Tips and techniques for Road Warriors at the - MacGroup
Transcription
Tips and techniques for Road Warriors at the - MacGroup
MacNews Monthly newsletter of MacGroup-Detroit www.macgroup.org Serving The Mac Community Since 1986 Tips and techniques for Road Warriors at the February Meeting MacGroup-Detroit Michigan's largest Macintosh users group February 2008 • $3 US 2 MacNews - February 2008 MacGroup is going Green by Terry White I t has been a long time coming and the day is finally here. For those of you who have been members for several years probably know that I’ve been pushing the group to move towards an electronic ONLY distribution of MacNews. We have been making PDFs of our newsletter ever since Acrobat came onto the scene back in 1993 (yes it’s been over 10 years). Back then there were several members who brought up valid reasons why we should keep a printed newsletter. One of the biggest reasons was that not everyone was online. Well that was kind of a show stopper! So I waited. The last time this came up, the main argument was that there were still several people on dial-up. Again, I waited. Then Adobe introduced Adobe InDesign and I got all excited about print publishing again, so I waited. What changed this time? March 1995 The Monthly Newsletter of MacGroup-Detroit $3 Version 9.6 The Paperless Office Myth or Reality? The March 1995 issue of MacNews http://macgroup.org/ MacNewsPDFS/MacNews03-95.pdf As I was sitting in the Macworld Keynote watching Steve introduce the latest toys, it was at the end of his presentation when he talked about how “green” the new MacBook Air was. How the case was made of aluminum (a highly sought after material by recyclers) and how the display was LED based, how the packaging was minimal to reduce energy in moving them around the planet, etc. etc. This got me to thinking about a lot of things and one of them was this newsletter and the amount of effort, paper and mailing that we put into it. I won’t pretend to be a “green” fanatic. I’m not! However, I do feel that if we all did ONE thing to conserve our resources it would have an impact. So for MacGroup the one biggest thing we can do is stop printing this publication. I did a quick sanity check by emailing and talking with several members (not just those who are on the iBBS who would obviously be more “online savvy”) and it was unanimous that a PDF version of MacNews is sufficient. Most are reading the online version before they see the printed version anyway. If they want a printed version of a particular article, well they can simply print just the pages they need to take with them. If you want a back issue here’s the trick. Simply change the month and year in the URL below to the issue you want. They are all there all the way back to the mid 90’s (yes over 10 years worth of back issues for your amusement). http://macgroup.org/MacNewsPDFS/MacNews02-08.pdf How else will this benefit us? Our printer Zip Printing has been AWESOME to work with over the years and they give us a GREAT deal on the printing. We spend about $369 per month on printing and mailing MacNews, not including anyone’s time and gas. That’s just printing and mailing. That money will go right back into the group! We’ll use it for door prizes and other meeting benefits. This is the last regularly printed version of MacNews! ■ Thanks for understanding! MacNews - February 2008 3 Welcome to MacGroup-Detroit Michigan’s Largest Apple® Macintosh® User’s Group MacGroup-Detroit, Inc. PO Box 760399 Lathrup Village MI 48076-0399 248-569-4933 FAX 248-557-9403 http://macgroup.org email: info@macgroup.org Officers & Volunteers President................................................... Terry L. White MacNews Editor......................................... Orie Carter Meeting Coordinator.............................Carla White Photographer............................................Joseph Grey Videographer......................................Shirley Kussner Registration Table........................................Mary Grey Registration Table.....................................Brian Stone Registration Table...........................Charlotte Stone Registration Table...................Loretta Sangeorsen Special Interest Group (SIG) Leaders Education SIG..................................... Jamie Feldman Internet SIG....................................... Howard Parsons Digital Video Detroit.................Michele Kotlarsky PDA/Portables............................................ Terry White Genius Table Volunteers Genius Table Leader..............................Phyllis Evans Mac Genius.............................................Jack Beckman Mac Genius...................................................... Bill Carver Mac Genius............................................. Yvonne Evans Mac Genius................................................Chita Hunter Webmaster Webmaster................................................... Terry White © 1986-2008 MacGroup-Detroit. All rights reserved. MacNews is published by MacGroup-Detroit, Inc. Excerpts may be reprinted by user groups and other non-profit media. Credit must be given to MacGroup-Detroit and the author. In addition, a copy of all reprinted materials must be sent to us at the address listed above. MacNews is an independent publication not affiliated or otherwise associated with or sponsored or sanctioned by Apple Computer, Inc. The opinions, statements, positions and views stated herein are those of the author(s) or publisher and are not intended to be the opinions, statements, positions or views of Apple Computer, Inc. You and your friends are invited to attend our next meeting. Our membership is only $40 per year, entitling you to this newsletter each month and many more benefits. If you would like to become a member or get more info on MacGroup, feel free to check out our web site at macgroup.org. Also see the membership form on page 14. Our meetings are held at The Birmingham Temple 28611 W. 12 Mile Rd Farmington Hills MI 48334 Welcome New Members Carl Bihlmeyer Charles Church, Transient Light LLC Santa Fabio Harriett Hollander Steve Johnston Michael Kondogiani Erick Leskinen James Mathis Stephen Wilson Welcome Back Renewing Members Peggy Angelos Linda Anger Harold Balmer Peter Bashakes Thom Briggs Richard Cavaler Nina Cleven Oliver Cole Wanda Doerner Mrs. Rusty Farrell Marc Garrison Joyce Golden Glenn Grace Donald Greening John Gruchala Jeff Hall Ron Hartmus Gary Heinonen Eric Horn John Impellizzeri George Kalligeros Rick Lepsetz Bill Meyer Brent Mitchell Charles Molnar Gary Molnar Claude Oliver Loretta Oliver What’s Inside... Jeane Poos Jan Prusinowski Ricardo Reyes Giovanni Sanitate Michael Sarnacki Richard Scheich Ewald Stief, Master Handyman Press John Stunz Jr MD Wolfgang Uhrig Dr. Kent Voigt Ellen Waara MacGroup is going Green...................................... 2 Welcome New Members....................................... 3 Welcome Back Renewing Members......................... 3 Creating your own Icons ........................................ 4 Broadband, broadly................................................ 6 DYMO DiscPainter ............................................... 9 Digital Video Column part 16................................. 10 Fund Raising for MacGroup-Detroit......................... 12 Apple Events........................................................ 13 MacGroup-Detroit Volunteer Help Lines................. 13 4 MacNews - February 2008 Creating your own Icons by Chita Hunter own icon. Since I wanted a variety of colors and maybe custom icons, the decision was made to design my own. Taking the plunge O ver the past few years, I’ve rarely had to boot anything up in OS 9, so only a few applications that never made it over to OS X will be missed. But there is one feature of OS 9 that I have really missed not having the ability to use in OS X. The ability to color label folders. The way OS X colors labels folders is not the same as OS 9, and actually, it is somewhat deceptive. At times, you can think that a folder is selected because of the way OS X color labels the background of the folder and its respective text. I want the folder color labeled, just the folder, not the text. And one day, while doing a little research, the possibility of getting back that ability in OS X revealed itself in a user friendly way. I could search the web and find a ready-made icon to just use generically or I could design my Wanting to make this as easy as possible, I decided to start with something already familiar. So, I copied one of OS X’s folder images (from the Get Info window) into a 128px x 128 px Illustrator document, then set that image layer as a template. On a new layer, I drew paths following the template outline to create my folder graphic. After creating the graphic in two paths and coloring it, the path was copied and pasted into a 128px x 128px Photoshop document, which had a transparent background. any other layers with additional graphic effects, I would need to deselect the Layers checkbox when saving as a .tif file so that it was saved as a flattened ,tif. Photoshop Save As TIFF dialogue box The next step in the creation process required a free application. That application is Pic2Icon, available here: http://www.download.com/ Pic2Icon/3000-2256_4-8881968. htm Paste and resize into Photoshop When presented with the paste options, I selected the option to paste the file as pixels and then resized the object to fit the 128px x128px document canvas. Now, from within Photoshop, I saved the file out as a .tif file. (Prior to saving out the file, I could add any manipulations in Photoshop I desired.) If I had created Pic2Icon application window Pic2Icon is a program that creates 128x128 Mac OS X icons, using a drag and drop method. From within Pic2Icon, you can further enhance how you want your icon to look upon creation, by MacNews - February 2008 5 adding a drop shadow or even a dog-eared corner. From the Finder window, take the newly created Photoshop .tif file and drop it into the Pic2Icon window. You’ll see that the Photoshop logo that typically displays on the file will change to display the image that is in the actual file. This icon can now be used as a folder icon or even a web image. That same Photoshop file can be used many times over to create any color folder desired, just by selecting the color area with the Magic Wand tool, deleting it, and placing a new color in that area. I found that creating a gradient that blended from color to transparency gave the resulting icon a little more character. Now I have my color labeled folders the way I want them, now that I know how to create my own icons, it’s time to get a little more creative and daring. Enjoy. Get Info window For use as a folder icon, select this file, choose Get Info, click on the icon in the upper left corner, copy and then paste into the same Get Info window of the file you want to change the icon of. Take Your Photography to the Next Level… Award-winning photographer ANDY GREENWELL is now holding photography/lighting classes in his Farmington Hills-based studio. You’ll learn all this and much more: (topics may vary based on class input) • Explore four levels of lighting people based on your budget: on-camera flash, umbrella or soft box, three-point lighting, and utilizing a full complement of studio lights for portraiture. • JPEGs? TIFFs? RAW files? Find out which I shoot and why. • Light meters. Do you really need one? Which one is best? • Choose the right lens for every situation. • Learn Glamour Lighting in terms you can understand! • Umbrellas? Softboxes? Hot lights? Which is best? • Understanding Digital Workflow: How to manage your time whether you’re a beginner or pro. • See lighting demonstrated on professional models! VERY SPECIAL GUEST: Terry White from Adobe will stop by to show the finer points of Adobe Lightroom and Photoshop CS3. One lucky student will win a full copy of Lightroom! The next 3-week class meets on Mondays February 11, 18 and 25 from 7PM to 9PM. Tuition is just $150 per person. Learn from one of the best! Don’t delay. Call today! Andy Greenwell Photography 37550 Hills Tech Dr. • Farmington Hills, MI 48331 248.489.5777 www.andygreenwell.com ■ 6 MacNews - February 2008 Broadband, broadly by Eric Fretz were changing. It seemed that every email, even spam, came with a bandwidth hogging attachment. The majority of websites were now dialup hostile, requiring 500K, and a few minutes at 56K, to even be seen. What is a dedicated road warrior to do? EVDO service and cards The mobile Mac O nce you commit to the laptop lifestyle, and you have Wi-Fi as part of your home broadband network, you really notice when you don’t have it. With a laptop you get used to “time shifting” your work so you can turn otherwise wasted time in line, or while traveling, into productive time (or just more productive goof-off time). In all these cases away from home though, you eventually find yourself needing, or wanting, Internet access. Maybe you need to check an address, or send a quick email, you just need a TCP/IP fix. Prior solutions Over the years, I came up with a variety of ways to get my Internet packets flowing when away from home. Obviously at school and at the better (and, now, pretty much all) hotels you can find a good wi-fi signal. I carried a retractable RJ-45 Ethernet cable with me too, in order to avail myself of the occasional unguarded Ethernet port. Back when laptops had modems, I kept my AOL dialup plan as a good backup when out in the sticks. And, as I have documented in two previous articles over the years, I had great success (if not great speed) with using my Sprint PCS phone as a modem with the right data cable (it was only dialup speed, but was charged as a phone call, not at data rates). These options, sometimes in combination, were less than ideal, but did get me the internet access I needed, as long as I was willing to wait. But times I had watched the growth of PCS networks, and the associated possibilities for PCS data connections, with growing envy. Each year brought revisions and new acronyms (which true geeks always love to learn and throw around). I was particularly impressed with EV-DO (Evolution Data Optimized) standard. With a dedicated PCS modem (or a phone with a data plan and Bluetooth) you could get 10 times dialup speed, or more. The speed seemed to jump up every few months! You can get EV-DO cards that go into USB ports, as well as more low profile cards that go into the PC or Express card slot on your laptop. The cards were expensive ($100-$300) and the data plans they required were not cheap (often $100 per month for unlimited use, or cheaper (?!) per MB plans). Still, given the cost, and the fact that when I just HAD to have access I could almost always suffer through my slow PCS phone connection (or sniff out some free Wi-Fi), I just could not justify the expense. MacNews - February 2008 7 Possibilities Then I got a special Christmas present from my Uncle Sam. 3 weeks notice to mobilize for 420 days and head to Iraq! I was going to have 3 weeks (which included a planned drive to Disney) to prepare and complete 40 hours of online courses, then travel the country to remote training bases before leaving for a year. Hmmm, now HOW ever would I be able to do all this online work, and maintain connection with my family, as I travel all over the place? Hmmmmm. Let’s see. So, I zipped down to my local Sprint store, bought the card, signed up for the plan, and they activated the card for me. They said I could complete the second step of activation at home. This is truly FOR PCs! It seems there are still a few behind in the times programmers and marketing folks who don’t take simple steps to ensure the Mac experience is equivalent to the PC side. A return to the Sprint store found a more knowledgeable person in the back who brought out the Mac setup software on a USB drive (itís not on the package CDÖ why??). Once that runs, the card auto-provisions (meaning it sets ITSELF up over the network). I did not even have to enter so much as a password! Cool. Now THAT is more Mac-like. Once the card is inserted, it shows an icon in the menu bar and auto-connects. Then it is available under NETWORK preference pane as an option. If you are not online any other way, then that connection becomes primary. I did a speed test with 5 of 5 bars and got 2000K download, 1500K upload. 40x dialup! Sweeeet! That’s more than enough to use online courseware, and to iChat. I have to say it certainly saved my bacon in the 3 weeks I had before mobilizing. What would have been two 15 hour blocks of dead time (as we drove down and back to Orlando) became the perfect time to grind out all my required online courses. I could iChat with friends who wanted to check in with me. If the hotel wireless was down, I didn’t care! On average I could reliably get 756K download and upload. Even with NO signal strength, I could still get about 56K. Even now, in the middle of a South Carolina pine forest, at Camp McCrady (home of the Armyís IA Combat Course), with at best, one bar, I can Skype to my family at home. When the base wireless network goes down, I become the most popular man on base when I click on my “share internet connection” via AirPort pane! I love my Mac. I’ll hand off the card to a friend to use while I am in Iraq (gotta love those long term contracts!), but it was still SO worth it. If you 8 MacNews - February 2008 can justify the $100 for the card ($250 with a $150 rebate), and the $59 per month, the joy of “broadband anywhere” is pretty intense. Depending on how much you are away from home, and if you get a good signal at home, you could let this service replace your home broadband and the cost offset would make it even more attractive. Future upgrades to the network should allow for even greater speeds to come! Caveats The Sprint EVDO card is not a perfect solution. The PCS network is not 100% nationwide and primarily follows highways and population centers. Thus, in cities and on highways you are in great shape. Everywhere else, you signal strength will vary with proximity to towers (you can watch it cycle up and down as you ride in a car, but the connection almost never drops and if it does, it picks up again automatically). I have found a few dead zones in rural areas. Signal strength equals bandwidth to some degree, so you’ll only get real broadband performance with two bars or better, but I have done some blocky iChats with one bar. You also have to be careful with the card. If you bump it, it can come unseated (both awake and asleep), and then it just slips out. I’m still looking for a nice snug padded case to put the card in. I keep it loose in my bag for now, and have dropped it several times so far with no ill effects, but I don’t recommend dropping electronics, as a rule. Lastly if flashing lights easily annoys you, be careful what card you choose. Mine flashes green while connected well (about 120 flashes per minute), and at a slower rate or in red when connections are weak or intermittent. I suppose you could darken the LED with a Sharpie or cover it with electrical tape too. Summary It’s not cheap, but if you want broadband anywhere and don’t spend a lot of time in rural areas, EV-DO is a broadband option whose time has come. The card and service have been reliable, and setup is a snap. If you can find a way to justify or offset the cost, I’d say give it a try! THE AUTHOR Is a proud Mac User since 1985, and UM dual PhD candidate, now mobilized for over a year to Iraq (blogging his adventure on .Mac at homepage.mac.com/ebfretz). Long ago, he was affiliated with the Detroit area’s premier Mac service and sales organization, MacProfessionals, www.macprofessionals.com (check out their fancy new showroom!) He can be reached for questions, comment, and discussion at EBFretz@AOL. COM or at (734)-284-3999. ■ Sprint ExpressCard Broadband card for MacBook Pro users Sprint USB AirCard Broadband card for users that don’t have ExpressCard Slots (example: MacBook users) MacNews - February 2008 9 DYMO DiscPainter by: Don Dubois I f you are familiar with Discus software, you are already able to produce beautiful covers for your CDs and DVDs. The DiscPainter is the printer to use with the Discus software (same company). The latest innovation in direct CD / DVD printing is the DYMO DiscPainter. This compact printer is designed solely for printing on CDs and DVDs and amazingly prints while the disk is spinning. Discus supports this printer directly and integrates perfectly with the DiscPainter. Just starting to ship in early fall of 2007, it is compatible with both Windows and Macintosh. Included are the USB cable, power cord, setup document, one blank CD, and the DVD with software and PDF manual. Bruce Mitchell and I purchased this product for our DVD production business, after we saw it mentioned in the Event DV magazine. We found the Epson printer that we used to be cum- bersome, lining up the trays and placing the proper notch for CDs and DVDs printing. The standard price of $279.95 sounds high, but compared to other printers of its kind, we found it to be practical in many ways. It works cross-platform, for all versions of MacOS X, prints in full color, prints in 60 seconds, and prints over the whole CD / DVD from edge to hub. It only uses one ink cartridge, which is multi-color, for the price of $39.95 per cartridge. What I like is the compact footprint and portability. With desk space at a minimum, this printer is a space saver. For those on site print-on-the-go jobs, this is very useful and easy to transport and connect. Step-By-Step: Purchase the Printer -includes the printer, blank disc, Software CD, power cord, USB cable, ink cartridge, and Quick Start Guide Setup the printer -insert the ink cartridge -connect the power cord -install the soft- ware -connect the USB cable when instructed to do so -insert a blank disc Create the Disc Design and print -open the Discus for DYMO software -choose disc layout -select the canvas (similar to Discus software designs ) -add symbols, photos, grids, text, and/or paint -select project preview and print (fast for text, normal for most designs, or best ) -allow time for disc to dry Don Dubois retired teacher (38 years) BA, MA, EdS Web Sites: http://global.dymo.com/ enUS/DiscPainter/default. html http://www.magicmouse.com/ ■ 10 MacNews - February 2008 Digital Video Column part 16 by Ken Bean I have been told that USB 2 can support transfer speeds as fast as Firewire 400. While this may be the case, there is some functionality that would be lost if you relied exclusively on USB 2 connections. The connectors at the ends of all USB cables are different. This limits the flexibility of how you can connect devices. I am not sure if your editing software can control cameras or decks using USB connections. With either Firewire speed, you can “daisy chain” a number of external drives if you want to. There are very few computers that have Firewire 800 ports, though most (if not all) have at least one Firewire 400 port. You can connect Firewire 400 drives to Firewire 800 drives using adaptor cables. In any case, you would be limited to the slowest through connecting speed. In addition, most video cameras that are coming out have a 4-pin Firewire port so you can capture the best quality video and audio possible. You would need an adapting cable to go from the 4 pin to either the 6 pin Firewire 400, or 9 pin Firewire 800 configurations. Most of the newer external hard drives with Firewire run at 7,200 rpm. There had been some that ran at 5,400 rpm. If you are doing video, you need to make sure that they run at 7,200 rpm because it is easier for them to handle the large files that video generates. External Hard Drives I was near the Genius Table at a recent meeting and overheard a question about whether to get two 500 gig drives or one 1 T drive. I think the discussion would prove to be an interesting topic of consideration when selecting external hard drives. You may not know that drives like the 500 gig and larger are basically a box that holds more than one drive mechanism. The 500 gig is actually two 250 gig drives in a single box, and the 1 TB drive is four 250 gig drives. These comments are for the basic external hard drive and not necessarily for G-RAID or other specialty drives directed more to the special purpose or the high end user. When I have looked at external drives in the past, the bigger the drive (box), the cheaper per gig the drive was. The prices changed significantly when you went from a 500 gig drive to a 1 TB drive, with the 1 TB drive being more expensive per gig of space. If this continues under the current prices of external hard drives, it would be better to get the two 500 gig drives rather than the one 1 T drive from a simple price comparison. There are a number of reasons why you may even want to get four 250 gig drives, rather than having only one or two big boxes. To simplify the math, let us take a 250 gig drive to have 250 gigs of usable space. Let us MacNews - February 2008 11 also take a MiniDV tape using QuickTime to take up 12.5 gigs of space for each hour of footage. That means that you could get 20 hours of footage into the 250 gig drive. How many projects do you have that would use more than 20 hours of footage? I am ignoring the space that might be taken up in the Edit Decision List (EDL), the photos, the rendering, the music, and any other comparatively small files that you may need for a project. Even if you did have a project that you needed more than 20 hours of footage for, the convenience of “daisy chaining” FireWire drives and the ability of programs like Final Cut and others to store files in more than one spot or hard drive, would make the argument for one big, or really big external hard drive irrelevant. You also have the issue of what would happen if that external drive failed. The first consideration is the fact that if you had to pay someone to recover data from your drive, they charge by the size of the drive, and not the amount of data that is on the drive. By having the projects spread over a number of smaller drives, you might be willing to live with the loss of the data on one smaller drive, but you might not want to lose all of your data on a larger drive, though you might find yourself having to by the prohibitive cost. This brings us to another advantage of having a number of smaller hard drives, and that is the ability to back up your projects. If you had a project on one smaller drive, you would then be more likely to back that entire drive onto a second drive on a more frequent basis. Another advantage of having relatively smaller external drives (i.e. 250 gig) is that if you are working on a number of projects, you can spread those projects onto different drives, without the issue of having to partition the drives and then to adjust the partition size if one project gets significantly larger than you had planned for. If you are working on projects with other people, and you both had the same version of the editing program, you would only have to transport the external drive when you are getting together to work on it. If you are working on another project with someone else, you would then be able to trans- port only the second drive. You could also leave one of the drives with the other person, and you could work on a second project on another drive. The next question you need to consider is: Do you need all of that hard drive space now or in the near future? As we have all noticed, the price of hardware and software decreases, or if it stays the same, the number of features increases. Not that long ago, a 500 gig external hard drive was near $ 1,000. It is now down to $ 117 for some models. It might be advantageous to buy a smaller drive that serves your immediate needs, and purchase others as your needs increase with time, as the future purchases are likely to be less expensive. One thing that I was not aware of when I first got my external drives is that even if the computer is off, the external hard drive will continue to cycle if it has power. I found this out the hard way when one of mine started having problems. This leads to another reason for having smaller hard drives, or at least not all of your files in one big hard drive. In researching and writing these comments, and realizing that 500 gig hard drives can be as little at $ 117, you might consider ignoring some of the options mentioned here, as drives are getting so inexpensive that you are more likely to be able to afford to purchase two hard drives and use one for your projects, and the other as a back up for the first. To be continued next month... 12 MacNews - February 2008 Fund Raising for MacGroup-Detroit by Leonard Mazerov I thought it might be time to bask for a moment in what might be some success in our fund raising activities. Why? Well, since its inception (at about the time we became a 501(c)(3) corporation) we have raised about $5,000. Nice. At least for the moment. Our original goal was to infuse our organization with $10,000 and so you see we have some way to go. But, hey. We are half way there and we say that with a certain amount of pride-pride that the members of MacGroup Detroit care enough to back us up and help get us where we want to go. Let me once again define what we mean by “Donations” and what we mean by “Contributions.” DONATIONS This is where one can claim a tax deduction (after consulting with one’s tax preparer). CONTRIBUTIONS This can be anything from a dollar or two to anything you can afford without expecting a tax deduction. Let me again point out that to keep MacGroup running at the level we have been enjoying, i.e., obtaining the best presenters and topics for our membership, it takes a lot of money. Such things as a high rent to the Temple, guest fees and housing, printing costs, some equipment costs, some raffle expenses and administrative costs are expensive. And these costs seem to keep going up each year. Now then, while our annual dues help offset some of these costs, they are not enough to continue at the level we want to maintain for our members. And so, we again ask you to help us cover the rising costs of keeping our group alive and financially healthy for now and the future. Please use the form below to make donations and feel free to contribute a dollar or two at our Registration Desk when you check in. We’re in this together and our future depends on all of us helping. MacGroup-Detroit Donation Form Date_____________Donation Amount $_______________ Name______________________________________________ Address__________________________________________ City_____________________State_____Zip______________ Phone and/or Email________________________________ Hand your donation to our Registration Desk, or Mail to: MacGroup-Detroit, Inc. P O Box 76099 LathrupVillage, MI 48076-0399, or Online @ www.macgroup.org (PayPal accepted) o Check o MasterCard o Visa o Cash Credit Card #_____________________ Expiration Date_________cvv2*_______ Signature_________________________ Please check with your tax preparer to make sure that your donation can be deducted from your taxes! *The three-digit number on the reverse side of your card. YOUR DONATION WILL HELP US CONTINUE TO WORK WITH YOU AND FOR YOU AND FOR THE FUTURE OF MacGroup-Detroit. MacNews - February 2008 13 MacGroup-Detroit Volunteer Help Lines For Members ONLY! Name Can Help With Contact via Hours Available Loretta Sangeorzan Clarisworks, MS Word 5.1, Beginners-graphics 810-225-9820 Tue., Fri., Sat., Sun. Ralph Marontate Adobe FrameMaker, Photoshop, 248-354-3252 Mon., Tue., Wed. evenings Mary Grey General 248-645-9740 Mon.-Fri. 10 am - 7 pm Chita Hunter Adobe, Microsoft & QuarkXPress Chuck Freedman Mac hardware and OS thru OSX, General Mac support, General DTP, DVD Authoring, Cross Platform connectivity. chuckf@macgroup.org anytime Jerry McBride Utilities, MS Word 5, PageMaker 6, Illustrator 6, Freehand 5.5, Clarisworks 4, Painter 3.1, many other graphic programs mcbridej@earthlink.net 810-887-3330 Mon.-Sat. 4-9pm Howard Parsons iMac G5 questions, OS X (Tiger), iPhoto, hparsons@comcast.net iTunes, Photoshop CS2 (photo editing 248-435-7438 only), FileMaker Pro, Excel, NisusWriter Express e-mail checked daily. by telephone most evenings before 9pm or weekends Terry White Mac questions in general, Adobe Products, Digital Video, Networking anytime anytime http://macgroup.org/ibbs http://macgroup.org/ibbs March 2008 Sunday Monday 24 Tuesday 25 Wednesday 26 Thursday 27 Steve Jobs Birthday Robert Krawiec’s Birthday 2 Apple Events Friday 28 3 Carla White’s Birthday 4 Donald Clark’s Birthday 9 10 5 6 Ron Hartmus’s Birthday 1 11 12 13 23 Ewald Stief’s Birthday Easter 30 8 MacNews Art…ue by Noon! 14 15 Ussama Hanna’s Birthday 17 16 3:00 PM MacGroup Main Meeting 7 John Blase’s Birthday Richard Hen…, III’s Birthday Daylight Savings Time Begins Jerry Allen’s Birthday 18 St. Patrick's Day Fred Meinberg’s Birthday 24 Mac OS X released in 2001 Barbara Coden’s Birthday William Stre!on’s Birthday Louis Abundis’s Birthday 19 20 21 Mark Lemko’s Birthday Beth Fordyce’s Birthday 25 31 26 27 28 2 3 4 Michael Berke’s Birthday Check out and subscribe to our iCal http://macgroup.org/ical 22 Pamela White’s Birthday Stan Sagan’s Birthday 1 Apple Comp…nded in 1976 April Fool's Day America/Detroit Time Zone Saturday 29 Rodney Broder’s Birthday 29 Daivd Snider….D.’s Birthday Paul Stolo!’s Birthday 5 Chester Stewart’s Birthday Lorna Middendorf’s Birthday Page 1/1 14 This may be your LAST issue! 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We value your membership and the membership of your friends MacGroup-Detroit Michigan's largest Macintosh users group t on us m ews wer ng s m- uy e ve ly b MacNews - February 2008 Membership Form Date: _____________________ Name: __________________________________ Company: _______________________________ Address: ________________________________ ________________________________________ City State Zip Day Phone: ______________________________ Evening Phone: ___________________________ Birth Date: _________________ Special Computer Interest: __________________ Model of Macintosh You Use: ________________ Categories of Annual Memberships MacGroup-Detroit Regular Membership $40 • • • • • • Twelve months of MacNews, our monthly newsletter Attendance at all monthly meetings and Special Interest Groups User Group Discounts Access to the User Group Store One Door Prize Raffle Ticket Each Meeting Access to the iBBS Family Membership $50 (same as Regular Membership and:) • Two membership cards • Two issues of MacNews • Attendance for two to all meetings and S.I.G.s • Two Door Prize Raffle Tickets (one per person attending the meeting) Primary Operating System? o Mac OS X o Mac OS 9 Corporate Membership $60 Email Address: ___________________________ (same as Regular Membership and:) • Up to three issues of MacNews • Attendance for up to three to all meetings and S.I.G.s • Discounted advertising in MacNews • Up to 3 Door Prize Raffle Tickets (one per person attending the meeting) May we send you email? o Yes o No Do you have Internet access? o Yes o No o Cable Modem o DSL o Dial-up o Other How did you hear about MacGroup?________________ o o o o o o o Annual Membership New Individual Membership . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $40 Family Membership. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $50 Corporation Membership. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $60 Lifetime Membership. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $350 Renewal—Member ID#: _______ . . . . . . . . . . . $35 Electronic ONLY Membership . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $25 Public Domain CD of the Month Subscription . . . $36 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Total Enclosed ______ o Cash o Check o Visa o MasterCard o Discover Credit Card #: ____________________________ Credit Card ID# (CVV2) _______ (3 digit code on the back) Expiration Date: _______ Signature: _______________________________ Return this form and check payable to: MacGroup-Detroit, Inc. P.O. Box 760399 • Lathrup Village MI 48076 or, credit card users may FAX their apps to 248-557-9403 Electronic Membership (iBBS) $25 (FREE to Regular, Family and Corporate Members) • Access to the iBBS • Electronic version of MacNews, to be downloaded • Internet Mail Disc of the Month Subscription $36 • A CD ROM disc mailed to you each month filled with the best public domain, shareware files and updates. MacNews - February 2008 15 (734) 453-7890 ext.1019 DIRECT: (734) 582-0019 FAX: (734) 453-7993 MacNews Commercial Advertising www.saturnofplymouth.com E-mail: saturncars@gmail.com DAVE FINEGOLD Sales and Leasing Consultant Dealers, hardware/software vendors, and businesses involved in computer-related services are invited to advertise in MacNews! Saturn of Plymouth M&Th 8 AM to 9 PM 9301 Massey Drive T W F 8 AM to 6 PM Plymouth, MI 48170 Sat 9 AM to 2 PM “Growing Our Business While Creating an Unmatched Customer Experience” Ad Rates Full Page $75 7.25" x 10" Half Page $50 7.25" x 3.5" 4.25" x 10" Quarter Page $20 4.25" x 5.5" 7.25" x 2.25" Business Card $5 3.5" x 2" Deadline for Ad & Payment 1st Sunday of the month Classified Ads FOR SALE Power Mac G4 Dual Processor Selling my G4 dual with max memory, including keyboard, mouse and a great View Sonic Monitor. All in good condition. Please call Don Baker @ 734.771.0829. OF FARMINGTON HILLS Submission Info Because MacNews is 100% electronically produced, please follow these guidelines: • Convert all type fonts to paths/outlines to avoid font substitution problems. • Line screens should be 85 lpi. Halftone scans should be 200 dpi or less. • Submit your ad as a Macintosh electronic file in one of the following formats: Adobe PDF, Adobe Illustrator, EPS, or TIFF. • Submit your file on disk or email it to MacNews@macgroup.org Also, please submit a hardcopy printout (not camera-ready). For any additional info, please email us at info@macgroup.org. Please submit all copy, files, and payment to: MacGroup-Detroit PO Box 760399 Lathrup Village MI 48076-0399 The makings of MacNews This publication was created entirely with Macintosh technology using the following products: Adobe Creative Suite 3; Xerox Phaser 8550DP, Canon 5D and the Nikon D300; iCal; Microsoft Office 2004; various electronic clip art collections; and of course, Mac OS X (Mac Pro with Cinema Display) Apple and Macintosh are registered trademarks of Apple Computer, Inc. Joseph Grey Bring a friend to the next meeting! We meet Monthly.... Don’t miss our next Meeting! 3–5 pm • • • February 17 • Road Warrior! iPhone, PDAs, Gadgets for the Mac user on the go. March 16 • Adobe Photoshop Elements 6 April 20 • Make music with your Mac See what topics we’ll cover in the coming months: http://macgroup.org/meetings Our meetings are held at The Birmingham Temple • 28611 W. 12 Mile Rd • Farmington Hills MI 48334 Always check our website before heading to the meeting for any last minute changes. MacGroup-Detroit PO Box 760399 Lathrup Village MI 48076-0399 www.macgroup.org Best In Show Electronic Newsletter Most Popular User Group Web Site & Special Judges Citation for MacNews www.user-groups.net NONPROFIT U.S. POSTAGE PAID SOUTHFIELD, MI PERMIT NO. 87 Think Different