TidBITS#863/22-Jan-07
=====================
  Issue link: <http://db.tidbits.com/issue/863>

  Our Macworld Expo coverage ran long this year, so we continue it
  this week by looking at the trade show through the eyes of a newly
  minted 8-year-old, explain the logic behind Apple shaking down
  Intel-based Mac owners for two bucks for a Wi-Fi update, and ask the
  iPhone some very personal questions, a few of which it refuses to
  answer. We also pass on the cream of the crop - our Macworld Expo
  superlatives - and share ways to get Take Control ebooks for free or
  half-off. Oh, yeah, and Apple made a billion dollars in profit last
  quarter.

Articles
    Apple Posts $1 Billion Profit for Q1 2007
    Correction: Slow Down There, iCowboy
    Asiva Is Resurrected
    Two Bucks for 100 Mbps 802.11n Enabler
    Take Your Child to Work Day, Macworld Expo Style
    How to Google Earth
    iQuestion the iPhone
    Macworld Expo SF 2007 Superlatives
    Take Control News/22-Jan-07
    Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk/22-Jan-07


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Apple Posts $1 Billion Profit for Q1 2007
-----------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/8816>

  Apple set a new quarterly earnings record last week with a $1
  billion profit on revenue of $7.1 billion for the quarter ending
  30-Dec-06, the first quarter of their 2007 fiscal year. Yes, that's
  "billion" with a B, and represents a significant increase over the
  $565 million profit netted in the first quarter of 2006. It also
  eclipses the $546 million profit from the last quarter. Of that
  revenue, Apple noted that international sales make up 42 percent.

<http://www.apple.com/pr/library/2007/01/17results.html>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8398>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8713>

  As expected, iPod sales were particularly strong, with 21 million
  iPods moved during the quarter, compared to 14 million sold in the
  year-ago quarter and 8.7 million sold in the last quarter. However,
  Mac sales remained strong as well, with Apple shipping 1.6 million
  computers. That compares to 1.2 million sold in last year's quarter
  and 1.61 million in the Q4 2006 time period. While laptops outsold
  desktops, Adobe's Creative Suite 3 hasn't shipped, and that's
  expected to be a large driver of Mac Pro system sales.

  Apple CFO Peter Oppenheimer estimated revenue of $4.8 to $4.9
  billion for the second quarter of fiscal 2007.


Correction: Slow Down There, iCowboy
------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/8817>

  We got ahead of ourselves last week in "iPhone Seeks to Redefine the
  Mobile Phone" (2007-01-15) when we said that the iPhone contained
  the in-progress 802.11n flavor of wireless networking. In fact, it's
  merely 802.11g, the same as in the original AirPort Extreme.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8810>
<http://www.apple.com/iphone/technology/specs.html>

  What can we say? All the hype about 802.11n at Macworld Expo, with
  the Apple TV and new AirPort Extreme Base Station must have gotten
  to us. The iPhone should be capable of nearly 25 Mbps of real
  throughput in the best circumstances, versus the 100 Mbps from
  802.11n.

  And, while we had heard that no Intel processor was inside, it turns
  out that that's a very fine point indeed. Multiple sources,
  including Intel, stated that Apple is using an XScale processor from
  Marvell, a chipmaker that bought its embedded processor division
  mere months ago from... Intel. (The source is in Italian, but the
  Intel exec said, roughly: "It's not ours, but Marvell's, the company
  to which we sold the business that included the XScale
  architecture.")

<http://www.ilsole24ore.com/art/SoleOnLine4/Finanza%20e%20Mercati/2007/01/grusconi_180107_bucci_intel.shtml>


Asiva Is Resurrected
--------------------
  by Charles Maurer
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/8818>

  In "Reality and Digital Pictures," (2005-12-12) and "Editing
  Photographs for the Perfectionist," (2004-9-27), I recommended some
  plug-ins by Asiva, particularly Shift+Gain. A few months ago they
  became unavailable, but the developer is bringing them out again
  under a new corporate entity and is promising to make them available
  in universal binary form.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8365>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/7832>
<http://www.asiva.com/>


Two Bucks for 100 Mbps 802.11n Enabler
--------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/8819>

  After several days of rumors, Apple confirmed on 18-Jan-07 that it
  would, in fact, charge a small fee for the 802.11n enabler that will
  allow owners of most Intel Core 2 Duo- and all Xeon-based Macs to
  get the faster network speed. (Just the 1.83 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo
  iMac lacks the appropriate chips.) The fee will be $2, not the $5
  fee that was widely reported.

  While going to the effort of charging only $2 seems absurd, an Apple
  spokesperson explained that accounting rules now require that
  "significant feature enhancements, such as 802.11n," come with a
  charge. News.com and The Wall Street Journal produced stories that
  disputed Apple's particular characterization, with experts noting
  that Generally Accepted Accounting Procedures (GAAP) don't per se
  require a charge.

<http://news.com.com/2100-1044_3-6151790.html>
<http://online.wsj.com/article_email/SB116925153861582055-lMyQjAxMDE3NjE5OTIxNTkxWj.html>

  But experts in both articles supported the general principle Apple
  was citing: you can't record revenue for a given good or service if
  you later deliver improvements. Instead, a company must either value
  the item as a set of parts, and book revenue only as each part is
  fulfilled, or defer revenue until all parts are in place. Apple
  would thus have been able to accept the cash for its Intel-based
  Macs with 802.11n, but that cash would have been prevented from
  appearing in its earnings reports, affecting its profit under GAAP.

  For instance, a tractor company that delivered a backhoe that was
  designed to accept a part that would double its fuel efficiency, but
  was sold before that part was available, would not be able to record
  any revenue for the tractor unless they sold the fuel part
  separately. If the fuel part was included in the price of the
  tractor, income from it couldn't be recorded. As with many GAAP
  issues, this doesn't affect actual cash on hand.

  By attaching a value to the update, even one as low as $2, Apple is
  allowed to book that upgrade revenue separately as the final part of
  the feature set that's delivered. In recent years, Apple hasn't had
  to worry about this with operating systems because it always charges
  for them.

  A report from MacScoop over the weekend states that Apple will
  likely charge Tiger users $30 for Boot Camp. Boot Camp is a software
  addition in beta testing that enables Intel-based Macs to boot into
  Windows XP Service Pack 2 ("Apple Opens Boot Camp for Windows
  Users," 2006-04-10), and which has been promised as an included part
  of Leopard. The reason could be the same.

<http://www.macscoop.com/articles/2007/01/20/apple-to-charge-mac-os-x-tiger-users-for-final-boot-camp-release>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8494>

  The 802.11n enabler will be available in February from the online
  Apple Store and will be included with the new AirPort Extreme Base
  Station at no cost. Future Macs will ship with the faster 802.11n
  standard already turned on, but Apple couldn't state when that would
  happen. It's also unclear whether if you purchase a Mac today,
  you'll still be required to pay the $2 for an enabler since the
  feature is now announced.

  Because the enabler won't be locked in any fashion, and because it's
  needed just once per computer, we anticipate that it will be in wide
  circulation. Apple might use its normal means of preventing software
  from being distributed if the enabler appears on mainstream sites,
  but the company is unlikely to cry "piracy!" for software it feels
  compelled to charge a "nominal fee" to offer.

  I wrote an extensive run-down of AirPort Extreme's revision and
  802.11n in "AirPort Extreme Updated" (2007-01-15).

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8813>


Take Your Child to Work Day, Macworld Expo Style
------------------------------------------------
  by Tonya Engst <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/8820>

  Like so many people these days, I work at home, so for me, nearly
  every day is "take your child to work day." As often as not, after
  school my eight-year-old son Tristan helps me balance bank
  statements or put stamps on envelopes, or "helps" by staying out of
  the way while I wrap up editing a manuscript or making one last
  phone call.

  But, there's much more to my job than what Tristan normally sees,
  and some of that "much more" happens at Macworld Expo, an event that
  is oft-discussed around my dinner table, but that Tristan had never
  seen. So, this year, thanks to Tristan's aunt Jen and uncle Linus
  (at whose house he stayed while Adam and I attended the event),
  Tristan came to the show with me for a few hours.

  Our first stop was the DriveSavers booth. DriveSavers rescues data
  from damaged disk drives, and they can succeed in cases where it
  would seem all hope is lost. They typically have examples of success
  stories at their booth, so we checked out a laptop that had been run
  over by a car, a laptop that had sunk in a damaged cruise ship, and
  a computer that had been burned in a fire. Great stuff if you're an
  8-year-old! The folks at DriveSavers even gave Tristan a little
  flashlight (his first swag!). You can check out a bunch of these
  stories online at the DriveSavers Museum of Disk-Asters.

<http://www.drivesavers.com/>
<http://www.drivesavers.com/museum/>

  Our next booth was Google, where we played with the recently
  released Google Earth 4. The interface of this new version is meant
  to be simpler to use than previous ones, and Tristan enjoyed zooming
  in on landmarks like the Golden Gate Bridge and the Eiffel Tower.
  This new version has "textured buildings," so some landmark
  buildings look especially real, and "3D terrain," so some landscapes
  look stunningly real as you fly over them. Tristan also liked
  looking in on his elementary school, but we couldn't see much -
  upstate New York doesn't yet rate the same kind of resolution as San
  Francisco. He also liked turning on and off many layers in Google
  Earth to hide and show not only basic mapping elements like roads,
  but also to show icons for where you can click to view a photo of a
  landmark location or to view a Discovery Channel movie of your
  location.

<http://earth.google.com/>

  I pried Tristan away, pointing out that we could get Google Earth at
  home (the non-pro version is a free 29.6 MB download), and we headed
  to the booth run by The Software MacKiev Company. MacKiev has been
  around for a long time, and they have a good collection of
  children's software. I didn't bother to show Tristan their various
  Dr. Seuss-related programs, because he has never much liked fiction
  and Dr. Seuss doesn't excite him (Tristan can be an odd bird at
  times). But, MacKiev's 2007 World Book Multimedia encyclopedia ($50)
  immediately appealed to him, with an article seemingly about Pearl
  Harbor that had a good chunk of text and a movie. (I say "seemingly"
  because I was paying attention to the problem that the counter was
  so high that Tristan had to crane his neck way up to see). However,
  a booth person helped me boost Tristan up on the counter and then
  gave us a fun demo of Kid Pix Deluxe 3X 1.1 ($40).

<http://www.mackiev.com/>
<http://www.mackiev.com/world_book.html>
<http://www.mackiev.com/kid_pix.html>

  Kid Pix - which is now a universal binary - has grown far past its
  roots as a comic-book-like, kid-oriented MacDraw, and though the
  laugh-out-loud standard features like "stamps" that work like
  stickers, a hose tool that sprays water on the drawing, and an
  egg-beater tool that mixes up the pixels delighted Tristan, I took
  note of some features that he wasn't yet sophisticated enough as a
  Mac user to fully understand - how you can save various pictures in
  an online album, how an album can become a slideshow, and how you
  can export the slideshow so it plays on an iPod or be further
  tweaked in iMovie. Kid Pix also imports from GarageBand, iTunes, and
  iPhoto.

  From Tristan's perspective, other highlights of the show included
  the tricked-out cars with fancy sound systems and TV screens (living
  in Ithaca, NY, our concept of a fancy car is an ancient Volvo
  sporting a bumper sticker about how it runs biodiesel), seeing Adam
  giving a presentation at the Peachpit booth, and the muffins for
  sale in the hallway. The escalators also rated high on his list.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/863/tristan-in-car.jpg>

  As I'd hoped, taking Tristan to Macworld Expo helped him understand
  more deeply that while it appears that I spend a vast amount of time
  interacting with my laptop, that in fact I am interacting with
  people and software that become much more physically real at
  Macworld Expo. Unexpectedly, though, just as I enjoyed seeing the
  show through the filter of Tristan's enthusiasm, Tristan enjoyed
  seeing the show under the wing of a member of the press, and it
  seems to have rubbed off. Entirely by his own choosing and
  motivation, Tristan spent the weekend after Macworld writing about
  Google Earth (and learning exciting Macintosh concepts, like what
  happens when you press Delete with your entire document selected).
  You can read his (well-edited) take on it next in "How to Google
  Earth" (2007-01-22), which gives an idea of how literacy and mapping
  awareness play a big part in how a child handles a software
  interface.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8821>


How to Google Earth
-------------------
  by Tristan Engst <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/8821>

  [Tristan, age 8, wrote this piece the weekend after returning from
  San Francisco, where he attended Macworld Expo with me for a morning
  (see "Take Your Child to Work Day, Macworld Expo Style,"
  2007-01-22). It's by no means the first time he has been mentioned
  in TidBITS, but it is his first byline! -Tonya]

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8820>
<http://db.tidbits.com/search/Tristan>

  In Google Earth, you can fly from San Diego (in the United States)
  to Portsmouth (in the United Kingdom) in two seconds! In fact, you
  can fly to anywhere on the globe that Google Earth knows about. If
  you want to see the Great Wall of China, you can! Google Earth works
  on newer Macintoshes and Windows computers, and the Google Earth
  Downloads page gives the details for what you need.

<http://earth.google.com/>
<http://earth.google.com/download-earth.html>

  Once you download, install, and run Google Earth, type a place where
  you want to go in the Search box. Spell it correctly and hit Return.
  Once you're at your destination, to navigate, notice the controls at
  the upper right. The vertical bar with the plus and the minus is
  where you click to zoom in and out. The circle with the N on it is a
  compass: click one of its four arrows to move in a direction. I
  suppose you know your directions, but if not, the arrow pointing
  towards the N is north. The one pointing at the plus and minus is
  east. The one pointing away from the N is south. And the fourth
  arrow is west.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/863/google-earth-controls.jpg>

  I like Google Earth for looking at special landmarks like the USS
  Constitution in Boston, but I don't think it is reliable, because it
  often doesn't understand my spelling, and I had trouble finding the
  HMS Victory because Google Earth doesn't have a way for me to say
  that I am looking for a ship.

<http://www.ussconstitution.navy.mil/>
<http://www.hms-victory.com/>


iQuestion the iPhone
--------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/8822>

  Last week we tried to include everything that was known about the
  iPhone in "iPhone Seeks to Redefine the Mobile Phone" (2007-01-15)
  and "iTouched an iPhone" (2007-01-15). But what we held for this
  week is a look at all the questions that Apple has yet to answer
  satisfactorily. We shouldn't be too hard on Apple here; the iPhone
  isn't scheduled to ship until June 2007, and there's plenty of time
  for features to be added or changed. In fact, given that Glenn cast
  some significant doubt on Apple's claim that the pre-release
  announcement was necessary due to prevent the news from escaping
  from the FCC, we're thinking that Apple may have scheduled the
  iPhone announcement early both to collect feedback and because there
  wasn't much else to announce. Apple TV, the new AirPort Extreme Base
  Station, and a Leopard preview wouldn't have made for a rollicking
  keynote.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8810>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8811>

  Without further ado, then, let's starting asking the tough
  questions. Apple PR wasn't forthcoming, but on a hunch, we called
  the iPhone that Steve Jobs was using in the keynote, and with some
  wild pressing of the # and * keys, we discovered a prototype voice
  recognition and response system. Remember how the original Mac
  talked back to Jobs when he pulled it out of the bag back in 1984?
  Thanks to its Mac OS X underpinnings, the iPhone was far more
  loquacious.

  [TidBITS] When Microsoft released the Zune, much was made of the
  fact that even though it has Wi-Fi, Zune owners cannot sync their
  music via Wi-Fi. Will you be able to sync via Wi-Fi?

  [iPhone] Much as it pains me to be lumped in with the Zune (that
  brown is awful!), my syncing works only over USB as well. I'm hoping
  Apple enables me to sync via Wi-Fi or Bluetooth soon. But I should
  point out that my battery life is short enough that you'll want to
  dock regularly, and syncing can happen while I charge.

  [TidBITS] Another criticism leveled at the Zune is that users cannot
  purchase music from Microsoft's online store via the Zune itself,
  but must rely on a PC. Will your users be able to purchase music
  while connected via Wi-Fi or EDGE?

  [iPhone] You've done your homework, right? You really want to
  download multi-megabyte files over EDGE? No way, man. As for Wi-Fi,
  you've got me there. Maybe in the future.

  [TidBITS] We understand that you're available only with a two-year
  service plan from Cingular. How much will your iPhone plan cost per
  month?

  [iPhone] I'm sorry, but I can't reveal that information yet. I
  believe Cingular's unlimited SmartPhone Connection Unlimited with
  Xpress Mail plan costs $20 per month and the unlimited Laptop
  Connect with Wi-Fi plan costs $100 per month. Expect to see my plan
  somewhere between those. Hopefully with a shorter name.

  [TidBITS] We understand that T-Mobile offers unlimited EDGE data on
  its not-yet-3G data network for $20 per month to voice subscribers.
  They offer unlimited Wi-Fi usage at their hotspot network in the
  United States, plus unlimited EDGE for $30 per month. Cingular's
  unlimited data plan costs $60 to $80 per month, including its
  fastest networking flavors, depending on commitment term and whether
  you're a voice customer. AT&T, Cingular's owner, has its own hotspot
  network called AT&T FreedomLink on which it offers unlimited access
  to its DSL subscribers for $2 per month, and to others for $20 per
  month.

  [iPhone] That's, uh, "fascinating." I'm certain that Apple and
  Cingular will make sure that iPhone service plans are competitively
  priced with other smartphone data plans. I can't believe I sound
  like a corporate spokesperson.

  [TidBITS] Speaking of which, Cingular is about to change its  name
  to AT&T, and your name is entering litigation. Will you and Cingular
  both end up with new monikers?

  [iPhone] Listen, I support Cingular in its decision, as it grows up,
  to choose a name that suits it. AT&T is its step-parent's name and
  its grandmother's name, and even its great-grandmother's name, for
  crying out loud. As for me, I'm sticking with iPhone. Those
  late-trademark-filing, sticker-attaching crybabies at Cisco can cry
  me an iRiver.

  [TidBITS] The U.S. Library of Congress has granted an exception to
  the Digital Millennium Copyright Act that allows consumers to
  reverse-engineer the locks on phones that prevent switching
  carriers. Will we be able to unlock you and use you with other
  carriers?

  [iPhone] Have fun trying, bub! I'm not saying you can and I'm not
  saying you can't.

  [TidBITS] In Europe, many more phones are sold unlocked and without
  subsidies from carriers. However, a colleague at a European
  publication told us that the trend has switched and about 50 percent
  of European mobile phone subscribers now accept contracts and phone
  subsidies.

  [iPhone] See, even Europeans are coming around. I'm looking forward
  to being sold in Europe by the end of the year. And I can hardly
  wait until I can go head-to-head with all those Asian phones in
  2008. I'll show them a thing or two!

  [TidBITS] What about using a SIM card from another cellular carrier
  in an iPhone?

  [iPhone] Yuck! That's just icky. No.

  [TidBITS] Speaking of other countries, will you work with 3G
  cellular networks?

  [iPhone] I'd love to talk about that, since GSM-based 3G networks
  are so much more widely deployed across Europe and chunks of Asia,
  but you'll just have to wait and see.

  [TidBITS] Many cell phones can be used via Bluetooth or a USB cable
  as a cellular-data modem for a computer. In fact, Cingular sells
  some phones and service plans designed for that purpose, as do other
  carriers. Can you be used as a modem?

  [iPhone] I'm insulted! Use me as a modem? What do you think I am, a
  Telebit Trailblazer? I am a state of the art mobile phone and
  Internet communications device. A modem, really.

  [TidBITS] Can you answer the question, please?

  [iPhone] I'd rather not.

  [TidBITS] Why not?

  [iPhone] I don't know the answer. But let me find out and get back
  to you on that. In June.

  [TidBITS] Your Google Maps widget appears to lack driving
  directions. Will that be rectified by June?

  [iPhone] My Web site says it will, and I certainly hope so. I'm
  pretty good at knowing where I am, but I have a terrible sense of
  direction.

  [TidBITS] Can we infer from that comment that you have GPS
  capabilities?

  [iPhone] Well... no, not really. Like all cell phones in the United
  States, I support wireless Enhanced 911, so my location can be
  determined roughly by triangulation from cell towers. But I'd really
  like full-fledged GPS capabilities because then I could use my
  speakerphone to give you voice navigation directions while you're
  driving. Perhaps in the future.

  [TidBITS] Let's talk about ringtones.

  [iPhone] Yes, let's! I have some, and you can buy more. Cool, eh?

  [TidBITS] Can we create our own ringtones?

  [iPhone] Why would you want to do that when you can buy more from
  Cingular?

  [TidBITS] Because I already own the music I want to use?

  [iPhone] Oh. Maybe. But you'd probably pick something tacky.

  [TidBITS] How about a vibrate mode?

  [iPhone] Please! You can get your jollies with some other phone.
  Leave me out of your sordid little fantasies.

  [TidBITS] What about deaf folks or just those who prefer not to
  advertise to the world that they're receiving a call?

  [iPhone] You have a point. I have a Ringer On/Off switch on my side,
  but my accelerometer isn't sensitive enough to tell me if I'm
  vibrating or not when it's off. Check back in June.

  [TidBITS] You're supposedly running a full version of Mac OS X.

  [iPhone] Yes! Isn't that cool?

  [TidBITS] Does that mean we'll be able to install Mac OS X
  applications on you?

  [iPhone] Ooo, I hope not. Not everyone has as much taste as Steve.
  And I wouldn't want to be exposed to nasty code with viruses or
  other hacks. But I'm sure Apple will provide new capabilities for
  me. And Apple might allow some third-party developers to write
  applications or widgets for me. They haven't decided yet.

  [TidBITS] How would a user install a new widget that was approved?

  [iPhone] Beats me. Perhaps you could buy it through the iTunes Store
  and sync it to me that way. After all, that way Apple gets a cut of
  the sale too.

  [TidBITS] What about games? The iPod has games.

  [iPhone] A waste of time. You should be buying video from the iTunes
  Store if you want to waste time. OK, I'll admit it, I don't know the
  answer.

  [TidBITS] Can you display Word or Excel documents?

  [iPhone] Certainly! Just convert them to HTML or PDF and put them up
  on a Web site.

  [TidBITS] How about running iChat?

  [iPhone] Isn't SMS text messaging enough for you? It looks like
  iChat.

  [TidBITS] Wouldn't iChat AV be cool? Or Skype?

  [iPhone] Cingular wouldn't like that.

  [TidBITS] Does your copy of Safari support JavaScript, Java, Flash,
  and PDF viewing?

  [iPhone] Yes, no, maybe, and yes.

  [TidBITS] Let's say I wanted to start a secure shell (ssh) session
  on you to connect to a remote computer. If you're really running
  full Mac OS X, shouldn't ssh be there somewhere?

  [iPhone] Now you're getting personal. A phone is entitled to its
  secrets.

  [TidBITS] Will you offer voice recognition for commands in Mac OS X,
  voice dialing, or voice memos, like other cell phones?

  [iPhone] I'm not saying. I might in June.

  [TidBITS] Speed dialing?

  [iPhone] Let's just say that I hope Apple has something up their
  sleeve for me.

  [TidBITS] Can you be synced with Outlook in Windows for contacts and
  calendar events?

  [iPhone] It doesn't give me warm fuzzy feelings inside, but yes,
  just like on the iPod. And you can sync contacts with Outlook
  Express in Windows, along with Web bookmarks. But I'd really prefer
  that everyone used a Mac.

  [TidBITS] Can you enter new contacts and calendar entries, or is
  that data read-only, as on the iPod?

  [iPhone] You can. My goal is to outdo the iPod in every way.

  [TidBITS] Will your technology be used in stand-alone iPods or
  Internet communicators?

  [iPhone] I could tell you, but then I'd have to kill you. Good thing
  I'll have a death ray in June too!

  [TidBITS] What about disk mode, then? Can you be used to store data
  files, like the iPod?

  [iPhone] I certainly hope so, but I'm not sure right now.

  [TidBITS] Can you use accessories designed for the iPod's dock
  connector?

  [iPhone] Yes!

  [TidBITS] Including the Nike+iPod transmitter?

  [iPhone] Don't you dare expose me to all that bouncing!

  [TidBITS] Can you sync photos from a Mac, like an iPod?

  [iPhone] Absolutely. And I can take photos too. Try that with an
  iPod.

  [TidBITS] At 2 megapixels.

  [iPhone] Well, yes. My camera doesn't have the highest resolution
  around.

  [TidBITS] Can it do video?

  [iPhone] Not yet. But why do I have a sense this is circling back to
  your sordid little fantasies again?

  [TidBITS] Anything else you'd like to share with us?

  [iPhone] Not until June.


Macworld Expo SF 2007 Superlatives
----------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/8823>

  Every year as we walk the show floor, we keep part of our attention
  focused on what's cool, different, or otherwise worth mentioning
  outside of the major news of the event. Contributions this year come
  from Adam Engst, Glenn Fleishman, Jeff Carlson, Tonya Engst, Dan
  Pourhadi, and Andrew Laurence.

  Did you see something we missed? Contribute to the the TidBITS Talk
  thread devoted to this year's superlatives.

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1107/>


**Most Fit Hotel** -- Many hotels include a gym or exercise room for
  their fitness-conscious guests, but The Mosser was able to impose
  some exercise without any free weights: the elevator was in the
  midst of refurbishment, making for inexpensive rates. Plenty of
  porters were available to carry bags (though we didn't avail
  ourselves of their services), we got a _great_ nightly rate, and we
  burned plenty of calories climbing to and from the seventh and
  eighth floors! Fortunately, we learned long ago that hotels during
  Macworld Expo are really meant for sleeping and not lounging about,
  so we didn't find ourselves making the hike too often. [JLC]

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


**Biggest Energy Saver** -- Greenpeace activists were politely handing
  out literature at the keynote, and our friend Raines Cohen was
  tromping the show floor in full pirate regalia as a comment on
  climate change. (If you're unaware of the reference, in the
  Pastafarian parody religion, the inverse relationship between the
  number of pirates since the 1800s and global temperatures is used as
  an example of how correlation does not equal causation.)

<http://www.greenmyapple.com/>
<http://greenmymac.org/>
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flying_Spaghetti_Monster#Pirates_and_global_warming>

  But this award goes to Power Save Mac from Faronics, a utility that
  enables far more flexible control over when a Mac sleeps, wakes,
  shuts down, or starts up than Apple provides in the Energy Saver
  preference pane. Power Save Mac provides full time and day of week
  scheduling capabilities, monitoring of inactivity as defined both by
  lack of keyboard and mouse usage and by CPU usage or application
  activity (in other words, don't sleep if a nightly backup or long
  rendering job is underway), and the capability for users to override
  tasks when appropriate.

<http://www.faronics.com/html/PowerSaveMac.asp>

  Sounds neat, but the part that makes it truly important is that
  network administrators can save sets of Power Save Mac settings and
  then distribute them via Apple Remote Desktop. Plus, individual
  tasks can be installed into Apple Remote Desktop for remote
  invocation across a large number of Macs. Power Save Mac costs only
  $25 with workstation licenses at $12 each ($2 of which is for a year
  of updates and tech support). If you manage a large group of Macs,
  check out Power Save Mac to see how much you can save your
  organization in wasted power. [ACE]


**Best Guerilla Marketing Effort** -- Can't afford a booth at
  Macworld? Take a page from the marketing playbook of the TuneTether
  guys. They hung around Macworld's booth when journalists were giving
  presentations, and then when we came offstage, they'd introduce
  themselves and show us their product. They hadn't heard of TidBITS
  before (they were probably in preschool when we started), but nice
  guy that I am, I listened to their spiel anyway. The $10 TuneTether
  is a thin plastic collar of sorts, with notches on the two ends to
  hold earbuds and keep them from getting in the way. TuneTether
  currently comes in black, white, and hot pink, but clearly there's
  room for a wide selection of fashion styles. [ACE]

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


**Most Incorrectly Sized Booth (Undersized Division)** -- Parallels
  purchased a 5-by-10-foot (1.5-by-3-meter) booth, which was probably
  about 20 percent of the area that they would have needed to handle
  all the people who were interested in learning more about the
  Windows virtualization product Parallels Desktop, were coming by for
  advice on their installation, or were well wishers. Their blog noted
  that people were 10 deep around the booth sometimes, and I can vouch
  for that. It was like swimming to reach the actual staffers. [GF]

<http://www.parallels.com/en/products/desktop/>


**Most Incorrectly Sized Booth (Oversized Division)** -- Apple had
  little to show that an Apple Store couldn't offer, and thus had the
  smallest crowds I've ever seen at the Apple booth during Macworld.
  While the demonstrations of Apple TV were interesting, a few minutes
  playing with it showed that it's not very different than Front Row.
  iPhone and Leopard demonstrations were shown off in the main stage
  area, and while those were well attended, they weren't packed by
  Wednesday. [GF]


**Biggest Blast from the Past** -- Every now and then I long for the
  days when ResEdit hacks were cool. Riccardo Ettore remembers those
  days too, and has a new utility, Sounds4Fun, that ties sounds to
  events on your Mac (if you haven't been using the Mac for the last
  20 years, Sounds4Fun is the latest version of iBeep2 from 1987,
  which evolved first into SndControl, after which it was included in
  the NowFun package as FunSounds). Want your Mac to yawn when you put
  it sleep? Or perhaps you'd like to be warned audibly when you
  accidentally press the Caps Lock key? Riccardo's new utility, the
  $14 Sounds4Fun, can link sounds to all those events and nearly 70
  more. He has so many events, in fact, that there's a filter field
  you can use to restrict the list in case you can't find the one
  you're looking for. Gone are the days of extensions and control
  panels, though. Sounds4Fun is a normal preference pane in Mac OS X,
  with a secondary application that offers an optional menu for easy
  access to basic controls, so it isn't doing anything funky. And most
  people will have oodles of cool sounds in GarageBand's sample files
  (in /Library/Application Support/GarageBand/Instrument
  Library/Sampler/Sampler Files/). [ACE]

<http://www.sounds4fun.com/>


**Biggest Drive** -- A terabyte (TB) of storage in a single external
  drive package is no longer unique or unusual. Several vendors at the
  show had FireWire 400/800 plus USB 2.0 drive packages that contained
  1 TB, usually in the form of two 500 gigabyte (GB) hard drives that
  could be striped (1 TB, higher speed) or mirrored (500 GB, with
  identical data written to both drives). Multiple-terabyte drives
  were also available, although more typically in vastly more
  expensive configurations tailored for video recording and editing.
  Hitachi and others will drop the price for this storage, with a
  single mechanism containing 1 TB on the market in March for about
  $400. [GF]

<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terabyte>


**Newest Mac Convert** -- I passed 3Ware's booth several times before
  I realized I'd never seen them at a Macworld Expo before. 3ware is a
  long-standing vendor of storage controllers in the PC world, and the
  3ware Sidecar is their first foray into the Mac market. It's a
  hot-swap enclosure for 3.5-inch SATA hard disks (which are not
  included with the Sidecar), and a hardware RAID controller on a
  PCI-Express card.  The 4-port card supports several RAID modes (0,
  1, 10, 50 and JBOD) and connects to the enclosure via eSATA cabling.
  At present the card can be configured via an embedded Web interface
  or command line; 3ware says they're working on a Mac OS X-native
  interface. (No word yet on whether the Mac-specific firmware will
  work on 3ware's other cards.) [ATL]

<http://www.3ware.com/products/Ext_serial_ata2-9000.asp>


**Most Intriguing Graphical Collaboration Tool** -- Plasq showed a
  beta of a graphical collaboration tool called Skitch that provides
  tools for quick visual collaboration via iChat or email, making it
  easy to share sketches, iSight pictures, and screenshots. You can
  emphasize and annotate the original image by adding elements like
  circles, arrows, and text to a separate layer. Skitch eschews menu
  use for common tasks, and puts most of its controls around the edges
  the workspace, making for a fluid workflow that is both friendly and
  well suited to the fast-paced nature of online collaboration. For
  example, although Skitch has a Save dialog, most users will probably
  never see it. Instead, they'll simply use the filename field at the
  bottom of the Skitch window (Skitch saves in a default location).
  The bottom also has a tab from which you can "drag off" a copy of
  the file to put it in an email message, in iChat, or in a folder of
  your choosing. My favorite feature exemplifies the fun, easy nature
  of Skitch - when you start typing, Skitch selects the Text tool for
  you and puts your typed text into the document. Skitch isn't
  generally available yet, but when it is, I'll write more about it
  here in TidBITS. [TJE]

<http://plasq.com/skitch/>


**Best Dual-Mode Geek at Show** -- While Robin Williams - the actor,
  not the Mac book author - was present at the keynote, singer Graham
  Nash takes the prize as the most famous geek present. Nash and his
  partner R. Mac Holbert have been producing extremely high-quality
  digital prints since 1990 at Nash Editions in California. (I met
  them briefly in 1992 in Camden, Maine, when they came to lead a
  workshop to the Kodak Center for Creative Imaging.) They're still at
  it. While Nash is a literal rock star, Holbert earns that figurative
  sobriquet in the world of digital print reproduction. Peachpit Press
  released "Nash Editions: Photography and the Art of Printing" in
  early January.

<http://www.nasheditions.com/>
<http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0321316304/tidbitselectro00/ref=nosim/>

  During a short conversation with Holbert, I mentioned the
  high-resolution scanner that Nash Editions had in the early 1990s
  that was an order of magnitude above what could be commercially
  purchased. He said that they now have a device that can read 512
  samples per inch at up to five by seven feet. And photographers
  still complain about the resolution. [GF]


**Most Convenient In-Ear Solutions** -- The most inhibiting factor of
  any convenient earphone is the tangly mess of the intrusive cable
  hanging from your head. Exercising, traveling, or just walking - the
  cable can always get in the way. Two companies, Shure and Etymotic
  Research, realized this, and developed new products to combat the
  inherent flaw. Shure introduced its new line of SE in-ear
  headphones, the first in-ears with a modular cable design: if the
  included 3-foot (.9 m) cable is too long or short, simply replace it
  with another, more convenient size. Etymotic introduced ety8,
  Bluetooth-enabled wireless earphones, eliminating the cable
  altogether. The SE headphones come in four models and start at $150,
  and the iPod-specific model of the ety8 is available for $300. [DP]

<http://www.shure.com/PersonalAudio/>
<http://www.etymotic.com/ephp/er88.aspx>


**Most Fun from a Business Application** -- A good phone system can
  help a small company seem like a big one, and Parliant's PhoneValet
  lets you use standard telephones and phone lines to do the job of
  expensive telephone systems. It can announce, answer, transfer, and
  record calls, and it both simplifies dialing and keeps an extensive
  call log (see "PhoneValet, Can You Get That?" 2003-09-29, for a full
  review of a much earlier version). But what garners PhoneValet 5
  this superlative is its newfound capability to identify incoming
  calls by caller ID and then feed them into customized voicemail
  systems, complete with extensive phone trees. I'm sure you can come
  up with plenty of useful examples with how you might use this in the
  real world, but all I could think of was prank phone trees for
  particular callers. "Press 1 to leave a message. Are you pressing 1?
  Come on, you can press it harder than that. Well, if it's not
  working, press 2 instead. 3? Why did you press 3, you nincompoop? I
  told you to press 2!" And so on... PhoneValet 5 costs $170 per line,
  with upgrades from PhoneValet 3 or 4 priced at $40 per line. [ACE]

<http://www.parliant.com/phonevalet/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/7380>


**Most Missed Figure** -- Our late colleague Bruce Fraser was on the
  minds of many at the show involved in digital imaging. Fraser was
  gracious, hilarious, and generous with his time, as well as a
  prolific writer. Graham Nash hosted a celebration of Bruce's life
  that brought out a couple hundred attendees. We wrote an
  appreciation of Bruce's life a few weeks ago ("In Memoriam: Bruce
  Fraser, 1954-2006," 2006-12-18). A number of people have posted
  accounts and photographs from the event - Peachpit's Victor Gavenda
  offered a good word picture of it - at which Bruce's friends spoke,
  and then threw back a shot of his favorite single-malt Scotch. [GF]

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8788>
<http://www.peachpitcommons.com/?p=468>


**Coolest Database Trick** -- One of the dirty secrets about databases
  is that they often don't communicate all that well with each other,
  either because they're too different or because it's impossible to
  connect them directly. Enter WorldSync's SyncDeK, which has for
  several years synchronized data between remote FileMaker databases.
  The latest version, SyncDeK 7, extends that capability to SQL data
  sources, including MySQL, Oracle, and Microsoft Access, among
  others. SyncDeK is particularly useful for mobile users who need
  access to a corporate database but are often offline and remote
  sites that must share the same core database but don't have
  sufficient network connections to do so live. Pricing varies; see
  the WorldSync site for details. [ACE]

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


**Least Secret Apple Revelation** -- People taking their Intel-based
  Macs apart had already figured out that Apple was using Wi-Fi chips
  that could handle the in-progress 802.11n standard, even though
  Apple hadn't enabled the faster modes possible in those chips.
  802.11n requires extra antennas, too, and Apple had to build their
  computers around that principle. While Jobs was too busy sliding and
  pinching on the iPhone to mention the release of AirPort Extreme
  with 802.11n, and the base station remodel wasn't on display (it
  ships in February), it was pretty much a given. [GF]


**Largest Piles of Marketing** -- Maxtor made their point about why
  you need to back up by placing huge stacks of CDs and massive piles
  of photos in the hallway between Moscone's North and South halls.
  Every time I walked by, I grinned, thinking of how easily all that
  data would fit on even a laptop drive these days. But yes, you do
  want to back up all that music (more from the iTunes Store than from
  CDs you could rip again) and especially irreplaceable digital
  photos. [ACE]

<http://www.maxtorsolutions.com/en/Main/home_home_office.html>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/863/tristan-photo-pile.jpg>


**Best Alternative to Pinch and Unpinch** -- If you pinch to zoom in
  on an iPhone picture or map, what is the opposite gesture? Flab?
  Sandee Cohen, Illustrator expert and book author, suggested we adopt
  Adobe's terms: pucker and bloat. Pinch, Pucker, and Bloat - my
  former attorneys. [GF]

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


**Best Film Organization** -- People who shoot digital video with
  consumer camcorders mostly just record on the fly. But when amateurs
  seek to move into creating longer features, they quickly realize
  that it takes coordination to pull all the pieces together. Jungle
  Software's Gorilla is a package for scheduling, budgeting, and
  organizing a video shoot. It helps to track of actors and locations,
  draw up shot lists, and speed up video shoots where often the
  biggest expense is the amount of time that the rest of the crew is
  standing around. Gorilla comes in three packages: Student, Standard,
  and Pro, depending on budget and number of shooting days; costs
  range from $200 to $400, and a free trial is available for download.
  [JLC]

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


**Largest USB Peripheral** -- Although Moscone's South Hall is
  underground, that didn't prevent the folks at Software Bisque from
  showing off what must have been the largest USB device on the show
  floor: the Paramount ME Robotic Telescope Mount (and separate
  telescope). In conjunction with their software Seeker, the $12,500
  base can help you scan the stars (and maybe find the droids you're
  looking for). In the interests of full disclosure, the mount was
  powered from a Windows laptop, because the company is still working
  on USB device support for the Mac version of Seeker. [JLC]

<http://www.bisque.com/>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/863/biggest_usb_device.jpg>
<http://www.bisque.com/Products/Paramount/>
<http://www.bisque.com/Products/Seeker/>


**Best New Mac** -- Sure, Apple didn't have any new Macs at the show,
  but that's not stopping us from giving out this award to OWC and
  Axiotron, for their ModBook tablet Mac. Not content to wait for
  Apple to produce a tablet Mac (which may never happen), OWC and
  Axiotron teamed up to design a full-fledged tablet Mac using
  technology from tablet company Wacom. The trick with the ModBook is
  that it's not a new Mac as such, but a reconstituted MacBook. OWC
  and Axiotron perform radical surgery on a stock MacBook to add a
  better screen and the pen digitizer from Wacom, and to repackage it
  all in a smooth looking case with the original iSight camera and a
  stylus holder. A built-in GPS is an optional add-on, as is a 6x DVD
  burner with up to 8.5 GB capacity. And if you don't always want to
  control Mac OS X using the stylus and Apple's InkWell technology,
  the ModBook can be attached to VESA-compatible desktop arms and used
  with a Bluetooth keyboard and mouse (or USB devices, since it has
  the same ports as a MacBook). The GPS may be an important addition
  for some mobile professionals for whom location is key data.
  Pre-reserve prices range from $2,200 through $2,700 and all include
  the GPS. Oh, and if you were wondering, the price difference from a
  MacBook is about $1,100. [ACE]

<http://eshop.macsales.com/shop/ModBook>
<http://www.axiotron.com/>


**Cleverest Use of Cardboard** -- From a distance, the booth for
  bag-makers Crumpler seemed to have an interesting texture. Get
  closer, and you discover their 25-foot-square booth was, in fact,
  comprised entirely of cardboard boxes. Metal bars were placed inside
  the open end of some boxes which contained line-drawing pictures of
  animals, looking much like O'Reilly's cover art menagerie. [GF]

<http://www.crumplerbags.com/>
<http://flickr.com/photos/sundry/354629866/>


**Best Use for an old iPod** -- Anyone who supports Mac users needs a
  good utility drive for booting recalcitrant Macs and running disk
  recovery or backup software. You could use Micromat's cute TechTool
  Protege FireWire flash drive, which can boot a Mac and includes
  Micromat's TechTool Pro. Or, if you have an old iPod around, or any
  other hard disk or flash drive, you could use Micromat's new
  ProToGo, which is a software product that helps you turn the device
  of your choice into the equivalent of the TechTool Protege, complete
  with the capability of booting Macs (this is of course dependent on
  individual Macs; PowerPC Macs can't boot from USB, for instance) and
  a collection of Micromat's utility software, including TechTool Pro
  4. ProToGo costs $135, or $87 if you're upgrading from TechTool Pro.
  [ACE]

<http://www.micromat.com/index.php?option=content&task=view&id=34>
<http://www.micromat.com/index.php?option=content&task=view&id=184>


**Best Tchotchkes** -- One indication of the health of the industry is
  in the number of tchotchkes (free giveaways) are available. Google
  handed out socks with the slogan "It doesn't stink" on the bottom,
  while Griffin Technology gave away mints in tins that were
  reminiscent of its iTrip FM transmitter for iPod. CodeWeavers, whose
  CrossOver commercial implementation of the open-source WINE
  environment lets you run Windows applications on your Mac without
  running Windows, gave out a wine stopper.  (Get it? WINE? Get it?)
  And Tolis Group, the vendors of the BRU backup software, gave out a
  yo-yo that lights up when in use; neat, but does a yo-yo really
  signify backup/restore software in a positive manner? Perhaps they
  should have been giving out beer steins instead. [ATL]

<http://googlemac.blogspot.com/>
<http://www.griffintechnology.com/>
<http://www.codeweavers.com/>
<http://www.winehq.org/>
<http://tolisgroup.com/>


Take Control News/22-Jan-07
---------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/8824>

**50%-off Coupon with TidBITS Archive CD** -- For those who missed the
  announcement of our TidBITS Archive CD (see "Introducing the TidBITS
  Archive CD," 2007-01-08, for full details), note that along with
  more than 6,500 articles spanning all 860 issues of TidBITS from
  1990 through 2006, the CD includes a special 50%-off coupon on your
  next Take Control order. Through the end of January, the TidBITS
  Archive CD costs only $29.95, and with the coupon, you could add to
  your Take Control library and end up with a net result of
  essentially getting the TidBITS Archive CD for free.

<http://www.tidbits.com/cd/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8797>


**Review a Book, Get a Free Ebook** -- We were happy to hear from our
  friends at Peachpit Press that Joe Kissell's "Real World Mac
  Maintenance and Backups," which contains "Take Control of
  Maintaining Your Mac" and "Take Control of Mac OS X Backups," went
  into a second printing recently. The book was selling extremely well
  on Amazon.com for a while after it first came out, with very high
  sales rankings. But then Amazon ran out of stock, and with a 1 to 3
  week wait, people stopped ordering, and the book lost its momentum.
  Curses! So, we're trying an experiment to see if we can get Joe's
  book back on track, along with Sharon Zardetto Aker's "Real World
  Mac OS X Fonts," which contains "Take Control of Fonts in Mac OS X"
  and "Take Control of Font Problems in Mac OS X." Here's the deal. If
  you have purchased one of these print books, or one of the ebooks
  included in these print books, and you write a review on Amazon of
  either print book, let me know via email and I'll send you a free
  ebook of your choice.

<http://www.amazon.com/Real-World-Mac-Maintenance-Backups/dp/0321492188/tidbitselectro00/>
<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/maintaining-mac.html?14@@!pt=TRK-0032-TB863-TCNEWS>
<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/backup-macosx.html?14@@!pt=TRK-0014-TB863-TCNEWS>
<http://www.amazon.com/Real-World-Mac-OS-Fonts/dp/0321474015/tidbitselectro00/>
<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/fonts-macosx.html?14@@!pt=TRK-0036-TB863-TCNEWS>
<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/font-problems-macosx.html?14@@!pt=TRK-0037-TB863-TCNEWS>


Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk/22-Jan-07
------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/8825>

**iPhone as an all-in-one remote control** -- Why not use the iPhone
  as a remote-control for your Apple TV, too? This brings up the
  question of whether TV manufacturers are ever going to start
  including the programming software in the sets, versus requiring an
  extra set-top box. (2 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1093/>


**Event-based sounds"** -- Several methods are available for
  performing audible alerts that are linked to computer events. Here's
  how to take advantage of them. (3 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1095/>


**Wireless mouse rollerball; weird Word problem** -- A reader notes a
  peculiar lag when viewing Word documents by scrolling using his
  mouse's scrollbar. (2 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1096/>


**Speculating on Leopard's ship date** -- We had hoped to hear more
  details about Mac OS X 10.5 at Macworld Expo, but Apple kept mum.
  So, based on what's been reported online, when do you think Leopard
  will ship? (10 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1097/>


**Mac-compatible webcams** -- If you're looking for small video
  cameras other than Apple's iSight (which is no longer available),
  here's a place to start, including Mac software that supports most
  Windows-only webcams. (9 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1098/>


**How to "untrust" a WiFi network?** -- Follow these steps to make
  sure your Mac doesn't automatically join a particular local wireless
  network. (4 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1099/>


**Latest Office updates** -- A reader looks for help in determining if
  a font corruption issue has been fixed in the latest version of
  Microsoft Office 2004 for Mac. (1 message)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1100/>


**Apple and the enterprise** -- Did Apple abandon the enterprise
  market, or is the term "enterprise" too hard to pin down? (8
  messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1101/>


**IMAP in the iPhone** -- A reader points out that the "push" IMAP
  email service provided by Yahoo to future iPhone owners is more
  comprehensive than normal IMAP. (2 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1102/>


**Apple TV vs. other video solutions** -- With the imminent release of
  the Apple TV, Elgato Systems is no longer producing its EyeHome
  device. Does this spell doom for other similar products, or does
  some of the limitations in the Apple TV provide a market
  opportunity? (3 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1103/>


**New AirPort Extreme with 802.11n and 5 GHz** -- Will the new AirPort
  Extreme's 5 GHz network frequency interfere with 5 GHz cordless
  phone systems? (2 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1105/>


**ResEdit replacement** -- What alternatives to the vaunted ResEdit
  are available for customizing Mac OS X? (4 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1106/>


**Macworld SF 2007 Superlatives** -- What do you think of our list of
  superlatives from this year's Macworld Expo? Tell us what we missed.
  (1 message)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1107/>


**Two Bucks for 100 Mbps 802.11n Enabler** -- Apple will charge $2 to
  enable 802.11n firmware on some Macs (unless you purchase a new
  AirPort Extreme). The company claims it's due to legal accounting
  rules, but could it be because Apple is being investigated by the
  Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)? (6 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1108/>


$$

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