TidBITS#1165/18-Mar-2013
========================
  Issue link: <http://tidbits.com/issue/1165>


  The big news this week came from Google, not with something new, but
  with the cancellation of something old: Google Reader. Josh Centers
  offers some suggestions for alternatives, if you’re accustomed to
  reading RSS news feeds via Google Reader or syncing them between
  devices with other RSS apps. And Adam Engst takes advantage of the
  opportunity to look more deeply into what the shuttering of Google
  Reader means in terms of tools versus platforms, publishers versus
  distributors, and the infinitude of Internet information. Bringing
  things back down to earth, Adam also looks at the OS X 10.8.3 update,
  and Joe Kissell introduces FlippedBITS, a new column aimed at
  correcting technology misconceptions, with the first installment aimed
  at explaining what to watch out for when booting from a duplicate of
  your hard disk. Notable software releases this week include Security
  Update 2013-001 for Snow Leopard and Lion, MacBook Pro Retina SMC
  Update 1.1, Pear Note 3.1, LaunchBar 5.4.2, Microsoft Office 2011
  14.3.2 and 2008 12.3.6, Default Folder X 4.5.8, and Dropbox 2.0.

Articles
    OS X 10.8.3 Mountain Lion Fixes Nagging Bugs
    Introducing Our New FlippedBITS Column
    FlippedBITS: Booting Your Mac from a Duplicate
    Explore Alternatives to Google Reader
    Thoughts Prompted by Google Reader’s Demise
    TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 18 March 2013
    ExtraBITS for 18 March 2013


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OS X 10.8.3 Mountain Lion Fixes Nagging Bugs
--------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst: <ace@tidbits.com>, @adamengst
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13637>
  10 comments

  With OS X Mountain Lion 10.8.3 Update and the included Safari 6.0.3, 
  Apple has squashed numerous nagging bugs, many of which were 
  extremely specific and were thus overlooked in the larger 10.8.2 
  release from nearly six months ago (see “OS X 10.8.2 Eases 
  Notification Center, Messages Frustrations,” 19 September 2012). 
  The free update is available via the Mac App Store, with delta 
  (540.46 MB — from 10.8.2) and combo (793.69 MB — from any 
  version of 10.8) updaters now ready for download from the Apple 
  Support Downloads site. Although we haven’t noticed any problems 
  yet, we recommend holding off on the update for at least a few days 
  until we’ve seen if it introduces any new issues. Let’s take a 
  look at the details.

<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT5612>
<http://tidbits.com/article/13274>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1641>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1640>

  Ding dong, the file URL bug is dead! See “A Simple Text String 
  that Crashes Most Mac Applications” (4 February 2013). This bug 
  was minor, but embarrassing, so it’s nice that Apple has addressed 
  it.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13540#comments>

  The Contacts app fixes several printing-related bugs, including one 
  that caused cards to print out of order and another that caused 
  addresses to print in the wrong location. We still mostly print with 
  BeLight Software’s more-capable Labels & Addresses, so we’ve not 
  run into these problems (see “Labels & Addresses Restores Holiday 
  Card Sanity,” 12 December 2008).

<http://www.belightsoft.com/products/labelsaddresses/overview.php>
<http://tidbits.com/article/9939>

  If you use Boot Camp in favor of VMware Fusion or Parallels Desktop, 
  and you want to stay up to date with the latest developments on both 
  sides of the fence, 10.8.3 adds support both for installing Windows 
  8 and for Macs with 3 TB drives.

  Eye candy lovers will be pleased to learn that 10.8.3 finally brings 
  back to Mountain Lion’s Slideshow screensaver the capability to 
  display photos from subfolders, and also fixes a bug that could 
  cause the desktop picture to change after logging out or restarting. 
  If you’ve noticed wackiness on the screen after waking from sleep, 
  that should be a thing of the past too.

  Listen up for two audio-related fixes, one that prevents an audio 
  stuttering problem on 2011 Macs, and another that could cause Logic 
  Pro to become unresponsive when using certain plug-ins.

  On the networking side, 10.8.3 promises reliability enhancements 
  when using a Microsoft Exchange account in Mail, claims improved 
  compatibility with IMAP servers in the Notes app, prevents Messages 
  from displaying messages out of order after waking from sleep, and 
  includes fixes for two Active Directory bugs that could cause delays 
  on high latency networks and lock out users after accessing the 
  Security & Privacy pane of System Preferences.

  Safari 6.0.3 improves performance when scrolling on Facebook and 
  while zoomed in on a Web page, plus while viewing Web pages with 
  plug-in content. Also included are bug fixes for an erroneous alert 
  claiming that bookmarks can’t be changed, duplicate bookmarks on 
  iOS devices after editing them in Safari on the Mac, incorrect 
  access to unfiltered search results when searching Google with 
  Parental Controls enabled, and a problem that prevents Safari from 
  restoring the correct page position when you navigate back to a 
  previous page.

  As always, both 10.8.3 and Safari 6.0.3 address numerous security 
  vulnerabilities. Safari 6.0.3 fixes no less than 15 WebKit memory 
  corruption bugs, plus a pair of cross-site scripting attacks. 
  10.8.3’s security fixes span the gamut, addressing components and 
  apps such as Apache, CoreTypes, International Components for 
  Unicode, Identity Services, ImageIO, IOAcceleratorFamily, the 
  kernel, Login Window, Messages, PDFKit, and QuickTime. Plus, the 
  update no longer allows incorrect SSL certificates.

<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT5671>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT5672>

  There’s also mention of a malware removal tool that Apple says 
  will run on installation and will remove most common variants of 
  malware — you’re alerted only if malware is found.

  As noted at the start, although the changes in both 10.8.3 and 
  Safari 6.0.3 are welcome, there’s no telling if Apple has 
  inadvertently introduced new problems, so unless you’re being 
  vexed daily by something that these updates fix, we recommend 
  holding off on this update until early adopters give the all clear. 


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://tidbits.com/e/13637#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://tidbits.com/t/13637>


Introducing Our New FlippedBITS Column
--------------------------------------
  by Joe Kissell: <joe@tidbits.com>, @joekissell
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13617>
  8 comments

  Today I’d like to introduce a new series of articles we’re 
  calling FlippedBITS. Our premise is that technology breeds 
  misconceptions, and far too often, due to a lack of information, we 
  develop mental models of the way things work that are plausible — 
  but wrong. Those mistaken ideas, in turn, make it more difficult to 
  solve everyday problems and can lead us to waste time, effort, and 
  money. In each installment of FlippedBITS, I’ll examine one or 
  more of these misconceptions and do my best to set the record 
  straight.

  My 2-year-old son is still learning the basics of how the world 
  works, and it’s fascinating to watch his understanding of 
  technology evolve. Just a few months ago, he’d pick up a remote 
  control and try to talk on it like a telephone. In his mind, any 
  oblong plastic box with buttons on one side must be a telephone — 
  it’s easy to see how he might make that mistake. (And, in all 
  fairness, we had a telephone and a remote control that looked mighty 
  similar to each other.) Now he understands that a remote control is 
  different — it’s the thing we point at the TV to make it play 
  his favorite shows. But then he became confused and frustrated when 
  we handed him a toy remote control that only made noise when he 
  pressed the buttons; he couldn’t understand why the TV wouldn’t 
  respond.

  We expect kids to make these kinds of errors, and we laugh knowingly 
  as we watch how they try to put something into one logical category, 
  notice that it doesn’t quite fit, and then try another. This is 
  all part of growing up. But in fact, we never stop trying to make 
  sense of the world. We encounter a new thing we don’t entirely 
  understand, and we automatically — perhaps unconsciously — start 
  trying to construct a mental model of what must be happening behind 
  the scenes. These models not only help us explain what we’re 
  seeing, they help us predict how things will work in the future. 
  It’s just that sometimes, through no fault of our own, we guess 
  wrong.

  For example, I remember the first time I heard of this newfangled 
  device called a “laser printer.” I was a freshman in college. I 
  got that paper went in blank and that, due to something involving a 
  laser, it came out with crisp black text. But the initial idea I had 
  about how this worked was that the laser was somehow burning the 
  letters directly on the paper, because after all, burning is what 
  lasers do. Later, when I found out that laser printers used a black 
  powder called toner, I had to revise my theory. Maybe the paper was 
  covered with toner before the laser zapped it, and the heat from the 
  laser caused the toner to melt in spots and stick to the paper. That 
  turned out to be wildly wrong too, of course. I had no idea at the 
  time that a laser beam could reverse an electrostatic charge that 
  otherwise causes toner to stick to a drum, that when paper rolled 
  along that drum, it picked up the remaining toner (again, due to 
  electrostatic attraction), and that a combination of heat and 
  pressure then fused the toner to the paper. My theories had seemed 
  reasonable based on the available information; they even correctly 
  predicted that the paper would come out of the printer warm. But my 
  mental model didn’t happen to reflect reality.

  Misconstruing how a laser printer worked had no negative 
  consequences for me. But sometimes erroneous mental models lead to 
  serious problems. If your mental model of how a car’s air bags 
  work is that they offer complete protection in any sort of crash, 
  that could lead you not to bother wearing a seatbelt, which might 
  prove deadly if, for example, your car flipped over.

  I get lots of technical questions from people who have read my books 
  and articles or heard me speak somewhere. A fair percentage of the 
  time, the questions are phrased in a way that shows they come from a 
  mistaken mental model. For example, in the last several weeks at 
  least three different people have asked approximately the same 
  question: “Since FileVault encrypts all the files on my disk, 
  doesn’t that mean when I copy a file to another disk, it’s still 
  encrypted?” No! It absolutely does not mean that. (I’ll explain 
  why in a future FlippedBITS article.) But I can easily see how 
  someone might draw such a conclusion — and misunderstanding 
  something like that could cause someone to make an unsafe decision 
  about how to handle sensitive files.

  I’ll admit it: When I hear questions like this, I sometimes have 
  to fight the temptation to roll my eyes and say, “What an idiotic 
  idea!” But I’ve had (and probably still have) plenty of idiotic 
  misconceptions myself. Not understanding something, or having a 
  faulty conception of how it works, doesn’t make you stupid. It 
  only means you haven’t yet acquired enough information about 
  something. I’ll do my best to supply those missing facts and put 
  us all on the right path. I already have a healthy list of 
  prospective FlippedBITS topics, but if there’s a topic you think 
  might be an appropriate fit, please feel free to suggest it.

  So, whence the name “FlippedBITS”? Apart from the fact that we 
  at TidBITS like to append “BITS” to everything, we thought that 
  flipped bits would be an apt description of the kind of error 
  we’re trying to correct. Computers, as you know, store information 
  as a series of ones and zeroes. Every “slot” that can hold 
  either a one or a zero is a bit. If the bit’s value is zero and 
  you flip it, it becomes a one. Flip it again, it’s back to zero. 
  Sometimes bits get flipped inadvertently due to programming errors, 
  mechanical failures, media degradation, cosmic rays — really! — 
  or other random occurrences. And unfortunately, a single flipped
  bit — a one where a zero should be, or vice-versa — can mean the 
  difference between a program succeeding and failing. After all, 
  01110111 is “w” in binary, but 01110011 — almost the same, but 
  with one bit flipped — is “s.” Sometimes a change as small as 
  a single flipped bit can spell the difference between a “win” 
  and a “sin”!

  With that, allow me to direct you to the first article in what I 
  hope will be a long and helpful series: “FlippedBITS: Booting Your 
  Mac from a Duplicate” (13 March 2013)

<http://tidbits.com/article/13618>


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://tidbits.com/e/13617#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://tidbits.com/t/13617>


FlippedBITS: Booting Your Mac from a Duplicate
----------------------------------------------
  by Joe Kissell: <joe@tidbits.com>, @joekissell
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13618>
  5 comments

  In this first installment of FlippedBITS, I want to look at what 
  happens when you boot your Mac from a duplicate (or “clone”) of 
  your startup disk. In doing so, I hope to clear up several common 
  points of confusion, particularly regarding ongoing backups and 
  syncing other types of data.

  For years I’ve recommended a three-pronged backup strategy 
  consisting of versioned backups (such as those produced by Time 
  Machine or CrashPlan), bootable duplicates (complete copies of 
  everything on your startup disk, stored on an external drive), and 
  offsite data storage (either in the cloud or by rotating physical 
  media to other locations). Together, this combination can protect 
  your data against almost any disaster, while making recovery as 
  painless as possible. (For complete details about my suggested 
  strategy, including the steps to create a bootable duplicate, see 
  “Take Control of Backing Up Your Mac.”)

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/backing-up?pt=TB1165>

  It’s simple enough to make a duplicate using a tool such as Carbon 
  Copy Cloner or SuperDuper; having done that, you can use the 
  duplicate to boot your Mac either by selecting it in the Startup 
  Disk pane of System Preferences or by holding down Option while 
  restarting and selecting the volume containing the duplicate. Doing 
  so enables you to get back to work immediately if anything goes 
  wrong with your startup disk; running from the duplicate makes your 
  Mac behave as though nothing had happened. So far, so good.

<http://bombich.com/>
<http://www.shirt-pocket.com/SuperDuper/SuperDuperDescription.html>

  But, based on numerous email exchanges I’ve had with people who 
  have read my various books and articles about backups, what happens 
  once you’ve booted from the duplicate is sometimes unclear. Some 
  people expect a duplicate to behave entirely like the original in 
  every situation, which turns out not to be quite true. Others worry 
  that the duplicate will cause all sorts of problems because it’s 
  not enough like the original, resulting in extra, unnecessary steps. 
  To untangle things, let’s start with the least ambiguous 
  situation.


**Swapping Your Startup Drive** -- Suppose your Mac’s internal hard 
  drive dies completely, so you remove it from your Mac and replace it 
  with the drive on which you’d previously stored your bootable 
  duplicate. Your Mac doesn’t care about the fact that the new hard 
  drive may have a different brand, capacity, or speed. All it knows 
  is: here’s a disk with exactly the same data in exactly the same 
  place. It is, for all practical purposes, the same disk. You can 
  carry on as if nothing happened; everything, including your backups, 
  should simply pick up where they left off, which is almost certainly 
  what you want.

  Now, there is one little catch. What if there was a time lag between 
  when you made the duplicate and when you started using it? And what 
  if, during that lag, you created or edited data on your startup
  disk — and backed it up to a destination other than where your bootable 
  duplicate is stored? Now you have a startup disk that’s somewhat 
  out of date, and to make it current, you’ll have to go to that 
  other backup to locate and restore any important files that were 
  changed _after_ you last updated the duplicate. This, I’m sorry to 
  say, is often an entirely manual procedure. In many backup apps (and 
  again, I’m thinking especially of Time Machine and CrashPlan), 
  there’s no simple way to say, “Show me all and only the files 
  that changed and were backed up _after_ time x.” You may have to 
  dig through folders one by one in your backup archive to find these 
  files. You could ask the software to restore _everything_ backed up 
  after a certain time, overwriting any existing files, but that would 
  take quite a while. It’s a pity that many otherwise highly 
  competent backup apps don’t account for this usage case.


**Booting from an External Drive** -- Although the situation I just 
  described is the least ambiguous, it’s also relatively infrequent. 
  The most likely scenario, which gets more confusing, is when your 
  regular startup disk is still present and functional but you hook up 
  your duplicate and boot from it temporarily. Perhaps you’re doing 
  this to verify that the duplicate works (in which case you may be 
  running from the duplicate for only a few minutes), or perhaps your 
  startup disk is having problems and you want to run a disk repair 
  utility while carrying on with your regular work.

  Either way, let me start by saying what _isn’t_ a problem in this 
  scenario. For one thing, it doesn’t matter if your startup disk is 
  external. Apart from speed differences, your Mac should behave 
  identically whether the startup disk is connected via an internal 
  SATA port, USB, FireWire, Thunderbolt, or whatever. So, don’t let 
  that trouble you in the least.

  For another thing, it doesn’t matter if data happens to sync with 
  the cloud while you’re booted from the duplicate. For example, if 
  you use iCloud, your calendars, contacts, bookmarks, and so on will 
  sync in the background. You need not worry that the outdated data 
  already on your duplicate will somehow overwrite what’s in the 
  cloud; on the contrary, the cloud has the “master” copy 
  (sometimes called the “truth”), so it will bring the data on 
  your duplicate disk up to date. Similarly, if you use Dropbox or 
  another cloud-based file storage service, it will bring your disk up 
  to date with the latest truth from the cloud, and it’s unnecessary 
  for you to fret over that in the slightest. 

  (You _do_ need to fret if you use POP for email, or if you have any 
  rules or filters that file incoming email from IMAP or Exchange 
  servers into local mailboxes. That could get messy, with the 
  duplicate being changed in ways that can’t easily be applied back 
  to the original, so if in doubt, refrain from checking your email at 
  all while booted from the duplicate.)

  You need not even worry about aliases — usually. When you create 
  an alias to an item that’s on your current boot drive (that 
  includes items in the Finder’s sidebar and in your Login Items 
  list), Mac OS X creates _relative_ links. That means if you make a 
  duplicate, boot from the duplicate, and open an alias, the item that 
  opens is the one on the duplicate, not on the original disk. (And 
  that’s probably what you want.) That’s not to say your Mac might 
  not have a script, a symbolic link you created in Terminal, or some 
  other pointer that references a file or folder by disk name, and if 
  it does, you could accidentally open the wrong copy of a file or 
  application, or save data to the wrong disk. (If you’re concerned 
  and want to be absolutely sure which item you’re opening, navigate 
  manually from the top level of your disk when booted from a 
  duplicate.)

  However, at least one significant thing is most likely different, 
  even though you may not notice it. If your duplicate had the same 
  name as your startup disk (presumably the most common case), 
  something slightly weird can occasionally happen. Mac OS X won’t 
  let two mounted volumes have exactly the same name. In the Finder, 
  they may _look_ like they have the same name, but if you already 
  have a volume called “Macintosh HD” mounted and then you mount a 
  second one, behind the scenes, the second one gets a different 
  working name (in this case, “Macintosh HD 1”). That’s because 
  many things that happen on your Mac depend on being able to locate a 
  disk by name, and if there were any ambiguity, a file might get put 
  in the wrong place.

  Ordinarily, this on-the-fly renaming just works, but it’s not 
  foolproof. What if, during the time you have both “Macintosh HD” 
  and “Macintosh HD 1” mounted, another user on your network 
  connects to your Mac and copies a file to what is now “Macintosh 
  HD” — your duplicate? You might not notice it, and when you 
  switch back to your usual startup disk, the file would be missing. 
  Similar things can happen with file-synchronization apps, software 
  downloads, and other operations. Furthermore, sometimes Mac OS X 
  gets confused and doesn’t correctly update its behind-the-scenes 
  list of volume names, so you could, for example, encounter a 
  situation in which “Macintosh HD” is a volume you mounted 
  _after_ “Macintosh HD 1.”

  On the other hand, renaming your duplicate doesn’t necessarily 
  solve these problems. If your normal startup disk is named 
  “Cindy” but you’ve booted temporarily from “Kate,” you may 
  avoid mismatched name issues right now — but later, if you have to 
  start using “Kate” permanently, apps and users that were still 
  trying to save data to “Cindy” could get confused. All in all, I 
  think you’ll get the best results if your duplicate has the same 
  name as the original disk, but you should follow a few steps (just 
  ahead) to avoid problems while running from the duplicate.

  Meanwhile, you may have to think about another subtle background 
  process: backups! After all, your backup software is probably 
  configured to run automatically — perhaps once an hour (like Time 
  Machine) or continuously (like CrashPlan). Backups usually don’t 
  begin immediately when you boot your Mac, but they could easily kick 
  in within 10 or 15 minutes. What if you’re planning to run your 
  Mac from the duplicate for longer than that, but not permanently? 
  Should you let your backups proceed — meaning they’ll be backing 
  up the duplicate — or should you turn them off?

  In general, there’s no harm, and considerable benefit, in letting 
  backups run. Your backup software should act as though your 
  duplicate is your regular startup disk and keep copying files to its 
  normal destination as though you had restarted normally. That’s 
  probably what you want, because if you create or modify a file while 
  running from the duplicate, it can then be backed up. The problem 
  is, in fact, with the opposite case: what if you modify a file but 
  it isn’t backed up (perhaps because the time for the next periodic 
  backup run hasn’t rolled around yet)? When you switch back to your 
  regular startup disk, the file won’t be there (or won’t be 
  current), and it won’t be in your backups either. It will still be 
  on your duplicate — but only if you think to check there before 
  you update your duplicate the next time; doing so will probably 
  delete the new file because it’s not on your startup disk.

  Taking all this into account, here are my recommendations for what 
  to do when you must boot from a duplicate for a short period of 
  time:

* If you can avoid creating, modifying, or downloading files, do. If 
  you can’t, make sure they’re synced to the cloud, copied back to 
  your regular startup disk, backed up, or otherwise made available to 
  yourself when you return to your usual disk later.

* Let regular, versioned backups (such as Time Machine and CrashPlan) 
  run normally. But if (per the last point) you can’t avoid creating 
  files, make sure your backup software has in fact backed them up 
  before switching back to your customary disk.

* Turn off any scheduled updates to your bootable duplicates. The last 
  thing you want is for your duplicate disk to clone itself back onto 
  your main startup disk while you’re testing it, or for the 
  software to freak out in trying to clone the original over the 
  now-booted duplicate.

* Avoid letting other users connect to your Mac, especially to upload 
  files.


**Booting a Different Mac** -- There’s one more scenario to 
  consider: booting one Mac with a duplicate of another Mac’s 
  startup disk. For example, imagine that you created a duplicate of 
  your iMac’s startup disk and then you had to take your iMac to the 
  shop for repairs. In the meantime, you hook up your duplicate to 
  your MacBook Pro so it can “pretend” to be the iMac. As long as 
  the MacBook Pro supports the same version of Mac OS X your iMac was 
  running, this arrangement should work fine — with, as you might 
  have guessed, a couple of qualifications.

  First, although this situation is ostensibly similar to the last
  one — booting a Mac temporarily from another drive — the time frame 
  involved could be longer (days or weeks instead of hours). So, 
  it’s impractical to avoid modifying files, checking your email, 
  and the like. Therefore, I recommend that you use the duplicate disk 
  on your MacBook Pro as you normally would use the internal drive on 
  your iMac, and then — once your regular iMac is back in service —
  hook up the external duplicate and reverse the cloning process 
  (copy everything from the external drive back to the iMac’s 
  internal drive it started on).

  Second, while your MacBook Pro is running from the duplicate, it 
  will by _almost_ every measure appear to _be_ the iMac. It’ll even 
  use the iMac’s name for file sharing, screen sharing, and the 
  like. However, every Mac has several unique identifiers, including a 
  serial number, a UUID (universally unique identifier), and a MAC 
  (media access control) address for each network interface. Some 
  pieces of software check one or more of these unique identifiers to 
  verify that they’re still running on the same Mac on which they 
  were authorized or licensed.

  The most common example is iTunes. If you authorize your iMac to use 
  your iTunes account and then start up your MacBook Pro with a 
  duplicate of the iMac’s disk, that doesn’t mean the MacBook Pro 
  is automatically authorized. You must authorize it manually, if you 
  haven’t done so previously (in iTunes, choose Store > Authorize 
  This Computer). But, if you’ve already run out of authorizations —
  Apple limits you to five — you may be out of luck unless you 
  can deauthorize one of your other computers or reset all your 
  authorizations, the latter being something that Apple allows you to 
  do only once per year. Other software may make you jump through 
  similar (or worse) hoops.

<http://support.apple.com/kb/ht1420>


**Don’t Sweat It** -- As convoluted as this all may sound, booting 
  your Mac from a duplicate is usually a simple and problem-free 
  operation. But it never hurts to have a better grip on what’s 
  going on behind the scenes, just in case. In particular, think about 
  whether you’re going to be using the duplicate long enough to add 
  or modify files on it manually. If not, there’s no harm in simply 
  switching back to the original. But if you are going to be working 
  from the duplicate for any significant period of time, you’ll need 
  to clone it back to the original when you’re done.

  A final note: keep those duplicates up to date. It would be overkill 
  to update them every hour, but once or twice a day is not a bad 
  idea. Remember, the longer the gap between the last time you updated 
  your duplicate and when you discovered you needed to boot from it, 
  the greater the chance of missing or outdated files that you may 
  have to laboriously restore. 


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://tidbits.com/e/13618#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://tidbits.com/t/13618>


Explore Alternatives to Google Reader
-------------------------------------
  by Josh Centers: <josh@tidbits.com>, @jcenters
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13642>
  5 comments

  Google says it will shut down the Google Reader RSS aggregation and 
  synchronization service on 1 July 2013. (For simplicity, we’ll use 
  the familiar term “RSS” to mean both the RSS and Atom news feed 
  formats, and the overall ecosystem of syndicated news feeds.) This 
  comes despite the fact that Reader reportedly generates more traffic 
  for publishers than the company’s Google+ service. It’s bad 
  enough to lose the Web client, but because many RSS app developers 
  relied on Google Reader to handle syncing and update retrieval, the 
  future of many independent RSS readers is in doubt. This includes 
  the venerable NetNewsWire for Mac OS X, currently owned by Black 
  Pixel. (For more general pondering about what the Google Reader 
  shutdown means, see Adam Engst’s “Thoughts Prompted by Google 
  Reader’s Demise,” 14 March 2013.)

<http://www.buzzfeed.com/jwherrman/google-reader-still-sends-far-more-traffic-than-google>
<http://tidbits.com/article/13636>
<http://netnewswireapp.com/>

  Developers, including Zite and Digg, are scrambling to fill the gap 
  left by Google’s announcement. The RSS race is on, and we’re 
  sure to see new developments by the time Google Reader goes dark. 
  However, that does little to help Reader users now. Fortunately, 
  several existing products can ease the pain of transition. Paul 
  Bradshaw of the Online Journalism Blog posted a call for comments on 
  Google Reader alternatives, and was then nice enough to compile a 
  spreadsheet of the results that lets you check out the field and 
  compare competitors.

<http://blog.zite.com/2013/03/14/google-reader-is-dead-so-we-rebuilt-it-for-you-in-zite-in-six-hours/>
<http://blog.digg.com/post/45355701332/were-building-a-reader>
<http://onlinejournalismblog.com/2013/03/14/alternatives-to-google-reader-which-one-will-you-use-comment-call/>
<https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/lv?key=0ApTo6f5Yj1iJdFRfWmhUVjV0WkktTjJhUUE4dGR5WUE&toomany=true>


**Get Takeout from Google** -- First things first. Export your 
  subscription data from Google Reader so you have the flexibility of 
  switching to another RSS reader at any time in the future. Google 
  offers a direct method via its data portability site, Google 
  Takeout. Visit the site, login if prompted, and click the Choose 
  Services button. From the list of buttons that appears, click Reader 
  and then click Create Archive. The file won’t be huge, but it will 
  probably take a while for Google to build it. If you get tired of 
  waiting, you can select the “Email me when ready” checkbox and 
  do something else as it builds.

<https://www.google.com/takeout/>
<http://tidbits.com/resources/2013-03/Google_Takeout_building.png>

  The Google Reader export is compiled as a downloadable Zip file. 
  Inside are several JSON files with various metadata, but most 
  important is the file called subscriptions.xml. This is an XML file 
  in the OPML format, a standard import and export format for RSS 
  readers. You can import this file into just about any RSS client to 
  restore your Google Reader subscriptions.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2013-03/Google_Reader_export.png>

  (If you use NetNewsWire and sync with Google Reader, you can export 
  your subscriptions locally. Make sure you have performed a sync and 
  then chose File > Export Subscriptions to create an OPML file.) 


**Feed Me an Easy Solution** -- If you’re looking for a one-click 
  transition, your best bet is Feedly, a Google Reader client that 
  comes in a variety of forms, including a Web client, Chrome 
  extension, Safari extension, Firefox add-on, iOS app, and Android 
  app. Log into your Google Reader account from a Feedly client, and 
  it presents your subscriptions in an attractive, magazine-like 
  format that’s particularly nice on touch screens.

<http://www.feedly.com/>
<http://tidbits.com/resources/2013-03/Feedly.png>

  What’s most compelling about Feedly isn’t its looks, but its 
  upcoming Normandy service for synchronizing your subscriptions 
  between devices. When Google Reader shuts its doors, Normandy will 
  take over on the back end, in what will hopefully be a seamless 
  transition. Other developers can integrate support for Normandy, 
  too.

<http://blog.feedly.com/2013/03/14/google-reader/>


**Run a Fever** -- Nice as Feedly is, it requires that you rely on yet 
  another company for your RSS-reading needs. If you can handle a bit 
  of system administration, Fever is worth a look. Fever is a 
  self-hosted news reader and feed aggregator. It costs $30, and you 
  have to provide your own Unix server running Apache, MySQL, and PHP. 
  If you have no idea what I just said, then Fever is not for you.

<http://www.feedafever.com/>

  Fever and Google Reader are functionally equivalent. You read news 
  in Fever through its Web client. Fever does set itself apart from 
  Google Reader by sorting and compiling articles by 
  “temperature,” a rating calculated by how many links and how 
  much discussion the article has garnered.

  Fever is particularly interesting for fans of the Reeder RSS client 
  for the iPhone and iPod touch, since it already supports Fever in 
  addition to Google Reader. Unfortunately, the Mac and iPad versions 
  of Reeder don’t yet support Fever, so you have to turn to 
  Fever’s Web app on those platforms. However, Fever does work via 
  the site-specific browser Fluid on the Mac, which turns the Web 
  interface into a Mac app, complete with a count of unread items in 
  the Dock. For another dedicated Fever client for the iPhone and iPod 
  touch, check out Sunstroke.

<https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/reeder/id325502379?mt=8>
<http://fluidapp.com/>
<https://goneeast.com/sunstroke/>


**Good Vibe-rations** -- Google isn’t just killing Reader, it’s 
  also shutting down iGoogle, its personalized Web portal, as of 1 
  November 2013. Fortunately, there’s a blast from the past that can 
  replace both: Netvibes.

<http://support.google.com/websearch/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=2664197>
<http://www.netvibes.com/>

  Netvibes started years ago as a personalized Web portal, like 
  iGoogle, but has since evolved into a RSS reader as well. You can 
  switch between modes with a click. In widget mode, each of your feed 
  folders shows up as a tab, and each feed is its own widget. This 
  mode is awkward for reading, so most will probably prefer the reader 
  mode, where feeds are presented in a more-traditional style.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2013-03/Netvibes_widgets.png>
<http://tidbits.com/resources/2013-03/Netvibes_RSS.png>

  Netvibes’s extra juice comes from adding more than just RSS feeds 
  to your interface. There are widgets for email, Google Analytics, 
  weather, and more. There’s also a respectable mobile site, though 
  for some reason if you save it to your iPhone’s home screen, the 
  resulting Web app doesn’t fill the iPhone 5’s screen.

  Unfortunately, Netvibes is showing its age. Its design is outdated, 
  and it feels slow and clunky. However, if you’re hurting from 
  losing both Google Reader and iGoogle, it’s a decent stopgap. And 
  Netvibes lets you export your feeds, so it’s easy to move on to 
  greener pastures later on.


**RSS: I’m Not Dead Yet!** -- Google has given neither users nor 
  developers much time to respond to the shuttering of Google Reader. 
  While several alternatives already exist and more will arise, the 
  transition will break many apps that rely on Google Reader’s 
  synchronization capabilities when developers choose not to update 
  their software or users fail to migrate in time.

  But fear not, RSS lovers. Useful Internet technologies always evolve 
  to meet the ever-changing environment. There’s no better proof of 
  that than the persistence of email, which remains the primary form 
  of communication for most professionals. Email is based on open 
  standards, has no central authority, and can’t be controlled by a 
  corporate behemoth, unlike social networking services Google+, 
  Facebook, and Twitter. If the online outrage over the death of 
  Google Reader is any indication, syndicating Web updates via RSS and 
  Atom feeds will remain viable into the foreseeable future.

  Rather than suffering from the Three Horsemen of the Techpocalypse —
  Fear, Uncertainty, and Doubt — RSS aficionados should rejoice. 
  By providing a good solution for free, Google Reader has essentially 
  monopolized aspects of the overall RSS world for many years, and its 
  upcoming death has inspired countless developers to build 
  alternatives that will undoubtedly look not just to replace Google 
  Reader but also to go well beyond it. 


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://tidbits.com/e/13642#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://tidbits.com/t/13642>


Thoughts Prompted by Google Reader’s Demise
-------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst: <ace@tidbits.com>, @adamengst
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13636>
  15 comments

  I’ll be the first to admit that I never particularly used an RSS 
  reader. Sure, I have NetNewsWire on my Mac, with a couple dozen 
  subscriptions, but I launch it only a few times a year, usually when 
  some question about our internal RSS feeds comes up. I also have a 
  Google Reader account, but log into it roughly as often. What little 
  I do with RSS, I funnel into my email via the Blogtrottr 
  RSS-to-email service. (I’m thus translating the serial medium of 
  RSS into the serial medium of email — see Internet pioneer Brad 
  Templeton’s take on the issue, where he makes some wonderfully 
  astute distinctions between serial, browsed, and sampled media.)

<http://blogtrottr.com/>
<http://ideas.4brad.com/importance-serial-media-vs-sampled-and-google-reader>

  Thus, Google’s announcement that the company would be shuttering 
  Google Reader as of 1 July 2013 doesn’t affect me much, but it’s 
  impossible to ignore the plaintive cries from the many loyal Google 
  Reader users. “Why are you abandoning us, Google?” they ask. 
  “What are we supposed to do now?” For some practical answers to 
  the latter question, see “Explore Alternatives to Google Reader” 
  (17 March 2013), and as to the former, all we have to go on is 
  Google’s public claim that “over the years usage has 
  declined.”

<http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2013/03/a-second-spring-of-cleaning.html>
<http://tidbits.com/article/13642>

  But what’s behind this move, and what does it mean more generally? 
  It means, for one, that while it’s increasingly impossible to 
  avoid relying on cloud-based tools, anything out on the Internet can 
  disappear without warning. It also points out some interesting 
  distinctions between tools and platforms, and the increasing tension 
  between publishers — a role occupied by anyone who produces 
  content on the Internet, which is just about everyone — and the 
  massively powerful distributors like Google, Facebook, and Twitter. 
  And finally, Google Reader is yet another casualty in the silent war 
  being waged against us by the infinite amount of information on the 
  Internet. 


**Up in Smoke** -- It’s said that change is inevitable, and that we 
  should get used to it. But I’d argue that’s not actually true —
  for most adults, life is more the same than different every day. 
  Throughout their lives, most people have only one or two spouses, 
  one or two children, a handful of houses, and a small number of 
  jobs. At age 45, Tonya and I have owned only five cars in our adult 
  lives, and only three in the 22 years since 1991, when we bought our 
  first new one after several used models. Although we have more Macs 
  than most people due to our business, we still go 3 to 5 years 
  between new computers. Day in and day out, we live our lives much 
  the way we did last week and last month, and in the broad strokes, 
  each year tends to recapitulate the previous years.

  All this is by way of saying that we — and I’m talking generally 
  here again — get used to things being the same, because they 
  usually are the same, and that applies just as much to the tools we 
  use and the ways we become accustomed to working. In the past, 
  change came less frequently, but in today’s hyper-competitive 
  world where massive companies are playing for unimaginably high 
  stakes, an insane rate of change has become a competitive necessity. 
  Apple and Google and Microsoft all need to keep rolling out updated 
  versions of their mobile operating systems to seem fresh and hip for 
  new and jaded smartphone customers, and Facebook and Twitter and 
  Google are constantly revising their social networking engines and 
  interfaces to remain compelling to their audiences.

  But a psychological toll is exacted on many people whenever 
  something major changes. Sure, some people thrive on exciting new 
  features and constantly having to adjust their ways of working, but 
  for those people who rely on established habits and time-tested 
  procedures to be productive, change can be frustrating, exhausting, 
  overwhelming, and downright scary. At least Google is providing a 
  few months warning before Google Reader’s switch will be thrown, 
  and Apple gave users even more warning with the massive transition 
  from MobileMe to iCloud. But iTunes 11, for instance, caused much 
  pulling of hair and gnashing of teeth for many people who didn’t 
  know in advance it was going to be so visually and experientially 
  different from iTunes 10.7. They don’t care that iTunes 11 can do 
  virtually everything that iTunes 10.7 can do; they care that 
  they’ve been thrust into an unfamiliar world and must laboriously 
  map out pathways and identify landmarks en route to that unchanged 
  functionality (see “Redesigned iTunes 11 Brings iCloud Streaming 
  and New MiniPlayer,” 30 November 2012).

<http://tidbits.com/article/13419>

  The heart of the problem is integration via the cloud. With Google 
  Reader, users are squawking not just because some will be forced to 
  switch to another RSS reader, of which there are many, but because 
  Google Reader provided a synchronization service that many RSS 
  readers relied on. We’re not losing a single RSS reader; we’re 
  losing what many developers had considered a building block upon 
  which they could construct elegant software. Developers all build on 
  the shoulders of others, but only with the rise of cloud integration 
  have those shoulders become unsteady. iTunes 11 is relevant here 
  too; even though iTunes 10.7 remains functional for now, it’s 
  inevitable that integration with the iTunes Store or new iOS 
  hardware will ring 10.7’s death knell.

  I have no happy answers here. Though I may not be a major Google 
  Reader user, I too rely heavily on a wide variety of cloud services, 
  and if one of them were to disappear, I’d be at a loss. I’ve 
  seen this happen enough that I wouldn’t take it as personally as 
  I’ve seen many people (and, let’s be honest here, older people 
  in particular) take other changes, whether we’re talking about 
  iWeb or iDisk or Google Sync or Twitter’s elimination of developer 
  capabilities. All I can suggest is that you think about your tools 
  and systems and consider what would happen if one might disappear. 
  As has been said about losing data, it’s a matter of when, not if.


**Tools Versus Platforms** -- Introducing Twitter into the previous 
  discussion offers a nice segue into another topic raised by Google 
  Reader’s closing, that of tools versus platforms. Twitter became 
  popular in large part because of its open API, which enabled 
  developers to create all sorts of Twitter clients and Web services 
  based on Twitter data. But the company has been limiting what is 
  possible, largely because Twitter’s business model relies on 
  selling ads, and it can guarantee display only if Twitter controls 
  the user experience. In essence, Twitter moved from being a tool to 
  being a platform, and in the process is causing App.net to rise up 
  to fill that void (see “New App.net Social Network Aspires Beyond 
  Chat and Ads,” 28 August 2012).

<http://tidbits.com/article/13216>

  Google has long been a purveyor of tools as well, and Google Reader 
  was one of them, particularly in terms of its synchronization 
  service. Many of Google’s tools came from its vaunted 20-percent 
  projects, where engineers were allowed to spend 20 percent of their 
  time on anything that interested them. The result was a flowering of 
  tools and services, but nowadays, those flowers look more like weeds 
  distracting Google from its core businesses. Most notably, Google 
  has focused a vast amount of its effort on Google+, thanks to the 
  realization that if it didn’t do something, Facebook’s social 
  approach might one day become a more-compelling platform for ads 
  than Google Search. But like Facebook and Twitter, Google+ is a 
  platform, not a tool, and while Google may open up aspects of 
  Google+ via an API, it’s unlikely ever to be usable in the 
  background without users noticing, as Google Reader was.

  This trend of companies moving from tools to platforms isn’t 
  surprising, and makes sense for both users and providers. Platforms 
  provide coherent user experiences, making things easier and more 
  understandable for increasingly non-technical users. And platforms 
  are largely self-contained, ensuring that the company in charge 
  doesn’t have to share control or worry about competition within 
  the platform. Platforms are also harder to leave — if you become 
  accustomed to the look and feel and content of Facebook, you’re 
  less likely to jump ship for Google+. It’s exactly the same 
  strategy Apple is employing with iOS to prevent users from switching 
  to Android or Windows Mobile (and, of course, Google and Microsoft 
  are using this approach as well).

  But the loss of tools is disturbing, for the same reasons it would 
  be disturbing if there were no more tools available for carpenters 
  to build houses, just pre-fab structures trucked in and plopped 
  down. Tools enable creative people to build things that no one else 
  can even imagine, and just as a hammer and saw can be used for far 
  more than building a house, so too can digital tools be used in ways 
  that were never intended initially. I don’t have time to use 
  App.net as a microblogging service like Twitter, but I 
  wholeheartedly support App.net’s role as an infrastructure service 
  for others to build upon. It’s a shame that Google is increasingly 
  getting out of the tools business, much as it may make sense for 
  them, but we can hope that other companies will fill the holes left 
  behind.


**Publishers Versus Distributors** -- Though Google said nothing about 
  Google+ in relation to the shuttering of Google Reader, many pundits 
  have suggested that Google Reader’s time has come and gone, 
  because where we are (or should be, for holdouts) now getting our 
  news is via Twitter, Facebook, and Google+. And certainly, social 
  marketing mavens will tell any company that will listen that it is 
  doomed — doomed, I say! — unless it starts tweeting or 
  maintaining a Google+ page or garnering “likes” on Facebook.

  But there’s a problem with social networks. OK, there are a vast 
  number of problems with social networks, but the one I want to focus 
  on ties in with the platform point I made above, which is that 
  we’re all publishers, whereas social media platforms — Google+, 
  Facebook, and Twitter — have become our distributors. They rely on 
  us for content, of course, but we rely on them much more, and that 
  should set off warning bells. 

  Sure, if all you post is what you had for lunch and cute cat 
  pictures, you probably don’t care that you have no permanent 
  control over your content. If you’re a company and need to get the 
  word out about your products, though, you’d be nuts to rely 
  exclusively on a platform you don’t control and that could 
  disappear or start charging usurious fees tomorrow. If you have a 
  company blog and associated RSS feed, you might lose readers due to 
  the loss of Google Reader, but at least you still have complete 
  control over your content and your readers can find it again easily. 
  (Me being old school, I’d suggest that better yet is having your 
  own mailing list server and maintaining contact via email, since 
  then no one can trip you up.)

  Worse, social networks are streams. From what I’ve seen, most 
  people don’t monitor social networks non-stop, especially if they 
  follow a lot of sources that aren’t close personal friends. With 
  the volume of posts being what it is, most people don’t go far 
  back in time to catch up after being offline for a while. So any 
  post you make, if it doesn’t happen to appear in a window of 
  attention, is likely to go completely unnoticed. Contrast that with 
  an RSS reader that, while it requires specific attention, is more 
  than happy to hold on to headlines until they’ve been read or 
  marked as such.


**At War with the Infinite** -- Lastly, and I hope to explore this 
  more in a future article as well, I think Google Reader is largely a 
  victim of the war we’re fighting — and losing! — against the 
  infinite amount of information on the Internet. 

  To recap, first there was email, and not long after, Usenet news. 
  Email is the unstoppable cockroach of Internet technologies, but 
  Usenet news grew so expansive that it engendered highly 
  sophisticated software for dealing with subscriptions before losing 
  its place in the limelight to the Web and slowly crumbling under its 
  own size. In the early days of the Web, there were few enough Web 
  sites that when we made our home pages, we all made lists of our 
  favorite sites. When the number of Web sites grew too large, 
  human-built directories like Yahoo sprung up to categorize all the 
  sites on the Internet. Before long, those directories were kicked 
  aside in favor of search engines, again because there were too many 
  sites and too much content on any given site to categorize. Then 
  news hit, in a big way, via professional publications and blogs 
  alike, and everyone who had previously made lists of Web sites 
  started a blog. With so many blogs to check regularly, RSS became 
  necessary as a way to make it possible to scan hundreds of headlines 
  per day. Curated aggregation sites like Slashdot and Daring Fireball 
  weren’t far behind, because even keeping up with an RSS reader was 
  too much for many people. With the rise of Twitter and Tumblr and 
  Facebook, it became too hard to justify the effort in maintaining a 
  personal blog, when it was so much easier to post short messages and 
  interesting links. 

  Google Reader, like other RSS readers, was an attempt to maintain 
  control over the amount of information on the Internet, but like all 
  such attempts, it was doomed to failure. The amount of information 
  on the Internet is now, for all practical purposes, infinite. 
  Actually, it’s even worse than that, since even just the 
  information that interests us, or the daily news about the 
  information that interests us, is essentially infinite, in the sense 
  that we live finite lives and stand no chance of ever reading it 
  all. (Yes, I realize there are people whose interests aren’t 
  terribly broad, but it’s nearly impossible even to keep up with a 
  sports team or two, or a few celebrities.)

  Those pundits I mentioned earlier who claim that they’re getting 
  all the news they need from social media instead of RSS readers are 
  basically saying that they were overwhelmed by their chosen RSS 
  feeds and consider Twitter or Facebook or Google+ more manageable. 
  And indeed, if you follow people who share your interests, you’ll 
  be rewarded with worthwhile posts and links. But there are some 
  perhaps unanticipated issues with this approach.

  What you’ll get is highly selective, but it’s selected by other 
  people, not you. Perhaps that’s good, perhaps not. You will also 
  miss posts — go offline overnight to sleep, and catching up the 
  next morning is likely to be too much bother. Again, that may be 
  good, in cutting down on the amount of information in your life, or 
  it may be bad, if you miss something you would have deemed highly 
  important. The good stuff may stick around in conversation anyway —
  I’ve long joked that I’m interested only in mainstream news 
  that’s going to still be in the news two weeks later.

  All that said, it’s easy to follow another person here and another 
  company there, confirm a few new “friends,” or add someone to a 
  circle, and before long, I’m willing to bet that social media 
  services succumb to the soul-crushing power of the infinite as well, 
  just like Usenet newsgroups and Yahoo’s Web site directory and now 
  Google Reader. For many people, they already have.

  To be fair, Joe Kissell had it right in “It’s Not Email That’s 
  Broken, It’s You” (23 February 2013). Just as email isn’t 
  broken, RSS readers aren’t broken, and social networking services 
  aren’t broken. We’re broken, because we’re both finite and 
  hardwired to be interested in a wide variety of things: other 
  people, tribes, power, sex, social position, and — of course — 
  kittens. Our only weapon in the war against the infinite is 
  self-control. Subscribe to too many mailing lists, read too many 
  newsgroups, track too many blogs via RSS, follow too many people on 
  social networking services — regardless of the specifics, if you 
  overindulge in information, no matter how good your tools, you will 
  eventually be crushed by the infinite.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13586>


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://tidbits.com/e/13636#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://tidbits.com/t/13636>


TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 18 March 2013
-------------------------------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff: <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13644>

**Security Update 2013-001 for Snow Leopard and Lion** -- Apple has 
  released Security Update 2013-001 for Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard and 
  10.7 Lion, with each big cat getting two versions: Snow Leopard 
  (316.63 MB) and Snow Leopard Server (391.63 MB); and Lion (31.42 MB) 
  and Lion Server (79.33 MB). The updates close a variety of 
  vulnerabilities, including Apache HTTP authentication, handling of 
  JSON data by Ruby on Rails in Podcast Producer Server, and a buffer 
  overflow when viewing MP4 files in QuickTime. The complete list of 
  fixes can be found on this Apple support page, which combines the 
  details for these security updates with those for the just-released 
  Mountain Lion update (see “OS X 10.8.3 Mountain Lion Fixes Nagging 
  Bugs,” 14 March 2013). The security update also runs a malware 
  removal tool that will notify you only if anything is removed. 
  It’s interesting to see Apple releasing this update for 10.6 Snow 
  Leopard, since Apple generally maintains security updates only one 
  version behind the current cat. (Free)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1642>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1644>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1643>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1645>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT5672>
<http://tidbits.com/article/13637>

  Read/post comments about Security Update 2013-001 for Snow Leopard 
  and Lion.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13639#comments>


**MacBook Pro Retina SMC Update 1.1** -- Apple has issued MacBook Pro 
  Retina SMC Update v1.1, which provides a fix for a “rare issue” 
  for slow frame rates while playing graphics-intensive games on the 
  15-inch model of the MacBook Pro with Retina display. The System 
  Management Controller update also provides bug fixes for Power Nap 
  and wake from sleep, as well as a fix for a fan control issue. While 
  the latter isn’t detailed in the release notes, it most likely 
  addresses the overzealous fan spinning that’s been discussed at 
  great length on Apple’s support forums and noted at Geek.com. 
  After installing, the SMC will be updated to version 2.3f35. (Free, 
  504 KB)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1559>
<https://discussions.apple.com/thread/4735947>
<http://www.geek.com/articles/apple/early-2013-retina-macbook-pro-succumbs-to-fan-speed-issue-2013035/>

  Read/post comments about MacBook Pro Retina SMC Update 1.1.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13638#comments>


**Pear Note 3.1** -- Useful Fruit Software has released Pear Note 3.1 
  with full support for Retina displays on Macs. The multimedia 
  note-taking app adds support for using images (like photos of slides 
  in a lecture!) in the just-updated Pear Note for iOS 2.1, and it now 
  saves documents in an updated format that can be read by the iOS 
  app. For older Pear Note documents that include images, Useful Fruit 
  suggests opening and re-saving them so they work properly with the 
  iOS app. The release also fixes a bug with saving that caused slides 
  to move back, an issue where shared documents with special 
  characters displayed improperly when hosted on Dropbox, and bugs 
  associated with Spotlight results and the Quick Look generator. 
  Finally, the Mac App Store version is now sandboxed. ($39.99 new, 
  free update, 4.6 MB, release notes)

<http://www.usefulfruit.com/pearnote/>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/pear-note/id460167120?mt=8>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/pear-note/id411827890?mt=12>
<http://www.usefulfruit.com/pearnote/changelog/>

  Read/post comments about Pear Note 3.1.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13635#comments>


**LaunchBar 5.4.2** -- Objective Development has released LaunchBar 
  5.4.2 with improvements in indexing actions, services, and 
  applications for the keyboard-based launcher. In addition to an 
  overall performance boost to LaunchBar’s indexing engine, the 
  update now recognizes executable shell scripts more reliably (even 
  if they have filename extensions), ignores iOS apps when indexing 
  applications, and improves 1Password indexing (especially on systems 
  with multiple installed versions of 1Password). The release also 
  replaces the previously used generic category icons in iTunes 
  (Albums, Genres, Playlists, etc.) with dedicated icons, and it fixes 
  a problem with the Play from Album option that started playing from 
  the beginning of the album rather than the selected track. Finally, 
  LaunchBar 5.4.2 fixes a bug with determining the originator of a 
  copy operation when triggered with a mouse click (instead of 
  pressing Command-C), an issue with sending a labeled email address 
  via Instant Send, and the appearance of double quotes in conjunction 
  with Instant Send or Clipboard History. ($35 new with a 20-percent 
  discount for TidBITS members, free update, 2.5 MB, release notes)

<http://www.obdev.at/products/launchbar/>
<http://tidbits.com/member_benefits.html>
<http://www.obdev.at/products/launchbar/releasenotes5.html>

  Read/post comments about LaunchBar 5.4.2.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13634#comments>


**Microsoft Office 2011 14.3.2 and 2008 12.3.6** -- Microsoft has 
  released Office 2011 14.3.2 and Office 2008 12.3.6, both of which 
  address a security vulnerability that could “allow information 
  disclosure if a user opens a specially crafted email message.” 
  According to the security bulletin on Microsoft’s Web site, the 
  updates ensure that both versions of Microsoft Office for Mac 
  require user consent to download content from external sources. 
  Additionally, the Office 2011 14.3.2 update includes several fixes, 
  primarily aimed at Outlook. It squashes a bug that didn’t save BCC 
  recipients in Gmail IMAP draft messages, fixes an issue where 
  messages were undeliverable if addressed to contacts that were 
  created in x500 format, ensures that contractions aren’t marked as 
  spelling errors, and fixes a problem with the Offline Address Book 
  that wouldn’t update for some Office 365 users. The update also 
  improves stability when using Track Changes and scrolling through a 
  large Word document and fixes a problem with artifacts appearing 
  during slideshow transitions in PowerPoint. (Free updates via the 
  Microsoft Web site or through Microsoft AutoUpdate, 113 MB/210 MB)

<http://www.microsoft.com/en-us/download/details.aspx?id=36922>
<http://www.microsoft.com/en-us/download/details.aspx?id=36897>
<http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/security/bulletin/ms13-026>
<http://support.microsoft.com/kb/2817452>
<http://www.microsoft.com/mac/downloads?pid=Mactopia_Office2011>

  Read/post comments about Microsoft Office 2011 14.3.2 and 2008 
  12.3.6.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13633#comments>


**Default Folder X 4.5.8** -- St. Clair Software has released Default 
  Folder X 4.5.8 with a few more corrections to issues that cropped up 
  in its two recent maintenance releases (see “Default Folder X 
  4.5.7,” 10 March 2013). Default Folder X can now be accessed in 
  Java applications running in OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion. The update 
  also fixes a bug that caused file dialogs to hang in Preview, 
  TextEdit, and Mail after using Default Folder X’s menus, and it 
  returns missing items to the utility menu and contextual menu. Other 
  user interface-related corrections include localizing the Quick Look 
  command in the utility menu and contextual menus and adding 
  VoiceOver labels to the Default Folder X toolbar buttons. ($34.95 
  new, $10 off for TidBITS members, free update, 11.4 MB, release 
  notes)

<http://www.stclairsoft.com/DefaultFolderX/>
<http://tidbits.com/article/13624>
<http://tidbits.com/member_benefits.html>
<http://www.stclairsoft.com/DefaultFolderX/release.html>

  Read/post comments about Default Folder X 4.5.8.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13632#comments>


**Dropbox 2.0** -- While not a groundbreaking version jump in 
  functionality, Dropbox 2.0 does significantly improve the interface 
  available from its menu bar icon with an improved view of recently 
  changed files as well as a new method for accepting shared folder 
  invitations. Clicking the Dropbox icon in the menu bar now opens a 
  window that displays buttons for opening the Dropbox folder and 
  visiting the Dropbox Web site, plus a list of the three most 
  recently changed files. When you mouse over one of the changed 
  files, a Share button appears. However, clicking the Share button 
  doesn’t engage an in-app sharing capability. Rather, this action 
  opens a Web browser to the file’s page on the Dropbox site, where 
  you’ll need to click a Share button again to send a file’s link 
  to an email recipient, share it on Facebook or Twitter, or copy the 
  link to your Clipboard.

<https://www.dropbox.com/install>

  The redesigned window also includes notifications of new shared 
  files and folders from other Dropbox users, which appear above the 
  Recently Changed section. Mouse over an invitation to join a shared 
  folder, and you can click the Accept button that appears to add it 
  to your Dropbox folder (you can also click Decline). However, 
  accepting a shared file (by clicking it in the window) again 
  requires a visit to the Dropbox Web site, where you are given the 
  option to download the file directly from the browser or add it to 
  your Dropbox folder.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2013-03/dropbox-menubartray.png>

  Other changes for the latest release include a fix for a bug that 
  switched on discrete graphics for Mac laptops and added localization 
  for Brazilian Portuguese. It’s available for Mac OS X 10.6 Snow 
  Leopard and later. (Free update, 26.1 MB, release notes)

<https://forums.dropbox.com/topic.php?id=97895>

  Read/post comments about Dropbox 2.0.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13629#comments>


ExtraBITS for 18 March 2013
---------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff: <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13643>

  On the Web this week, Andy Rubin of Google’s Android team steps 
  aside, Adam Engst talks about the demise of Google Reader and how 
  tools are becoming platforms on MacVoices, Microsoft walks back a 
  strict and unfriendly licensing scheme for Office for Mac 2011, and 
  our brainboxes are puzzling the implications of Dropbox buying 
  Mailbox.


**Android Boss Brushed Aside in Spring Cleaning** -- Is it coincidence 
  that Google CEO Larry Page announced that Android head Andy Rubin 
  has “decided it’s time to hand over the reins and start a new 
  chapter at Google” the same day Google released the latest 
  projects that the company is dropping in “spring cleaning,” 
  including Google Reader? It’s impossible to say what caused the 
  replacement of Rubin with Sundar Pichai, who will add Android 
  responsibilities to his Chrome and Apps leadership roles at Google, 
  but it’s possible that Android was essentially getting too popular 
  without actually contributing that much to Google’s bottom line 
  (only $550 million from 2008 through 2011, by some estimates). What 
  changes Pichai will bring to the Android ecosystem — and how that 
  will affect the iOS world — are a matter for speculation.

<http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2013/03/update-from-ceo.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/13645#comments>


**Adam Engst Riffs on the Google Reader News at MacVoices** -- In this 
  discussion with host Chuck Joiner, Adam Engst delves into some of 
  the more-subtle meanings of the news that Google Reader will 
  disappear in a few months. In particular, Adam talks about the 
  effects of tools morphing into platforms, the psychological effect 
  that change has on users, and pricing models to support the concept 
  that not all change is good for all users.

<http://www.macvoices.com/wordpress/macvoices-1396-adam-engst-on-subscriptions-the-death-of-google-reader-and-how-much-change-is-too-much/>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/13641#comments>


**Microsoft Reverses Office Licensing Change** -- According to 
  MacTech, Microsoft recently changed the original license agreement 
  for Office for Mac 2011 to match Office 2013 for Windows, whose 
  license prevented the transfer of the software from one computer to 
  another. Microsoft reversed course on the Office 2013 licensing 
  policies, once again allowing the software to be moved between 
  computers (but no more than once every 90 days). Although Microsoft 
  said nothing about the Mac version in its Windows Office 
  announcement, MacTech learned that the reversal also applies to the 
  Mac version. In short, we’re back where we’d expect to be, but 
  it’s distressing that Microsoft would even contemplate such an 
  unfriendly license, much less implement it.

<http://www.mactech.com/2013/03/08/microsoft-changes-licensing-agree-office>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/13630#comments>


**Dropbox Acquires Mailbox** -- Some acquisitions make sufficiently 
  little sense when taken at face value that they signal a major 
  future direction, are mostly about acquiring specific talent or 
  technology, or are just utterly misconceived. Dropbox’s 
  acquisition of the company behind the Mailbox iPhone app falls into 
  one of those categories, but it’s unclear which just yet, given 
  that making a quirky iOS email client seems far from Dropbox’s 
  core mission. Despite protestations that the Mailbox app will 
  continue, it seems entirely possible that it could share the fate of 
  the Sparrow email app, which, while still for sale, is no longer 
  being developed after its developers joined Google in July 2012.

<http://www.mailboxapp.com/reservations/?p=1#to-grow-even-faster-mailbox-is-joining-dropbox>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/13628#comments>


$$

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