not 
  as polished as Instacast’s, and some of its categories are a 
  little odd. For example, Leo Laporte’s “The Tech Guy” ranks at 
  number 3 in Technology, while his venerable “This Week in Tech” 
  ranks at number 6, which is strange for a power user app. You also 
  won’t find podcasts separated by audio or video. However, none of 
  these small issues should prevent you from finding your favorite 
  shows.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-12/Downcast-directory-and-settings.png>

  Downcast offers an overwhelming number of options that can sometimes 
  be confusing. For example, by default, the forward and back buttons 
  on the lock screen switch between episodes. Their settings can be 
  changed instead to skip by a number of seconds within an episode. 
  However, the description of this setting, called Remote Media 
  Switch, is misleading. It says that when turned on, “Fast forward 
  and fast reverse will trigger next/previous episode.” Actually, 
  the _opposite_ is true, when turned on, that setting will skip 
  backward or forward, and when off will skip between episodes. It has 
  been like that ever since I can remember.

  A unique feature of Downcast is location-based updates. You can set 
  Downcast to update your subscriptions when approaching or leaving 
  any destination, just like the built-in Reminders app. This feature 
  appears to not use any additional power, so why other clients 
  don’t do this is beyond me.

  Another unique feature of Downcast, and one of my favorites, is its 
  capability to import MP3s via iTunes file sharing. My job offers a 
  number of free audiobooks as MP3s. They’re a pain to listen to in 
  the Music app, because it doesn’t save my place or let me easily 
  skip forward or back. However, I can import all of these into 
  Downcast and have full control of MP3 audiobooks.

  Unlike Instacast, Downcast still uses iCloud sync. While iCloud is 
  far from perfect, you won’t have to create a separate user account 
  to keep up with. Whether this is a pro or con is a personal choice.

  I used Downcast as my main player for a long time, but two major 
  issues made me switch. The first was power usage. Downcast would 
  drain my battery, causing the iPhone to heat up, and leaving it 
  almost dead at the end of the day. What finally made me give up on 
  Downcast was poor design that led to excessive data usage. After 
  upgrading to the iPhone 5, Downcast imported my subscriptions, but 
  didn’t bother to redownload the shows I had been listening to. 
  Whenever a show was next in my playlist, but the file hadn’t been 
  downloaded, Downcast would automatically stream that episode, 
  despite my setting it to download new shows only while on Wi-Fi. 
  Over LTE, a 40 MB podcast would cache in seconds, burning through my 
  data plan in the process.

  Fortunately, it appears that these issues have been fixed. While 
  testing Downcast for this article, my iPhone’s power usage and 
  temperature appeared to be typical. The developer has also addressed 
  accidental data usage in two recent updates. Update 2.7.11 added an 
  option to stream only over Wi-Fi, and the next update, 2.7.12, made 
  Downcast better handle data usage when exiting Wi-Fi coverage, so it 
  won’t keep downloading a podcast when you leave Wi-Fi range.

<http://support.downcastapp.com/customer/portal/articles/476131-change-log>

  At only $1.99 for the universal app, loads of options, and no major 
  bugs, it’s hard not to recommend Downcast.


**PodCruncher** -- Obsessive Coders’ PodCruncher is only $1.99 and 
  has a dead simple interface that’s split into five tabs: Podcasts, 
  Playlists, Player, Downloads, and More. I really want to like this 
  app. PodCruncher has an unpretentious interface that doesn’t get 
  bogged down in details. Its playlists are simple, but powerful. As 
  opposed to Instacast, PodCruncher provides a plethora of playlist 
  options, without getting overly complicated.

<http://www.obsessivecoders.com/>
<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-12/Podcruncher-podcasts-and-playlists.png>

  The default playlists are thoughtful. There are four: one with 
  podcasts released in the past 24 hours, one for the last episodes 
  from each podcast, another for starred podcasts, and finally one for 
  recently played podcasts so you can catch up on what you were 
  listening to. You can of course create your own playlists, with an 
  impressive number of options for each.

  Unfortunately, PodCruncher has some drawbacks that prevent me from 
  recommending it. The first is a nitpick. For some reason, the 
  developer crammed the sleep timer into the share menu, which is 
  sloppy and confusing, especially when there’s a blank space it 
  could fit into to the right of the timeline. Another nitpick is the 
  lack of URLs in show notes. Many of my favorite podcasts can be hard 
  to follow without links to source materials, so for me this is a key 
  feature.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-12/PodCruncher-sleep-timer.png>

  A more severe issue is that unlike Downcast, the lock screen 
  controls cannot be reconfigured in PodCruncher. By default, the lock 
  screen controls only skipping between podcasts, leaving no easy way 
  to skip around inside an episode. As I stated earlier, I consider 
  this a core competency of any podcast app, so the lack of this 
  feature makes PodCruncher untenable for my daily listening.

  On top of that, many episodes won’t download at all. Even though 
  Instacast, Downcast, and PodCruncher shared the same subscriptions, 
  PodCruncher would download only two episodes, while Instacast and 
  Downcast would download at least nine. I also received several error 
  messages while using the app, leading me to think that the codebase 
  is half-baked. It’s a shame. If Obsessive Coders could channel 
  some of that obsessiveness and fix these issues, PodCruncher would 
  be my choice of podcast app.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-12/PodCruncher-error.png>


**Stitcher** -- If you listen to podcasts only occasionally, the free 
  (and heavily advertised) Stitcher app may be for you. Stitcher tries 
  to be the Pandora of podcasts (for more about Pandora, see 
  “Comparing Music Streaming Services: Pandora, Spotify, and 
  Last.fm,” 27 August 2012). Stitcher prefers to stream shows 
  instead of downloading them, continuously playing related shows, and 
  letting you vote them up or down. Also, like Pandora, it’s 
  ad-supported, but unlike Pandora, there is no paid premium option.

<http://stitcher.com/>
<http://tidbits.com/article/13211>
<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-12/Stitcher.png>

  Just like Pandora, you can create custom stations based on a 
  podcast. Tap the star button while playing any podcast, and it’ll 
  be added to the custom station(s) you choose. There is also a Smart 
  Station full of shows Stitcher thinks you’ll like based on what 
  you’ve listened to.

  Since Stitcher is built for streaming, it’s not a great choice for 
  mobile users with tight bandwidth caps. It does offer an offline 
  listening option for your custom stations, but it’s obviously an 
  afterthought. It’s also not ideal for those wanting complete 
  control over their podcasts. It’s easy to skip to the next 
  podcast, but the reverse is trickier, forcing you to navigate 
  through menus to see the last one you played. Also, there’s no 
  easy way to skip commercials, and even the 30-second skip back is 
  hidden inside the cluttered interface.

  Stitcher isn’t my preferred listening option, but it definitely 
  has its strong points. It costs nothing, takes up little storage 
  space, and is a great way to discover new shows.


**Pocket Casts** -- Several readers recommended Shifty Jelly’s 
  Pocket Casts ($1.99), a tragically overlooked podcatcher that has 
  been on the scene since 2011. It has a unique interface, impressive 
  underpinnings, and a funky personality (according to the FAQ, only 
  seven animals were hurt during production of the app). After only a 
  few days of use, I have fallen in love with it.

<http://pocketcasts.com/>

  From first launch, Pocket Casts is impressive. It automatically 
  searches your iPhone to find your subscriptions in other apps. When 
  I first launched it, it found nearly all of mine, which blew me 
  away.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-12/Pocket-Casts-import-podcast-list.png>

  Like most of the apps mentioned here, Pocket Casts’ interface is 
  split into tabs: Library, which has sub-tabs for podcasts and 
  episodes, Now Playing, Search, and Settings. Subscribed podcasts are 
  displayed in a similar manner to Apple’s Podcasts, as a scrolling 
  grid of cover art. You can tap and hold on any of them to put them 
  into what I call “shaky mode,” where you can rearrange and 
  delete subscriptions just like apps on the iPhone home screen.

  In the episode list, you’re presented with four filters at the 
  top. By default, you have Recent, Unplayed, Downloaded, and 
  Unfinished. These filters can be changed by pressing on them, and 
  each shows a count of episodes that fall under that filter. This is 
  a great way to sort through your podcast library. Each episode is 
  listed in chronological order, with a brief description, a quick 
  play button, status, and show length.

  The player interface is clean, yet powerful. It offers a scrubbable 
  timeline at the top, along with playback speed, a shortcut to your 
  current playlist, and a share button. The share button is the best 
  in its class, as you can share either the podcast, the episode 
  you’re listening to, or even your position in the episode via 
  email or Twitter. You can slide left on the podcast art to reveal 
  show notes, and tapping the lower right or left sides of the album 
  art to skip forward or back inside an episode. It’s a great touch 
  for drivers who keep their iPhones mounted in their cars.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-12/Pocket-Casts-player-notes.png>

  The podcast directory in Pocket Casts is fantastic. My favorite 
  feature is the capability to view podcasts per network. So if 
  you’re a fan of say, Leo Laporte’s TWiT network, you can easily 
  view and subscribe to every podcast on that network. Its settings 
  are equally good, providing everything you need in clear, simple 
  language. An especially nice touch is the option to key in the 
  specific number of seconds you want to skip forward or back when you 
  press the previous or next buttons, and you can even set each to a 
  different time interval.

  What makes Pocket Casts fantastic is its attention to detail. 
  Progress dots scroll under the Library tab while downloading 
  episodes and under the Now Playing tab while playing a podcast. 
  Subscribe to a podcast, and it falls into the Library tab. While in 
  the episode view, pull to refresh and you’ll see an animated radio 
  tuner. Unlike Apple’s Podcasts, which uses a reel-to-reel recorder 
  as the episode timeline, it’s a decorative touch that adds a bit 
  of fun instead of being a frustrating interface element. It’s how 
  skeuomorphic elements should be. Pocket Casts’ interface surprises 
  and delights.

  Another impressive detail about Pocket Casts is that all episode 
  updates happen on Shifty Jelly’s servers. While most podcast apps 
  contact each podcast’s server directly, Pocket Casts connects to 
  only one. The result is faster updates with less data usage. (The 
  downside is that podcast publishers don’t get useful statistics.) 
  Downloading hundreds of megabytes of podcast episodes can lock up 
  most podcast apps, but Pocket Casts does it without a hiccup. And 
  Shifty Jelly’s eleven servers update frequently throughout the 
  day, so you always have the freshest content.

  However, Pocket Casts isn’t perfect. My biggest gripe is that 
  episodes don’t download automatically. Instead, you have to tap an 
  arrow icon in the Episodes view, which downloads every episode in 
  the selected filter. Pocket Casts also lacks smart playlists, though 
  with the built-in filters, this isn’t much of an issue. 
  Fortunately, the developer tells me that a forthcoming free update 
  will feature automatic downloads, smart playlists, an iPad version, 
  and syncing between the iOS and Android versions of the app. After 
  that update, Pocket Casts may become my main client.


**Recommendation** -- In terms of overall value, my money’s on 
  Downcast. It’s cheap, works well, and has most every feature you 
  could ask for. While the options can be overwhelming, its interface 
  is relatively clean and simple.

  If you don’t mind paying a premium for simplicity, then Instacast 
  might be worth the extra cost. For me, it’s almost worth the money 
  just for the automatic storage management.

  For those who are casual listeners, mostly listen at home, or want a 
  new way to discover podcasts, then Stitcher is a great app to keep 
  around. It’s free and won’t hog your device’s storage, but it 
  will frustrate you if you listen a lot or have a low bandwidth cap.

  While there’s a lot to like about PodCruncher, it needs a few 
  fixes to become a serious contender, but there’s no reason that 
  can’t happen.

  Finally, Pocket Casts is a fun and refreshing podcast client that 
  gets a lot right. With a little more added functionality, it could 
  easily be the best of the bunch.


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://tidbits.com/e/13475#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://tidbits.com/t/13475>


TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 21 January 2013
---------------------------------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff: <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13509>

**Quicksilver β71** -- The open-source keyboard launcher Quicksilver 
  has been updated to version β71 with a multitude of improvements 
  and fixes as well as cosmetic changes — including new icons and a 
  modernized look for the Bezel interface. At the top of the list, OS 
  X 10.8 Mountain Lion’s Notification Center has been added as a 
  notification handler and iCloud documents are displayed after 
  right-arrowing into an iCloud-compatible application. The update 
  also improves several aspects of its alternate action behavior, 
  including adding the capability to hold the Command key down to 
  select available alternate actions; enabling alternate actions to be 
  viewed in the Actions preferences; and adding new alternate actions 
  for moving, copying, opening files with a specified app, running at 
  a specified time, and creating a link. Also new are localizations 
  for Czech, French, German, Spanish, Welsh, and Chinese (Taiwan). 
  (Free, 3.6 MB, release notes)

<http://qsapp.com/>
<http://qsapp.com/changelog.php>

  Read/post comments about Quicksilver β71.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13507#comments>


**Sandvox 2.7.4** -- Karelia has released Sandvox 2.7.4 with improved 
  performance while saving files (especially for people running Mac OS 
  X 10.6 Snow Leopard), editing, and dragging media into the Web 
  authoring tool. The update also adds local publishing setup 
  compatibility to OS X 10.7.2 and earlier, ignores image filename 
  extensions when dragged from the Finder, fixes a problem where an 
  exported site’s resources could be placed in the wrong location, 
  and resolves an issue where Sandvox would forget what it had 
  published when dealing with host setups whose folder begins with two 
  or more slashes. ($79.99 new from Karelia or the Mac App Store, free 
  update, 31.2 MB)

<http://www.karelia.com/sandvox/>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/sandvox/id455413521?mt=12>

  Read/post comments about Sandvox 2.7.4.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13506#comments>


**LaunchBar 5.4.1** -- Objective Development has released LaunchBar 
  5.4.1 with a wide-ranging list of enhancements to the keyboard 
  launcher, including improved compatibility with iTunes 11. Other 
  iTunes-related changes include a fix for an issue that failed to 
  “Go to Current Song” when playing a song via LaunchBar; a fix 
  for a Show in iTunes action failure; and redesigned icons for 
  Artist, Album, and Track. The update also modifies the behavior of 
  the “Switch to Calculator when typing digits” option, which now 
  makes it possible to enter abbreviations that start with a digit 
  (such as 1P  to open 1Password) even with this preference turned on. 
  Dash support for developers looking up API documentation is 
  improved, enabling you to select Dash and then press the Spacebar to 
  trigger the “Look up in Dash” action. The release also improves 
  VoiceOver support in the index window, display of an app’s recent 
  documents, indexing and display of mounted volumes, compatibility 
  with SparkleShare, commands for Assign Abbreviation and Show in 
  Index, and detection of labeled email addresses during Instant Send. 
  Finally, LaunchBar fixes an issue that prevented the app from hiding 
  after receiving a file via drag and drop. ($35 new with a 20-percent 
  discount for TidBITS members, free update, 2.5 MB, release notes)

<http://www.obdev.at/products/launchbar/>
<https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/dash-docs-snippets/id458034879?mt=12>
<http://tidbits.com/member_benefits.html>
<http://www.obdev.at/products/launchbar/releasenotes5.html>

  Read/post comments about LaunchBar 5.4.1.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13502#comments>


**PDFpen and PDFpenPro 5.9.4** -- Smile has updated PDFpen and 
  PDFpenPro to version 5.9.4, both of which reduce overall memory 
  usage for improved performance. The PDF-manipulation programs gain 
  improvements in OCR error handling, as well as opening documents 
  that didn’t correctly adhere to PDF specifications. PDFpenPro also 
  resolves a sandboxing issue when creating new PDFs from local HTML 
  files. As of this writing, both PDFpen and PDFpenPro haven’t been 
  updated to this latest version in the Mac App Store (they’re both 
  still stuck on version 5.9.3). ($59.95/$99.95 new with a 20-percent 
  discount for TidBITS members, free update, 47.5/48.5 MB)

<http://www.smilesoftware.com/PDFpen/>
<http://www.smilesoftware.com/PDFpenPro/>
<http://tidbits.com/member_benefits.html>

  Read/post comments about PDFpen and PDFpenPro 5.9.4.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13501#comments>


ExtraBITS for 21 January 2013
-----------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff: <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13508>

  On the Web and in the news this week, Adam Engst is interviewed 
  about publishing on the Generational podcast, Rene Ritchie at iMore 
  argues that Apple is ready to fend off attacks from competitors in a 
  unique way, and Dell CEO Michael Dell, who once famously advocated 
  Apple shut itself down, is reportedly looking to push for a buyout 
  of his company to private equity firms.


**Adam Engst Discusses Publishing on the Generational Podcast** -- In 
  this lengthy but engaging discussion with Generational’s host Gabe 
  Weatherhead, Adam Engst shares numerous thoughts about writing, 
  editing, and publishing, with forays into specifics about customer 
  service, the use of DRM as a platform lock-in, issues with iBooks 
  Author, why small publishers must build their own audiences, the 
  role of different people in the publishing process, how we choose 
  book topics, why outlines are important, and much more.

<http://www.70decibels.com/generational/2013/1/20/018-digital-publishing-with-adam-engst.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/13513#comments>


**Vincible: iMore on What Apple Faces in 2013** -- At iMore, Rene 
  Ritchie looks at the fusillades being thrown at Apple so far in 
  2013 — endless nonsensical punditry, rumors of iPhone production 
  cutbacks, possible stock price manipulation — and how everyone is 
  attacking the supposedly invincible market leader. He argues that 
  Apple is fighting against psychology as much as competing products, 
  and points out the company’s edge. Ritchie writes: “But here’s 
  the thing — Apple has been here before. They’ve been to the very 
  bottom, and they came back. Apple knows they’re beatable — that 
  everyone is beatable — and they know how to fight their way back. 
  It’s part of them now.”

<http://www.imore.com/vincible>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/13510#comments>


**Dell to Take Its Own Advice?** -- On 6 October 1997, Michael Dell, 
  the CEO of Dell Inc., when asked how he would fix the 
  then-struggling Apple Computer, told an audience at the Gartner 
  Symposium that, were he in charge at Apple, he would “shut it down 
  and give the money back to the shareholders.” Now, Bloomberg 
  reports that Dell is said to be in buyout talks with private equity 
  firms. Meanwhile, the once-beleaguered Apple has something in the 
  neighborhood of $123 billion in cash and securities on hand, 
  according to its last financial statement.

<http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-01-14/dell-is-said-be-in-buyout-discussions-with-private-equity-firms.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/13497#comments>


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