In this Issue Monthly Meeting
Transcription
In this Issue Monthly Meeting
Monthly Meeting January 28, 2004 The Apple Store Westfarms Mall Panther demo, hands-on G5 trials, great deals, etc. NEWSLETTER OF CONNECTICUT MACINTOSH CONNECTION, INC. Danger! iPod Could Be Hazardous To Your Health! Mouse Tales By Don Dickey, president W h e n eve r a g o o d d e a l appears, I often call Joe Arcuri and ask him to “talk me out of it” if he can. He sometimes does the same with me. Simultaneous failures led us to both purchase Umax clones and scanners, Wallstreet PowerBook G3s, Toshiba M4 digital cameras, PowerBook G4s, PowerBoy drive enclosures, and most recently Canon LiDE30 scanners. We are each other’s most expensive friend! A couple of months ago, similar simultaneous failures caused us both to purchase 10gb iPods from Apple.com for $169 each complete with remote and carry case. “Such a deal”...or so I thought. The iPod was going to be a Christmas present for my wife Joyce. (She works with Joe’s wife at Bristol-Myers Squibb Company in Wallingford. In fact, that’s how Joe and I met... through our wives.) With the long commute from West Hartford to Wallingford, Joyce often uses the travel time to listen to audio books. She recently acquired a lengthy book that came on 25 CDs, but fortunately a friend “ripped” them to MP3 which then fit on a single CD. Unfortunately, Joyce had no way to listen to MP3s in the car. I made the decision to give her the iPod at her birthday in early October JANUARY, 2004 instead of making her wait to Christmas for it. After all, if I didn’t, I would have to burn 25 CDs so she could listen to the new book! There was a single condition to my gift, however. The iPod I ordered arrived a couple of days before Joe’s, so one morning I met him and his daughter Savannah for breakfast and brought along the iPod to show him. On the way over to Avon I realized just how distracting the iPod could be and the inclination to play with it while driving. So, I gave the iPod to Joyce under the condition that she never look at it while driving. She had to start her book (or music) while parked and turn it off while parked... and use only the remote control to adjust the volume or control play. I’ll bet you can tell where I’m heading... right? Well, this past Thursday evening Joyce had an Adult Ed class at the local high school. Just when I expected to hear her coming into the house, the phone rang. It was her...reporting that she needed some help as she had two flat tires on her PT Cruiser. I grabbed my portable floodlight, a pair of extra jacks, and headed over to mount a rescue. I expected to see a pile of glass or nails in the road that might have caused her malady, but the road 1 surface was clear. Inspection of the car revealed the side walls on both passenger tires were torn, and one rim was badly chewed up. She had obviously tangled both right wheels with the curb, but why? Answer: iPod distraction. Before shelling out $640 for a new chrome plated alloy rim and half that for a pair of new tires, I realized just how lucky we were. This was a lesson she walked away from. Had it happened on Interstate 91 at 65 miles per hour, things could have been much more tragic, to say the least. Needless to say, the cassette adapter for the iPod no longer lives in the PT Cruiser, and I may be burning some MP3s to audio CD. I thought I owed it to the membership to point out just how captivating an iPod can be. The motto of this story is, “Leave home without it!” In this Issue Mouse Tales......................................... 1 911 by Chris Breen.............................. 2 OSX System Enhancers .......................3 Dye Sublimation Printers..................... 4 Panther Makes PDFs ............................5 Heartwarming Technology ...................6 Download of the Month .......................6 Panther Book Reviews .........................7 Meeting Photos.....................................7 Web Picks of the Month ...................... 8 User Group Specials.............................9 Meetings & Club News ......................11 Mac 911: Help Desk by Christopher Breen Editor Deena Quilty Content Contributors Don Dickey Contributing Authors Rich Lenoce Designer George Maciel Photographers John Scott Jack Bass Publisher Connecticut Macintosh Connection, Inc. 41 Crossroads Plaza PMB 1984 West Hartford, CT 06117 Printer Budget Printers 1718 Park Street Hartford, CT 06106 We welcome submissions from members! Please submit articles by first of the month for inclusion in our newsletter. There is much talent in our group; it would be great to have several member articles in each issue. If you’re vexed by menu-bar items that won’t go away and the hard-drive space annexed by unnecessary language files, this month’s Mac 911 is for you. Join me as I detail handy methods for removing extraneous items. I also address syncing e-mail with Palms and converting audio files for Final Cut Pro. Ejecting Eject Rob Griffiths describes how to add an Eject icon to the Mac’s menu bar in “Mac OS X Hints” (Secrets, August 2003). But he didn’t provide instructions for removing it. Please advise. — Matt Palomares, Asheville, NC To remove almost any item from the Finder’s menu bar (except commands such as File, Edit, and View, which you can’t remove by this method), just 1-click on the item you’d like to eliminate and drag it to the Desktop. The resulting puff of smoke and “whoosh” sound effect indicate that the menu item has hit the road. Note that this procedure doesn’t trash the original MenuExtra plug-in, it merely removes its icon from the menu bar. You can also use this shortcut to drag items to a new position on the menu bar. Lost Languages The tip for freeing up disk space by deleting language files was helpful (“Mac OS X Hints,” Secrets, August 2003). Can I do the same kind of thing by using Find to locate the offending language files (searching for da.lproj, for example) and deleting them all at once? — Mei Chau Hayes, Bedford, NH Although you can find such .lproj files with the Finder’s Find command, you can’t throw them away because you don’t have the proper permissions to do so. Many of these files are owned by the root user and are forbidden to you. Thankfully, a host of free utilities can strip extraneous language files from OS X volumes. Among them are Mike Bombich’s DeLocalizer (http://software.bombich .com), Joshua Schrier’s Monolingual 2 (http://homepage.mac.com/jschrier/index .html), and Philippe Hupe’s Youpi Optimizer (http://perso.club-internet.fr/ phupe/english/YOIndex.html). Portable Post Office I sync Microsoft Entourage with my Palm Tungsten T and my Mac. This is great for my contacts but not for e-mail. How can I sync my e-mail with the Palm so that I can work with it while I’m offline? — Eli Zakay, Macworld.com forums For this kind of thing, I use Ligature Technologies’ Mail Courier ($25; www.ligaturetech.com). Mail Courier is made up of a conduit, the Ligature Mail application that you install on your Palm, and an AppleScript that copies mail between the devices. Within Palm’s HotSync Manager (in the Conduit Settings window) you configure the program to synchronize Entourage’s e-mail database on the Mac and the Palm, overwrite the messages on the Palm with those on the Mac, or overwrite the messages on the Mac with those on the Palm. In Ligature Mail you browse your Entourage e-mail, reply to it, and create new messages. The next time you run HotSync, any messages you create on the Palm are copied to your Mac, ready for sending from Entourage. Ligature Mail displays only text and doesn’t synchronize attachments, and each message has a size limit of 32K (anything larger will be truncated). Mail Courier is a viable solution to your problem only if you regularly toss out your old e-mail. The program doesn’t let you choose which e-mail messages it synchronizes — it’s either all the mail in your Inbox, Outbox, Deleted Items, Filed Mail, Drafts, and Sent Items mailboxes, or nothing. That’s perfectly ducky with me when I’m on the road with my PowerBook — which holds just the e-mail I need for my travels — but I’d never use it at home, where my Entourage Inbox contains thousands of messages. iPod Is as iPod Does Before I sold my iMac G4, I installed Jaguar on my 30GB iPod and moved most of the contents of my iMac’s hard drive to it. When I need a Mac, I borrow my roommate’s PowerBook and boot from the iPod. However, I would still like to use the iPod as an iPod — sync my contacts, calendars, and music. Is this possible when you’re booting a computer from the iPod? — Greg Lindus, Fort Collins, Colorado Continued on page 3 Continued from page 2 Sure, a booted iPod is more than happy to perform its primary functions. Bear in mind, though, that if the iPod’s music library is linked to your old iMac, you’ll lose your songs if you allow the PowerBook to automatically update the iPod. For this reason, you should configure the iPod for manual updating. the file to CD and then import it into iTunes as an AIFF file, but why bother when iMovie can convert the file for you? To choose this option, open iTunes, click on the iPod’s icon in the Source list, click on the iPod Preferences icon that appears at the bottom right of the iTunes window, and, in the resulting iPod Preferences window, enable the Manually Manage Songs And Playlists option. To add songs to your iPod, drag them from the iTunes library to the iPod (or to a playlist on the iPod). Open a new iMovie project and click on the Audio button. Drag the song you want from the iTunes Library window into the timeline. Save the project and then choose Export from the File menu. Choose To QuickTime from the Export pop-up menu and Expert Settings from the Formats popup menu. Click on the Export button and, in the resulting Save Exported File As dialog box, choose Sound To AIFF from the Export pop-up menu. Click on Save to convert the movie to an AIFF sound file. When the conversion is complete, quit iMovie and import the converted sound file into Final Cut Pro. — Eric Dietrich, Kettering, Ohio Camera Capers Unsolicited Advice When I connect my digital camera to my Mac via USB, Apple’s iPhoto automatically opens. I use Adobe Photoshop to manipulate my photos and would like it to open when I connect the camera. I’ve explored both iPhoto’s preferences and System Preferences to find a way to achieve this, but I’ve been unsuccessful. Can you help? — Robert Steven Connett, Mount Washington, CA You’re right to look to a preference to direct Photoshop to open when you connect your camera, but you’ve missed the appropriate application. That application is Image Capture (found inside OS X’s Applications folder). Launch Image Capture, choose Preferences from the Image Capture menu, and in the resulting window select Other from the Camera Preferences pop-up menu. In the sheet that appears, navigate to your copy of Photoshop, select it, and click on Open. When you connect your camera in the future, Photoshop should launch. Tip of the Month You want to include that great tune you purchased from the iTunes Music Store in a video you’re editing in Final Cut Pro 4. But Final Cut Pro won’t import the file, and QuickTime Pro can’t convert a protected file into the required AIFF format. You could burn If, like me, you tend to visit the same collection of Web sites each morning, the following technique will save you multiple trips to Safari’s Bookmarks menu. Launch Safari and make sure the Enable Tabbed Browsing option is selected in the Tabs section of Safari’s preferences. Click on the Bookmarks button and create a new folder (1shift-N). Give the folder a descriptive name (mine is called Morning Mix), and copy the bookmarks of your favorite Web sites into it. Click on the Bookmarks Bar entry in the Collections column of the Bookmarks window, and drag your new folder into Safari’s main window. Enable the Auto-Tab option next to the folder in this window. When you next sit down at your Mac, click on this folder (which now appears in the Bookmarks Bar) and howl exultantly as each site within the folder opens in a separate tab. Macworld contributing editor Chris Breen is the author of Macworld’s tips and troubleshooting column, “Mac 911,” as well as Secrets of the iPod: Second Edition and Mac 911 (Peachpit Press). Find Chris’ books at w w w. a m a z o n . c o m a n d w w w. peachpit. com. User Group Special: Get 12 issues of Macworld for $12! Subscribe today at www.macworld.com/dollarperissue 3 System Enhancers for OS X by Don Dickey, president As nice as OS X is, I’ve found a few cool little applications that make it even better I’d like to share with you. First off, if you attended a recent CMC meeting, you no doubt saw a calendar right on my OS X desktop. It’s there all the time and automatically updates itself. Desktop Calendar also puts the Month/Date in the OSX Dock. If you’re like me and have your Dock set to “autohide,” you’ll be pleased to find that your download also included DesktopCalendar_ SB. This version puts the Month/Date in the menu bar instead, just like you had in OS 9. You’ll be able to see the date without having to click the time in the menu bar! Find it using VersionTracker.com by searching for “DesktopCalendar.” Sometimes I hit the power button to startup my Mac and go to the kitchen for a cup of coffee. To let me know my Mac is booted up and ready for me, I use a program called Classic Startup Sound. All this does is play a sound as soon as bootup and login have completed. It comes with a built-in sound, but you can easily change it to one of your own as long as you name your sound file “defaultsound” (one word, no quotes, remove its extension if it has one) and stick it in the folder with the application. Another application called Quick Startup Sound does essentially the same thing. Since OS X is multi-threaded, you can even get to work while your sound plays if you choose a long song! Find either on VersionTracker.com The last little program I’ll mention today is Sharing Menu. This program puts a widget in your menu bar to turn sharing ON or OFF. This is great if you like to leave sharing OFF most of the time (to save system resources or for security purposes). It makes it easy to toggle it back and forth without making the trip to System Preferences. These three applications are now fully compatible with both Panther and Jaguar. I added all three to my Login Items so they run on bootup and login automatically. Enjoy! Digital Photography Are You Ready for a Dye Sublimation Printer? By Rich Lenoce Three years ago, I purchased a $199 photo-quality ink jet printer – it was quickly relegated to the basement. I was never happy with the quality. Many photos showed bands of lines (banding), inks would smear when touched, black and white prints always had a bluish cast, photos would fade in a matter of months when hung on the refrigerator, and the printer needed to be calibrated and aligned for proper color reproduction. The effort to get a good print was trying my patience. Two months later a “new line” of improved printers would be released claiming to fix some of the problems but spending another $200 for what I consider to be bug fixes was out of the question. I switched to iPhoto’s on-line print ordering but as someone who once had his own darkroom, the urge to print at home was still there. I’ve since been waiting for a technology that resolved ink jet issues, not with improvements and patches, but a technology that is photo-ready, providing ease of use and the highest quality, at prices comparable to ink jets. That technology is here, and it’s called dye sublimation. For years, graphics professionals have used expensive dye sublimation printers to print high quality archival photographs from digital images but the printers started at $10,000 and prints were $20 or more each. Dramatic advances in technology have lowered prices to consumer levels. Dye sublimation brings the absolutely stunning quality of a highend photo lab–at ink jet prices. How does dye sublimation work? Ink jet printers release colored inks from cartridges in dot patterns on to a paper’s surface. Dye sublimation is a continuous tone thermal transfer process that uses no dots or ink cartridges but instead uses a heated print head to transfer cyan, magenta, yellow and black ink from a ribbon into the paper. During the final stage of printing, a clear laminate coating is applied to protect the paper and inks from ultra violet light, humidity and physical damage. The dye sublimation process has several advantages. First, the continuous tone is more akin in appearance to true photographs, providing photo-quality resolution and color that perfectly matches the original. Black and white images remain true without the colorcast problem that has plagued most ink jets. The edges of objects in a dye sublimation print remain sharp and don’t exhibit the softening or dithering that ink jet prints display caused by the ink dots blending together. The problem of color banding is also eliminated. Dye sublimation is a simpler process than ink-jet printing, requiring no alignment or calibration by a computer, so no computer is required! Most printers can be unplugged from the computer and can be used standalone by importing images directly from a compact flash, multimedia card or memory stick or directly from the camera. The printers can be powered from a battery, car cigarette lighter, a laptop’s USB connection or a portable AC adapter. Canon’s $150 CP200 is completely portable and is barely larger then the 4" X 6" prints it produces. 4 It even fits in a camera bag with the camera and produces outstanding photos quickly—about 65 seconds— with the touch of a button. Since there are no multiple ink cartridges, only a printer ribbon housed in a single cartridge, installation is uncomplicated. Also, because dye sublimation printers don’t need all of the bells and whistles to align, size and color calibrate their prints, their print drivers are very basic making each and every printer Mac OS compatible! Finally, dye sublimation prints have the potential to last longer. Since the paper receives a clear laminate coating during the final stage of printing, the dyes are protected from air, humidity and ultraviolet light that cause color ink jet prints to fade. This also provides a layer of protection from physical damage. Though manufacturers of ink jets have made tremendous improvements in producing archival quality images, the inks still reside on the surface of the paper where they can be damaged by the environment, poor handling or storage. Holding a dye sublimation print, it is nearly impossible to tell the difference between it and a high quality professionally processed photo. Dye sublimation printers have been more expensive because of the heated print head. Recently, prices have dropped to be competitive with the high-end ink jet printers and in some cases cost less. Prices start at around $150 for a small 4" X 6" photo printer and go up in price based on the maximum size of the prints. An 8" X 10" dye sublimation printer costs around $269, less than the price of a top of the line ink jet. These are certainly higher than the inexpensive photo-quality ink jet printers we’re used to, but are more comparable in price and exceed the performance of many high-end ink jet printers. Prices are dropping rapidly Continued on page 5 Continued from page 4 as more manufacturers are offering more models. Once the printer is purchased, dye sublimation prints cost about 50 cents per print, comparable to a professional photo print and it would be hard for anyone to tell the difference. And the accuracy of dye sublimation printing means less wasted paper and ink, so if you are put off by the higher cost of the printer, it should pay for itself in cost savings. Manufacturers of consumer dye sublimation printers include Canon, Sony and Olympus. One drawback is that dye sublimation printers are photo-only, and are not recommended for doing text. You’ll Panther Makes PDFs Press Worthy! By Rich Lenoce Since the introduction of OS X, Apple has touted its ability to save files from any application as a PDF from its print dialog window, adding full cross platform compatibility for viewing documents and a superior method of WYSWYG printing. But is this “Save as PDF...” feature in OS X truly “press-worthy” ? Can these PDFS meet commercial standards? At first glance, the answer may seem to be “no.” The standard out-of-the-box “Save as PDF...” feature is generated by OS X’s still need an ink jet ($40+) or laser ($199) to print text. I have had no trouble finding and ordering the paper and ribbon cartridges on the Internet, but I have had trouble locating them at local stores. That should change as they grow in popularity. When shopping for a dye sublimation printer, you will notice the specifications are different than their ink jet counterparts. Printer manufacInkjet or turers for both ink jets Dye-Sub and dye sublimation printers specify resoluPrinter? tion in dots per inch, but due to the nature of the continuous tone process, the dpi is far less for dye sublimation then it is for an ink jet yet the quality is as good or better. A 300- Quartz graphic engine and creates what is essentially a screen snapshot of the document to be saved. This method is not compliant with the full PDF/X-3 print standard that will RIP correctly on commercial PostScript devices, nor will it meet the proper preflight criteria. Even if this PDF is run through Adobe’s PDF Distiller, it would not be “press worthy,” since its origin is still a screen snapshot. However, a hidden feature in Panther adds a very sophisticated processing feature that can make a document as press worthy as any from Adobe InDesign, Illustrator or Acrobat, but this feature needs to be turned on using the ColorSync Utility found in the Applications: Utilities folder. To make a PDF/X-3 a press worthy document, you need to first 5 dpi dye sublimation specification equates to the best photo-quality ink jets. To truly compare the two technologies, you’ll need to see both printers in action and compare the same prints side by side. I have found my $150 Canon gives me photostore quality with ink jet convenience. Though it only produces 4 x 6 prints, I use iPhoto’s ordering feature for the occasional large print. Best of all, the printer takes up little space and can be stored away in small carrying case when I’m not printing photos. create a folder called PDF Services in your OS X System Library folder (not in the user folder). Launch ColorSync Utility and select the Filters button in the ToolBar. Select PDF in the Filter details bar. Add (+) a profile and from the pull-down menu select PDF/X-3. Next, select the button called Domains in the Filter defaults bar and check “PDF Workflow.” Now the “Save as PDF...”will no longer merely record screen data as a PDF, but will be the equivalent of saving or exporting a PDF through one of Adobe’s own products such as InDesign, Acrobat or Illustrator. Now you have the capability of producing a press-worthy document from any application–even Microsoft Word–with the exact same features found in Adobe’s own PDF authoring applications! Heartwarming Technology From the Desk of David Pogue: I took last Thursday off from writing this column, and you took last Thursday off from reading it. But I have a Thanksgiving thought to share, even though it’s about something that happened two weeks ago. I was in London at a computer conference. I was jet lagged, on the verge of a cold and — after nearly a week away — missing my wife and two young children. Following a talk, I asked some stragglers in the auditorium if there was anywhere I could get online to check my e-mail. A young man named Tim Haigh offered to show me to a coffee shop a few blocks away that had wireless Internet access. Tim and I paid our $8 for the hour, bought fizzy lemon sodas, popped open our PowerBooks and began to surf. As we chatted, he mentioned that he often sat in this very coffee shop and conducted video chats with a buddy in the States, using an Apple iSight. The iSight is a compact, tubular, highquality video camera, about the size of a Hostess Ho-Ho. It has a built-in microphone and lens cover. It has no power cord of its own; it connects to a Macintosh with a single FireWire cable. As long as you both have broadband Internet connections, you and another iSight (or camcorder) owner can conduct a videoconference. like and very little delay. It’s absolutely nothing like the crude, jerky, stuttering, massively delayed video you may have tried with cheap Web cams. In any case, I perked right up when Tim mentioned his video chats, because I had an iSight, too, perched on my screen back home. I had no idea you could use it across the Atlantic. Indeed you can, Tim said — in fact, he carries his iSight around with him. “You mean you have it with you right now?” I exclaimed. “Can I borrow it?” It was about 5:30 p.m., meaning that it was 12:30 p.m. at home. On the chance that my wife was at her computer, I fired off an e-mail to her, suggesting that we try out an intercontinental video call. It took a few minutes for me to explain to her, by furious back-and-forth email messages, how to open iChat and start up the video link. (Most of the time was spent with me, a color-blind husband, imploring her to click the “orange camcorder icon,” which turns out to be green.) technological miracle before them, which I found tremendously reassuring; I could see for myself that none of the traveling dad’s worst nightmares had come true. We caught up for awhile; I told a silly bedtime story to the kids; we showed each other how it was dark out in England, but still bright at home. Finally, after about 20 minutes, we “hung up.” There’s a lot of junk in technology, a lot of hassle and frustration, a lot of disappointment. But this moment was like a TV commercial. It was an emotional, powerful, simple, perfect example of how technology can change a moment, solve a problem and despite the gulf of time and distance, bring you face to face with the people you love. Visit David Pogue on the Web at: http://www.davidpogue.com © Copyright 2003 The New York Times Company Download of the Month submitted by Debi Foss And then, suddenly, there it was: My wife Jennifer’s live image and her voice, transmitted in real time 3,500 miles across the globe — instantly, crystal clear and, by the way, free. I paraded around the coffee shop with my laptop and the iSight, showing her the local ambiance. (Jennifer, grinning: “Hey, buy me one of those chocolate croissants!”) Maybe I was just overtired and sentimental, but it was an almost overwhelming experience. She rounded up the kids. They didn’t seem to grasp the full scope of the The quality is excellent: smooth motion, full screen if you 6 http://www.stupendoussoftware.com/ Tutorials.html Eight free iMovie tutorials from Stupendous Software. With the growth of the use of both digital and analog movie cameras, and the h o l i d a y s h av i n g j u s t passed, I offer you tutorials on how to use iMovie, that software most of you should have gotten free with your Macs. This company makes packages of plug-ins for iMovie 2 that work on both OS 9 and OS X. They have developed these tutorials that run either from their web site or can be downloaded to your own hard drive. And it is free; I like free! Did I mention it is free? Review: Take Control Electronic Books: by Elsa Travisano Take Control of Upgrading to Panther by Joe Kissell. 65 pp. PDF format. $5 Take Control of Customizing Panther by Matt Neuburg. 55 pp. PDF format. $5 http://www.tidbits.com/takecontrol/ default.html Want to take control of upgrading to OS 10.3 Panther? Check out the innovative and affordable new Take Control electronic book series from Adam and Tonya Engst of TidBITs. Take Control ebooks are professionally produced mini-books by Mac experts on timely Mac topics. The titles are published directly to PDF format, which speeds them to your Mac without the delays of print publishing. Because they’re published electronically, titles can swiftly updated. The Take Control series leverages the capabilities of the Internet in ways that could well change the face of tech publishing. The first two titles in the series are Take Control of Upgrading to Panther by Joe Kissell (65 pages) and Take Control of Customizing Panther by Matt Neuburg (55 pages). Kissell’s book gives invaluable step-by-step instructions for upgrading to Panther as well as troubleshooting help and tips for avoiding trouble in the first place. Neuburg’s book offers undocumented Panther details and helps you create shortcuts and customize your installation, Finder windows, Exposé, Font menus and more. Each is well worth the modest $5 cost. Take Control titles are purchased through the TidBITs website via eSellerate online ordering service. Both books I purchased were ready for downloading within a few minutes of placing my order. Books arrive in the form of trim PDF files that can be read on your Mac using the free Acrobat Reader software—no specialized software required. The books print out nicely if you prefer a hard copy. However, reading on an internet-connected Mac allows you to take full advantage the books’ internal and web hyperlinks: selections of internet-style clickable text that jump you to related topics within the book and on the internet. Bill Atkinson, the creator of HyperCard, would be proud. Just three weeks after the first two Take Control titles were published, updates were issued for both books (free to current owners) covering latebreaking developments. That’s impressive customer service under any circumstance, and for a $5 investment, it’s simply amazing. Copyright ©2003 by Elsa Travisano. (This review appeared in the November 2003 issue of Newsbreak, the newsletter of MUG ONE - Macintosh User Group of Oneonta, NY). CMC Web Site Access www.ctmac.org Members-only area of our web site The User ID: xxxxx (all uppercase) Password: xxxxx (all lowercase) Apple User Group Store Monthly CMC Meeting/ Holiday Pizza Party Carolyn Dickey, president Don Dickey, and CMC board member Jack Bass (right and below) Caricaturist, guitarist and fellow CMC member– Bill Dougal entertained us thru the night (below) CMC board member Deena Quilty and guest Mark Maglio network And the Winner is... Don Dickey announced the winner of the Canon Digital Camera Raffle – Patricia Heldmann. Congratulations! www.applemugstore.com From 1/1/2004 - 3/31/2004 The User ID: xxxxx (all lowercase) Password: xxxxx (all lowercase) Photographs by John Scott and Jack Bass 7 Web Picks of the Month Compiled by Neal Dembicer, CMC Please report any broken links to: dembicer@sbcglobal.net From Neal Dembicer: http://www.cybercollege.com/ It has everything on audio – video you want to know, even what lenses to use on your camera. Use the Search utility. Take a course on how to take photographs and how light works, at h t t p : / / w w w. c y b e r c o l l e g e . c o m /tvp034.htm. Use the module button on the bottom to go to Module 32-38. Take a College course in Film, Radio and Television Production, so when you use that new digital camera or camcorder, your pictures will come out looking professional. http://www.denounce.com/ Recognized around the world as the best source for completely fictional news and information. When you’re not looking for a reliable, accurate website for computer industry news, there’s only one place to go: denounce From Don Dickey: http://store.apple.com/ My web pick this month is the “Special deals” page at store.apple .com It’s not obvious... you have to scroll down on the main store page and look for the red tag that says “Save.” Right now it’s on the left side, but it’s been on the right in the past. This is where Apple sells refurbished gear including computers, iPods, and accessories. From Peter Kidwell: http://ask.yahoo.com Ask Yahoo! takes questions submitted via email and sends them to Yahoo’s “research team”. While it’s mainly a way for Yahoo to show off their search engine and website directory, you still get answers to a new trivia question each day. At the website, you can see the answer of the day, or sign up for the daily email. From Deena Quilty: http://www.allbookstores.com/index “At AllBookstores.com, we help you find the lowest book prices on new and used books by comparing prices at more than 2 dozen online bookstores. Our price comparisons include: Shipping Cost, Shipping Time, Sales Tax (when required), Availability and Condition (New or Used). AllBook stores.com does not sell books, we only compare the price and then provide a convenient link for you to make your purchase from the merchant of your choice.” From Jack Bass: http://gallery.euroweb.hu/index1.html The Web Gallery of Art contains over 11,600 digital reproductions of European paintings and sculptures created between the years 1150 and 1800. A considerable number of the pictures are commented and biographies of the significant artists are given. A versatile search engine allows you to find pictures in the collection using various search criteria. Yes, I want to join CMC Benefits: From Joe Arcuri: http://www.museumofhoaxes.com/ The museum of hoaxes does an entertaining job of cataloging all things hoax-related. He keeps the site updated almost daily so you can go there every day for your fix of the stupid things people will believe. Monthly meetings, monthly newsletter, discounted book purchases, computer problem assistance, network with other Mac users, User Group Store, etc. http://terraserverusa.com/address.aspx Get an aerial photo of your home! It looks like they have the majority of the US covered. Address ___________________________ From George Maciel: http://www.sitelink.net/ Established back in 1996, when the Mac web was in its infancy, SiteLink prides itself on offering an exclusive up-to-date list of the very best Mac web sites, supplemented with the latest Mac news, software and deals listings from the most popular Mac sites. SiteLink is the perfect start page for Mac users wanting to keep up to date on the latest and greatest Mac sites and information. Phone (Home) ______________________ From Deborah Foss: http://channels.netscape.com/ns/tv/ default.jsp For those of you too lazy (like me) to find your TV Guide. Free TV listings, courtesy of Netscape. Just go to this page, click on the TV listings button, put in your zip code, and voila, TV Guide on your Computer. __________________________________ 8 Date ______________________________ Name _____________________________ City ______________________________ State________ Zip __________________ Phone (Office) ______________________ Phone (Fax) ________________________ Business___________________________ Occupation_________________________ Email:_____________________________ Areas of special interest to you: __________________________________ Annual Family Membership - $25.00 Mail to: CMC 41 Crossroads Plaza – PMB 1984 West Hartford, CT 06117 or...Register Online with PayPal at www.ctmac.org Special MUG Offers from the Apple User Group These special offers are brought to you by the Apple User Group Advisory Board. You must be a current user group member to qualify for these savings. Not a member? Join today and take advantage of all the benefits of membership. Panergy Software Do you need to view, print or convert Microsoft Office documents so you can use them with AppleWorks? There’s no need to buy MS Office. You can do it easily with Panergy’s suite. icWord, icExcel and OneClick Convert quickly display or convert an entire folder of documents in one quick operation. User group members who buy the icWord and icExcel bundle for $29.95 will receive OneClick Convert, regularly $29.95, for free. For product details, go to: http://www.panergy-software.com To order, go to: http://store.eSellerate.net/s.asp?s= STR3678959586 Offer expires March 31, 2004. dvGarage dvGarage is a company dedicated to training the next generation of media developers. We build cutting edge training for 3D, compositing and visual effects designed to augment TV, broadband, DVD production and film. Offerings include the 3D Toolkit, dvMatte Pro for Final Cut Pro and After Effects, the Composite Toolkit, the Maya Lab and many other training and surfacing tools. dvGarage is offering user group members an exclusive discount of 30 percent off any single order. This offer covers any combination of products. Use the coupon code MacUG30 on the order page during checkout. http://www.dvgarage.com Offer expires March 31, 2004. Sybex Books Sybex, an independent computer book publisher with over 27 years of experience and commitment, is offering Macintosh user group members 40 percent off list price for online purchase of the following books: Mastering Mac OS X, Third Edition, Mac OSX Power Tools, Presenting Keynote and iMovie 3 Solutions. Other titles are available at 20 to 30 percent off. To receive the user group discount, place your order at http://www.sybex.com and enter promo code MUGS1 at checkout. Orders will be placed in U.S. dollars. Offer expires expires March 31, 2004. Aspyr Media User group members can save $10.00 (US) each on selected Aspyr games, including the newly released Indiana Jones and the Emperor’s Tomb, when you place your order at the Aspyr website. • Indiana Jones and the Emperor’s Tomb $29.99 - reg. $39.99 • Kelly Slater’s Pro Surfer $19.99 - reg. $29.99 • Law & Order: Dead On The Money $29.99 - reg. $39.99 • Star Trek: Voyager Elite Force II $29.99 - reg. $39.99 • X2 Wolverine’s Revenge $29.99 - reg. $39.99 • Zoo Tycoon $39.99 - reg. $49.99 To get your discount, enter the code MUGSPO in the special code field for each item ordered. http://www.aspyr. com/games.php/mac/complete/ Offer expires March 31, 2004. TechTool Pro 4 Micromat has released TechTool Pro 4 for Mac OS X 10.2 and OS X 10.3, Panther. TechTool Pro 4 introduces eDrive for creating an emergency partition without reformatting. Other features include S.M.A.R.T. testing, optimization, email notification of 9 problems and hardware tests to help pinpoint problems. TechTool is the only utility that simultaneously repairs or optimizes multiple volumes. User group members can purchase TechTool Pro 4 for $79.95 (US) or upgrade for $39.95 (US). To receive these special prices, contact Micromat directly at 800-829-6227. Offer expires March 31, 2004 and is available to members of user groups. The MUG Store For a limited time the MUG Store is offering tons of extras and discounts on the latest and greatest Power Mac G5s. In addition to free freight on every order, you can receive instant rebates of $50 (US) on the G5 and up to $100 (US) when purchased with an Apple display. Every G5 ordered comes with a free speaker set, MYOB First Edge software and an Epson allin-one printer (printer free after rebates). Throw in the extra one percent your user group receives on every purchase and you can see why the MUG Store is THE place for user group members to shop. December’s best factory refurbished specials were: • eMac G4/700 128/40/CD: $649 • 12" PowerBook G4/867 256/40/Combo: $1,149 • 12" PowerBook G4/867 256/40/SuperDrive: $1,349 • Power Mac Dual G4/876 256/60/Combo: $1,349 • Power Mac Dual G4/1 GHz 256/80/SuperDrive: $1,488 • Power Mac Dual G4/1.25 GHz 512/120/SuperDrive: $1,739 And much more! Place your orders. http://www.applemugstore.com This offer is available to members of U.S. user groups (see CMC passwords on page 7 of this newsletter). Complete list of all current deals: h t t p : / / w w w. m u g c e n t e r. c o m / vendornews/vendornews.html 2003-2004 CMC OFFICERS AND BOARD MEMBERS President Don Dickey president@ctmac.org 860-232-2841 Vice President Rich Lenoce vicepres@ctmac.org 860-347-1789 Treasurer George Maciel treasurer@ctmac.org 860-561-0319 Secretary Chris Hart secretary@ctmac.org 860-291-9393 Download of the Month Debbie Foss dotm@ctmac.org 860-583-1165 Public Relations Neal Dembicer pr@ctmac.org 860-673-7711 Editor Deena Quilty editor@ctmac.org 860-678-8622 Webmaster Brian Desmond webmaster@ctmac.org (860) 668-8728 Raffles Robert Sawyer raffles@ctmac.org 860-677-7787 Past President Joseph Arcuri pastpres@ctmac.org 860-485-1547 Special Events Jack Bass programs@ctmac.org Ambassador Connie Scott ambassador@ctmac.org 860-584-9573 Caricatures by Bill Dougal of Lebanon, (860) 456-9041. Available for illustration assignments and event caricature. 10 Upcoming Meetings Monthly CMC Meetings are held on last Wednesday of the month, 7:00 p.m. – 9:00 p.m. Discounted Books Board meetings are the first Thursday of the month. If you wish to attend a Board meeting, contact an officer for location. CMC continues to offer current members the opportunity to purchase any published book for either Mac or Windows at a 20% discount. All major publishers are carried by our source. January 28, 2004 Special Meeting & Location! Call Neal Dembicer at 673-7711 or send email to booksales@ctmac.org. CMC at the Apple Store WestFarms Mall Provide the book title, the publisher and the ISBN number, if possible, and he will check on its availability. Books will be back-ordered if not in stock. Normally, the wait is not too long. Join the many people who have satisfactorily used this service! (except Nov. and Dec. when the meetings are one week earlier due to the holidays) Panther demo, hands-on G5 trials, MacWorld-SF, great deals, etc. February 25, 2004 MS Office Alternatives Programs include Think Free Office, AppleWorks, TextEdit and Open Office UConn Health Center Future topics include: Wacom Tablet Demo Lego MindStorm Demo If you have a program you are interested in, email Rich Lenoce at: vicepres@ctmac.org Treasurer’s Report Ending Checking Account Balance ................$2013.96 Savings Account Balance...$3942.35 Balances as of December 31, 2003 New Members Spread the word. We need new members! Have your friends and co-workers join us for fun and learning about OS X, the Mac and iMac. Total Membership: 118 Classified Ad Linksys BEFSR41 4-port “Etherfast Cable/DSL Router” allows you to hook up multiple computers (Mac or PC) to share one broadband Internet connection. Asking $30. Email peter.kidwell@snet.net for details! 11 FREE Raffle! Every member who attends our meetings gets a raffle ticket for a chance at a free prize every month! You could win . . . t-shirts, toys, CDs, mugs, software . . . there’s always something we’re giving away! CMC Classified Ads Members can Advertise For Sale, Swap, Trade, Giveaway or Want to Buy Items. This space can be used by members to advertise non-business items which they are no longer using or upgrading. This is a free service provided to our members. Any business items or services can be advertised at the rates shown below: Monthly Ad Rates Business Card ..........................$10.00 Quarter Page.............................$20.00 Half Page..................................$30.00 Full Page (or insert) .................$50.00 Submit all ad copy to the Editor on a disk with nothing else on it or e-mail it for insertion in the following issue. Display ads must be submitted camera-ready in .eps or .pdf format with all fonts & graphics embedded. 41 Crossroads Plaza – PMB 1984 West Hartford, CT 06117 ng Monthly Meeti04 January 28, 20 The Apple Store all in Westfarms M CMC Meeting Location – a PDF document containing a visual direction guide to UConn Health Center on our website: http://www.ctmac.org. Print and take it with you to find us easily! Monthly meetings will be held at UConn Health Center in Farmington. When hands-on programs require computers for meeting attendees we will be using MxCC in Middletown. Directions to UCHC, Farmington Directions to MxCC, Middletown From I-84: Take Exit 39 (if coming from I-84 West, Exit 39 is after 39A). Turn right at first traffic light onto Route 4 East (Farmington Avenue). At third traffic light, turn right to enter the Health Center campus. Go around the main building to the right (at a Y in road), then take a left when you get to the Academic Entrance. The road becomes twoway there so you should be able to tell where to turn. (Do not go on straight to the two-way part). Then take the second right into parking lot A&B. this is close to the building. Go past the police station entrance on your left (small sign). You will see a continuation of the building with its own entrance area. This is the new research building. Enter on the ground floor, turn right and enter room EG-013 on your right. This is the first room on your right. The rest rooms are on your left as you enter. From the Hartford area, take Route 9 South. A few miles south of downtown Middletown on Route 9, take Exit 11 (Rt. 155, Randolph Road). At the end of the ramp (for both N. & S. bound), turn right onto Randolph Road. Continue to the traffic light at the top of the hill and turn left onto Saybrook Road. Go a quarter of a mile and turn right onto Reservoir Road. Travel past the stop sign, then take the first right onto Training Hill Road. Your first left will lead into the MxCC Campus parking area. When you arrive on campus, take a right onto Training Hill Road. Go to the second parking lot entrance and take a left into the upper lot. Directly in front of you will be Snow Hall. Enter Snow Hall and go up the stairs to the 2nd floor and go to the last room on the right, Room 509. 12 Monthly Meeting February 25, 2004 MS Office Alternatives UConn Health Center Programs include RagTime Solo, Think Free Office, AppleWorks LightWay Text, Mariner Write/Calc, iText Pro, Nisus Writer Express and more. NEWSLETTER OF CONNECTICUT MACINTOSH CONNECTION, INC. Living the iLife By Don Dickey, president Some folks came away from Macworld in San Francisco last month saying that Apple introduced little new stuff, and they felt let down. There was a new, smaller iPod (called the iPod mini), there was a preview of the new Office 2004 from Microsoft, and there was an upgrade of the software package Apple calls iLife... nothing significant to many, but very significant in my point of view. Read on to find out why! OK, the iPod mini doesn’t really turn me on. After I got a 40 gb iPod last year that now contains our entire music collection and then some, I just can’t get too excited about something less. But for those looking for a more pocketable/wearable juke box, it may be just the ticket. And while I didn’t get too excited about Office 2004, I realize that the Mac needs new versions of Office applications to remain current with the Windows world. If Microsoft left Office to wither on the vine, it would lead to a sad day for us Mac fans. In that light, I was pleased to see this preview come out of Macworld. The other stuff from Apple was mostly “just software.” There’s something really cool about software, though. It has the power to make your Mac do something new, different, better, faster, or easier. iLife 04 is all of that and more. It does something new and different with Garage Band, Apple’s brand new program that lets you compose music using recordings of your own and/or “loops” that come with it (or are added on) and/or music you play with a key- FEBRUARY, 2004 board connected to your Mac or any combination thereof. It’s sort of like the program “Band in a Box–on steroids. Why is this software significant? Because Apple has determined that the majority of households with Macs have at least one musician in the family! The cool thing about Garage Band is that you don’t have to be a musician to have a blast with it, but if you are a musician you’ll have an even bigger blast with it. I know this from talking with several musicians who ran out and bought iLife as soon as it was announced. The iMovie 4 software does something better by letting you more easily edit your digital video footage than before with “nondestructive” tools that work right on the timeline. They added “snap to” precision that really helps you sync your audio and video. Then, iDVD 4 does something better by letting you fit two full hours of high quality video on a DVD. They added more “themes” and transitions, and you can now have up to 99 chapters in a movie. For anyone with a digital camcorder, these are tremendous benefits when you get involved in editing your movies onto DVDs. Finally, iPhoto 4 software lets you work (or play) significantly faster with your digital photos. What used to take minutes now takes seconds. I haven’t got a clue how they made it so fast, but it is a remarkable improvement. My G4 feels like a G5 running this package! It also removed the 5,000 photo limit of the previous versions. Who ever thought we’d have more than 5,000 photos on our hard drive? 1 I won’t dwell on iTunes 4 since it is the one component of the package that’s still free for the asking. In fact, many of you have been using it for almost 9 months now. What’s cool about iTunes, though, is that it is the one iLife component available for Windows. Your friends with a PC can finally see for themselves just how good Apple software is. What do you need to get in on the fun? Any G3 with 0S X (Jaguar or Panther) will run iTunes, iPhoto, and iMovie. You’ll need a 600 MHz or faster G3 to enjoy GarageBand, and iDVD wants a 733 MHz G4. In my humble opinion, any one of the programs in the new iLife package is worth the $49 Apple charges for it ($29 to students and educators). To say that the iLife 04 bundle is a bargain is an understatement. If you’re into digital photography, digital video, or music, perhaps the new iLife ‘04 is the best reason to buy a Mac if you don’t have one... or a new Mac if you need one to run it. Either way, you’re sure to have a ton of fun playing and working with this new software. Don’t I keep reminding you that my focus is on having fun with your Mac? iLife ‘04 just makes that easier! In this Issue Living the iLife.................................... 1 911 by Chris Breen.............................. 2 Buying A Scanner.................................4 Review: iLife ....................................... 6 Web Picks of the Month .......................7 PDFs in Panther....................................8 Download of the Month .......................8 User Group Specials.............................9 Meetings & Club News ......................11 assigning letters to media drives and hard drives. If you use Windows’ regular file shortcuts, they may point to the pictures on the PC’s hard drive rather than to the files you’ve burned to the disc. Mac 911: Converting Bookmarks and Slideshows by Christopher Breen Editor Deena Quilty Content Contributors Don Dickey Contributing Authors Rich Lenoce Designer George Maciel Photographers John Scott Jack Bass Publisher Connecticut Macintosh Connection, Inc. 41 Crossroads Plaza PMB 1984 West Hartford, CT 06117 Printer Budget Printers 1718 Park Street Hartford, CT 06106 We welcome submissions from members! Please submit articles by first of the month for inclusion in our newsletter. There is much talent in our group; it would be great to have several member articles in each issue. Although this month’s Mac 911 fails to turn straw into gold, water into wine, or frogs into princes, it does offer slightly less-miraculous methods for converting your old Netscape bookmarks into bookmarks for the current Netscape, turning slide shows into Web pages, and dividing drawn-out discourses. Change of Address I’ve collected several hundred URLs in Netscape 4.7 by dragging and dropping the small icons at the left end of the Location field onto the desktop (where they turn into bookmark files). Then I upgraded to Netscape 7. Now when I double-click on one of the old icons, it opens as a file in Netscape, rather than directing my browser to the site. Is there a way to convert my older bookmarks to work with Netscape 7? — A. E. Siegman, Stanford, California There is. Download, install, and launch a copy of Alco Blom’s $25 URL Manager Pro (www.url-manager .com). Create a new folder by selecting New Folder from the Bookmarks menu, and give it an intuitive name such as Convert. Drag your URLs into this folder and, once they appear, drag them right out again. This converts them into Web Internet Location files. Doubleclick on one of these files, and your default Web browser will launch and whisk you to the Web site associated with that URL. Picture Disc I read an article in a recent issue of PC Magazine that described how to create an HTML file with relative links to photos on a CD-ROM. It contained a lot of HTML code. Is there an easier way to do this on the Mac? — John Peterson, Manhattan Beach, California This can be more difficult on a PC because of Windows’ insistence on 2 And that, dear John, is Why Windows Stinks: Reason 9,862. There’s no need to write a single smidgen of HTML code to accomplish this task on a Mac. Just launch iPhoto 2, select the photos you’d like to add to your disc, and select the Export command from iPhoto’s File menu. In the resulting Export Photos window, click on the Web Page tab and enter a title for your photo album in the Title field (MyCoolPix, for example). If you care to, change the settings for the number of columns and rows of pictures, as well as for the size of the thumbnails and images, on the HTML pages iPhoto generates. Click on the Export button; in the sheet that appears, create a new folder to store the HTML files in. Select this new folder and click on OK. Your collection of photos will be saved as a series of HTML index files that display thumbnails of your pictures, as well as folders that contain those thumbnails and the full image files. Insert a blank CD, copy the folder you created to the CD, and burn the CD. To browse the finished CD, simply shove it into a Mac or a PC and double-click on the index page (which, using the earlier called MyCoolPix.html). The computer’s default browser will open, revealing the first page of the index, replete with thumbnails of your pictures. Click on a thumbnail to view the full image. Short Clips When I make an iMovie film, I like to archive it to DV tape. I occasionally need to edit an archived movie, but when I capture it into iMovie, the program automatically divides it into clips. Is there any way to make iMovie capture the movie into a single video clip? — Jeffrey Johnston, Toronto, Ontario, Canada It depends on the length of your video. iMovie creates new clips when it detects Continued on page 3 Continued from page 2 a scene change — a convenient feature when you capture raw footage, but not desirable in your situation. Thankfully, you can easily put an end to this automatic clip creation. Just select Preferences from the iMovie 3 menu and deselect the Automatically Start New Clip At Scene Break option. This may not completely free you from multiple clips. iMovie limits clips to 2GB (which works out to 9 minutes, 28 seconds, and 2 frames). If your video exceeds this length, iMovie automatically creates a new clip when it reaches the 2GB limit. Broken Recording We record the ministers in our church and then transfer the resulting audio files to a Mac, so we can make CD copies for members. We’d like to insert a break in the audio every 10 minutes, so members can choose a point at which to start listening. Is there a program that inserts such breaks automatically? — Stan Bemel, Portland, Oregon I’d tackle such a project by dividing the sermons into separate, 10- minute audio files and then burning those files — in order — to CD. Creating such audio files is a cinch with HairerSoft’s $25 Amadeus II (www.hairersoft.com/ amadeus.html). Just open the sound file in Amadeus (it can read AIFF, WAV, and MP3 files) and select Generate Marks from the Selection menu. In the resulting Generate Marks window, enter 10’00”000 in the Time Interval field to create markers that appear every 10 minutes in the track. Enter something in the Text field that hints at the contents of the files — Sermon1, for example. Click on OK to dismiss the window. From the same Selection menu, choose Split According To Marks. Click on OK in the Split window that appears. In the resulting Save As sheet, designate a location for your split files, select AIFF from the Format pop-up menu, and click on Save. Amadeus will split your file into 10- minute increments and sequentially number the segments — Sermon1 01, Sermon1 02, and Sermon1 03, for example. Load these segments into iTunes and then into a playlist, ensure that they’re in the proper order, and burn them to disc. Missing Link Is there any way to connect a number of tunes in iTunes, for background music behind a long slide show? — Bill Semplice, Wethersfield, Connecticut I haven’t found a slide-show application that can do this. However, there’s no reason you couldn’t stitch together the tunes you’d like to play during your slide show. The free way to do this is to import into iMovie 3 the songs you want to join. Click on the Audio button in iMovie and drag the songs you want to string together into iMovie’s timeline (these songs can be in any audio format iTunes supports, including the protected AAC files you purchase from the iTunes Music Store). Select Export from iMovie’s File menu, and in the iMovie: Export window that appears, select To QuickTime from the Export pop-up menu. Choose Expert Settings from the Formats pop-up menu and click on the Export button. In the resulting Save Exported File As window, choose Sound To AIFF from the Export pop-up menu; then name and save the file. Your tunes are now contained in a single audio file you can use to accompany your slide show. If you’re willing to convert your slide show into a QuickTime movie, you can create the entire slide show in iMovie. Add nothing except still clips to your movie, drag the song files you want to use into iMovie’s soundtrack, adjust the length of the still pictures so they fit the length of your soundtrack, and then export your creation as a QuickTime movie. Tip of the Month Having your Mac read text documents to you is a great way to proofread your writing — you’re more likely to notice mistakes when you hear them. The 3 Services command in OS X’s Finder menu offers a Speech command from which you can choose Start Speaking Text, but this service works only in applications such as Apple’s TextEdit, Safari, and Mail. If you’re using Microsoft Word, the service is unavailable. Although you could copy and paste your Word document into TextEdit, there’s a simple way to hear your text within its original application. Open the Speech preference pane, click on the Spoken User Interface tab, and enable the Selected Text When The Key Is Pressed option. Click on Change Key, and enter a keyboard command for activating text-to-speech (choose a key combination your applications don’t use). Once you’ve set this up, you can select the text in any application and press your keyboard command to hear the text read aloud. Press the keyboard command again to stop it. — Garrick Chow, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania Unsolicited Advice When you select multiple picture files numbered in a series — Picture 01, Picture 02, and Picture 03, for example — and double-click on them, Preview doesn’t display them in order. There are two ways to make the pictures appear in sequence: You can open a folder full of pictures in column view, select them all, and double click on them. You can also launch Preview, press 1-O to produce the Open dialog box, navigate to your pictures, 1-click on the pictures you want to view, and click on Open. With either method, the thumbnails will appear in the proper order. Macworld contributing editor Chris Breen is the author of Macworld’s tips and troubleshooting column, “Mac 911,” as well as Secrets of the iPod: Second Edition and Mac 911 (Peachpit Press). Find Chris’books at www.amazon.com and www. peachpit. com. User Group Special: Get 12 issues of Macworld for $12! Subscribe today at www.macworld.com/dollarperissue Buying a Scanner By Rich Lenoce Like digital still and video cameras, scanner prices have dropped and quality has improved, especially at the low ($80 -200) and mid ($150-$500) pricing levels. Wading through the technical information can be confusing, but I hope this article can help with your purchase. There are three types of scanners: flatbed, film (for slides, negatives and other transparencies) and drum scanners. The popular Flatbed scanner offers a variety of features and quality including built-in film scanning, copying and faxing. They work by reflecting light off of an image placed on a glass bed. A scanning head that contains a line of either inexpensive CIS or better quality CCD image sensors mechanically glides down the scanning area, scanning one line at a time. The scanned data is sent to the scanning software via USB, FireWire, serial, parallel or SCSI interface and the rows of lines are pieced together as a single image. Flatbed scanning is a slow process so purchasing a scanner with a fast interface such as FireWire won’t necessarily mean a faster scan. Scanning areas range from 8.5 x 11 (letter), 8.4 x 14 (legal) to 11 x 17 (large photo). Film scanners offer the highest quality reproduction of scanned transparent images including slides, negatives, and 4 x 6 or larger transparencies. Film has far more detail than photographic prints and therefore requires image sensors with higher resolutions than a flatbed scanner. A 35 mm slide or negative can have the equivalent of 3000 dpi resolution, while a print from the same negative scanned with a flatbed scanner might equate to only 300 dpi. High resolution scanning equates to large file sizes with a 35 mm slide having minimum resolution of 2400 dpi or 22 mb in size. Drum scanners are used in professional print houses for high quality color separations of scanned images. They use photo multiplier tubes (PMT) to provide higher resolution, color accuracy and dynamic range than flatbed or film scanners. Artwork is wrapped around a cylinder that rotates the image at a high speed in front of the PMT to split the image into its components. Drum scanners usually have 6,000-12,000 dpi optical resolution, 48-bit color, direct CMYK conversion and a large scanning area for art prints. All of this quality and sophistication cost thousands of dollars. What Should You Look for when Buying a Scanner? Optical Resolution Optical resolution is the number of scanning elements (dots) per inch–dpi–on the scan head. The first and smaller number in the specification is the scanner’s actual optical resolution; the second number is less important and usually only refers to the number of stops the scan head makes in a given area. A printer with 600 x 1200 resolution has an optical resolution of 600 dpi. Beware of interpolated or enhanced resolution–it is often listed after the optical resolution. Interpolated resolution is when software is used to mimic a higher optical resolution. This figure should be ignored when purchasing a scanner and never used in actual scanning. How much resolution you need is dependent on your use. Most documents and photos for printing on laser and inkjet printers as well as commercial printers should be scanned at 150-300 dpi. Since the web can only display images at 72 dpi, scanning more than 72 dpi ifor that use s unnecessary. High resolution is most needed with film (slides, negatives and transparencies), with a minimum scanner resolution of 2400 dpi. 3000+ dpi is preferred. Printed line illustrations and drawings also should be scanned at a high resolution, usually 1200 dpi or more to maintain the smoothness of the lines. Documents can usually be scanned at about 150 dpi unless you are using optical character recognition (OCR) software; adding resolution may improve the accuracy of the software. Bit Depth Each pixel in a scanner’s imager generates data; how much data or the number of bits to describe a pixel in a scan is called the bit depth. More data equates to more detail (usually color detail) in each pixel in an image. Most scanners have a bit depth of at least 24 bits, capturing 8 bits of information for each primary color: red, green and blue. Many scanners have a bit depth of 30, 36 and even 48 bits. Most of today’s graphics programs do not support images with more than 24 bits, but the software will retain that extra detail. The more bits the better. Dynamic Range Dynamic range is perhaps the most important specification as it defines the range of grayscale tones a scanner can record measured on a scale of 0 (white) to 4.0 (perfect black). This very important specification expresses how much detail a scanner can yield in the dark and light areas of an image. The higher the number, the better. Most inexpensive consumer flatbed scanners yield high resolution and bit depth but fail to provide smooth and accurate tonal quality differentiating them from their professional counterparts. A typical consumer scanner may have a dynamic range of only 2.4 while a top quality flatbed scanner will range between 3 to 3.6. Film scanners usually equal or exceed this figure while drum scanners can go to 4.2 and beyond. Continued on page 5 4 Continued from page 4 Comparing Scanners Prior to purchasing a scanner you should have a clear vision of how the scanned images will be used to determine the quality and features needed. It is also always wise to do some research beforehand. Let’s compare two scanners with the same specifications at opposing ends of the price spectrum: a $99 Canon Scan LIDE 30 and a $1,500 Microtek ScanMaker each with specifications of 1200 x 2400 dpi and bit depths of 48 bits. For typical scan jobs such as email, web page creation and basic duplication of photos, the $99 Canon is a winner. It’s light, thin and convenient and does a good job of general scanning. However, its advantages can be drawbacks if used in professional work. For example, the Canon’s lightness and thinness mean that the motor that moves the imager generates vibrations close to the imager causing illustration lines and document text to vibrate during the scan and not be as sharp and clear as they could be. The Microtek is a thick beast so the motor is mounted away from the imager and its 30 lb. weight absorbs any extraneous vibration. The Microtek uses a CCD imager with a dynamic range of 3.5 while the Canon uses the less expensive CIS imager with a far lower dynamic range. In fact, Canon doesn’t even publish dynamic range specifications on its low-end scanners. This low dynamic range can be seen in its inability to extrude detail from dark or overly bright areas of a scanned image. Also, documents scanned with inexpensive scanners may not appear straight because the tolerance of the scan heads alignment is usually not as strict as more expensive professional scanners. They may even miss a scan line or two in a document or illustration. OCR software may not be as accurate on an inexpensive scanner because of the problems mentioned requiring the user to spend more time editing the OCR document. More importantly, notice that most of the problems on an inexpensive scanner like the Canon are not indicated in the specifications since with the exception of the dynamic range, which Canon doesn’t publish, the scanners have the same specifications. The telling detail is in the type of imager; the Canon uses the lower cost/quality CIS imager compared to the Microtek’s CCD. Scanners in the $200-$500 range offer a good compromise between the professional and consumer imaging devices. Yes, I want to join CMC Benefits: Monthly meetings, monthly newsletter, discounted book purchases, computer problem assistance, network with other Mac users, User Group Store, etc. Date ______________________________ Name _____________________________ Address ___________________________ City ______________________________ State________ Zip __________________ Phone (Home) ______________________ In comparing scanners, higher priced scanners come with more sophisticated scanning software that effectively color matches the scan to the original image and allows for minute manipulation of dozens of image parameters. Inexpensive scanners may have only limited settings. Recommending a scanner is akin to most other products: identify how you will use the product, do your research and realize you get what you pay for. The more you know, the better you will be able to spot a good deal. We’re Sorry! ntured out to Many of you ve all last month WestFarms M an exciting anticipating Apple Store. meeting at the due to cirUnfortunately, beyond our cumstances sentation did control, the pre planned. We not occur as ur members in apologize to o nd steps are attendance a y the board to being taken b om happening prevent this fr – CMC Board again. 5 Phone (Office) ______________________ Phone (Fax) ________________________ Business___________________________ Occupation_________________________ Email:_____________________________ Areas of special interest to you: __________________________________ __________________________________ Annual Family Membership - $25.00 Mail to: CMC 41 Crossroads Plaza – PMB 1984 West Hartford, CT 06117 Make checks payable to CMC or...Register Online with PayPal at www.ctmac.org Review: iLife ‘04 by Rich Lenoce, vice president Great software like iLife ‘04 is the reason many of us are Mac users because there is no equivalent on the PC for twenty times the price. Free with every new Mac and only $49 retail ($29 education), iLife’s ‘04’s five applications— iTunes, iPhoto, iMovie, iDVD and the new Garage Band, demonstrate that complicated media creation can be easy and made by anyone. Best of all, these applications are thoroughly integrated with each other, sharing media through their respective libraries. Installation Installation was easy but odd. The five iLife apps come on one DVD. A CD containing only iTunes, iPhoto and iMovie is included for those without a DVD drive–Garage Band is noticeably absent. Given the G3/G4 requirements of Garage Band, Macs without DVD drives can run it but there is no way to get to the 1 gig installer. Odd. Why not put Garage Band on two CDs? Also odd is the 733 MHz G4 requirement for iDVD. I have a 400mhz G4 and it installed and ran fine. Odd again. iPhoto iTunes has not been updated from the latest 4.2 release, but iPhoto shows significant speed improvements and a few handy features. No longer does iPhoto slow down as the photo library gets larger; it can now hold 25,000 pictures without a performance hit. New Smart Photo Albums can automatically sort this myriad of photos based on criteria the user presets. For example, a Smart Album named Christmas might be created to recognize photos taken on December 25th. All imported photos taken on Christmas would be dumped into that Smart Album. Sepia tone and addi- tional crop presets have been added and options for exporting photos and web pages have been greatly improved. Slide shows now can be made into beautiful QuickTime movies with 3D effects and music. Brightness/contrast adjustments can now be fine tuned. Though library speed is improved greatly, editing speed can still be sluggish if photos are large. iMovie iMovie 4 moves to the “prosumer” level with enhancements to Time Line Editing. Editing a clip no longer permanently alters it (called “destructive” editing). Clips now have handles to lengthen and shorten the clip that don’t affect the original footage. Changes can also be applied across multiple clips, transitions and effects. Alignment guides have been added to better sync audio and video. Graphical waveforms have been added to audio tracks to further improve audio editing. There are new transitions, titles and digital effects including better Ken Burns Effect integration. Finally, iMovie can now generate 99 iDVD chapters though I don’t know why you’d want 99 DVD chapters! iMovie still lacks the ability to create longform video projects or the ability to add additional tracks so it’s not truly professional—but your projects will look like they are! iDVD iDVD also moves up a notch by support for the creation of two-hour DVDs, improved DVD compression, and a map view for creating sophisticated DVDs. IDVD 4 is more akin to DVD Studio Pro 2’s “basic” setting, allowing for a more complex navigational structure that in typical iLife fashion, is easy to create. For example: DVDs can open with a video clip or slide show, then the menu can appear and then you can offer multiple versions of programs, add DVD-ROM content and musical selections. New themes look more professional adding more depth and flair to buttons, text, backgrounds and navigation and greater customization including the addition of drop shadow text. iDVD 6 now provides easy access to all photo and music libraries as well as all video projects. Also, the status view is greatly enhanced and DVDs can now be archived for future use without reencoding the project. DVDs look better too, with improved compression in dark areas of the screen and during transitions. An already killer application just got better! Garage Band Not convinced you should spend $49? The deal breaker is Garage Band, which makes creating, composing and remixing music incredibly easy, intuitive and fun. Garage Band’s 64 tracks can handle any type of sound-synthesized (MIDI) and real “sampled” instruments including vintage guitar amps, beats, rhythms, loops, music from your iTunes library and recorded audio. Thousands of professionallymade sounds, beats and loops are included which can be mixed and matched on up to 64 tracks. iLife integration allows your musical creations to be added to videos, slide shows, DVDs and iPod. Features are too many to name and would be best left to a full review and a few weeks of experimenting, but it’s worth a spin for anyone interested in audio recording and music. PC users would need to spend $800 to get a similar application with all its features. For only $99, the Garage Band Jam Pack adds thousands more sounds and could keep someone busy for years. Apple also sells a MIDI keyboard for $99 to unleash the full power of Garage Band. What’s Missing Life isn’t perfect and neither is iLife. Product requirements are steep so not everyone can run all products. Minimum requirements are OS X.2.6, a 600 mHz G3 for Garage Band, and a G4 to play the synthesized sounds. My aging G4 400 worked great with all apps, however it struggled with more than eight tracks of Garage Band audio. Apple can’t be faulted for wanting to sell more hardware and better engrain OS X and should be comContinued on page 7 Continued from page 6 Web Picks of the Month mended for pushing the consumer software envelope, but it’s shameful that Mac owners without DVD drives can’t install Garage Band. Also, Garage Band’s export options are limited to just iTunes as an AIFF. iTunes easily handled conversion (controlclick and convert) but it should have the ability to export to MP3, AAC, .mac, direct to CD or to a specific location. IPhoto could have used more editing enhancements such as a muchneeded white balance adjustment. Compiled by Neal Dembicer, CMC Please report any broken links to: NealDD@yahoo.com I find that as I become more iLifecentered, media content management becomes more difficult. Just because I can have 40,000 songs and 25,000 pictures in a single music or photo library doesn’t mean I should! There needs to be ways of sub-organizing libraries, playlists and albums. Smart Albums/Playlists help, but a true digital hub needs to be created to manage and organize media regardless of type. There is also no equivalent of libraries, playlist and albums for video content. All this disorganization comes from iLife’s biggest problem— it’s fun and addictive! And, that’s not a bad thing. At less than $10 per application, iLife 2004 is a winner! Free iLife Manual in PDF Format O’Reilly has posted a free iLife ‘04 Mini Manual–from David Pogue–for download as a pdf at http://www.macdevcenter.com/mac /excerpt/iLife04_MiniManual.pdf The book is a tremendous resource since iLife doesn’t come with a manual or documentation. From Neal Dembicer: http://www.placesonline.org/ Places On Line provides access to the world’s very best place-based Web sites. These are sites that make you feel you are there. From Don Dickey: http://www.apple.com/quicktime/whatson/ This is a site at Apple where you can test out your new broadband net connection! See if you’re getting your money’s worth by downloading a movie “trailer” or a music video from your favorite pop star! From Peter Kidwell: http://vitaminq.blogspot.com A great web log (“blog”) for lovers of useless information. In the words of its creator, “... this sort-of-blog belongs to Roddy Lumsden, a puzzle writer and poet from Scotland now living in Bristol in England. I post lists, curiosities and fragments which please me as a lover of trivia and reference. They tend to reflect my interests which include pop, nature, words, Scotland, TV, food, folklore and literature. I post a few items most weeks, so do bookmark and return.” From Deena Quilty: http://www.autopedia.com/html/Rebate.html Buying a new car? Check here to find out what manufacturers are offering for rebates and other promotions first. And Autopedia has other great carbuying info, too. Click the autopedia.com link at the bottom to get to the homepage. From Joe Arcuri: http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?art num=75459 Apple has released a knowledgebase article documenting many keyboard shortcuts available in OS X. Worth bookmarking. 7 From Jack Bass: http://www.howstuffworks.com/ A great basic resource for everything to see how it works. From Robert F. Sawyer: http://www.kk.org/cooltools/ Quote from the author: “Here are my recommendations for cool tools. I include books, gadgets, software, videos, maps, hardware, materials, websites or gear that are extraordinary, little-known, or reliably handy for an individual or small group. I depend on friends and readers to suggest things they actually use. Particularly welcomed are old items that you still dote on after years of use. I only post things I like and I ignore the rest. Suggestions for tools much better than what is recommended here are always wanted. I have purchase recommendations off this site and all have been very good. From George Maciel: http://www.AdFlip.com/ This archive of magazine ads is “the world’s largest searchable database of classic print ads.” Browsing is free, while paid members can search by brand or model name, category, decade, or by year. Thank You!! Our recent annual CMC auction raised hundreds of dollars for our group. We wish to thank the many companies and individuals who donated: • Adobe • Alsoft, Inc. • eZedia • iKlear • Logitech • Wacom • Corel • Auto FX Software • Design Tools Monthly • E-Book Systems Inc • Lumiquest • IOGEAR • Microsoft • Rocstore • O’Reilly & Associates • PeachPit Press • RadTech • SmileOnMyMac • George Maciel • Bill Dougal • Jack Bass • Deb Foss • Karla Lee Cucka Please accept our apologies if we have inadvertently left out anyone from this list! – Deena Quilty, Auction Chair Three Ways to Make PDFs in Panther by Rich Lenoce There are three ways to make PDFs in OS X Panther that may interest designers or people who have a passing interest in creating PDFs. Why PDF? For the average user, Adobe’s Portable Document Format creates a cross platform document that can be opened, viewed, mailed, stored and printed regardless of platform or operating system. A PDF document will look the same on any machine, creating an exact snapshot of what you see, separate from the application that created it. For example, saving an HTML file from within a browser won’t save the complete page and looks different on different platforms and browsers. Saving an HTML page as a PDF means that it will look as it looked in the browser. PDFs are also useful when a recipient of the file doesn’t have the application that created the file—Appleworks for example. For professional designers, PDFs are used to insure what the designer creates on the screen is exactly what will print. Panther provides users with three methods to create PDFS from within applications for various levels of usage. Save as PDF The easiest way to create a PDF document in OS X is to select Print from an application’s File Menu and then select the Save as PDF… button in the lower left corner of the Print Dialog Box. Your document will now be ready for mailing and viewing on any platform. To further automate this feature such as having the ability to save and mail a PDF in one step, download a terrific freeware program called PDF_U available from VersionTracker which will create a PDF Services folder in your System>Library and fills it with pre-made scripts. You can create additional PDF services by adding program aliases to that folder. Save as Postscript Save as PDF… is fine for most purposes but is not recommended for sending files to commercial printers since the file isn’t truly Postscript compliant. This is because the file created using Save As PDF… is really only a screen snapshot from OS X’s Quartz graphic engine and lacks much of the Postscript information necessary for commercial printers. A Postscript document isn’t just an image of a page but contains all the details about the page—fonts, layout information, images, etc. Graphic professionals would normally use a Postscript application such as Quark, InDesign, Illustrator or Adobe Acrobat Distiller to create such PDFs but for occasional use OS X can create Postscript PDFs from within any application. To create a Postscript PDF, select Print from the File Menu just as if you were going to print the page. The Print Dialog Box will appear and using the pull-down menu located in the center of the box that defaults to Copies and Pages, select Output Options. The dialog box will change and you will see a checkbox, Save As File. Check the box and another pull-down menu will become available that has two options: PDF and Postscript. Be sure to select Postscript and then click Save. The Save Dialog Box will appear with the name of the file followed by a .ps file extension (turn off Hide Extension if it is selected). Save the file. Next, open the file using OS X’s Preview application and when opened Preview will convert the file to a printable Postscript PDF. After the file opens in Preview, notice the file extension has changed to .pdf in the Title Bar. Save this file in Preview and you will have a print-ready Postscript PDF document similar to those produced by Acrobat Distiller or any of Adobe’s own products. Color Sync Utility/PDF X-3 Filter For advanced users who need more control, specifically those who need advanced Preflight control and PDF/X-3 compliance, the ColorSync utility located in the Applications> Utility folder can be used to set up a PDF Service that will generate a PDF/X-3 compliant file. This is a difficult task and it would be far easier to do this in any number of professional applications but in a pinch Panther is capable of doing it. To make a PDF/X-3 document, you need to first create a folder called PDF Services in your OS X System Library folders (not in the user folder). Launch ColorSyncUtility and select the FILTERS button in the ToolBar. Select PDF in the Filter Details bar. Add (+) a profile and from the Pull-Down Menu select PDF/X-3. Next, select the button called DOMAINS in the Filter Defaults bar and check “PDF Workflow.” You’ll need to select a slew of parameters in ColorSync but now the Save as PDF... will no longer merely record screen data as a PDF but will be the equivalent of saving or exporting a PDF through one of Adobe’s own products such as InDesign, Acrobat or Illustrator where all color and typographical PreFlighting has been performed. Download of the Month submitted by Debi Foss Thumbnailer http://homepage.mac.com/mdewalt/d ownloads.html Thumnailer is a freeware application that creates and displays picture thumbnails, is a quick picture viewer, and let’s you make slide shows of your pictures...and set them to music in either MP3 or the new Apple Music Store AAC formats. It will also convert any image that QuickTime can read into a PICT, BMP, JPG, TIFF, PNG, JPEG 2000, Photoshop, TGA, or MacPaint format image. Version 2.3 is for Mac OS 9. Version 2.2 is for OS X 10.2 or higher and version 1.3 — is for OS X This is a view of the folder browser 10.0 and 10.1. for Thumbnailer. It’s is similar to Apple’s column view in the finder. 8 Special MUG Offers from the Apple User Group These special offers are brought to you by the Apple User Group Advisory Board. You must be a current user group member to qualify for these savings. SnapMail SnapMail is the complete messaging and communication application for your Mac office. Using peer-to-peer technology over TCP/IP networks, SnapMail keeps all of your messages and documents safely in-house. It doesn’t require a mail server, Internet connection, or any administration. Send messages, files, folders, reminders and alerts instantly. Combining an intuitive user interface with trouble-free installation and maintenance, SnapMail offers a dynamic and friendly messaging system for Macintosh networks. SnapMail costs around $25 per user, even less for education and non-profit clients. For our Macintosh user group exclusive offer, go to http:// www.glass bead.com/buy/so.html and enter special offer code “so2793” to receive prices discounted by 15 percent. Offer expires April 30, 2004. Mac Gold Book Mac Gold Book subscribers receive heavy discounts on a fast-growing range of hardware and software products including CINEMA 3D, Asante routers, Spire bags and much more. Normally $34.80 (US) for a one year subscription, user group members pay just $21.00. http://www.macgoldbook .com/mugoffer/ Vendors, an entry in the Mac Gold Book is free. Sign up here: http:// www.macgoldbook.com/vendors/ Offer expires May 31, 2004. WebPrint Plus WebPrint Plus lets you instantly print or save selected text, pictures and graphics from virtually any application — even programs that can’t print or save their own content. WebPrint Plus also lets you add on-the-fly time-date stamps and notes to anything (even images and graphics) that you print and save. WebPrint Plus can also instantly print and save the contents of the Clipboard. WebPrint Plus includes a powerful editor for editing and adding new content to your saved data and images, and many additional features. WebPrint Plus works with Mac OS X and Mac OS 7.5.3 or later. Normal price: $39.95 MUG price: $29.95. Find out more about WebPrint Plus. http://www.macease.com/webprint_plus _x_main_page.html. User Group Special Order Page: http://order.kagi .com/?L8TV. Offer expires 5/31/04. Hemera Hemera is pleased to offer a 25 percent discount to all Macintosh user groups*. BizArt - Over 56,000 images for business! Reg. $49.99, MUG price: $37.49 Photo Clip Art by Hemera - Real photos you can use like clip art. Regular price $29.99, MUG price: $22.49 Hemera Photo-Objects - 150,000 Photo-Objects images in 3 volumes. Reg. $69.99, MUG price: $52.49 The Big Box of Art - 800,000 images for all your projects. Regular price $129.99, MUG price: $97.49 * Subscriptions to Hemera Image Express and AbleStock.com are not included in this offer. Order your products from http:// www.hemera.com and enter promo code: hem10104 in the shopping cart. Offer expires 5/30/04. CMC Web Site Access Apple User Group Store www.ctmac.org The User ID: XXX (all uppercase) Password: xxxxx(all lowercase) www.applemugstore.com The User ID: xxxxx(all lowercase) Password: xxxxx (all lowercase) 9 Office Applications for Mac OS X Office Applications for Mac OS X is a complete office productivity suite based on the OpenOffice.org package. It includes document processing, spreadsheets, presentations, graphics and more. It can read and write the vast majority of Microsoft Office documents, and has multi-language support and a one-click installer. This package provides professional office software with many enhancements not available through download. We offer a large discount to Macintosh user group members. Follow this link and use coupon code “ADC35P” for 30 percent off the $39.95 list price. http://BSDmall.com/cgi-bin/clink ?bsdmall+8B85sZ+officeapps2.html +adc35p. Offer expires 4/30/04. The MUG Store Here is just a sampling of the great deals user group members can get at The MUG Store this month, in addition to free freight and one percent back to your user group: • New G5s - $50 instant rebate, free speakers and up to $100 (US) additional instant rebate when purchased with an Apple display. • Factory Refurbished G5s starting at $1,399 • New G4/1.25 with Combo Drive - $1249 • Factory Refurbished G4/1.25 with SuperDrive - $1,649 • New iMacs - Instant rebates - free RAM • Factory Refurbished LCD iMac G4/700 with CD-RW - $799 • New iBooks starting at $699 • New PowerBooks starting at $1,249 • Factory Refurbished iBooks and PowerBooks - starting at $649 Place your orders. http://www.apple mugstore.com. This offer is available to members of U.S. user groups only. See User ID’s and Passwords in the box at the left. 2003-2004 CMC OFFICERS AND BOARD MEMBERS President Don Dickey president@ctmac.org 860-232-2841 Vice President Rich Lenoce vicepres@ctmac.org 860-347-1789 Treasurer George Maciel treasurer@ctmac.org 860-561-0319 Secretary Chris Hart secretary@ctmac.org 860-291-9393 Download of the Month Debbie Foss dotm@ctmac.org 860-583-1165 Public Relations Neal Dembicer pr@ctmac.org 860-673-7711 Editor Deena Quilty editor@ctmac.org 860-678-8622 Webmaster Brian Desmond webmaster@ctmac.org (860) 668-8728 Raffles Robert Sawyer raffles@ctmac.org 860-677-7787 Past President Joseph Arcuri pastpres@ctmac.org 860-485-1547 Special Events Jack Bass programs@ctmac.org Ambassador Connie Scott ambassador@ctmac.org 860-584-9573 Caricatures by Bill Dougal of Lebanon, (860) 456-9041. Available for illustration assignments and event caricature. 10 Discounted Books Upcoming Meetings Board meetings are the first Thursday of the month. If you wish to attend a Board meeting, contact an officer for location. February 25, 2004 MS Office Alternatives Programs include RagTime Solo, iText Pro, Think Free Office, AppleWorks, LightWay Text, Mariner Write/Calc, Nisus Writer Express and more. UConn Health Center Future topics include: Lego MindStorm Demo Wacom Tablet Demo Digital Photography Hands-On Workshops Making Music on the Mac and Much More! If you have a program you are interested in, email Rich Lenoce at: vicepres@ctmac.org CMC Classified Ads Members can Advertise For Sale, Swap, Trade, Giveaway or Want to Buy Items. This space can be used by members to advertise non-business items which they are no longer using or upgrading. This is a free service provided to our members. Any business items or services can be advertised at the rates shown below: Monthly Ad Rates Business Card ..........................$10.00 Quarter Page.............................$20.00 Half Page..................................$30.00 Full Page (or insert) .................$50.00 Submit all ad copy to the Editor on a disk with nothing else on it or e-mail it for insertion in the following issue. Display ads must be submitted camera-ready in .eps or .pdf format with all fonts & graphics embedded. CMC continues to offer current members the opportunity to purchase any published book for either Mac or Windows at a 20% discount. All major publishers are carried by our source. Call Neal Dembicer at 673-7711 or send email to booksales@ctmac.org. Provide the book title, the publisher and the ISBN number, if possible, and he will check on its availability. Books will be back-ordered if not in stock. Normally, the wait is not too long. Join the many people who have satisfactorily used this service! Every member who attends our meetings gets a raffle ticket for a chance at a free prize every month! You could win . . . t-shirts, toys, CDs, mugs, software . . . there’s always something we’re giving away! FOR SALE! FOR SALE Plextor external SCSI 12/4/32 CD burner–$50. ViewSonic G810 21” CRT monitor – $200. Both in excellent condition. Contact Jack Bass 860-233-9954 or w1fla@comcast.net . Treasurer’s Report New Members Ending Checking Account Balance ................$1902.16 Savings Account Balance...$3944.19 Balances as of January 31, 2004 Forums, mac t-shirts, beanies and the home of The Joy of Tech! Monthly CMC Meetings are held on last Wednesday of the month, 7:00 p.m. – 9:00 p.m. (except Nov. and Dec. when the meetings are one week earlier due to the holidays) FREE Raffle! 11 Spread the word. We need new members! Have your friends and co-workers join us for fun and learning about OS X, the Mac and iMac. Total Membership: 121 41 Crossroads Plaza – PMB 1984 West Hartford, CT 06117 CMC Meeting Location – a PDF document containing a visual direction guide to UConn Health Center on our website: http://www.ctmac.org. Print and take it with you to find us easily! Monthly meetings will be held at UConn Health Center in Farmington. When hands-on programs require computers for meeting attendees we will be using MxCC in Middletown. Directions to UCHC, Farmington Directions to MxCC, Middletown From I-84: Take Exit 39 (if coming from I-84 West, Exit 39 is after 39A). Turn right at first traffic light onto Route 4 East (Farmington Avenue). At third traffic light, turn right to enter the Health Center campus. Go around the main building to the right (at a Y in road), then take a left when you get to the Academic Entrance. The road becomes twoway there so you should be able to tell where to turn. (Do not go on straight to the two-way part). Then take the second right into parking lot A&B. this is close to the building. Go past the police station entrance on your left (small sign). You will see a continuation of the building with its own entrance area. This is the new research building. Enter on the ground floor, turn right and enter room EG-013 on your right. This is the first room on your right. The rest rooms are on your left as you enter. From the Hartford area, take Route 9 South. A few miles south of downtown Middletown on Route 9, take Exit 11 (Rt. 155, Randolph Road). At the end of the ramp (for both N. & S. bound), turn right onto Randolph Road. Continue to the traffic light at the top of the hill and turn left onto Saybrook Road. Go a quarter of a mile and turn right onto Reservoir Road. Travel past the stop sign, then take the first right onto Training Hill Road. Your first left will lead into the MxCC Campus parking area. When you arrive on campus, take a right onto Training Hill Road. Go to the second parking lot entrance and take a left into the upper lot. Directly in front of you will be Snow Hall. Enter Snow Hall and go up the stairs to the 2nd floor and go to the last room on the right, Room 509. 12 Monthly Meeting March 31 – 7 PM featuring Lego MindStorm Bring the Kids! See pg.11 for info. NEWSLETTER OF CONNECTICUT MACINTOSH CONNECTION, INC. Keeping Up... to Upgrade or Not? Smart Shopping By Don Dickey, president Every once in a while, Apple throws a monkey wrench into the works. It now seems like a long time ago, but I remember well the introduction of the PowerMac. Heralded as being light years ahead of the then aging 68040, the PowerPC processor came out during what many refer to as one of Apple’s dark years. It required a leap of faith to look forward to a day when there would be PPC-native software that might take advantage of the new chip’s architecture. If I recall, Adobe led the pack with a PPC-enhanced Photoshop. Apple was smart, and they built compatibility into the new chip so it would run most older software. It did so with a speed penalty, however. It took a little time, but soon there were PPC-native versions of most major applications, and not long after that there was a switch to software requiring the new chip. I think Microsoft Office was a leader in that category being one of the first major application packages that left the 68K architecture in the dust with Office 98. MARCH, 2004 a G3/400 upgrade for my SuperMac S900 clone which easily doubled the speed of the machine. Today, that upgrade even makes it possible to run OS X on that very old, tired computer. Does it make sense? If you have an older Mac or Mac clone, should you upgrade? The answer to this question depends on a few things. First, do you plan on staying with OS 9 (or older OS) for a while, and are you only interested in getting a speed bump? Or, are you truly interested in making the transition to OS X? My feeling is that while OS X is a nice, stable platform, it’s the cool, new OS X-only software that pushed me in the X direction. You just can’t run the current versions of iTunes, iPhoto, iMovie, iDVD, iChat, or Word, Excel, or PowerPoint on OS 9. You had three choices: keep running the old software on your old Mac, buy a new Mac to run the new software, or consider an upgrade package that would extend the life of your aging hardware. Even Apple sold upgrades for some machines back then! I specifically remember the PPC upgrade that brought new life to my old PowerBook 520c. In any case, you should evaluate your budget. If you are limited to spending $200-$300 to make your computing experience a trifle faster, perhaps an upgrade is worth considering. If, however, your budget is more like $600-$750, you would probably be better served by investigating an Apple refurbished computer at the Apple Store online. As I write this, Apple has refurbished Mac G4s selling for as low as $649 (including shipping and a full year warranty). I would not recommend that you spend half that amount to upgrade your old PowerMac or clone and not get full OS X compatibility in the process. Besides, even after you’ve upgraded the CPU, you’re still left with a dated system bus, hard drive and controller (SCSI?), and graphics card. Later, upgrades from PPCs to G3s and then to G4s became available. I bought If you have an older G4, however, the upgrade question takes a different 1 direction. Here, you already have a machine that can run OS X. In this case, a modest $200 investment might double your computer’s speed, make it more usable and enjoyable running OS X, enable processor-intensive software such as Garage Band to work, and buy you some time before needing a completely new Mac. Another $100 could buy you big, new, and faster hard drive. In this situation, the $300 to spruce up an aging G4 might be just the ticket. That seems like the magic number to me. Somehow, spending $450 or more on an older system goes against my grain. I’d rather salt that much away towards a newer Mac down the road. For the budget-challenged Mac fan, here are a couple of tips: If you’re interested in seeing how much an upgrade for your Mac costs, visit MacSales .com and SmallDog.com. If you’re in the market for a newer Mac, check the Apple online store. Scroll down to the red “Save” tag to get to a page of refurbished gear. You can also find refurbished gear at SmallDog. Also, you can often find recently discontinued gear online at the Apple Store. I saved a bundle getting a QuickSilver G4 right after the Mirrored Door G4s came out. Finally, if you or your spouse teaches or if you have a student in your family, you probably qualify for an educational discount. This can save you up to $300 on a new Mac. With proper ID, they’ll even honor the educational prices at the Apple Store in Westfarms! The transition to OS X is somewhat inevitable for most of us. Just remember that your user group is here to help. Take advantage of our monthly presentations, and bring your questions to the meetings! Mac 911: Help Desk by Christopher Breen Editor Deena Quilty Content Contributors Don Dickey Contributing Authors Rich Lenoce Designer George Maciel Publisher Connecticut Macintosh Connection, Inc. 41 Crossroads Plaza PMB 1984 West Hartford, CT 06117 Printer Budget Printers 1718 Park Street Hartford, CT 06106 We welcome submissions from members! Please submit articles by first of the month for inclusion in our newsletter. There is much talent in our group; it would be great to have several member articles in each issue. Mac OS X 10.3 (Panther) is a mighty fine feline, but it isn’t sleek enough to make this column obsolete. If you’re confounded by Panther’s ability to create a bootable disc, confused about installing missing language resources, seeking a replacement for Copy Agent, or distressed by ungainly games, read on. Boot Camp I’d like to create bootable copies of my OS X 10.3 installation discs for backup. How do I do this in Panther? –Terry Byers, Aptos, CA In earlier versions of OS X, you did this with Disk Copy, but in Panther, Disk Utility does the job. To copy your discs, follow these steps: 1. Launch Disk Utility (in the Applications: Utilities folder). 2. Insert the first Panther CD, and when its icon appears in the left side of the Disk Utility, select Mac OS X Install Disc 1. 3. Click on the New Image button at the top of the Disk Utility window and, in the resulting sheet, name the file (Panther 1, for example); then select DVD/CD Master from the Image Format pop-up menu. Don’t change the None setting in the Encryption pop-up menu. 4. Click on Save and eat half a snack while Disk Utility creates an image of the disc. 5. Select the image and click on the Burn button. 6. Insert a blank CD-R and enjoy the other half of your snack while Disk Utility burns and verifies your disc. 7. Repeat for all the other Panther discs that you want to back up. Relocalizer I used Mike Bombich’s free Delocalizer (http://software.bombich.com) to remove extraneous language files from my hard drive. It turns out that one of my Microsoft Word files includes a let- 2 terhead that contains foreign characters – characters that no longer appear. How can I restore language files? –Larry Grossberg, Hillsborough, NC Both Jaguar and Panther include language files you can install with a simple double-click. If you have the multidisc Jaguar installation set, you’ll find these files in the Optional Installs folder on the first disc. If you received Jaguar on a single DVD, the Optional Installs folder is inside the Welcome To Mac OS X folder, which may be invisible. If you don’t see it, download a copy of Marcel Bresink’s free TinkerTool (www.bresink.com/en/index.html), launch it, select the Finder button, enable the Show Hidden And System Files option, and click on Relaunch Finder. The Welcome To Mac OS X folder will now be visible. (Because invisible files are invisible so you won’t accidentally delete them, be sure to use TinkerTool to make your files invisible again when you’re done.) Restoring language files is much easier in Panther. Insert the second Panther CD, open the Packages folder, and double-click on the Languages.mpkg item. The Install Language Translations installer will open. After selecting a destination for the installed files, click on Continue to move to the Easy Install screen. Click on that screen’s Customize button to view a list of all the language files you can install or upgrade. Deselect the languages you don’t want to install, and click on Install. When you’re asked for it, enter your administrator’s password and click on OK. Replacing Smart Replace In the law office where I work, I use a set of 10,000 Word master documents, which is duplicated on each user’s computer. I make changes to the master set of documents and then regularly update the other users’ set of copies. Connectix’s Copy Agent’s Smart Replace feature allowed us to change only the documents that had been updated, but it doesn’t run on OS X. Is there another tool that can do the same thing? –Scott Darling, Riverside, CA Continued on page 3 Continued from page 2 I can recommend three – Econ Techs’ $20 ChronoSync (www.econtechnologies.com), Jason Weber’s $20 ExecutiveSync (www.executivesync .com), and Qdea’s $30 Synchronize X Plus (www.qdea.com). Although classified as synchronization utilities, they work well for backing up files, and because they’re designed to synchronize folders and volumes, they replace only changed files. I wrote about the synchronization abilities of each program in my May 2003 column (www.macworld.com/2003/05 /secrets/mac9110305), so I won’t repeat myself here, other than to say that you might prefer ChronoSync or Synchronize X Plus because they offer scheduling features. You could put the schedule to good use by placing the master folder of your Word documents on the office’s server, providing each user with a copy of one of these utilities, and configuring each user’s utility to synchronize with that master folder as often as you deem necessary. Blame Game What is it about games that, when they crash, OS X locks up completely? If my other applications go belly up, I can force-quit that application and the OS keeps on truckin’. –Todd Harding, Duluth, GA Games that perform slowly stink. To produce games that don’t stink, programmers employ various forms of trickery to pull as many resources from the Mac and its video card as possible. Because a game demands so much from your computer, if something goes wrong, your Mac may not be able to back out from it gracefully. Glenda Adams–Aspyr Media’s director of PC and Mac development–confirmed that games often push settings higher than a video card can handle, thus not leaving enough for the OS to politely exit if the game crashes. All is not lost, however. Ms. Adams passed along this hint: Sometimes the Force Quit command works even if you can’t see the dialog box. Try pressing 1-option-escape and then press the return key twice. This may safely force-quit the game even if you can’t see anything happen. In Panther, you can also try pressing 1shift-option-escape. This force-quits the active application without asking for confirmation. from multiple songs: In the Burning tab of iTunes’ Preferences window, select Audio CD as the disc format and set the desired gap between songs. Now create a playlist with the tunes that you’d like to accompany the slide show. Burn the playlist to a CD. Time for Resets From iTunes’ Source list, select the CD you just burned and select all the songs on it. From the Advanced menu, choose Join CD Tracks and then click on the Import button. All the joined tracks –which must be consecutive tracks on the CD–will be imported as a single track that you can use as the audio background for your slide show. There was a power failure in my neighborhood while my Power Mac G4 was plugged in. I unplugged it until the power returned but when I plugged it back in, it wouldn’t start–the button glowed when I pushed it, but I heard no activity from the computer. Is it dead? Kerin Tyrrell, Macworld.com forums Probably not. This has happened to my Power Mac G4 when the lights have gone out, and I’ve put things right by pressing the PMU reset button, which is located on the Mac’s motherboard (see “One-Touch Repair”)–its exact location varies depending on which Power Mac you own. Pushing this button resets the Power Management Unit and usually allows the Mac to start up. The Apple-recommended method for performing this operation is to unplug the power cord and press the PMU reset button only one time (pressing it more than once could keep the PMU chip from responding and reduce the internal battery’s life from five years to two days). Wait ten seconds, plug the Mac back in, and then press the power button. After resetting the PMU, it’s also a good idea to reset the Mac’s nonvolatile RAM (NVRAM). To do so, shut down the Mac and restart while holding down 1-option-P-R. Continue to hold these keys until you hear the startup sound twice. Let go, and the Mac will continue to start up. After resetting the PMU and NVRAM, use System Preferences to verify your time zone, startup volume, and volume settings. Tip of the Month In the January 2004 Mac 911 column (“Missing Link”), I suggested using iMovie to string together iTunes songs into a single track that could be played behind an iPhoto 2 slide show. Here’s another way to create a single track 3 Unsolicited Advice At the risk of injuring the feelings of Apple’s Panther user-interface team, I have to admit that I find Panther’s metallic Finder windows overbearing and unattractive. Because I do, I’ve scrounged the Web for tools that banish any trace of metal from my otherwise attractive OS. One such tool is the free Whiteout, available from www.versiontracker. com. Whiteout replaces the system resource that brushes on the metal appearance in the Finder, iChat, iCal, and Safari (sorry, iTunes is still metallic) with a modified version of the resource that creates off-white, dimly pinstriped windows. If you’d like your Mac to sport a wildly different appearance, check out Unsanity’s $20 ShapeShifter (www.unsanity.com/haxies/shapeshifter), which allows you to apply themes to Panther’s interface. Changing more than Finder windows, these themes alter the appearance of windows, menus, buttons, scroll bars, and sliders. Macworld contributing editor Chris Breen is the author of Macworld’s tips and troubleshooting column, “Mac 911,” as well as Secrets of the iPod: Second Edition and Mac 911 (Peachpit Press). Find Chris’ books at www.amazon.com and www. peachpit. com. User Group Special: Get 12 issues of Macworld for $12! Subscribe today at www.macworld.com/dollarperissue Archiving Your iLife By Rich Lenoce, Vice President 100 years after my great grandparent’s wedding, the photos of that event are still in beautiful condition. But a CD that I burned of digital photos in 1995 is unreadable today. As media storage becomes more “digital,” how do we preserve our iLife memories of photos, music and videos—and even our work—for the long term? Storage and Compatibility Selecting the proper storage media and format for compatibility is the best way to guarantee playback in the distant future. A 78 rpm record isn’t much good without a 78 rpm phonograph–but today 78/45/33 rpm record players are still manufactured and available from places like Sharper Image because they were the standard of their time. CDs and DVDs are standard today and there is no reason to believe, even if replaced by better formats, that CDs and DVDs would necessarily disappear since hundreds of millions of recordings are in circulation. Also, if you use standard digital formats such as JPEG and MPEG to store your memories, future players should not only play the CD or DVD but read the files. Archiving, the science of storing and preserving information or items for 50 or more years, requires knowledge of the proper media and methods of storing pictures, sounds and videos for future generations to enjoy. Archiving Digital Photos If you are worried about your digital photos file formats being incompatible or destroyed, have the photos printed by a reputable photo lab, put them in albums and store them away. Don’t trust your ink jet printer to be “archival” no matter what the manu- facturer said. Keeping these photos out of direct sunlight is the best method to preserve them. If you are going to display the photos, have a professional framing service use acid free materials and special UV glass. Since original digital photos, audio and videos need to be stored electronically, let’s examine each digital media storage technology and how to approach archiving. Forget Hard Disks With a gigabyte worth of storage falling below $1 a gig, it would seem this could be an economic method of long-term storage. Just get a FireWire drive and put it in the closet. Wrong! Hard disks are precision electronic devices with motors, heads and media that must all work in perfect synchrony and therefore many things can go wrong with them. Hard drives will fail and, because of their fragility, they are useless for long-term archival storage, which is why you should constantly back up your data to a more stable storage media like CDs or DVDs. CDs and DVDs Commercial CDs and DVDs are the most permanent examples of CD/DVD storage because they use a permanent printed metallic layer that holds the data; that layer is then placed within a plastic disc. As consumers, we are left with the CD and DVD recordable formats, which use a layer of organic dye sandwiched between a reflective layer on top and a clear plastic polymer underneath. When a disk is “burned,” the laser literally burns the dye, which becomes darker where the laser has hit the disk. The alternating bright and dark spots are read as the bit pattern that has been recorded. Both the dye material and reflective layer play an important role in the 4 longevity of a CD-R and DVD-R. Like the dyes in color photos, these dyes will break down over time. The longest lasting and most stable dye is Phthalocyanine. When Phthalocyanine is coupled with a real gold reflective layer and kept in cold, dark storage, tests indicate a disc can last 200+ years. Mitsui has a patent on this technology and makes the Mitsui Gold CD-R. Some Phthalocyanine disks use plain silver, a silver and gold blend, or other metallic material for their reflective layers and these disks can last 200 years. These include Mitsui Silver, Ricoh Platinum - Phthalocyanine dye + Silver. If you are looking for stable but not quite Smithsonian-like archival quality, Azo dye with a metal reflective layer has been tested to last 100 years using proper storage. Azo CD-Rs are only made by Mitsubishi/Verbatim and are labeled Mitsubishi/Verbatim-Azo + Silver or under the Verbatim DataLife label. Verbatim DataLife CD-R and DVD-R disks are very common and offer longevity at a terrific price. The shortest-lived type of dye used is cyanine dye, a chemically unstable dye that must be stabilized with other materials. These are the least expensive disks intended for short-term use. The aluminum used for the reflective layer in these cheaper disks oxidizes quickly, contaminating the disc and making it unreadable sometimes within a matter of months. The first CD-Rs and all current CD-RW discs use this combination of materials and is the reason many haven’t lasted. Never use CD-RW and DVD-RW disks for longterm storage. Storage and Handling As with color photographs, CD-R and DVD-R dyes fade when exposed to Continued on page 5 Continued from page 4 light, particularly sunlight and break down in extreme hot and cold. Direct sun or excessive heat can destroy the longest lasting disk in about two hours! Store recordable media that you wish to archive in places where light, heat and humidity are controlled. Cool, dry places are best. Handling also affects a disk’s longevity. On a recordable CD/DVD, the reflective layer is on the top of the disk making it the most vulnerable to scratches. Bending a disc can cause microscopic breaks and cracks in the dye or reflective layer. Always store an archived disk in a hard jewel case with a center spindle that supports the disk and always handle a disk from the edges. Never mail an archived disc, but if you must, pack it in a full size jewel case, thick bubble wrap and a tear proof envelope. Finally, marking or labeling a disk can reduce longevity. Stick-on label materials can cause disc failure as the glue may eventually seep into the disk and on to the reflective layer causing contamination. The ink from a Sharpie marker has been shown to penetrate the plastic. Use CD safe markers like those from Maxell. If archiving a disk, never use labels, glue or inks on a CD. Make Copies Finally, the type of archival media discussed cost less than a dollar each for the highest quality archival CDs and less than $5.00 for high quality DVDRs. At this price, there’s no reason why you shouldn’t make more than one copy if the data is truly important to you. Make several copies and designate at least one as the original archive disk. This disk should never be touched or handled and should be placed in a safe place such as a locked fire safe, a safe deposit box or storage chest. It doesn’t hurt to keep two archive originals in the same or different locations in case one fails over time. You should designate at least one disk as the copy master to be stored vertically on a shelf, in a drawer or other dark location. The copy master will be used to make future copies should any day-to-day copies become damaged. There should be copies for every day use and access. All copies except for the original archive disk should be checked annually for data integrity by placing the disk in a computer and making sure the disk mounts and files can be accessed. The archive original should never be accessed unless time has taken its toll on all other copies and even then it should only be used to make another copy-master. For compatibility purposes, a list of files and their formats should be put on the jewel case cover along with the disk format type. Every 5-10 years the content should be reviewed against current file formats and disk standards to make sure the formats used haven’t become obsolete. If either the disk or file formats have become obsolete there should be readily accessible tools to convert the old disks and files to the latest formats. Yes, I want to join CMC Benefits: Monthly meetings, monthly newsletter, discounted book purchases, computer problem assistance, network with other Mac users, User Group Store, etc. Date ______________________________ Name _____________________________ Address ___________________________ City ______________________________ State________ Zip __________________ Phone (Home) ______________________ Phone (Office) ______________________ Phone (Fax) ________________________ Business___________________________ Tip of the Month Occupation_________________________ Did you attend our holiday meeting in December? If you did, then you probably came away with a great caricature from artist and member Bill Dougal. Here’s a tip from President Don Dickey for those of you running OS X and iChat. Scan your caricature, make the lines bolder (bring into Photoshop as a gray scale doc, apply a Gaussian blur, then crank up the contrast to unblur), and reduce the size to something like 64 pixels square. You can then drop this icon of you into the well under System Preferences for your logon picture and also into the well in iChat so people see it in their buddy list or when you send an instant message or invite an audio/video chat. 5 Email:_____________________________ Areas of special interest to you: __________________________________ __________________________________ Annual Family Membership - $25.00 Mail to: CMC 41 Crossroads Plaza – PMB 1984 West Hartford, CT 06117 Make checks payable to CMC or... Register Online with PayPal at www.ctmac.org Microsoft Office Alternatives by Rich Lenoce, Vice President $400 for MS Office? $200 just for Word? For typing basic letters and calculating checkbooks, that’s a lot of money! Most of us don’t need Entourage because OS X comes with Address Book, Calendar, iSync and OS X Mail. But, in a PC-centric world dominated by MS Office in the workplace, can Mac users function without Microsoft Office? Can a lower cost Mac product offer most of MS Office’s features and seamless compatibility? The CMC Board tested six programs over 30 days: iTextPro/Lightway, AppleWorks, Mariner Write and Calc, Think Free Office, Nisus Writer Express and Ragtime Solo. Here’s what they found. AppleWorks 6 ($79 or free with new Macs) CMC President Don Dickey uses Appleworks 6 exclusively. “I don’t even own a copy of Microsoft Office and writing is my business!” Don finds AW6 offers all the features of MS Office with its word processing, spreadsheet and presentation modules, but it also includes drawing, painting, and database programs not included in Office’s Macintosh version. AW6 opens and saves MS Office file formats (.doc, xls, etc.), thanks to the included and well-integrated DataViz MacLink Plus program. Don says, “Best of all, it’s fast, small and will run on almost any Mac, new or old.” A Windows version is also available. Hundreds of templates and 25,000 clip art images are available to customers with an Internet connection. AW6 could use some updating. Data isn’t interchangeable between AW6 And OS X’s Address Book and Calendar formats. To save files to an MS Office format, you must choose Save As and then select the Office format manually; the default preferences are the native Apple formats and that can’t be changed. Also, integration with .Mac for publishing data to the web is practically non-existent. That being said, this is a program ripe for a major upgrade, but as it stands now, it’s still a great buy. Think Free Office ($49.95) Chris Hart, CMC Secretary, found the $49 ThinkFree office an adequate alternative to MS Office. It has the ability to open and save native Office documents and it worked well, albeit slowly. Its interface was very similar to Office…but the PC version of Office! Chris found that the dialog boxes and other navigation elements used PC icons. ThinkFree Office is a Java program meant to run on both platforms. “Switchers” might be comfortable with this approach but Mac aficionados might need to learn the equivalent PC icons if they haven’t used MS Office in a PC environment. The program is slow in opening and translating native Office documents and has some bugs, but overall Chris thought it did the job. Available from http://www.thinkfree.com/ Ragtime Solo (Free) Can a great program really be free? CMC Webmaster Brian Desmond thinks so. Ragtime Solo, if used non-commercially, is free (commercially it’s called Ragtime 5 and is $600) and proved to be a real surprise to Brian. The basic office applications–word processor, spreadsheet and presentation are full featured–but the program also came with sophisticated page layout, drawing, painting and database programs! 6 The page layout part of the package convinced Brian this was more than a Microsoft knock-off exclaiming, “PageMaker is back!” because the interface and operations are very similar. Unlike ThinkFree, Ragtime uses a non-Microsoft approach to the interface, which takes some getting used to. Text and objects are placed in containers that can then can be placed anywhere on a page and layered. This unique approach provides flexibility far beyond Word-style word processing but also a learning curve, which Brian found worth the effort. Ragtime is not without its faults, although they are few. Ragtime Solo had no problem opening Office documents, but could not save in Office native formats, instead using industry standard RTF and PDF, which are fine for most functions. No English dictionary is included but can be purchased for $15 (euro). Available from http://www.ragtime-online.com/ Mariner Write/Calc ($69.95 each) Surprisingly, both applications look more like AppleWorks than Microsoft Office, but offer most of Office’s functions. Mail merge was missing from M a r i n e r Write, as was the ability to save in .doc and .xls formats, but could save to RTF and other standard formats. I found Mariner Write and Calc had trouble displaying complex Word and Excel documents. For most users this may not be a problem, but for professionals this could prove troublesome. I found the interface to be nearly identical to the Appleworks with one exception: the style/font toolbar was right at the top of the document making the most common features always accessible. Mariner’s biggest problem is the price–nearly twice as much as Appleworks for two only programs. http://www.marinersoftware.com Continued on page 7 Continued from page 6 Nisus Writer Express ($60 download / $40 upgrade) CMC Ambassador Connie Scott found Nisus Express to be a welcome surprise. Though she pines for the days of Microsoft Word 5.1, Nisus’s unique interface made her take notice. Express uses a side pane to put common tools such as styles, sizes, colors and objects. This unique approach plants common tools firmly to the app instead of floating around the desktop. Text sizes are changed using a slider providing immediate visual feedback. It is a true OS X application, built from the ground up so it’s taking a while to gain all of its classic counterpart features. Connie felt it was a fun application once you got the hang of it, and has great potential. http://www.nisus.com IText/iText Pro/Lightway (Free / $20 / $25) These are different implementations of the same program with each level going up a notch from basic text editor to word processor. Treasurer George Maciel said though documentation was good, the applications are somewhat limited. Interfaces don’t follow normal conventions and though they work fine and are inexpensive, they really aren’t good Word alternatives considering all of the other programs that do a better job. http://members.aol.com/iText/ Apple Seminars Online Below you will find a listing of current seminars online. These online events are available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week from any computer with internet access. They are designed to be no more than 30 minutes in length and offer a wide variety of resources and information for your review. Topics cover solutions using Apple and partner products and technologies. For training on these and other solutions visit http://seminars.apple. com/training/index.html To find out more about these and other Apple events, please visit: http://www.apple.com/seminars Keynote – Improve Your Presentation Skills Watch this free online seminar and find out how to improve your presentation skills. For more information visit http://seminars.apple.com/ seminarsonline/presenting/apple/ index.html?s=203 Information Lifecycle Management Steve Kenniston, an Enterprise Storage Group analyst will offer insights as to how to manage vast amounts of data while keeping your overhead low. For more information visit http://seminars.apple.com/seminars online/ilm/apple/index.html?s=203 Biotech is in our DNA Michael Athanas, Ph.D., of The BioTeam will show how to install a fully provisioned informatics cluster on one or more Xserve servers using iNquiry. For more information visit http://seminars.apple.com/seminars online/biotech/apple/index.html?s=203 Keynote: Presentations that Meet Your Creative Standards Take this free online seminar and find out how Keynote allows you to create superior presentations you would expect from a professional creative tool. For more information visit http://seminars.apple.com/seminars online/keynote/apple/index.html?s=203 Break Through the Barriers to Digital Photography Success Digital photography provides exciting ways to deliver new content and gain greater control over the finished product, while saving time and money. For more information visit http:// seminars.apple.com/seminarsonline/ prophoto/apple/index.html?s=203 Perfectly Focused - Digital Photography on Mac OS X This seminar will show you why you should take the plunge to digital—and how to get started with your own digital photography workflow on Mac OS X. For more information visit http://seminars.apple.com/seminars online/perfectfocusinosx/apple/ Color Management for Your Digital Workflow This free online seminar helps demystify color management and gives you the knowledge you need to incorporate it into your workflow. For more information visit http://seminars.apple. com/seminarsonline/colormgmt/apple/ind ex.html?s=203 Unwire Your Business Take this free online seminar and find out how Apple’s wireless and mobile solutions let you take your computing environment with you wherever you go. For more information visit http://seminars.apple.com/seminars online/wireless/apple/index.html?s=203 Guitarists and the Mac A Conversation with Pat Metheny Join Pat Metheny in this free online seminar and learn how the Mac can help you take your music to the next level. For more information visit http://seminars.apple.com/seminarsonline/guitarists/apple/index.html?s=203 Why Hire a Member of the Apple Consultants Network Learn about the services provided by and advantages of hiring members of the Apple Consultants Network. For more information visit http://www. seminars.apple.com/seminars online/hireacn/apple/index.html 7 Web Picks of the Month Compiled by Neal Dembicer, CMC Please report any broken links to: NealDD@yahoo.com From Neal Dembicer: http://www.gohook.com Going, Going, Sold! If you’ve ever visited an online auction site, you may well have wondered how much that used computer or that piece of jewelry was really worth. GoHook is a new auction database that is meant to answer that question. Its goal is to allow buyers and sellers to research the fair market value of an item by checking the final sale prices in completed auctions. So far the site lists only about 150,000 auctions–all from eBay–but it is adding more than 2,000 auctions a day and hopes to offer a million auctions by the end of the year. It’s free until next year. From Don Dickey: http://www.itl.nist.gov/div895/ carefordisc/index.html or http://www.itl.nist.gov/div895/ carefordisc/disccare.html A US Government web site where you can learn how to safely store data on CD and DVD media. It seems that adhesive labels and certain types of markers can damage data on such media. From Robert F. Sawyer: http://www.badapple.kustomrides.com/ From author Bill Butler: “Welcome to my homage to Panther, the operating system that Apple deigned to replace Jaguar, an honest, stable platform. In its place is a surprisingly unstable OS 10.3.x. Herein lies the various “screens of death” I’ve encountered, mostly system crashes rivaling any DOS blue screen.” This site is funny with great comments on the various screens of death. Unfortunately I have seen too many of these screens myself! From Jack Bass: http://www.presidentmatch.com/Main .jsp2?cp=main This is a very interesting site that matches all of your voting preferences with the candidates stated positions, and then tells you who you should vote for president. At the end, click on the compare button, to compare all the positions of your desired candidate with the one that is chosen for you, if it is different. www.govliquidation.com This is a site for buying government surplus at auction. Practically anything you might want, at very reasonable prices . . . if you know what you want or are willing to research the item to know what you are bidding on. From Deena Quilty: http://www.zinio.com/category?cat=1005 Free sample electronic versions of several good magazines are available. You’ll need the free Zinio Reader – it’s available for Mac OS X. Limewire features: • Ease of use - just install, run, and search • Search by artist, title, genre, or other meta information • Elegant multiple search tabbed interface • Integrated chat • iTunes integration for Mac users • “Swarm” downloads from multiple hosts • Unique “ultrapeer” technology reduces bandwidth requirements for most users • Browse host feature—even works through firewalls • Added Bitzi metadata lookup • International versions-available in many languages. • Connects to the network using GWebCache, a distributed connection system • Automatic local network searches for lightning-fast downloads. • If you’re on a corporate or university network, down load files from other users on the same network almost instantaneously! • Support for MAGNET links that allow you to click on web page links that access Gnutella. Download of the Month submitted by Debi Foss Limewire File-sharing the quick and easy way www.limewire.com/english/content/download.shtml Limewire is free, Limewire Pro is not. There is a version for OS X and a Version for Mac OS 8.5 and above. I am not using it to share music files, just regular files! If you share music files, you do so at your own risk. (OK, you have had your public service announcement. And if I catch you downloading Clay Aiken without paying, I will personally come over and paddle your ***. Sorry, just love the guy!) This latest 3.8.6 release features numerous enhancements to improve search and download performance and refine the user experience. A new connection scheme with a connection quality meter helps users gain connectivity faster on startup. Search progress bars show a user how far along a search is progressing. Finally, files of any language can now be shared and searched for through LimeWire. 8 Special MUG Offers from the Apple User Group documents, making it available for use by the most popular software titles. These special offers are brought to you by the Apple User Group Advisory Board. You must be a current user group member to qualify for these savings. Regular price: $129, User Group price: $89. Order PDF2Office at: http://www. digitalriver.com/promo=38013. This offer expires May 31, 2004 and is available to members of U.S. user groups. Take Control Electronic Books Adam and Tonya Engst of TidBITS are continuing their fourteen years of support for user groups with a special 10 percent discount for all orders in their new Take Control electronic book series. Take Control ebooks provide highly practical, tightly focused, inexpensive help from leading Macintosh authors. Titles are delivered in PDF layout with active links, and are optimized for on-screen viewing. XtremeMac Current titles include: Take Control of Upgrading to Panther, by Joe Kissell, Take Control of Customizing Panther, by Matt Neuburg, Take Control of Users & Accounts in Panther, by Kirk McElhearn, Take Control of Sharing Files in Panther, by Glenn Fleishman To take advantage of this offer, enter code “muggle” during Step 2 of the checkout process (Shipping and Payment Method). Your discount will be calculated automatically. XtremeMac http://www.xtrememac.com This offer expires May 31, 2004 and is available to members of U.S. user groups. To get your discount, enter coupon code CPN31208MUG when ordering. Ta k e C o n t r o l E b o o k C a t a l o g http://www.tidbits.com/takecontrol. This ongoing offer is available to user group members worldwide. Recosoft PDF2Office PDF2Office is the revolutionary PDF document conversion and data extraction tool. PDF2Office converts PDF documents into editable Microsoft Word, RTF, AppleWorks, HTML and other file formats. PDF2Office recreates the original layout of the document, forming paragraphs, applying styles, re-grouping independent graphics elements, extracting images, creating tables, and processing headers/footers, endnotes/footnotes and columns/sections. PDF2Office provides options for converting a range of pages in a PDF document into word processing formats and popular image types such as JPEG, Photoshop and more. PDF2Office lets you unlock the content stored in PDF XtremeMac is proud to offer Mac user group members 20 percent discount on all iPod accessories, as well as 20 percent off our new RecipeManager software, awarded Best of Show at MacWorld Expo. Choose from iPod cases, car chargers, and more, including the new SportWrap for the active iPod user. Keep watching for exciting new products for the entire iPod line. Element K Journals View a free issue and save $50 off a new subscription. Do you want to advance your skills to a higher level and rapidly increase your productivity with Photoshop? Then you’ll love our monthly “how-to” journals “Photoshop Fundamentals” & “Inside Photoshop.” Beginner or expert, you’ll jump-start your productivity with Adobe Photoshop when you subscribe to either of these 16-page, four-color journals that give you specific, real world design examples you can easily apply to your day-to-day work. You’ll learn quick shortcuts, find hidden features, and avoid common mistakes so you can work smarter, faster, and more creatively. Regular price: $139 per year, Mac user group members: first year for just $89. Price is $99 outside the U.S. & Canada. Element K Journals http://go.elementkjournals.com/mug. This offer expires June 31, 2004. 9 Design Tools Monthly Free issue and 50% off a new subscription You know that stack of magazines in your office that you wish you had time to read? What about all those websites you need to scour for updates? If you prefer to spend your time being creative, get Design Tools Monthly instead. For the past twelve years, Design Tools Monthly has provided “the Executive Summary of Graphic Design News” to subscribers in more than 40 countries. Regular price: $229, Mac user group members: first year for just $99, $125 outside U.S. and Canada. For a free sample issue or to subscribe:http:// www.design-tools.com/mug or call (303) 543-8400. This worldwide offer expires July 31, 2004. The MUG Store The MUG store always has great deals for user group members! If you haven’t looked lately, be sure to surf to www.applemugstore.com and seek out great deals on all sorts of Mac products. This month’s highlights include: Refurbished eMacs starting at $599 Refurbished iBooks starting at $729 Refurbished 17” iMacs from $1549 Don’t forget - your group gets a one percent return toward anything the MUG Store sells when your members buy from the Store. Place your orders. http://www.applemugstore.com This offer is available to members of U.S. user groups. Get a complete list of all current deals. http://www.mugcenter .com/vendornews/vendornews.html CMC Web Site Access www.ctmac.org User ID: xxx (all uppercase) Password: xxxxx (all lowercase) Apple User Group Store www.applemugstore.com January 1, 2004 - March 31, 2004 User ID: xxxx / Password: xxxx April 1, 2004 - July 31, 2004 User ID: xxxx / Password: xxxx 2003-2004 CMC OFFICERS AND BOARD MEMBERS President Don Dickey president@ctmac.org 860-232-2841 Vice President Rich Lenoce vicepres@ctmac.org 860-347-1789 Treasurer George Maciel treasurer@ctmac.org 860-561-0319 Secretary Chris Hart secretary@ctmac.org 860-291-9393 Download of the Month Debbie Foss dotm@ctmac.org 860-583-1165 Public Relations Neal Dembicer pr@ctmac.org 860-673-7711 Editor Deena Quilty editor@ctmac.org 860-678-8622 Webmaster Brian Desmond webmaster@ctmac.org (860) 668-8728 Raffles Robert Sawyer raffles@ctmac.org 860-677-7787 Past President Joseph Arcuri pastpres@ctmac.org 860-485-1547 Special Events Jack Bass programs@ctmac.org Ambassador Connie Scott ambassador@ctmac.org 860-584-9573 Caricatures by Bill Dougal of Lebanon, (860) 456-9041. Available for illustration assignments and event caricature. 10 Upcoming Meetings Monthly CMC Meetings are held on last Wednesday of the month, 7:00 p.m. – 9:00 p.m. (except Nov. and Dec. when the meetings are one week earlier due to the holidays) Board meetings are the first Thursday of the month. If you wish to attend a Board meeting, contact an officer for the location. March 31 • 7 pm Bring the kids! Mindstorm allows your Mac to control Legos into walking, rolling, moving, reaching robots. For adults, Mindstorms are just plain fun but for children it teaches them a variety of topics including math, science, robotics, computer and design technology. This presentation should be fun for the whole family. April 28 • 7 pm Wacom Tablet Demo From the basic tablet to the incredible Cintiq tablet. May 26 • 7 pm Digital Photography Basics Selecting and using your digital camera. June 29 • 7 pm Hands-On Photoshop, iPhoto and iDVD Workshops at Middlesex Community College. Future topics include: GarageBand Quark/InDesign Celebrity Guest Night Annual Auction Migration to OSX and Much More! If you have a program you are interested in, email Rich Lenoce at: vicepres@ctmac.org Discounted Books CMC continues to offer current members the opportunity to purchase any published book for either Mac or Windows at a 20% discount. All major publishers are carried by our source. Call Neal Dembicer at 673-7711 or send email to booksales@ctmac.org. Provide the book title, the publisher and the ISBN number, if possible, and he will check on its availability. Books will be back-ordered if not in stock. Normally, the wait is not too long. Join the many people who have satisfactorily used this service! Treasurer’s Report FREE Raffle! Every member who attends our monthly meetings gets a raffle ticket. This will give you a chance for one of our free prizes every month! You could win . . . t-shirts, toys, CDs, mugs, software . . . there’s always something we’re giving away! New Members Ending Checking Account Balance ................$1921.29 Spread the word. We need new members! Have your friends and co-workers join us for fun and learning about OS X, the Mac and iMac. Savings Account Balance...$3945.85 Balances as of February 29, 2004 Total Membership: 121 “Back To Basics” CMC Classified Ads A monthly “mini” group meeting, designed to help you to better understand your Mac, will take place each month immediately prior to the main presentation. It will provide you with a forum to learn those details that you’ve always wondered about. Details, including start time and date of the first meeting, will be announced soon by Chris Hart (email: secretary@ctmac.org) Members can Advertise For Sale, Swap, Trade, Giveaway or Want to Buy Items. This space can be used by members to advertise non-business items which they are no longer using or upgrading. This is a free service provided to our members. Any business items or services can be advertised at the rates shown below: CMC Elections are coming up! Monthly Ad Rates Elections for President, Vice President, Secretary, and Treasurer will be held at the May meeting. Any member is eligible to run for any position. Any one willing to give back to CMC for what they have received, please contact Connie Scott, Nominating Committee Chair at ambassador@ctmac.org. Any questions about the election, please e-mail to the same address. 11 Business Card ..........................$10.00 Quarter Page.............................$20.00 Half Page..................................$30.00 Full Page (or insert) .................$50.00 Submit all ad copy to the Editor on a disk with nothing else on it or e-mail it for insertion in the following issue. Display ads must be submitted camera-ready in .eps or .pdf format with all fonts & graphics embedded. 41 Crossroads Plaza – PMB 1984 West Hartford, CT 06117 CMC Meeting Location – a PDF document containing a visual direction guide to UConn Health Center is available on our website: http://www.ctmac.org. Print and take it with you to find us easily! Monthly meetings will be held at UConn Health Center in Farmington. When hands-on programs require computers for attendees, we will be using Middlesex Community College in Middletown. Directions to UCHC, Farmington Directions to Middlesex C.C. From I-84: Take Exit 39 (if coming from I-84 West, Exit 39 is after 39A). Turn right at first traffic light onto Route 4 East (Farmington Avenue). At third traffic light, turn right to enter the Health Center campus. Go around the main building to the right (at a Y in road), then take a left when you get to the Academic Entrance. The road becomes twoway there so you should be able to tell where to turn. (Do not go on straight to the two-way part). Then take the second right into parking lot A&B. this is close to the building. Go past the police station entrance on your left (small sign). You will see a continuation of the building with its own entrance area. This is the new research building. Enter on the ground floor, turn right and enter room EG-013 on your right. This is the first room on your right. The rest rooms are on your left as you enter. From the Hartford area, take Route 9 South. A few miles south of downtown Middletown on Route 9, take Exit 11 (Rt. 155, Randolph Road). At the end of the ramp (for both N. & S. bound), turn right onto Randolph Road. Continue to the traffic light at the top of the hill and turn left onto Saybrook Road. Go a quarter of a mile and turn right onto Reservoir Road. Travel past the stop sign, then take the first right onto Training Hill Road. Your first left will lead into the Middlesex Community College Campus parking area. When you arrive on campus, take a right onto Training Hill Road. Go to the second parking lot entrance and take a left into the upper lot. Directly in front of you will be Snow Hall. Enter Snow Hall and go up the stairs to the 2nd floor and go to the last room on the right, Room 509. 12 Monthly Meeting April 28 – 7 p.m. Wacom Tablet Demo From the basic tablet to the incredible Cintiq tablet. Green Apples – 6 p.m. (See Page 5 for details) NEWSLETTER OF CONNECTICUT MACINTOSH CONNECTION, INC. Instant Messaging ‘04 By Don Dickey, CMC president As you know, my focus as your president has always been to help you have fun with your Mac. In keeping with this theme, I’d like to share my experiences with Instant Messaging. While it’s been around for a while, recent software upgrades have made it a lot more fun than it used to be. If you have a teenager in your household, you already know that Instant Messaging is “in” these days. The good news is that if you have a broadband connection to the internet, at least your teen isn’t tying up the phone line for hours on end as was common in years past. What you should know is that Instant Messaging isn’t just for teens! I’ve been using it for quite a while now to communicate with several friends who would otherwise require a long distance phone call. I don’t mean text chats either, but real voice communication! What do you need to get started? First of all, you n e e d a n AO L “screen name” which is your IM identity or “handle.” Fortunately, MAY, 2004 you don’t need to be an AOL subscriber to get one, and it’s completely free! The place to get started is at www.aim.com or my.screenname.aol. com. You’ll need to convince them that you’re over 18 years old and you will also need to provide an email address where they can send you a message that you must reply to for account activation to be completed. Next, you need to get some Instant Messaging software. If you’re running Panther (OS X v10.3) or later, you’ve already got Apple’s great iChat AV. If you’re running Jaguar (OS X v10.2.x), you can purchase iChat AV from Apple. If you’re running OS 9 you’re not out of luck. You can download the “Classic” version of AOL’s own instant messenger which includes “Talk” in the full install. Note that you should not download the “Carbon” version (now at 4.7) as Talk is not included. To use VOIP (voice over internet protocol), you also need some equipment: a microphone and speakers. Fortunately, many Macs include builtin microphones and nearly all (except the new G5s) have built-in speakers. Those with iMacs, iBooks, eMacs, and PowerBooks are ready to IM right out-of-the-box! Otherwise, you may need to purchase a microphone and speakers. Older PowerMacs use what’s called a PlainTalk microphone. Newer Macs use USB microphones. I have 1 a USB desk microphone and also a USB headset for Instant Messaging. If you’re using AOL’s software (under OS 9), you’ll find that headphones are a virtual necessity. Otherwise, the person you are talking with will hear themselves coming back in a sort of reverb. OS X’s iChat eliminates this problem by electronically subtracting you speaker audio from what the microphone hears, so a headset is not usually required (unless you want to keep others in the room from listening in on your conversation). Finally, all that’s left is to set the software up. You need to enter your username and password to “sign on” to the AOL Instant Messaging server. You also should add the screen names of your “buddies” into your “Buddy List” so you can see when they’re on and initiate a chat or conversation. If you’re using iChat AV, you can start it from your Dock. When setting it up, you should tell it that you’re using an AOL server and not a .Mac server, and what your screen name and passContinued on page 2 In this Issue Instant Messaging................................ 1 Scanning with Digital Camera............. 3 Super Driving - DVD ...........................4 Green Apples ....................................... 5 Tactile Pro Keybord Article...................6 Web Picks of the Month .......................8 Download of the Month .......................8 Apple Seminars ....................................9 Upcoming Meetings ...........................10 Meetings & Club News ......................11 Continued from page 1 word are. In Preferences, set it up to show your online status in the menu bar. You’ll see a new symbol at the top right of your screen where you can easily toggle your status from Available to Off-line and also bring up your Buddy List. In your iChat AV “Buddy List” click the “+” button at the bottom. Then, click New Person. Set the Account Type to AIM, type in a buddy’s name and click Add. In AOL’s software, just use the Setup tab in your buddy list to add buddies. You can separate them into categories, such as Buddies, Family, or CoWorkers, if you wish. Editor Deena Quilty Content Contributor Don Dickey Contributing Author Rich Lenoce Deeena Quilty CMC Editor Designer George Maciel Photographers John Scott Jack Bass Chris Hart Caricatures Bill Dougal, CMC member (860) 456-9041 Available for illustration assignments & event caricatures Publisher Connecticut Macintosh Connection, Inc. 41 Crossroads Plaza PMB 1984 West Hartford, CT 06117 Printer Budget Printers 1718 Park Street Hartford, CT 06106 We welcome submissions from members! Please submit articles by first of the month for inclusion in our newsletter. There is much talent in our group; it would be great to have several member articles in each issue. If you’re running iChat AV, the “V” stands for Video. This, or course, requires a video camera. Apple supports only FireWire video cameras such as their excellent iSight or most any digital camcorder (with a FireWire cable). There is shareware available which enables inexpensive USB cameras to work, however. I recently purchased iChatUSBCam from the folks at www.ecamm.com for $10, and it works just fine. That was a lot cheaper than any FireWire camera, and sufficient to get my feet wet with video conferencing. You can download a demo that runs for a week so you can see if your hardware and software are up to the task before plunking down real $$$. There are several hidden features in iChat AV (and also in AOL/IM... just in different places). One cool thing you can do is set up “Actions” that happen when a buddy logs on. To do this in iChat, click on the person in your buddy list (they don’t have to be online at the time) and Get Info (Command-I). Toggle Show at the top to Actions. Here you can toggle Event to Buddy Becomes Available to cause a sound to play, the Dock icon to bounce, and/or to have your Mac announce them with speech. For instance, when my buddy John signs 2 on, my Mac says, “ J o h n i s o n .” This way, I can set the defaults in iChat to be silent, so Buddies coming and going don’t make any sounds, but certain Buddies announce themselves as I’m likely to want to chat with them right away. (Note that you can do this in AOL’s software, but you do it in Preferences instead of in the Buddy List.) Another thing you can do is set a special ring tone for audio and/or video chat invitations from this Buddy. This is handy if you’re in a different room and want to be able to hear a loud ringer; useful for when your kid calls from college (and you’d rather chat on your Mac than on a long distance phone call). The default ringer in iChat AV is particularly quiet, but you can choose another louder sound if you wish. To add new a new sound, OS X requires it to be in AIFF format. You can use iTunes to convert sounds from MP3 to AIFF. Place the AIFF file(s) in your “Sounds” folder in your “Library” folder. If you don’t have a “Sounds” folder, simply create one in your Library. You may have to log out and back in for the Mac to see the new sounds you’ve added. If you want these sounds to be available for multiple users, add them instead to the Sounds folder in the Library folder at the root of your hard drive and restart. These are the basics. Instant Messaging is a great way to have fun (and save money) with your Mac. The best part is that AV chatting is completely free if you already have an Internet connection and the required hardware. Remember, I always say having fun is what it’s all about! Scanning With Your Digital Camera by Jack Bass A few members have asked me for further details on how I scanned over 5000 slides and film negatives (some of my extensive collection), after I showed my system at a meeting awhile back. I owned a Polaroid 4000 scanner ($750 on sale) that took 15 minutes to scan four slides and realized it would take me years to copy my immense collection gathered over fifty years. Thus, I looked around for an alternative. A friend–he has a large collection of film negatives and slides, too–thought we could do it with an old copying adapter that fit a film camera, as his Kodak digital camera (3 megapixel) had threads on the lens front ring and focused within a few inches of the lens. I experimented with him until we found the correct distance to see a full photo on the LCD. We had to take the close focusing lens out of the filmcopying adapter as it was redundant. Then he had a machine shop trim the end of the film adapter off and weld an adapter ring with the correct thread size on the other end to fit the camera. He bought one of those white light fluorescent floor lamps for his light source. The lamps are advertised in many magazines for $149.95 plus S & H. They have 55 watts (250 watt equivalent) full-spectrum fluorescent bulbs. It worked just fine for him. He has placed most of his slides on zip drives and displays them on his 55inch TV where they show off impressively. He has thrown his slides away as he says they take up too much room and he will never project them on a screen again. (He has more nerve than I have and probably more sense!) I have a 5 megapixel Nikon Coolpix 5000. Something told me to go to the Nikon web site and there was a film copying adapter (ES-E28) and auxiliary adapter (UR-E6) for less than $100. I have never seen it advertised. The adapter is good for most of the Nikon digital cameras with the correct auxiliary adapter that fits the camera to the copying adapter. It also comes with a negative film strip holder and a two place slide holder (see photos). There may be a copying adapter out there for your camera. Try your camera maker’s web site and search for “copying adapter” or something similar. My camera has four setting options. I have one of the options set to default to closeup, color slide copying and another sett to copying black and white negatives and a third set to copying color negatives. The slide holder is the easier to use as it can be placed in the copying adapter end and slid back and forth without removing it. The slides are put in and removed from the top. Thus, I can put a slide in one end of the adapter, slide it over, hold a second until the camera focuses and then press the shutter. Placing another slide in the free end and sliding it in place exposes the slide already copied that is removed and another slide placed in, etc. It takes about 15 seconds for each slide. That is 4 per minute. And the results are very good. Of course, I have a box of slides ready to scan on my right and they end up in another box to my left. For now, they end up on CD or DVD discs after processing through my computer using iPhoto. My daughter and son love to view them on their own TV set at home any time they want. No setup required using a DVD player. 3 The film holder has to be loaded, slid into the copying adapter end and moved as each negative is copied. Then it is removed, negative holder opened and film removed and another strip placed in. It takes about two minutes to do a strip of six depending on how adept you are in opening and placing the strip of film appropriately in the slide holder. My light is a desk lamp with a $15 Philips Daylight 50 15-watt fluorescent bulb bought at Home Depot. It works just fine for me with my camera on a small tripod placed on my desk facing the bulb about four inches away. Super Driving What is a DVD By Rich Lenoce, Vice President This may sound like a silly question, but in reality there is a lot of confusion about DVDs particularly since Macs for the last five years have shipped with DVD recorders called Superdrives and iDVD software. The acronym DVD stands for (drum roll please) . . . nothing! Originally, the DVD Forum, the DVD standards organization made up of the Hollywood Studios, Pioneer Electronics and Apple, named the format Digital Video Disk but when it became apparent that the format was going to go beyond playing movies and would be used for DVDROM (storing files), DVD Audio, etc. the acronym no longer worked, so it’s just called a DVD. When using the term DVD we need to qualify that DVDs have a physical format such as DVD-ROM (any pressed DVD with files on it), or DVD-R (recordable DVDs), and an application format such as DVD video for distributing movies, DVD-Audio, etc. This is no different then Compact Disks, which are available as CD-ROMs, CD-R, CDRW and can contain a standardized application such as CD Audio. Unlike the 700 mb CD, DVDs hold 4.7 gigabytes of on a single layer. Each side of a DVD can have two layers giving a potential of 9 gigabytes per side and 18 gigabytes per disk for a double-sided, double-layered DVD. A DVD player plays the second layer by moving the laser to a slightly different angle. When a DVD switches layers, there is a minor pause or stutter in DVD video. Currently, dual layer DVDs are limited to commercially pressed DVDs; recordable DVDs are limited to one layer and hold 4.7 gigabytes per side. The DVD video disks we rent and purchase use a standardized hierarchical file structure providing random access to all features on a disk from a menu or series of menus or can play automatically depending on how they are authored or programmed. By standardizing DVD video, the DVD Forum insured that disks could be manufactured to provide universal playback on players from different manufacturers. Though DVD video is a standard, its hierarchical or branching file structure offers tremendous flexibility allowing for multiple menus, different types of audio (stereo, surround, Dolby, DTS), languages, subtitles, extras (graphics, animation, DVD-ROM content), multiple titles and programs as well as multiple camera angles of individual scenes. All of the files on an authored DVD video are referred to as a title set. Minimally, there are two basic types of files that can make up a set: files that provide information and navigation on the disk are called Information Set Files (.IFO) and the video files themselves called Video Object files (.VOB). Other files for graphics, commentary, surround audio, etc can also be included. The video on a DVD video is not one single file but several VOB files–a movie, for example is broken up into several individual files that can play sequentially or accessed individually as chapters. The reason for multiple VOB files is that when the DVD standard was set, operating systems were limited to files sizes that could not exceed 2gigabytes. Most DVD movies are 6-8 gigabytes in length so they must be broken up into several smaller VOB files; the IFO files provide the information about the sequence these files are to be played. VOB files are encoded using the MPEG2 video compression standard. Compressed video must be used because uncompressed video is enormous. An uncompressed 2-hour movie would be 200 gigabytes in size, but 4 MPEG2 compression reduces this to about 8 gigabytes for two hours of very high quality video. The person doing the compression sets the rate of compression based on the quality required or the amount of data needed to be stored on the disk. The more compression applied, the lower the picture quality and more data can fit on a disk. Up to 8 hours of high quality video and 30 hours of low quality video can be encoded onto a single disk. The optimum quality can be derived using a compression data rate of 9.8 mbps but most movies are encoded at between 5 and 6 mbps providing good quality yet keeping a movie to one side on two layers. At this rate, a single two and a half hour movie can fit on one side of a DVD with very high picture quality. Obviously, the compression rate used affects the price of the DVD: the more layers and disks used, the more expensive to duplicate and the higher the cost to the consumer. Once compressed, a chip in a DVD player or software on a computer such as Apple’s DVD Player decompresses the video turning it back into a picture. Commercial DVDs are also copy-protected using methods to thwart theft, mass duplication and illegal importation. The first method, called CSS, puts an encryption key on each frame. A legitimate DVD player has the decryption key that unlocks the CSS on each frame so that files can be played back for viewing. Operating systems on computers don’t have the key so therefore a digital copy can’t be made because the file can’t be unlocked. DVD video disks and players are also Continued on page 5 Continued from page 4 regionalized by continent or country. The United States is considered Region 1 and all players and disks sold here will work together. Taking a disk to another region (Europe, Asia, Australia, etc) and attempting to play a Region 1 disk on Region 4 player won’t work. For travelers, laptop software can reset the region to the country being traveled to limiting that change to 7 or 8 times. However, DVD players don’t have this feature. This protects illegal US copies of DVDs being sold beyond the region they were intended theoretically reducing the black market of pirated disks. Finally, DVD video uses the same Macrovision analog copy protection used on commercial VHS tapes that causes distortion when an analog copy is made from a commercial DVD. Like VHS and audiotapes, if you own a copy of a DVD you are entitled to make a copy for your own use but the DVD Forum in adding these protections to the DVD standard isn’t making it easy. In addition, the Digital Copyright Protection Act makes it illegal for a manufacturer to sell software to break the copy protection on a DVD. That is currently being challenged in court. There are other commercial DVD application standards such as DVDAudio, etc. There are also recordable DVD formats such as those used in Apple’s Super Drive. The DVD Forum approved a recordable standard called DVD-R (a.k.a. DVD minus R) and DVD-RW, the re-writable version. DVD-R/RW is similar to CD-R/RW but can hold 4.7 gigabytes per side; dual layers are not supported. Most new DVD players sold today can play DVD-R. Not to be outdone, a second group of companies, which included Microsoft and Sony, created another standard called DVD+R/RW. This was created primarily as a backup medium and as a way not to pay the DVD Forum for the technology. On the PC side it is being used by consumers to create video DVDs but DVD+R is supported in only about 40% of DVD players. Apple currently doesn’t support this standard but it is supported in third-party applications such as Toast. DVD technology is a “standard definition” video technology, meaning it is limited to the 525 line TV standard that has been in use for the last 60 years, not the 720 and 1080 line standards called High Definition (HDTV) that go into effect in 2006. DVDs are not high definition, so a new optical disk or DVD application standard will need to be developed. Don’t worry!!! DVD is here to stay and any new technology will be able to play today’s DVDs. However, there is a fight brewing in the wings between the DVD Forum and its proposal for a high definition encoding being placed on a standard DVD, and a new blue laser video disk technology that offers 25 gigabytes on a disk–enough to fit hours of extremely high quality HDTV. The fight is a big one as it’s expected that the next generation of optical disk standards will be the last–whatever technology is adopted will stay for many years to come. It is expected to be the last, since some other yet-to-be-determined memory device with no moving parts (similar to Flash memory used in digital cameras) will provide the next wave of data storage. Or, movies may also fly across a new broadband Internet for rent or purchase like today’s web pages, and never actually reside on a portable disk. At the moment, we sit at the edge between science fiction and tomorrow’s realities. Seeing how a DVD works places a whole new perspective on the power of a new Mac; a machine where DVD authoring comes standard and free. The Mac Superdrive and iDVD 1.0 were released when there were less than 10 million DVD players in the hands of consumers. Today, there are an estimated 75 million players, and growing with the technology has meant Apple-made DVDs work on 90% of today’s players. Whatever the next standards are for home video, you can be sure Apple will again be leading the revolution. 5 Green Apples by Chris Hart, CMC Secretary Do You Feel Like A Green Apple? CMC is ready to ripen your computer knowledge with CMC Back To Basics, a monthly pre-meeting session focusing on the essentials of Macintosh computing. Open to all CMC members, this session offer an abbreviated program that answers the most popular questions among Mac users. Join us on April 28th for our session on web browser basics. You’ll learn about the numerous web browsers available and the benefits of each. Discussions will include preferences settings, security issues, pop-ups, cookies and bookmarks. Our May 26th session will be all about sharing files between computers. Whether you want to do a one-time transfer to a brand new Mac, or share files on a regular basis, we’ll demonstrate how it’s done. Back To Basics will take a break during the month of June, when the CMC meeting will will be at Middlesex Community College in Middletown. On July 28th, CMC will return to UConn Medical Center, and Back To Basics will provide a complete exploration of the System Preferences in Mac OS X. After attending this session, you’ll be able to customize your computer’s behavior to your liking. Please join us each month (except June) at 6:00 P.M. for CMC Back To Basics. These sessions take place just across the hall from our primary meeting space inside the UConn Medical Center. We encourage you to bring a notepad, so that you can take notes on the demonstrations and explanations provided. Afterwards, we’ll leave you plenty of time to move across the hall and get a seat for the main CMC meeting. I look forward to seeing you! The Majestic Alps and the King of Keyboards by Adam C. Engst ace@tidbits.com Back in the days when ADB ruled the land, Apple made one of the best keyboards in the known universe - the Apple Extended Keyboard. It was a large, solid keyboard with a great tactile feel provided by mechanical switches under each key. But good keyboards cost money, and over time Apple traded the desire to provide the best keyboard with the Mac for the desire to spend less money per Mac by skimping on the keyboard. Thanks to moving away from Alps mechanical keyswitches, Apple’s keyboards became mushy, and those of us who appreciate a good keyboard muttered darkly and clung to our old keyboards. But if things were looking bad then, they were to get worse (and I promise not to dwell on the abomination that is the location of the Fn key on PowerBook and iBook keyboards). When Apple introduced the iMac, it included a cute little keyboard with a non-standard layout and a truly awful tactile feel, accompanied by a round mouse that was even worse. Almost everyone hated this keyboard (I’m being kind here, since in fact, I don’t know anyone who liked it, but it’s a big world out there and Apple sold a lot of iMacs, so I’m sure someone must have liked it). Worse, since the iMac dropped ADB in favor of USB, it became difficult to use an old ADB keyboard, since USB-to-ADB adapters tended to be a bit flaky with keyboards, which need to work in unusual situations such as when the Mac is powered down, sleeping, or crashed. Having fallen to previously unexplored depths, Apple pulled itself out of the fetid mire with the Apple Pro Keyboard, a full-size keyboard with a standard layout and a decent tactile feel. The Apple Pro Keyboard was so much better than the original iMac keyboard that everyone breathed a sigh of relief and with a few exceptions, forgot that even the Apple Pro Keyboard couldn’t hold a candle to the Apple Extended Keyboard. On a Mission — I, and the other members of the TidBITS staff, do a lot of typing. Our keyboards are in constant use all day long, as we write and edit articles, create and reply to email, and who knows what else. In fact, the main serious use for keyboards that we don’t have is gaming, where fast and accurate response are essential. Over the last few years, we’ve tried a number of keyboards. Note that we don’t want anything fancy, like split keyboards, or keyboards with lots of extra specialty keys. All we want is a real Macintosh keyboard (with Command and Option keys, rather than Windows and Alt keys) that’s basically the same as the Apple Extended Keyboard. None of the keyboards we’ve tried, including some from Macally, Kensington, and MicroConnectors, have garnered entirely positive comments, and more problematic, a number of them have failed in some important way (who needs an N key anyway!). Enter the Tactile Pro — We’re inundated by press releases every day, and it’s uncommon for one to generate comment on our internal staff mailing list. However, when we received the initial press release for Matias’s Tactile Pro keyboard, which led with “Matias recreates ‘the best keyboard Apple ever made’” and went on to promise that the Tactile Pro Keyboard used the same mechanical switch technology as the original Apple Extended Keyboard, there was very nearly an online battle over who would get to try a review unit first. Ever the voice of calm and reason, I settled the question by announcing 6 that I would take first crack at it. To quote Tom Petty, it’s good to be king. <http://tactilepro.com/> On the face of it, the Tactile Pro Keyboard looks very much like the Apple Pro Keyboard (at least the one that came with my Power Mac G4), with a clear plastic shell backed by white plastic and solid white keys. It’s slightly less wide (from Caps Lock to the edge of the numeric keypad) than the Apple Pro Keyboard, but deeper (from the spacebar to the top of the keyboard above the function keys). Like the Apple Pro Keyboard, it sports a hard-wired cable and a pair of USB ports on either side of the top. A pair of feet flip out from the bottom if you prefer your keyboard angled up (so your fingers are higher than your wrists, a position I usually recommend against because of the unnatural hand position it enforces). The keyboard layout is standard (no Fn or other boutique keys anywhere in sight!) and for the most part very similar to the Apple Pro Keyboard. There are a few differences, though. The top row of keys (Escape, the function keys, and the volume and Eject keys) are somewhat more separated from the rest of the keyboard than on the Apple Pro Keyboard, which is fine, since you don’t want to press them accidentally. The Tactile Pro Keyboard also has a power key above the function keys, a welcome addition if you can’t easily reach one of the power keys on your Mac or if you don’t have Apple monitors (which can power the machine on). Through no fault of Matias’s, the power key can only power on older Macs with the necessary hardware support; Apple’s current Macs no longer support power on signals via USB (but the power key still brings up the Restart/Sleep/Shut Down dialog when the Mac is turned on). At a quick glance, the keycaps on the Tactile Pro Keyboard look slightly unusual. When you look more closely, you realize that Matias has done something that would seem obvious except Continued on page 7 for the fact that no one has done it before: they printed the Option- and Shift-Option-characters on every keycap. It’s a brilliant move; no longer do you need a software utility to look up the degree character when you can just glance at the keyboard and see that it’s Shift-Option-8. And before this I could never keep the keystrokes straight for single and double curly quotes (hold Option- or Shift-Option and press the bracket keys). http://tactilepro.com/viewer/tp_mainpic.html On the downside, the Tactile Pro Keyboard’s Option keys are slightly smaller than on the A p p l e P r o Keyboard, making them harder to hit accurately. The Apple Pro Keyboard’s Caps Lock key has an unusual keycap that separates it slightly from the A key; the Tactile Pro Keyboard lacks that special keycap, so I find myself accidentally turning Caps Lock on more frequently than before. Speaking of special keys, the volume and Eject keys require a special driver that Mac OS X 10.2 Jaguar users must install; a CD-ROM contains the necessary installer. Where the Tactile Pro Keyboard really shines, though, is in its feel. The keys are decidedly “clickier” and more mechanical, and they have a slightly longer key travel when you push them. The end result is a much less mushy feel than on the Apple Pro Keyboard, but accompanied by much louder typing noises. When I’m typing fast, the Tactile Pro Keyboard almost clatters, and I can say with assurance that I don’t mind one bit. The new feel took a little getting used to, but within a day, it felt quite wonderful. It’s entirely possible that some people may not appreciate the extra noise; there’s no question that the Tactile Pro Keyboard is much louder than the Apple Pro Keyboard and other keyboards that use rubber membrane switches. I could imagine situations where a quiet keyboard would be important, but for most people, the important aspect of a keyboard is how it feels when you type. I had to switch back to the Apple Pro Keyboard briefly because the first Tactile Pro Keyboard Matias sent me developed a spotty A key after a few weeks of use; Edgar Matias told me that although the Alps keyswitches generally last for many years, if one is going to fail, it will fail almost immediately (which is why Matias offers a 5-year “few questions asked” warranty). The return to the Apple Pro Keyboard was revealing. My typing accuracy dropped immediately, and my hands ached after a long day. Although I probably would have re-acclimated to it after another week or two, switching back to the replacement Tactile Pro Keyboard when it arrived was a huge relief. I can’t speak for anyone else, but if you consider yourself a keyboard aficionado, or if you’ve been bothered by the slide in quality for Apple’s keyboards, you owe it to yourself to give the Tactile Pro Keyboard a try. It costs $100 plus $20 shipping if you buy direct from Matias; it probably makes more sense to buy from a reseller like TidBITS sponsor Small Dog Electronics, where the price is $80 before shipping. Protecting the Alps — There’s an interesting little side story that played itself out while I was reviewing the keyboard and communicating back and forth with Edgar Matias. The Tactile Pro Keyboard had been out for only a short while when Alps, the makers of the mechanical keyswitches, announced that they were going to stop making these particular keyswitches altogether. Most vendors have moved to a lowercost clone of the keyswitch, but when Edgar tried a sample keyboard they sent him, he thought it felt awful, with a 7 touch so light it was tricky to avoid typing a character if he so much as touched a keycap. Although a light touch might seem like a good thing, it’s common to rest your fingers gently on the keycaps when you’re not typing, and if the switch doesn’t provide a certain amount of resistance, you end up entering characters accidentally. Most users respond to a too-light keyboard by holding their fingers just above the keyboard, but that subconscious action can make you even more tired by the end of the day. Despite this light touch, the sample keyboard was even louder than the Tactile Pro Keyboard. Needless to say, he was shocked that this could happen, both because he feared for the Tactile Pro Keyboard’s future and because he didn’t want see the famed Alps keyswitch disappear for good. Since Alps would have mothballed the tooling used to build this particular keyswitch, it might never have been produced again, particularly if the tooling deteriorated in the warehouse from lack of use and maintenance. Luckily, Edgar was able to convince the Alps factory in Taiwan to keep the tooling active for him by committing to buy a million keyswitches. There are 110 keys (and thus presumably keyswitches) on a Tactile Pro Keyboard, so Matias needs to sell just over 9,000 keyboards to use up the promised million keyswitches. That’s confidence, but after trying the Tactile Pro Keyboard, I think it’s justified. It costs only a bit more than an Apple Pro Keyboard; it includes all the Optionand Shift-Option characters on the keycaps; and at least to my mind, it feels so much better that I type faster, more accurately, and more comfortably. Everyone’s hands are different, but if you live and die by your keyboard as I do, Matias’s Tactile Pro Keyboard is absolutely worth a try. Copyright 2004 TidBITS: Reuse governed by Creative Commons license <http://www.tidbits.com/terms/> Contact: <editors@tidbits.com> Web Picks of the Month Compiled by Neal Dembicer, CMC Please report broken links to: NealDD@yahoo.com From Neal Dembicer: http://www.allowe.com/More/ download.htm and http://oldgames.org For people who want to find games they played when they were growing up. From Deena Quilty: http://www.llewellyn.com/free/tarot.php This site sells Tarot cards and other “mystical” items. But you can get a free online reading. Just choose a deck (I had no clue what the differences are), think of a question, and then one click deals the cards for a past, present and future reading. http://www.efuse.com/ Building a web site? Or just want some good tips to spruce up a basic one you already have? This site has really useful tips and guidelines from some well-known experts in the business. It includes basics on planning, designing, writing, and everything else that makes a good site. Geared towards the beginner but everyone should be able to get something out of this site. From Robert F. Sawyer: http://www.worldofquotes.com Need the perfect quote for your speech or web site.?This is the place to go. Browse the database of 32767 quotes organized in over 1398 topics. New topics and quotes added frequently. Looking for a specific author or famous person? You now have 10177 authors and historical figures to quote. http://www.thistothat.com/ This to That —Which glue to use? Several people have reminded me of a cool tool that I use all the time, and should mention again. It is the website “This to That” which functions as a glue calculator. You tell it what you want to glue — this to that — and it will recommend the type of glue to use. It’s pretty reliable. And does a great job of educating you about glueing possibilities. From www.kk.org/cooltools/ From Ken Sawyer: http://www.urbanlegends.com/ulz/ plastic.html This site is pretty good at debunking email myths. They keep pretty current on all the stuff being passed off as demanding immediate action to prevent dire consequences. Only problem with their site is that their search engine appears a little flaky. So when you get an email that tells you that you’re getting poisoned by plastics in microwave ovens, look up it up so you know you aren’t! From Joe Arcuri: http://www.angelfire.com/extreme4/k iddofspeed/chapter1.html Here’s an interesting photo journal of a Russian girl who rides her motorcycle through Chernobyl. It really brings home the devastation of a nuclear powerplant meltdown Download of the Month submitted by Debi Foss ohNotes 2.1 by Swimpsoft http://www.macdesktop.com/ swimpsoft/productsohnotes.html ohNotes is an extremely handy application that lets you handle your notes with ease! Just click New, type in a main title and add more detailed text to it. It fits on the side of your screen perfectly. Like Stickies, but way smarter–quick and easy does it! And now new features like Extended Topic view and the Viewer window, you’ll find your- 8 Free Admission Pass to the 2004 Boston Macworld Expo The User Group Advisory Board would like to remind you that Macworld Conference & Expo is coming to Boston from July 12-15. For a limited time, user group members are eligible for free or discounted attendance. • Register before May 7 for a free Exhibit Hall Pass • Register before June 18 for 15% off all conference pkgs. To receive your discount, enter the user group discount code H0101 (zeros & ones) on the the website: http://www.macworldexpo.com Macworld Conference & Expo Boston Convention & Exhibition Center July 12 - 15, 2004 (Expo: July 13 - 15, 2004) CMC is planning to charter a bus to Boston on Thursday, July 15th. Info will be announced soon. self more productive than ever! ohNotes remembers the last set position of the main window so it will be in your favorite spot on the screen each time you start it. It also remembers the height of the window. The ohNotes preferences allow you to specify things like fonts, styles and sizes for your notes, and the new internet tools will help you look up words, search Google, find software online and more! It’s free and it comes in versions for OS 9 and OS X. Apple Seminars Online Below you will find a listing of current seminars online. These online events are available 24 hours a day, 7 days a Connie Scott, CMC week from any computer Apple Ambassador with internet access. They are designed to be no more than 30 minutes in length and offer a wide variety of resources and information for your review. Topics cover solutions using Apple and partner products and technologies. For training on these and other solutions visit seminars.apple.com/training/index.html To find out more about these and other Apple related events, please visit: www.apple.com/seminars Biotech is in our DNA. Michael Athanas, Ph.D., of The BioTeam will show how to install a fully provisioned informatics cluster on one or more Xserve servers using iNquiry. For more information visit http://seminars.apple.com/seminarsonline/biotech/apple/index.html?s=203 Break Through the Barriers to Digital Photography Success. Digital photography provides exciting ways to deliver new content and gain greater control over the finished product, while saving time and money. For more information visit http://seminars.apple.com/seminarsonline/propho to/apple/index.html?s=203 Color Management for Your Digital Workflow. This free online seminar helps demystify color management and gives you the knowledge you need to incorporate it into your workflow. For more information visit seminars.apple.com/seminars online/colormgmt/apple/index.html?s=203 Guitarists and the Mac: A Conversation with Pat Metheny Join Pat Metheny in this free online seminar and learn how the Mac can help you take your music to the next level. For more information visit http://seminars.apple.com/seminarsonline/guitarists/apple/index.html?s=203 Keynote: Improve Your Presentation Skills. Watch this free online seminar and find out how to improve your presentation skills. For more information visit http://seminars.apple.com/seminarsonline/presenting/apple/index.html?s=203 Information Lifecycle Management. Steve Kenniston, an Enterprise Storage Group analyst will offer insights as to how to manage vast amounts of data while keeping your overhead low. For information visit seminars.apple.com/ seminarsonline/ilm/apple/index.html?s =203 Elizabeth Kerr, Ph.D., Director of Science and Technology Markets at Apple, moderates this informative webcast discussion of the Apple Workgroup Cluster. For more information visit http://seminars.apple.com/seminarsonline/biocluster/apple/index.html?s=203 Learn about the services provided by and advantages of hiring members of the Apple Consultants Network. For more information visit http://www. seminars.apple.com/seminarsonline/hir eacn/apple/index.html Yes, I want to join CMC Benefits: Monthly meetings, monthly newsletter, discounted book purchases, computer problem assistance, network with other Mac users, User Group Store, etc. Date ______________________________ Name _____________________________ Address ___________________________ City ______________________________ State________ Zip __________________ Keynote: Presentations that Meet your Creative Standards Take this free online seminar and find out how Keynote allows you to create superior presentations you would expect from a professional creative tool. For more information visit http://seminars.apple.com/seminarsonline/keynote/apple/index.html?s=203 Phone (Home) ______________________ Phone (Office) ______________________ Phone (Fax) ________________________ Business___________________________ Occupation_________________________ Perfectly Focused - Digital Photography on Mac OS X This seminar will show you why you should take the plunge to digital—and how to get started with your own digital photography workflow on Mac OS X. For more information visit http://seminars.apple.com/seminarsonline/perfectfocusinosx/apple/ Unwire Your Business Computational Clusters for Bioinformatics. Why Hire a Member of the Apple Consultants Network Take this free online seminar and find out how Apple’s wireless and mobile solutions let you take your computing environment with you wherever you go. For more information visit http://seminars.apple.com/seminarsonline/wireless/apple/index.html?s=203 9 Email:_____________________________ Areas of special interest to you: __________________________________ __________________________________ Annual CMC Family Membership - $25.00 Mail form to: CMC 41 Crossroads Plaza – PMB 1984 West Hartford, CT 06117 Make checks payable to CMC or... Register Online with PayPal at www.ctmac.org March 31st Monthly Meeting featured Lego MindStorm presented by Brian Desmond 2004 Upcoming CMC Meetings By Rich Lenoce, Vice President As Vice President of CMC, I have taken on the task of assigning the programs for our CMC meetings based on input from our members. The hardest part of this task was meeting the needs of all CMC members with such a wide range of skills–from newbies to pros and with an equal range of interests–from technical to digital media to games to using a Mac for work, or just having fun. I assure you, there will be something at each meeting for everyone, and not just the raffle! Before each monthly meeting, Chris Hart will be coordinating the Back to Basics mini group meeting designed to help all users better understand their Mac. CMC President, Don Dickey will open each meeting with the latest news and developments in the Apple world. Next on the agenda is our always -popular Q & A session where Mac experts answer your questions and attempt to solve your problems. Finally, presentations throughout the year have been structured to cover a range of topics. On April 28, you’ll learn why tablets aren’t just for artists. Steven Gottlieb of Wacom will demonstrate the Wacom and Cintiq line of tablets. Tablets offer a more natural method of input than a mouse–with less repetitive physical stress. They can be very powerful tools especially when OS X’s handwriting recognition technology is enabled. Photos by John Scott and Chris Hart On May 26 and June 30, we start a two-month series on digital photography –by far our most requested presentation topic. May’s meeting will be an introduction to digital photography and digital camera basics. June’s meeting will be held at Middlesex Community College where hands-on sessions in digital photo editing will be held. CMC members can bring their digital images and photo experts will show you how to organize your 10 photos, correct problems and prepare photos for printing. Both Photoshop an iPhoto will be covered. Other hands-on sessions are in the works; if there is a session you’d like to see offered, let me know ASAP. July 28 will cover Garage Band, Apple’s new fun-touse music creation and audio mixing program. This presentation will be geared towards the non-musician demonstrating how easy Garage Band can make music. On August 25, graphic designer Pat Rasch will give a presentation on the graphics program that is taking the field by storm: Adobe’s InDesign. Pat will discuss the benefits of InDesign and how to move to InDesign for users of other graphic programs such as Quark Xpress and Adobe Pagemaker. September 29 is Celebrity Night. Apple engineer, author and presenter Dave Marra will give an entertaining and informative presentation about the Mac world. Check out his web site at http://www.marrathon.com. October 27 is our annual auction month. In November–due to the Thanksgiving holiday, we meet a week early so on November 17–CMC secretary and Mac consultant Chris Hart will give a presentation on the Whys and how-tos of migrating to OS X. This is particularly important since 50% of our membership hasn’t made the jump yet. Chris will review the benefits of OS X, talk about the differences, and explain how to move your applications and data to the new OS when you decide to make the move. Bring your questions! December’s meeting ends the year with our popular Holiday party featuring Stump the Geeks. Topics are subject to change depending on the needs of the membership and new products that may be released by Apple. If you have any suggestions or comments, please don’t hesitate to contact me at cmcvicepres@ctmac.org. Upcoming Meetings FREE Raffle! (See Article on Page 10) Monthly CMC Meetings are held on last Wednesday of the month, 7:00 p.m. – 9:00 p.m. (except Nov. and Dec. when the meetings are one week earlier due to the holidays) Board meetings are the first Thursday of the month. If you wish to attend a Board meeting, contact an officer for the location. April 28 • 7 pm Wacom Tablet Demo From the basic tablet to the incredible Cintiq tablet. May 26 • 7 pm Digital Photography Basics Selecting and using your digital camera. June 29 • 7 pm Hands-On Photoshop, iPhoto and iDVD Workshops at Middlesex Community College. Future topics include: GarageBand Quark/InDesign Celebrity Guest Night Annual Auction Migration to OSX and Much More! If you have a program you are interested in, email Rich Lenoce at: vicepres@ctmac.org Discounted Books CMC continues to offer current members the opportunity to purchase any published book for either Mac or Windows at a 20% discount. All major publishers are carried by our source. Call Neal Dembicer at 673-7711 or send email to booksales@ctmac.org. Provide the book title, the publisher and the ISBN number, if possible, and he will check on its availability. Normally, the wait is not too long. Treasurer’s Report George Maciel, CMC Treasurer Ending Checking Account Balance ................$1475.67 Savings Account Balance...$3947.75 Balances as of March 31, 2004 CMC Web Site Access www.ctmac.org User ID: XXX (all uppercase) Password: xxxxx (all lowercase) Apple User Group Store www.applemugstore.com April 1, 2004 - July 31, 2004 User ID: xxxx / Password: xxxx Every CMC member Robert Sawyer who attends our monthly CMC Raffles meetings gets a raffle ticket. This will give you a chance for one of our free prizes every month! You could win… t-shirts, toys, CDs, mugs, software …there’s always something we’re giving away! New Members Spread the word. We need new members! Have your friends and co-workers join us for fun and learning about OS X, the Mac and iMac. Total Membership: 122 CMC Classified Ads Members can Advertise For Sale, Swap, Trade, Giveaway or Want to Buy Items. This space can be used by members to advertise non-business items which they are no longer using or upgrading. This is a free service provided to our members. Any business items or services can be advertised at the rates shown below: Monthly Ad Rates CMC Elections are coming up in May! Elections for President, Vice President, Secretary, and Treasurer will be held at the May meeting. Any member is eligible to run for any position. Any one willing to give back to CMC for what they have received, please contact Connie Scott, Nominating Committee Chair at ambassador@ctmac.org. Any questions about the election, please e-mail to the same address. 11 Business Card ..........................$10.00 Quarter Page.............................$20.00 Half Page..................................$30.00 Full Page (or insert) .................$50.00 Submit all ad copy to the Editor on a disk with nothing else on it or e-mail it for insertion in the following issue. Display ads must be submitted camera-ready in .eps or .pdf format with all fonts & graphics embedded. 41 Crossroads Plaza – PMB 1984 West Hartford, CT 06117 CMC Meeting Location – a PDF document containing a visual direction guide to UConn Health Center is available on our website: http://www.ctmac.org. Print and take it with you to find us easily! Monthly meetings will be held at UConn Health Center in Farmington. When hands-on programs require computers for attendees, we will be using Middlesex Community College in Middletown. Directions to UCHC, Farmington Directions to Middlesex C.C. From I-84: Take Exit 39 (if coming from I-84 West, Exit 39 is after 39A). Turn right at first traffic light onto Route 4 East (Farmington Avenue). At third traffic light, turn right to enter the Health Center campus. Go around the main building to the right (at a Y in road), then take a left when you get to the Academic Entrance. The road becomes twoway there so you should be able to tell where to turn. (Do not go on straight to the two-way part). Then take the second right into parking lot A&B. this is close to the building. Go past the police station entrance on your left (small sign). You will see a continuation of the building with its own entrance area. This is the new research building. Enter on the ground floor, turn right and enter room EG-013 on your right. This is the first room on your right. The rest rooms are on your left as you enter. From the Hartford area, take Route 9 South. A few miles south of downtown Middletown on Route 9, take Exit 11 (Rt. 155, Randolph Road). At the end of the ramp (for both N. & S. bound), turn right onto Randolph Road. Continue to the traffic light at the top of the hill and turn left onto Saybrook Road. Go a quarter of a mile and turn right onto Reservoir Road. Travel past the stop sign, then take the first right onto Training Hill Road. Your first left will lead into the Middlesex Community College Campus parking area. When you arrive on campus, take a right onto Training Hill Road. Go to the second parking lot entrance and take a left into the upper lot. Directly in front of you will be Snow Hall. Enter Snow Hall and go up the stairs to the 2nd floor and go to the last room on the right, Room 509. 12 Monthly Meeting May 26 – 7 p.m. UConn Health Center Digital Photography Basics Introduction to Digital Cameras and Digital Photography Green Apples – 6 p.m. (See Page 2 for details) NEWSLETTER OF CONNECTICUT MACINTOSH CONNECTION, INC. Some cameras have a video output jack. If yours does, you can easily show your slides using your camera as a Slideshow Fun By Don Dickey, CMC president There was a time when the family would gather around for a slideshow. Dad would set up a pullout screen that stood on it’s own self-contained tripod. Kodachrome or Ektachrome slides cased in cardboard squares would then be projected onto the screen with a bright lamp. This lamp would always burn out at the least opportune time, like when the projector was taken to school for a presentation! That was then, but now many kids have never seen a slide or slide projector! This doesn’t mean that the family tradition has to die, however. It just needs to move into the 21st century with a little help from technology. That’s where your Mac comes in! MAY, 2004 projector. This has the advantage of costing nothing extra, and it’s extremely portable. Make sure to have the camera fully charged (or have extra batteries on hand), or your show might end prematurely! My experience has been, however, that cameras don’t make the best projectors. It also subjects an expensive device to possible harm. First of all, your “slides” are now digital files. If you have old Kodachrome or Ektachrome slides to show, previous articles by noted photographer (and CMC member) Jack Bass taught you how to digitize them. Refer back to your old newsletters for help with this, or catch Jack after the next CMC meeting for a refresher. If you have a PowerBook with a video output jack, you can use that as your “projector.” Even if you have a laptop, I recommend a separate “box” to use as your projector: an inexpensive DVD player! These can be had for as little as $35 locally. That’s a lot cheaper than even an old used PowerBook! It has the distinct advantage of being easy to control with a handheld remote without fancy extra hardware. Another advantage is that it’s easily operated by most any member of your family. Your other “slides” are the digital files from a digital camera. If you don’t have a digital camera, be sure to come to our upcoming meetings which will focus on digital photography, including choosing a camera. Fortunately, for slideshows you don’t need a very high resolution camera as you might for hardcopy prints. Even a 1 megapixel camera available for under $100 will suffice. In choosing a DVD player, be sure to select a model that can display .JPGs and VCDs on CD-R media. Most new ones can, but check the outside of the box before opening it up. These features are usually listed prominently. These features let you display your slides on inexpensive media,absolutely required if you don’t have a SuperDrive or DVD burner but you do have a CD-R drive. 1 You have several options for making your slideshow. The simplest is to burn your slides as .JPG files onto a CD-R that the DVD player can show all by itself. You should name your slides so they come up in the order you want them shown. A simple way to do this is to drag them into iPhoto as a new album, drag to arrange them in the order you want to show them, and then export them using “Album name” to rename them in the proper order. To “kick it up a notch,” you can add musical accompaniment to your slide show. Again, you have a few options. One would be to choose your music in iPhoto from your iTunes library, and then export a QuickTime movie of your slideshow. This can be burnt onto either a DVD or cheaper VideoCD using Toast. Unfortunately, doing this ruins the transitions between slides that played so nicely in iPhoto. To keep nice transitions, if your slideshow is under 100 slides, you can use iDVD to create your slideshow. Here you can specify transitions, slide timing, etc. before burning. Options are somewhat limited, but it does work nicely for smaller shows. If you have more slides, create multiple Continued on page 2 Inside this Issue Green Apples ....................................... 2 Review: DVD Copy ............................. 3 The Worm Hole in the Apple ...............4 Mac 911................................................5 Macworld Bus Trip Info........................6 Web Picks of the Month .......................8 MUG Offers........................................10 Meetings & Club News ......................11 Continued from page 1 slideshows on your DVD, with 100 or less in each one. A DVD blank can hold thousands of slides! Editor Deena Quilty Content Contributor Don Dickey Contributing Author Rich Lenoce Designer George Maciel Photographer John Scott Publisher Connecticut Macintosh Connection, Inc. 41 Crossroads Plaza PMB 1984 West Hartford, CT 06117 Printer Budget Printers 1718 Park Street Hartford, CT 06106 We welcome submissions from members! Please submit articles by first of the month for inclusion in our newsletter. There is much talent in our group; it would be great to have several member articles in each issue. For the most options, I recommend creating your slideshow in iMovie. Here you have almost unlimited control of slide duration, transition type and length, and you can also add titles if desired. The drawback with this approach is that you have to manually drag a transition between all the slides in your show. I recently did a 10-minute show with about 300 slides, and this process took quite a while. The results were worth it, however. To start, create a new album in iPhoto for your slideshow. Drag all the photos you want to show into this album. Arrange them in the proper order. Then, in iMovie, click the Photos button. Choose your Photo Library, select all the photos, and drag them onto the clip viewer at the bottom of the page. Once on the timeline, you can change the duration (and size if necessary) and click Apply. Add your musical soundtrack to the timeline and adjust its length if necessary. At this point, you can export a QuickTime movie for burning as a VideoCD (VCD) onto CD-R media, or you can use the iDVD button to export the show into iDVD for burning as a high resolution DVD. While the VCD approach is inexpensive, your slides won’t look as good as they will on a DVD due to the encoding that’s used. If you don’t have a DVD burner, try making a VCD show. If you do have a DVD burner, however, I recommend spending the extra cents to “do it right.” If you are burning via iDVD, you can also add “chapters” so you can easily jump forward or backward to sections of your show. These are great if you watch part of a show and then want to restart it later near where you left off. Once you’ve created your show as a VCD or DVD, now all you need to do is pop the disc into your player, turn on the TV, and make a batch of popcorn before assembling the family for the evening’s entertainment! Give it a try. After you’ve done it a couple of times, you’ll find out what works best for you. In the meantime, be sure to have fun making your slideshows. After all, isn’t that what using your Mac is all about? Green Apples Back to Basics! by Chris Hart, CMC Secretary CMC is ready to ripen your computer knowledge with CMC Back To Basics, a monthly pre-meeting session focusing on the essentials of Macintosh computing. Open to all CMC members, this session offer an abbreviated program that answers the most popular questions among Mac users. Our May 26th session will be all about sharing files between computers. Whether you want to do a one-time transfer to a brand new Mac, or share files on a regular basis, we’ll demonstrate how it’s done. Back To Basics will take a break during the month of June, when the CMC 2 meeting will will be at Middlesex Community College in Middletown. On July 28th, CMC will return to UConn Medical Center, and Back To Basics will provide a complete exploration of the System Preferences in Mac OS X. After attending this session, you’ll be able to customize your computer’s behavior to your liking. Please join us each month (except June) at 6:00 P.M. for CMC Back To Basics. These sessions take place just across the hall from our primary meeting space inside the UConn Medical Center. We encourage you to bring a notepad, so that you can take notes on the demonstrations and explanations provided. original file structure. This process took several hours and one misstep such as improperly naming a folder would cause the disk to not work in a DVD player. Review: Fast DVD Copy by Rich Lenoce, Vice President February saw the release of one-step DVD copying software for the Mac: Velan’s Fast DVD Copy. Fast DVD Copy allows owners of commercial DVDs to make a single copy of their disks. Despite what you may have heard, it is legal to copy a DVD that you own for personal use under copyright Fair Use guidelines. However, the only way to make such a copy is to circumvent the disk’s built-in anti-piracy technology, and that is illegal. Right now, a final decision sits with the Court of Appeals. Here’s some background. In February, Judge Judith Illston ruled on a case where the Motion Picture Association of America filed a lawsuit against 321 Studio,s makers of the PC-only software DVD X Copy and DVD Copy Plus. Illston said though copying DVDs may be considered Fair Use, using software that circumvents a DVD’s anti-piracy copy protection or uses technology to decrypt DVD piracy keys was illegal as she claimed was outlined in the Digital Millenium Copyright Act. 321 Studios is appealing the decision, leaving their products on store shelves as of the time this article was written. Prior to the release of Fast DVD Copy, Mac users had to use a time consuming process using three separate applications to copy DVDs. First, programs such as DVD Backup or Mac The Ripper were used to crack the anti-piracy technology and then copy the decrypted DVD to the hard drive. A typical 2 hour movie on a commercial DVD is about 8 gigabytes in size, twice as much as the 4.3 gigabytes that a recordable DVD-R disk could hold. Therefore, additional software such as DVD2One ($49) was needed to re-encode the MPEG2 at a lower bit rate so that a movie could fit on one disk. Finally, DVD burning software such as Toast ($79) was required to burn the reencoded movie while maintaining the Fast DVD Copy dispenses with complexity. Put a commercial DVD movie into your Mac’s internal Superdrive or external DVD burner, and press START. That’s it! The software decrypts and reencodes the movie and once that step is completed DVD Fast Copy will prompt the user to eject the DVD and insert a blank recordable disc. It couldn’t be simpler! Despite some slight loss in video quality from the re-encoding process, the DVD operates identically to the original with all features, menus, etc included. Besides being simple, the picture quality is very good. However the downside is that the system resources are pretty hefty. First, the software does not work in Classic, only OS 10.2 or 10.3 or higher and requires 17 gigabytes of free hard drive space. Yes, you heard me right, 17 gigabytes of free space! The reason is that it needs to copy the decrypted movie, which may be up to 9 gigabytes in size, then re-encode the movie to 4.3 gigabytes and then create a 4.3 gigabyte disk image of the final copy for burning to recordable DVD media. DVD Fast Copy’s biggest drawback is that it isn’t “fast” unless you have a very powerful Mac. DVD Fast Copy is extremely processor and RAM intensive. Decrypting and re-encoding video may be the most processor and RAM intensive functions your Mac will ever perform, so expect it to take a long time to copy a DVD. My dual 2 ghz G5 takes about 90-100 minutes to copy and burn a two-hour movie with 4x DVD-R media. A G4 533 may take three or four times that long. A fast G3 might take overnight. Unless you have a dual G5 system, I suggest you turn all other software off and allow your Mac to give DVD Fast Copy its full attention. 3 I have heard many Mac users balk at the price, but $99 is the same price PC users pay for similar software. Mac users need to realize this is sophisticated software that would cost more than $99 if you used the separate tools of Roxio’s Toast and DVD2OneX. Finally, the biggest drawback for some people is that an Internet connection is required to run the software. Each time the software starts, it calls back to Velan, makers of DVD Fast Copy, and matches the software activation code against the machine’s own internal number that was recorded and registered when the software was purchased. This measure stops people from giving their friends the activation number or posting their activation numbers to Internet “krack” sites. If the activation number and transmitted internal machine number don’t match, the software won’t work. Sadly, once purchased the software will only run on the machine it was purchased on. The reality is that this is becoming the new way to stop software pirating. Microsoft, Adobe and even the shareware registration company, Kagi, are said to be moving to this method. As someone who teaches film, I use this software to make copies of classic films on DVD. I keep the originals pristine, locked away in a cabinet, and only bring the copies into the classroom to keep the originals from being damaged. Parents will find this software useful in a similar way, as expensive children’s DVDs can be copied and the original kept away from hands that could scratch or even chew the originals. DVD Fast Copy does not allow users to make copies of copies should you ever loose the original, but Toast’s Disk Copy feature and Apple’s own Disk Copy or Disk Utility software can copy the disks. Overall, if you don’t mind the price, this is a simple solution to a sophisticated problem and I highly recommend the DVD Fast Copy for its high quality and ease of use. The Worm Hole in the Apple An Opinion by Rich Lenoce, Vice President Apple is selling lots of iPods: 807,000 last quarter alone. Apple’s stock price is up and earnings have increased dramatically: $46 million dollar profit on nearly $2 billion in earnings. Looks pretty rosy at the moment, huh? Yes, at this point in time it appears the iPod has taken Apple not just out of its slump, but back onto the race track. The sad news is that its computer business hasn’t kept up with the overall industry’s growth. Computers are still the bulk of Apple’s business—more profit is earned on a $1,000-$3,000 Mac than a little iPod. Apple’s computer growth last quarter was 5%, which sounds like reason for celebration, except that the typical PC maker’s growth was over 13%. This number has to come up for Apple to sustain success and right now, it’s not looking favorable. Though we Mac users are zealous about our machines, we realize that they are of such good quality that we replace them less than PC users. But recent studies from Gartner Group and other research companies are showing PC users are hanging on to their machines longer too—to the point where the difference is now negligible. The higher initial cost of Macs is no longer cause to proclaim it’s a longer lasting machine with lower cost of ownership. Finally, processor enhancements are stuck. With all the fanfare of the G5, consumers realize that the G4 is at the end of its life with the eMac, PowerBook, iBook and iMac 1.25ghz to 1.5 ghz G4s that were just released. Why buy a $1,000+ iMac or PowerBook ,when you can buy a cheap and loaded under $1,000 eMac or $1,100 iBook with nearly the same specs —and even better specs if you consider the eMacs 8X Superdrive! Mac users figure that G5s have to be” just around the corner” in these models. At the very least, Steve promised 3ghz G5 processors by summer, but there has been no change in G5 models since last summer. Mac users are clearly holding off their purchases to see what Apple has to offer. But after nearly a year, it seems the wait is getting pretty long. As for PC and Linux switchers who may once have been interested in a G5, there have been no grand additions or improvements to the G5 models in nearly a year, yet Intel processor are approaching 4 ghz on the cheap. For all the G5 talk, that 2 ghz compared to Intel’s 3 ghz processors, Intel has surpassed that, and 3 ghz processors are now well under $1,000, while 2 ghz G5s remain at $3,000. Improvements to eMacs, iBooks and PowerBooks just widen Apple’s own gap. iMac models remain the same in price and performance, while eMacs improve in performance at a cost running 50% less! iBooks nearly match the specifications of PowerBook G4s at a significantly lower price. PowerBooks, except for the 17” wide screen model, no longer justify their higher costs. What’s going on at Apple? Well, it’s not Apple, its IBM. IBM hasn’t been able to meet its G5 processor promises in performance, heat reduction and yield–nearly halting improvements to Apple’s whole product line. The lowest eMac—the one with the lowest price and lowest profit margin—is proving to be Apple’s winner right now. It offers tremendous value—the 4 fastest G4 processor, a beautiful screen, a faster video card than previous models, more standard RAM, the fastest Superdrive than any other Mac, and all for a mere $1,000…but it offers little profit. Apple needs a two-fisted approach. The iPod on one side seems to continually improve in performance, but Apple needs to begin moving the G5 processor across its entire product line as quickly as possible. “Switchers” and Mac users won’t buy a Mac unless they realize they are getting this year’s technology, not four-year old technology. There are still some people calling for Apple to release a Cube or cheap tower type (non all-in-one) Mac at the very bottom end (an eMac without a monitor) to compete with low end PCs. I think this is a good move to attract the people who buy cheap Linux and PC boxes to the Mac (who already have monitors or who don’t mind buying cheap PC monitors). These people are either first time consumers, consumers who can’t afford high-end machines or Linux/Unix geeks who’d rather fidget with boxes then buy expensive or all-in-one machines. Only higher yields of G5s and faster G5s will allow products to move though all levels. Of course, this is only my opinion, but I think Apple could win the music and portable music player war, but lose overall in profitability unless it resolves these issues. Help Desk Mac 911 By Christopher Breen Becoming a Convert I imported my CDs into iTunes as AIFF files. Now that I have an iPod, I'd like to convert those songs to the AAC format. Is this possible or must I rerip all my CDs? Steve Hawley, Jacksonville, NC You don't need to feed the CDs to your Mac again, as you can use iTunes to convert files from AIFF to AAC. To do so, launch iTunes and select Preferences from the iTunes menu. Click on the Importing tab in the resulting window, select AAC Encoder from the Import Using pop-up menu, and click on OK to close the Preferences window. In the iTunes window, select all the songs you want to convert, and choose Advanced: Convert Selection To AAC. All the selected songs will be duplicated, leaving you with two copies of each song -- the original AIFF file and the new AAC version. To easily locate and delete the AIFF files, choose View Options from the Edit menu, and in the View Options window that appears, enable the Date Added option and click on OK. Click on the new Date Added heading in the iTunes window to sort your songs by the date they were added to your iTunes library. The new AAC files will appear at the top of the list; the older AIFF tunes, at the bottom. Select the AIFF files and press the delete key to remove them from the library. Office Annoyance I'm on a closed Ethernet network within my company and use Microsoft Office v. X. Everyone in the office has his or her own copy of the software, yet my copy of Entourage quits at least twice an hour due to a license-conflict message. I have installed a brand-new copy of Office, and the same problem still occurs. Any thoughts on this? Paul Rosenblit, Freeport, New York What you're seeing is the license-checking "feature" that was built into early versions of Microsoft Office v. X. It was created so that you couldn't run the same copy of Office on multiple Macs. Fortunately, this feature disappears after you install the Microsoft Office v. X 10.1.2 Update (http://www.microsoft. com/mac/DOWNLOAD/OFFICEX/ OfficeX_1012.asp). Console Capers While glancing through the console.log file on my computer, I found an entry that reads "I got a control baby!" Am I being hacked? Fausto E. Castillo, Buffalo, NY No, what you see is an example of programmerspeak. That message is generated by Microsoft Office v. X's WordPDE.plugin and is completely harmless. Rummaging through page after page of a log file is more likely to confuse -- rather than inform -- the average user. But you can put Console and log files to good use. If, for example, an application crashes every time you perform a particular action, launch Console (found in the Utilities folder within the Applications folder), click on the Clear button to remove other entries from the log, and then perform that action. After The Bad Thing happens, return to Console and see what it has to say. Granted, a message that reads "Assertion failure in [NSMenu item AtIndex:], Menus.subproj /NSMenu.m:638" won't enlighten most of us, but the person or company responsible for the well-being of your ailing application may appreciate such an informative bug report. Losing the Light Since installing Panther on my 17-inch PowerBook G4, my keyboard doesn't always light up in dark conditions. Do you have any suggestions? Mitch Santell, Oceanside, CA Judging by messages posted in Apple's Discussions forum, robust keyboard backlighting on the latest PowerBooks remains a work in progress. Although some people found relief only by returning the PowerBook to Apple for repair, others fixed the problem by performing some of the following actions: 1. Cover the speaker grilles with your hands. The ambient light sensor is under the grilles, and covering them briefly may force the keys to shine. 2. Reset the Power Manager and zap the PRAM. To reset the Power Manager, turn off the PowerBook, simultaneously press and release control-shift-option and the power button, wait five seconds, and then press the power button to restart the PowerBook. To zap the PRAM, restart the Mac while holding down the 1-option-P-R keys and wait for the Mac to chime three times. Let go of the keys and the PowerBook will start up. 3. Repair permissions with Disk Utility (Applications: Utilities). If none of these procedures work, it's time for your PowerBook to take a trip to Apple. 5 TIP OF THE MONTH Occasionally I'll download a disk image that doesn't mount due to a "no mountable filesystems" error. I've recently learned that I needn't discard these seemingly broken images. Instead, I launch Disk Utility, drag the disk image into the list of volumes in the Disk Utility window, select the image, and click on Repair Disk. If the image can be repaired, Disk Utility will fix it, and afterward the disk image mounts. Nathan Wilairat, Berkeley, California UNSOLICITED ADVICE With the introduction of iTunes 4.2, Apple allows not only those with Apple IDs to shop at the iTunes Music Store (iTMS) but also AOL members who've created credit card accounts through the AOL Wallets feature. If you have both an Apple ID and an AOL account, you're welcome to create an iTMS account for each. Why bother? This is a useful option if you'd like to purchase and play music from a host of computers. When you purchase music from the iTMS, you're allowed to play that music on as many as three computers per account. If you've already authorized your two Macs and PC at home and later attempt to purchase and play music on your computer at work via your Apple account, you'll find that you can't, because you've exhausted your authorizations. With the additional authorizations that come with your new AOL account, you can purchase and play music at the office as well. Note, however, that purchased music is identified by the account that purchased it. If you buy music via your AOL identity at the office and want to play it at home on a Mac authorized with your Apple ID, you must authorize that Mac for the AOL account. To do so, simply attempt to play the file. You'll be prompted for your AOL ID and password. Macworld contributing editor Chris Breen is the author of Macworld's tips and troubleshooting column, "Mac 911," as well as Secrets of the iPod: Fourth Edition and Mac 911 (Peachpit Press). Find Chris' books at www.amazon.com and www.peachpit.com. Get special user group pricing on Macworld Magazine! Subscribe today at http://www.macworld.com/useroffer. Macworld Conference & Expo Bus Trip - July 14 • Register Now! Boston Convention & Exhibition Center July 12 - 15, 2004 Expo: July 13 - 15 CMC has chartered a bus to Boston on Wednesday, July 14th. See article at right for discount Bus Trip Registration - Deadline May 31st Software Tip: SideTrack by Raging Menace by Joe Arcuri, Past President, CMC Many of you who use Powerbooks and iBooks may have looked over at PC laptops enviously as they've rightclicked and also used the edge of their trackpad to scroll pages. Our streamlined single buttoned trackpad is a work of art, but every once in a while it'd be nice to have those added features. Join CMC as it goes to Macworld Expo in Boston on Wednesday, July 14th! For early bird registrations, we are holding the price at $15 per member if payment is received by May 31st. If payment is made after May 31st, please include $20 per member. Non-members rates are $25 per person. Payments can be made at the meetings on May 26th at UConn or the June 30th meeting at MxCC. Additionally, checks can be mailed to: Connecticut Macintosh Connection 41 Crossroads Plaza — PMB 1984 West Hartford, CT 06117 PayPal payments are also accepted on our website at www.ctmac.org. All seats will be on a first come, first served basis, so make sure to register early if you’re planning on attending. Don’t forget that you will also need to register for the Expo itself; for this you can go to www.macworldexpo.com. B O S T O N • J U LY 2 0 0 4 April 28 CMC Meeting featuring Wacom Tablets Interestingly, Apple uses the same Synaptics trackpad hardware that the PC manufacturers use; it's just that Apple has not written drivers for the additional features available. Along comes Raging Menace to write SideTrack, a replacement driver which allows you to release the scrolling and clicking capabilities of your trackpad. I have mine currently configured to scroll vertically on the righthand side of the trackpad, rightclick when I tap the upper left corner and show my Exposé windows when clicking in the lower left corner. (More details on page 9 - Web Picks) Steven Gottlieb (pictured left & above) of Wacom demonstrated the Intuos and Cintiq (below) tablets. CMC member Bill Dougal created Steven Gottlieb’s caricature (below-left) on the Cintiq. SideTrack is beta software and free. The current version, .8, expires on 6/30/04 and can be found at: http://www.ragingmenace.com/software/sidetrack/index.html 6 Yes, I want to join CMC Benefits: Monthly meetings, monthly newsletter, discounted book purchases, computer problem assistance, network with other Mac users, User Group Store, etc. Date ______________________________ Company __________________________ Name _____________________________ Address ___________________________ City ______________________________ State________ Zip __________________ Phone (Home) ______________________ Phone (Office) ______________________ Phone (Fax) ________________________ Business___________________________ Occupation_________________________ Email:_____________________________ Areas of special interest to you: __________________________________ __________________________________ __________________________________ Annual CMC Family Membership - $25.00 Mail form to: CMC 41 Crossroads Plaza – PMB 1984 West Hartford, CT 06117 Make checks payable to CMC or... Register Online with PayPal at www.ctmac.org 7 Web Picks of the Month Compiled by Neal Dembicer, CMC Please report broken links to: NealDD@yahoo.com From Neal Dembicer: http://gasbuddy.com/ It’s a portal site to more than 170 web sites that help consumers find cheap gas prices. All web sites are operated by the non-profit organization known as GasBuddy Organization Inc. Why? Since gasoline prices change frequently and may vary by as much as 20 percent within only a few blocks it is important to be able locate the service station with the lowest priced fuel. GasBuddy Organization web sites allow consumers to both share information about low priced fuel with others as well as target the lowest priced stations to save at the pumps! Also, www.GasPriceWatch.com per Janet Hall From Kyle DeMilo: http://www.sr.se/cgi-bin/p1/src/sing/ default.asp Some people have too much time on their hands...Put in your words and it will sing it for you. From Janet Hall: http://www.itasoftware.com/demos/ I read a review of this site in Conde Nast Traveler Magazine and it was rated very high. This is a search engine for airlines which goes out and queries airlines and travel sites like Orbitz, Travelocity etc for the best fares. It is NOT like Orbitz, Travelocity and Expedia which limit you to seats sold to them by the airlines. It actually queries low cost airlines like Frontier and Southwest (which Expedia, Travelocity and Orbitz do not). It also has a feature where it warns you if the layover is over 2 hours and shows the total travel time of the flights. So you can see if the ticket that is a mere $20.00 less actually has 4 additional hours of travel time. Nice feature. Sidestep is similar but this site gives me lower fares and more info. It was developed by MIT. I tried the demo and logged in as a guest. You don’t buy your tickets through them but it links you to the site where it found the fare. From Joe Arcuri: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page If you are an information buff then this is the site for you. The wikipedia is an online encyclopedia that is constantly growing and refining due to the nature of a wiki. What is a wiki you ask? A Wiki is a collection of interlinked web pages, any of which can be visited and edited by anyone at any time (collaborative software). This means that if you are reading an entry in the Wikipedia that you have a correction for you can go ahead and edit it.Go ahead, try it out. You’ll be hooked. From Deena Quilty: http://www.llewellyn.com/free/tarot.php This site sells Tarot cards and other “mystical” items. But you can get a free online reading. Just choose a deck (I had no clue what the differences are), think of a question, and then one click deals the cards for a past, present and future reading. From Jack Bass: www.bradshawfoundation.com Art of Ancients - world’s finest rock art www.sumanasinc.com/science infocus/scienceinfocus.html Science in focus - biology, the easy way through instructive animations. www.eternalegypt.org A tour of ancient Egyptian empire From Robert F. Sawyer: Here is alot of good stuff. All of these are from the MacAttorney Users Goup newsletter - www.MacAttorney.com S.M.A.R.T. Hard Drive Reporting http://www.belarc.com/Drive/ smart.html#attributes Most disk drives sold these days include S.M.A.R.T. (Self-Monitoring Analysis and Reporting Technology) hardware developed by IBM that allows hard disks to test themselves for potential problems. Some repair and maintenance utilities, such as the latest version of Disk Warrior, allow you to check a disk’s S.M.A.R.T status, but now under OS X10.3, you can check the health of your hard disk right in the included program Disk Utility. To check the status of a disk: Open Disk Utility, located in Applications/Utilities, and select the disk in the left column. Look at the bottom of the window to see the S.M.A.R.T. status. If your disk is “verified,” it’s a valid disk with nothing wrong at this time. If you see “About to Fail” in red letters, back up your disk immediately and have the disk replaced. It ‘will’ fail. See: Mac OS X 10.3: Replacing a Disk Before it Fails http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html? artnum=135048 Since the point of S.M.A.R.T is to predict disk failure before it happens, checking regularly is very important. Here is a free AppleScript that will automatically give you a daily hard drive status message window, so you don’t have to run Disk Utility everyday to monitor your hard drive’s health. http://homepage.mac.com/cyberbrent/ filechute/SMART_Disk_Check.zip To use this script you will need to also also download the free utility CronniX so that you can schedule when the script will be run. http://www.koch-schmidt.de/cronnix/ This topic is discussed at: www.macosxhints.com/article.php? story=20031122041138373&query= Turn Off Your Dock http://sideburn.com/dockblock/ A number of folks have expressed the desire to be able to turn off the Dock in OS X. (Not just simply hide it.) DockBlock will disable the Dock via a universal menubar menu, and it also includes an Application menu for quickly jumping between your running Applications even when the dock is disabled. Price: $5 continued on page 9 8 continued from page 8 Tutorial for Word 2001 www.mvps.org/word/FAQs/Word Mac/Bend/BendWord.htm This article is a good intro to using Microsoft Word 2001: “Bend Word to Your Will”. You can download the article as a Word file directly from: www.mvps.org/word/FAQs/WordMac/ Bend/BendWordToYourWill.sit or http://tinyurl.com/23bze Restore Internet Preferences To OS X www.clauss-net.de/misfox/misfox.html Under Mac OS X several internet settings which were available under MacOS 8 (in Internet Config) and 9 (in Internet Preferences) are still present and are still used by most internet applications, but they are no longer accessible by the user. So if these settings become corrupted for some reason, there is no longer any way to repair these settings. The FREE application MisFox makes some of the most important internet settings accessible again. MisFox will show all of the file mapping settings, and the protocol helpers. With it you can inspect, edit, delete and create new items for these functions. Panther Hidden Feature: The “Orb” www.ifthensoft.com/index2.html Hackposé is small program that puts a little “blob” on your screen under OS X 10.3 Panther that serves as a hotpoint that allows you to use the Mac’s hot new Exposé features without having to remember any of the hot keys that activate them. More Internet Preferences www.monkeyfood.com/software/ moreInternet/ In OS X 10.3 Panther the Internet preference panel, used for setting your default Internet applications (e.g. your preferred browser, e-mail client, etc.) is gone. You now have to set your preferred Internet programs in the preferences of the programs themselves. More Internet is a FREE utility brings back the functionality of the Internet preferences pane, and more: AppleScript for Absolute Beginners http://www.applescriptsource book.com/tips/AS4AS.html Here’s a useful resource for those wanting to try scripting to speed repetitive tasks: AppleScript for Absolute Beginners by Bert Altenburg is a free, 65-page AppleScript tutorial (pdf) that teaches beginners the basics of AppleScript scripting. BurnX Free is FREE www.hernansoft.com/products.html BurnX Free has several useful features that Apple’s built-in CD-burning software does not offer, or that aren’t implemented well. BurnX can burn CDs in a hybrid format for cross-platform compatibility, and it can also erase CD-RW media. It supports multiple session burning and drag-and-drop of files and folders for burning. BurnX Free is FREE for Mac OS X 10.2.3 and up. Group Scheduling Software www.teamsoft.com/ TeamAgenda Pro is a corporate group scheduler and resource manager that provides workgroups with advanced tools for time management and team coordination. TeamAgenda Pro is cross-platform compatible with PC or Macintosh. Open System Preference Panes Fast! http://homepage.mac.com/asagoo/ prefling/index.html Longtime Mac users remember when they could open a Control Panel quickly and easily from the Apple menu. Under OS X, to change a System Preference, you have to launch System Preferences, and then find the preference pane you are looking for, and that takes time. Prefling, a FREE utility, lets you open system preference panes FAST! Prefling sits in your Dock and offers a menu with all the preference panes installed and active. It’s the ideal replacement for the “System Preferences” item that’s in your Dock by default. Do you have a great Web Pick? Email it to Neal Dembicer at: NealDD@yahoo.com 9 Drawing Programs http://www.touchcad.com Contributed by: Leif C. Bäckström, European Patent Attorney, Sweden. In my work as patent attorney, I frequently need to draw patent drawings, design drawings and trademarks besides different kinds of sketches. In said work, I have found the following programs to be very useful. My number one favorite for modeling is TouchCad3.0; for rendering, ArtLantis 4.5; and for general drawing work, VectorWorks 8.5.2. The last two programs are well known but not the first one, which ought to be, according to my opinion. Further information about TouchCad3.0 can be found at: http://www.touchcad.com or directly from ludesign@algonet.se TouchCad3.0 is primarily designed for the Macintosh but can also be used on a PC. It is simply and intuitive to use and has not a steep learning curve like all other CAD programs I have been in contact with. Make Your PowerBook’s Trackpad More Useful! http://www.ragingmenace.com/ software/sidetrack/index.html SideTrack is a FREE replacement driver for the trackpad (touchpad) found on Apple PowerBooks and iBooks. It brings many of the trackpad scrolling features found on Windows laptops to MacOS X. Most Windows laptops implement trackpad scrolling using drivers made by Synaptics. Although Apple PowerBooks also use Synaptics trackpads, the standard Apple driver uses none of the extended features. SideTrack supports these features: • Vertical scrolling at left or right edge of pad. • Horizontal scrolling at top or bottom edge of pad. • Map hardware button to left or right click. • Map trackpad taps to no action, left click, left click drag (with or without drag lock), or right click. • Compatible with uControl, including uControl’s scroll emulation. Side Track (free) Special MUG Offers from the Apple User Group These special offers are brought to you by the Apple User Group Advisory Board. You must be a current user group member to qualify for these savings. Que Publications Dreaming of touring the world, seeing your name in lights and partying like a rock star? Who knows? It could happen. Let Que's "MacAddict Guide to Making Music with GarageBand" free your inner rock star and show you how to create, perform and record your own music. Get 40 percent off the $24.99 book (free shipping for U.S. customers). http://www.quepublishing.com/title/07 89732262 Coupon code MACGBAND This worldwide offer is valid until October 31, 2004. Digital Element Digital Element is offering Apple user group Mac Photoshop users a download bundle of all of their Photoshop plugins (Aurora 2.1, Verdant and Modelshop) for only $199 (US), a $300 savings. (Offer only for the Mac version and for Apple user group members.) http://www.digi-element.com Coupon code MUGSDEAL04 Go to www.digi-element.com, select Store, Order Online, Bundles and choose one of the two Mac bundles, each regularly $439. This worldwide offer is valid until August 31, 2004. Boinx iStopMotion and iVeZeen Looking for exciting ways to use your webcam? Create amazing stop motion animations or time lapse recordings with Boinx iStopMotion. Use Boinx iVeZeen to record video with your webcam. (The iSight is particularly well supported.) Apple user group members can get an exclusive 20 percent discount on Boinx iStopMotion and/or Boinx iVeZeen. iStopMotion is regularly $39.95 and iVeZeen is regularly $14.95. This worldwide offer is valid until August 31, 2004. Get free demos, more info and the free MiracleSight Screensaver http://www.boinx.com/aug macXware macXware welcomes Apple user groups with a 15 percent discount on any macXware website order. Current Titles • MacFonts - 1000 TrueType Fonts & FontManager • MoreMacFonts - 750 New TrueType Fonts & FontManager • LogoCreator - Create Your Own Identity • MacBurn - CD & DVD Burning Software • MediaEdit Pro - Video, Audio & Image Editor • ScreenRecord - Capture OnScreen Actions • PhotoEdit - Photo Editor & Paint Tool • MacPac - Boost Your Mac Power Visit http://www.macXware.com CouponCode MUG2004 This worldwide offer is valid until December 31, 2004. PodShop Like peanut butter and jelly, some things just go together. PodShop has designed the perfect companion for iPod, an acrylic stand/display that complements the look and feel. PodHolder is a beautiful and functional accessory built at the perfect angle, allowing one-thumb access to iPod while preventing scratches. Regularly $9.95, PodHolder is available to Apple user group members for $7.95, a 20 percent discount. http://podshop.com/mug.htm This worldwide offer is valid until December 31, 2004. 10 The MUG Store The MUG Store always has great deals for you This Month's Highlights • Refurbished eMacs starting at $599 • Refurbished iBooks with Combo drive starting at $899 • Refurbished iMacs starting at $999 • Refurbished PowerBooks starting at $1,099 But the Mug Store isn't just about refurbished Macs: We offer free freight, great deals on new Macs and other products, plus one percent back to your group when you buy from the store. To get into this exclusive User Group site order today http://www.applemugstore.com See user id and password on page 11. Get a complete list of all current deals. http://www.mugcenter.com/vendornews/vendornews.html Download of the Month submitted by Debi Foss Trash Locked Files http://www.landsbert.freeserve. co.uk/trashlockedfiles Trash Locked Files will unlock all the files in the trash and then send an AppleEvent to the Finder to empty the trash. You can also use Trash Locked Files to unlock all files within a folder you select. Minimum System Requirements • Macintosh PowerPC. • System 8.5 (including OS X). • Carbon Library (pre-OS X only). • 10Mb RAM free. • 1Mb Hard disk space. I have had this mysterious, invincible file in my trash for about 2 weeks, and this got rid of it. Whee! Upcoming Meetings Monthly CMC Meetings are held on last Wednesday of the month, 7:00 p.m. – 9:00 p.m. (except Nov. and Dec. when the meetings are one week earlier due to the holidays) Board meetings are the first Thursday of the month. If you wish to attend a Board meeting, contact an officer for the location. May 26 • 7 pm Digital Photography Basics Introduction to Digital Cameras and Digital Photography June 29 • 7 pm Hands-On Photoshop, iPhoto and iDVD Workshops at Middlesex Community College. Discounted Books CMC continues to offer our current members the opportunity to purchase any published book for either Mac or Windows at a 20% discount. All major publishers are carried by our source. Call Neal Dembicer at 673-7711 or send email to booksales@ctmac.org. Provide the book title, the publisher and the ISBN number, if possible, and he will check on its availability. Normally, the wait is not too long. Free . . . to a good home! Complete Mac system — hey, it’s old, but the price is right! Quadra 605, 14” display, StyleWriter printer, mouse, keyboard. Contact Deena at editor@ctmac.org. August 25 • 7 pm Quark/InDesign Graphic designer Pat Rasch will give a presentation on InDesign. Pat will discuss the benefits of InDesign and how to move to InDesign for users of Quark and Pagemaker. September 29 • 7 pm Celebrity Guest Night Apple engineer, author and presenter Dave Marra will give an entertaining and informative presentation about the Mac world. Future Meeings include: • Annual Auction • Migration to OSX • Holiday Party If you have a program you are interested in, email Rich Lenoce at: vicepres@ctmac.org Every CMC member who attends our monthly meetings gets a raffle ticket. This will give you a chance for one of our free prizes every month! You could win… t-shirts, toys, CDs, mugs, software …there’s always something we’re giving away! WELCOME! New Members Spread the word. We need new members! Have your friends and co-workers join us for fun and learning about OS X and the Mac. Total Membership: 124 Treasurer’s Report July 28 • 7 pm GarageBand This presentation will be geared towards the non-musician demonstrating how easy Garage Band can make music. FREE Raffle! Ending Checking Account Balance ................$1336.36 CMC Web Site Access www.ctmac.org User ID: XXX (uppercase) Password: xxxxx (lowercase) Savings Account Balance...$3949.53 Balances as of April 30, 2004 CMC Classified Ads April 1, 2004 - July 31, 2004 User ID: xxxx (lowercase) Password: xxxx (lowercase) Members can Advertise For Sale, Swap, Trade, Giveaway or Want to Buy Items. This space can be used by members to advertise non-business items which they are no longer using or upgrading. This is a free service provided to our members. Any business items or services can be advertised at the rates shown below: CMC ELECTIONS Monthly Ad Rates At the May meeting we will vote in the officers for the next year. We will accept nominations from the floor prior to the elections. The ballot at this time has the following names: Business Card ..........................$10.00 Quarter Page.............................$20.00 Half Page..................................$30.00 Full Page (or insert) .................$50.00 • President............Don Dickey • Vice President....Rich Lenoce • Secretary............Chris Hart • Treasurer............David Gerstein Submit all ad copy to the Editor on a disk with nothing else on it or e-mail it for insertion in the following issue. Display ads must be submitted camera-ready in .eps or .pdf format with all fonts & graphics embedded. Apple User Group Store www.applemugstore.com 11 41 Crossroads Plaza – PMB 1984 West Hartford, CT 06117 CMC Meeting Location – a PDF document containing a visual direction guide to UConn Health Center is available on our website: http://www.ctmac.org. Print and take it with you to find us easily! Monthly meetings will be held at UConn Health Center in Farmington. When hands-on programs require computers for attendees, we will be using Middlesex Community College in Middletown. Directions to UCHC, Farmington Directions to Middlesex C.C. From I-84: Take Exit 39 (if coming from I-84 West, Exit 39 is after 39A). Turn right at first traffic light onto Route 4 East (Farmington Avenue). At third traffic light, turn right to enter the Health Center campus. Go around the main building to the right (at a Y in road), then take a left when you get to the Academic Entrance. The road becomes twoway there so you should be able to tell where to turn. (Do not go on straight to the two-way part). Then take the second right into parking lot A&B. this is close to the building. Go past the police station entrance on your left (small sign). You will see a continuation of the building with its own entrance area. This is the new research building. Enter on the ground floor, turn right and enter room EG-013 on your right. This is the first room on your right. The rest rooms are on your left as you enter. From the Hartford area, take Route 9 South. A few miles south of downtown Middletown on Route 9, take Exit 11 (Rt. 155, Randolph Road). At the end of the ramp (for both N. & S. bound), turn right onto Randolph Road. Continue to the traffic light at the top of the hill and turn left onto Saybrook Road. Go a quarter of a mile and turn right onto Reservoir Road. Travel past the stop sign, then take the first right onto Training Hill Road. Your first left will lead into the Middlesex Community College Campus parking area. When you arrive on campus, take a right onto Training Hill Road. Go to the second parking lot entrance and take a left into the upper lot. Directly in front of you will be Snow Hall. Enter Snow Hall and go up the stairs to the 2nd floor and go to the last room on the right, Room 509. 12 Monthly Meeting June 30 – 7 p.m. Middlesex Community College Hands-on Photoshop, iPhoto and iDVD Workshops NEWSLETTER OF CONNECTICUT MACINTOSH CONNECTION, INC. Shopping Wisely By Don Dickey, CMC president Many of us hate to spend money. That said, getting a good buy or having a pleasant buying experience can ease the pain of parting with our hard-earned cash. This month I’ll share a few of my favorite online shopping haunts. Computer Geeks (geeks.com) is a supplier of computer stuff. Most of it is PeeSee stuff, but I’ve bought stuff here like hard drives, external enclosures, and a Labtek USB microphone that works great with iChat AV. The microphone cost me $9. It was selling at the Apple Store in Westfarms for three times that! NewEgg.com is a similar company with a very large selection. They have reasonable shipping on most items, and some items even ship free. I’ve purchased drives and external enclosures from NewEgg. Both Geeks and NewEgg are in California, so your stuff will take a week to get here. Small Dog Electronics (smalldog.com) is a Mac-centric shop up in Waitsfield, Vermont. Being in New England, you should get your stuff in a day or two. They’re an Apple Authorized Reseller and sell both new and refurbished gear. Selling similar stuff from Woodstock, IL is Other World Computing (macsales.com). They have very good tech support gurus, and they’re a good place to shop for a processor upgrade to help speed up an aging Mac. Another good Mac-centric shop is MacResQ.com. They have some used JUNE, 2004 Macs, and you can use their site as a guide to what your old Mac might be worth should you decide to sell it. They also stock many hard-to-find parts for older gear. Mac Connection (MacConnection .com) is an Apple Authorized Reseller with a very large inventory of new Apple systems, software, and peripherals. Their sister company, PcConnection.com, “Be sure to carefully read the fine print before you buy from any vendor. Check their return policy, and make sure the shipping charges aren’t out of line. If you have to return a defective item, ask the vendor to either issue a “pull tag” or send you a freight-paid return shipping label” focuses on the Windoze world. They’re located in New Hampshire, but that doesn’t mean your stuff will necessarily ship from there since they have several warehouses. At last report, they offered free ground shipping if you tell them your a CMC user group member! That could save you a bundle on heavy purchases. I remember when Outpost.com of Kent, CT. was featured in Connecticut Magazine. Our own Deena Quilty did their PR for a while! They’re now part of the Fry’s Electronics chain and the 1 deals may be fewer and less frequent, but they’re still a good place to shop. Their selection seems to have grown with their Fry’s affiliation. While Belkin.com normally sells their stuff at list prices, shopping here during a Macworld show sometimes yields a 50%-off sale! I bought a nice, powered FireWire hub online here during the January Macworld show at half-off. If you’re a member, SamsClub.com is a great place to buy stuff at warehouse prices without leaving your home. I got my 19” flat panel display here, and they even shipped it for free. The best part about this site is that if you aren’t completely happy with your purchase, you can return it to any Sam's Club warehouse store. If you’re willing to try a refurbished Mac, try the “Special Deals” page at the Apple Store online. I’ve seen eMacs with G4 processors and built-in 17” flat screen monitors for $549 with free shipping! I got a refurbished 10 gb iPod for $169 when they were selling for almost twice that if new. For good deals on software, check out Software-Blowouts.com. I recently Continued on page 2 Inside this Issue Saving The ‘Unsavable’....................... 2 Office 2004 .......................................... 4 Mac 911................................................6 Macworld Bus Trip Info........................7 Download of the Month........................7 Be S.M.A.R.T.......................................8 Meetings & Club News ......................11 Continued from page 1 bought a 4-CD Encyclopedia Britannica Ultimate Reference Set for $6.95 (plus shipping)! Most of their software is discontinued or overstocks. Be careful to check the supported OS versions before you whip out your credit card. Editor Deena Quilty Content Contributor Don Dickey Contributing Author Rich Lenoce Chris hart Designer George Maciel Photographer John Scott Chris Hart Publisher Connecticut Macintosh Connection, Inc. 41 Crossroads Plaza PMB 1984 West Hartford, CT 06117 Printer Budget Printers 1718 Park Street Hartford, CT 06106 We welcome submissions from members! Please submit articles by first of the month for inclusion in our newsletter. There is much talent in our group; it would be great to have several member articles in each issue. If you like Epson printers, I’ve found great deals at their site (epson.com) on refurbished or recently discontinued gear. They shipped my printer for free, and they even threw in a free USB cable! InkDaddy.com (formerly 4ink.com) and Ink4Art.com are a couple of good places to buy 3rd party ink jet ink and laser printer toner. You’ll save a bundle over real Epson, Canon, and HP products. Some people say your printer is more likely to get gummed up, but I’ve had good luck with 3rd party ink. Your milage may vary. Don’t complain to me if you buy this stuff and it wrecks your print head! Perhaps my best deal was at Buy.com Several years ago they offered an incredible deal on a large NEC monitor. I ordered one as soon as I saw it. Later, however, they realized the price had been posted in error. They canceled my order, along with all the other orders they caught in time. That irritated somebody enough that he filed a class action lawsuit against them! The net result, however, was that a couple years later I got a settlement check in the mail for something like $50 without even having to buy anything. Be sure to carefully read the fine print before you buy from any vendor. Check their return policy, and make sure the shipping charges aren’t out of line. If you have to return a defective item, ask the vendor to either issue a “pull tag” or send you a freight-paid return shipping label. It’s great to have fun with your Mac. It’s even better to do it at a discount! Happy shopping. 2 Saving The ‘Unsavable’ by Chris Hart, Secretary Have you visited a web site which contains audio or video clips, and wished you could save them for later listening or viewing? Were you stopped in your tracks by the lack of an option to accomplish this kind of file saving? You’re not alone. Thanks to Corporate America’s obsession with copyright protection, much of the audio and video content online cannot be saved to your computer. However, I have a trick to share with you, which may be the solution you’ve been looking for. This trick will work for most audio and video files that are being played back by the QuickTime plug-in built into your Macintosh. Of course some multimedia files use other media players to make their way to your screen. So, how can you tell if QuickTime is being used? Well, if the playback control bar that you see is similar to the one below, then you are likely using the QuickTime plug-in, and this trick will work. I must mention that the only types of files that will work with this process are audio and video files which are in QuickTime or MPG/MPEG format. That’s because these two types of files are played by the QuickTime software built into your Mac. If, instead, the audio or video content you wish to save is in RealPlayer or Windows Media Player format (meaning it has an extension on the end such as .RM, .RAM, .AVI, .ASF, .WMF), then you’ll have to explore other methods of saving it to your Mac. I have provided information, at the end of this article, on tools which will make this possible. Please remember that it is your responsibility to use the copyrighted material you download with some degree of respect for the originators of that material. If you appreciate their work, you should consider rewarding them by continued on page 3 (a.k.a. extension), which tells the computer what kind of file this is. If you’re confident that the file is a QuickTime file, then put .MOV on the end (such as “movie traile r. m o v ” ) . I f y o u b e l i e v e t h e content might be an MPG/MPEG file, then use those letters for the suffix (example “ m o v i e t r a i l e r. m p g ” ) . A n MP3 file should have that same extension (example “song.mp3”). continued from page 2 purchasing the stuff they produce. With that small lecture out of the way, I now present the trick I’ve been promising...How to save ‘unsavable’ QuickTime files in Mac OS X: Step 1: Open System Preferences (in the Apple Menu). Click on the QuickTime icon in the System Preferences window. Click on the tab that is labeled “Plug-In.” Make sure that there is a checkbox in place for the option “Save movies in disk cache.” Quit System Preferences. Step 2: Visit the web page, QuickTime player page, or iTunes Music Store page that has the audio/video content you wish to save. You’ll notice that as playback of the clip begins to play, the progress bar below it is filled from left to right. This horizontal line begins as all white, and darkens as the file your hearing/watching is being obtained from the internet. If you like, you may pause the playback and not hamper this process. Step 3: You must wait until the progress bar is completely filled from left to right. For example, the progress bar I showed you above indicates that the video clip is only partially loaded. Only once this bar is completely filled can you proceed with the rest of the steps. Step 4: Hide the application that is playing the clip. Switch to the Finder. In the Go menu, select the option “Go to Folder...” A dialog box will now ask you to enter the path to the folder you want. Type in /tmp/501/TemporaryItems/ and click on the GO button. Step 5: You will now have a window on your screen for the folder “Temporary Items” which contains just that — lots of files that your computer has stored temporarily on your hard drive. I must tell you up front that it is very important that you do not modify any of the files in this folder (such as changing their names or trashing them). Doing so could cause your computer or software to become unstable. Look through the contents of the “Temporary Items” folder for any files that begin with the name “QTPluginTemp.” These files will have random numbers on the end, such as “QTPluginTemp8675309” If there is more than one file of this type, try to determine which is the one you are looking for by comparing the file sizes and modification dates. (Most likely, you are looking for the file with the largest size and/or most recent modification date that is the one you seek.) If you are unsure which file is the right one, you may repeat the steps below for any of the files you suspect are what you’re looking for. Once you have identified the correct “QTPluginTemp” file: • Hold down the OPTION key on your keyboard. • Drag that file to your desktop. • Let go of the OPTION key. A duplicate has now been created on your desktop. As I mentioned earlier, do not modify the original file. Simply close the folder window named “Temporary Items.” Step 6: Find the “QTPluginTemp” file on your desktop. Click once on the name, and rename the file to something appropriate, such as “movie trailer” You must follow that name with a file suffix 3 Your Macintosh may ask you if you are sure that you want to change the file name.Reassure it that you do. You will notice that the file’s icon immediately changes from one that is generic to one that is colorful. That indicates that the file is now associated with a media player on your computer. Step 7: Enjoy the file. You should be able to simply double click on the file and have it start to playback in the appropriate media player (usually QuickTime Player). If that doesn’t work, then you’ll have to manually launch QuickTime Player and use the OPEN function in the FILE menu, to navigate your way to the file. If at first you don’t succeed: Below are a variety of software products that allow you to record audio and video on your Mac, in one way or another. You may need to try several, in order to find one that works satisfactorily, or suits your particular needs. Audion www.panic.com Audio Hijack www.rogueamoeba.com WireTap www.ambrosiasw.com Snapz Pro X www.ambrosiasw.com Screen Tool www.citrussoftware.com Screen Record (available at two URLs) www.macxware.com and www.miennetwork.com ASF Recorder (for Windows Media Player content) www.misawa. net/ archives/000030.html Radio Recorder http://u1.netgate.net/~snowcat/ RadioRecorder.html Office 2004 v11 for Mac: Should you bother? on the laptop to display only what is on the slide while the presenter sees the slide in a small window and presentation notes in another on their laptop. This can become a crutch for presenters, but for the novice or those nervous about presenting, it can be an excellent aid. Just remember that you have an audience and to look up from the computer screen often! by Rich Lenoce, Vice President I received a copy of Microsoft Office 2004-Standard Edition, and as I do every couple of years, I had to ask the question, is this package of Word, Excel, PowerPoint and Entourage worth the $249 upgrade price, $400 for a new copy or $149 for the Teacher/Student Edition? Let me expose my prejudices first. I have always found any Microsoft product, especially Office, to be bloatware. Office has historically occupied huge amounts of disk space, eats up an undeserving amount of memory and processor cycles, is buggy, and in the past, upgrades offered little in the way of real productivity enhancements. On the plus side, Office does offer tremendous compatibility with the PC world and when mastered, offers many necessary features and productivity tools not found anywhere else. The reason these tools aren’t found anywhere else is that Microsoft has beaten all other competitors into submission by selling their product (on the PC-side) at the point of sale where people buy a computer or it is distributed as part of an overall Microsoft OS and software site license for businesses and schools. Because of this entrenchment in the PC and business world, few users, except for those with a Mac, actually purchase individual copies of Office. In the PC world, it’s a defacto standard. As we covered earlier, there are many alternatives, but few with the features, power and entrenchment in the business world. For Mac users we may feel we need Office to work with our PC brethren, and for the corporate environment it’s a must. Once Microsoft had come out with the third update to Office X for Macintosh, the program had reached a nice balance of stability and speed on most G3/G4/G5 systems, so I was leery of stepping up to a new edition. There are some notable features and improvements in Office 2004, particul a r l y w i t h M i c r o s o f t Wo r d , PowerPoint and Entourage. Word now has note-taking features that allow you take quick notes and organize these notes for later use within a Word document. This may be useful for students and people who take meeting notes, as it’s a speedy and slick way to get ideas onto “paper,” or into the computer fast. You can dispense with notes all together and use Word as a dictation machine as it can now record audio from a microphone. Both are handy features and well integrated, but there are many free and shareware note-taking and simple audio recording applications available that will do the same thing at little or no cost. Just do a search on Versiontracker.com. A p p l e ’s K e y n o t e h a s g i v e n PowerPoint a run for its money and Microsoft has shot back with an enhanced product. One new feature and what I consider a Keynote-breaker is the ability for the laptop and video projector to show two distinct images. You can set the video output 4 Entourage is the most enhanced produ c t i n t h e s u i t e . I t s p o r t s a well-organized new three-column view and a more responsive feel. Entourage’s biggest enhancement is a project management feature where all emails, notes and Office documents, spreadsheets and presentations relating to the same project can reside within a single folder. For those with poor organizational skills, this is a godsend. For those of us meticulous about our desktop and file organization, this new feature may be wholly unnecessary. Entourage certainly seems more stable and now has recovery and backup tools for the database. I refused to try Entourage again after my database was destroyed in the last version but this new item makes me feel more secure. Entourage is a powerful PIM application for those who need that kind of power and organization in one package. I am a teacher with hundreds of student and professional contacts, an extensive and detailed calendar, and I have been able to live without Entourage by using Apple’s own Mail, Address Book and iCal applications. I like the way those let me sync to my .mac account, keeping all my information synchronized across multiple computers and handheld devices as well as my Safari bookmarks. I also don’t like the way Entourage wants to hog my entire screen and prefer my Mac application’s ability to be shrunk and stuck into a corner for when I need them. continued on page 5 continued from page 4 But, Entourage is a powerful, all-inone tool aimed at businesses, educators and others with busy lives. And, where’s Excel you ask? It appears Excel did not get much in the way of improvements. Sadly, speed and stability were not improved with Office 2004. There was a noticeable performance hit and system slow down with Word, PowerPoint and Entourage compared to the Office X versions. Word quit on me 20 minutes into a document for no reason, which to me has become a staple when Microsoft releases a new version of Office. But, those clever folks at MS are ahead of the game because the document reappeared as “Recovered” when I launched the application again. Phewwww! As with earlier versions of Office, expect stability enhancement releases and bug fixes in the coming months. So is Office worth the hefty price? I think you’ll find that if you need these new features for school or work, you’ll need to upgrade. The Student/Teacher edition is full featured and nicely priced at $149, and allows Office to be installed on up to three machines; certainly it’s the best deal. If purchasing Office for the first time, you might want to save some money and find a clearance copy of the older Office X for Mac. If you have no need for the new features and Office X works for you, by all means stick with it and save yourself from this bloatware. For $400 you can get airfare and a hotel for a weekend in Orlando. Do that and you’ll be happier — and tell Mickey I said hello! Samples Reprinted by permission The Executive Summary of Graphic Design News - June 04 Force Startup from Hard Drive Sometimes, after starting up from a CD and then restarting, your Mac won’t eject the CD and still wants to start up from the CD. To force your Mac to start up from the internal hard drive, hold down the D key just after hearing the startup chime. (Hold down the C key to start up using the CD.) Digital Camera Info Sites Here are two good review sites for digital cameras: • Steve’s Digicams This terrific review site includes a discussion forum area. His reviews have lots of close-up pictures of the features of the cameras. The reviews are quite easy to understand (not too much techno babble), and they are quite thorough. www.steves-digicams.com • Imaging Resource Another great site that includes lots of sample pictures, making it easy to visually compare the image quality of different cameras. www.imaging-resource.com Time/Life Images www.TimePix.com licenses the images from Time and Life magazines from 1923 through today. You can search by subject, or have their staff search for you. Retro Images www.Retrofile.com specializes in images from many U.S. vintage photo libraries, including black and white imagery through the 1960s, and color imagery from the 1950s through the 1970s. The images capture “American optimism in the early and middle parts of the century…and Mod, Flower Power and Disco generations.” Lynda Movies www.Lynda.com has hundreds of hours of streaming QuickTime movies that teach you just about everything about graphics, animation, Web applications such as Macromedia Dreamweaver, 5 Flash, UltraDev, and Fireworks, and Adobe Acrobat, Photoshop, ImageReady, and Illustrator. Access costs $25 per month. We tried it, and it’s remarkably effective, even on a 56k modem. More Memory for Classic If you run several memory-hungry applications in Panther’s Classic environment, and Classic complains that you don’t have enough memory, you can adjust the memory that Mac OS X gives to classic: in System Preferences> Classic, hold down the Option key when clicking the Memory/Versions button. An Adjust Memory button appears at the bottom of the window. Click it, and a sheet drops down containing a slider: “Application Temporary”. Move the slider toward Temporary. Ted Landau Copy Mac OS X Startup Volumes Carbon Copy Cloner is a free utility that lets you copy your Mac OS X startup volume to a different hard drive, including all the necessary invisible files. Just click a button and it copies. At www.bombich.com. Find Downloads More Quickly To quickly find the items you’ve downloaded from websites, rather than let them accumulate on your desktop, create a folder on the desktop (perhaps named Downloads). Then, in your Web browser’s preferences set the location for downloaded files to that folder. Lesa Snider Mac Design May/June 04, pg.36 Design Tools Monthly is published by The Nelson Group, Inc. Its purpose is: 1) to summarize all the news in graphic design technologies; and 2) to be a designer’s index to trade publications and websites. Information is collected from graphic design and prepress trade publications, websites, tech notes, press releases, and user reports. To download a free sample of a DTM newsletter, go to http://www.designtools.com/sample/index.htm Help Desk Mac 911 By Christopher Breen Do you wonder whether sending AppleWorks documents to PC users is strictly for the birds? Do you seek the means for sending a Mail message to one user's many e-mail accounts? If so, then this month's Mac 911, in which we examine Apple's bundled applications, is for you. Will AppleWorks Work? Marti Hokans, Santa Ana, California Probably. I waffle because a successful translation from AppleWorks to Excel depends on the elements you include in the spreadsheet. With a straightforward table -one including headings, colored text and cell backgrounds, a book title, an author name, and an ISBN number, for example -you should have no problem. Excel for both the Mac and Windows can read spreadsheets that include lists and standard formulas. To save the file in a format acceptable to Excel, just select Save As from AppleWorks' File menu; then, in the Save: AppleWorks 6 dialog box, choose the appropriate Excel format (Excel Win 97, 2000, XP, or 2002, for example), and click on Save. You'll run into trouble, though, if you place charts in the AppleWorks spreadsheet or slap an image of a black-crowned night heron into the file. The data should be readable, but any charts and graphics you've inserted won't appear in Excel. One Recipient, Many Addresses I have some people in my address book who have multiple e-mail addresses. How can I pick a person's name once when typing it in the To section of Mail and have my e-mail sent to all of his or her available addresses? Mike Drinks, Baltimore, Maryland You can't do it by default, but I know a workaround. Create a group that includes multiple e-mail addresses for one individual. Let's say I wanted to generate a group that sends a message to your home, school, and work addresses. I'd create one contact that I might call Mike Drinks Home (with your home e-mail address), another called Mike Drinks School (with your school e-mail address), and another labeled Mike Drinks Work (with your work e-mail address). I would then create a new Drinks Contacts group and drag the three Mike Drinks contacts I'd made into this group. When I wanted to send a message to all those addresses, I would use that Drinks Contacts group. Secret Schedule A friend would like to publish her vacation itinerary as an iCal calendar, but she wants to restrict access to only her family members. How can she do this? Amy R. Miller, Austin, Texas Your friend can do this with her .Mac account, but I recommend that she do so only if she has a nearly pathological trust in her family. To password-protect her calendar under .Mac, she must provide family members with her .Mac user name and password -- the same user name and password she uses to purchase Mac goodies from the Apple Store and music at the iTunes Music Store. With that user name and password, others can log in to her .Mac account. If this gaping security flaw doesn't bother your friend, she need only select an iCal calendar, choose Publish from the Calendar menu, select On A WebDAV Server from the Publish Calendar pop-up menu, and enter http://idisk.mac.com/username/ Documents (where username is her user name). Then she must enter her .Mac user name and password and click on Publish for the calendar to be published to the Documents folder of her iDisk. To share the calendar, she can pass along its address (which will take the form of webcal:// idisk.mac.com/username/Documents/calendar.ics) and her user name and password. Family members can access her calendar by choosing Subscribe from iCal's Calendar menu, entering the URL for the calendar, and placing her user name and password in the Authentication dialog box that appears. I strongly advise your friend not to allow this kind of access to her .Mac account. She can use a far safer service such as iCal Exchange (www.icalx.com) or iCal World (www.icalworld.com/hosting.html), both of which allow you to publish password-pro- 6 tected iCal calendars for a small fee ($12 a year for iCal Exchange and $25 a year for iCal World). 'Ware, oh, Where? My ISP says that there are invisible files placed on my system by sites I visit, and that these files regularly send information about me back to those sites. The ISP used terms such as adware and spyware. What's really going on? Walt Hammonds, Monte Vista, CO If your ISP were more in tune with the Mac world, it would have prefaced its message with "For Windows Users Only." Currently adware and spyware -- which, respectively, are bits of code that display pop-up ads and send information from your computer to a third party without your permission -- are all but unknown on the Mac. There are applications that can log keystrokes and capture snapshots of what someone is doing on a Mac. Unlike much of the adware and spyware made for Windows, these applications aren't installed by a malevolent software download. Rather, they're placed on your Mac by someone who has access to your computer -- a parent concerned about a child's Internet activities, a prying boss, or a jealous mate, for example. Such tools are designed to be difficult to detect, so if you suspect that your activities are being monitored, you might take a look at Aladdin Software's $30 Internet Cleanup (831/761-6200, www.aladdinsys.com). Among its components is SpyAlert, a utility that searches your hard drive for traces of applications known to track your activities. When it finds such traces, it alerts you to them and — with your permission — attempts to remove the offending software. When Aladdin learns of new spyware applications, it updates Internet Cleanup to deal with new threats. Tip of the Month Although you can assign images to contacts in Address Book or iChat applications, wouldn't it be nice if your i-apps recognized all your friends and loved ones? Here's a tip for doing just that. Find a TIFF image that represents the person in question (around 64 by 64 pixels continued on page 7 continued from page 6 works best). Name it with the e-mail address of your contact, and make sure to include the .tiff file extension. For example: person64@example.com.tiff. Create a folder called Images. Within that folder, create another folder called People. Drag the Images folder into the Library folder at the root level of your OS X volume to make the picture available for all users on your Mac. (To make it available for a single account, use the Library folder in that user's Home directory.) Now whenever you look up "Person 64" in Address Book, and whenever he sends you an e-mail or joins you in an iChat session, you'll see the image you assigned to him. Chuck La Tournous, Port Reading, NJ Unsolicited Advice iPhoto 4's slide shows are far more flexible than those created in previous versions of the program. You can not only elect to play an entire iTunes playlist behind a slide show, but also rate and rotate pictures as you view a slide show. What's a little less obvious is that you can perform all these actions from the Mac's keyboard. For example, to rate pictures as they slide by, press 0 (zero) through 5 (0 for no stars, 5 for five stars). To rotate pictures clockwise, press 1-R. To rotate pictures counter-clockwise, press 1-option-R. Press delete to remove a picture from the selected album. To change the speed of the slide show, use the up-arrow key to display pictures for a shorter amount of time and the down-arrow key to slow things down. To pause the slide show (but not the background music), press the spacebar. Macworld contributing editor Chris Breen is the author of Macworld's tips and troubleshooting column, "Mac 911," as well as Secrets of the iPod: Fourth Edition and Mac 911 (Peachpit Press). Find Chris' books at www.amazon.com and www.peachpit.com. Get special user group pricing on Macworld Magazine! Subscribe today at http://www.macworld.com/useroffer. Macworld Conference & Expo Bus Trip - July 14 The bus will leave 7:30 A.M. sharp on Wednesday BOSTON • JULY July 14. In an emergency, we might delay the departure a few minutes. Please call Jack Bass cell phone number 324-4224 - that morning if you do have an emergency. 14 We have been approved to park in the G7 area that is located in front of the main entrance to the JC Penney store at the WestFarms Mall, New Britain Ave in West Hartford. It is the same area that we used last year. Join CMC as it goes to Macworld Expo in Boston on Wednesday, July 14th! The price is $20 per member. Non-members rates are $25 per person. Payments can be made at the meeting on June 30th at MxCC. Additionally, checks can be mailed to: Connecticut Macintosh Connection 41 Crossroads Plaza — PMB 1984 West Hartford, CT 06117 PayPal payments are also accepted on our website at www.ctmac.org. All seats will be on a first come, first served basis. Don’t forget that you will also need to register for the Expo itself; for this you can go to www.macworldexpo.com. Download of the Month submitted by Debi Foss My Photo Album 4.2.1 http://www.x-industries.com /mpa/download.html Classic or Mac OS X, Freeware! My Photo Album is an application for the Mac OS that allows you to organize your digital photographs into photo albums that are personalized and attractive. Regardless of how you file your photos on your hard drive, you can mix and match, arrange, caption, and group your photos into albums and store them all in an easily accessible pop-up menu. Albums are created with ease in a simple step-by-step process. Your albums are saved as small data files, so your original photos are left untouched. You can even modify the album's appearance by downloading themes from this web page. Treat your friends across the globe to photos of your new baby girl or your drunken frat parties by exporting them with the click of your mouse to a fancy HTML page. 7 A comprehensive online help manual, balloon help, and top-notch customer support are included in case you get stuck at any point. It's free for a limited time only! With current foreign and economic policies crumbling, we feel it's right about time to spread some love. So here's a real tax cut: My Photo Album 4.2 for free. If you find yourself enjoying it, please make a contribution to your community and vote in 2004. Features: • Friendly Interface–Photo Album Wizard & Point 'n' Click Interface Multiple Viewing Options – Electronic Albums, Slide Shows & Web Pages • Multiple Photo Albums–Each with their own look and feel • Web Exporting–Upload your albums to the internet as either Flash (NEW!) or HTML! Be S.M.A.R.T. About Your Data by Chris Hart, CMC Secretary We all put a great deal of faith in our computers. They contain our business information, our personal information, and provide an increasingly important means of communicating with the world. So, when your computer fails to work as you expect it to, it's understandable that you get frustrated. And the most dreaded way in which your computer could fail is the loss of your data — your documents, photos, web site favorites, and emails. The fact is, at any given time you could be just days, hours, or minutes away from losing it all. As people who work in the computer industry are often known to say "It's not a matter of if a hard disk will fail, but when it will fail.” You see the hard disk is a primary component inside every computer, and its job is to store all your files. It’s a tough job, because nearly every function of your computer’s operation requires interaction with the hard disk. This is because, in addition to storing your own files, the hard disk is also the place of residence for hundreds of thousands of files that are necessary for your computer to operate. Storing all that information already sounds tough, but now lets compound the task by having to keep track of it all on a 2.5 to 3.5 inch disk that is constantly in motion — rotating 5000 or more times a minute. Plus, the pin-sized “head” that has the job of interpreting the information on this rotating disk has to move above it in minute steps, while avoiding any physical contact with the disk. Hopefully this gives you an understanding as to why it’s just a matter of time before one or more of these components breaks down, and no longer works reliably. My goal is not to alarm you, but to give you an understanding of the factors involved in storing your files. There are certainly alternative methods for data storage, but the hard disk is the most cost-efficient means of storing files that is currently practical for personal computer manufacturers. The majority of the time, hard drives work reliably and provide rapid access to a massive amount of data — currently up to approximately 400 gigabytes for an individual disk. Now that you have an understanding of the hard disk, let’s increase your understanding for how to protect against its eventual failure. Your number one protection should be backups of “Also available are three, relatively expensive commercial software utilities: Disk Guardian Disk Warrior TechTool Pro 4” your data. And if there is one thing I hope you have come away from CMC with, I wish it would be the necessity for regular backups of your data through whatever means is available to you. But I realize that wishing doesn’t always make it so, and that most of you rarely stick to a backup regimen. So, the best we can do is to avert disaster, and in that effort, S.M.A.R.T. Is your friend. S . M . A . R . T. s t a n d s f o r “ S e l f Monitoring Analysis Reporting Technology” and provides a means for the hard disk inside your computer to warn you when failure is pending. Nearly all hard drives manufactured in recent years feature S.M.A.R.T. capability, but that’s all it is — a capability. It’s the computer user’s responsibility to tap into this capability, by using S.M.A.R.T. monitoring software. Apple includes this feature in the “Disk Utility” software that is included with the “Jaguar” version (10.3) of the Mac OS X operating system. (For those of you running OS 9, I regret that there is no way to take advantage of S.M.A.R.T.) You can find Disk Utility inside the “Utilities” folder, which is inside the “Applications” folder. When you launch Disk Utility, after a brief system scan, you will see a list of all the hard disks in your computer in the left hand column. You must now click once on the icon for the hard disk you want to check. Instead of clicking on the name of the disk that you regularly see on the desktop, click on the manufacturer’s name above that. At the bottom of the Disk Utility window, you will now a listing for S.M.A.R.T. status. If this indicator reads as "verified," then it’s likely that nothing is wrong. If, however, the status indicators reads "About to Fail", you need to back up your files immediately and have the hard disk replaced as soon as possible. A caveat that I must mention is that, at this point in time, Mac OS X can only read S.M.A.R.T. status from internal hard disks. That means any external hard disks you have, whether connected via USB or FireWire, cannot be monitored. As you may have surmised, using Apple’s Disk Utility to monitor S.M.A.R.T. status requires that you manually launch the utility and verify your hard disk’s condition. There are some automated alternatives, howevcontinued on page 9 8 continued from page 8 er, which will monitor the hard disk whenever the computer is on. The least expensive is a shareware creation called SMARTReporter, which is available at: http://homepage.mac. com/julianmayer/. Also available are three relatively expensive commercial software utilities: Disk Guardian http://www.subrosasoft.com Disk Warrior http://www.alsoft.com TechTool Pro 4 http://www.micromat.com No matter which of these software tools you choose to use, when you are notified that S.M.A.R.T. indicates a pending failure, you must act immediately. It is not unusual for a hard disk to become inaccessible in a short time frame, so every minute is vital. You should make every effort to backup all the files that you can before the computer stops responding. Following a backup of your files, you need to take the computer to someone skilled in servicing Macintosh computers, and have them replace the hard disk. If this happens while your computer is under warranty, you should bring it to an Apple service center. If it’s out of warranty, you can call upon a Macintosh computer technician or consultant. Neither Apple nor your typical computer service center, is likely to do anything to help you transfer your old files to the new hard disk. A consultant, however, will make this process as painless as possible, and take care of all the system setup that will be necessary following a hard disk replacement. I must point out that a lack of any S.M.A.R.T. alerts from the above software utilities should not give you a false sense of security. There are hard disk failures that can elude S.M.A.R.T. and your safest bet is always to make regular backups of your data. Using these methods will make you SMARTer than the other computer users on your block, and spare you from data loss! Yes...I want to join CMC Benefits: Monthly meetings, monthly newsletter, discounted book purchases, computer problem assistance, network with other Mac users, User Group Store, etc. Date ___________________ Referred by: ________________________ Name ________________________________________________________ Company Name ________________________________________________ Occupation ____________________________________________________ Address_______________________________________________________ City/State/Zip __________________________________________________ Phone (Home) ____________________Phone (Office)_________________ Email ________________________________________________________ Areas of Special Interest _________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________ Annual CMC Family Membership - $25.00 Make check payable to CMC and mail to: 41 Crossroads Plaza – PMB 1984, West Hartford, CT 06117 ...or register online with PayPal at www.ctmac.org May 26th CMC Meeting on Digital Photography Basics Guest presenter Dave Farrington, Sales Manager at Zacher's Photo of West Hartford, discussed selecting and using digital cameras. 9 2004-2005 CMC OFFICERS AND BOARD MEMBERS President Don Dickey president@ctmac.org 860-232-2841 Vice President Rich Lenoce vicepres@ctmac.org 860-347-1789 Treasurer David Gerstein treasurer@ctmac.org Secretary Chris Hart secretary@ctmac.org 860-291-9393 Download of the Month Debbie Foss dotm@ctmac.org 860-583-1165 Public Relations Neal Dembicer pr@ctmac.org 860-673-7711 Editor Deena Quilty editor@ctmac.org 860-678-8622 Webmaster Brian Desmond webmaster@ctmac.org (860) 668-8728 Raffles Robert Sawyer raffles@ctmac.org 860-677-7787 Past President Joseph Arcuri pastpres@ctmac.org 860-485-1547 Special Events Jack Bass programs@ctmac.org Ambassador Connie Scott ambassador@ctmac.org 860-584-9573 Caricatures by Bill Dougal of Lebanon, (860) 456-9041. Available for illustration assignments and event caricature. 10 Upcoming Meetings Monthly CMC Meetings are held on last Wednesday of the month, 7:00 p.m. – 9:00 p.m. (except Nov. and Dec. when the meetings are one week earlier due to the holidays) Board meetings are the first Thursday of the month. If you wish to attend a Board meeting, contact an officer for the location. June 30 • 7 pm Hands-On Photoshop, iPhoto and iDVD Workshops at Middlesex Community College. July 28 • 7 pm GarageBand at UConn Medical Center This presentation will be geared towards the non-musician demonstrating how easy Garage Band can make music. August 25 • 7 pm Quark/InDesign at UConn Medical Center Graphic designer Pat Rasch will give a presentation on InDesign. Pat will discuss the benefits of InDesign and how to move to InDesign for users of Quark and Pagemaker. September 29 • 7 pm Celebrity Guest Night at UConn Medical Center Apple engineer, author and presenter Dave Marra will give an entertaining and informative presentation about the Mac world. Discounted Books CMC continues to offer our current members the opportunity to purchase any published book for either Mac or Windows at a 20% discount. All major publishers are carried by our source. Call Neal Dembicer at 673-7711 or send email to booksales@ctmac.org. Provide the book title, the publisher and the ISBN number, if possible, and he will check on its availability. Normally, the wait is not too long. Special MUG Offers Get a complete list of all current deals: www.mugcenter.com/ vendornews/vendornews.html FREE Raffle! Every CMC member who attends our monthly meetings gets a raffle ticket. This will give you a chance for one of our free prizes every month! You could win… t-shirts, toys, CDs, mugs, software …there’s always something we’re giving away! WELCOME! New Members Spread the word. We need new members! Have your friends and co-workers join us for fun and learning about OS X and the Mac. Total Membership: 127 Treasurer’s Report Ending Checking Account Balance ................$1486.36 CMC Web Site Access www.ctmac.org User ID: XXX (uppercase) Password: xxxxx (lowercase) Apple User Group Store www.applemugstore.com April 1, 2004 - July 31, 2004 User ID: xxxx (lowercase) Password: xxxx (lowercase) Savings Account Balance...$3951.25 Balances as of May 31, 2004 CMC Classified Ads Members can Advertise For Sale, Swap, Trade, Giveaway or Want to Buy Items. This space can be used by members to advertise non-business items which they are no longer using or upgrading. This is a free service provided to our members. Any business items or services can be advertised at the rates shown below: Monthly Ad Rates If you have a program you would like to present or a subject that interests you, then please email Rich Lenoce vicepres@ ctmac.org Business Card ..........................$10.00 Quarter Page.............................$20.00 Half Page..................................$30.00 Full Page (or insert) .................$50.00 Submit all ad copy to the Editor on a disk with nothing else on it or e-mail it for insertion in the following issue. Display ads must be submitted camera-ready in .eps or .pdf format with all fonts & graphics embedded. 11 41 Crossroads Plaza – PMB 1984 West Hartford, CT 06117 Meeting y l h t n o M p.m. 7 June 30 – sex at Middle ollege ty C Communiotoshop, iPhoto n Ph ps Hands-o Worksho D V iD d n a CMC Meeting Location – a PDF document containing a visual direction guide to UConn Health Center is available on our website: http://www.ctmac.org. Print and take it with you to find us easily! Monthly meetings will be held at UConn Health Center in Farmington. When hands-on programs require computers for attendees, we will be using Middlesex Community College in Middletown. Directions to UCHC, Farmington Directions to Middlesex C.C. From I-84: Take Exit 39 (if coming from I-84 West, Exit 39 is after 39A). Turn right at first traffic light onto Route 4 East (Farmington Avenue). At third traffic light, turn right to enter the Health Center campus. Go around the main building to the right (at a Y in road), then take a left when you get to the Academic Entrance. The road becomes twoway there so you should be able to tell where to turn. (Do not go on straight to the two-way part). Then take the second right into parking lot A&B. this is close to the building. Go past the police station entrance on your left (small sign). You will see a continuation of the building with its own entrance area. This is the new research building. Enter on the ground floor, turn right and enter room EG-013 on your right. This is the first room on your right. The rest rooms are on your left as you enter. From the Hartford area, take Route 9 South. A few miles south of downtown Middletown on Route 9, take Exit 11 (Rt. 155, Randolph Road). At the end of the ramp (for both N. & S. bound), turn right onto Randolph Road. Continue to the traffic light at the top of the hill and turn left onto Saybrook Road. Go a quarter of a mile and turn right onto Reservoir Road. Travel past the stop sign, then take the first right onto Training Hill Road. Your first left will lead into the Middlesex Community College Campus parking area. When you arrive on campus, take a right onto Training Hill Road. Go to the second parking lot entrance and take a left into the upper lot. Directly in front of you will be Snow Hall. Enter Snow Hall and go up the stairs to the 2nd floor and go to the last room on the right, Room 509. 12 Monthly Meeting July 28 – 7 pm GarageBand at UConn Medical Center Geared towards the non-musician demonstrating how easy GarageBand can make music. NEWSLETTER OF CONNECTICUT MACINTOSH CONNECTION, INC. JULY, 2004 After careful investigation, I found that in the case of the eBay contact, the fraudulent site was outside the U.S. Since the email sent as HTML, the URL you see is just a cover! When you click the link, you really end up going to http://211.174.62.133/ verify/index.php Identity Theft By Don Dickey, CMC president As you know, my theme as your president has been how to have fun with your Mac. Unfortunately, recent events force me to deal with a topic I am truly sorry to have to write about, but I feel compelled to raise a big red flag this month. By pasting the above URL into a browser, and backspacing over the address after the IP, I was redirected to http://www.goldmat. co.kr/ with all the text in kangi (Asian) fonts. Surprise! You're on a web site in Korea! You may have seen advertisements on TV where a woman speaks with a man’s voice about the cool stuff she bought with his identity. The reality of this scenario is that it can happen to you! During the past couple of weeks I received several emails which cause me concern. They have come from what look like legitimate businesses such as eBay, Citibank, and U.S. Bank. What makes them look legitimate is that I believe I have done business with these firms. In each case, the sender directed me to a web site where I was supposed to “verify my user data” or risk suspension of my account in a specified number of days. Example: (actual screenshots above) Dear eBay member, During our regular and verification of the accounts we couldn't verify your current information, either your information. Has changed or it is incomplete? If the account is not updat- “Back To Basics” - 6 pm ed to current information within 5 days then, your access to Buy or Sell on eBay will be restricted. Go to the link below to Update your account information: http://signin.ebay.com/ aw-cgi/eBayISAPI.dll?SignIn&ssPage Name=h:h:sin:US Please dont reply to this email as you will not receive a response. Thank You for using eBay! http://www.eBay.com As outlined in our user agreement, eBay will periodically send you information about site changes and enhancements, vist our Privacy Policy and User Agreement if you have any questions. Copyright © 1995-2004 eBay Inc. All Rights Reserved. 1 Had I entered my user name and password, I would have given the thief enough information to log onto eBay and get my complete profile data. Worse yet, had I entered my credit card information, you could probably hear those cash registers ringing sales all the way from the Orient! Here is my warning, plain and simple: (1) Do not reply to any email requesting user data verification, even if it is Continued on page 2 Inside this Issue Identity Theft ....................................... 1 Apple User Group Offers .................... 3 Monthly Tips ........................................4 MAC 911 Help Desk.............................6 Download of the Month........................7 GarageBand Review .............................8 Meetings & Club News ......................11 Identity Theft...continued from pg.1 from an institution with which you have done business. Call them on the phone using a number posted on a recent statement. Do not call any phone number listed in an email or linked web site as it may be fraudulent as well. (2) Do not click on or visit any web site linked to such emails. Editor Deena Quilty Content Contributor Don Dickey (3) Warn other members of your family about this activity before it happens to them. (4) Identify such email as “junk” to your spam filter so maybe next time it will get caught automatically. (5) Visit the FBI’s Internet Fraud Complaint Center at www.ifccfbi.gov to learn more about Internet fraud and possibly file a complaint with law enforcement agencies if you believe you have been a target or a victim. I will hopefully return to my regularly scheduled program of having fun next month. In the meantime, be careful! Contributing Author Rich Lenoce Designer George Maciel Photographer John Scott Chris Hart Publisher Connecticut Macintosh Connection, Inc. 41 Crossroads Plaza PMB 1984 West Hartford, CT 06117 Printer Budget Printers 1718 Park Street Hartford, CT 06106 We welcome submissions from members! Please submit articles by first of the month for inclusion in our newsletter. There is much talent in our group; it would be great to have several member articles in each issue. Apple has recently upgraded the services and web site for their .Mac (“Dot Mac”) service. If you are subscribed to this service, a key improvement you should explore is the Learning Center, located at: http://www.mac.com/ learningcenter/ The .Mac Learning Center contains detailed tutorials and guides for .Mac services, Mac OS X “Panther” and the applications that come with it (such as “Mail”), iLife’04 (iPhoto, iMovie, iDVD, iTunes, GarageBand), as well as Keynote (Apple’s presentation creation program). Additionally, a new .Mac Support site has been integrated into Apple's main support site, including 2 FAQs, community discussion boards, and email-based support. Until September, subscribers can download a free chapter of O'Reilly & Associates' new book "Inside .Mac." When you’re done exploring the .Mac Learning Center, share your feedback with Apple at this address: http://user.training.apple. com/feedback/dm/ (Thanks to Chris Hart for bringing this to our attention – Newsletter staff) Special MUG Offers from the Apple User Group These special offers are brought to you by the Apple User Group Advisory Board. You must be a current user group member to qualify for these savings. Get a complete list of all current deals. http://www.mugcenter.com/ vendornews/vendornews.html Print Shop for Mac OS X and World Book for Jaguar The Print Shop for Mac OS X Edition 1.0 by Software MacKiev. Create professional-looking CD labels and cases from iTunes playlists. Import photos from iPhoto to create greeting cards. Make a wall-postersize sports calendar for your favorite team and import all the team's games from iCal with a single click. Print Shop has everything you need to create great-looking projects. Regular price: $49.95. MUG price: $39.95. In addition, MacKiev discounts their World Book Jaguar Edition. User Group price: $49.95, upgrade price: $19.95. http://www.mackiev.com/mugs/ This US Only offer is valid until September 30 2004. Graphic Authority Discount “Quick solutions and outstanding results.” Create layered or photo collages, apply edges to photos or learn dynamic warping and more. Kits, including Extreme Edges, Euro-Collage Kit, Photo Collage Kit and more, offer a compliment of PDF and Quick Time tutorials and royalty-free images. $39.95 each or download all for one outstanding price of $69.95. Domestic and International customers save the shipping and taxes with their MemberZone download subscription. User Group members receive 20 percent off the entire product line. http://www.graphicauthority.com Coupon Code ugroup20. Offer is valid until November 30, 2004. QuicKeys and Trans Lucy QuicKeys creates shortcuts that automate repetitive tasks with custom hot keys, toolbars and timers. From typing text, launching programs and remapping keys, to selecting menus, recording and playing back actions, and everything in between, QuicKeys is the premier macro automation tool. CE Software is offering user group members QuicKeys for only $59.95 – 40 percent off SRP. They are also offering discounted pricing on Trans Lucy – a new DVD player that lets you watch a movie while you work. Normally priced at $14.95, Trans Lucy is available for only $9.95. http://www.cesoft.com/usergroup/pricing.html Valid until October 31, 2004. Total Training Have you ever wanted to take an Adobe expert to work or home with you? With Total Training videos, now you can. Plus, as an Apple user group member you can save 25 percent off any Total Training video for Adobe software. This discount is only available on phone orders and cannot be combined with other offers. Call 1-888-368-6825 or 1-760-517-9015. (see ad on page 5) Coupon Code MUG103104 http://www.totaltraining.com Valid until October 31, 2004. Business Card Composer Since calling cards first appeared in the 1600s in France, one thing has remained the same: you must have business cards to win new business. With Business Card Composer from BeLight Software, you can quickly create and modify professional-looking cards, and easily print them on standard business card stock with office or home printers. Regular price $39.95 – MUG Special $33.95 http://www.belightsoft.com/ products/special.php Valid until November 30, 2004. Speed Download 2 Speed Download 2 is the fastest, most complete download manager for Mac OS X, no matter what browser you use. 3 Optimized for dial-up and broadband connections, Speed Download 2 offers resumable downloading, scheduling, bandwidth throttling and much more. Yaz software offers two licenses for $30 (US), a savings of 25 percent. Updates are free to all registered SD2 owners. Learn more: http://www.yazsoft.com Purchase: http://order.kagi.com/?7NT Valid until October 31, 2004. BounceBack Professional The software component of CMS' award-winning ABSplus complete backup solution is now available as BounceBack Professional, software that can turn any modern FireWire drive into a backup that boots with a single keystroke (a Mac-only feature), or restores an entire system with one click. Better still, choose from any ABSplus portable or desktop solution and BounceBack Professional to protect your iTunes library investment or irreplaceable photos and movies. Apple user group members receive 20 percent off any CMS product. Coupon Code macmug http://www.cmsproducts.com Valid until December 31, 2004. The MUG Store The MUG store always has great deals for your members. Remember the MUG store for the following benefits to all User Groups: • Free freight on all orders • Knowledgeable consultants available for every customer • Great deals on new, refurbished and used Macs • Blowout deals on a large assortment of goodies and accessories • One percent goes back to your group in merchandise To get into this exclusive User Group site order today at: www.applemugstore.com See User ID and Password on Page 11 of this newsletter From The Tuscarawas County Macintosh Users Group (TCMUG) New Philadelphia, OH OS X TIP OF THE MONTH: Safari Tips 1) You can have virtually instant access to ALL your Safari Bookmarks from the Bookmarks bar (via hierarchical menus) if you spend a few minutes sorting them. Create 6 or 7 (max) main folders (e.g. Personal, Work, Family, Education, ...) and put those in the Bookmarks Bar. Then sort your bookmarks into subfolders, and put all sub-folders into the appropriate main folders. Also, for grabbing bookmarks quickly while surfing and putting them where they can be easily found/sorted later, use an INBOX in the Bookmarks bar. Create a new folder in the Bookmarks window, call it INBOX, and make it the first item in the Bookmarks bar. Then while surfing, you can just grab the icon to the left of the URL, and drag it to the INBOX on the Bookmarks bar. After following these steps, the only time you ever need to open your Bookmarks window is when you want to sort any new bookmarks you have collected. This bookmark organization hint will apply to any browser that supports folders on the bookmarks bar along with sub-folders. 2) I was having a problem with the spinning beach ball and slow page loads in Safari, and after searching a bunch of forums, found two things that seemed to help: a. Delete all your autofill entries from time to time. Do this by going to Safari preferences, Autofill button, and then click the "Edit..." button for the "Other forms" box. In the next window that appears, just click Remove All. b. Turn off all the languages you don't need. In the Finder, select the Safari application and do a Get Info (Command-I), click "Languages," and uncheck all the languages you don't need. It appears you can maximize Safari's speed by also disabling JavaScript and removing cached FavIcons. WEB SITE: Links of Interest PDF AND PANTHER: The Hidden Role of PDF in Mac OS X 10.3 Get ready for using Garageband with these helpful books from Amazon.com: GarageBand : The Missing Manual, http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ ASIN/0596006950/theworlofkapn Apple Training Series : GarageBand http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ ASIN/0321268768/theworlofkapn GarageBand Visual QuickStart Guide http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ ASIN/0321272811/theworlofkapn Apple iLife '04 http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ ASIN/B0001ACK2K/theworlofkapn Apple's Mac OS X makes broad use of Adobe's PDF technology. It is the first example to date of an operating system that contains an actual Adobe Normalizer embedded as a system component. A careful analysis shows that Apple hasn't yet delivered on the exciting promise of an operating system built around PDF. http://www.creativepro.com/story /feature/21266.html?cprose=daily Trojan Horse Hubbub Read the following news stories for a full run-down on all the hubbub brewing around the announcement this past month of the first Trojan horse to target Mac OS X. It's merely a marketing scheme by the "security" company Intego (VirusBarrier) to exploit a "proof of concept" Trojan built to demonstrate that an OS X executable app could be embedded into an MP3 file. http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/ TidBITS-726.html#lnk2 http://securityresponse.symantec.com/ avcenter/venc/data/mp3concept.html http://www.wired.com/news/mac/ 0,2125,63000,00.html http://maccentral.macworld.com/news/ 2004/04/08/trojan/ Macsimum Perspective Welcome to Macsimum Perspective. First, the obvious question: why Macsimum Perspective? Second: a better question: why not? There's never been a more exciting time to be a Mac user and Apple fan. After years of covering our favorite computing platform as a reporter, Dennis Sellers decided it's time to ramrod a new site filled with critiques, editorials, reviews and more – including Macsimum Migration Kits. http://www.macsimumperspective.com /index2.php?id=P17 4 TIP OF THE MONTH: Online Shopping Tips Here are some high-level tips to consider when conducting transactions online. 1. Shop at secure websites. Check for "https://" in the URL and the closed padlock at the bottom of your screen. These indicators or an unbroken key all mean that the website is secure. 2. Read the website's privacy and security policies. All reputable companies clearly state how they intend to use your information and what measures they take to ensure that your data stays secure. 3. Use credit cards instead of debit cards. In the event that something goes wrong, you can dispute charges on a credit card; debit cards can leave you vulnerable to bank fraud. 4. Keep your password private. Most ecommerce sites require that you login to conduct business with a combination of a user ID and password. When choosing a password, don't use commonly known information – your mother's maiden name, your birthday, etc. The best passwords are at least 8 characters long and are alpha-numeric. 5. Check the website address. Always check the URL to ensure that you are shopping at your intended destination and not a fraudulent site that looks similar to the real one. 6. Use your intuition. If something seems to good to be true, it probably is. Likewise, if there are spelling and grammar mistakes or if the company's phone goes unanswered, you might want to investigate further before you conduct business with the merchant. Hot Summertime Deals Web Pick of the Month by Neal Dembicer, CMC For everyone who would like save money on gas: http://gasbuddy.com/ It's a portal site to more than 170 web sites that help consumers find cheap gas prices. All web sites are operated by the non-profit organization known as GasBuddy Organization Inc. The local Hartford area web site is: http://www.hartfordgasprices.com/ “Since gasoline prices change frequently and may vary by as much as 20 percent within only a few blocks it is important to be able locate the service station with the lowest priced fuel. GasBuddy Organization web sites allow consumers to both share information about low priced fuel with others as well as target the lowest priced stations to save at the pumps!” TOTAL TRAINING June 30th Monthly Meeting Hosted by Rich Lenoce and Middlesex Community College Hands-On Photoshop & Digital Photography presented by Rick Eriksen iPhoto Workshop presented by Jack Bass iMovie/iDVD Workshops presented by Don Dickey Rick Eriksen (above & right) presents his workshop to CMC members Mac Training Programs Photos by John Scott and Chris Hart proudly partners with CT MAC CONNECTION USER GROUP to offer its members 25% OFF When you call in to 1-888-368-6825 and reference offer code: MUG103104 Visit our web site Jack Bass (above) oversees a member’s progress during an iPhoto workshop www.totaltraining.com for information on all of our training products Offer valid through October 31, 2004; cannot be combined with any other offer; is valid ON ALL Total Training Products FREE VIDEO INTRODUCTION DISCS AT JULY 28 CMC MEETING Don Dickey (above-right and above) demonstrates iDVD Don Dickey, Rich Lenoce and Neal Dembicer hand out CMC t-shirts to members who attended the workshops at Middlesex Community College 5 Mac 911 Help Desk By Christopher Breen Few would accuse me of following Ned Ludd, but there are times when technology drives me to distraction. In the spirit of the Luddites, this month's Mac 911 offers ways to defeat the technological turmoil of corrupted AOL attachments, DVD-less Macs, cockeyed movies, and folders that refuse to move away from Home. A-O-Heck I’ve been trying to send some Microsoft Word documents to my mom, who uses America Online, but AOL turns the files into MIME format, which corrupts the documents. What should I do? – Jack Lee I have the same problem when I send pictures to my mother. AOL has a nasty habit of mangling attachments sent from outside the service. There are a couple of ways around this. The easiest is to compress any files you send to people who use AOL. Although AOL can corrupt many kinds of files, it seems to respect compressed documents. In Panther, create a .zip archive by selecting your document (or a folder full of documents) in the Finder and choosing Create Archive from the File menu. Or, if you prefer, use Aladdin Systems’ DropStuff, which you can find in the $50 StuffIt Standard Edition and the $80 StuffIt Deluxe 8.0 (www.aladdinsys.com), to compress files in the .sit format. Alternatively, you can upload your files to a Web site – your .Mac account, for example. Send your mother the link to that site, and she can download the files from there. Disc Despair I’ve noticed that some software, such as Apple’s iLife '04 ($49; www.apple.com), ships on DVD. My Power Mac G4 doesn't have a DVD drive, and I’m concerned that I'm going to be left out in the cold when more software is delivered in this form. Short of buying a DVD drive, what can I do if I receive a DVD that I’d like to use on my Mac? – Ed Borman You don’t need to purchase a DVD drive in order to use discs such as the iLife ‘04 installer (which contains both GarageBand and iDVD). You do, however, need access to a Mac that carries such a drive. With such access, there are two ways to take advantage of that DVD. The first is to use Disk Utility to create an image of the disc and then copy that image to your Mac or, if your Mac isn't close at hand, to a removable drive. (I use my iPod for such jobs.) To do so, insert the disc, launch Disk Utility (in Applications: Utilities), select the disc from the list of volumes on the left side of the Disk Utility window, and click on the New Image button. In the resulting sheet, select DVD/CD Master in the Image Format pop-up menu and leave the Encryption pop-up menu set to None. Name the image and click on Save. When the image has been created, move it to the other Mac, double-click on it to mount it, and treat it as an installer disc. If you can borrow a Mac with a SuperDrive and you'd like to skip the disc-image step, just insert the disc in the borrowed Mac and connect the two computers via FireWire Target Disk Mode (with the borrowed Mac as the target), and the disc will appear on your Mac as a mounted image. Run the installer on the image, and you're good to go. To connect those Macs via FireWire Target Disk Mode, shut down both computers, string a FireWire cable between them, boot the target Mac while holding down the T key, and then boot the host Mac. The target Mac’s screen will display a FireWire icon. Its volumes will appear on the host Mac as FireWire drives. Home Sweet Home Is there a way to move my Home folder? I tried copying the files in my Home folder to my external hard drive, but it didn’t work. – Guillermo Alvelais I'm afraid that it takes more than a simple Copy command to do this, but it's certainly an achievable goal. Launch NetInfo Manager (Applications: Utilities). In the local @ localhost~/window that appears, click on the Lock icon. Enter your password when prompted. Now click on the Users entry in the second column and, in the third column, click on the name of the account you want to move– yours might be named Guillermo, for example. In the lower portion of the window, look for the Home entry in the Property list. To the right of this entry, you'll see something like /Users/guillermo. Double-click on this entry and enter /Volumes/othervolume, where othervolume is the name of the volume or hard drive you want to move the Home folder to. Press the return key or the enter key, and then choose Save Changes from the File menu. Log out and then log back in again, and you'll discover that your Home folder is now located on the volume or drive you designated in NetInfo Manager. If you place the Home folder on an external drive, make sure you give it enough time to spin up and mount before you log in. To put things back the way they were, follow this same procedure but when you edit the entry, change it back to /Users/guillermo. Hubbub When I plug two iPods into my FireWire hub, I receive error messages about unrecognized devices. Why can't more than one iPod be plugged into a computer at a time? – Shirley Kehr You can plug more than one iPod into your Mac, but to do so, you must either use a powered hub that provides enough juice for both your iPods or connect each iPod to separate FireWire ports on your Mac. My guess is that you're attempting to use an unpowered hub or a hub that, even when plugged in, just doesn't have the oomph necessary to drive two iPods. Apple suggests that an iPod be the only device on a FireWire bus because an iPod continued on page 7 6 continued from page 6 Unsolicited Advice requires most of the power that bus can provide. I’ve heard of instances where people have been able to successfully use an iPod chained to a low-powered FireWire device (or one that has its own power supply), but, in general, I’ve found Apple’s advice to be solid. Microsoft Entourage X ($399 as part of Microsoft Office v. X; www.microsoft.com) has an option for automatically compressing attachments with StuffIt (this option is in the Compose tab of the Mail & News Preferences window). When you upgrade to Panther, this option doesn’t work, because Entourage requires version 6.5 of StuffIt Engine, and Panther replaces that version with a more recent iteration. But you can get this option to work again. Wrong Angle I just bought a Canon A80 camcorder. When I rotate the camera into portrait mode to shoot, the movie appears sideways when I download it to my Mac. How do I rotate the movie so it displays properly? – Tim Waag This is easily fixed with QuickTime Pro ($30; www.apple.com). Open the movie in QuickTime Pro and press Command-J. Select Video Track from the Movie pop-up window, and then select Size from the Annotations pop-up menu. You’ll see controls for flipping the video horizontally and vertically, as well as controls for rotating the movie in 90-degree increments (both clockwise and counterclockwise). Rotate the movie to your satisfaction and save it. Tip of the Month I like to fall asleep to the music playing on my Mac, but I wanted that music to switch off once I’d fallen asleep. Enter AppleScript. I make a lullaby-inducing script by launching Script Editor (Applications: AppleScript) and typing the following: Tell application “iTunes” Delay 5400 Quit End tell Then I select the Save As command from the File menu and save the script as an application with the Startup Screen and Stay Open options deselected. You can put the application anywhere that’s convenient for you. The next time you want to fall asleep to your iTunes playlists, just launch iTunes, start playing, and then launch your AppleScript. Exactly 90 minutes (5,400 seconds) later, iTunes will quit. – Christian Brescia To do so, you must install the older version of StuffIt Engine. Fortunately, Aladdin Systems (maker of StuffIt) has made this possible. Simply download and install StuffIt Engine 6.5.2, and Entourage’s automatic-compression feature is back in business. You can download version 6.5.2 at http://tinyurl.com/2ep3l. Macworld contributing editor Chris Breen is the author of Macworld’s tips and troubleshooting column, “Mac 911,” as well as Secrets of the iPod: Fourth Edition and Mac 911 (Peachpit Press). Find Chris’ books at www.amazon.com and www.peachpit.com. Get special user group pricing on Macworld Magazine! Subscribe today at http://www.macworld.com/useroffer. Download of the Month submitted by Debi Foss MacDict 2.9.1 by Bains Software http://www.bainsware.com/ downloads/macdict.sit MacDICT gives easy access to many databases including Webster's Dictionary. MacDICT lets you access a growing number of databases, including Webster's Dictionary, for free! Other databases include the US Gazetter, Free Online Dictionary of Computing, WordNet, Jargon File, and the CIA World Factbook. MacDICT is a client for the DICT protocol. It connects to dict.org to provide access to a number of databases, including Webster's Dictionary a n d t h e Wo r l d FactBook. MacDICT also accesses translation services on the web to translate to and from a wide variety of languages. 7 New in v2.5, MacDICT now also provides access to Wikipedia, the Internet's free encyclopedia! Features: • Easy-to-use interface • Looks up definitions in 11 databases • Translates words, sentences, and full passages • Completely Free! Requirements: MacDICT supports any Mac running Mac OS 8 or later, including Mac OS 9 and Mac OS 10.2. GarageBand: For Musicians and Non-Musicians by Rich Lenoce, CMC VP The CMC July meeting will be about Garage Band, Apple’s new addition to its iLife media creation suite. No, this isn’t a review nor is it a how-to article on using Garage Band. As an introduction to the CMC presentation, I’d like to go over what GarageBand is and isn’t. GarageBand is an application that allows anyone–musician or non-musician-–to compose and produce music. Musicians can plug in their instruments and instantly record music, while the non-musician has hundreds of instruments and loops already available to them. An instrument can be a synthesized MIDI instrument or a “real” instrument that uses “sampled” sounds. In either case, both can be triggered or played using an on-screen keyboard or a USB MIDI controller, such as a keyboard or guitar. You can even see visual representations of the notes on a staff. Loops are pre-recorded sounds that serve as the rhythm section that can be repeated over and over; for example, a blues riff or a techno-dance beat. GarageBand generates all these sounds via QuickTime MIDI synthesis or prerecorded samples (recordings of real sounds). In addition, any recorded sounds or song can be imported into GarageBand. Finally, microphones or other audio devices can be connected and recorded into GarageBand for adding vocals, analog instruments, sound effects, etc., and a waveform can be displayed for editing purposes. There are many other features to aid composers, but I suggest you check out Apple’s web site, tutorials and numerous GarageBand user sites to learn more. Instruction Manuals, Tutorials and Extras At the time this article is being written, David Pogue’s iLife ‘04 Mini Missing M a n u a l wa s s t i l l ava i l a b l e a t http://www.missingmanuals.com/. It is a great introduction to GarageBand. Apple has tutorials and other support material available at http://www.apple. com/support/garageband/. There are several other sites that offer tutorials including: MacJam http://www.macjams.com/), Synthtopia http://www.synthtopia.com/news/ FreeGarageBandTutorialsPo.html Music on the Mac http://www.musiconthemac.com iCompositions http:///www.icompositions.com Also, a simple Google search such as G a rage B a n d i n s t r u m e n t s , f re e GarageBand instruments or GarageBand loops will yield hundreds of sites where people post their own instruments and loops, usually at no charge. And there are numerous commercial expansion packs available, including Apple’s own GarageBand Jam Expansion Pack. Other Uses for GarageBand Many people may not have an interest in music composition, but thanks to GarageBand’s sophistication and iLife integration, it’s a powerful tool for a 8 variety of uses. For example, I have been looking for a simple audio program to edit lectures that replaces one of my favorite Classic applications not available in OSX: Macromedia’s Sound Edit 16. Garage Band fits the bill, allowing me to easily edit and mix basic audio. For those who feel hindered by iMovie’s three audio tracks, GarageBand can import iMovie audio and then music and sound effects can be added, layered and mixed. Once completed, the soundtrack can be reimported into iMovie. GarageBand can mix audio for iPhoto slide shows or create a fanfare for the opening of your next iDVD project. It can record concerts or edit dialog. You can even build a radio broadcast or create commercials. I enjoy taking several songs from iTunes and creating mega-mixes for parties. One of my students records my lectures to his iPod as a study aid and edits my lectures using GarageBand removing all my bad jokes. The uses for GarageBand are endless. GarageBand Limitations GarageBand isn’t perfect. First, it requires a great deal of overhead if you wish to use synthesized instruments and record more than four tracks. Lots of RAM is needed and a G4 is a must. Installation requires a DVD drive, which is odd considering a DVD drive isn’t required for GarageBand to function. Clearly the installer should have been offered on multiple CDs. There is a simple work around: find someone with a DVD drive and copy the file to an iPod or external Firewire/USB drive. One problem I encountered is that GarageBand lacks the ability to import traditional MIDI files. A freeware application called Dent du Midi, available on versiontracker.com, not only imports the MIDI file, but breaks the MIDI tracks into separate GarageBand continued on page 9 continued from page 8 tracks. Likewise, GarageBand can’t output MIDI instrument tracks to external MIDI devices or software synths, however another freeware product called MidiO provides this functionality. I find GaragBand’s biggest weakness is that it only exports files as AIFFs and only to the iTunes’ Music Library. This is handy if you want to use the program in other iLife applications but cumbersome if you want to use the file anywhere else–even on an iPod. To convert the file to MP3 or AAC, the exported file needs to be selected in iTunes and using the Advanced menu select Convert Selection to AAC or MP3 (depending on how your preferences are set). Once converted, the file can be copied to any location by simply dragging it out of the iTunes Library Window. GarageBand should act like iMovie or iPhoto and not only export directly to iTunes, but allow files to be exported to any location using any QuickTime CODEC. GarageBand is geared towards the consumer, hobbyist and musician who wish to create music from a range of sources for a variety of purposes. Its tools are more general and less specific or professional. As powerful as GarageBand is, it lacks many of the tools and filters needed by audio professionals. Apple’s Final Cut. Like Soundtrack, GarageBand is also music creation tool and MIDI sequencer but supports the connection of MIDI controllers and analog devices such as microphones, etc. which Soundtrack does not. Yes...I want to join CMC Benefits: Monthly meetings, monthly newsletter, discounted book purchases, computer problem assistance, network with other Mac users, User Group Store, etc. Date ___________________ Apple’s Soundtrack vs. GarageBand The question often arises as to what are the similarities and difference between Apple’s $299 Soundtrack and the almost free GarageBand. First, there are many similarities. Both appear to be built around the same core components as they operate in very similar ways and both are used to create music. The differences have more to do with their user and intended purpose. Soundtrack is strictly a MIDI sequencer used to create soundtracks for videos and films so that producers can dispense with purchasing music and, instead, create their own from prerecorded loops and sounds. This is only a piece of what GarageBand offers. Soundtrack offers professional tools that can maintain synchronization throughout a video project and is meant to work in conjunction with Considering that GarageBand is only at version 1.1, it’s an impressive application with many advanced features, an intuitive interface and is very stable. It will be interesting to see where Apple takes this product and what possible new features can be added. Stay tuned! Referred by: ________________________ Name ________________________________________________________ Company Name ________________________________________________ Occupation ____________________________________________________ Address_______________________________________________________ City/State/Zip __________________________________________________ Phone (Home) ____________________Phone (Office)_________________ Email ________________________________________________________ Areas of Special Interest _________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________ Annual CMC Family Membership - $25.00 Make check payable to CMC and mail to: 41 Crossroads Plaza – PMB 1984, West Hartford, CT 06117 ...or register online with PayPal at www.ctmac.org 9 2004-2005 CMC OFFICERS AND BOARD MEMBERS President Don Dickey president@ctmac.org 860-232-2841 Vice President Rich Lenoce vicepres@ctmac.org 860-347-1789 Secretary Chris Hart secretary@ctmac.org 860-291-9393 Treasurer David Gerstein treasurer@ctmac.org Past President Joseph Arcuri pastpres@ctmac.org 860-485-1547 Newsletter George M. Maciel newsletter@ctmac.org 860-561-0319 Public Relations Neal Dembicer pr@ctmac.org 860-673-7711 Editor Deena Quilty editor@ctmac.org 860-678-8622 Webmaster Brian Desmond webmaster@ctmac.org (860) 668-8728 Raffles Robert Sawyer raffles@ctmac.org 860-677-7787 Download of the Month Debbie Foss dotm@ctmac.org 860-583-1165 Special Events Jack Bass programs@ctmac.org Ambassador Connie Scott ambassador@ctmac.org 860-584-9573 Caricatures by Bill Dougal of Lebanon, (860) 456-9041. Available for illustration assignments and event caricatures. 10 Upcoming Meetings! Monthly CMC Meetings are held on last Wednesday of the month, 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm (except November and December when the meetings are one week earlier due to the holidays) Board meetings are held on the first Thursday of the month. If you wish to attend a Board meeting, contact an officer for the location. July 28 • 7 pm GarageBand at UConn Medical Center This presentation will be geared towards the non-musician, demonstrating how easy Garage Band can make music. “Back To Basics” - 6 pm Back To Basics will provide a complete exploration of the System Preferences in Mac OS X. After attending this session, you'll have an understanding for the various settings available to you in Mac OS X. August 25 • 7 pm InDesign at UConn Medical Center Graphic designer Pat Rasch will give a presentation on InDesign. Pat will discuss the benefits of InDesign and how to move to InDesign for users of Quark and Pagemaker. September 29 • 7 pm Celebrity Guest Night at UConn Medical Center Apple engineer, author and presenter Dave Marra will give an entertaining and informative presentation about the Mac world. Oct. 27 Auction Nov. 17* Migration to OSX Dec. 15* Holiday Pizza Party & Stump the Geeks *(Early date due to holidays) Discounted Books! FREE Raffle! CMC continues to offer our current members the opportunity to purchase any published book for either Mac or Windows at a 20% discount. All major publishers are carried by our source. Call Neal Dembicer at 673-7711 or send email to booksales@ctmac.org. Every CMC member who attends our monthly meetings gets a raffle ticket. This will give you a chance for one of our free prizes every month! You could win…t-shirts, toys, CDs, mugs, software …there’s always something we’re giving away! Provide the book title, the publisher and the ISBN number, if possible, and he will check on its availability. Normally, the wait is not too long. WELCOME! New Members For Members Only! User ID’s and Passwords We need new members! Have your friends and co-workers join us for fun and learning about OSX and the Mac. Total Membership: 129 Treasurer’s Report CMC Web Site www.ctmac.org User ID: XXX (uppercase) Password: xxxxxxx (lowercase) Apple User Group Store www.applemugstore.com April 1, 2004 - July 31, 2004 User ID: xxxx (lowercase) Password: xxxx (lowercase) Aug. 1, 2004 - Nov. 30, 2004 User ID: xxxx (lowercase) Password: xxxx (lowercase) Ending Checking Account Balance ..................$493.54 Savings Account Balance...$3953.15 Balances as of May 31, 2004 CMC Classified Ads Members can Advertise For Sale, Swap, Trade, Giveaway or Want to Buy Items. This space can be used by members to advertise non-business items which they are no longer using or upgrading. This is a free service provided to our members. Any business items or services can be advertised at the rates shown below. Monthly Ad Rates Are you receiving our CMC emails? We always send out advance notice of the meetings, and sometimes for big news or special events (like our bus trip to Macworld). If you're not getting them, please email us at president@ctmac.org with your current email address and a subject line of ADD TO CMC EMAIL LIST. 11 Business Card ..........................$10.00 Quarter Page.............................$20.00 Half Page..................................$30.00 Full Page (or insert) .................$50.00 Submit all ad copy to the Editor on a disk with nothing else on it or e-mail it for insertion in the following issue. Display ads must be submitted camera-ready in .eps or .pdf format with all fonts & graphics embedded. 41 Crossroads Plaza – PMB 1984 West Hartford, CT 06117 Meeting y l h t n o M 7 pm July 28 – d n GarageBa nter ical Ce ed UConn M m cs” - 6 p i s a B o T “Back CMC Meeting Location – a PDF document containing a visual direction guide to UConn Health Center is available on our website: http://www.ctmac.org. Print and take it with you to find us easily! Monthly meetings will be held at UConn Health Center in Farmington. When hands-on programs require computers for attendees, we will be using Middlesex Community College in Middletown. Directions to UCHC, Farmington Directions to Middlesex C.C. From I-84: Take Exit 39 (if coming from I-84 West, Exit 39 is after 39A). Turn right at first traffic light onto Route 4 East (Farmington Avenue). At third traffic light, turn right to enter the Health Center campus. Go around the main building to the right (at a Y in road), then take a left when you get to the Academic Entrance. The road becomes twoway there so you should be able to tell where to turn. (Do not go on straight to the two-way part). Then take the second right into parking lot A&B. this is close to the building. Go past the police station entrance on your left (small sign). You will see a continuation of the building with its own entrance area. This is the new research building. Enter on the ground floor, turn right and enter room EG-013 on your right. This is the first room on your right. The rest rooms are on your left as you enter. From the Hartford area, take Route 9 South. A few miles south of downtown Middletown on Route 9, take Exit 11 (Rt. 155, Randolph Road). At the end of the ramp (for both N. & S. bound), turn right onto Randolph Road. Continue to the traffic light at the top of the hill and turn left onto Saybrook Road. Go a quarter of a mile and turn right onto Reservoir Road. Travel past the stop sign, then take the first right onto Training Hill Road. Your first left will lead into the Middlesex Community College Campus parking area. When you arrive on campus, take a right onto Training Hill Road. Go to the second parking lot entrance and take a left into the upper lot. Directly in front of you will be Snow Hall. Enter Snow Hall and go up the stairs to the 2nd floor and go to the last room on the right, Room 509. 12 Monthly Meeting August 25 - 7 pm Adobe InDesign at UConn Medical Center Graphic designer Pat Rasch will discuss Adobe's latest entry into the page editing and layout world, Adobe Indesign. “Back To Basics” - 6 pm NEWSLETTER OF CONNECTICUT MACINTOSH CONNECTION, INC. AUGUST, 2004 of hearing your voice in his time of need. Solution: automatically forward your business calls to your cell phone when you’re not in the office. The key to this is the word “automatically.” Most phone companies offer call forwarding, but you have to turn it “on” when you leave and “off” when you return. SBC offers “no answer forwarding” after a number of rings which you specify. To Work or Play or Both By Don Dickey, CMC president My family recently was on vacation at the shore, and my usual prep included loading up my PowerBook G4 with lots of client data and charging up a couple of batteries for the laptop and cell phone. Oh yes, I also charged up my iPod! None the less, mentioning all the hardware led to a few comments from friends like, “I go on vacation to get away from my computer and cell phone,” and “Why go on vacation if you’re bringing your office with you?” Contrary to what you’re already thinking, this month’s article IS about how to have fun with your Mac! Read on to find out how. (see info on page 11) an idea came to me! It was computer-based, and the pieces of the puzzle involved my Mac, a broadband internet connection, and some very special software that tied everything together. “Instafax” was born. I kept my “real job” until I got things rolling. The hardware and software were debugged, the cable modem technology went from the beta test phase to working every day, and I signed on a couple of clients. Things were looking up! Not long ago, I had a “real job.” I got up at the same time every day, put on nice clothes (including a tie), and drove almost an hour (each way)… to somebody else's business. The pay was OK, and I thought I had some job security, but I worked all year to be able to take a couple of weeks off when my employer said it was all right to do so. So it was from college for about twenty years. As things progressed, my clients grew to expect a level of service they would be hard pressed to find elsewhere. That’s what can distinguish the little guy from big gun competition. Unfortunately, this scenario can also lead to that same “jail cell” feeling you have in a cubicle of a “real job.” Fortunately, technology can provide some very liberating solutions! I thought long and hard about starting my own business. There were lots of books out there with ideas, but they were all other people’s businesses, not mine. Then, one day almost out of the blue (literally–in our blue-tiled shower), First, you need to liberate yourself from being glued to your office just to answer the phone. Obviously you could use an answering service or carry a beeper, but neither gives your client that cherished warm and fuzzy feeling 1 If you have trouble remembering all your pertinent business information, contacts, appointments, etc., the next logical thing to carry is a Palm-based organizer. They’re reliable, easy to synchronize with your Mac, and are automatically backed up with each sync. Again, the key here is “automatic.” Next, if your business is computer and/or internet based, you need to be able to work remotely. This normally requires a laptop. PowerBook G4s, and now even iBook G4s, carry enough horsepower to run all current business applications...anywhere...anytime. If you take the final step and merge the cell phone and Palm into a unit like the Continued on page 2 Inside this Issue Work or Play........................................ 1 Web Watch........................................... 3 EyeHome ..............................................4 MAC 911 Help Desk.............................6 Download of the Month........................7 G5 Review ............................................8 Meetings & Club News ......................11 Continued from page 1 Kyocera SmartPhones, you’ll have a well-integrated device that can not only answer calls, but also check and reply to emails. Then, cable the phone to the laptop and you’ve got wireless internet access. Depending on your business, these few tools can let you work anywhere you choose. Editor Deena Quilty Content Contributor Don Dickey Contributing Author Rich Lenoce Designer George Maciel Photographer John Scott Chris Hart Sure, the last time I went striper fishing on Martha’s Vineyard Sound for a week with an old high school buddy, we had to kill the boat engine a few times to talk to clients. But those few minutes of business enabled many hours of great fishing! Without these technologies, we both would have been glued to our offices, or risk alienating a client (who could always call somebody else next time). Tomorrow as you head to your “real job,” or even if you’re already selfemployed, think about how you could use technology to free yourself from being at your desk. Even the luxury of working in the local coffee shop or town library for a morning is a change that refreshes! The key is to use technology to let you work on your terms as much as possible. Shy of being retired, a commute to my downstairs home office or sometimes even a favorite fishing spot sure beats the usual business rat race. Business gets done, and I’m having fun (with my Mac)! Photos from our July 28th Meeting GarageBand presented by Rich Lenoce Publisher Connecticut Macintosh Connection, Inc. 41 Crossroads Plaza PMB 1984 West Hartford, CT 06117 Printer Budget Printers 1718 Park Street Hartford, CT 06106 We welcome submissions from members! Please submit articles by first of the month for inclusion in our newsletter. There is much talent in our group; it would be great to have several member articles in each issue. Photos by John Scott and Chris Hart 2 Web Watch From Chuck Joiner <chuck@chuckjoiner.com> compiled by The MUG Center <http://www.mugcenter.com> Macworld Secrets: Mobile Mac Highway Fidelity – Whether you're commuting to work or heading across country, nothing beats music for passing the time. Until a few years ago, audio CDs were the only way to get digital sound in your car. But now, thanks to portable audio players, satellite radios, and MP3-compatible CD gear, it's easier than ever to listen to clean, digital music on the road. For a fee, satellite radio receivers let you tap into 24-7 digital programming. If you'd rather listen to your own tunes and playlists – and many more songs than a CD can hold — an iPod is the way to go. Mobile installations range from basic dashboard mounts to stealthy setups that conceal the iPod and let you control it remotely. There's a system for just about any car… http://www.macworld.com/2004/05/ secrets/junemobilemac/?lsrc=mcrss-0604 Inside Wire: Repairing Permissions –Sometimes the privileges of permissions of certain items in the file system become modified in such a way that an application may crash or not function properly. Disk Utility provides a mechanism to repair the permissions of operating system f i l e s . . . h t t p : / / w w w. m a c s i m u m perspective.com/index2.php?id=P218 An alternative method of saving QuickTime streams –Dammit, I love Pink Floyd. I was overjoyed to see that the official Floyd site posted the entire Final Cut short film (which is very rare) on their site. The only problem is, it is a Quicktime stream embedded in the HTML… http://www.macosxhints.com/article. php?story=20040713092506660 ‘Fix a Troubled Mac’ v1.4.0 –a Mac troubleshooting PDF book has been updated and is available to evaluate for FREE or purchase… h t t p : / / w w w. m a c m e g a s i t e . c o m / modules.php?name=News&file= article&sid=1490 A workaround for audio input problems in 10.3 –Some users–mostly those with G5s–are reporting distorted or altogether lost audio capabilities after the Mac OS X 10.3.4 update. http://www.macosxhints.com/article. php?story=20040622205450834 12 Steps to Improving Your Mac's Performance –Keeping your Mac happy and performing as it did the day you brought it home takes a bit of degunking. Joli Ballew offers 12 steps to improving your Mac's performance that will have it humming along in no time. http://www.macdevcenter.com/pub/a/ mac/2004/07/16/DegunkYourMac.html Edit MP3s for mobile phones via QuickTime and iTunes –I have recently received a mobile phone that will play MP3s, and can use them as ring tones. However, I didn't want to put the whole file on my phone, so I wanted a way to edit the track down to the most important part… http://www.macosxhints.com/article. php?story=20040701184343408 Combine multiple disc albums in iTunes –When selecting albums to play, especially on the iPod, where you can only select one thing to play, listening to albums with multiple discs becomes a nuisance - if not an impossibility… http://www.macosxhints.com/article. php?story=20040629211444912 Copy text from protected PDFs to other apps –For those of you who come across PDF documents in which the document's creator has restricted the ability to copy text to the clipboard, here's a simple workaround… http://www.macosxhints.com/article. php?story=20040622214927503 3 Organize a huge number of photos into a hierarchy –I often face the problem of sorting through thousands of pictures and wanting to create some sensible hierarchy before importing them into another program or burning them to a DVD… http://www.macosxhints.com/article. php?story=20040324071531479 Create multiple tracks from single MP3 files –So you have Pink Floyd's The Wall and you want to play it without any pauses between songs. What do you do? You have iTunes copy the album as a single track… http://www.macosxhints.com/article. php?story=20040624044711131 REGISTE R to WIN ! Total Train ing p resents “ADOBE From De CREATIVE SUITE sign To 4 CD se Delivery Adobe tPof Software Tra ” hoto inin shop CS g InDesign , Illustracovering C tor CS, CMC mem S, GoLive and A bers only - raffle Aug crobat 6. . 25 Meeti ng TOTAL TRAINING Mac Training Programs proudly partners with CT MAC CONNECTION USER GROUP to offer its members 25% OFF When you call in to 1-888-368-6825 and reference offer code: MUG103104 Offer valid through October 31, 2004; Visit our web site www.totaltraining.com for information on all of our training products Cannot be combined with any other offer; offer is valid ON ALL Total Training Products FREE VIDEO INTRODUCTION DISCS available at August 25 CMC meeting. EyeHome: So Close, Yet So Far by Andrew Laurence <atlauren@uci.edu> I have a dream. It's a simple dream, really. I dream of a device that will bring my digital media - music, movies, photos - to my home theater system with its comfy couch, audiolicious speakers, and largescreen television. TiVo has freed me from the confines of the network schedules (see "TiVo: Freedom Through Time-Shifting" in TidBITS-594); I want a device to free me from the confines of physical media. I want my music collection available in an unending stream. I want to show my mother digital pictures of her grandson without huddling around a computer monitor. I want to torture guests with unending hours of baby video footage. Last, but perhaps most important, I dream of a remote control that won't piss me off. Connect your EyeHome to your Mac. http://www.elgato.com/index.php?file= products_eyehome http://www.linksys.com/products/ product.asp?grid=33&scid=36&prid=602 http://www.netgear.com/products/ details/ME101.php Eye for Details — In practice, the EyeHome does just about everything it claims. Setup and installation are a breeze. Just install the software, hook up the device and turn it on. It finds your Mac (or multiple Macs) via Rendezvous and Shazam! Your pictures, movies, and music are all available for playing on the television and hi-fi stereo. http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbser=1204 EyeHome from Elgato Systems comes tantalizingly close to realizing this dream. By the spec sheet, it does nearly everything: it plays MP3, AIFF, and unprotected AAC files on the stereo, with support for iTunes playlists and the capability to browse by album/artist/song; it displays JPEG, GIF, PNG, and BMP graphic image files on the television, according to iPhoto's albums and slide shows; and it plays MPEG-1, MPEG-2, MPEG-4, and DiVX movie files on the television. A simple preference pane activates its Java-based server software on your Mac and advertises its presence via Rendezvous. The EyeHome itself, a small, silver set-top box, connects to your Mac via Ethernet and to your television or receiver via RCA, S-Video, or optical S/PDIF jacks. (Those with wireless networks can use an 802.11b/g bridge such as the Linksys WET11 or NetGear ME101.) iPhoto's photo albums are displayed in the same order as they appear within iPhoto; you can view a single photo or play an album as a slide show. During a party I played a random slide show of baby pictures on the television, a handy conversation piece (and a way for the guests to catch up on the baby's life, while the real article was long since asleep). Songs, albums and playlists all play from the iTunes Library. However, EyeHome's Music section doesn't descend through the library as I expect. I'd expect it to descend from Artist to Aretha Franklin to a list of her albums, but instead you get a list of songs. Similarly, going from Genre to Jazz, one expects a list of artists, but again you find a list of songs. EyeHome is restricted to playlists in iTunes and cannot create ad hoc playlists. Having tasted the rich freedom of Slim Devices' SlimServer 4 software, however, I find the marriage to iTunes limiting; ad hoc playlists are addictive, and the EyeHome’s Java software feels slow by comparison (see “ G o o d Vi b r a t i o n s f r o m t h e Squeezebox” in TidBITS-726). The documentation claims that EyeHome can play Internet radio stations (via a .pls file in your Music folder), but I could not get this feature to work. http://www.slimdevices.com/ http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi? tbart=07637 I don't yet have DV footage converted to a compatible format, but from my test with some downloaded material, video playback works quite well. Quality on the screen is a direct function of the file's video format; the more information in the file, the better the image. MPEG-1 looks grainy, while MPEG-4 and DiVX can look quite spectacular. As always with digital video, there can be a wide quality variance depending on the codec used; I had problems with a few DiVX files, but all the MPEG files I tried worked fine. http://www.archive.org/movies/ details-db.php? id=5269 (The EyeHome can also browse the Web, but I don't find that feature at all compelling; viewing the Web on a TV didn't work well with WebTV, doesn't work in a hotel room, and doesn't interest me in my home with broadband and laptop computers.) Eye on Interface — However, while the EyeHome appears to realize my dream, it falls short due to a horrible interface and a remote control with tiny buttons and inscrutable icons. When a computer outputs its display to an NTSC television, it offers an image of only 640 by 480 pixels - tiny by modern computing standards. When faced with this constraint in a consumer continued on page 5 continued from page 4 device, TiVo chose a simple vertical list of selectable items; selecting an item takes you to a new screen and a new list of options. TiVo's interface is quickly comprehensible, uncluttered, and focused on the task at hand. Elgato, however, shoehorns a three-pane interface into this limited space. Large text buttons occupy the lefthand portion of the screen, one for each major function: EyeTV, Movies, Music, Photos, Internet, Services. (I find the topmost EyeTV button to be exasperating, as it is useless without an EyeTV device and cannot be moved or removed.) The right-hand portion of the screen is used for browsing content in the selected area, and small soft buttons for media playback sit along the top. It sounds simple enough, if a bit cluttered. However, the execution is maddening. To navigate through the interface, you use a set of small directional buttons on the included remote control. When an on-screen button is highlighted, it is surrounded by a blue rectangle. However, when one of the large media buttons is active, it is shown as an Aqua-ish blue blob. If you click to highlight that button, the rectangle vanishes! Suddenly, there is no indication of which item is currently selected. It gets worse as you delve deeper: press Select on the remote, and the cursor moves into the selected area (say, Music), where each listed item is delimited by a similar roundish blue blob. Moving the cursor to an item once again highlights its text with a blue rectangle, but that is the only indication of where your eye should focus. The list pane doesn't have a visual highlight, and the Music button is still surrounded by a big honkin’ blue blob that draws the eye away from the content pane. If the content in the list pane is longer than one screen, buttons for the next set are at the top of the list, not the bottom. If you are prone to pressing Down as you move through a list (or, say, just finished with one selection and want to move to a different screen), you must press Up several times in order to move to the next set. A scrollable list of “pages,” TiVostyle, would make a great deal more sense. At various points, soft buttons for playback options (Search, Back, Play All, Random) appear at the top of the screen. These buttons are denoted with white-onblack icons, in a different font than any other button text. (It might just be a smaller point size; after all, this is NTSC video we're looking at, which isn't the best way to view typefaces.) The appearance of these icons is another inconsistency, and while the Search button is handy, again the implementation is horrid. Pressing the Search button brings up a simple text field, but the field isn’t highlighted for input - that infernal EyeTV button is! So, hit the 5 Right button and input text with the multi-tap numeric buttons, just like a cell phone and just as annoying. (Again, TiVo gets it right with an onscreen alphabet and arrow-to-select.) In that hard-to-define quality of “feel,” the EyeHome interface feels clunky. Navigation feels like tabbing through fields on a Web browser; this should come as no surprise, because it is, in fact, a Web browser. The browser accesses your Mac over TCP port 8000. The EyeHome software on the Mac is the Apache Web server with the Tomcat Java application server. It appears that the EyeHome is a licensee of technology from OEM digital media supplier Syabas. The device’s Web browser identifies itself as “Syabas,” and the server’s .jar filenames begin with “syabas.” Other Syabas licensee products appear to include the D-Link Wireless Media Player and the Neuston MC500. http://www.syabas.com/solutions _myihome.html http://www.syabas.com/solutions _myibox.html http://www.dlink.com/products/ ?pid=318 http://www.neuston.com/ en/mc500.asp In summary, the convenience of having one's digital pictures on the TV is a blessing, as is dialing up a digital movie on a moment's notice. Music playback works, but it pales in comparison to the SlimServer software on the Squeezebox from Slim Devices. If you can get past the interface, the EyeHome functions quite well. It costs $250 and is available from Elgato Systems and various online dealers. Reprinted from TidBITS #741/09-Aug-04 [Andrew Laurence continues his quest for the ideal home theater digital hub. Frankly, the category is beginning to look like MP3 players did before the iPod came out. Hmm...] Help Desk Mac 911 By Christopher Breen As the parent of a three year old, I've recently been devoting a lot of thought to the concept of sharing. And many Mac users can benefit from paying more attention to sharing – whether it’s Address Book birthdays with iCal, contact information with Word documents, or digital music between devices such as an old iPod and a new Mac. Birthday Wishes Can I configure Apple’s Address Book and iCal to give me advance notification of birthdays for friends, family members, and business associates? – Lenn Hann There’s no “Since Lenn went to the trouble of adding a Birthday field to this contact’s card, I’ll bet he’d like that birthday to also automatically appear in iCal” relationship between Address Book and iCal. But there are a few free utilities that do the job. The first is Ulli Kortenkamp’s ABtoiCal <http://homepage.mac.com/kortenkamp> This AppleScript creates a new Birthdays calendar in iCal; it includes all the birthdays you’ve entered in Address Book. Scotland Software’s iCal Birthday Shifter application <http://iratescotsman.com/products/ icalshifter/index.html> also copies birthdays into a calendar of your choosing. And Martin Pittenauer’s ABBirthday <www.codingmonkeys.de/goodies/ABBirt hday.dmg> is an Address Book plug-in that lets you create individual birthday events in iCal. Just click on a contact’s Birthday heading and select Add To iCal from the resulting menu, and a sheet appears asking you to select the calendar you’d like to add the birthday to. Better yet, it can create an alarm for the birthdays you add to iCal. Office Merger In Microsoft Office v.X Standard Edition $399; www.microsoft.com), is there an easy way to insert a name and an address into a Word document? –David Christian There is – more than one, as a matter of fact. The first employs Word’s AutoComplete feature. Begin typing the name of an Entourage contact (you must keep your contacts in Entourage’s Address Book for this to work). After you type a few letters, the entire name appears in a small yellow box. Press the return key, and that name appears in the document with a dotted red line beneath it. Control-click on the name, and you can insert that person’s e-mail address, street address, or phone number. For greater control, select View: Toolbars: Contact. You can use the resulting Contact toolbar to select a contact’s name from a pop-up menu, add a new contact, and substitute one contact for another. With a contact’s name in your document, you can then use other pop-up menus to insert that person’s street address, phone number, or email address. MiniDisc to Mac I’ve made some recordings on my MiniDisc player. Now I want to record the music digitally on my Mac and convert it to AAC format. How do I do it? –Ralf Ginter To keep your recording digital, you need digital-audio ports on your music player and your Mac. Some MiniDisc players include digital-audio ports, but in the Mac lineup, only the Power Mac G5 includes digitalaudio-ins and -outs. These are optical ports rather than S/PDIF (Sony/ Philips Digital Interface) ports. If your MiniDisc doesn’t have a digitalaudio output and you’re extremely handy, you may be able to add one. MiniDisc.org offers tutorials at www.minidisc.org/part_ hacking.html#Construction_Projects. Thankfully, you needn’t hack your Mac to add digital inputs. Just purchase a USB digital- audio interface such as Edirol’s $80 UA-1D <www.edirol.com/products/info/ ua1d.html>, an adapter with both S/PDIF and optical digital-audio ports. Once you’ve made a digital connection between the devices, you’ll need an application that records audio as AIFF files. iMovie can do the job for free via its Audio tab, but that’s a clumsy way to go. Instead, consider my current favorite inexpensive two-track audio editor, HairerSoft’s $30 Amadeus II <www.hairersoft.com/Amadeus.html> Then you can drag the AIFF files into iTunes and convert them. To do so, select Preferences from the iTunes menu, click on the Importing tab, select AAC Encoder from the Import Using pop-up menu, click on OK to dismiss the Preferences window, select the files, and choose Convert Selections To AAC from the Advanced menu. Old iPod, New OS I have an older iPod that I’ve used with a Mac running OS 9. My wife bought one of the new iPods that works only with OS X, so I had to upgrade my OS. After installing Panther, I plugged in my old iPod, and my music library was nowhere to be found. Are older iPods incompatible with OS X? –George A. Renville Absolutely not. The problem is that iTunes doesn’t know where to find your music. In OS 9, iTunes keeps its songs at the root level of your hard drive, in Documents: iTunes: iTunes Music. To bring those songs into iTunes in OS X, select Preferences from the iTunes menu, click on the Advanced tab, disable the Copy Files To iTunes Music Folder When Adding To Library option, and click on OK. Now choose Add To Library from the File menu, navigate to your old iTunes Music Folder, and click on Choose in the Add To Library dialog box. Tip of the Month In the April 2004 issue, you suggested using OpenShiiva to convert VOB files to a format readable by iMovie. If you own a copy of Roxio’s Toast Titanium (866/280-7694, www.roxio.com), you can convert files easily. Open Toast and click on the Video tab. Drag and drop your VOB files into the Toast window, as though you were creating a disc. Within Toast, select the video file to convert, continued on page 7 6 continued from page 6 and then select Export Video from the Disc menu. You’ll be prompted to save the converted file as a .dv file, which can be read by iMovie. There are some limitations depending on the audio format (for instance, Dolby Digital AC-3 requires Toast with Jam), but they shouldn’t apply to your DVD source discs. When you’re done converting, you can quit Toast without saving the project. –Martin Dellwo UNSOLICITED ADVICE The ability to create QuickTime slide shows with iPhoto’s Export command is a boon, but iPhoto still won’t cut a slide show to fit the length of an accompanying soundtrack. Sure, you could get close by doing the math and dividing the length of the soundtrack by the number of slides you intend to display. But unless you’re lucky, you’ll only get close. iPhoto doesn’t let you display slides for fractions of seconds (8 seconds is acceptable, for example, but 8.13 isn’t). If you have a copy of Roxio’s Toast Titanium 6, you can solve this problem by opening a copy of the bundled Motion Pictures application. Motion Pictures can perform the “pan and scan” Ken Burns effect and, unlike iPhoto, create a QuickTime slide show that matches the length of a soundtrack. It will also send that slide show directly to Toast, where you can burn it to a DVD or a Video CD. Macworld contributing editor Chris Breen is the author of Macworld’s tips and troubleshooting column, “Mac 911,” as well as Secrets of the iPod: Fourth Edition and Mac 911 (Peachpit Press). Find Chris’ books at www.amazon.com and www.peachpit.com. Get special user group pricing on Macworld Magazine! Subscribe today at http://www.macworld.com/useroffer. Chris Breen met with CMC members in the Mac User Group Lounge at Macworld Boston Download of the Month submitted by Debi Foss Default Folder Tired of wasting time opening and saving files? By enhancing the Open and Save dialog boxes on your Macintosh, Default Folder makes managing your files almost automatic. Simply install Default Folder, set your preferences, and start saving time and aggravation! ■ It shows you where you are. The top menu in a file dialog lists the active folder and its enclosing folders, just as it did in Mac OS 9. Apple dropped this feature in OS X in order to overload the menu with recently used items, favorites, and other navigational tools. Default Folder puts those tools where they should be, and gives you back your bearings. ■ It gives you access to windows you have open in the Finder. A popup menu gives you a list of all of the windows open in the Finder. Selecting one from the menu, or simply clicking on the window you want, switches the file dialog to that folder. ■ It quickly takes you to recently used and favorite folders. Default Folder's popup menus track folders you've used recently and give you fast access to your favorite folders. You can even assign command keys to your favorites to save more time. ■ It lets you click on a filename to copy it. In Save As dialogs, you can option-click on the name of an existing file to copy it to the edit box. No more retyping the same or similar filenames. 7 ■ It lets you rename, delete, and get information on files and folders without leaving the file dialog. Default Folder provides a host of useful commands so you don't have to go rummaging around just to do something simple like renaming a file. ■ It “rebounds” back to the last item that you selected in a folder. You no longer have to hunt through the file listing for a particular document you were working on before lunch - this gets you to work much faster. ■ It opens folders for you in the Finder. When you really need to do more with a file or folder, use Default Folder X to open the folder shown in an Open or Save dialog in the Finder. Or use Default Folder X's convenient menu in the Dock to access recent, favorite, and other useful folders at any time. How do you use it? Default Folder X attaches a toolbar to the right side of the Open and Save dialogs in any Mac OS X application (see the picture below). The toolbar gives you fast access to various folders and commands. You just click on the buttons to go to your favorite and recently used folders, manage the folders and files shown in the list, and make changes to your settings. You can manage multiple groups of favorites and default folders through the OS X System Preferences: http://www2.stclairsoft.com/download/DefaultFolderX-1.9.4.hqx convenient. I was able to install extra memory and a hard drive myself in only a few minutes. Six Months with a G5 by Rich Lenoce, CMC VP There have been a great many claims about the performance of the G5. Though I use G4s at work – a loaded G4 533mhz tower used for Final Cut editing, an eMac 1ghz used for DVD authoring, and a 400mhz iMac G3 office computer – my home office machine that I use for professional video and multimedia work needs to be a performer. In selecting a new Mac, I narrowed down my choices between the 1.2 ghz 20" LCD iMac and the PowerMac G5 dual 2ghz machine. I could have gone with a G4 tower or an eMac but I have found that spending the extra money on the latest technology means I get more years out of the machine saving me money over time. I liked the 20" iMacs style but when loaded with RAM and a big HD, it cost as much as the top of the line G5. The LCD was beautiful but I already had a high-end Apple Studio Display. I simply couldn’t justify the cost of the LCD when tied to old G4 technology, when I could have the next generation Mac. So I purchased the dual 2ghz G5. I was replacing a graphite 400mhz G4 tower–tops when I bought it 5 years ago. Though loaded with 1 gig of RAM, four large hard drives and still running great, it began showing its age when the specifications weren’t high enough to run Apple’s DVD Studio Pro and would choke on Soundtrack. G5 specifications can be found on Apple’s web site, so I won’t cover them here. For options, I loaded the G5 with 1 gigabyte of RAM, two 250 gigabyte serial drives plus a 128gig FireWire 400 drive used exclusively for backup storage. Convenience The G5 has two things going for it: convenience and speed. From a convenience standpoint it has nearly every port you could ask for: analog audio, digital audio, Firewire 400/800, USB 2.0, etc. The front FireWire and USB ports makes it easy to hook up digital lifestyle devices (like iPods, iSights, cameras, video camcorders). I had wondered for years why Apple hadn’t done this earlier, since towers have always been annoying to move. Who said aluminum was light? At 45 pounds, simply connecting temporary devices to the G5 without these front hookups would be a back straining experience so these ports are greatly appreciated. Upgrading memory and hard drives and access to the PCI expansion slots could not be more Speed All that has been written about the G5’s supercomputer speed is true. Applications run at lightning speed. Photoshop, Final Cut, DVD Studio run several times faster then on the fastest G4. iLife apps with high system demands, such as iDVD and Garage Band, are downright zippy. On a G5, finally, the Mac OS X lives up to its claims. Take multitasking. I have Final Cut Pro, DVD Studio Pro and Photoshop as well as my mail and Internet browser apps running in the background when I’m working. Using all of these applications at the same time would choke a G4, but on a G5 you can work, render and bounce between applications with no apparent hit in performance. Ditto for memory allocation; the G5 seems to know which application gets memory priority and instantly relinquishes the memory and reallocates it without missing a beat. Remember how responsive the Classic Mac OS felt? I’ve always found with OS X on my G4 400, there is a slight delay in everything I do. Click an icon, start a copy, whatever it happens to be, there’d always be a second’s delay that’s just enough to be annoying. If you work in OS X, and then use OS 9 natively you’ll know what I’m talking about. The G5 makes the Mac OS snappy again. As soon as you click, things happen instantly. continued on page 9 8 continued from page 8 Issues and Limitations There are only a few negatives I’ve found to this Macintosh. First, noise from my G5 is a rare occurrence, but does pop up occasionally. Under normal operations, the G5 is certainly much quieter than a Quicksilver G4, eliciting a low-level fan whisper. Most noticeably, fans come on when burning DVDs and CDs–the noise is noticeable but not unbearable. Intense processing will cause all nine fans to turn on which can be very loud but this only occurs when the Mac is doing intensive processing and burning a CD/DVD at the same time. What’s intense? Rendering a Final Cut Pro file, encoding a DVD and running Photoshop at the same time–all while burning a CD. But how many of us will do that type of processing all at once? Audio and video professionals who need silence may want to put their G5 in a well-ventilated cabinet–most would do that anyway. For the rest of us, this machine is plenty quiet. There are some limitations. Having only one CD/DVD drive slot on such a high-end professional machine is nothing short of ridiculous. Equally ridiculous is the lack of space to put extra hard drives. In a G4, you could stack as many hard drives as would fit. On a G5 there is a narrow area that fits only two drives. There are thirdparty drive space expansion kits available and the multiple Firewire 400 and 800 ports make this a problem easily (but not inexpensively) solved. Conclusion Overall, this is the best Mac I’ve ever owned. It’s well constructed and simply the fastest Mac ever. It’s so fast, the only thing holding it back seems to be the speed of the hard drives as they ramp up–it’s that fast This first generation G5 reminds me of my PowerMac 8500; though not as expandable, it’s a powerful and versatile machine. Best of all, it’s a glimpse of what Apple has coming when it moves the G5 to its consumer computers and laptops. Photo of the Month by Shirl Bloethe, CMC member Shirl took this photo in Southington, CT. I think that the sign says it all. Have a photo for the newsletter? Email it to us at newsletter@cmc.org. Yes...I want to join CMC Benefits: Monthly meetings, monthly newsletter, discounted book purchases, computer problem assistance, network with other Mac users, User Group Store, etc. Date ___________________ Referred by: ________________________ Name ________________________________________________________ Company Name ________________________________________________ Occupation ____________________________________________________ Address_______________________________________________________ City/State/Zip __________________________________________________ Phone (Home) ____________________Phone (Office)_________________ Email ________________________________________________________ Areas of Special Interest _________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________ Annual CMC Family Membership - $25.00 Make check payable to CMC and mail to: 41 Crossroads Plaza – PMB 1984, West Hartford, CT 06117 ...or register online with PayPal at www.ctmac.org 9 2004-2005 CMC OFFICERS AND BOARD MEMBERS President Don Dickey president@ctmac.org 860-232-2841 Vice President Rich Lenoce vicepres@ctmac.org 860-347-1789 Secretary Chris Hart secretary@ctmac.org 860-291-9393 Treasurer David Gerstein treasurer@ctmac.org Past President Joseph Arcuri pastpres@ctmac.org 860-485-1547 Newsletter Design George Maciel newsletter@ctmac.org 860-561-0319 Editor Deena Quilty editor@ctmac.org 860-678-8622 Webmaster Brian Desmond webmaster@ctmac.org (860) 668-8728 Raffles Robert Sawyer raffles@ctmac.org 860-677-7787 Download of the Month Debbie Foss dotm@ctmac.org 860-583-1165 Special Events Jack Bass programs@ctmac.org Ambassador Connie Scott ambassador@ctmac.org 860-584-9573 Caricatures by Bill Dougal of Lebanon, (860) 456-9041. Available for illustration assignments and event caricatures. 10 Upcoming Meetings! Monthly CMC Meetings are held on last Wednesday of the month, 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm (except November and December when the meetings are held earlier due to the holidays) Board meetings are held on the first Thursday of the month. If you wish to attend a Board meeting, contact an officer for the location. Discounted Books! FREE Raffle! CMC continues to offer our current members the opportunity to purchase any published book for either Mac or Windows at a 20% discount. All major publishers are carried by our source. Every CMC member who attends our monthly meetings gets a raffle ticket. This will give you a chance for one of our free prizes every month! You could win…t-shirts, toys, CDs, mugs, software …there’s always something we’re giving away! And don’t forget the Free table at the back of the room where everything is...FREE! Contact a Board Member or send an email to booksales@ctmac.org. Provide the book title, the publisher and the ISBN number, if possible, and he will check on its availability. Normally, the wait is not too long. August 25 - UConn Medical Center 6 pm – Back to Basics This month’s session focuses on digital photography. If you missed our previous CMC program on digital cameras, or still have more questions, this session is for you. We’ll explore topics such as megapixels, memory cards, file formats, and batteries. Bring your questions, and we’ll be happy to answer them! 7 pm – Adobe InDesign Watch out Quark, there’s a new application in town. Pat Rasch, graphic designer and CMC member, will be the presenter at CMC’s August meeting covering Adobe’s latest entry into the page editing and layout world, Adobe Indesign. Indesign competes with Quark and replaces Adobe’s other page layout application, PageMaker. Indesign integrates with all of Adobe’s other applications (Photoshop, Illustrator, etc.) and is receiving raves from graphic designers for its features and improved workflow that it offers anyone designing print media. Coming Events.... Sept. 29 Celebrity Guest Nite with Dave Marra Oct. 27 CMC Auction Nov. 17* Migration to OSX Dec. 15* Holiday Pizza Party & Stump the Geeks *(Early date due to holidays) Treasurer’s Report New Members! For CMC Members Only! We need new members! Have your friends and co-workers join us for fun and learning about OSX and the Mac. User ID’s and Passwords Total Membership: 130 Account Balances Ending Checking Account Balance ..................$488.04 CMC Web Site www.ctmac.org User ID: XXX (uppercase) Password: xxxxxxx (lowercase) Apple User Group Store www.applemugstore.com Aug. 1, 2004 - Nov. 30, 2004 User ID: xxxxx (lowercase) Password: xxxx (lowercase) Are You Receiving our CMC emails? We always send out advance notice of the meetings, and sometimes for big news or special events (like our bus trip to Macworld). If you’re not getting them, please email us at president@ctmac.org with your current email address and a subject line of: ADD TO CMC EMAIL LIST 11 Savings Account Balance...$3954.99 Balances as of July 31, 2004 CMC Classified Ads Members can Advertise For Sale, Swap, Trade, Giveaway or Want to Buy Items. This space can be used by members to advertise non-business items which they are no longer using or upgrading. This is a FREE service provided to our members. CMC Display Ad Rates Any business items or services can be advertised at the monthly rates below. Business Card ..........................$10.00 Quarter Page.............................$20.00 Half Page..................................$30.00 Full Page (or insert) .................$50.00 Submit all ad copy to the Editor on a disk with nothing else on it or e-mail it for insertion in the following issue. Display ads must be submitted camera-ready in .eps or .pdf format with all fonts & graphics embedded. Make your check payable to CMC. 41 Crossroads Plaza – PMB 1984 West Hartford, CT 06117 Meeting y l h t n o M 7 pm 5– August 2 Design Adobe In Center edical UConn M m cs” - 6 p i s a B o T pg11) “Back phy (see hotogra Digital P CMC Meeting Location – a PDF document containing a visual direction guide to UConn Health Center is available on our website: http://www.ctmac.org. Print and take it with you to find us easily! Monthly meetings will be held at UConn Health Center in Farmington. When hands-on programs require computers for attendees, we will be using Middlesex Community College in Middletown. Directions to UCHC, Farmington Directions to Middlesex C.C. From I-84: Take Exit 39 (if coming from I-84 West, Exit 39 is after 39A). Turn right at first traffic light onto Route 4 East (Farmington Avenue). At third traffic light, turn right to enter the Health Center campus. Go around the main building to the right (at a Y in road), then take a left when you get to the Academic Entrance. The road becomes twoway there so you should be able to tell where to turn. (Do not go on straight to the two-way part). Then take the second right into parking lot A&B. this is close to the building. Go past the police station entrance on your left (small sign). You will see a continuation of the building with its own entrance area. This is the new research building. Enter on the ground floor, turn right and enter room EG-013 on your right. This is the first room on your right. The rest rooms are on your left as you enter. From the Hartford area, take Route 9 South. A few miles south of downtown Middletown on Route 9, take Exit 11 (Rt. 155, Randolph Road). At the end of the ramp (for both N. & S. bound), turn right onto Randolph Road. Continue to the traffic light at the top of the hill and turn left onto Saybrook Road. Go a quarter of a mile and turn right onto Reservoir Road. Travel past the stop sign, then take the first right onto Training Hill Road. Your first left will lead into the Middlesex Community College Campus parking area. When you arrive on campus, take a right onto Training Hill Road. Go to the second parking lot entrance and take a left into the upper lot. Directly in front of you will be Snow Hall. Enter Snow Hall and go up the stairs to the 2nd floor and go to the last room on the right, Room 509. 12 Monthly Meeting September 29 - 7 pm Celebrity Guest Nite at UConn Medical Center Apple’s Senior Systems Engineer Dave Marra will give an entertaining and informative presentation. “Back To Basics” - 6 pm NEWSLETTER OF CONNECTICUT MACINTOSH CONNECTION, INC. Just Hanging Around By Don Dickey, CMC president Remember the movie Fahrenheit 451? This circa 1966 classic was about a society when books were forbidden. In the movie, the television screens hung on the wall and were only a couple of inches thick. A year or two ago, television manufacturers finally gave us sets we can hang on the wall. We just can’t afford them yet! (Well, at least I can’t.) Yesterday, Apple unveiled the new iMac G5 to rapturous applause at Apple Expo 2004 in Paris. The new iMac is something akin to an iBook split in half: a screen half and a keyboard (and mouse) half. The tech specs note an optional VESA mount allows you to hang the new computers on the wall! Add the optional wireless keyboard and mouse setup and the only cord you’ll need is for AC power. Maybe a 3rd party company will figure a way to beam power to it wirelessly, but I won’t hold my breath. Standing on its slim pedestal or hanging on the wall, the iMac G5 is a thing of beauty. What’s important to appreciate here is that many engineers can develop something with great form or great function. It takes people thinking on a much higher plain to create something with simultaneously great form and great function. This appears to be Apple’s forte. In recent history, they did it with the original iMac, then the new flat panel iMac, later the iPod, and now with this 3rd generation iMac...each SEPTEMBER, 2004 time taking advantage of the latest technology to improve the form as well. There’s something to be learned here. It’s this very design philosophy that lets a manufacturer charge almost twice as much for a product with the same function but lacking in a quality form. There are usually people willing to pay for products with these qualities. If there weren’t, the likes of Mercedes and BMW would have gone out of business long ago. The media announced this past week that Apple’s market share is only between 2 and 3 percent. While that sounds puny, understand that BMW would be very happy to have the same share of the car market! Where am I going with this article? As you know, my focus has always been on having fun with your Mac. I include appreciating beautiful design in my loose definition of having fun. Perhaps being a mechanical engineer gives me a different perspective, but I think it goes without saying that those among us who have iPods or iMacs may feel the same way, or we’d probably have a Rio connected to a Dell instead (along with a few hundred bucks of extra cash in our wallets). There’s a price to be paid for being a Mac user, but you can know that our machines are the envy of many a PC/Windoze user with the brains to see the difference. Not to downplay the technical benefits of being a Mac user as these constitute part of the computer’s “function,” it’s the “form” that sets us apart from other computer users. Sort of like taking time to smell the roses, my point here is that we should occasionally remember to appreciate our Mac’s beautiful form as we enjoy it’s great function. 1 (see info on page 11) Quark should be very worried. Graphic professionals like Pat Rasch have jumped the Quark ship over to Adobe’s InDesign. From Pat’s excellent presentation at the August, it’s easy now for all of us to see why. CMC would like to thank Pat Rasch for her informative and enlightening presentation on Adobe InDesign. Pat’s knowledge of graphic design and expertise with page layout applications demonstrated to the group why InDesign is taking the publishing world by storm. Pat’s presentation drew a large number of participants and was well received by all. She showed all of us that Quark has a lot to be worried about. We’d like to extend our appreciation to Pat for sharing her knowledge and the time she took to teach us why InDesign is a superior product. Inside this Issue Just Hanging Around ........................... 1 Review: iWork v2.1.5 .......................... 3 Power of iLife.......................................4 Download of the Month .......................5 Review: iVideo & FootTrack................6 Review: Wireless Intellimouse .............8 Meetings and Club News ...................11 Take Control from Tidbits Tidbits has announced a new series of electronic books, called the “Take Control Series.” Not just a quick summary, these books can run to 60 pages! We will be publishing reviews of some of these in upcoming issues of our newsletter. In the meantime, you may want to visit http:/www.tidbits.com and click on electronic books for more details. Editor Deena Quilty Content Contributor Don Dickey Contributing Author Rich Lenoce Designer George Maciel Photographer John Scott Publisher Connecticut Macintosh Connection, Inc. 41 Crossroads Plaza PMB 1984 West Hartford, CT 06117 Current titles include: Take Control of Buying a Mac 1.0 Take Control of Email with Apple Mail 1.1 Take Control of Your AirPort Network 1.1.1 Take Control of Spam with Apple Mail 1.1.2 Take Control of Sharing Files in Panther 1.1.2 Take Control of Customizing Panther 1.2 Take Control of Upgrading to Panther 1.2.2 Take Control of Users & Accounts in Panther 1.1 Take Control of What’s New in Entourage 2004 1.0 Take Control of Making Music w/GarageBand 1.0 Be sure to take advantage of the discount code if you wish to order. Advertising ... see page 11 for info on how to advertise in our newsletter. FOR SALE: Your Macintosh Support Connection… Tripod, extendable to full height. Perfect for that digital camera! Never used. $25.00 Contact Deena at (860) 678-8622. CMC AUCTION: Printer Budget Printers 1718 Park Street Hartford, CT 06106 We welcome submissions from members! Please submit articles by first of the month for inclusion in our newsletter. There is much talent in our group; it would be great to have several member articles in each issue. While we are busy soliciting donations from nationwide merchants and manufacturers and developers, we would also gratefully accept donations from individuals or local companies. A donation receipt for tax purposes can be provided in exchange. If you have something you'd like to donate, please contact Joe Arcuri at: pastpres@ctmac.org. And be sure to attend the auction at our October meeting! Chris Hart (860) 291-9393 Help@MyMacTech.com Specializing in support for small business and the self-employed • Friendly, personalized attention and reasonable rates • Honest opinions and answers — no sales pitch! • On-site service by appointment or 24/7 for emergencies • 10 years experience 2 Review: iWork v2.1.5 IGG Software by Frank Petrie, MaMUGs/Mid-Atlantic MUG Team http://www.iggsoftware.com/iwork/ Requirements: Mac OS X 10.2 or higher, 10.3 recommended Price: $29.99, Thanks to the rapid advancement of technology, the distinction between home and office are blurring more daily. If you are freelancing, you need a simple and fast way to keep track of your hours and billing. And doesn‘t the thought of keeping track of all of that depress you instantly? “iWork is an easy to use time-billing and invoicing application. It integrates with iCal and Address Book, offers tax support and easily generates custom invoices. This is the most intuitive timebilling application out there. Essential for anyone self employed. Try it, you won‘t be disappointed. And yeah, it has seamless networking features.” Hey, anything that can reduce my time crunching numbers! Let‘s see if it does. THE GOOD “Drag this icon ... yadda, yadda, yadda.” The UI is the familiar, if somewhat infamous, brushed aluminum and is laid out very intuitively. All of your shortcuts are listed along the top and you can sort your event tracking by roughly a dozen different criteria. On your left, there is a pane for your Client list. On the right side is all the relevant information for that client‘s past, current and future assignments. You will also find that iWorks is tightly integrated into iCal. That‘s one less step - can‘t be bad. (It is also seamlessly integrated with OS X‘s Rendevous and Address Book,) Cabinet. There‘s also a separate invoice preferences, so you can choose between self-designed templates to send to your customers (very handy if you‘re running several different businesses). And iWork will hold your hand through a billing process, any report or graph that you may need to generate. Also on their website is a collection of custom templates created by iWork users to download for free! Users giving back and sharing is always a good sign. You need more information or help? Their Help Viewer and their forums should answer any questions that you could possibly have (that‘s even should you have any?) THE BAD Unfortunately, I don‘t have a steady job to use it for. THE UGLY Nada. NUTSHELL iWork v2.1.5 is a very well thought out program. It‘s very intuitive and will get your nose out of the books and put your brain back to working on the project at hand. The only question that I have is “Where was this program when I was gainfully employed?” RATING: 10 out of 10 ©2004 Frank Petrie, Technologies & Products Specialist The Mid-Atlantic Macintosh User Groups Team http://www.mamugs.org Email: phranky@mamugs.com iChat: phranky Providing camaraderie, cooperative programs, events, training and knowledge sharing for Apple/Macintosh User Groups free of charge. Recall Notice: 15-inch PowerBook G4 Battery Exchange Program https://depot.info.apple.com/ batteryexchange/index.html In cooperation with the U.S. CPSC (Consumer Product Safety Commission) and other international safety authorities, Apple is voluntarily recalling certain lithium ion rechargeable batteries that were sold worldwide from January 2004 through August 2004 for use with 15-inch PowerBook G4 (Aluminum) notebook computers. These batteries were manufactured by LG Chem, Ltd. of South Korea. The affected batteries could overheat, posing a fire hazard. Apple received four reports of these batteries overheating. No injuries have been reported. Apple urges you to stop using your battery and to order a replacement battery immediately. If you continue to use your battery, do not leave it unattended and check for signs of overheating. Apple has initiated an exchange program and will provide eligible customers with a new replacement battery, free of charge. No other PowerBook or iBook batteries are part of this recall. The recalled batteries have the Model Number: A1045 and serial numbers that begin with: HQ404, HQ405, HQ406, HQ407, or HQ408. The Info Drawer is also tied into iCal and is broken down into two functions - Info and File 3 The Power of iLife By Rich Lenoce CMC vice president As Mac users, we hate to admit it, but, like Microsoft, many of Apple’s innovations came from other companies. Final Cut Pro came from Macromedia, LogicPro and Soundtrack from eMagic (now Apple Logic Pro), and DVD Studio Pro from Astarte (once called DVDirector). Apple improved these acquisitions by giving them a Mac interface and selling them to professionals. To the benefit of consumers, Apple has taken the fat out of the pro software, and reworked the interfaces to make them even more intuitive to the non-media professional and renamed them iMovie, Garage Band and iDVD. With iLife, you have all the power the pros have without the complexity or bells and whistles most users will never use. All it takes is your vision. As proof, iLife has made it into the hands of professionals, as seen in many professional journals. With all that power under the hood, GarageBand is fully capable of creating music and soundtracks indistinguishable from those made with LogicPro or Digidesign’s ProTools, as noted by the number of websites devoted to GarageBand music and the high quality music they offer. At this year’s Sundance film festival Tarnation, became the first feature-length film edited entirely using iMovie. And, nearly every video professional working on a Mac has at one time or another used iDVD to quickly create DVDs for clients. How can this be? Folks, it’s not the technology or the software, it’s the vision and knowledge, and storytelling the person brings to a project. The software is merely a tool–and iLife is a darn good tool. Much like Alfred Hitchcock didn’t need digital non-linear editing to make his many masterpieces, you don’t need expensive software like Final Cut Pro/HD to make yours. GarageBand GarageBand records CD-quality sound, uses professional loops and high quality instrument synthesis as well as real instruments to create music. Combine this with the same multi-track recording pros use and the consumer has an incredibly powerful professional toolset in their hands. Prior to the release of GarageBand, these tools were only found in professional software such as LogicPro, at a cost of $1,000. Apple is a company built on bringing complex computing to the masses. Why should music creation or filmmaking be any different? They are applying the same philosophy to music and audio production that they did to the computer . . . to sell more computers. iMovie iMovie offers many of the same features as its big brothers: Final Cut Express and Final Cut Pro HD. The major differences between FCP/HD and its slightly smaller sibling, FCE are pretty minor. FCE doesn’t have the capability of editing high definition TV (only DV), it can’t batch digitize footage and it can’t do complex motion effects over time. iMovie further removes some features such as the ability to composite and superimpose video layers on multiple tracks. You are also limited to three tracks of audio, and titling is not very customizable. Effects are limited to transitions and some basic special effects, and there is no inherent way to sort large number of clips or work in numerous sequences. It sounds like much is missing, but a great deal is included. Looking at how movies and TV shows are made. Few, 4 if any, use anything besides cuts and dissolves between shots and scenes. When was the last time you saw a wipe in a feature film? What iMovie does do, and does well, is allow you to tell a story using the techniques of a filmmaker. What makes a movie a movie is it’s narrative structure–how the story is told. Much like a musician puts notes together in a series to create a melody, filmmakers place, or “edit,” individual shots in a series to create a simple story–called a scene. Individual scenes are then edited together in order to create a movie or TV show. Like notes in music, the shots within a scene can be re-ordered and held on the screen for various lengths of time to manipulate the viewer. For example, suspense is created by restraining the time between shots. A scene can be lyrically romantic by having the shots flow together unrestrained. Action scenes bombard the viewer with successive images from varying angles. There are many other techniques used to get a range of results, but what all these techniques have in common is the ability to edit Shot A next to Shot B. Often times the master shot, called Shot A or the A roll, has a supporting shot called Shot B or B-roll, inserted over it. For example, a man is walking through the woods and we hear him reminiscing about his childhood, we see him scanning the distant mountains accompanied by a voiceover of the first time he saw this view as a child. That’s the A-Roll. We then see shots of him as a child, camping in those same woods, leaving his family for the outing, etc. That’s the B-Roll, sometimes called a “cut-away”, because we “cut away” from the A shot. It’s still there as the foundation of the scene and possibly providing the audio voice-over, but we don’t see it. Later in the scene, we then cut back to the A shot of the mountains. continued on page 5 continued from page 4 Here’s what we have done: through editing, time and space are manipulated to the point where we are in several times and places at once. The story is therefore compelling and interesting because in real life we can only be in one place at a time. This technique of being in two or more places within one scene is called Classic Cutting and is the power of movie making. Prior to iMovie, consumer editing software only allowed the user to assemble A roll together, much like you would if you put two VCRs together and taped chunks of picture and sound from one to the other. You couldn’t insert shots and sounds on top of the A-roll so you couldn’t tell a story like a filmmaker. Everyone who owns iMovie can now put a story together exactly as Alfred Hitchcock did, or Steven Spielberg does today. In iMovie, this technique is performed using a feature called “Paste Over at Playhead.” A good manual such as David Pogue’s iMovie: The Missing Manual or iMovie’s Help Center will explain how to do this. You can’t do Lord of the Rings type effects with iMovie, but you also can’t do them with Final Cut Pro. However, if some team of animators created the effect shots for you, you could certainly edit them together using iMovie. iMovie is still evolving. Features like the Ken Burns Effect give videos a professional touch. Add on packs from companies like eZedia add many of the things back that Apple took out of Final Cut to make iMovie: custom titles, compositing layers of video, batch digitizing, chroma-keying, motion graphics, etc. What iMovie lacks is the ability to distribute a movie on DVD like a commercial film, that’s where iDVD comes in. iDVD iDVD not only burns a DVD from an iMovie project in pristine digital quality, but also adds interfaces, themes, buttons, and special features (slide shows, supplemental material, etc.) that we come to expect from a feature film DVD. Again, under the hood is a tool p r o s u s e t o make commerc i a l D V D ’ s : DVD Studio Pro. iDVD has dozens of pre-made themes created by designers to give your DVD that professional look. Or, you can try your hand at authoring a customized DVD using custom graphics, opening video clips, music made in GarageBand and supplemental materials. iDVD is a complex program that looks simple. What you don’t see is iDVD converting your project into the complex format that commercial DVD players understand and re-encoding the material into the DVD video streaming standard, MPEG2. iDVD analyzes each and every frame of the video material not once, but twice to maintain its quality before burning the DVD. Even with the most powerful computers, this complex process can take many hours–patience is a must! The results are truly astounding. Distribution The question that has eluded musicians and filmmakers has always been, “But how do I get people to hear my music or see my video?” 5 With iTunes and GarageBand, music can be burned to a CD or encoded to MP3 or AAC for making demo CDs to go to record labels or for web distribution. For filmmakers, from within iMovie, you can select to output your video to an email, a web site or by clicking a button you can send the movie to iDVD. Now the world can see your work. You can enter the movie in film festivals, send it to a producer, post it on the web using your .Mac account or submit it to any number of amateur filmmaker web sites. Or just snail mail a DVD to family and friends. The power is in your hands. Download of the Month submitted by Debi Foss PixelNhance from Caffeine Software, Inc. http://www.caffeinesoft.com/ PixelNhance is a fast and easy to use real-time image processing application that greatly speeds the process of determining the perfect settings for common image processing tasks such as color adjustment and sharpening. Caffeine Software has released all their software for free since the dissolution of their business. Other programs available are: TIFFany, Curator, and Cycles. (Note: the programs are only available as one download of 56 mb.) For OS X only. Please note that Caffeine Software has suspended its operations so you should not expect any support for this product. But it IS free! Review: iVideo and FootTrack Video Cataloguing and Organization Software By Rich Lenoce CMC Vice President In my review of iLife ‘04 last winter, I criticized Apple for not including a video cataloging application with iLife. IPhoto organizes digital photos, and iTunes organizes digital music, but where is the application to organize video? Shouldn’t iLife users be able to organize the myriad of video clips, tapes, projects and movies that reside on our hard drives, thanks to iMovie and iDVD? Apple’s thinking may come from the fact that DV and other video file formats are big. With one hour of DV video occupying 13 gigabytes of hard drive space, having more than one project on a drive wasn’t possible just a couple of years ago ago. With today’s hard drives reaching 300 gigabytes and the ability to connect multiple FireWire drives to even the lowest of Macs, we can now can store hundreds of hours of video and dozens of iMovie and Final Cut projects. Two inexpensive and easy to use applications can organize your “video iLife”: Waterfall Software’s iVideo ($17) and T-Squared Software’s FootTrack ($40). Trial demos are available at versiontracker.com. Ultimately, video-cataloging software should offer the same power and flexibility for importing, organizing, sorting, viewing and exporting video as iPhoto does for photos and iTunes does for music. IVideo and FootTrack have these features but implement them in distinctly different ways. iVideo iVideo should look familiar to anyone who uses iPhoto or iTunes and it’s just as easy and intuitive to use. Just drag a QuickTime Movie, MPEG, MP4, AVI, QTVRs, or DV Stream (from say, an iMovie clip or QuicktTime reference file) to the clip window and voila, it’s imported into iVideo. Playlists can be added and the video sorted and organized in numerous ways. Like iTunes, IVideo also offers Smart Playlists where user defined or preset “rules” automatically place imported footage that meets the rule criteria into the appropriate playlist. For example, a Smart Playlist named “Christmas,” may be set to recognize all video footage recorded in December. Information on each video file, called “metadata,” (date, time, etc) can be edited in iVideo and like iPhoto files, can be deleted from within the application. iVideo doesn’t have a separate movie or content folder, but instead keeps the video files in their original location. The software merely points to the existing file saving valuable disk space. iVideo’s export feature is identical to the ones found in Quicktime Pro and iMovie with one notable exception. Files can be recompressed and exported into any Quicktime compatibible format including .MOV, MPEG1, MPEG4, AVI or DV. However, one of iVideo’s biggest advantages is that a single playlist can be selected and all of the video files in the playlist will be recompressed and exported at once. In professional video circles, this is called batch processing, and up until now this feature was left to expensive professional video products such as Apple’s Compressor, available only with Final Cut HD ($999), or Discreet’s Cleaner ($599). This is impressive for a $17 package! Where iVideo shines is not only in its intuitive interface and advanced organizing features, but also in video playback. Movies can be played right from within iVideo at any size including full screen–unlike the free Quicktime Player. Even multiple movies can be selected and played at the same time. iVideo has a handy feature where it will search all hard drives for video files importing all video files it finds. If you pre-set your Smart Playlist rules, the video will be organized on-the-fly potentially saving hours of sorting. iVideo’s weaknesses are few. First, iVideo only supports Quicktime compatible formats, which is not unusual for a Quicktime based product. NonQuicktime files such as Windows Media (WMV) and DIVX can’t be imported or viewed using iVideo. Also, iVideo only imports files already on your hard drive, having no FireWire camcorder control of its own. If it did, then it might be the perfect video cataloging and organizing software. That’s where FootTrack comes in. continued on page 7 6 continued from page 6 FootTrack FootTrack looks similar to iVideo and iPhoto, but dispenses with the playlist metaphor, instead calling the video library a Tape Library made up of Tapes. The equivalent of iTunes and iVideo playlists are Groups, where footage can be dragged and organized. The Tape metaphor makes sense since FootTrack can import DV footage directly from a DV camcorder or through an analog to DV FireWire converter for importing VHS tapes. When a DV tape is imported, clips are created based on the Start/Stop markers embedded in the videotape, which correspond to where the camcorder play/pause button were pressed during shooting. These clips are listed in subgroups under each Tape in the Tape Library in the order they were imported. These clips can be further sorted into Groups that work identically like Playlists or Albums. When importing from an Analog to DV FireWire converter, there are no Stop/Start markers so the lengthy footage, rather than coming in as one long single 60 minute clip, can be manually split into tape subgroups, just like DV tapes, and then organized in Groups. This gives people wishing to edit VHS tapes all the advantages of batch capturing DV clips. Like iVideo, files already on the hard drive can be imported and split if necessary. Foottrack can also edit video clip metadata, which is then maintained when exporting for use in Final Cut Pro/HD/Express and iMovie. FootTrack gives Final Cut Express users a method to essentially “batch capture” footage, and iMovie users a way to presort imported footage prior to starting a project. If this all sounds sophisticated, it’s because this application doesn’t just organize clips like iVideo, but goes a step farther. For example, you can use this application as a tape archiver. In fact, tape can be imported in either full quality or compressed to save disk space. The tape can later be re-imported at the higher quality for editing. FootTrack is a powerful tool not only for the video professional, but also for the home enthusiast. For example, I had 10 unlabeled DV tapes sitting on the shelf that capsulated my son’s first two years. Being unlabeled, I had no idea what each tape contained. FootTrack imported the tapes, broke them into clips, complete with the camera metadata (e.g. date and time shot). After viewing the clips, I was able to come up with several thematic projects (birthdays, Christmas, etc.) and then organized the clips into Groups based on the project. To start editing a project, I exported the Group of clips to a folder for importation into either iMovie or Final Cut. Allowing for tape footage to be “logged” is FootTrack’s real strength and enormous time saver1 7 FootTrack is not without faults. Unlike iVideo, all clips are stored in a single FootTrack Capture Folder. This is a problem only if you already have video files on your drive, because when they are brought into FootTrack, a copy is made and placed in the Capture folder which wastes unnecessary space. Also, like iVideo, FootTrack, does not allow for the exporting of video clips in nonQuicktime formats. It also doesn’t support non-Quicktime media such as Windows Media (WMV) and DiVX. Finally, FootTrack’s viewing options are limited up to a size of 640 X 480 pixels, not to full screen display. Which is Better? Both are five star applications, with each being unique in some ways and similar in others. I like FootTrack’s tape importing feature, but I also like the way I can recompress and batch export videos in iVideo. These are different enough that many people may wish to have both on their machines. The easiest way to do this is to move all existing video files into the FootTrack capture folder and then import them into iVideo so there is no additional disk space needed. Just don’t run both applications at the same time or you will likely corrupt library files. Each application forces me to think about organizing video like I organize my photos, and music and that alone, given the size of video files, is a space saver. I can see and get rid of files, clips and projects I don’t need and be more creative with the footage I have, knowing at a glance what is available. Most people will want one or the other. Download the trial copies and take them for a spin. Review: Microsoft Wireless IntelliMouse Explorer by Sven Anderson of MUG ONE Macintosh User Group of Oneonta, NY The Microsoft Wireless IntelliMouse Explorer is an attractive and well built mouse. It is mostly black with the look and feel of leather. In an age where hardware designers seem to think that everything must be designed to fit in on the deck of a star-cruiser, the IntelliMouse is an elegant exception. It is a little larger than most mice these days and considerably heavier, due in large part to the two AA batteries tucked away in its belly. At first I thought that the extra weight would be a real problem but I have come to find it an added feature that I like. The extra weight gives me more control when making very tight selections in a program like Photoshop. The IntelliMouse is designed for right-handed mouseketeers, and I can’t find any reference to a left-handed version. I must say that the ergonomic form fit for a right hand is a welcome asset. The design was well thought out. It includes two main buttons plus a clickable wheel that functions as a third button and has two smaller buttons on the left side. One of the great design elements of this mouse is the fact that these two buttons are convenient yet tucked out of the way enough that they do not interfere with normal mouse functionality at all. I find most four or more button mice to be a real pain to operate because the extra buttons are constantly being pressed inadvertently when trying to move or especially, pick up and move the mouse when you have run out of mouse-pad real estate. For the graphic artist who uses a large monitor and is constantly picking up the mouse while trying to keep a button depressed, this is really big. The left side is even undercut slightly so it is easy to grip and lift. As far as wireless functionality is concerned, you have all the benefits of wireless and very few drawbacks. The benefits include not having to untangle that mouse cord that always seems to find a way of getting tangled or hung up on the corner of the keyboard. I have been using this mouse constantly now for several months and have only found two occasions where it seemed to lose contact with the computer. These two instances were only for a second and the mouse found the connection again on its own. This was far less of a hindrance than a corded mouse encounters on a daily basis. If there is a flaw in the design it is that it uses an antennae unit, about the size of a mouse, to connect to the USB terminal on your computer. My only wish is that it would be Bluetooth enabled so I would not need to either use the USB port or have yet another thing hanging off of the back of my monitor. The Wireless IntelliMouse Explorer has excellent optical tracking technology and therefore has all the usual optical benefits such as smooth operation over most any surface and nothing to clean. It is extremely sensitive and works like a dream for those of us doing things that need very precise mouse control. As for cool features, this mouse includes programmable buttons which can be very handy for taking care of repetitive tasks such as refreshing a web page or going back to the previous page or for undoing the last command. The biggest “New” feature for me was the tilt wheel for side to side scrolling. You can tilt the wheel to navigate side to side in documents or in a web 8 browser. The combination of scroll wheel with a tilt mechanism means you can practically say good-bye to window scroll bars. That is a feature making this mouse worthwhile all on its own. Even without the added features of 5 buttons and a tilt-wheel, or even the wireless aspects, I love this mouse. It works and feels great. Microsoft hit this one out of the park. (Sven Anderson is an Apple Distinguished Educator and professor of Computer Art at State University of New York, College at Oneonta) Microsoft Wireless IntelliMouse Explorer System Requirements: Mac OS X version 10.1 to 10.2.x (excluding 10.0), 15 MB of available hard-disk space, Universal Serial Bus (USB) port, CD-ROM drive. Copyright 2004 Sven Anderson. This article originally appeared in “Newsbreak,” the newsletter of MUG ONE - Macintosh User Group of Oneonta, NY The MUG Store The MUG store always has great deals for members. This month's highlights include: • Factory Refurbished iBooks starting at $699 • Factory Refurbished Power Mac G4s starting at $1,099 • Factory Refurb 12" Power Books starting at $1,249 • Factory Refurbished iPods starting at $188 • Plus an exclusive $100 rebate on any installed RAM in selected new Macs! Plus... - Free freight on all orders - Knowledgeable consultants - Blowout deals - One percent goes back to your group in merchandise (Password & User ID on pg 11) This offer and more are available to members of U.S. user groups. http://www.applemugstore.com Mac OS X Tips from Web Watch - compiled by The MUG Center <www.mugcenter.com> Create interactive slideshows for Windows users If you need to make an interactive slideshow for use on Windows, you need to use something in addition to iPhoto. For whatever reason, iPhoto‘s QuickTime export feature does not include an option for interactivity. The slideshow shareware apps I‘ve seen use proprietary formats, which are unplayable on Windows. The solution is to drag your selected images straight from iPhoto into the navigator pane in a new Keynote document. Keynote will automatically create a new slide for each photo. You can then easily rearrange them, and export the slideshow to QuickTime, with the ‘interactive slideshow’ option selected. You can also drag from the Finder, but who views their images there? Use wildcards to build iPhoto smart albums tried it with the two Airport Expresses (AXs) I have and it worked pretty well, although I got occasional but infrequent dropouts, mainly because I was doing everything wirelessly. It will probably work better on wired networks. streaming to the AX in my family room. I opened iTunes, selected my family room speakers, selected “Advanced>Open Stream...”, and typed in “http://localhost:8000”. The music started playing on my family room stereo. I used Panther‘s Fast User Switching feature and three user accounts: 3. The third account handled streaming to the AX in my study. I followed the same steps as the second account except that I selected the speakers in my study. The music started playing there too! The music wasn‘t completely in sync between AXs -- probably due to buffering -- but it played nonetheless. 1. The first account was the playback account, where the music originated. I set up Nicecast to stream iTunes’ output to port 8000 (the default). I then started a playlist playing. 2. The second account handled Yes...I want to join CMC Benefits: Monthly meetings, monthly newsletter, discounted book purchases, computer problem assistance, network with other Mac users, User Group Store, etc. This is an interesting little iPhoto feature I just found. When making a smart album, ? and * are wildcards. A ? will match “any single character,” so that K??e will match “Kate” and “Kyle.” A * will match “any number of characters,” including none, so K*e will match “Kate” and “Kill me” and “Ke.” I couldn‘t, however, discover how to search for the actual ? and * characters. Backslashes -- the usual escape character -- don‘t seem to work; K?ate is treated the same as Kate, but K\ate will find only “Kate.” Adding an ‘escape’ character (Control-Q, Esc) also failed. Date ___________________ Stream iTunes to multiple Airport Express units _____________________________________________________________ I came up with a novel way to get around the singlestream limitation of AirTunes, with a little help from Nicecast. I Referred by: ________________________ Name ________________________________________________________ Company Name ________________________________________________ Occupation ____________________________________________________ Address_______________________________________________________ City/State/Zip __________________________________________________ Phone (Home) ____________________Phone (Office)_________________ Email ________________________________________________________ Areas of Special Interest _________________________________________ Annual CMC Family Membership - $25.00 Make check payable to CMC and mail to: 41 Crossroads Plaza – PMB 1984, West Hartford, CT 06117 ...or register online with PayPal at www.ctmac.org 9 2004-2005 CMC OFFICERS AND BOARD MEMBERS President Don Dickey president@ctmac.org 860-232-2841 Vice President Rich Lenoce vicepres@ctmac.org 860-347-1789 Secretary Chris Hart secretary@ctmac.org 860-291-9393 Treasurer David Gerstein treasurer@ctmac.org Past President Joseph Arcuri pastpres@ctmac.org 860-485-1547 Newsletter Design George Maciel newsletter@ctmac.org 860-561-0319 Editor Deena Quilty editor@ctmac.org 860-678-8622 Webmaster Brian Desmond webmaster@ctmac.org (860) 668-8728 Raffles Robert Sawyer raffles@ctmac.org 860-677-7787 Download of the Month Debbie Foss dotm@ctmac.org 860-583-1165 Special Events Jack Bass programs@ctmac.org Ambassador Connie Scott ambassador@ctmac.org 860-584-9573 Caricatures by Bill Dougal of Lebanon, (860) 456-9041. Available for illustration assignments and event caricatures. 10 Upcoming Meetings! September 29, 2004 at UConn Medical Center 6 pm – Back to Basics This month’s Back To Basics session is all about wireless networking technology and Apple’s Airport products. Discussions will include parts needed, cost involved, ease of use, and security concerns. We’ll have demonstrations and will answer all of your questions. This session begins at 6:00, and will take place in the same conference room as our monthly meeting. Please note that there will not be a Back To Basics session in October. Discounted Books! FREE Raffle! CMC continues to offer our current members the opportunity to purchase any published book for either Mac or Windows at a 20% discount. All major publishers are carried by our source. Every CMC member who attends our monthly meetings gets a raffle ticket. This will give you a chance for one of our free prizes every month! You could win…t-shirts, toys, CDs, mugs, software …there’s always something we’re giving away! And don’t forget the Free table at the back of the room where everything is...FREE! Contact a Board Member or send an email to booksales@ctmac.org. Provide the book title, the publisher and the ISBN number, if possible, and he will check on its availability. Normally, the wait is not too long. For CMC Members Only! We need new members! Have your friends and co-workers join us for fun and learning about OSX and the Mac. User IDs and Passwords Total Membership: 138 7 pm – Celebrity Guest Night September’s meeting will feature Apple Senior Systems Engineer Dave Marra. Dave’s knowledge of the Macintosh platform and expertise in solving computer problems with the Macintosh make Dave an exciting and entertaining speaker. Dave Marra has conducted over 500 technology presentations, keynote addresses and workshops for businesses, schools, computer user groups and other professional organizations across the United States and Canada. His specialty areas include digital multimedia, internet technologies and crossplatform integration. In addition to his presentations and workshops, Dave has served as a technology consultant to numerous schools, businesses and technology advisory boards. If you’d like to learn more about Dave, visit his web site at www.marrathon.com. Coming Events.... Oct. 27 CMC Auction Nov. 17* Migration to OSX Dec. 15* Holiday Pizza Party & Ask the Geeks *(Early date due to holidays) Treasurer’s Report New Members! Account Balances Ending Checking Account Balance ..................$533.24 CMC Web Site www.ctmac.org User ID: XXXX (uppercase) Password: xxxxxxx (lowercase) Apple User Group Store www.applemugstore.com Aug. 1, 2004 - Nov. 30, 2004 User ID: xxxxx (lowercase) Password: xxxx (lowercase) Are You Receiving our CMC emails? We always send out advance notice of the meetings, and sometimes for big news or special events (like our bus trip to Macworld). If you’re not getting them, please email us at president@ctmac.org with your current email address and a subject line of: ADD TO CMC EMAIL LIST 11 Savings Account Balance...$3956.83 Balances as of September 13, 2004 CMC Classified Ads Members can Advertise For Sale, Swap, Trade, Giveaway or Want to Buy Items. This space can be used by members to advertise non-business items which they are no longer using or upgrading. This is a FREE service provided to our members. CMC Display Ad Rates Any business items or services can be advertised at the monthly rates below. Business Card ..........................$10.00 Quarter Page.............................$20.00 Half Page..................................$30.00 Full Page (or insert) .................$50.00 Submit all ad copy to the Editor on a disk with nothing else on it or e-mail it for insertion in the following issue. Display ads must be submitted camera-ready in .eps or .pdf format with all fonts & graphics embedded. Make your check payable to CMC. 41 Crossroads Plaza – PMB 1984 West Hartford, CT 06117 Meeting y l h t n o M – 7 pm r 29 Septembe est Night Gu Celebrity edical Center UConn M m cs” - 6 p i s a B o T s) “Back for detail 11 (see page CMC Meeting Location – a PDF document containing a visual direction guide to UConn Health Center is available on our website: http://www.ctmac.org. Print and take it with you to find us easily! Monthly meetings will be held at UConn Health Center in Farmington. When hands-on programs require computers for attendees, we will be using Middlesex Community College in Middletown. Directions to UCHC, Farmington Directions to Middlesex C.C. From I-84: Take Exit 39 (if coming from I-84 West, Exit 39 is after 39A). Turn right at first traffic light onto Route 4 East (Farmington Avenue). At third traffic light, turn right to enter the Health Center campus. Go around the main building to the right (at a Y in road), then take a left when you get to the Academic Entrance. The road becomes twoway there so you should be able to tell where to turn. (Do not go on straight to the two-way part). Then take the second right into parking lot A&B. this is close to the building. Go past the police station entrance on your left (small sign). You will see a continuation of the building with its own entrance area. This is the new research building. Enter on the ground floor, turn right and enter room EG-013 on your right. This is the first room on your right. The rest rooms are on your left as you enter. From the Hartford area, take Route 9 South. A few miles south of downtown Middletown on Route 9, take Exit 11 (Rt. 155, Randolph Road). At the end of the ramp (for both N. & S. bound), turn right onto Randolph Road. Continue to the traffic light at the top of the hill and turn left onto Saybrook Road. Go a quarter of a mile and turn right onto Reservoir Road. Travel past the stop sign, then take the first right onto Training Hill Road. Your first left will lead into the Middlesex Community College Campus parking area. When you arrive on campus, take a right onto Training Hill Road. Go to the second parking lot entrance and take a left into the upper lot. Directly in front of you will be Snow Hall. Enter Snow Hall and go up the stairs to the 2nd floor and go to the last room on the right, Room 509. 12 Monthly Meeting October 27 - 7 pm OS X Migration at UConn Medical Center October's CMC meeting will equip you with the knowledge you need to tackle a changeover to OS X. “Back To Basics” - 6 pm NEWSLETTER OF CONNECTICUT MACINTOSH CONNECTION, INC. Matrix Reloaded By Don Dickey, CMC president You’re probably thinking this article is about the movie, right? Sorry... it’s about how to prepare for reloading your Mac. With OS X Panther as stable and resilient as it is, you could suggest that an article on reloading is somewhat moot. Well, there are actually several instances that call for a reload. Buying that new iMac G5, for instance, might present just such a predicament. Upgrading your hard drive might be another. There are a few programs that can make a “carbon copy” of an existing drive for either a backup or to transfer data to a new drive. You may, however, wish to reinstall your software from scratch. Software that’s packaged with multiple serial numbers (such as Microsoft Office Teacher & Student Edition) can necessitate a fresh installation on each computer. OCTOBER, 2004 Begin by hunting down all your original software packages. Round them up, and also locate the required installation data such as serial numbers and activation codes. You might want to build a text file with all this information so it’s all in one consolidated place. I use OS X’s TextEdit for this purpose. Next, you need to replicate the installer for each program in a folder or collection of folders you can backup to your DVD or external drive. Be aware that some programs are fussy about where they’re installed from. In such cases, you can use either OS X’s Disk Utility or Roxio’s Toast Titanium to create a “disk image” of the original install CD(s). When you mount such an image later, the computer thinks you have the CD mounted and thereby fools the installer. While Disk Utility comes with O SX and is free, and usually works fine, I’ve found that Toast can handle a few situations that otherwise would fail using Disk Utility. The concept is simple: consolidate your software installers in one place for ease of use. Since many programs now consume the better part of an entire CD, you should not plan on using CD-R media for this project unless it’s all you have available. Finally, copy your folder of installers and serial number data to a DVD-R or backup drive. A word of caution: don’t throw out all your original discs! You may need them to vouch for being a licensed owner of the software, and you may have to use them should your new installer copy fail. There are two better alternatives. The first is to simply bump up to DVD-R media. This is a very practical solution if you have a Superdrive or other DVD burner. The other option is to use an external FireWire hard drive. If you have a newer Mac, you could opt for a USB 2.0 drive instead. For this purpose, you don’t need a huge drive. Even a modest 20 or 40 gb would do fine. You might not have a need for this tool right away, but when you do, particularly if you’re panicked by a hard drive crash, you’ll be glad you’re prepared. I’ve used my “master install DVD” several times and it was very convenient to have everything I needed in one place. Best of all, I was back to having fun with my Mac in a jiffy! 1 (see info on page 11) A Note of Thanks The President and Board of Directors wish to express our sincere gratitude to Dave Marra, Apple Senior Systems Engineer, for his wonderful presentation at our recent September meeting on all things new from the mothership! Dave covered a wide range of products including the new iMac G5, Airport Express, and Apple’s pro video editing software. We all learned something from this meeting, including a few power user secret tips for iPhoto! Inside this Issue Matrix Reloaded .................................. 1 Getting ProCare ................................... 3 Tidbits – Take Control..........................4 Bigger iDisk Brings Big Headaches ....5 Download of the Month .......................5 Review: Back-Up 2 ..............................6 iMac G5-Initial Impressions.................6 Meetings and Club News ...................11 CMC Auction! Nov. 17 This year's auction will be held on November 17. The current list of items for the auction can be found http://www.ctmac.org/auction04.php. Please remember auction items are paid for by cash or check only. Any nonmembers will be charged a 20% premium, so make sure that your membership is current. Also, there will be no checkouts permitted before 8 PM. Have fun, and may the highest bidder win. While we are busy soliciting donations from nationwide merchants and manufacturers and developers, we would also gratefully accept donations from individuals or local companies. A donation receipt for tax purposes can be provided in exchange. If you have something you'd like to donate, please contact Joe Arcuri at: pastpres@ctmac.org. And be sure to attend the auction at our November 17th meeting! Content Contributor Don Dickey Alsoft – Special Offer for CMC Contributing Author Rich Lenoce Alsoft, Inc., maker of popular software for the Macintosh, offers us these two special deals: Call 800-257-6381 to order. You must mention the special code to get this special pricing. This discount is not available on purchases made from the Alsoft web site. Discount Code: CTMAC11302004. Editor Deena Quilty Designer George Maciel Photographer Chris Hart Publisher Connecticut Macintosh Connection, Inc. 41 Crossroads Plaza PMB 1984 West Hartford, CT 06117 Printer Budget Printers 1718 Park Street Hartford, CT 06106 We welcome submissions from members! Please submit articles by first of the month for inclusion in our newsletter. There is much talent in our group; it would be great to have several member articles in each issue. IDiskWarrior3 $64.95 (reg. $79.95) MasterJuggler3 $69.95 (reg. $89.95) Shipping and handling is $9.95 Advertising Any business items or services can be advertised at the low monthly rates listed. Business Card............$10 Quarter Page ..............$20 Half Page....................$30 Full Page or insert......$50 Submit all ad copy to the Editor on a disk with nothing else on it or e-mail it for insertion in the following issue. Display ads must be submitted camera-ready in .eps or .pdf format with all fonts and graphics embedded. See Page 11 for info on FREE CMC member Classified advertising that is available. 2 This special offer expires Tuesday, November 30, 2004. Getting ProCare By Chris Hart CMC secretary When your Macintosh is giving you grief, it’s frustrating to get more grief from people on tech support lines, from a support web site that is slow as molasses, or from the employees at the very same place you bought your computer. If you frequently work under deadlines, this grief can affect your entire business. Apple recently unveiled a service which addresses this issue to some degree. They’re calling it ProCare <http:// www.apple.com/retail/procare/>, and it commits the Apple Store to treating you with priority, and turning around the repair of your computer as fast as is possible. That explains the name of course, which denotes the fact that this service is aimed primarily at those whose work depends on their Mac. Don’t confuse this new plan with the long-standing AppleCare coverage, which is different. AppleCare has two primary functions: (1) Extending the period of free Apple phone support from 3 months to 3 years. (2) Extending your hardware’s warranty from 1 year to 3. This coverage is applicable no matter where you bought your computer, and no matter which Apple authorized repair center you take your computer to. ProCare, on the other hand, covers the priority you receive at the local Apple Store. You’ll get faster attention at the Genius Bar, and if your computer has to be admitted to the Apple hospital for some TLC, it will be put at the top of the repair list. Note that you can only buy the ProCare plan at an Apple retail store, because you can only reap its benefits at the store. If you really want to make Apple’s day, you can certainly buy ProCare in addition to AppleCare. You’ll still have to pay $100 a year for ProCare, no matter what other plans you have in place. And you’ll always have to go down to the Apple Store in order to get the attention you’ve paid for. (By the way: Have fun trying to find the cost of ProCare on Apple’s web site. Just because they don’t sell this service through their web site, they have decided not to lists its cost on their site–an annoying oversight.) I see the ProCare service as only being of value to a small group of Mac users. For many, the speedy hardware service coverage is a primary feature of this service. But hardware failures just aren’t that common with most of Apple’s computers. For instance, I don’t see this plan as necessary for the typical owner of a PowerMac G5. However, if you’re someone who is constantly on the move with a PowerBook for example, this plan may the best way to get mobile again as quickly as possible when something breaks. But, there is something about the terms of Apple’s ProCare <www.apple. com/retail/procare/terms.html> that troubles me. Specifically, the sentence that says: ”…Apple is not responsible for Covered Products that are lost or stolen while in Apple’s possession…” Excuse me? Not liable? I give you my computer worth thousands of dollars, and you feel no obligation to safeguard its security? I was flabbergasted when I read this lack of accountability. Obviously this is the kind of corporate legalese used by companies so that they can cover their butt. But it’s still disappointing. You’ll have to decide for yourself if this issue is a “deal breaker.” Apple has certainly always been trustworthy with customer property, and I can’t envision that ever changing. As I mentioned before, ProCare requires that you be willing to carry your computer into the Apple Store whenever you have a problem with it. 3 Also keep in mind that the only things they’ll fix are the hardware and software created by Apple. If your system freezes every time you run your Canon scanner, or if you constantly get error messages when running Microsoft Word, then Apple will say “Sorry, but we can’t help you.” For most people, it’s these third-party products and how they interact with your particular computer setup that usually causes the most snafus. For those problems, you’ll still find yourself waiting on hold with Canon or Microsoft in order to sort these things out. Some software makers offer priority tech support plans. For example, Quark has a priority support plan for XPress, as does Adobe for their entire line of software products. But as soon as they sense that your problems are not specifically related to their software product, they’ll tell you “I’m sorry, but that’s not a problem I can help you with.” Your best alternative may be to hire your local Apple authorized service center (of the non-Apple Store variety) or a consultant who will come to you and troubleshoot your Mac’s problems. Many times these technicians already have the solutions to these problems in their brain or in their bag of tricks, and the gremlins can be dispatched quickly. Regardless of who you choose to call on, you’ll benefit from the fact that there are more choices than ever for computer support. Apple deserves recognition for continuing to offer more services to attend to the needs of their customers. Whether you’ve only recently switched to the Mac, or you were using them before anyone knew the word “iMac,” you don’t have to live with computer grief! Take Control from Tidbits submitted by Robert Sawyer TidBITS has released two new ebooks for Word users http:/www.tidbits.com Make the most of your investment in Microsoft Office by learning Word 2004's new features! Microsoft Office 2004 is expensive, so turn to Word expert Matt Neuburg and the 73-page "Take Control of What's New in Word 2004" for the best strategy for upgrading to Word 2004 and handling the 80 fonts that Word installs, complete with info about four fonts you should not delete and those you can delete to avoid conflicts, shorten your Font menu, and make Word launch faster. Save time and increase accuracy when typing and pasting text with smart buttons. Discover the new Navigation Pane and three workarounds to an annoying bug that may bite you. Learn how to use Notebook view effectively. Read an overview of important changes to Unicode support, styles, and using markup, plus find out what's new with AppleScript and what Microsoft put in the Toolbox. Bonus! Summaries of ten changes to preference panes, six subtle changes to menus, and three important changes to commonly used dialogs. Next is the 78-page "Take Control of What's New in Word 2004: Advanced Editing & Formatting," which picks up where the first book leaves off. Under Matt's expert guidance, you'll get help with the complex changes in Word's editing and formatting features. You'll learn the hidden rules that govern smart buttons and animated blue underlines and find out how to take advantage of new style features, including table and list styles. Matt also explains how to type special characters and teaches you three techniques for entering frequently used characters. Anyone relying on Unicode or unusual fonts needs Matt's real-world help and explanation of why fonts may not work as expected, including four solutions to common problems with old fonts. Finally, Matt explains in detail how you can use the new comment and revision tracking features most effectively. You can buy either volume by itself for $5 (be sure to use the 10-percent user group discount with code CPN31208MUG) or buy both together and get a 50-percent discount on the second volume (sorry, the user group discount can't be combined with the bundle discount). Book Details: “Take Control of What's New in Word 2004” http://www.tidbits.com/ takecontrol/word-1.html PDF format, 73 pages; free 27-page sample available Publication date: October 7, 2004 Price: $5.00 “Take Control of What's New in Word 2004: Advanced Editing & Formatting” http://www.tidbits.com/ takecontrol/word-2.html PDF format, 78 pages; free 21-page sample available Publication date: October 7, 2004 Price: $5.00 Be sure to take advantage of the discount code if you wish to order. Other titles include: • Take Control of Buying a Mac 1.0 • Take Control of Email with Apple Mail 1.1 • Take Control of Your AirPort Network 1.1.1 • Take Control of Spam with Apple Mail 1.1.2 • Take Control of Sharing Files in Panther 1.1.2 • Take Control of Customizing Panther 1.2 • Take Control of Upgrading to Panther 1.2.2 • Take Control of Users & Accounts in Panther 1.1 • Take Control of What’s New in Entourage 2004 1.0 • Take Control of Making Music w/GarageBand 1.0 Photos from the September 29th CMC Meeting Celebrity Guest Night featuring Dave Marra Photos by Chris Hart 4 Bigger iDisk Brings Big Headaches – Here’s how to fix it By Rich Lenoce CMC Vice President In late September, Apple increased the size of .Mac members’ iDisk to 250 mb. But few people were able to take advantage of the increased size. Many people got –14 errors or more likely they were told their local iDisk and online iDisk had different sizes. Here’s what’s going on and how to resolve it. When you first set up your iDisk in Panther, you were asked if you wanted to keep a local copy on your hard drive. This speeded up the iDisk service, enabling you to drop or save items to the local iDisk, while the computer performs the slower synchronizing process to the on-line iDisk in the background. Also, during this set-up procedure, you had an option to automatically perform this synchronization, or to do so manually. The local iDisk was created and matched the online iDisk exactly in both size and contents. When Apple decided to increase the size of the iDisk to 250 mb they also increased the potential size of .Mac mailboxes—but you still only have 250 mb total as that number is shared by both services. You will need to go into your .Mac account and decide on the size you wish to allocate to iDisk and .Mac mail. That needs to be done prior to synchronizing the sizes between your online and local iDisks. To adjust your iDisk and Mail allocations, go to http://www.mac.com and log in to the .Mac service. Scroll down to the menu on the left of the screen and select Account. You will now see the default setting Apple has given to your iDisk and mail accounts. From the right column select Storage Settings. A new screen will come up that will give you a graphical breakdown of your mail and iDisk allocations, as well as a pull-down menu to Manage Your Storage. Select the pull down menu and adjust the settings to meet your needs. Click Save. You have now set the online iDisk size, but now we have to enable that change locally. Return to the Finder and open your System Preferences located in the Dock or by going to the Apple Menu and selecting System Preferences. Select the network preference labeled .Mac. The preference will open; then select iDisk. You will see by the graphic bar on the top of the preference pane that your online iDisk size has increased, but if you were to check your local iDisk in the Finder, you’d find it would still be only 100 mb in size. To resize the local disk, uncheck the selection Create a Local Copy of Your iDisk. Close the preference using the red close button in the upper left corner of the preference pane. You will be prompted with a message, Are you sure you want to turn off iDisk? Be sure to select Turn off local iDisk, then close the preference pane again with the red close button. Reopen the .Mac system preference and reselect the iDisk pane. Now check the box that says Create a Local Copy of Your iDisk and set the iDisk to synchronize Automatically. Close the preference pane and your computer will recreate the local iDisk at the proper size with the proper contents. You won’t be able to access your local iDisk while this process is being performed so be patient—and I do mean patient. It can take several minutes or even an entire day for the computer to perform this task, depending on how busy the .Mac servers are and how your computer’s hard drive and iDisk are configured. 5 Download of the Month submitted by Debi Foss GraphicConverter 5.23 If you don't have this on your machine, get with the program–it opens anything! It is shareware, but makes you wait just a few moments if you don't use it often enough to bother paying for it. Don't wait until you need it; download it now. Not “one of the best” shareware products for the Mac; it is THE best! Product Description: • Imports about 170 graphic file formats • Exports about 45 graphic file formats • Browser • Batch conversion with additional actions • Slide show • Easy creation of optimized images for the Internet • Basic images manipulation • Enhanced images manipulation • AppleScript support • Support for the special features of Mac OS 8, 9 and Mac OS X • Support of new technologies like LuraWave LWF format http://www.lemkesoft.de/en/ graphdownload.htm Product Requirements: Mac OS 8.6 or higher Review: Backup 2.02 Archiving and Backing Up Large Projects By Rich Lenoce CMC Vice President Tape drives such as DLT have been the traditional backup media for professionals who deal with large projects that won’t fit on standard 4.3 gigabyte DVD-R discs. Such projects require the project’s file structure be maintained on the backup media so that the so that the application that created the project can find all associated files when it’s restored. This is particularly important to video professionals or enthusiasts, since one 30-minute DV file can alone run 6 gigabytes in size, which would spread over two DVDRs. All the assets of an iMovie, Final Cut or DVD Studio Pro project can run to 20, 30 or even 100 gigabytes. Given those large file and project sizes, software can be used to break up large project folders and files among consecutive DVD-Rs. Apple’s Backup software is the perfect tool for backing up large projects to multiple CDs or DVDs. .Mac membership. Backup does all that’s needed–easily and efficiently. Initial Impressions of the iMac G5 When starting any media project, all files should be organized in a single project folder, which can include other folders (video, audio, graphics, etc.), as well as the project file. This allows speedy file access, and keeps files organized and ready for backup. by Chris Hart, CMC Secretary To perform a backup, make sure no boxes are checked in Backup’s Main Window. Just drag the project folder to Backup’s main window, making sure the check box is checked. Select Backup to CD/DVD from the pull down menu, insert a DVD and click Backup Now. Backup will start copying the information, burning and verifying each disc and prompting you when to insert a new disk. It will tell you how to name and number your backup discs. The last disc burned is referred to as the Master Disc. Restoring a project is easy. In Backup, select Restore from CD/DVD from the pull down menu and you will be prompted to insert the Master Disc. Select where to restore the project and press Restore Project. Apple’s Backup is free, too. Mac The only software you don’t have to members. If you include the cost of use Backup for is Apple’s own iDVD. .Mac membership, iDVD has an it is less expensive archive feature then similar highthat takes all end backup utilities the original that can perform video footage the same function. (before MPEG I tried using StuffIt 2 encoding), Deluxe–it wouldn’t graphics, segment the commusic and pressed files into project files 4.3 gigabyte segand archives ments, but instead them to sepainto smaller segrate DVDs. ments that would use many disks. Retrospect will backup to 1 Select Your Destination DVD in segments, but at a 2 Fetch Your Files price equivalent to my 3 Schedule Your Backup 6 On the last day of August, Apple introduced the redesigned iMac G5. This fourth generation of the computer that first changed Apple’s fate in 1998, has been highly anticipated. In very uncharacteristic fashion, Apple fed that anticipation by announcing the forthcoming model revision several months prior. They had no choice, as supplies of the iMac G4 were dwindling, and retailers and customers wanted to know what was going on. At a recent CMC meeting, a member took advantage of our Q&A session to ask whether or not he should await this forthcoming iMac. Rich Lenoce and I were in agreement and advised this gentleman to wait and take advantage of the more up to date technology. You’ll be happy to know that we won’t need to retract our advice. Only moments into my first encounter with the handsome iMac G5, I was tempted to whip out my credit card and get one for myself. This computer is so clean in its design, yet so capable, that it‘s going to be very tempting for buyers of all sorts; even professionals. You’ll understand that temptation when you hear the price points. You can have one of these new iMacs for $1300. If you want a faster processor, bigger screen or DVD burner, you can choose between the $1500 and $1900 models. Why should a computer over $1000 be considered a good value? Because the iMac G5 is a complete package of a fast computer, LCD screen, and bundled software, that comes in a dramatically slim unit that is suspended over your desktop by a sleek aluminum pedestal. You simply can not find a comparable package with the same combination of features, simplicity, compactness, and cool factor for less money. While LCD screen prices are constantly dropping in price, Apple continues to take the high road with widescreen LCD displays that provide the highest quality picture possible. Whether you’re looking at the version of the iMac G5 with a 17" or 20" screen, you’ll see a very bright LCD screen that can be viewed from a wide variety of angles. Of note for those who have limited eyesight, is the ability to magnify the screen’s image (by lowering the pixel resolution), without text becoming a fuzzy blob. continued on page 7 continued from page 6 Some people have criticized the positioning of the iMac’s ports as being conspicuous. My feeling is that their location on the back is not bad at all. Especially since most users will back the computer up against a wall. Anyone concerned with the appearance of cables simply has to put some attention towards securing them. The iMac’s aluminum pedestal provides the perfect means for routing and securing cables where they will call less attention to themselves. In all my years of computer consulting, I have encountered a handful of people who are as obsessed as Apple’s CEO with the minimalist appearance of the computer on their desk. For such perfectionists, buying peripheral cables that are silver or white in color is an option. Apple listened to their customers when they put USB and FireWire ports on the front panel of the PowerMac G5 series of tower computers. It’s unfortunate that they didn’t remember this lesson when it came time to design this iMac. They could have easily stowed these ports behind a flip down door, which would provide convenience, yet maintain the flawless facade. One solution to this situation would be to employ extension cables – permanently connect one end to the appropriate port on the back of the iMac and keep the other end in a convenient location, for easy connection to the device or your choosing. Also important to note when discussing the issue of neatness is the new iMac’s lack of an external power supply. The PowerMac G4 Cube is one of Apple‘s most notorious “computer-as-design” statements, and it was unsuccessful for a variety of reasons, including an inflated price tag. A prominent flaw that weighed down the Cube’s appeal was a massive external power supply, that one had to find a place for. The new iMac’s builtin power supply avoids that hindrance. In fact, if you were to employ all the optional wireless capabilities possible with the iMac G5, you could get away with having the power cord as the only cable hanging off of it. Such freedom is made possible by Wi-Fi and Bluetooth technologies. The iMac G5’s internal Airport Extreme (Wi-Fi) card slot provides you with the ability to use a wireless network (be it an Apple Airport base station or other brand of 802.11b/g wireless broadband router). Bluetooth is a recent wireless technology development, that is beginning to see widespread implementation in consumer electronics. It provides a short distance connection (within approximately 30') to devices equipped with Bluetooth capability. That list of devices currently includes keyboards, mice, printers, PDAs, and cell phones. It’s important to note that the internal Bluetooth option on the iMac G5 can only be acquired as part of a “build to order” configuration at the Apple Store. The Bluetooth component is built into the system in a way which can not be duplicated after purchase. So, if you value freedom from cables, definitely take this into consideration before placing your order. Another detail to consider is the cost of a potential RAM upgrade. Apple installs 256 megabytes of this memory at the factory, which is fine for usage limited to email, web browsing, word processing and some iPhoto work. However, if you use the iMovie, iDVD, or GarageBand components of the included iLife package on a regular basis, then you will definitely want to consider a RAM upgrade. If you’re a professional, running such programs as Quark, Photoshop, Illustrator, then such an upgrade is essential and will pay off in productivity. The iMac G5’s dual RAM slots provide both upgrade versatility, and the potential for speed improvement. When the iMac’s intelligent circuitry sees that you have installed a matching pair of RAM modules, it adapts accordingly with its ability to treat this pair of modules as one, large block of RAM. The overall speed improvement is noticeable and of significant benefit when using the iLife suite of programs, for example. Apple’s latest lineup of flat panel LCD Cinema Displays is free of ventilation holes, providing for a flawless aluminum shell. Since the G5 processor inside the new iMac produces too much heat for such a design to be possible, Apple had to incorporate some method of ventilation. We all know how kids love to stick things into vents and grilles. So, it was likely an important priority within Apple to design a vent that doesn‘t scream “come play with me, kids.” Apple achieved this 7 through the use of a narrow, recessed slot on the top rear. In comparison to a perforated grille approach, this design simultaneously provides an inconspicuous appearance, and discourages the little people of the world from poking and prodding. Speaking of the children, I suspect the iMac’s CD/DVD disc slot will be a reach for them, as it’s located at the highest point on the right side of the computer. Adults may prefer this position, as it prevents discs from bumping into objects standing on their desk. But small kids may need to get on their tippy toes to reach up there. It’s interesting to note that the back of this new computer is imprinted with the word “iMac” instead of an eaten fruit logo. This breaks Apple’s common design methodology, which traditionally eschews prominent model labels. As the Mac platform has always attracted its share of diehard computer enthusiasts, many of them choose to customize their macs with unique paint schemes or decals/skins. I envision the iMac G5 as being very popular with customizers, and imagine it won’t be long before Mac enthusiast web sites start posting photos of unique creations. Not that the iMac G5 needs customization. It will keep most buyers happy just as it is out of the box: powerful, elegant, versatile, and easy to use. I’m very impressed that Apple put this system together for a starting price of $1300, and consider it to be the best buy in Apple‘s computer product line. At the time of writing, several journalists have praised the iMac G5. Highly regarded columnists such as The Wall Street Journal’s Walter Mossberg, and The New York Times’ David Pogue have already written detailed reviews. Mike Wendland of The Detroit Free Press went so far as to say “The new G5 iMac is the finest personal computer I’ve ever used, hands down. Nothing comes close. If you have ever thought of switching from a Windows-based PC to a Mac, this is the deal-clincher. It is simply a stunning machine both to look at and to use.” The full text of these reviews are available online: David Pogue, NY Times http://www.nytimes.com /2004/09/16/technology/circuits/16stat.html Walter Mossberg, Wall Street Journal http:// ptech.wsj.com/archive/ptech-20040923.html Mike Wendland, Detroit Free Press: http:// www.freep.com/money/tech/mwendland5e_2004 1005.htm Nicholas Pyers (nicholas@nicholaspyers.com) Puzzle: Apple Software Apple Computer not only produces cool hardware like the iMac G5, 30-inch cinema display and iPod, they also produce some great software packages. Some of these are bundled free of charge with their computer systems, while others are commercial applications aimed for the high end user. Here is a crossword based on some of Apple’s software packages. Across Down 2 3 6 7 11 12 14 15 16 18 1 2 4 5 8 9 10 13 17 19 21 24 20 22 23 25 The power to synchronize your digital life. Digital music, photography, movies and DVD creation. Manage your calendars and share them online. Composition, notation and audio production. Turn your Mac into a recording studio. Get, save, organize, share and enjoy digital photos. Produce music with thousands of loops. A new generation of presentation software. Create powerful Java server applications. Sol Robots’ application that allows you to easily make classroom style crossword and word search puzzles. Get all you need to create pro documents. The leading database application for workgroups. Affordable audio composition and production. The world’s most advanced OS. The fastest and easiest to use web browser. Shop for music, burn CDs, sync iPod. For Mac and PC. Making digital movies is as fun as using your iMac. The beauty of HD. The simplicity of DV. Now you can edit video like a professional. High-performance data sharing. Essential for film and video production Advanced effects compositing with network rendering. Put your Desktop Movies and digital photos in motion. Introducing real-time motion graphics design. The SAN file system for Mac OS X. The common windowing environment for UNIX systems. SOLUTION on PAGE 9 8 Solution: Apple Software (Puzzle on page 8) Credits Thanks to Sol Robots for providing a fully licensed version of the Mac OS X version of Crossword Forge to generate this puzzle. A copy of this puzzle, along with the solution, is also available from my website, www.nicholaspyers.com. <www.nicholaspyers.com/puzzles/20040913-applesoftware/> Interested in reprinting this puzzle? Any non-profit Apple Macintosh User Group (MUG) may re-print, free of charge, any of the puzzles created by Nicholas Pyers found in the /puzzles directory of the nicholaspyers.com websites. There are just a couple of conditions, which basically boil down to letting us know - for the full details please visit http://www.nicholaspyers.com/reprints. Discussions about this puzzle may also occur on the appropriate Australian Computer News Network (ACNN) mailing list(s)- please visit http://www.zonian.net.au/lists for more details. Copyright October 2004, Nicholas Pyers. The MUG Store Yes...I want to join CMC The MUG store always has great deals for members. This month's highlights include: • Brand new 15" PowerBooks with Combo for only $1499 • Factory Refurbished iPods starting at $179 • Brand new custom-configured iBooks with Combo $1188 • An exclusive $100 rebate on any installed RAM in selected new Macs! Don't forget our huge blowout and specials section, including great deals on Bose speakers, Apple software and more! Plus... - Free freight on all orders - Knowledgeable consultants - Blowout deals - One percent goes back to your group in merchandise User ID and Password for CMC members: Aug. 1, 2004 - Nov. 30, 2004 Benefits: Monthly meetings, monthly newsletter, discounted book purchases, computer problem assistance, network with other Mac users, User Group Store, etc. Date ___________________ Referred by: ________________________ Name ________________________________________________________ Company Name ________________________________________________ Occupation ____________________________________________________ Address_______________________________________________________ City/State/Zip __________________________________________________ Phone (Home) ____________________Phone (Office)_________________ Email ________________________________________________________ Areas of Special Interest _________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________ User ID: xxxxx (lowercase) Password: xxxx (lowercase) Annual CMC Family Membership - $25.00 These offers and more are available to members of U.S. user groups. Make check payable to CMC and mail to: 41 Crossroads Plaza – PMB 1984, West Hartford, CT 06117 ...or register online with PayPal at www.ctmac.org http://www.applemugstore.com 9 2004-2005 CMC Officers and Board Members President Don Dickey president@ctmac.org 860-232-2841 Vice President Rich Lenoce vicepres@ctmac.org 860-347-1789 Secretary Chris Hart secretary@ctmac.org 860-291-9393 Treasurer David Gerstein treasurer@ctmac.org Past President Joseph Arcuri pastpres@ctmac.org 860-485-1547 Newsletter Design George Maciel newsletter@ctmac.org 860-561-0319 Editor Deena Quilty editor@ctmac.org 860-678-8622 Webmaster Brian Desmond webmaster@ctmac.org (860) 668-8728 Raffles Robert Sawyer raffles@ctmac.org 860-677-7787 Download of the Month Debbie Foss dotm@ctmac.org 860-583-1165 Special Events Jack Bass programs@ctmac.org Ambassador Connie Scott ambassador@ctmac.org 860-584-9573 Caricatures by Bill Dougal of Lebanon, (860) 456-9041. Available for illustration assignments and event caricatures. 10 CMC Monthly Meeting October 27, 2004 at UConn Medical Center 6 pm – Back to Basics Browser Basics–understand how to use and configure your Internet browser. We'll be exploring a number of browsers under OSX and how to best configure them to your web surfing needs. Pros and cons of different browsers will be discussed. 7 pm – OS X Migration October's CMC meeting will equip you with the knowledge you need to tackle a changeover to OS X. If you're still using OS 9, your computer is probably feeling long in the tooth. Moving to OS X will make you feel like a reborn Mac User! CMC Secretary, Chris Hart, will present a thorough demonstration and exploration of Mac OS X. What do you need to know before making the leap? This is the place to find out. Topics will include hardware requirements, expenses involved, planning and preparing, and learning to love OS X! Discounted Books! FREE Raffle! CMC continues to offer our current members the opportunity to purchase any published book for either Mac or Windows at a 20% discount. All major publishers are carried by our source. Every CMC member who attends our monthly meetings gets a raffle ticket. This will give you a chance for one of our free prizes every month! You could win…t-shirts, toys, CDs, mugs, software …there’s always something we’re giving away! And don’t forget the Free table at the back of the room where everything is...FREE! Contact a Board Member or send an email to booksales@ctmac.org. Provide the book title, the publisher and the ISBN number, if possible, and he will check on its availability. Normally, the wait is not too long. Treasurer’s Report New Members! We need new members! Have your friends and co-workers join us for fun and learning about OSX and the Mac. SPECIAL NOTICE! Changes regarding access to the CMC website: www.ctmac.org • Member expiration date • Membership number Total Membership: 139 Account Balances Checking Balance ................$470.69 Savings Balance ................$3958.61 Balances as of October 6, 2004 FREE Classified Ads Please make a note of it now! CMC Members can Advertise For Sale, Swap, Trade, Giveaway or Want to Buy Items. This space can be used by members to advertise non-business items which they are no longer using or upgrading. This is a FREE service provided to our members. Send submissions via email to editor@ctmac.org Upcoming Events Got Mail? Display Ad Rates Oct. 27 OS X Migration Nov. 17* CMC Auction (see pg.2) Are You Receiving our CMC emails? Any business items or services can be advertised at the low monthly rates listed below. Business Card ...................$10.00 Quarter Page.....................$20.00 Half Page .........................$30.00 Full Page (or insert) ............$50.00 Whether you intend to upgrade your current computer to OS X, or buy a new one that's ready to roll, this presentation will provide you with the information you need. Bring your list of questions, and leave some room on that notepad for the answers! Even if you've already transitioned to OS X, it's a safe bet you'll learn something new. Dec. 15* Holiday Pizza Party & Ask the Geeks *(Early dates due to holidays) Jan. 26 iDVD Feb. 23 Maintaining Your Mac If you have a program you are interested in, email Rich Lenoce at: vicepres@ctmac.org (for free shipping at MacConnection) • Web site username & password ...are now located on your newsletter mailing label. We always send out advance notice of the meetings, and sometimes for big news or special events (like our bus trip to Macworld). If you’re not getting them, please email us at president@ctmac.org with your current email address and a subject line of: ADD TO CMC EMAIL LIST 11 Submit all ad copy to the Editor on a disk (with nothing else on it) or e-mail it to editor@ctmac.org for insertion in the following issue. Display ads must be submitted camera-ready in eps or pdf format with all fonts and graphics embedded. Make check payable to CMC. 41 Crossroads Plaza – PMB 1984 West Hartford, CT 06117 Meeting y l h t n o M – 7 pm 7 October 2 ation r OS X Mig al Center edic UConn M m cs” - 6 p i s a B o T “Back tails) 11 for de (see page CMC Meeting Location – a PDF document containing a visual direction guide to UConn Health Center is available on our website: http://www.ctmac.org. Print and take it with you to find us easily! Monthly meetings will be held at UConn Health Center in Farmington. When hands-on programs require computers for attendees, we will be using Middlesex Community College in Middletown. Directions to UCHC, Farmington Directions to Middlesex C.C. From I-84: Take Exit 39 (if coming from I-84 West, Exit 39 is after 39A). Turn right at first traffic light onto Route 4 East (Farmington Avenue). At third traffic light, turn right to enter the Health Center campus. Go around the main building to the right (at a Y in road), then take a left when you get to the Academic Entrance. The road becomes twoway there so you should be able to tell where to turn. (Do not go on straight to the two-way part). Then take the second right into parking lot A&B. this is close to the building. Go past the police station entrance on your left (small sign). You will see a continuation of the building with its own entrance area. This is the new research building. Enter on the ground floor, turn right and enter room EG-013 on your right. This is the first room on your right. The rest rooms are on your left as you enter. From the Hartford area, take Route 9 South. A few miles south of downtown Middletown on Route 9, take Exit 11 (Rt. 155, Randolph Road). At the end of the ramp (for both N. & S. bound), turn right onto Randolph Road. Continue to the traffic light at the top of the hill and turn left onto Saybrook Road. Go a quarter of a mile and turn right onto Reservoir Road. Travel past the stop sign, then take the first right onto Training Hill Road. Your first left will lead into the Middlesex Community College Campus parking area. When you arrive on campus, take a right onto Training Hill Road. Go to the second parking lot entrance and take a left into the upper lot. Directly in front of you will be Snow Hall. Enter Snow Hall and go up the stairs to the 2nd floor and go to the last room on the right, Room 509. 12 Monthly Meeting December 15 - 7 pm Holiday Pizza Party & Ask The Geeks at UConn Medical Center “Back To Basics” - 6 pm NEWSLETTER OF CONNECTICUT MACINTOSH CONNECTION, INC. Best Free Software By Don Dickey, CMC president Most of us enjoy using some of the great free software available for our Macs. These usually amount to small “utilities” that either make our computing just a little bit easier or solve a small problem. They rarely fall into the “killer app” category – software that we’d be hard pressed to live without once accustomed to. While some might say Apple’s free iTunes music software could be their killer app, for me (and many of my friends), Palm Desktop has got me by my mouse tail. Palm Desktop actually began life as an Apple product, specifically as Claris Organizer. I remember trying it back then, and while it was nice, I didn’t have a need for what it did. Maybe life was less complicated then, or maybe my lifestyle was less computer-centric. In any case, Palm acquired the program from Apple’s Claris division, improved it somewhat, and added “hooks” so it could easily exchange data with their handheld computers. A few years ago, several friends had started using Palm handhelds. They swore by these gadgets, and had them clipped to their belts everywhere they went. I didn’t think I wasn’t ready for one yet, but after some prodding I decided to download and try their software. I had a few basic needs. One was to more easily manage my contact database. This started in a DOS program called Nutshell which later grew DECEMBER 2004 up into what we now know as FileMaker. As good as FileMaker was, I wanted a better way to see and sort contacts, and an easier way to print address labels and envelopes. I also wanted a way to clear my wallet of the dozen or two Post-It notes stuck inside. Palm’s memos fit that bill nicely. Finally, I wanted a simple calendar where I could note appointments and meetings. Palm Desktop was a natural here. Better yet, it even offers to cross link appointments to the contacts automatically. The Palm Desktop has a great ToDo manager. I’m afraid to get too wrapped up with this feature, lest my wife get a hold of it and start entering honey-doos! Nuff said. Soon the software was helping run my business, and I was hooked. I can even say it helped me be more productive. It wasn’t long before I wanted to take all this data with me, and be able to edit or add to it out of the office. Enter my first Palm organizer, a Palm IIIc. The point I’m trying to make here is not to sell you on the need for a Palm handheld. It’s that you can reap many of the benefits by simply using their great software on your Mac. While a handheld will set you back $100 or more, the software is completely free! Sure, you could use Apple’s Address Book for your contacts, iCal for your calendar, and TextEdit for your memos. They’re all free too, but they’re not at all integrated with each other. The nice thing about Palm Desktop is that the whole is Continued on page 2 1 (see info on page 11) A Note of Thanks The President and Board of Directors wish to express our sincere gratitude to Chris Hart for his wonderful presentation at our recent October meeting on migrating to OS X! Chris covered a wide range of issues including the reasons you should consider upgrading if you’re still running an older OS. With OS X shipping on all new Macs, you'll be forced to switch if you upgrade to a new machine. The rest of us have a choice. Fortunately, it’s a good one, and Chris explained why. Inside this Issue Best Free Software............................... 1 Review: Delicious Library................... 3 Book Review Mac OSX Helpline.........4 Download of the Month .......................4 Powerbook 1400 - Old is New .............5 Complete List of Web Browsers ..........6 Auction Photos .....................................9 MUG Special Offers.............................8 Meetings and Club News ...................11 Continued from page 1 actually worth more than the sum of its parts. The only downside is that it might lead you to want a Palm handheld down the road. My advice is to cross that bridge when you get there. Editor Deena Quilty Content Contributor Don Dickey Contributing Author Rich Lenoce Designer George Maciel Photographer John Scott Chris Hart Publisher Connecticut Macintosh Connection, Inc. 41 Crossroads Plaza PMB 1984 West Hartford, CT 06117 Printer Budget Printers 1718 Park Street Hartford, CT 06106 We welcome submissions from members! Please submit articles by first of the month for inclusion in our newsletter. There is much talent in our group; it would be great to have several member articles in each issue. Another nice feature about Palm Desktop is its ability to share its data. I routinely export contacts as vCards which are easily dropped into the OS X AddressBook. This makes email addresses immediately available in the OS X Mail program. I also export a vCal file to drop on my iPod along with the vCards. If you already have an iPod, you might not even crave a Palm if you carry your contacts and appointments on your pod. One very nice feature is automatic birthdays. If you enter a contact’s birthday in the address form, it’s automatically transferred onto the calendar along with a reminder 5 days in advance...just enough time to get a card in the mail! Advertising Any business items or services can be advertised at the low monthly rates listed. Business Card............$10 Quarter Page ..............$20 Half Page....................$30 Full Page or insert......$50 Submit all ad copy to the Editor on a disk with nothing else on it or e-mail it for insertion in the following issue. Display ads must be submitted camera-ready in .eps or .pdf format with all fonts and graphics embedded. See Page 11 for info on FREE CMC member Classified advertising that is available. 2 Another useful feature is Categories. You can assign just about anything (contact, ToDo, appointment, memo, etc.) to a category, such as Personal or Business. It’s useful to be able to sort names or notes by category, for instance. The software supports multiple users, each with their own set of data. It does not, however, support showing multiple calendars simultaneously each in their own color as iCal now does. Synchronizing data between users can be tricky but is possible. Moving your data between computers is easy, however. Just copy the Palm folder from the Documents folder on your main Mac to the same folder on any other Mac. I’ll wrap this up by encouraging you to give Palm Desktop a try if you’re not already using it. Palm Desktop runs in either OS 9 or OS X. Visit www.palmOne.com for a download link. We all love to have fun with our Macs, but it’s especially nice when it’s free! Delicious Library that lets you import about 750 items an hour (assuming you can move your arms that fast). At that rate the staff of the new downtown Seattle Central Library could work together to import all of their 1.4 million books into Delicious Library in just over 5 hours. Catalogues Your Media Files By Bill Davies Let me start this review by saying that I finally found a good use for my iSight videocam. I don’t mean to be a complete Luddite, but I just never really saw the need to videoconference on the computer. But then I started hearing people talk about this application called Delicious Library so I decided to take a look. Delicious Library 3.0 is a program for cataloging and managing your “library” of books, movies, music, DVDs, and video games. Quite frankly, that‘s not a task that I‘m interested in, and in our house we have far too many books to even tempt me to start such a project. And you can imagine how boring a cataloging program can be. That’s why you need to look at Delicious Library–to see what happens when the developers get just a teensy bit creative. Sure, you can type in all your listings by hand. But Delicious Library offers support for barcode scanning using an iSight or Bluetooth barcode scanner, automatic downloading of information about the scanned media from Amazon (including similar items, user reviews, etc.), the ability to track items lent to people, the ability to send recommendations about a book to friends, and much more. To see how well it worked, I pulled out my son’s “Superman Diamond Anniversary Edition” DVD, launched Delicious Library on our G4 iMac, and all of a sudden a little window on the screen popped open and I was looking at myself. So the iSight turned itself on automatically and was ready for input! I then held up the back of the DVD so that the iSight could read the bar code. This took a bit of experimentation because (having not read the documentation) I was unclear how close or how far to hold the DVD case from the camera. Nothing seemed to happen, so I created a new “card” in the library and held the bar code a bit closer to the camera, letting the image fill approximately 10% of the viewable area. Then presto, without me typing anything, Delicious Library read the bar code, queried Amazon.com for details on the publication (author, release date, current value, description, and even a highresolution picture of the cover), and filled in all the information for me. If you think this is clever, you‘re not the only one, as this product was awarded O’Reilly’s Mac OS X Innovators Award for 2004. And now you know why I think I finally found a good use for my iSight camera! I suspect that the faster your Mac, the faster the iSight processes every single frame of digital video, but I have to say it was not too bad on our G4 iMac. And I have to wonder about books we’ve inherited from both our parents or friends; I mean, did they even have bar codes in the 1960’s? I’ll have to pull out some of those old books and see. Quoting from Delicious Software, “using the same technology found in $800 industrial-strength CCD barcode scanners, Delicious Library reads every single frame of digital video; seeki n g o u t , t a rg e t i n g , a n d instantly decoding any visible barcodes.” This results in a seamless process of scanning 3 Once you get the information in, how do you get it out? Delicious Library offers iPod sync so you can take your catalog with you, and lets you issue voice commands to initiate a search, and if you can’t remember who wrote that book you liked but you remember the cover, Delicious Library lets you browse the cover art. (You can also just type part of an author or book name and get back the results that match.) And not surprisingly, you can find related items by the same author or subject on Amazon, list parts of your collection for sale, etc. While I can’t prove it, I’ll speculate that Delicious Monster Software receives a small commission from every Amazon sale they generate. Sound great? Ready to start cataloging? You can download the software and enter up to 25 items without paying a cent, by visiting http://www.delicious-monster.com. Delicious Library is the first release from Delicious Monster Software, a new company formed by two former employees of the Omni Group, makers of OmniWeb and OmniGraffle. The cost is $40 and it works only on OS X. (c) Bill Davies, MacNexus 2004. May be reprinted by any Mac user group with attribution to MacNexus. Book Review: Mac OS X Help Line, Panther Edition by Elsa Travisano Ted Landau’s Mac OS X Help Line, Panther Edition is the Manhattan Yellow Pages of Macintosh troubleshooting books. Weighing in at a massive 1144 pages, this invaluable compendium covers just about any technical problem you’re likely to encounter in Mac OS X 10.3. As Mary Poppins once said, “well begun is half done.” Landau is the founder of MacFixit <www.macfixit.com>, the premier Mac troubleshooting website. He starts out by giving readers a thorough grounding in Mac OS X, with an emphasis on topics that are particularly pertinent to troubleshooting like fonts, directories and permissions. The various methods of installing, restoring, backing up and uninstalling OS X are then detailed, along with what to do when things go wrong. The bulk of the book delves into the methods and tools for solving specific problems. Chapters deal with crash prevention and recovery, troubleshooting printing and networking, working with files, the Classic environment and troubleshooting the iApps and iPod. There’s also a chapter on Unix, to help readers harness the powerful tools of the command line for troubleshooting. Detailed contents and a thorough index make short work of finding what you need to know to extract yourself from whatever technological quagmire you may find yourself in. In spite of its heft, Mac OS X Help Line is the book I’m most likely to take along on Mac consulting calls. Time after time, it delivers the goods. Very highly recommended. Mac OS X Help Line, Panther Edition by Ted Landau. 1144 pp. Peachpit Press, 2004. $39.99 ©2004 Elsa Travisano. This article originally appeared in Newsbreak, the newsletter of MUG ONE – Macintosh User Group of Oneonta, NY. Hot Tips: Did you know that you can CONTROL click on words in most OS X applications to bring up a contextual menu which includes access to the built-in spelling checker? You can check the spelling of words, find the correct spelling of and replace misspelled words, and turn the check-asyou-type feature on or off. – from Don Dickey Photos are removed from iPhoto’s master library when you remove them from a photo album. Prior versions of iPhoto didn't allow this. But, version 4 allows you to do COMMAND-OPTION-DELETE which removes the photo from both the album and the library simultaneously. This also works in iTunes with playlists and the master music library. – from Chris Hart 4 Download of the Month submitted by Debi Foss Carbon Copy Cloner Having just bought a larger second hard drive, (those dratted Clay Aiken photos, you know!), I had to figure out how to install it and how to format it and get an operating system on it, etc.... Don, our esteemed President, recommended Carbon Copy Cloner 2.3! As more club members migrate to OS X, I figure you may have a use for this program also. So here it is. Two versions available, for OS X pre and post version 10.2. From the website: Have you ever wanted a simple, complete, bootable backup of your hard drive? Have you ever wanted to upgrade to a larger hard drive with minimal hassle and without reinstalling your OS and all of your applications? Have you ever wanted to move your entire Mac OS X installation to a new computer? Then CCC is the tool for you! CCC makes these tasks simple by harnessing the Unix power built into Mac OS X. In addition to the features that CCC has provided in the past, version 2 offers synchronization of the source and target as well as scheduled backup tasks. Now you can setup a regular backup regimen that occurs in the background, even if you are not logged in! http://www.bombich.com/ software/files/cccloner.dmg PowerBook 1400: Everything Old is New Again good episode of The Apprentice. My goal–spend almost no money. What could be done with OS 7.5.3? As I found out, quite a bit!!! By Rich Lenoce CMC Vice President First, I upgraded to the free 7.6.1. This would allow me to run the latest Classic versions of Netscape Communicator. The 56k Internet connection was annoying so I put out a call to the CMC Board asking them for suggestions about getting this PowerBook on broadband. Joe Arcuri recommended wireless. Wireless? This thing was built in 1996! That's five years before Airport 802.11b or any other wireless standard with an alphabetical designation. Back in 1996, I paid over three thousand dollars for a new PowerBook 1400. I probably spent another thousand on accessories including a Zip drive, expensive RAM, a PC-card modem, two extra batteries, a multi-battery charger, and a VGA-out card–yes, this was a laptop without video output. This laptop was always a bit of an odd duck. To install the VGA card I had to remove the expensive RAM and then would never have enough RAM to run applications. Though it had two standard PC slots, the rest of the thing was built on Apple proprietary interfaces – ADB, Local Talk, etc. The stock battery was good for only an hour requiring me to carry two other heavy batteries to get any work done on an airplane. It did have four things going for it: it was small, had a great LCD screen and keyboard and, for its day, seemed fairly quick. I got on-line and found websites devoted to upgrading PowerBook 1400s to wireless. The only “standard” this portable Mac accepted was the PC card and it seemed every wireless company made a Windows/Mac WiFi PC card to work with the 1400. I ordered a Lucent/Proxim/Orinoco Gold card; cost was $24 with drivers for OS 7.5 and above! Two days later, I got the card, installed the drivers, restarted the computer and ran the set-up wizard. It immediately spotted my Airport Express! I connected to the network and I was surfing, emailing and doing everything I intended too. I recently found the crate with the PowerBook and wondered: what was I going to do with it? My first reaction was to stick $3,000 worth of PowerBook 1400 stuff on the free table at the next CMC meeting. Instead, I plugged it in, and low and behold it came to life and that beautiful screen caught my eye. I wiped the drive and reinstalled the original system software – OS 7.5.3. I then installed the enclosed applications which included the usual Claris package of Organizer, eMailer and Works. I slapped the modem in and launched Cyberdog (remember that spiffy little browser)? All my apps were open and this little devil was running on less than 10 megs of RAM. Today, I can barely get Apple's Motion software to run on my new Dual 2ghz G5 with a gigabyte of RAM. I decided to do some exploring of Classic freeware utilities and software. Though the Classic pages on VersionTracker and MacUpdate look nearly abandoned compared to their OS X counterparts, there are still plenty of developers creating Classic Mac software, allowing you to do anything your heart desires – even in OS 7.6. I was able to find software to connect to my iDisk, play, record and convert MP3s, share files easily with my other OS X machines. I even found software that made the PowerBook look and work like the OS X Finder. And there were programs that mimicked iPhoto and iTunes. I dug through boxes and found old copies of Photoshop, Illustrator, Director, Hypercard. All had no problem running on the PowerBook and though they were old, they're functionality was still pretty useful. Playing with the PowerBook, I was really struck by how fast and efficient the operating system and apps were. Menus appear immediately when requested and resources aren't sucked up by eye candy and unnecessary workflow enhancements I seem to never have the time to learn, never mind use. Claris software gives you what you need and nothing more or less. I got the modem going and Cyberdog brought up pages in a flash – except, of course, for Flash pages or any other web page technology created after 1996! There are upgrade cards for the 1400 to turn it into a G3, but it takes away the much needed RAM slot, making it not worth the cost or effort to upgrade. System 7, a system out years before Windows 95, and far faster and more efficient than anything Microsoft or even Apple has put out since, is really a simple but effective OS that deserves the title of “Classic” and allows old machines to become new again. Looking at its diminutive size, I decided I could use it as a second computer in the family room for checking email so I don't have to walk upstairs to my office, interrupting a 5 A Complete List of Macintosh Web Browsers By Rich Lenoce CMC Vice President Did you know Apple once had its own ISP? And that they created two excellent web browsers– before Safari? Even today, there are many web browsers available for the Mac, not just Safari and MS Internet Explorer. In fact, there are dozens of older browsers that support Mac operating systems going back to the very beginning of the World Wide Web. Here is an almost complete list of browsers from Darrel Knutson’s web site at <http://darrel.knutson.com/mac/ www/browsers.html>. Given the many versions available, there are well over 100 Mac web browsers. Visit Darrel's site for more info on any of these browsers and info on how to get them. Almost all are free. NetNewsWire (OS X) from Ranchero Software NetNewsWire is an RSS newsfeed reader that includes a built-in Safaribased web browser. webXkiosk from NC State University (OS X) ebXkiosk is a full screen, web kiosk application with security, web screen saver, video embed and some “universal access” features. OmniWeb from The Omni Group (PPC/OS X) Some consider this to be the best web browser available for the Mac. DEVONagent from DEVON Technologies (OS X) DEVONagent is primarily an Internet information agent and includes an embedded web browser based on Safari. Webstractor from SoftChaos Webstractor is a different kind of browser that saves each page visited, which can then be searched, viewed or edited offline ICE Browser from Mac Beta9 Written completely in Java. Small (128k), fast and discontinued. Mozilla from Mozilla.org (OS X/OS9) Mozilla code is the basis for many browsers on PC and Mac systems including Chimera/Camino and FireFox. Version's prior to 1.4 will run on OS9 and earlier OSs. Mozilla Firefox (Firebird) (OS X) Mozilla’s popular browser-only software. It’s high security has made this popular on the PC side and many consider this a winner in the Mac world too. WaMCom Mozilla from WaMCom.org (OS9/OS X) A modern Mozilla browser meant for OS9 but will run under OS X as well. Wazilla (OS X) and Eharunga (OS9) Two Japanese Mozilla-based browsers. Mozilla Firebird (formerly Phoenix) http://www.kmgerich.com/misc.html A Macintosh port from the PC version of Mozilla/Netscape. RealPlayer from RealNetworks (OS X) Real networks has a very basic built-in web browser that displasy sites with Real content such as CNN. AppMac wKiosk (OS X) A commercial full-screen browser for kiosk systems, originally based on the Gecko engine. Shiira from the HMDT Shiira Project (OS X 10.3) The goal of the Shiira Project is to create a browser that is better and more useful than Safari. In some respects, its features are more advanced. Based on publicly available source code. Camino (formerly Chimera) from the Camino Project (OS X) http://mozilla.org/products/camino/ A Cocoa port of Mozilla. This is a favorite among many Mac users. iBrowser from ArtiszZ (OS X 10.3) A small browser that works in full screen mode on the desktop. Netscape Navigator and Netscape Communicator (64k/PPC/OS9/OS X) N av i g a t o r i s t h e b r ow s e r a n d Communicator is all-in-one browser, email, newsreader and web composer application. Mac 68k versions through the latest OS X version are available. Once the king of browsers, it has now been rolled into the Mozilla project and uses the Gecko engine. NoteTaker from AquaMinds (OS X) NoteTaker is not primarily a browser, but it includes one as a sort of side feature. Opera from Opera Software (OS 8/9/OS X) Many people feel this is one of the best browsers available with a host of features. Available for free if you don’t mind the ad window, or $39 for the commercial browser. Pre-OS X versions are still available. w3m from w3m.org (OS X) http://www.w3m.org/ A new, terminal-based browser being developed in Japan. Echo from DropLit Software (OS X) A minimalist Safari based browser BumperCar from Freeverse (OS X) A commercial browser for kids based on Opera. 30 day free trial. iCab from iCab Company (68k/PPC/OS X) Fast, lean and in perpetual beta. Simple, but has many nice features. Will run on nearly any Mac or Mac OS! The Web Stalker from I/O/D4 (68K/PPC) http://www.backspace.org/ iod/iod4Macupdates.html A very strange browser apparently created in Director. You’ll know what I mean when you start it and are faced with a black screen and hidden menu. KioskBrowser and DesktopBrowser from Kiosk Software (OS X) http://www.kiosksw.com Two browsers: one a full screen browser and another that is a desktop browser. continued on page 7 6 continued from page 6 WebDesktop from Steven Frank (OS X) http://www.stevenf.com/webdesktop Not exactly a browser, but if you’d like a web page as a desktop background, and want it updated at specified intervals, this application will do the trick. Hazice by Yoav Weiss & Oren Kazi (OS X) http://wazi.cjb.net/ A Safari-based small, fast browser. Lynx (OS X) A text-based web browser that runs in the Terminal. Links by Mikulas Patocka (OS X) Another terminal-based text only browser that is surprisingly intuitive and extremely fast. PT Browser by Mike Coffey (Bahamas) Ltd. (OS X) Mike Coffey created the website that tracks the worlds worst Mac software, perversiontracker.com. Coffey decided to create the worst browser–one that only points to his website. Type in any other URL and you are redirected back to PT. I guess it’s supposed to be a joke! Amaya Editor/Browser from the folks who bring you the Web, W3C (OS X+X11+X11SDK) A graphical browser that runs in Apple’s X11 environment. Dillo from the Dillo Project (OS X+X11) http://www.OSXgnu.org/software/ Xwin/Applications/dillo/ Another graphical browser that runs in Apple’s X11 wDesk from AppMac (OS X) A discontinued Gecko based browser that has been replaced by wKiosk. wKids from AppMac (OS X) A discontinued Gecko-Based full screen browser for kids. Replaced by KidsBrowser. WannaBe by David T. Pierson (68k, PPC) An extremely fast, text-only browser for Mac Classic Operating Systems. WebTV Viewer from MSN TV (PPC) http://developer.msntv.com/Tools/Web TVVwr.asp A viewer application used by developers to see how web sites would appear on WebTV. eWorld Browser from Apple From 1993-96, Apple had their own ISP called eWorld. This browser worked only in conjunction with the eWorld service and client software. Built for Apple by Intercon. MacLynx by Oliver Gutknecht (68k/PPC) A fast text-only browser based on Lynx 2.7.1. MacWWW by CERN A.K.A. Samba, this is the first web browser for the Mac. Very primitive. Chameleon WebSurfer from Netmanage (PPC) Though NetManage is still around, the browser has been discontinued AOLpress from AOL (64k/PPC) Web creation and publishing tool with a web editor from 1997. MacWeb (64k/PPC) from EINet This product is no longer being developed, but is still available. AOL Browser (PPC) An awful attempt at creating a web browser from back when AOL wasn’t interested in supporting the web. MacWeb from TradeWave This product has been discontinued and is no longer available. Internet Safari from Heartsoft (PPC) A browser meant for children that attempts to limit access to only those sites “appropriate for children”. Hot Java from Sun Microsystems (Macintosh Run Time for Java) HotJava web browser from Sun requires Macintosh Runtime for Java. MiniWeb from PygmySoftwyr A text-only browser written in RealBasic. InstantSpace from Xeosoft Corp (64k/PPC) An customized “Open-Doc” version of Internet Explorer 2. Blake from Kantara (PPC) Blake was a replacement web browser for Cyberdog that hasn’t been updated since at least 1998. Mosaic NCSA (68k) Mosaic NCSA is no longer under development, but is still available. Mosaic Spyglass version (68k) No longer available. Mosaic from SPRY (PPC) No longer available. Sprynet is a CompuServe company. NetShark Intercon has been sold to Ascend and Netshark is a dead project. Intercon also offered a package with integrated browser called tcpCONNECT4, but this has also been discontinued. Tiber VOL Teknama Internet Browser. This was the browser used in the discontinued “world wide” Video On Line provider program. Prone to crashes and very limited. Cyberdog from Apple (PPC). Apple’s own home-grown web browser that used the now discontinued “Open Doc.” Fast, efficient, and still has many fans. Note: Does anyone have information on pre-1998 browsers including the following two browsers: DaniBrowser/1.0 (Macintosh PPC) or Enhanced_Mosaic/ 2.01 Mac_PowerPC PSI/1? If so contact Darrel Knuton, darrel@knutson.com, so he can make this list truly complete. 7 Special MUG Offers from the Apple User Group Yes, I want to join CMC Benefits: Monthly meetings, monthly newsletter, special events, discounted books, assistance with computer problem, network with other Mac users, User Group Store discounts, and more. These User Group discounts are brought to you by the Apple User Group Advisory Board. You must be a current Apple user group member to qualify for these savings. Get a complete list of all current deals at... www.mugcenter.com/vendornews/ vendornews.html iPod911.com Group Exclusive: City ______________________________ We are a small company who only knows batteries, ink and the Mac. As an Apple user group exclusive, iPod911.com offers 1G, 2G and 3G iPod Batteries for $22 with free shipping. Check it out on the website. www.ipod911.com/macusergroup.asp Valid until January 31, 2005. State________ Zip __________________ Mediafour UG Offer: Date ______________________________ Name _____________________________ Address ___________________________ Phone (Home) ______________________ Phone (Office) ______________________ Phone (Fax) ________________________ Business___________________________ Occupation_________________________ Email:_____________________________ Referred by:________________________ Areas of special interest: ______________ __________________________________ __________________________________ __________________________________ Annual CMC Family Membership - $25.00 Make check payable to CMC and mail to: 41 Crossroads Plaza, PMB 1984 West Hartford, CT 06117 ...or pay online with PayPal at www.ctmac.org Special pricing for MacDrive 6, an application for Windows that lets PC users open, edit and save files on Mac disks. You can even burn Mac CDs and DVDs. With MacDrive there is nothing new to learn or launch; just pop in any Mac disk and access files as if it were a PC disk. MacDrive is normally $49.95 but Mediafour is offering it for $35.95 to user groups in the U.S. (download purchase only) Email suenail@mediafour.com for URL and discount code. Valid until January 31, 2005. www.mediafour.com PhoneValet Message Center More than an answering machine, PhoneValet Message Center turns Mac computers into telephone communications hubs. PhoneValet includes hardware and software to do the work of a skilled staffer: greeting callers professionally, announcing calls and recording calls when desired. Featuring caller-activated Apple Scripting, a searchable call history, talking caller ID, fax controller and voice dialing, PhoneValet intuitively and elegantly merges the telephone with Apple's digital hub in the spirit of the Macintosh. Reg. $199.95, members receive a $20 discount. Coupon Code: AUG-847285. www.parliant.com Offer valid until May 31, 2005. 8 FirSoft User Group Offer: Do you need to synchronize your iCal calendars between multiple Mac computers, between multiple users on the same Mac or with your iPod? Run iSynCal and sync them using the standard Apple File Sharing shipped with Mac OS X. You don’t need a .Mac account, nor to publish your calendars on an external ftp or WebDav server. Regularly $20 (US), iSynCal is available to MUG members for $16 (US), a 20 percent discount, Find out more. http://ww2.unime.it/flr/isyncal/en/ Order. http://orders.kagi.com/?4WH1 This offer is valid until Jan. 31, 2005. Nisus UG Offer: You have something to say and you need a writing tool that will help you say it. Express Yourself with the affordable, easy to use Word alternative: Nisus Writer Express 2.0. With so many new features, our legendary user interface, Microsoft Word compatibility and a very low price, this new release is something you can’t afford to miss. Regularly $59.95, Nisus Writer Express is available to User Group members for only $49.95. www.nisus.com/Express/mug.php Valid until January 31, 2005. The MUG Store www.applemugstore.com Great deals for CMC members. Aggressive new prices on all the latest Macs. Add to that Free freight, an exclusive $100 rebate on any installed RAM in selected new Macs, 1% merchandise credit back to CMC, huge blowout and specials section–including great deals on Bose speakers, Apple software, and more...and you have a deal that can’t be beat. User ID and Password 12/1/2004 - 3/30/2005 User ID: xxx (lowercase) Password: xxx (lowercase) www.applemugstore.com SOLD! Photos from the November 17 Auction Thanks! Auction Donors Our recent annual CMC auction raised hundreds of dollars for our group. We wish to thank the many companies and individuals who donated: Apple Adobe Alsoft Avondale Media AXIO Bare Bones Software Circus Ponies Dantz Digital Light & Color Econ Technologies, Inc. Fellowes Focal Press IDG/Macworld Expo Marware MAX Programming LLC Micromat Microsoft New Riders OReilly Press PeachPit Press Prosoft Engineering Rocstor Quark RadTech LLC Red Giant Software Sailalong Software Sybex STM TechTV Total Training Wacom Wiley Press Woodwing Software You Software Photos by John Scott and Chris Hart CMC members who donated items: Jack Bass Neal Dembicer Don Dickey Tricia Heldmann George Maciel Deena Quilty John Scott Please accept our apologies if we have inadvertently left out anyone from this list! 9 2004-2005 CMC Officers and Board of Directors President Don Dickey president@ctmac.org 860-232-2841 Vice President Rich Lenoce vicepres@ctmac.org 860-347-1789 Secretary Chris Hart secretary@ctmac.org 860-291-9393 Treasurer David Gerstein treasurer@ctmac.org Past President/Ambassador Joseph Arcuri pastpres@ctmac.org 860-485-1547 Newsletter Design George Maciel newsletter@ctmac.org 860-561-0319 The CMC Officers and Directors would like to welcome Jerry Esposito to the Board – Serving as our PR Director Editor/Auction Deena Quilty editor@ctmac.org 860-678-8622 Webmaster Brian Desmond webmaster@ctmac.org (860) 668-8728 Raffles Robert Sawyer raffles@ctmac.org 860-677-7787 Download of the Month Debbie Foss dotm@ctmac.org 860-583-1165 Special Events Jack Bass programs@ctmac.org Parlimentarian/Historian Connie Scott parlimentarian@ctmac.org 860-584-9573 Caricatures by Bill Dougal of Lebanon, (860) 456-9041. Available for illustration assignments and event caricatures. 10 CMC Monthly Meeting December 15 UConn Health Center 6 pm – Back To Basics This month’s session is all about Apple’s email application “Mail” that comes with Mac OS X. CMC president Don Dickey will show you how to be smart about your “Mail!” He’ll explain and demonstrate its features and functions. As with all Back To Basics sessions, we'll devote plenty of time to answering your questions! Discounted Books! FREE Raffle! CMC continues to offer our current members the opportunity to purchase any published book for either Mac or Windows at a 20% discount. All major publishers are carried by our source. Every CMC member who attends our monthly meetings gets a raffle ticket. This will give you a chance for one of our free prizes every month! You could win…t-shirts, toys, CDs, mugs, software …there’s always something we’re giving away! And don’t forget the Free table at the back of the room where everything is...FREE! Contact a Board Member or send an email to booksales@ctmac.org. Provide the book title, the publisher and the ISBN number, if possible, and he will check on its availability. Normally, the wait is not too long. New Members! 7 pm – Holiday Pizza Party & Ask the Geeks The Annual CMC Holiday Pizza Party starts at 7 pm. Bring your appetite and computer questions! Upcoming Meetings! • Jan. 26 iDVD • Feb. 23 Caring Your Mac New 2005 Feature Coming in the January to the CMC Chronicle A new feature: Meet the Member of the Month. An interview with one of our own – watch for it! We need new members! Have your friends and co-workers join us for fun and learning about OSX and the Mac. SPECIAL NOTICE! Changes regarding access to the CMC website: www.ctmac.org • Member expiration date • Membership number (for free shipping at MacConnection) • Web site username & password ...are now located on your newsletter mailing label. Please make a note of it now! We always want to hear what you need and want from the group. Right now we're making that even easier by giving you a way to share your opinions. During December and January, CMC is conducting a survey of all its members. You can tell us – anonymously – what you really think of the group. Total Membership: 143 Account Balances Checking Balance ..............$2568.65 Savings Balance ................$3960.39 Balances as of November 30, 2004 FREE Classified Ads CMC Members can Advertise For Sale, Swap, Trade, Giveaway or Want to Buy Items. This space can be used by members to advertise non-business items which they are no longer using or upgrading. This is a FREE service provided to our members. Send submissions via email to editor@ctmac.org Display Ad Rates Take Note of This! You can get your own Apple logo notepad and pen, as our thank you, when you complete a CMC survey! Plus, you'll get a chance at free music from the iTunes Music Store. Treasurer’s Report Your participation is essential to the future of CMC. In addition to receiving a thank you gift when you complete the survey, you'll also be entered into our raffle for a $75 gift certificate to the iTunes Music Store! What better gift for yourself, or the iPod-lover in your family? Watch your email and check our web site for details on how to participate. 11 Any business items or services can be advertised at the low monthly rates listed below. Business Card ...................$10.00 Quarter Page.....................$20.00 Half Page .........................$30.00 Full Page (or insert) ............$50.00 Submit all ad copy to the Editor on a disk (with nothing else on it) or e-mail it to editor@ctmac.org for insertion in the following issue. Display ads must be submitted camera-ready in eps or pdf format with all fonts and graphics embedded. Make check payable to CMC. 41 Crossroads Plaza – PMB 1984 West Hartford, CT 06117 Meeting Monthly m r 15 - 7 p e b m e c e D zza Party i P y a d i l Ho e Geeks h T k s A & r ical Cente ed UConn M s – 6 pm c i s a B o t Back CMC Meeting Location a PDF document containing a visual direction guide to UConn Health Center is available on our website: www.ctmac.org. Print and take it with you to find us easily! Monthly meetings will be held at UConn Health Center in Farmington. When hands-on programs require computers for attendees, we will be using Middlesex Community College in Middletown. Directions to UCHC, Farmington Directions to Middlesex C.C. From I-84: Take Exit 39 (if coming from I-84 West, Exit 39 is after 39A). Turn right at first traffic light onto Route 4 East (Farmington Avenue). At third traffic light, turn right to enter the Health Center campus. Go around the main building to the right (at a Y in road), then take a left when you get to the Academic Entrance. The road becomes twoway there so you should be able to tell where to turn. (Do not go on straight to the two-way part). Then take the second right into parking lot A&B. this is close to the building. Go past the police station entrance on your left (small sign). You will see a continuation of the building with its own entrance area. This is the new research building. Enter on the ground floor, turn right and enter room EG-013 on your right. This is the first room on your right. The rest rooms are on your left as you enter. From the Hartford area, take Route 9 South. A few miles south of downtown Middletown on Route 9, take Exit 11 (Rt. 155, Randolph Road). At the end of the ramp (for both N. & S. bound), turn right onto Randolph Road. Continue to the traffic light at the top of the hill and turn left onto Saybrook Road. Go a quarter of a mile and turn right onto Reservoir Road. Travel past the stop sign, then take the first right onto Training Hill Road. Your first left will lead into the Middlesex Community College Campus parking area. When you arrive on campus, take a right onto Training Hill Road. Go to the second parking lot entrance and take a left into the upper lot. Directly in front of you will be Snow Hall. Enter Snow Hall and go up the stairs to the 2nd floor and go to the last room on the right, Room 509. 12