TidBITS#746/13-Sep-04
=====================

  People using Safari or Mac OS X's FTP server should take care with
  last week's Security Update 2004-09-07; read on for the details
  of problems experienced by early upgraders. Looking for wireless
  headphones for your iPod? See Adam's review of Bluetake's i-Phono.
  Need help organizing your thoughts? Matt Neuburg's review of
  MindCad's Pyramid might offer a solution. Interesting releases
  this week include Nisus Writer Express 2.0, DragThing 5.3.1,
  XBit 1.0.1, and Allume's Creative Essentials bundle.

Topics:
    MailBITS/13-Sep-04
    Security Update 2004-09-07 Potentially Problematic
    XBit 1.0 Browses TidBITS
    i-Phono Eliminates iPod Wires
    Pyramid Therapy
    Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk/13-Sep-04

<http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/TidBITS-746.html>
<ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/issues/2004/TidBITS#746_13-Sep-04.etx>

Copyright 2004 TidBITS: Reuse governed by Creative Commons license
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This issue of TidBITS sponsored in part by:
* READERS LIKE YOU! Help keep TidBITS great via our voluntary <------ NEW!
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   and Prospect Hill Publishing Services for their kind support!
   <http://www.tidbits.com/about/support/contributors.html>

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   workgroup reports, entertainment, advice columns, politics, or
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   access lists, etc. Try it! <http://www.webcrossing.com/tb-504>

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* MindFortress: We built MindFortress because I wanted one place <--- NEW!
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   ---------------------------------------------------------------

MailBITS/13-Sep-04
------------------

**Allume Carries the Graphics Torch** -- One of my favorite graphics
  suites, CorelDRAW and Corel PHOTO-PAINT (see "CorelDRAW 8: A Hedy
  Experience" in TidBITS-457_), after years of undeservedly lukewarm
  public reception, and having been recently updated to version 11,
  finally had its Mac development cut off in January. I thought this
  was the end of the road - but not quite! Creative Essentials, a
  new package of graphics software assembled by Allume (formerly
  Aladdin), is a great opportunity for folks to obtain the Corel
  software at the jaw-droppingly low price of $150 (and through
  11-Oct-04, Allume will donate $1 from each sale of an Allume
  product to charity). Just bear in mind that bugs won't be fixed.
  Oh, and do use the fastest computer you can find, since the
  program can be a little sluggish.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05193>
<http://www.allume.com/mac/creative/>
<http://www.allume.com/company/pressroom/releases/allume/091004donate.html>

  As if that weren't enough, Creative Essentials includes the
  3-D landscape painter Bryce 5 and entitles you to upgrade pricing
  on the next version. (Corel also killed off Bryce, having acquired
  it from MetaCreations; now Bryce has been picked up by DAZ
  Productions, who are actively developing it.) Creative Essentials
  also includes Toon Boom Studio Express, an animation tool, along
  with upgrade pricing for the full Toon Boom Studio, and 25
  Bitstream fonts. [MAN]

<http://www.brycetech.com/>
<http://www.toonboom.com/products/toonBoomStudioExpress/>


**Nisus Writer Express 2.0 Ships** -- Nisus Software has begun
  shipping Nisus Writer Express 2.0, adding more than 30 new
  features to the company's streamlined word processor for Mac OS X.
  Improvements include user-defined styles, footnotes, endnotes, a
  built-in table tool, a Find/Replace dialog that works more like
  the one in Nisus Writer Classic, and more. Some features, such
  as word auto-completion and the capability to apply bold or italic
  to any font (which often isn't possible in Mac OS X if the font in
  question lacks bold and italic variants), are available only under
  Mac OS X 10.3. Nisus Writer Express 2.0 requires Mac OS X 10.2 or
  later and is a free upgrade for owners of Nisus Writer Express
  1.0. Otherwise, it costs $60 as a download, or $70 for a CD;
  owners of Nisus Writer 6.0 and later can upgrade for $45
  (download) or $55 (CD). A free 30-day trial version is available
  as a 21 MB download. [JLC]

<http://www.nisus.com/Express/>


**DragThing 5.3.1 Adds Email Count** -- TLA Systems has released
  DragThing 5.3.1, adding features to the launcher and Dock
  replacement. New in this version is the capability to display
  the number of unread message in the email In box for Apple's
  Mail, Entourage, Eudora, Mailsmith, NetNewsWire, and PowerMail.
  (However, note that version 5.3.1 disables the feature for Eudora
  due to excessive processor use when dealing with a large In box;
  you can re-enable it using a downloadable patch.) Also new is
  the capability to display application-specific contextual menu
  commands (such as a Play/Pause control for iTunes). A number of
  other fixes have also been applied. DragThing 5.3.1 is a free
  update for owners of DragThing 5.0 and later; a new license costs
  $29, and upgrades from versions 2 and 4 cost $12. The update is
  a 9 MB download and requires Mac OS X 10.2 or later. [JLC]

<http://www.dragthing.com/english/whatsnew.shtml>
<http://www.dragthing.com/english/history.html>


Security Update 2004-09-07 Potentially Problematic
--------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

  Apple last week released Security Update 2004-09-07 to address
  a slew of security-related issues. Updated components include
  Apache 2, CoreFoundation, FTP, IPSec, Kerberos, OpenLDAP,
  OpenSSH, PPPDialer, QuickTime Streaming Server, rsync, Safari,
  SquirrelMail, and tcpdump - see Apple's site for details.
  Unfortunately, two of the changes may have negative consequences.

<http://www.apple.com/support/security/security_updates.html>

  The changes to Safari resulted in rendering problems on a number
  of Web sites, though the trouble apparently originates with the
  Web sites themselves. Many sites detect browser versions and
  present slightly different versions of their pages to different
  browsers. It seems that some sites were accidentally identifying
  this new version of Safari as Netscape 4 and thus feeding it
  dynamic HTML that failed in a modern browser. In at least some of
  places suffering from this problem (including FedEx, CompUSA, and
  Best Buy) the problem stemmed from a product called QuickMenu Pro,
  from OpenCube. OpenCube has since fixed the problem, though it's
  up to the sites to update their copies of QuickMenu Pro. Kudos
  to Jeff of the HyperJeff Network for tracking down the bug in
  QuickMenu Pro.

<http://osx.hyperjeff.net/>

  Also, to work around a security problem in the lukemftpd FTP
  server in the client version of Mac OS X, Apple replaced it
  with the tnftpd FTP server (Mac OS X Server uses xftp instead);
  unfortunately the change has caused login difficulties for some
  users when connecting to upgraded Macs via FTP. The Apple support
  forum discussion linked below offers some solutions, but perhaps
  the best one is to use this problem as an excuse to switch to
  SFTP, which eliminates long-standing security problems with FTP.
  Apple will likely release a fix for normal FTP in the near future.

<http://discussions.info.apple.com/webx?128@@.689a720d>

  The security update applies to the client and server versions of
  Mac OS X 10.2.8, Mac OS X 10.3.4, and Mac OS X 10.3.5. The easiest
  way to get Security Update 2004-09-07 is via Software Update;
  otherwise you'll have to pick the correct version from the Apple
  Downloads page. The client downloads are 7.6 MB; the server
  downloads are 12.6 MB. [ACE]

<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/>


XBit 1.0 Browses TidBITS
------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

  Those of you who have been around for a decade or so probably
  remember Easy View, Akif Eyler's free text browsing utility.
  Easy View understood a number of text formats, including the
  setext format that we use for the text edition of TidBITS, and
  provided a three-pane view into TidBITS. One pane listed issues,
  the second listed articles in an issue, and the third large pane
  displayed the actual text of the article. Alas, Akif moved on to
  other things, and although he donated the source of Easy View
  to anyone who wanted to update it, nothing ever came of it.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbtxt=Easy%20View%20Akif>
<ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/info-mac/dev/src/easy-view-src-260.hqx>

  Now, however, Kevin LaCoste of ZenVilla Software has released
  XBit 1.0, an Easy View-like utility for Mac OS X that provides
  a triple-pane approach to viewing the setext issues of TidBITS.
  Although XBit doesn't have some of Easy View's flexibility in
  indexing multiple formats, it uses a better pane display, can
  mark articles and issues as read so you can keep track of your
  progress, and it can download new issues from our FTP server
  automatically. XBit can search inside an article, but not across
  multiple articles.

<http://zenvilla.com/>

  At $15, XBit isn't free, but you can download a fully functional,
  non-expiring demo. To be clear, I have no problem with Kevin
  charging for this utility; he's not making money from TidBITS
  itself (which would be a no-no), and he developed XBit entirely
  on his own with no help or input from us. I don't know that
  there's much of a market for XBit, given all the other ways people
  can receive, read, and search TidBITS, but that's Kevin's concern.
  I do need to make clear up front that I can't guarantee we'll
  continue to use the setext format or provide issues for download
  via FTP indefinitely, although Kevin will always be able to access
  whatever public formats and services we do provide just like
  everyone else. Still, if you're a fan of browsing text collections
  offline in a dedicated program, XBit is worth a quick look.


i-Phono Eliminates iPod Wires
-----------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

  I like my iPod, but I've always detested the wired earbuds, partly
  because I dislike things inside my ears, but mostly because the
  wires are constantly tangled and in the way. Yes, I know the white
  wires are almost as iconic as the iPod itself these days, but they
  still bug me. And I'd bet they bother Steve Jobs, with his
  notorious dislike for wires on Macs.

  Nevertheless, when I asked Phil Schiller about the possibility of
  a Bluetooth-enabled iPod back at Macworld Expo San Francisco in
  January of 2004, he basically laughed at me. Now, thanks to the
  i-Phono from Bluetake, I can laugh right back at him.

<http://www.bluetake.com/products/BT420EX.htm>

  At Macworld Expo Boston a few months ago, a guy named Clement Wen
  came up to me in the hallway and asked if I'd like to try his
  company's Bluetooth dongle and headphones for the iPod. I of
  course said yes, and I listened to them for a few minutes there
  in the hall. They seemingly worked fine, but it was a terrible
  environment for serious testing, so I asked him to send me a set
  to review in more detail. I've now had a chance to use the i-Phono
  in a real-world environment.


**Setting Up the Hardware** -- The i-Phono has two parts: a small
  audio dongle on a short cable that plugs into the iPod's headphone
  port (it also works with any other standard headphone port) and a
  pair of sport-style headphones (i.e., they wrap across the back of
  your neck instead of over the top of your head) that also include
  a microphone for use with a Bluetooth-capable cell phone. The
  dongle is fairly awkward, as you'd expect, although Bluetake
  includes a velcro strip and some double-sided tape for securing
  it in place. A future version will reportedly fit neatly on top
  of the iPod. Charging the built-in batteries in both the dongle
  and the headphones was easy; Bluetake includes both a wall wart
  charger and a USB-based charger, along with a splitter cable
  that enables you to charge both devices simultaneously.

  Once I had everything charged, I paired the devices following the
  instructions - it was trivially easy once I remembered to turn
  both devices on. Then it was merely a matter of plugging the audio
  dongle into the iPod and trying to figure out how to position the
  headphones on my head (they're the first sport-style headphones
  I've tried).


**Ear Check** -- The sound quality was decent, if not stunning,
  although I won't pretend that I'm qualified to comment on audio
  quality. I did hear a few crackles for no apparent reason, even
  when I was sitting still with the iPod a few feet away on my desk.
  Walking around my office (with the iPod still on my desk) didn't
  affect the sound quality at all, but going into the next room
  caused the sound to break up badly. Luckily, it's easy to press
  a button on either the headphones or the dongle to turn off the
  audio quickly (though turning it back on from the headphones took
  longer than from the dongle, oddly enough). Volume control was
  good; I could easily increase it beyond my comfort level. The
  headphone also has a pair of volume buttons, but they have only
  a few settings.

  Wearing the headphones for a few hours chafed at the skin on my
  head, just above my ears, but then again, with the exception of
  my headset phone, I've had trouble finding any headphones that
  don't squish or irritate my ears in some uncomfortable way. These
  weren't comfortable enough that I wore them outside of testing,
  though if I worked in an office environment where playing music
  through normal speakers was a problem, I might put more effort
  into becoming accustomed to the headphones. I have no idea if
  the headphones would be likely to stay on when exercising, and
  it probably depends on what you do. I'd never consider wearing
  them (or carrying an iPod, for that matter) for the kind of
  running I do.

  Battery life is supposed to be about six hours of continuous play,
  though I wasn't able to spend that much time in continuous play,
  nor was my iPod (and outlasting the iPod is all that's really
  necessary).


**Other Uses** -- After using the i-Phono with the iPod
  successfully, and proving to myself that it worked fine when
  I plugged the audio dongle into my Mac's headphone jack as well,
  I wondered if I could use the headphones directly with my 12-inch
  PowerBook, which has Bluetooth built in. Pairing worked fine, but
  the Bluetooth preference pane never reported that the headphones
  were connected, and they never appeared in the Sound preference
  pane. While researching this article further, I found a note
  on one site that confirmed that the headphones aren't directly
  compatible with the Mac, and said Bluetake is working on a fix
  that should be available soon.

  Not having an appropriate cell phone, I wasn't able to test
  Bluetake's claim that you can pair the headphone with a cell phone
  as well and have it automatically turn off the music when you
  answer a call (some of the other reviews listed below comment on
  that feature). I briefly tried to plug the audio dongle into the
  headset jack on one of our cordless phones, but it's a different
  size, and no doubt wouldn't have worked with the microphone built
  into the headphones anyway.


**Conclusions** -- There's no question the i-Phone scores major
  points for cool technology. It was great being able to walk
  around with my iPod deep in a pocket without fussing with the
  wires. However, it isn't cheap at $250 (street prices are more
  commonly between $200 and $230), and it's a bit difficult to
  find, although I eventually tracked it down using price
  comparison services like Shopping.com and MySimon (check
  the sponsored matches at the latter).

<http://www2.shopping.com/xFS?KW=bluetake+i-Phono>
<http://mysimon.search.com.com/search?qt=bluetake>

  If you're not yet desperate to eliminate your iPod's wires
  (or not so desperate that you'd spend more than $200 to do so),
  I recommend waiting a few months to see how Bluetake improves
  the i-Phono in future revisions. The awkward dongle should
  disappear in favor of a form factor that mimics the FM
  transmitters currently available for the iPod, and it sounds
  as though Bluetake may also improve the headphones so they'll
  be directly compatible with the Mac for use with iChat audio
  chats, voice control, and voice-over-IP telephony software.
  Lastly, I'd like to see some additional form factors for
  the headphones, preferably ones that I could wear without
  any discomfort.

  On the other hand, if you're addicted to your iPod and dying
  for a pair of wireless headphones, give the i-Phono a look.
  I do encourage you to read additional reviews before you plunk
  down that much cash for a pair of headphones. Modtown and
  iPodlounge have both published detailed reviews, and Bluetake
  links to a number of other articles as well.

<http://modtown.co.uk/mt/review2.php?id=iphono>
<http://www.ipodlounge.com/reviews_more.php?id=4377_0_6_0_C>
<http://www.bluetake.com/products/BT420EX/BT420EX_subN.htm>


Pyramid Therapy
---------------
  by Matt Neuburg <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

  For many years, as TidBITS readers know, I've been on a quest for
  interesting ways to store and arrange data on the Mac. This never-
  ending quest is plenty of fun, and I've learned a lot about many
  interesting programs. I've also learned something about myself:
  I have a two-sided personality.

  One side of my personality is the power user. It likes
  applications with lots of bells and whistles, applications that
  let it tinker and construct and customize everything in sight.
  The other side of my personality, though, seems to be into some
  kind of Zen aesthetic. It appreciates elegance and simplicity,
  even austerity, as may be seen from my reviews of iData Pro and
  Hog Bay Notebook.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbser=1196>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=07319>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=07145>

  MindCad's Pyramid definitely appeals to the second side of my
  personality. It's a mind-map program; with it, you draw a chart,
  a visual diagram showing the relationship between ideas. Pyramid
  lacks the "power-user" mind-mapping features of ConceptDraw, or
  even Inspiration: Pyramid makes just one kind of chart, with
  severe limitations on its degree of complexity, according to
  its own layout rules, and it has no accompanying outliner.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=06179>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=04586>

  Yet Pyramid's simplicity is exactly what's so beautiful about it.
  When you're trying to express an arrangement of ideas, clarity is
  a virtue. Pyramid is so small and simple, you can literally learn
  the whole program in two minutes. Instead of getting lost in a
  world of complex options, you just use the program, in a
  straightforward manner. You waste no time worrying about form;
  you go directly to content. Pyramid quickly becomes an extension
  of yourself, which is probably just what you want from mind-
  mapping software in the first place.

<http://www.mindcad.com/>


**The Art of the Chart** -- A new Pyramid document is essentially
  a blank space. Command-double-click and you get a piece of
  editable text surrounded by an oval. This is a "topic," a main
  head. Now press a Command-arrow key - up, down, left, or right -
  to create a child "item" of this topic, editable text surrounded
  by a rectangle, branching from the topic in any of the four
  cardinal directions, north, south, east, and west. From a child
  item, you can use the Command-arrow keys to create a sibling or
  child of that item. Thus a topic can have up to four bunches of
  items attached to it. The relationship between items in a bunch
  is shown by straight lines that are drawn for you, each bunch of
  items looking rather like one of those genealogical diagrams you
  may have studied in history class.

  It is also possible, by double-clicking, to create a loose item,
  not attached to a topic; it can have siblings and children, but
  the overall bunch can grow in only one of the four directions.
  A document can also be decorated with two other sorts of loose
  object, not part of the item hierarchy. An annotation (Shift-
  double-click) is an isolated box of editable text. An image is
  created by dragging an image file into the document.

  So, four kinds of object constitute a document: topics, each with
  up to four bunches of related items attached to it; loose bunches
  of items that grow in a single direction; annotations; and images.
  You can freely reposition each kind of object as a whole by
  dragging, but the internal layout of a bunch of items, or of
  a topic and its attached bunches of items, is done by Pyramid.

  The fact that you can't manually adjust the position of an item
  within its bunch doesn't feel like a limitation; it feels like
  you're relieved of responsibility, so that you can concentrate on
  content while Pyramid takes care of form. It also means that the
  adjustments you can make are simple and clear. For example, if you
  do drag a sub-item, you can only mean to detach it from its bunch
  or attach it elsewhere to an existing item or topic - and that's
  just what does happen.


**Upward but Not Northward** -- Even a Pyramid document consisting
  of only what I've described so far can be useful, but Pyramid goes
  further by providing several extra dimensions. First, what I've
  described is not really a document; it's a "sheet." A document
  can consist of any number of sheets, in the same way that an Excel
  workbook can have multiple worksheets. The sheets are tab views,
  and you can navigate between them using tabs at the top of the
  window. Sheets add a top level of categorization, and they make up
  for the relative simplicity of a Pyramid diagram. For example, a
  topic can have only four bunches of items, and things can become
  too crowded as a topic grows; to express additional information,
  add a sheet.

  Individual items can also have a number of useful attributes.
  The most powerful of these is the link. An item can be linked to
  another sheet, and clicking the link switches to that sheet; or
  to a document of any kind on disk, where clicking the link opens
  the document; or to a URL, where clicking the link opens the URL
  in the usual way. This simple feature greatly increases your
  document's power and depth.

  An item can also have a "note" consisting of styled text. This is
  important because an item whose own text consists of more than a
  few words eats into your document's real estate. An item is thus
  best expressed in a few words, with any further information
  expressed as sub-items, a link, or a note (or all three).

  Pyramid comes with an astonishing repertoire of elegant shortcuts
  for accomplishing common tasks. It does everything you intuitively
  expect a drawing program to do, and much more. You can navigate,
  edit, and move the objects on a sheet entirely by using the
  keyboard. (Oddly, however, you can't move from sheet to sheet,
  or jump from an item to its note, without using the mouse.) You
  can Option-drag to copy an item, Command-Option-drag to copy its
  text styling, and Command-Shift-Option-drag to copy its color.
  There are menu items for letting you align objects, lock objects,
  combine multiple objects into one, and split a multi-line object
  into several. Finally, an item can display a checkmark at its
  start or end (or both), so a Pyramid document can include a
  checklist, to-do list, or what have you.

  A Pyramid document can communicate with the rest of the world
  in a number of ways. Styled text dragged into a Pyramid document
  becomes an item; an individual piece of editable text can be
  dragged out of Pyramid into another document, or you can export
  an entire document as styled text, which basically loses the
  document's structure but preserves its order and all topics,
  items, annotations, and notes. You can also export a Pyramid
  document as OPML. This is a form of XML that preserves the
  document's hierarchical structure, but loses its text styling.
  Finally, you can export a sheet as a PNG image.


**Future Directions** -- As soon as I started using Pyramid, I
  began imagining ways in which this program could grow. This is
  not because the program as it stands is in any way inadequate,
  and I certainly would not want to see Pyramid increase in
  complexity or clutter. In fact, when the MindCad folks told me
  they were thinking of allowing the user to attach a custom icon
  to an item, or to reconfigure the entire document's appearance
  (different styles of item connection lines, for example), I sort
  of balked; to me, this would spoil the program's clean, ascetic
  lines. But I do have a small wish list of possible ideas for
  future growth.

* AppleScript: It would be nice if Pyramid were scriptable. The
  MindCad folks already have plans to let an individual item have
  a script attached to it, which might be triggered by clicking
  an icon; I look forward to seeing this as it develops.

* Keywords: Suppose a document could have a configurable list of
  keywords, and it were possible to assign keywords to any item.
  This would allow items to be categorized, thus providing another
  form of hierarchy. For example, in a diagram of tasks to be done
  by members of a team, you could arrange the tasks hierarchically
  according to type or temporal order and use the categories to
  say who is to do each task.

* Better finding: Right now there is crude text finding, which
  might be expanded to include finding in notes, finding on other
  sheets, finding keywords if these were implemented, and so forth.
  (Indeed, keywords would make sense only if finding included them;
  you want to say, "Show me all items with keyword Joe," to learn
  what Joe is supposed to do.)

* Object hiding: One of the most important things an outline can
  do is collapse sub-items into their governing item, essentially
  making them temporarily invisible; an item is marked to show that
  it has sub-items that aren't presently showing. This reduces
  clutter and allows easy concentration on just one part of a
  complex structure. Pyramid could do the same sort of thing.

* Better notes: Right now, notes are edited in a simple secondary
  drawer or inspector panel; it would be nice if the note editing
  milieu felt more like a genuine word-processing environment, a
  place for getting real work done.

* Full XML export: All current export formats are lossy in one
  way or another. It would be nice if a Pyramid document could
  be exported in its entirety, including images, structure,
  object position, links, text styling, and everything else
  that Pyramid knows about it. That way, certain kinds of editing
  could be performed by exporting to XML, editing, and re-importing.
  (Compare Tinderbox, which does exactly this.)

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=06959>


**Conclusions** -- Pyramid is a breath of fresh air. The simplicity
  and elegance of its interface, the attention to detail, the
  program's clarity and responsiveness, make it useful and easy.
  Pyramid is proof in action of what I said when Mac OS X first came
  out: that Apple's provision of a great system-level application
  framework and free developer tools will eventually make for
  some really original, interesting programs. And Pyramid is very
  reasonably priced. Anyone who has been attracted by the mind-map
  idea but has found the existing programs too complex or too
  expensive should definitely investigate Pyramid.

  Pyramid requires Mac OS X 10.3 Panther or later. It costs $30,
  and a demo version is available as a 400K download.


Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk/13-Sep-04
------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

  The second URL below each thread description points to
  the discussion on our Web Crossing server, which will be
  much faster.


**Do inexpensive color laser printers exist?** If you're sick
  of throwing money down the "inkjet hole," read about color
  laser printers that work with the Mac, as well as software
  for printing Postscript on non-laser printers. (17 messages)

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tlkthrd=2307>
<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/171>


**NoteBook vs. NoteTaker** -- Who would have thought that snippet-
  keeping would spawn so many products? Here, a comparative
  discussion of two leading programs. (9 messages)

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tlkthrd=2308>
<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/172>


**Internet Music Sales in Canada** -- Canada has yet to see
  an iTunes Music Store - why? Readers offer their theories.
  (3 messages)

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tlkthrd=2309>
<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/173>



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