june 2010 magazine
Transcription
june 2010 magazine
citrus macintosh users group JUNE 2010 Contributors Board GailMitchell Gail has been a member of CMUG since the beginning. She currently has both a G5 Mac, MacPro and a PowerBook. Gail enjoys creating newsletters with iWeb, and she loves her 80 GB Sony, which she says she is still learning how to use. CMUG members are invited to share their experiences, expertise, how-tos and other computer-related—including peripherals—stories or information as occasional articles or monthly columns. (Really long submissions should be broken into segments to serialize.) The magazine deadline is at the beginning of the month for the current issue. However, contributions can be sent anytime. Include a photo and short statement about yourself to include with the mug. Citrus Macintosh Users Group Magazine is published online monthly by Citrus Macintosh Users Group. Citrus Macintosh Users Group Magazine was produced using Adobe Photoshop CS and Adobe InDesign 2.0. Johanna Foster, Editor Cover design by Johanna Foster © Copyright Citrus Macintosh Users Group 2010 Alan Wentzell, President cmugpres@gmail.com 220-6158 Curtis Herrin, Past President and Membership Chairman cmugmem@gmail.com 341-5555 Carolyn Herrin, VP Education carolynwherrin@mac.com 341-5555 John Engberg, VP Technical mrbyte@earthlink.net 465-2816 Rita Coffman, Secretary rcoffman4@tampabay.rr.com 726-3331 Julie DePinto, Treasurer jdvango@yahoo.com 726-7787 Pat Purcell, Ambassador cmugamb@gmail.com 795-4843 Jo Foster, Magazine Editor ohanajo@embarqmail.com 726-1046 Inside Articles Hawaii Two-O One-O – Gail Mitchell – 4 magicJack – Johanna Foster – 9 Columns Beginners & Guru – 7 Coming Up – 10 From the President – 3 Pointers for the Perplexed – 6 Surf’s Up – 8 MemberGalleries Curt Herrin – 11 Gail Mitchell – 5 This issue is posted online in two parts to make it easier for members with dial-up service to download. Click the underlined words under the magazine icon for part two. AboutCMUG Citrus Macintosh Users Group is a tax-exempt, nonprofit educational organization, dedicated to helping all people in our area become familiar with their computers. We meet on the fourth Friday monthly at the CFCC Lecanto campus. The meetings start at 6:30 p.m. with an informal question-and-answer period led by some of the club’s Mac tech people. A business meeting follows at 7 p.m., followed by a presentation covering a variety of topics, such as graphics, Web pages, or using hardware and software related to the Macintosh computer. On the Sunday following the meeting, we hold a Lab/Tune-up from 1 to 5 p.m. at the CFCC Lecanto campus. At the lab, which is free for members, tech members correct problems with hardware and software. We offer Saturday afternoon classes monthly. The classes allow participants to learn Mac software programs and techniques in a hands-on-setting. Cost for the classes are $10 for members, $15 for member families, and $20 for nonmembers. The monthly magazine with articles from members is also a member benefit, as well as free special interest groups (SIGs) that are formed by members who have an interest in exploring a particular area in depth. We also offer an informal workshop for members at the CFCC Lecanto campus on the fourth Tuesday monthly. The workshop can either cover a specific topic or address various computer problems of participants. ClubDues Annual dues for members are $20 for an individual membership, $30 for a family membership and $10 for a student membership. The membership period begins in January each year. Dues for new memberships after July are pro-rated; renewals remain at the annual rate. For more information about CMUG, visit cmugonline.com and click the About Us button. 2 FromthePresident access to the membership. Remember, the Facebook Group is a social page and every member is able to post to it. Add your pictures and commentary. Tell us what is happening in your life. Our next goal is to add podcasting of meetings or possibly even some classes to our agenda. This is still in it’s infancy. If there are any members with experience in podcasting who would like to work with us in this endeavor, please let me know. Have a safe summer. I hope to see those of you remaining in Florida at the up coming meetings, classes, labs and workshops. AlanWentzell June has arrived and half the year has passed. Where has it gone? We are settling into the summertime patterns, which for CMUG means an altered schedule for the summer months. As most of you know, the college, like most other publicly funded organizations has been given an ultimatum to cut operating cost. The directors found that closing the campus on Friday, Saturday, and Sunday for the months of May June, and July gave them savings with the least impact on the citizens using the facilities. Unfortunately, one of the organizations that was impacted by this closure is CMUG. Our Friday meetings and Saturday classes, have been moved to Thursdays for these months and our Sunday lab’s have been moved to Mondays. Lib and I took a small vacation the end of May and went south.We spent several days in the Miami-Fort Lauderdale area and then a week in Everglades City and the 1,000 Island area. There was no internet and only a few spots where the cell phone worked. What a change. We fished, took lots of pictures and relaxed. After returning home, I managed to injure my back and have spent the last four or five days moving only from bed to the couch and back to bed at night. I’m now up and moving again and will be answering e-mails and playing catch-up for the next few days. I have set a goal for this year to add several new facets to our repertoire. Our Facebook group is up and running. We have 44 CMUG members who have joined the group. I feel this is a good start. There is a learning curve with all new things. The Facebook Jo Foster group took almost a month before Deborah McLaughlin gave a very thorough demonstration of Bento software during the I felt confident enough to open it’s May meeting. 3 Hawaii Two-O One-O Gail Mitchell T T T here are many reasons I love visiting Hawaii each year. I used to live there, and I enjoy visiting the places I used to love. Bob and I have the opportunity to practice our Japanese language, and I can find sashimi and sushi every day if I wish. However, one of the greatest pleasure I have when we are in Hawaii is visiting the flowers that are so abundant around the islands. Our hotel is in the middle of a garden of flowers and flowering trees. Each day is another day in paradise, as the saying goes. I love taking photographs as well, so when I can take photos of the flowers I love, I am filled with joy. On our last trip, I took over 1,500 photos, most of my grandniece Brittany, but I certainly found many flowers to photograph as well. My Nikon D40 proved to be up to the task, and I hope you enjoy the few photos I have selected for the magazine. I am purchasing a Nikon D90 that I am taking to Illinois this month to hopefully photograph the flowers of Illinois. I’ll let you know how that goes and share any that seem Gail’s husband, Bob, by the Tiki at the hotel in Hawaii. Gail’s flower pix follow on page 5. especially lovely. 4 Gail Mitchell Red Bromeliad Bird of Paradise Flowers of Hawaii – 2010 Photos by Gail Mitchell Alamanda, Hawaii state flower Member Gallery Cup of Gold Red Spider Lily Ohia Lehua Yellow Hibiscus Flowering Vines 5 Shell Ginger It would be good to keep a record of all your Mail settings by making screen shots of the account windows. If you don’t have SnapNDrag, you can use keyboard commands. Open Mail and go to Preferences > Accounts. Place your cursor on the window. Press Command-Shift-4Space Bar. The cursor will change to a camera image. Click the mouse or trackpad. The picture will appear on your desktop. Go back to the Accounts page and open the menu for Outgoing Mail Server. Select Select SMTP Server List. Click Advanced. Use CommandShift-4-Space Bar to take a picture of this page. If you have Tiger on your Mac, you get to the Authentication settings by clicking Server Settings. You can print the two pictures. Move the pictures to your Home Folder. Now when you have to reenter account information, you will have it easily available. In Snow Leopard, Mail will automatically set the account information after you enter your user name and password and click Create. What is SMTP? It’s Simple Mail Transfer Protocol— more simply, Send Mail to People. What is POP? This is Post Office Protocol. It is the most common account type. What is IMAP? Some mail servers—MobileMe, AOL and Gmail, for instance—use Internet Message Access Protocol. Pointersforthe Perplexed BillDean bjdean@embarqmail.com Fixing Mail Things go wrong. It’s not your fault, unless you’ve moved something out of its required place or deleted something accidentally. Apple Mail is one of those applications that sometimes cease to function properly. You can’t send or receive mail. An ultimate solution is to remove Mail Preferences. Quit Mail. Now go to your Home Folder > Library > Preferences and move com.apple.mail.plist to the Desktop. Open Mail and go through the process of setting the account. Mail should work now. If it does, move the old Mail.plist to the trash. If you had customized your Mail Toolbar, you will have to reset that. You will probably never have to do this. Certainly, you shouldn’t do it to just see if it works. In order to set your account, you will have to know what to enter for the account settings. Curt Herrin At the May Workshop, Bill Dean, back row, helps new members Richard and Patricia Becker, while Tim Quinn, front row left, and Stan Jones wait. 6 Control, Option or Command, will cause a modification or result in an action. Command P will present your printer window. If you have read my previous articles, you know how to access your Key Board Viewer and the potential result of pushing any of those keys with a corresponding lettered key; for example, Option R will result in ®. When you push the fn key, there are only a couple noted changes in Key Board Viewer. So where is the fn key used? Beginners&Guru CurtHerrin fn Were have I seen that before and what does it stand for? It is not shorthand for fun or on any chemistry periodic table to date. Now think.… It is on most Apple keyboards. Down at the bottom left it resides next to the Control Key. As we may recall, pushing any of the adjoining keys, like It is mostly used in conjunction with your F1 through F12 Keys at the very top of your keyboard. On most keyboards, there are two symbols on the Keys at the top. One is F with a number. Not all, but other keyboards have one more symbol. Your audio volume control is located on F10 through F12. If you press F12, one of two things will happen. Your volume indicator will show an increase or your Widgets will appear. This all depends on how your system preferences are set. If you are a big Widget user, perhaps you might check the box in your system prefs to reverse the default results for your F Keys. If you have a laptop you have a few other choices on your F Keys than those with the standard keyboards. Take a little time now and play with your F keys. Who knows, you might think it is fun.… 7 So what do you want to find online? Blogs? Free books? Game cheats? Then you need to know about JohannaFoster thesearchenginelist.com where you can find search engines and Web portals in Polish and Portuguese, as well as websites for job hunting. It even has map search engines. Remember Mapquest? Thesearchenginelist.com This site can provide hours of entertainment. Surf’sUp 8 magicJack Johanna Foster L L L ast month, Fran Cooperrider wrote about in living in Florida, where we have so many lightning and communicating long distance with family thunder storms, which can be a bit tough on computers for free via Skype to Skype on her Mac that are just plugged in, never mind running. So this kind of negates using magicJack on a 24/7 basis—at laptop. This month, as it turns out, I purchased least in Florida. But, then, it could make a great secondary phone magicJack, a USB computer peripheral that, with the telephone services from the for “free” (i.e., it’s low-cost, not free—about $40 the related YMAX Communications Corp., first year and about $20 the second and subsequent provides VoIP—Internet-based telephone years) long-distance calling with a traditional land line for a primary phone. service. Further, my Although magicJack is not free with an lack of enthusiasm initial charge of about comes from being $40 the first year disconnected during that covers the a long phone call to purchase of the a friend. USB device and On the other one year’s service, hand, magicJack has that is one year a lot of features and subsequent among which are years are less. conference call, Plus, calls are not voice mail, and restricted to other 911 coverage. magicJack users; magicJack one can call free to re-quires a hightraditional land and speed Internet wireless networks connection, such in the United States, as broadband and more. Also, and DSL. globally, magicJack The installato magicJack calls are tion process free. is simple. However, there is a Connect a caution. Before buying phone to the magicJack, one should magicJack read the Wikipedia and connect entry, because some magicJack to users are unhappy about Jo Foster the computer the terms of service— tender cluded USB ex in e th g in in the USB us read that, too—to which o ok Pr my Intel MacBo the magicJack. to to d d te te ec ec nn nn co co port. Next, a user must agree in The magicJack is phone is tional). The tele wait for magicJack to install its order to be able to use (using the extender is op software and bring up the registration form. Send the the technology. Also, one thing that is an inconvenience if this is a form. You can make a phone call right away. But, person’s only phone is that your computer must be on remember to look for the confirmation e-mail and and connected to the Internet to use the magicJack. At this point, I’m a bit ambivalent about magicJack. follow its instructions within 24 hours. Part of my ambivalent attitude toward it has its source Nothing could be simpler. 9 Curt Herrin Leonard Bates, left, and John Engberg, vice president technical, witness the death of an iMac. ComingUpinJune Date: Thursday, June 24 Time: 1-5 p.m. Place: CFCC Lecanto Campus, Building L4, Classroom 103 Topic: Numbers Synopsis written by: Curtis Herrin If you have iWork and have not used Numbers It is time to come on out and learn a little about the spread sheet that has replaced AppleWorks. Like most things new, it looks a little confusing at first but you will soon feel comfortable moving around the application and making entries. You will be introduced to basic formulas that help you obtain the desired results. You will learn how to make certain cells stand out for easy seeing and then how to link items from one Sheet and/or Table to those in another. If you have iWork 8 or 9 you will be able to follow along and get the skills needed to set up a Work Sheet and kept track of your information. Hope to see you there. RSVP with Carolyn Herrin at carolynwherrin@mac.com. The class fees for members are $10 for individuals, $15 for family, and $20 for nonmembers. Date: Monday, June 28 Time: 6-9 p.m. Place: CFCC Lecanto Campus, Building L4, Classroom 103 Topic: Pages Synopsis written by: Curtis Herrin Pages, part of iWork, is a very robust word document application that allows you to format your text in about any configuration you desire.You can use the supplied templates or design your own document and/or template for repetitive use. Placing pictures or other objects on your document is a snap and making them fancy is just one or two short steps. Come on out and learn your way around this impressive application. Hope to see you there. 10 Club Meeting Date: Thursday, June 24 Time: 6:30-9 p.m. Place: CFCC Lecanto Campus, Building L4, Classroom 103 Demo topic: Antarctica Penguins Presented by: Martin Dunn Come listen and see Martin’s adventures in Antarctica as he describes the penguins and shows you breathtaking pictures of them in their natural habitat. A relaxed, informative evening. Member Gallery Curt Herrin Top: Fort Island Trail. Bottom: Lake Henderson 11
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