Jan 24

A friend called the other day because the tip to his wife’s PowerBook G4 had broken off inside the jack. The local Apple-authorized repair shop said it would take a week and cost $65 to fix, and his wife couldn’t be without the machine that long. After discussing some various strategies for moving her data to another machine while it was being repaired, I had a brainstorm and suggested she take it to a jeweler, figuring that they had the tools and experience for working with tiny parts inside watches.

My friend just called back to thank me for the advice, since his wife had gone down to a local jeweler, where the guy at the store thought it was a fascinating challenge and managed to extract the broken-off tip after 30 minutes of painstaking work with tiny tweezers and a magnifying glass. He refused any payment, although she did buy a watch while waiting.

Of course, the other question I asked my friend initially was if his wife would just prefer to hold off for a few weeks and replace the aging PowerBook G4 with a MacBook Air. As happy as she was to have the PowerBook working again, the MacBook Air is now on order.

 

Copyright © 2008 Adam C. Engst. TidBITS is copyright © 2008 TidBITS Publishing Inc. If you’re reading this article on a Web site other than TidBITS.com, please let us know, because if it was republished without attribution, by a commercial site, or in modified form, it violates our Creative Commons License.

Fetch Softworks: Fetch 5.3 has WebView, the easy way
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Also a new look for Leopard, droplet shortcuts, and more.
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Jan 24

Even if I get that new MacBook Air, I won’t be carrying it around in a manila envelope, Steve Jobs’s keynote demonstration notwithstanding (in fact, there’s now a fleece-lined vinyl one, called the AirMail, already in production). Laptop users need a place for a power adapter, cables, and all that other mundane gear we lug around. And while I want a bag with plenty of protective padding and comfortable straps, it should have enough style that I won’t be mistaken for a SWAT team member.

Fortunately, Macworld Expo had no shortage of laptop bags this year, ranging from the fashion-conscious to the eco-sensitive to the user-friendly. Here’s a quick roundup of a few I found particularly impressive. You can see even more bags from Macworld in the accompanying slideshow. Also be sure to read Jeff Carlson’s article “Buying a Laptop Bag” (2004-04-05) for lots of sage advice about how to choose the right bag for your needs. (Hmmm, sage would be a pretty good color for a laptop bag, now that I think about it.)

Great All-round Bags — The thoughtfully designed and attractive fabric bags from Brenthaven, in briefcase, messenger, and backpack styles, are made even more tempting by the their reputation for durability. Brenthaven is constantly updating their line; the nicely sized sling backpack (in the slideshow) won’t be available until May 2008. Both Brenthaven and rival bagmaker Targus (also renowned for durability) are touting their use of environmentally conscious materials and manufacturing processes.

Classic Business BagsClark & Mayfield was back at the show this year with an even greater variety of high-end leather and fabric bags aimed at businesswomen who carry a laptop. This line now includes a rolling bag and leather laptop briefcases for men. While there are other companies aiming at this market, no one does it with such a classic look, featuring designs and workmanship that evoke Coach and Gucci.

Gear Bags — The folks at Naneu got their start making camera bags, and their laptop bags show that experience, with loads of padding and plenty of external securable pockets for small accessories. These laptop bags and briefcases are the answer if you want to tote along bulky accessories such as power supplies or small cameras.

Special-feature Bags — Heading for the Playa? Planning to kayak into the wilds? In addition to iPod and camera boxes, Otterbox makes a waterproof, crushproof laptop case with an internal structure that adjusts to fit your computer precisely. For the off-grid traveler, Voltaic Systems offers a variety of packs and messenger bags equipped with solar panels (capable of producing up to 14.7 watts of power), a battery pack, and adaptors for your gadgets. And for the audio-obsessed, there’s the Boom Bag, a rolling office bag with two speakers, a
sub-woofer, and cables – just add an iPod.

Trendy Bags — Clearly aimed at women who cringe at the thought of schlepping a rectangular black computer case, the luscious Italian leather bags from Urban Junket are great big stylish purses – that just happen to have a secure place for a laptop. Urban Junket also offers the Campomaggi urban gear bag line for men.

From Sacks to Saks — Where fashion trends go, laptop bags follow. The early portable computers appeared during the “dress for success” 1980s. People toted hefty briefcase-style bags, which came in an underwhelming choice of stiff black leather or stiff black synthetic canvas. (And you needed those tough materials because some of the early laptops weighed more than 10 pounds.) As laptops lightened up, so did the bag designs. That meant ballistic nylon briefcases (in colors) and backpacks with padded laptop compartments. Today’s laptop bags continue to shadow fashion trends, from hip, scruffy messenger bags to outsized leather purses. And bags have evolved to address niches: for travel (rolling luggage with
laptop compartments), for photography (laptop/camera bags), and for extreme sports (water-proof and crush-proof cases). The current buzzword is “green,” so, sure enough, major bag manufacturers Targus and Brenthaven are hustling into production lines of eco-conscious laptop bags made with recycled and/or recyclable materials.

What’s ahead for Macworld 2009? Certainly more of the “green” bags – plus we might see solar panel-equipped bags move into the mainstream. And, of course, something that’s bound to be called the “AirBag.”

[Karen Anderson is a Seattle-area writer and ghost-blogger. Her own blogs are Writer Way and Food, Fitness, Fashion.]

 

Copyright © 2008 Karen Anderson. TidBITS is copyright © 2008 TidBITS Publishing Inc. If you’re reading this article on a Web site other than TidBITS.com, please let us know, because if it was republished without attribution, by a commercial site, or in modified form, it violates our Creative Commons License.

Fetch Softworks: Fetch 5.3 has WebView, the easy way
to view files in a browser and copy Web addresses from Fetch.
Also a new look for Leopard, droplet shortcuts, and more.
Download your free trial version! <http://fetchsoftworks.com/>
 

ARTICLE SOURCE

Jan 24

Apple’s iPhone officially entered the corporate world in the United States this week when AT&T announced Enterprise Data Plans available to “corporate responsibility users” with an eligible voice plan. Previously, iPhone service was available only to individual users, who had to register with AT&T using a personal Social Security Number.

Monthly data plans for enterprise iPhone users (which includes corporate, government, and educational institutions) start at $45, which includes unlimited domestic data, 200 SMS messages, and visual voicemail, like the lowest-priced personal plan. (By comparison, the lowest-priced personal iPhone data plan costs $20 on top of an existing voice plan.) Data plans with 1,500 SMS messages per month and unlimited SMS messages cost $55 and $65, respectively. These rates don’t include the monthly cost of the voice plan, which varies widely and is dependent on volume discounts and other enterprise service policies.

Global data plans are available for those who travel outside the United States; a 20MB data plan is available for $25 per month, and a 50MB data plan is available for $60 per month, offering service in 29 countries. (iPhone users have discovered that leaving their phone operating while traveling overseas without such plans can rack up enormous charges.) Enterprise customers must sign up for a new two-year service agreement, or renew their service agreement for two years, in order to be eligible for the iPhone enterprise data plans.

Early enterprise adopters stand to save quite a bit of money; AT&T is offering a $25 per month credit (which will appear on monthly invoices) through the end of 2008 for qualifying users who activate an iPhone Enterprise Data Plan by 31-Mar-08.

 

Copyright © 2008 Mark H. Anbinder. TidBITS is copyright © 2008 TidBITS Publishing Inc. If you’re reading this article on a Web site other than TidBITS.com, please let us know, because if it was republished without attribution, by a commercial site, or in modified form, it violates our Creative Commons License.

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Jan 24

If you have a few minutes to spare, hop over to Flickr to see PaulTheWineGuy’s set of famous works of art, all cleverly modified with digital artifacts of today’s electronic culture. Rodin’s “The Thinker” appears with a Windows hourglass wait cursor, for instance, and HTML table tags are superimposed on a classic Mondrian. Then there’s Jasper Johns’s 1961 map of the United States – complete with Google Maps controls. A few of the images are a bit more subtle (and show a Windows sensibility): Ctrl+C and Ctrl+V have been added to Andy Warhol’s “100 Cans” to apply the current concept of replication to Warhol’s work, and a much-damaged work by Antonello da
Messina has broken-image rectangles overlaid on the parts that lack paint, as though a Web browser had failed to load those parts. The visual puns and trenchant revisions are both amusing and, I suspect, telling commentary on both our electronic culture and the original works.

 

Copyright © 2008 Adam C. Engst. TidBITS is copyright © 2008 TidBITS Publishing Inc. If you’re reading this article on a Web site other than TidBITS.com, please let us know, because if it was republished without attribution, by a commercial site, or in modified form, it violates our Creative Commons License.

Used to working with Microsoft Office Visio on a PC but have a Mac?
ConceptDraw 7 is professional technical drawing and business
graphics software. It supports Leopard and can import MS Visio files.
TidBITS readers save $50! <http://www.conceptdraw.com/tb>

 

ARTICLE SOURCE

Jan 24

Apple has announced the company’s best ever quarterly revenues and earnings, posting revenues of $9.6 billion and a net quarterly profit of $1.58 billion, which comes out to $1.76 per share. In the first quarter of 2007, in comparison, Apple posted revenues of $7.1 billion and a profit of $1 billion – putting this year’s Q1 revenue 35 percent higher than last year’s Q1. Some of that came from improved margins, up to 34.7 percent this quarter from 31.2 percent in the year-ago quarter. International sales helped too, making up 45 percent of quarter’s revenue, up from 42 percent a year ago.

But realistically, Apple just sold boatloads more Macs, shipping 2,319,000 Macs or a massive 44 percent more than last year this time (in terms of revenue, it’s even better, up 47 percent). iPod sales growth was significantly slower, no doubt because every high school and college student already has at least one, at only 5 percent higher than last year’s quarter. Still, Apple sold 22,121,000 iPods, and better margins increased iPod revenue growth by 17 percent over last year’s Q1. Apple also sold 2,315,000 iPhones.

All those sales produced a cash flow from operations of over $2.7 billion, bringing Apple’s cash hoard to a whopping $18.4 billion. That’s just slightly less than Microsoft’s $18.88 billion in cash, and significantly more than Dell’s $12.61 billion and HP’s $11.45 billion. Obviously, I can’t speak for Microsoft, Dell, and HP, all of whom have significantly different competitive situations that might require a lot of cash on hand, but it’s surprising that Apple has continued to build up such a huge cash balance unless the company is anticipating the need to fund a large acquisition, weather some major downturn, or perhaps buy shares back.

As I write this, Apple stock is down more than 18 points in after-hours trading due to the company’s conservative guidance for Q2 2008 – $6.8 billion in revenue and earnings per share of $0.94. Wall Street analysts had expected higher numbers – $6.99 billion and $1.09 per share – presumably basing their estimates on bird entrails and other leading edge indicators. The mismatch between Apple’s projections and the analysts’ estimates apparently results in the stock dropping, although it’s worth noting that since Apple’s Q1 results beat the analyst expectations handily (perhaps due to Apple’s conservative guidance, or to a dearth of the right sort of dead birds), a drop in Apple stock could make for a good buying opportunity.

(For the record, Tonya and I have never owned any Apple stock; aside from the obvious conflict of interest, it would be dangerous to have both our livelihoods and our investments dependent on the same company.)

 

Copyright © 2008 Adam C. Engst. TidBITS is copyright © 2008 TidBITS Publishing Inc. If you’re reading this article on a Web site other than TidBITS.com, please let us know, because if it was republished without attribution, by a commercial site, or in modified form, it violates our Creative Commons License.

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ARTICLE SOURCE

Jan 23

Responding with alacrity to TidBITS Senior Editor Tonya Engst’s piece about the increased number of women in the Macintosh world (or at least attending Macworld Expo – see “More Women at Macworld Expo?,” 2008-01-20), Apple today released a pink iPod nano. The 8 GB iPod nano costs $199, just like all the other colored 8 GB iPod nanos, since Apple knows that women are way too smart to pay more just because they’d prefer pink.

“We’re sure Tonya will appreciate the new color, and we apologize for dragging our heels on releasing the pink iPod nano,” said Greg Joswiak, Apple’s vice president of Worldwide iPod Product Marketing. “We had to get Jonathan Ive to sign off on the exact shade of pink, and it turns out to be harder than you’d expect to color aluminum pink.”

Well, actually, he didn’t say that. His actual quote was, “The pink iPod nano is perfect for people who want a great new color this spring, or who are searching for a special Valentine’s Day gift.” But I know Joz, and I can’t imagine he actually said that, given that he is a verified guy. My money is on the quote having been put in Joz’s mouth by Christine Monaghan, Apple PR’s iPod contact, who I’m willing to bet is a woman and would thus be much more likely to use “a great new color this spring” in a sentence.

And Joz, I’m betting the whole Valentine’s Day gift thing is a hint.

 

Copyright © 2008 Adam C. Engst. TidBITS is copyright © 2008 TidBITS Publishing Inc. If you’re reading this article on a Web site other than TidBITS.com, please let us know, because if it was republished without attribution, by a commercial site, or in modified form, it violates our Creative Commons License.

READERS LIKE YOU! Support TidBITS with a contribution today!
<http://www.tidbits.com/about/support/contributors.html>
Special thanks this week to James Robertson, Michael Delfiner,
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Jan 23

The iPhone’s software update last week offering location finding with a few dozen yards to hundreds of feet (see “iPhone and iPod touch Become Self-Aware,” 2008-01-15) is a harbinger of what we’ll see on more and more cell phones – but also a way to measure how “open” a cell platform, phone, and carrier has become. (For more “open access” and open cell phones, see “Google’s View of Our Cell Phone Future Is an Android, Not a GPhone,” 2007-11-12.)


It’s sometimes hard to come up with concrete examples of how an open network that allows any phone and any software accessing any remote service will differ from existing service offerings. So let me deconstruct the iPhone and its Maps location feature from the 1.1.3 software release.

Explaining How iPhone Maps Finds You — The location feature uses the iPhone’s hardware, software, network connection, and two remote services to calculate latitude and longitude with some knowledge of the margin of error. The iPhone doesn’t include a GPS (global positioning satellite) receiver, as some cell phones sport, but all cell phones have to determine the nearest cell base stations from which they can receive signals, along with the signal strength and unique identifier. A cell phone has to know these details at all times to perform seamless handoffs without dropping voice calls or data connections.

The iPhone also has a Wi-Fi transceiver, which means that the phone can snapshot the set of signals, unique identifiers, and other device information for all Wi-Fi networks within its range. (If you use iStumbler on a Mac, you can see pretty much what an iPhone can pick up and measure without connecting to a network.)

In the current implementation, with the Maps program launched, you tap a small icon in the lower left of the screen, and the current cell tower and Wi-Fi information is transmitted. (As I understand it, if you’re connected via the EDGE network, both cell and Wi-Fi scans are sent via EDGE; if connected via Wi-Fi, the same info is sent over Wi-Fi. You don’t need to be connected to a Wi-Fi network to have Wi-Fi information packaged as part of your location finding.)

Apple’s servers in conjunction with Google for cell tower triangulation and Skyhook Wireless for Wi-Fi locating produce coordinates which are returned to the iPhone’s Map application, which then displays the appropriate location centered within a circle that indicates the expected degree of reliability in distance – a larger circle means a less accurate result, on average. (You can play with Wi-Fi-based location finding under Mac OS X or Windows, too, with Skyhook’s Loki browser plug-in.)

Now think about what’s involved in this: hardware (the cell and Wi-Fi radios), operating system and firmware (drivers that talk to the radios and frameworks that communicate with drivers), application software (the Maps application), and a network service (the GPS-like results produced from the Maps application’s query).

How could this be more open? Let’s look at the pieces.

An Open Location in an Open Cell Phone — Starting with the hardware, an open cell phone could simply offer a slot or even something more primitive that would allow me to insert or solder on a GPS chip or module. This would let me add GPS to a phone that lacks it.

For a phone that includes a GPS radio or that has cell and/or Wi-Fi radios, an open platform would allow me to write software to communicate with it. In a truly open platform, I could even create custom driver software that would allow me to use any radios I chose, or that might allow lower-level access to functions in radios included with the phone, but that the supplied or stock drivers in the operating system didn’t provide. (Imagine a GPS that could produce a timestamp to 10 digits of precision, but the included driver only supported 7 digits.)

Moving up a layer, I should be able to write custom application software on an open platform that would talk to the drivers (custom or stock) and allow me to query any of the hardware on the device. If there were a compass but not a GPS on board, and an accelerometer – a device that records motion as a change – I could potentially track a path without other specialized hardware.

On the open services side, the software I write could talk to any Internet resource that had location information. Potentially, a market could develop for providing me with information based on my location. I wouldn’t have to build the pieces from scratch, but could buy directions from Navteq and Wi-Fi coordinates from Skyhook Wireless, but have the option to go on the cheap, too, to a collaborative system or competitors to the previously mentioned firms.

Location is Just Scratching the Surface — Now you might not think that location finding is very exciting, and many people don’t. But this is just a concrete metaphor – an oxymoron that makes sense here. The bottom-to-top approach works for any kind of hardware (or no hardware at all) coupled with drivers, programs that talk to drivers, and servers that programs talk to.

In a more general example, I could see Kodak introducing a private-label cell phone that they created the optics and camera innards for but left the rest to a partner. The KodakPhone could have the highest quality portable camera electronics, and pair with their own or other services, so that as you take pictures, they’re post-processed with your settings on how to clean up images, and uploaded to their service. (Or uploaded as RAW format files, and processed online via rules you set there.)

A more creative group of people might put together their own, less corporate slick phone, too, that tied in a great camera and an option to upload to any of dozens of online services.

And that’s the beauty of it. If we actually get open access, open platforms, and open services, then all these possibilities could come to pass – and the reign of “you can have it in black, silver, or red, but you can’t do anything else you want with it” could come to an end.

 

Copyright © 2008 Glenn Fleishman. TidBITS is copyright © 2008 TidBITS Publishing Inc. If you’re reading this article on a Web site other than TidBITS.com, please let us know, because if it was republished without attribution, by a commercial site, or in modified form, it violates our Creative Commons License.

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ARTICLE SOURCE

Jan 23

Eudora vs. Mac’s Mail — A lack of authentication is the likely culprit for a reader who can’t get Eudora to work outside his home network. (3 messages)

When is a Warranty Not a Warranty? Mark Anbinder’s experience with a failed hard drive and subsequent frustration leads to a discussion of warranty repairs (and related horror stories). (7 messages)

Dock Icons Not Default — For some reason, icons on a reader’s Dock have shifted. Perhaps the icon caches have become corrupted? (4 messages)

Monochrome Laser MFC to share Mac/Windows? Readers share their experiences with multi-function printers (don’t forget to consider the costs of toner replacements!). (9 messages)

New Mac User (not until I get my Mac) — A person interested in switching to the Mac is contemplating a Mac mini. Has the compact Mac been abandoned by Apple, or is it still a worthwhile machine? (22 messages)

Broadband Internet w/o DSL or Cable — A reader sets up EVDO Internet service in a house that is out of range of DSL or cable service. (2 messages)

Lost Finder sounds in Leopard — The sound effects in Leopard’s Finder have disappeared for a few readers. Where did they go? (4 messages)

multi-touch trackpad — The new multi-touch trackpad found on the MacBook Air is impressive, but will that functionality cross over into other Mac laptops? Are the features just in software, or does the new trackpad include special hardware not found in other models? (7 messages)

MacBook Air — The MacBook Air comes with a cleaning cloth, presumably because it has a glossy screen. Other recent Macs with glossy screens have also included similar cloths. (14 messages)

An iPod Touch question — The new applications available for the iPod touch could be enough to compel a reader to finally ditch his Palm handheld. Also, people discuss ways of storing secure passwords on the iPhone and iPod touch. (14 messages)

So, how is Time Capsule different from an Airport Extreme + Drive? Readers discuss Time Capsule’s disk mode as well as the lack of support for Time Machine backup functionality to a hard disk attached to a regular AirPort Extreme. (11 messages)

iTunes Movie Rentals and Apple TV Take 2 — A reader disputes our idea that a $99 Apple TV would be a good idea. (1 message)

Movie rentals — Do the new terms of service of iTunes movie rentals prohibit watching movies stored on an iPod from playing on a connected television? Or is the Apple TV the only route to the TV? (1 message)

Folder actions — A reader tries to use a folder action to sort a folder’s icons, but the solution may lie in just setting that folder’s view preferences. (2 messages)

Sharing security — Are connections made between Macs secure? We look at AFP and Screen Sharing, and discuss the merits of public key authentication. (8 messages)

No CableCard for the Apple TV — Putting a CableCard into the Apple TV would convince one reader to ditch his DVR, but Apple clearly doesn’t want to play along with the cable industry. (12 messages)

Time Capsule and Its Associated Rage Factor — Several people bought AirPort Extreme base stations and external USB hard drives in anticipation of Time Machine, but that feature was pulled before Leopard’s release. Is Time Capsule a worthy replacement? (5 messages)

The new Cube? Stunning design, less power, and a price premium: is the MacBook Air the next Power Mac G4 Cube? (20 messages)

AVCHD support — Final Cut Express 4 can only import AVCHD video on an Intel-based Mac, but a program called Voltaic can do the necessary conversion on PowerPC-based Macs as well. (3 messages)

Word 2008 and the Paste Plain Text Dance — Readers offer suggestions for utilities that can paste unformatted text. (4 messages)

 

Copyright © 2008 Jeff Carlson. TidBITS is copyright © 2008 TidBITS Publishing Inc. If you’re reading this article on a Web site other than TidBITS.com, please let us know, because if it was republished without attribution, by a commercial site, or in modified form, it violates our Creative Commons License.

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Jan 23

The Macintosh industry continues to grow and gain steam, but it’s no longer purely following in Apple’s footsteps, a significant new trend that became evident at last week’s Macworld Expo in San Francisco. The last few years of the show have all been upbeat, energetic, and increasingly large, and this year was no exception. But where this year’s Expo diverged was in the extent to which the exhibitors are capitalizing on the overall success of the Mac and the iPhone but showing products and services in areas that Apple has left more or less untouched.

As a starting point, consider Apple’s own keynote announcements. The updates to the iPhone, iPod touch, and Apple TV all underscored Apple’s ever-increasing focus on consumer electronics, and the addition of movie rentals to the iTunes Store was the latest salvo in Apple’s battle to maintain its position as the dominant provider of online entertainment. The MacBook Air, on the other hand, supports Apple’s core Macintosh business and may prove more influential than its somewhat anemic specs would indicate due to the attraction sub-notebooks have for travelling executives. Time Capsule is interesting mostly in the way it aids Time Machine backups; it supports the Apple backup story in ways few third-party developers have been able to do
so far.

But despite the numerous vendors showing iPod and iPhone cases at Macworld Expo, and a wide variety of iPod-compatible speaker systems, numerous companies exhibited products that have little to do with Apple’s primary markets.

For instance, there was much speculation before the show that Apple would announce a tablet Mac or scaled-up iPod touch, but not only did that not happen, another company – Axiotron – finally shipped their long-simmering ModBook (announced at last year’s Macworld Expo), which converts a standard MacBook into the much-desired tablet Mac. Perhaps Apple considers the tablet Mac market too much of a niche, but the crowds around the Axiotron booth clearly wanted to get their hands on one.

Enterprise companies like Iron Mountain (organization-wide backup) and IBM (corporate databases) were out in force at the show, despite Apple’s focus on the consumer world. The Iron Mountain rep told me that the company didn’t have any particular intention of creating a Macintosh client for their backup system until their enterprise customers started buying Apple laptops and asking to have them backed up with the rest of the company’s Windows-based computers. In the past, companies would get into the Macintosh space because they were passionate about the Mac; now we’re seeing companies almost
forced to create Mac products purely because there is a customer base to satisfy and money to be made.

We even saw companies like Polar Bear Farm showing iPhone applications in advance of Apple’s release of the iPhone software development kit (SDK). This is a company that can’t even use the iPhone without jailbreaking and unlocking it, since Apple doesn’t sell the iPhone in New Zealand yet. The company was demonstrating applications that can’t be purchased, based on a business model – how Apple will allow iPhone applications to be sold – that remains unknown. (And no, there are no polar bears native to New Zealand – they live only in the northern hemisphere.)

Other companies showed products that were even further afield. CodeFlare’s TileStack.com makes it possible to create Web applications from old HyperCard stacks; the company’s HyperTalk compiler also enables the creation of entirely new Web applications. (For those who haven’t been using the Mac as long as we’ve been writing about it, HyperCard was an innovative “software erector set” created by Bill Atkinson and distributed for a time with every Mac; we published TidBITS in HyperCard format for the first two years. Apple never understood the utility and popularity of HyperCard and let it fade away many years ago despite impassioned pleas from the HyperCard developer community.) Another company, reQall, was showing a technology that enables you to create to-dos by voice recognition on a toll-free telephone number (you could also use a Web site); it could then remind you of your tasks via email, instant message, SMS, RSS, or a Web interface. The only connection with Apple was that you could use reQall on an iPhone – that’s pretty tenuous.

The industry’s different beat extends to the traditional Macworld Expo schedule as well. Although the show date has been known for at least a year and was even a week later than normal this year, a surprising number of companies were showing products that weren’t shipping. EMC was perhaps the most notable among this group, showing only screenshots of Retrospect X and promising a public beta for the third quarter of 2008. There were also plenty of other examples: Parallels Server and VMware Fusion Server, which enable users to virtualize multiple
copies of Leopard Server, were in beta and preview releases, respectively. DisplayLink’s product for adding up to four monitors to any Mac via USB 2.0 clearly worked, but was far too slow for actual usage; the company anticipates a usable release in the first half of 2008. The iTornado device for easily transferring data between Macs and PCs (or between two Macs) is slated to ship in March 2008. Now Software’s Nighthawk update to Now Up-to-Date & Contact is now slated for release by the middle of 2008. Iron Mountain is beta
testing their Connected Backup Mac client. And so on…

Clearly, appearing at Macworld Expo was deemed important enough to justify the significant cost and effort, but seemingly not sufficiently important to ensure that the products were ready in time to be purchased at the show. Perhaps, and I realize I may be stretching to make a point here, just as we’re seeing the Mac industry exerting an increasing independence from Apple, we’re also seeing the industry treat Macworld Expo more as face time than as the drop-dead date for shipping new products.

In the end, seeing all these companies extending the Macintosh (and iPhone) platform in ways that Apple hasn’t is indication of the ever-increasing strength of the industry. It has been many years since I’ve seen such a broad representation of companies at Macworld, and that’s good for everyone involved: users, developers, and even Apple itself.

 

Copyright © 2008 Adam C. Engst. TidBITS is copyright © 2008 TidBITS Publishing Inc. If you’re reading this article on a Web site other than TidBITS.com, please let us know, because if it was republished without attribution, by a commercial site, or in modified form, it violates our Creative Commons License.

Fetch Softworks: Fetch 5.3 has WebView, the easy way
to view files in a browser and copy Web addresses from Fetch.
Also a new look for Leopard, droplet shortcuts, and more.
Download your free trial version! <http://fetchsoftworks.com/>
 

ARTICLE SOURCE

Jan 23

Eudora vs. Mac’s Mail — A lack of authentication is the likely culprit for a reader who can’t get Eudora to work outside his home network. (3 messages)

When is a Warranty Not a Warranty? Mark Anbinder’s experience with a failed hard drive and subsequent frustration leads to a discussion of warranty repairs (and related horror stories). (7 messages)

Dock Icons Not Default — For some reason, icons on a reader’s Dock have shifted. Perhaps the icon caches have become corrupted? (4 messages)

Monochrome Laser MFC to share Mac/Windows? Readers share their experiences with multi-function printers (don’t forget to consider the costs of toner replacements!). (9 messages)

New Mac User (not until I get my Mac) — A person interested in switching to the Mac is contemplating a Mac mini. Has the compact Mac been abandoned by Apple, or is it still a worthwhile machine? (22 messages)

Broadband Internet w/o DSL or Cable — A reader sets up EVDO Internet service in a house that is out of range of DSL or cable service. (2 messages)

Lost Finder sounds in Leopard — The sound effects in Leopard’s Finder have disappeared for a few readers. Where did they go? (4 messages)

multi-touch trackpad — The new multi-touch trackpad found on the MacBook Air is impressive, but will that functionality cross over into other Mac laptops? Are the features just in software, or does the new trackpad include special hardware not found in other models? (7 messages)

MacBook Air — The MacBook Air comes with a cleaning cloth, presumably because it has a glossy screen. Other recent Macs with glossy screens have also included similar cloths. (14 messages)

An iPod Touch question — The new applications available for the iPod touch could be enough to compel a reader to finally ditch his Palm handheld. Also, people discuss ways of storing secure passwords on the iPhone and iPod touch. (14 messages)

So, how is Time Capsule different from an Airport Extreme + Drive? Readers discuss Time Capsule’s disk mode as well as the lack of support for Time Machine backup functionality to a hard disk attached to a regular AirPort Extreme. (11 messages)

iTunes Movie Rentals and Apple TV Take 2 — A reader disputes our idea that a $99 Apple TV would be a good idea. (1 message)

Movie rentals — Do the new terms of service of iTunes movie rentals prohibit watching movies stored on an iPod from playing on a connected television? Or is the Apple TV the only route to the TV? (1 message)

Folder actions — A reader tries to use a folder action to sort a folder’s icons, but the solution may lie in just setting that folder’s view preferences. (2 messages)

Sharing security — Are connections made between Macs secure? We look at AFP and Screen Sharing, and discuss the merits of public key authentication. (8 messages)

No CableCard for the Apple TV — Putting a CableCard into the Apple TV would convince one reader to ditch his DVR, but Apple clearly doesn’t want to play along with the cable industry. (12 messages)

Time Capsule and Its Associated Rage Factor — Several people bought AirPort Extreme base stations and external USB hard drives in anticipation of Time Machine, but that feature was pulled before Leopard’s release. Is Time Capsule a worthy replacement? (5 messages)

The new Cube? Stunning design, less power, and a price premium: is the MacBook Air the next Power Mac G4 Cube? (20 messages)

AVCHD support — Final Cut Express 4 can only import AVCHD video on an Intel-based Mac, but a program called Voltaic can do the necessary conversion on PowerPC-based Macs as well. (3 messages)

Word 2008 and the Paste Plain Text Dance — Readers offer suggestions for utilities that can paste unformatted text. (4 messages)

 

Copyright © 2008 Jeff Carlson. TidBITS is copyright © 2008 TidBITS Publishing Inc. If you’re reading this article on a Web site other than TidBITS.com, please let us know, because if it was republished without attribution, by a commercial site, or in modified form, it violates our Creative Commons License.

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