Macintosh Users East
Transcription
Macintosh Users East
Macintosh Users East iPod & Quark Issue: February 2007 MaUsE President: Michael Shaw Email: wazooster@gmail.com Vice President & Resident MacGenius: Aaron Vegh Email aaron@vegh.ca Apple Ambassador Hm: (905) 983-9205 Orono Bruce Cameron Email: rbcameron@rogers.com Treasurer and Grammarian: Hm: 905-404-0405 John Kettle Email : hjke@pteron.org Publicity Director and Jolly Good Fellow Jim Danabie Logistics and Morale Officer: Chris Greaves Email: cgreaves@i-zoom.net Secretary Email: Stan Wild Halston.Wild@gmail.com MaUsE DoubleClick Newsletter Editor Michael Shaw: mause.doubleclick@gmail.com Drectors: Marcel Dufresne and Guy Lafontaine Macintosh Users East [MaUsE] 208 Winona Avenue, Oshawa, Ontario, L1G 3H5 MaUsE Message Line: 905-433-0777 See DoubleClick on the web at: www.mause.ca Submissions from MaUsE Club members are always welcome. Send them to me at <mause.doubleclick@gmail.com> if there are files or pictures attached. I have never refused a submission yet. There is always room for another piece on ANY Mac-related topic and Iʼll make room if there isnʼt. I would like your submissions. But I wonʼt beg. Apple, Macintosh, and the Apple logo are trademarks of Apple Computer, Inc., registered in the U.S. and other countries. The MaUsE (Macintosh Users East) is an independent user group and has not been authorized, sponsored, or otherwise approved by Apple Computer, Inc. The Editor, Michael Shaw Notice The MaUsE Meeting in February will be held on the 28th at 7:00 P.M. in Whitby, Ontario, at the New Whitby Public Library on the corner of Henry Street and Dundas Street (Highway #2). Henry Street is four streets west of the four corners in Whitby and FREE parking is available after 6:00 P.M. just south of the nearby Scotia Bank. The next meeting will be held at the new Whitby Public Library in Whitby, Ontario, at 7:00 on February 28, 2007 !!!!!!!! Henry Street (Highway #2) Please feel free to contact any of the following individuals if you have comments or questions relating to Macintosh Users East (MaUsE). What you are looking at is the February 2007 edition of the DoubleClick monthly newsletter from the Macintosh Users East, (MaUsE), a motley collection of old and new Mac users (harmless cranks for the most part) who reside in Southern Ontario with a motley collection of old and new Macintosh computers. Everything not specifically attributed to someone else can be blamed on me. Back issues can be downloaded from the <www.mause.ca> website for a laugh. New Whitby Public Library King Street Free Parking Scotia Bank Center Street Dundas Street West 2007 Executive Contact List February 28th Members’ Meeting February 2007 MaUsE Executive Meeting Report The February 2007 MaUsE Executive meeting got off to a really early start: we held it on the last day of January. Jim, John, Marcel, Guy, Aaron Stan, Bruce & I made up the party of eight. We set the agenda for this month’s Meeting and we hope you will enjoy it. We had a lot to discuss. One of the issues we discussed was various ways to accommodate new MaUsE Members who join up part-way through our MaUsE year, now that we are getting larger numbers of them. Our schedule generally runs from April to the following March with the summer months off. We talked about the response to Aaron’s email about help resources for Club Members who need more basic information. It was also noted that we have our first international MaUsE Member. We got a biker in northern Mexico with a G4 PowerBook and iMac sign up on the website. Including him we had five new MaUsErs in January. This is a good thing. Due to the influx of new MaUsE Members it has come to our attention that our past practice and policy of printing up identically-dated MaUsE Membership cards once per year needs to be revised. This policy will be decided and put in place in time for the MaUsE Membership renewals in April, 2007. Yearly fees will remain at $45.00 CDN per year and entitle the Member to many wonderful MaUsE benefits and privileges. To New MaUsE Members From the President Hello. My name is Michael Shaw. You’ve seen me at the MaUsE meetings introducing the MaUsE Raffle stuff and now you know me as the Editor of this fine Mac User Group newsletter, the MaUsE DoubleClick. I’d like to welcome you all to the MaUsE Mac User Group. We provide our members with four services: our website, < www.mause.ca >, the monthly meetings, the DoubleClick Newsletter, and a MaUsE Help email help line . But we also function as a valuable introduction service. There are other Mac users in the MaUsE that already use their Macs to do the things you want to do with yours. Find them and make contacts through the MaUsE. Ask questions. Our fifth, and most important resource, is our membership. Michael Shaw, MaUsE President Here is out intended schedule. The original intention was to have a MaUsE Meeting at this point concentrating on maximising our understanding of the uses of the iPod, and I have found some interesting iPod stuff for this issue (and iPod utilities fro the February MaUsE Raffle).However, we decided at the Exec Meeting that there is so much more to the entire phenomenon of downloading data from the internet than just music and podcasts for the iPod. The only thing the iPod adds to the process is portability. The chain of access to data is through the computer and people who don’t even have an iPod will find everything covered in this month’s MaUsE presentation just as useful as people who have iPods. ‘Beyond Music—All the things you can get by using iTunes 7:00 p.m. Welcome - Club Announcements - Aaron 7:10 p.m. Treasurer-Membership update - John 7:15 p.m. Apple News – Aaron 7:25 p.m. Mac Tips of the Month - Aaron 7:35 p.m. Ask the experts ≠ An informal Question and Answer period 7:55 p.m. Introducing the concept of ‘An Evening With Mac’ – Stan 8:00 p.m. Raffle overview - Marcel 8:05 p.m. Break and socialize - Follow up on one-onone questions. Schmooze time. 8: 25 p.m. Pod casts, books and other good stuff – How to find, subscribe, and locate downloads, and, if you wish, move onto your iPod – Marcel 9:00 p.m. Mini Feature – Using your iPod for short term storage of photographs taken with digital cameras - Guy Lafontaine 9:15 p.m. Raffle - Members Only MacFAX to Go ! A few weeks ago I sent out an enquiry and received the reply in the form of a couple of .PDF requests for information forms to be completed and returned by FAX. In this age of instant email and .PDF attachments, I thought that strange, but I guess most people still have to print out .PDF forms on paper, fill them in by hand, and then send them by FAX or mail. With the Adobe Acrobat version I have, I can fill out forms right on my computer. So thats what I did. Then I had to figure out how to get the forms from me in Ontario to the other party, in Alabama. I have a G4 iBook and connect to the internet via DSL modem over an ethernet network. If its possible to send a FAX over ethernet I don’t know what it is. Luckily for me I thought to check Mac Help, right there in the Menu bar on the iBook. Mac Help had a little blurb about going to the PDF button on the Print dialog box and checking out the “FAX PDF” button. Mac Help says: Sending a fax. You can fax files directly from your computer to any fax machine or computer that is set up to receive faxes. If your computer has a modem that is connected to a phone line, it is automatically configured to send faxes. Really, I had no idea that this was possible or that my internal USB modem was automatically configured to send faxes. I know there is a modem in my iBook but I have never used it. Just in case this worked, I connected the modem port on the iBook to a telephone jack on the wall using the telephone cable that came with the iBook. Since I have never used the internal modem the cable was still wrapped in the original plastic in the iBook case. I opened the first of the documents I wanted to FAX. I selected Print from the File menu. When the LaserWriter Print dialog box opened I clicked on the PDF button and was amazed at the variety of things I could do. Among other choices, I could compress or encrypt the document, save the entire .PDF document as a JPEG or as a TIFF or I could mail it or I could FAX it. Good enough. Mac Help was right. I selected “FAX PDF...” and waited to see what would happen. The Print dialog box was replaced with a different Print box with fields asking for the information required to FAX the document instead of send it to the LaserWriter. I put in the correct phone number, put in the dialing prefix “1” to indicate long distance, created a simple FAX Cover Page with the name of my contact on it, and not much more, and put the other information the window required. I clicked on the FAX button. Just like it said in Mac Help, the Internal USB Modem window opened automatically and the computer started making NOISES. It was just like the old dial-up days when you heard the modem dial the phone number tones, heard the telephone ringing on the other end, and heard the hardware handshake of strident clicks, beeps and whistles. Once contact had been established it took only a few minutes for the process to proceed to completion. The document was only 156k but that was plenty of time for the Internal Modem window to report its progress every step of the way: it informed me when it was dialing the number, let me know when it was connected, let me know when it was sending the FAX, when it was finished sending the FAX, and when it disconnected. As soon as the process was completed I opened the second document and FAXed it as well. The Internal Modem window re-opened with my Cover page information already in place but I had to re-insert the phone numbers. I wondered how well this works with some of the other options offered under the “PDF” button on the Print dialog box. I opened a TextEdit document named TTP Instructions that I had on my Desktop, a few paragraphs I wrote about TechTool Pro for a previous DoubleClick. I clicked on Print from the File menu and under the “PDF” button I selected “Mail PDF” just to see what would happen. What happened was that my default Mail program opened with a blank email page with the TextEdit document converted to a PDF and attached. All I had to do was type in the Subject and an email address to send it to and it was ready to go. I guess any document you can print you can also FAX or send as an email attachment. Right from your Finder. Neat ! Eltima Flash Optimizer Flash Optimizer for Mac is an advanced SWF compression utility. If you use Macromedia Flash® to produce rich content for the Web, you should know how important the size of SWF files is. With Flash Optimizer you can considerably reduce SWF file size and, as a result, save loading time, traffic and money! • Morphing optimization • Fonts optimization • Zero-objects optimization • Z-buffer optimization • Vectors optimization • Curves optimization • Images compression • Sounds compression • Embedded video compression • Revolutionary compression methods that allow to optimize SWF files to save up to 70% of their size • Speed and reliability Based on profound algorithms of shapes, morphing, vectors, fonts, Zbuffer and other optimizations, Flash Optimizer manages to optimize the whole SWF file with curves, zero-objects, ZLib and more. With over 50 compression options available, unique advantage of Flash Optimizer for Mac is that it does not stop at optimizing parts of the file, but continues with compressing SWF core itself. The parameters of the optimization process can also be customized if needed, to achieve the results you want - from basic compression with absolutely no quality loss to strong compression with minimum quality loss. With a few filespecific customizations you can reduce SWF size easily reaching significant compression ratio for an average SWF file (with images and sounds being a minority of its elements). The straightforward, configurable user interface provides a selection of layout options that make it easy to work on a wide variety of projects, from small buttons to full-screen interfaces. You can preview the result side-by-side in 1 or 2 built-in players with zooming in/out options. Flash Optimizer for Mac features the “SWF info” button, which indicates the details on the Flash movie, like percentage of all movie elements (pictures, shapes, videos, actions etc.) and both the sizes of original and reduced files. Extensive customization options, delivered in a most user-friendly way, give you precise control over every aspect of your Flash project and lead to optimum compression results. • The only Flash Optimizer on the net available for free download and trial period • Unique SWF Compressor for Mac OS • Simple and Professional optimization settings - customize every compression option • Easy SWF compression preview & comparison to original file • Easy-to-use interface with intellectual, fully customizable controls • Shapes optimization There will be a fully licensed raffle copy of Eltima Flash Optimiser available for the February MaUsE Raffle. How to Burn a CD in Mac OS X That Can Be Read by Mac OS 7.6 This guide will tell you how to burn a CD from within OS X that can be read by OS 7.6.1. There is no guarantee that this procedure works with Mac OS 7.5 or OS7.1. The basic principle of this tutorial is creating a disk image in OS X, then formatting it as a Mac OS Standard disk, then dragging your files to the disk image, then burning the disk image. Step 1: On your OS X computer, launch Disk Utility, which can be found in your “Utilities” folder inside your “Applications” folder. Step 2: In the window that appears, click on the “New Image” button. Give it a unique name, and make sure to save it to the Desktop. Set “Size:” to the size of your blank CD media. Set “Encryption:” to none, and set “Format:” to read/write disk image. Click the “Create” button when you are finished. Step 3: After the disk image creation process has finished, you should see your disk image in the list on the left hand side of the Disk Utilities window (as well as on your computer’s desktop). If you do not see it there, you did not save it to the desktop, and you’ll have to find it. Highlight the disk image you just created in the Disk Utility list. Then, click the “Erase” tab, and select “Mac OS Standard” from the “Volume Format:” drop down menu that appears. Give the new disk a name such as “Mac OS 7 Stuff” by entering it in the “Name:” field. Note that this will be the name of your mounted disk, not the name of the image file. Once you have changed these two settings, click “Erase.” The new disk should appear mounted on your desktop. Step 4: Minimize the Disk Utility window to get it out of the way temporarily (we’ll need it again in a moment). On the desktop, start dragging the files that you want to bring to your OS 7 computer into the newly created disk image. Keep in mind that if you downloaded software from this or any other web site, it is best to keep it in it’s original compressed image format (such as .sit, .bin, .hqx, or .img). If you don’t your icons and icon placement will probably not transfer to OS 7 properly, because Mac OS X does not maintain a proper classic desktop database. Step 5: Once you’ve dragged all your files into your “Mac OS 7 Stuff” CD image, go back into Disk Utility, make sure the disk image is selected from the list, and click “Burn” in the upper left-hand corner of the Disk Utility window. You will be prompted to insert a blank CD if you have not already done so. Conclusion: Congratulations, you should now be able to read this CD in any Mac OS 7.6.1 computer with a CD-ROM drive. Be mindful that some early CD-ROM drives physically can not read burned CDs, but so far most people seem to do just fine following these instructions. BeLight Mail Factory About a year ago I wrote a little review of BeLight Software’s Swift Publisher, a gorgeous little program for designing brochures and flyers complete with libraries of images and a selection of popular templates to use with the software. We have been using it ever since to design the MaUsE brochures for the brochure racks in the local libraries. Recently I found a BeLight Software sampler CD with more of their software and one program that caught my eye was Mail Factory. This program is for layout and design of all standard envelopes and sticky labels (like Avery labels). It also does custom sizes. There are other programs that do the same thing, like SOHO Labels&Envelopes from Chronos LLC. and Imprint from Ampersandbox Inc., but BeLight Swift Publisher is such a nice product that I thought I would try BeLight Mail Factory just because it is from the same company. I must admit that I was almost overwhelmed by the wide range of standard envelope sizes Mail Factory provides (over 90) and the wide range of label templates from more than a dozen popular companies, (several many hundreds) listed in the menu windows. This program allows you to create custom labels for a wide range of uses using images from your own photos or any image from Mail Factory’s collection of thirty-five clip-art libraries. Images can be dragged and dropped into the application window and positioned and resized easily right on the envelope or label template. In case you mail parcels there are also several large libraries of colour shipping and caution labels so you can create your own warning labels. There are also templates for common removable data storage media and VCR / DVD cases. And you can set dimensions to create a lot more custom labels if you need to. Look up Mail Factory and BeLight Software on the internet to get a more complete list of what you can do with Mail Factory. It really is a wonderful program. Buy it on-line for $40.00 US or win yourself a copy of Mail Factory courtesy of BeLight Software at the February MaUsE Raffle. Auto FX DreamSuite Series 1 DreamSuite is a visual effects application from Auto FX Software. Auto FX has been around for a long time making software that works as plug-ins for programs like Adobe Photoshop. The 18 effects in the Series One collection are: 35mm Frame, Chisel, Crackle, Crease, Cubism, Deckle, Dimension X, Focus, Hot Stamp, Instamatic, Liquid Metal, Metal Mixer, PhotoBorder, PhotoDepth, PhotoTone, Putty, Ripple, and Tape. Its like a collection of neat image filters with a common interface. One difference between this software and all of the AKVIS Photoshop plug-ins I’ve been writing about is that DreamSuite functions either as a stand-alone application or as a plug-in inside any Photoshop-compatible host application. When you purchase DreamSuite, you get both the stand-alone and plug-in versions of the program, over 400 presets for the 18 effects, an operations manual in electronic PDF format, and technical support by telephone and email. It is available for Macintosh and Windows on a cross-platform CD or as an electronic download at a suggested retail price of only $199.00 US. Most of the DreamSuite effects are resolution-independent, so you should get the same results whether applying the effects to high resolution or low resolution images. Each of the 18 effects has an extensive set of tools and controls for adjusting that effect. Installation went fine; the DreamSuite application was installed on my hard drive and the plug-ins were installed correctly into the Plug-ins folder of my Photoshop Elements 4 but there appears to be a compatibility issue under OSX 10.4.8. Maybe DreamSuite doesn’t like my 1 GHz G4 iBook. Anyway, every time I tried to launch any DreamSuite filter from within Photoshop Elements 4.0 the Adobe application crashes. Deleting the DreamSuite application and plug-ins and running the installer again gave the same results: as a standalone application the DreamSuite works fine, but as a plug-in, its a total washout. Several exchanges between me and the technical assistance people at Auto FX left me no wiser and the Dream Suite plug-ins no better. After deleting and re-installing several times my Dream Suite plug-ins still refused to work as advertised BUT the stand-alone application works beautifully. Its GREAT !!!! The application has an interesting interface reminiscent of DAZ Bryce and a wide and wild variety of effects that are unique to each of the 18 different filter packages that make up the DreamSuite. There is room for a myriad of sliders and complex effect controllers in the panel along the left side of the application window When you invoke DreamSuite as a stand-alone application, it takes over all available screen space. All interface elements are self-contained in a single window. There are no detachable palettes that would allow you to better utilize screen real estate. Besides the texture-altering filters, DreamSuite allows you to fold, bend and rip your photos in a very controlled and realistic manner. There are lots of example images and manuals that you can download from the Auto FX website to enable you to achieve wonderful photo effects with this software. Check it out. Edie McRee at Auto FX Software has sent us Mosaic and Dreamy Photo, two samples of their newer software releases, for our February 28th MaUsE Raffle. January MaUsE Meeting Report The January 24th MaUsE Meeting was a big success. Even though it was colder than we had expected it to be, the turnout was prodigious. This was also the first meeting of the new year and the first meeting with the newly revised hours. The message that we would be starting early obviously got out OK because we had a full house by 6:55 P.M. We got started early, at 7:00 P.M., exactly as planned. Acting in my position as the new President, I opened the Meeting and welcomed new & old MaUsE Members and first-time visitors. When I asked about first-time visitors there was a large response from the audience indicating that we had more guests than usual. Then Aaron spoke about the new developments from Apple: Apple TV, iPhone, and new AirPort technology. John Kettle gave the Treasurer’s Report and updated the membership statistics. He also welcomed the three new members who joined MaUsE this month. Remember, March is when we renew MaUsE Memberships. Brian Elston told us about one of his projects, called < www.macsforkids.com > and answered questions. Marcel Defresne spoke about some of his favourite websites, Guy Lafontaine gave the Photoshop SIG report, Janet Barlow from MicroImage Plus offered up some discounted merchandise and presented the Specials, and then I spoke briefly about the January MaUsE Raffle items and did two quick slide show presentations showing what Alsoft DiskWarrior and Micromat DiskStudio DVD could do. After the break Aaron presented his scathingly brilliant trouble-shooting guide designed to educate us about what to do when we suspect hardware or software problems with our Macs. At the end of Aaron’s presentation Our Chris held the January MaUsE Raffle and various prizes were awarded. We had many of the utilities that have appeared in last month’s DoubleClick, including SubRosaSoft’s FileSalvage 5.1, a couple of copies of StuffIt Deluxe 11, Gideon Software utilities bundle, Mellel II, and about ten others. We used up the full two and a half hours that we had specified for the meeting and in my opinion, we needed all of it. There were more than the usual numbers of questions from the audience. I will not be present at the February 28th MaUsE Meeting but it will also start at the earlier time and will also have a raffle. See the articles in this issue of the MaUsE DoubleClick, (the last DoubleClick to be created with InDesign CS) for descriptions of some of the software items that will appear in the February 28th MaUsE Raffle. I have set aside a lot of neat stuff, including some iPod utility software, for the February raffle. And don’t forget, MaUsE Raffle items are not door prizes for anyone who attends the MaUsE Meetings: MaUsE Raffle tickets are free, but only available to paid-up MaUsE members. Prosoft TuneTech for iPod There are suddenly some utilities specifically designed for those of us who have iPods and for this issue I have managed to find a few of them. And copies of some of the applications presented in this issue have been made available for our February MaUsE Raffle, so make sure that you attend the February MaUsE Meeting for your chance to win something. Now that iPods are everywhere and so many companies are releasing new add-ons and accessories for iPods, it was inevitable that software companies would realise that there is a huge market for software that simplifies iPod maintenance. TuneTech for iPod (formerly Pod Genius) is like Drive Genius for iPods. With this software you can recover lost or damaged music, repair corrupted data structures, backup your iPod to an exact copy, permanently delete unwanted files, or optimize the file layout of your music. TuneTech comes packed with everything you need to diagnose and repair any hard drive problems that your iPod may experience in a normal working environment. And, it presents these tools in a cute iPod-like interface. Here are some key features of “TuneTech for iPod”: • Backup: Make an exact clone of your iPod for safe keeping. This is the fastest way to backup all the music, pictures and files that are stored on your iPod. Use your backup as protection against data loss. • Optimize: Increase battery life and minimize wear-and-tear. Your songs get optimized by physically putting them in order on the drive in the order that you want to hear them, minimizing hard drive access and reducing the work your iPod has to do. • Repair: This is the solution if songs or play lists have become inaccessible due to software errors. If songs are missing or play erratically, repair immediately before running the risk of permanent data loss. • Undelete: Accidentally deleted music? Undelete quickly recovers them in perfect condition. • Shred: Permanently delete your songs and files from your iPod. Do your part to protect against music piracy... if you sell or donate your iPod, shred your music to prevent unauthorized use. • Duplicate: Make an exact copy of your iPod on another iPod - perfect when migrating all your data in one shot from your old iPod to a newer model. • Scan: Analyze your iPod’s hard drive for media defects that can endanger the data on your iPod. • Info: Display detailed information about your iPod’s hard drive to enable sophisticated troubleshooting. Most of what Prosoft TuneTech for iPod can do are functions already present in Apple’s Disk Utility and the iPod synchronization capabilities of iTunes and iPhoto but TuneTech presents them in a way that simplifies the process of finding and using them. If you don’t regularly use a good disk repair utility, such as TechTool Pro or Drive Genius, or observe a good regular maintenance routine, your iTunes and iPhoto libraries will likely require repair at some point. Not everyone has the latest version of these utilities but for $59.00 US there is no excuse not to have TuneTech if you value your iPod. If anything were to happen to the libraries on your iPod, all that you would have to do is verify/repair your iPod’s disk with Apple’s Disk Utility, restore your iPod’s software from the latest iPod Software Updater, and synchronize your iPod with your iTunes and iPhoto libraries. There will be a fully licensed raffle copy of TechTune for iPod available for the February MaUsE Raffle. Prosoft Jax for iPod Jax for iPod is something completely different for Prosoft: an application that is fun instead of a diagnostic or disk repair program. It is nothing like Prosoft TechTune for iPods. It will enhance the way you use your iPod. Apple’s iPod is THE portable device of the decade. If you carry one, why not load it with more than music and videos? Jax for iPod is a revolutionary new product that opens your iPod up to a whole new universe of possibilities. With its ground-breaking user interface, Jax keeps all your important information at your finger tips. Best of all, Jax is customizable and its features can change to match your personality and needs. Prosoft has built in more than a dozen features and you can add others whenever you want as we develop more and more Jax. Just go to our website and find others that you might like. For some, Jax is very useful, while for others it may be whimsical or enlightening. One thing for sure, Jax has something for everyone. Pick up Jax and see what it means for you. Control your music: Configurable visualizers. Manage your lyrics and find songs in your library that contain specific phrases and words. Manage your album art and select alternative images with higher resolution or different and international graphics. Research your favorite songs and bands, their band members, similar bands and click in a brand new awe-inspiring interface. Control your life: Point-to-point directions, current weather forecasts, your favorite stock quotes, movie listings and local gas prices. Local news from your favorite news readers, all your latest emails and any of your favorite documents - and oh, have you heard? You can download them into your iPod as text, or as spoken words as tracks in MP3 format. Not good enough? How about being to directly download YouTube, Google Videos, and any QuickTime movies directly to your video iPod? Control your future: This is just the beginning... Jax is upgradable with its plug and play feature set. Each feature of Jax is a module (called a Jak). Dozens more are on the way and most will be available as free downloads right from the Prosoft website. iPod Recovery Utility 2.0.1.5 Lets not forget that a great deal of the importance of the iPod from a historic point of view is that it was the thin edge of the wedge that brought many Windows users their first taste of Macintosh hardware. The iPod works with Windows. To commemorate this fact, I have included an iPod utility that works with just about every version of Windows. This is the first and only time that you will see any Windows software in the MaUsE DoubleClick while I am the Editor, so enjoy it. Non destructive iPod data restoration software ascertains recovery of damage done due to setting reset, boot up problems and hardware malfunction. iPod retrieval tool not only enable you to recover deleted data but also save your data in safe location. Moreover software is read only. You can restore files even if you have formatted the media. Restore all types of AAC file format and store it to desired location. Various type of iPod like iPod nano, iPod mini, apple iPod, iPod shuffle etc are supported by the software and assures restoration of data what if you have performed reformatting in your iPod. No need to worry about how to operate the software, its simple and quick. This version covers iPod of both the third and fourth generation. Software support Windows 2000 NT4.0 2003 XP 98 ME and Windows XP media center 2005 edition. Software enables you to recover iTunes mp4 aif m4p mpeg aac m4p unprotected m4a m4b wav mpg m4v aa files as well picture, images and photos. Features:: • It does not provide console user interface while it provide user friendly graphical user interface (GUI). • Software support Windows 98 ME NT 2000 2003 XP and Windows XP media center 2005 edition. • Data damaged due to virus infection can be retrieved from each type of iPod. • You can recover data damaged due to destructed file system. • Tool can recover data from secure digital, flash memory, xD cards, compact flash. • Software ensures recovery of all type of media file like mp4, wav, m4a, AAC, aif, mp3, wmv, m4p. • Restore the data when the message DRIVE NOT FORMATTED prompted by the system. • All iPod like iPod apple, Samsung, Toshiba, Sony, iPod mini, iPod first generation, iPod next generation series, iPod nano and iPod Shuffle can be recovered by the software. • Utility saves the recovered data in the safe location in your hard disk. • Software maintains the quality of file after recovery. • Support all types of latest iPod devices PD+RESCUE for iPod thing. Your iTunes software does. For example, if your iPod was set to automatic update, and your iTunes library on your computer was empty and you plugged in your iPod... all of the tunes on your iPod would vanish. Likewise, if your iPod was set to automatic update and you plugged it into someone else’s computer with an empty library and then clicked OK if you wanted to relink your iPod you would lose all of your music.- PD+RescueTM for iPod® by TastyBytes Software, Inc. is the missing link between your computer and your iPod®. Although the iPod has revolutionized the way we listen to music it has one major drawback: once songs are put on your iPod they cannot be taken off. PD+Rescue solves this problem by allowing you to freely transfer your songs and playlists back to your computer for use in iTunes or as backup on an external hard drive. With a simplified user interface PD+Rescue allows individual songs, artists or albums to be transferred The best feature of any iPod utility is ease of use. to different locations and will automatically file Generally speaking, many of the features of iTunes. songs based on Artist and Album titles. PD+Rescue iPhoto, and Apple’s Disk Utility are not instantly is compatible with all iPod file formats including obvious because these programs have so many fea- songs purchased from the iTunes Music Store®. tures. With a device like your iPod you don’t need PD+Rescue also has the ability to recover songs powerful software but you do need straightforward from an iPod with a damaged database. The emsoftware. One really important thing to remember phasis of this utility is backup of your songs and when playing with your iPod is that while data and recovery from iPod disaster. PD+Rescue does not have the ability to delete any- Features Include: • Support for Windows Vista/XP/2000 and Mac OS X • Works with all iPod models • Easy to use interface • Playlist Cloning Support • Add songs directly to iTunes® • Play songs directly from the iPod • File renaming during copy and backup • Recovers songs from a damaged database. • Support for Multiple iPods • Support for iTunes Music Store® songs • Audible.com support • Single button sequential backups • Play video files directly from the iPod (NEW) • iTunes® Song rating support (NEW) • Transfer ID3 tags for WAV and iFM files. • Faster Copy & Backup Speeds (NEW) Macintosh® Requirements • Mac OS X v10.2.8 or later • Mac OS X 10.4.1 or later recommended • 400MHz G3 processor or better • 256MB RAM Recommended • A working connection to an iPod® • iPod Software v1.2 or higher • QuickTime v6.5.2 or higher • iTunes v4.7 or higher There will be a fully licensed raffle copy of PD+ RESCUE available for the February MaUsE Raffle. Tune Tools for iPod Tune Tools is NEW, and its from SmithMicro, better known as Allume Systems, the people who gave us StuffIt and StuffIt Deluxe, among other things. There are suddenly a lot of software titles available for iPods and in this issue I will introduce you to some of them and we’ll see how many we can get for this month’s MaUsE Raffle, too ! • Correct tag inconsistencies in your iPod and iTunes library. • Detect inconsistencies between your iTunes library and your iPod. • Check the health of your iPod hard drive to find problems before they find you! Detect and correct corrupt files in your iPod library Your iPod is more than just your music with the click of a mouse. jukebox, now with video and podcast capabilities, it’s your portable hard drive and entertainment gadget. Up until now, your iPod’s potential has been limited by iTunes’® features. Now with Tune Tools fully integrated features, it’s time to unlock your iPod’s potential. Get songs out of your iPod, perform backups and get the most out of your iPod. • Use the Full Backup feature to protect the full content of your iPod from loss or corruption. • Make instant backups of your iPod files using our Quick Backup technology. • Restore your iPod quickly from a Quick or Full Backup using Smart Restore from Tune Tools. • Transfer individual iPod files and playlists direct- • Get instant access to artist, album and song ly to another iPod. information when you transfer your iPod database. • Move songs, videos, podcasts and other files easily from your iPod to a different computer. • Migrate songs, videos, podcasts and playlist directly into iTunes to grow your music library without losing playcounts and other information. • Clone your iPod contents to another iPod. • Restore files that occasionally disappear from the iPod database with the click of a mouse. • Clean Up & Sync Your iPod Library Micromat Inc. iPod PodLock Utility Micromat supplied us with TechTool Pro (featured at our November 2006 MaUsE Meeting and raffle) and DiskStudio DVD ( featured in next month’s MaUsE DoubleClick). I asked Micromat if we could have a copy for our raffle and they said that PodLock is not available right now because it is between revisions, but it will be released again later in 2007 when updated by Micromat, (probably, I suspect, as soon as a universal binary version is available that will be usable on the new Intel Macs). You can find PodLock on SWAP lists or eBay. PodLock helps you and your iPod in many ways: • Backup and restore: PodLock allows you to seamlessly backup and restore your primary iPod volume to your Macintosh drive (excluding your music files). This is especially useful if you store files for transport on your iPod. • Optimize the data on your iPod: By using PodLock’s defragment tool, your iPod’s drive will run faster. This means songs will load more quickly and data can be retrieved much faster. • Hide your important files: PodLock allows you to create an “invisible” partition. It’s like having a secret drive for your data files that only you can see by entering your personal password. If you use your iPod as an external drive to transport data, you’ll want this protection in case you should ever lose your iPod. • Manage pictures and voice recordings: PodLock gives you an easy and convenient way to access other types of data on your iPod. Learn Technical Details about your iPod, find out when and where your iPod was manufactured, the current version of the iPod system software, as well as other important technical information. QuarkXPress 7 Here’s a program that many of our MaUsE members do not now use, do not now own, and will likely never use or own, but you have all seen and handled examples of documents created in QuarkXPress every day for years and probably not known it. In terms of Apple history and the evolution of desktop publishing it is one of the most important and influential applications ever written. If you go into any big magazine store where they have multiple racks of colorful magazines on display, fashion mags, computer, automotive, Newsweek, and special interest magazines, stuff like Playboy, Elle, Vogue, and Macleans, you can safely assume that about three-quarters of the professional periodicals you are looking at were created using some version of QuarkXPress. Xpress 7, the latest version of the company’s flagship desktop publishing software, was awarded “Best of Show” by the Macwelt editors at the MacExpo trade show and conference in Cologne, Germany in June, 2006. At the MacWorld UK Expo in August, Quark cleaned up again with two awards for QuarkXPress 7: the “Editor’s Choice” award and the “Best Creative Software” award. Winners came from an extensive and varied list that Macworld UK editors compiled during a year of fast-paced change in the Macintosh computer industry. The Macworld UK editors wrote: “In terms of practical design production, QuarkXPress 7 is second to none.” 2006 wrapped up with the German Printing Industry Innovation Awards. Various experts in the field of publishing decided which software product they considered the most innovative solution or development for the production of printed products, and Quark came out on top. QuarkXPress is a drag-and-drop “WYSIWYG” page layout application for Mac OS X and Windows, produced by Quark, Inc.. (“What you see is what you get” means that the document that comes out of your printing process will look identical to how it appeared on your monitor). Quark, Inc. can be seen as one of the founders of Desktop Publishing (beside Adobe Systems and Apple Computer). QuarkXPress early on incorporated an innovative application programming interface called XTensions which allows third-party developers to create custom add-on features to their desktop application. Introduced in 1989, Xtensions, was one of the first examples of a developer allowing others to create software addons for their application. The XTensions work similar to the way Filters in Adobe Photoshop: you get some XTensions with the XPress application and then, if you find that you have special needs not covered by the XPress application as it is, you buy more XTensions as required to do special tricks and for achieving expanded abilities. The first Mac-only version of QuarkXPress was released in 1987 and for many people in the advertising and publishing industries, XPress has been their application of choice ever since. In the 1990s, QuarkXPress quickly became the worldwide preferred tool for most professional page designers, and the typesetting industry and printers. Just about everything done in the magazine and pre-press industry was done in QuarkXPress. Having gained a market share of approximately 90% in the 1990s, Quark was criticized as being monopolist with overly long innovation cycles and too high prices. The release of QuarkXPress version 5 in 2002 led to a row with Apple, as Quark 5 did not support Mac OS X and Adobe’s InDesign 2.0, launched in the same week, did. This was a Very Bad Thing from the point of view of many Quark users who were ready to upgrade and a Very Good Thing from Adobe’s perspective. Evolution of new features in QuarkXPress since version 5 can be seen as improvements designed to prevent or slow the migration of the desktop publishing industry en masse away from Quark and into the Adobe camp. Mac users who switched to OSX had to leave Quark behind and this gave InDesign a real advantage over XPress for a while. I have used both of these applications, XPress and InDesign. I recall the day that I switched to InDesign CS and why. Jim and Susan went to MacWorld in the States early in this century, and they both attended the major presentations, including Steve’s keynote speech and the Adobe debut of InDesign CS. Under each chair was a coupon redeemable for a copy of InDesign CS for OSX. Jim brought them back, kept one, and gave the other to me. For free. I recall that my initial reaction upon leaving Quark 5 for InDesign was that I had dropped a dime and picked up a nickel. It was advertised that InDesign could theoretically translate Quark documents but the process was not yet perfected. QuarkXPress handles text and graphics as different objects (text boxes and image boxes). Both types of boxes can be reshaped and layered in quite complex ways, and in varying levels of transparency and runaround. Version 6.5, released at the end of 2004, added enhanced support for the Photoshop format (PSD). The PSD integration and picture manipulation features led to QuarkXPress and PDF/X-export. QuarkXPress 7 also allows receiving a number of awards. unique features, such as native transparency at the color level. QuarkXPress 7’s composition zones The current version, QuarkXPress 7, greatly re- feature makes it the only layout application with sembles the earlier versions and anyone already fa- multi-user capabilities by allowing multiple users miliar with Quark 3, 4, 5, 6 or 6.5 will feel right at to edit different zones on the same page. And when home using it. But there are lots of new features, I write that the new XPress greatly resembles the too, including support for OpenType, Unicode, JDF incarnations of the program from ten years ago, this is not a complaint; opening a QuarkXPress document for a user like me, who has not used QuarkXPress since version 4, was a delightful return to familiar territory. There is a great deal of conflicting opinion on the internet about which application, QuarkXPress or Adobe InDesign, is “better” right now. I suppose it just comes down to personal taste. They both do the same thing and they both do it well. Price should not be a consideration as they both sell for about $700 US. Integration with other Adobe products is a real plus for InDesign, but QuarkXPress 7 is used by more than three million people worldwide. The Apple site still says, “QuarkXPress is the tool of choice for magazines, newspapers, advertising and design agencies, marketers, printers, corporate publishers, catalog publishers and book publishers”. But then the Apple website has nothing bad to say about InDesign either. What I did find revealing was that the public are encouraged to post reviews on the Apple site of the software advertised there. There was only one review comment posted on the page where information and pricing for InDesign CS was located, but there were twenty-six postings on the page where QuarkXPress 7 was described, some of them obviously simply anti-Quark rants from strident InDesign users that said nothing sensible about the QuarkXPress 7 program and arguments that sounded more like prejudice and nonsense poorly posing as informed opinion, comments and criticisms. Its obvious that many people have strong feelings about using and preferring one application over the other. The competition between QuarkXPress and InDesign is forcing both Quark and Adobe to improve their products as they compete for dominance in the market Quark used to control exclusively. It’ll be interesting to see what new features are built into InDesign when InDesign CS3 is released in 2007. It will also be interesting to see what price they charge for the new InDesign, especially since InDesign used to be several hundreds of dollars cheaper than QuarkXPress, a situation remedied by the release of XPress 7. The abilities to make objects translucent (opacity control) and to apply soft drop shadows to text and objects are among the most appealing InDesign features that previous versions of QuarkXPress lacked. QuarkXPress 7 has not only implemented both of these features, but has embellished them with options that aren’t available in InDesign. For example, in XPress you can control the opacity of anything that has color applied to it—box backgrounds, pictures, frames, and even individual characters Quark did a nice job updating the user interface. Most obvious and significant is the retooled Measurements palette, which eliminates the need to open dialog boxes to modify objects. All of the new features found in the Measurements palette are available elsewhere in the menus that users of earlier versions of Quark will find just where they used to be but if the features are accessed from the menu bar they are applied only after the Apply or OK button is pressed: if accessed from the Measurement palette they update immediately. When you select an item and move the pointer over the Measurements palette, a row of icons pops up along the top of the palette, a different row of icons for each type of item or group of items selected. Clicking an icon changes the controls displayed in the palette. For example, when you’re working on text, you can not only apply character and paragraph formatting, but also modify tab settings as well as text-box settings such as frame, text runaround, and drop shadow. When a picture box is active, you can use the Measurements palette to make almost all of the modifications available in the Modify command. Amazingly, QuarkXPress still uses a single row of icons through which all the main functions are accessed. The toolbar features primarily frame, text box and shape tools which, when it boils down to it, are all you really need in page design. At the bottom of the screen is a contextsensitive palette which shows various parameters and settings, such as font name and size, or the co-ordinates of the mouse cursor at any given time. In contrast, InDesign uses twice as many control icons and up to 22 tabbed windows and they don’t always respond to commands. There are floating toolbars available in XPress if you want them - just click on the View menu - and the standard complement for most layout artists is the Colours toolbar (which includes Pantone support), the Document Layout toolbar (which enables you to jump around the pages in the document at ease), and the Styles toolbar (which lets you globally apply typeface attributes). However, digging deeper reveals some extraordinary features. You can draw text boxes or frames in freehand using your mouse, for example, while an entire range of useful predefined text boxes and frames are also available. Elsewhere you’ll find that this version of QuarkXPress shares In Design’s ability to automatically generate cutout clipping paths around photographs, saving the bother of manually generating them in Photoshop. The Xtensions manager lets you add-in third party programs to XPress’s arsenal, boosting its feature base even more. QuarkXPress has always prided itself on productivity, and with XPress 7 you can now group and dock palettes, as well as save and restore palette setups. You can also split your window view and open multiple windows onto a single layout or onto multiple layouts from the same project. A few words about the QuarkXPress package itself: complete, delightful, and relatively cheap. QuarkXPress 7 ships in a large cardboard box with a price tag that will please. Somewhere between QuarkXPress 6 and XPress 7 the price dropped by more than several hundred dollars, so you can now see some ads on the internet offering the older ver- sion of XPress for more money than the newest version. Like InDesign, it still comes with a printed-on-paper hard-copy manual, for those of us who like to read. The XPress manual is 435 pages. (The InDesign manual is 375 pages). The XPress package contains four CDs, including the XPress application and updaters on two CDs, a Quark Alliance CD with an incredible amount of advice, information and catalogs from companies that supply addon XTensions and other stuff. The alliance CD also has six issues of X-Ray Magazine for Quark users, the 2006 XTensions Catalog and Xtensions Directory, and brochures and offers from output providers and XPress training material providers. Also included with the package is a <www.lynda.com> Quark training CD with twenty QuickTime videos with voice-over narration that describes and demonstrates getting started with QuarkXPress 7.0. (There is also a wealth of free training materials and tutorials in the Support section on the Quark website). RAM, which may be more a cause of the problem than the Quark application). The XPress program created an extensive crash report and sent it off to Quark to make them aware of the problem and a Quark employee got in touch via email with questions about my concerns with the program and a request for more information about what I was doIn my opinion, this latest version of QuarkXPress 7 ing or trying to do with QuarkXPress 7 when the is the best of a long line of XPress incarnations and program went down. goes a long way towards justifying the faith that loyal Quark users have had in the product. QuarkX- Some users may think that Quark has generally Press always was a very classy product and its waited too long between upgrades and that the dominance in the field of desktop publishing is due march of Adobe has gained more momentum than to the stability and versatility of the XPress pro- it should have, but the past cannot be re-written. gram itself coupled with the ingenious third-party The whole software scene changes too rapidly for XTensions that extend its usefulness. In response to any company to think that it can rest on its laurels, competition from Adobe, Quark has re-created a Adobe included, but it appears that Quark is back product that re-establishes Quark firmly as a com- in the game with a product upgrade that is signifipany capable of building on the best features of cantly better than Quark 6.5 as well as significantly previous XPress versions, capable of including and better than Adobe InDesign CS. From my own eximproving on the new features that made InDesign perience I can say that Quark is more responsive to a contender, and capable of providing it all in an their customers’ needs than their reputation would improved interface that is welcoming and intuitive. indicate, and this is just as welcome and imporBy lowering the price of QuarkXPress so that it is tant. now competitive with InDesign, introducing the new features that make it possible for more than There are no losers in competition like this. The big one designer to work simultaneously on the same winners will be the professional consumers who do document, and building in their new Job Jackets layout and design for a living and people like us, features to ensure that preferences and color man- amateurs who publish for our own amusement. We agement settings can be controlled and consistent can all expect to benefit from more product imacross all features of large projects, Quark has made provements and more aggressive pricing as Adobe XPress 7 a whole new player in the field of layout and Quark compete for our business. The last version of QuarkXPress, v6.5, sold for US $999.00 and design. and this new version sells on the Quark website I had only one problem with my QuarkXPress and for US $749.00. it was more a source of assurance than otherwise: while attempting to rotate a translucent pink text box with text and drop shadows over a complex graphic, QuarkXPress quit on me. (I have it installed on an old G4 iBook with only 640 megs of This is the February 2007 MaUsE DoubleClick, made with InDesign CS. Next month you will see the March 2007 DoubleClick, made using the new QuarkXPress 7.1. This is the February 2007 MaUsE DoubleClick, made with InDesign CS. Next month you will see the March 2007 DoubleClick, made using QuarkXPress 7.1. There will probably be little difference in the actual appearance of the DoubleClick as a result of the change. Both of these programs do more or less the same job and they both do it well. QuarkXPress or Adobe InDesign: its a matter of personal preference. Both of these very similar products can create beautiful layouts and they each have their individual strengths, and they each have a loyal following of users. I am fortunate enough to have both installed on my computer (so I don’t have to use AppleWorks or any Microsoft programs), but if I had only one of them it would be QuarkXPress. It has lots of room to grow into and web document creation tools I have not explored yet. I’ll describe a couple of really impressive XTensions (QuarkXPress lug-ins) in next month’s DoubleClick. You can visit the Quark website and store for more information about XPress and if you want to see the tutorials and watch training videos they are there for the viewing. There are lots of new productivity enhancement features I have not touched on. If you want to try out QuarkXPress on your own Mac you can download a 250-megabyte demo copy of the program that will perform without limitations for a month before expiring. QuarkXPress 7 is available for Mac OS X 10.4 and Windows XP. The Mac version is a Universal binary which runs natively on PPC- and Intel-based Macs. I must warn you, however, that the program can bog down anything slower than a really fast G4 processor and if you do download the demo to try out make sure that you get the very latest version, QuarkXPress 7.1. I have read on the internet that some QuarkXPress 7 users are not thrilled by the performance (speed) of this new release. My own experience is that right out of the box QuarkXPress 7 does have some performance (speed) issues but XPress 7 users can either download the Updater to v7.1, which improves performance significantly, or order the update for free on CD from Quark. On my 1 GHz G4 2004 iBook I found performance perfectly acceptable, but I know that this consumer-level iBook has limitations. I trotted into the new Apple Store in Sherway Gardens and found that they had installed Save-disabled DEMO versions of XPress 7 on some of their professional machines. QuarkXPress 7 is accelerated for the new Intel models ( something like the programs that were labeled “Accelerated for PowerPC” that we ran into back when we were still using 680X0 Macintoshes) and I found that compared to performance on my G4 iBook, QuarkXPress ran with incredible speed on a new Mac with Intel Dual-Core Intel Xeon processors. For me, the true test of how this program works will be how it performs on my next Macintosh computer, the one I am getting to replace the iBook. The January QuarkXPress is available at the Apple Store and from online resellers like Amazon.ca but the logical place to shop for programs like QuarkXPress is probably still eBay online auctions. As with most big-ticket items, do your research before you bid: check for auctions for QuarkXPress 7 that have already ended and you will find that what appears to be identical QuarkXPress items have sold for anywhere from $204.00 to $585.00 on eBay! There are academic and other language versions of the program available from Quark so read the item description carefully and cross-reference product numbers to the Quark store on the internet to make sure you know what you are getting. I offer my sincerest thanks to the people at Quark who made this upgrade possible. I hope 2007 sees continued success for everyone at Quark. MaUsE Raffle The January 2007 MaUsE Raffle was another success with 16 prizes awarded. All of the prizes were copies of programs previously donated to the DoubleClick for review purposes. If you would like to receive a free copy of a new software program in exchange for writing a review of it for the MaUsE DoubleClick, get in touch with the Editor. Contact info for the DoubleClick is on Page 2. Sometimes software companies will supply review copies for free... The February MaUsE Raffle I will not be attending the February MaUsE Meeting but I did make sure that I set aside a few nice things for a rainy day. Some of the software in this issue will be available, including several very desirable items. For February we have another copy of StuffIt Deluxe 11, at least two of the iPod utilities from Prosoft and TastyBytes, some AUTO FX Photoshop plugins, Virtual Villagers, Comic Life Deluxe, Arctic Quest, BeLight MailFactory, ZIPIT, and Eltima Flash Optimiser. MaUsE Meetings are open to the public but MaUsE Raffle tickets can only be issued to MaUsE Members in good standing who actually attend the raffle. Another reason to attend... Going Directly From Your Video Camera Into QuickTime (.mov) Submitted by Chris Greaves There’s a very cool feature that sneaked into QuickTime Pro 7 that has kind of flown below the radar so far. It’s the ability to record directly from your digital video camera, iSight or built-in camera (or a microphone) right into a QuickTime file, without going through iMovie, Final Cut Pro, or a third-party application. It works the same way for recording audio using your Mac’s built-in microphone (provided of course that your Mac actually does have a built-in mic), but instead of choosing New Movie Recording, you’ll choose New Audio Recording. Further refinements can be made in QuickTime Preferences. Video Quality can be saved small for email or left Device Native to edit in iMovie. Microphone sources can also be changed. Note: you have to upgrade from the standard QuickTime to QuickTime Pro to have access to this feature. Just connect your home digital video camera (or iSight camera or built-in portables camera), launch the QuickTime Pro 7 Player, then from the File menu choose New Movie Recording. A QuickTime window will open showing you a preview of what your camera is seeing. Now just click the round red record button at the bottom of the QuickTime window and it starts recording. Click the stop button when If you can see a QuickTime you’re done and you’ve got an instant Quick- video window at the bottom Time movie. of this page click on it to see a video created specially for the web version of MaUsE DoubleClick. This will not work with the printed-on-paper version of the publication. Arctic Quest Submitted by Marcel Dufresne Arctic Quest from exclusivegames.com is an IBM game that has been adapted to run on the MAC platform. It is a puzzle solving game with a time limit. In Arctic Quest, you set out to solve the puzzles, each of which takes the shape of an animal or other tropical wonder. The animal is set up as a grid work which can be filled with various shaped puzzle pieces. As pieces of ice fall from the sky, you grab them with your mouse, rotate them using the space bar and place them on a grid within the puzzle. You have completed the level once all the grid has been filled in. The shapes fall faster than you can actually use them. Also, many are of the wrong shape and so must be ignored. If the waters that surround the island fill up with unused ice, your quest will fail. A small fire that burns on the land allows you to melt surplus ice and keep that level alive for awhile longer. Fish are sometimes caught in the ice and can be freed if used in the grid. The freed fish earn bonuses that grant you various powers, such as the ability to smash excess ice or paint in portions of the grid. You can also click on any flying birds to get bonus points. Every fifth level is actually a special level There will be a fully licensed raffle copy of Arctic where the puzzle pieces are already in the Quest available for the February MaUsE Raffle. water and you must simply pick them up and place them in the grid. There is how- The full game has 60 levels, an online high scoreboard and ever a very short time allotment for this. free technical support and updates. The regular game price is $19.95 (US) but an exclusive user group offer is $11.97 Installation is simply a matter of dragging (US), a 40 percent discount. Purchase using the direct link: the game to your applications folder. Once www.regnow.com/softsell/nph-softsell.cgi?item=11295you double click the icon you are taken to 5&ss_coupon=MUG-I080-AQ. This offer is valid until the home page and allowed to start a new April 27, 2007. game, switch player or continue from where you left off. The graphics are full screen and pleasing to look at, although they are very much cartoonish. The game may be played by any age group. The one complaint I have is that the instructions in the help menu assume we have a double click mouse (IBM) and I had to learn on my own that rotating the puzzle pieces can be done with the space bar. The game can be played with a limited number of levels for free. It is available from: www.exclusivegames.com/download/arctic-quest-mac.dmg. Here is what your Fonts list looks like under your Text Menu if you don’t have FontCard installed. Every time you want to change fonts you have to crawl through this bewildering list of dozens of fonts you don’t use and will probably never use. Australian Sunrise indeed ! As if you’re ever going to need that ! Here is what your simplified Fonts list looks like under your Text Menu if you have organized your fonts with FontCard. No more wading through a list as long as your arm. Fonts you never use but don’t want to discard can be set aside out of the way of the fonts you actually use. Unsanity FontCard Submitted by Marcel Dufresne I have way too many fonts. In the old System 8.6 days I was able to place my fonts into groupings that I could control. I had dingbats, favourites, capitals, etc. This allowed me to choose quickly what I wanted to use. I have been searching for an easy way to do this in System 10. FontCard has this capability. FontCard from Unsanity Software is a haxie that modifies the Font menu in applications. It can add an icon that displays the format of a font next to the font menu item. It displays the font name in the font face (WYSIWYG) and will group the fonts into submenus, favourites and most recently used being in this submenus. You can also add font collections to the font menu. All of this is controlled from the FontCard in the Preference Folder. I created a folder called “school” into which I have added the fonts I most often want to use. FontCard has been tested with InDesign, BBedit, TextEdit, Word, PowerPoint, QuarkXPress, iChat, Illustrator, Photoshop, Eudora, SimpleText and more. FontCard 1.4 runs on Mac OS X 10.3 or later and Intel Macs. I have included a before and after pict of what happens with AppleWorks. You can download a copy and try it out for a limited time as it is shareware. The trial allows full use for a short time. It is worth downloading just to see what it can do. It is priced at US $17. For this price, you can save yourself a lot of time searching for the correct font you want. Unsanity is devoted to developing high, commercial quality software at affordable prices. Software developed by Unsanity is distributed mainly through the Internet, although it is possible to purchase our products on a CD or in retail stores. Comic Life Deluxe At right you can see the entire monitor screen as it appears while Comic Life Deluxe is running. You start building your comic by laying out panels to hold photos (or by simply picking from the 322 templates found in the section I have marked with the red rectangle). Comic template designs copy traditional layouts from various decades and various types of comic books. Once you set the framework, it’s time to import your photos. Just drag and drop pics from Comic Life’s file browser, the area I have marked in blue. The browser has three buttons at its bottom to allow access to iPhoto libraries, or to pictures in folders that can be found on your computer, or to a digital camera if one is connected. There is a “Freeze” button in the file browser window that allows you to take snaps of the image in your video camera and the picture quality is very high with the iSight camera. Everything is dragged and positioned in the yellow box and as pages are completed they appear off to the left in a vertical stack which I have indicated with a purple box. After you place a photo in the appropriate panel, you can move the pic around or zoom. You can even add some visual punch by applying one of 17 image filters. Want an authentic comic look? Choose Comicify. Feel like going psychedelic? Select Pop Art ’05. It’s fun to experiment, but filters only work in Mac OS 10.4 (Tiger). The panel marked in green has a selection of balloons that can be dragged and dropped anywhere on the page and then nudged into position. As soon as you select and place a balloon you can type in it and the balloon with automatically adjust its size to accommodate the text. You can also add text boxes and titles or sound effect words in a large variety of special colours and text shapes just like the ones you find in Batman and other super-hero comics. Its surprisingly easy to do and a lot of fun. When your comic is ready, the only thing left to do is publish it—you can print it out, save it as an image, create a QuickTime movie (just a video slide show of all your comic pages), export it to HTML so you can put it on the Web, or send it straight to your .Mac account. Comic Life from FREEVERSE is a remarkable application, one of the Apple Design Award winners for 2006. If you are tempted to get a copy make sure you get the Deluxe version instead of the Standard program. It has many more features, more fonts, more templates and more text styles. Look it up on the internet for more information and to see what other Mac users have done with this software. Our thanks go out to Colin Smith and Timothy Beck at FREEVERSE who have graciously provided the copy of Raina’s Revenge that appeared reviewed in last month’s DoubleClick and a copy of Comic Life Deluxe for our February MaUsE Raffle. Virtual Villagers Submitted by Marcel Dufresne Virtual Villagers from BigFishGames is a new sim type game. There is a twist. It is real-time simulation gameplay. This means that the game will keep playing even when you quit it, even when your computer is shut off. And unlike other sim games, it is extremely easy to learn. There are no vast menus from which to choose what to do next. It is simply drag and drop. The story is that a group of villagers has washed up on the shores of an island, Isola, after surviving a volcanic eruption. You have to guide them in learning how to survive. They learn by doing. When you drag and drop them onto a certain area, like a berry bush, they learn to gather food. If you drag them onto a building, they might repair it. You may have to drag them there more than once until they learn that skill. They need to become farmers, builders, scientists, doctors and of course parents. As the game runs, they build huts, farm fields, have children. You will also have to make many decisions as problems arise. Do you open up a crate that has washed up on shore or not? That choice will move your village in one direction or another, sometimes good, sometimes bad. body decomposing into a skeleton. It did not take long before the original six players died. They had reproduced enough to keep my colony going. I have been checking on my little group at least twice daily to see how they are doing. I have solved only 7 or the 16 puzzles up to now. Because the game plays even when the computer is off, you must check into the island daily in order to keep problems from getting out of hand. However, if you are to be away for awhile the spacebar will toggle the pause on or off. Pause it before you go away for awhile. You can also change the game speed as you play from the option menu. You can also change the level of difficulty and whether to play full screen or not. ries in which you need to upgrade, each of which There are hundreds of unique villagers. I have seen require more tech points. For instance, a school can 38 so far. It is a 18.2 MB download an it runs on be built with an upgrade in the construction area. Mac OSX 10.2 or later. It sells for US $19.99 but it is on sale now for $14.99. Try out the game. You There are 16 puzzles that the villagers must solve. will be pleasantly surprised. If you like Sims, you These are dependent upon some combination of will fall for Virtual Villagers! Village Tech, villager skills, and other puzzles. The puzzles do not have to be completed in the order given. I studied plants on the island and was able to solve puzzle 8 after I had completed the first three puzzles. The curiosity of the villagers helps to identify what they should be in fact studying. You As the village grows, the villagers become curious are able to get a ranking on how you about their mysterious island home and the secrets are doing compared to other players it holds. You must help them explore and restore via the internet. the island. The more they work at a task, the more expert they become. The scientists will research At first glance it appears to be a and earn Tech Points. With Tech Points you are able children’s game. However it talks to purchase upgrades in six areas: farming, con- about fertility and the need for pristructing, medicine, spirituality, science and fertil- vacy in order to breed. Also, when ity. There are three levels of each of these catego- villagers die, the game shows the Notice to Double Click Readers Who Are NOT MaUsE Members If you are living in or near the Durham Region of Southern Ontario and using a Macintosh computer and are not yet a member of MaUsE you can use the information found on the second page of this newsletter to get meeting info and to get in touch with a member of our executive to find out how to join. There is enough information on our website (www.mause.ca) to get you started. If you just want to attend a few of our monthly meetings before committing, please feel free to join us at the new central Whitby Library at 7:00 P.M. on the fourth Wednesday of the month. Meetings are open to the public and admission is free but eligibility for winning valuable MaUsE Raffle prizes at our monthly MaUsE Meeting Raffles and receiving technical assistance are available only to paid-up MaUsE club members. 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