MacMost: Making the most of your Mac, iPod, Apple TV and iPhone.


MacMost.com frontpage

iPhone 2.2, QuickTime and iTunes Updates

Thursday, November 27th, 2008 by rosenz

   Dominating Apple news this week was the release of version 2.2 of the iPhone OS. This included some pretty interesting new features, such as Google Maps street view and the ability to download podcasts directly on the iPhone instead of requiring them to be added to iTunes on your Mac or PC first. See episode 162 of MacMost Now for more details.
    QuickTime update 7.5.7 seems to fix a problem where standard definition movie rentals cannot be watched on an HD screen connected to a Mac. This triggered an HD anti-piracy restriction called HDCP, which is meant only for HD content, not the SD content used for movie rentals in iTunes.
    An update to iTunes itself, version 8.0.2, adds VoiceOver accessibility to control iTunes, plus a quality fix for making .mp3 files with iTunes. A bug was also fixed that may have prevented connecting to the iTunes Store through a proxy server.
    In the United States, this is thanksgiving week, which is followed by “black friday” — a day of shopping and special sales to kick off the holiday shopping season. For the last few years Apple has participated both online and in stores with some special deals. Be sure to check the news at MacMost.com on Friday to see what’s on sale.

MacMost Now 164: Spell Check in Mac OS X Applications

Wednesday, November 26th, 2008 by rosenz

   How to use the built-in Mac OS X spell check in many applications like TextEdit, Mail and Safari. You can make it learn new words and reset your custom dictionary.
   
   


   
   

Back to School at the Apple Store

Tuesday, November 25th, 2008 by rosenz

   Chaperoning elementary school field trips is something every parent should try to do. You’re pretty lucky, though, when your first call to do one is a visit to the Apple Store.
    Apparently some Apple Stores offer opportunities to allow schools to bring in classes. The employees then teach something age-appropriate using the Macs in the store.
    In this case, we brought about 17 kids in and they divided them up, two per Mac. They actually used MacBooks, MacBook Pros and MacBook Airs. This was done with the sample machines scattered in the store for customers to play with.
    For this first grade class, the tasks were simple. First, they had them open up Photo Booth. The kids had a blast taking pictures of themselves, especially when they were shown the special effects.
    Then they opened up Pages. I thought it was weird to have them work with a program from iWork, but it was basically an introduction to publishing, and iWork is the publishing tool.
    The kids were shown how to make shapes on the page, and then drag their photos from the PhotoBooth panel to the shapes. They then added a bit of text, usually talk bubbles.
    While all the kids had experience with computers before, most seemed a little uncomfortable with the track pad as they are used to mice. But instructions like “drag the triangle along the slider to zoom out the picture” were understood easily.
    It is obvious what the goal was here for Apple — get the kids to come home with their printouts and “certificate” and talk to their parents about how cool the Apple Store was. Maybe even force a detour into the Apple Store the next time the family goes to the mall.
    From the school’s side of things, there was some benefit as well. I think it was a pretty comparable experience to an in-school computer class — at least at the first grade level. The kids gained a little more knowledge about what computers can do and how to use them.
    So it was a win-win. A win-win-win if you count me in there. I mean, how often do you get to participate in a school field trip, do some research for work, and have a good time all at once?

MacMost Now 163: How to Take a Screen Shot

Monday, November 24th, 2008 by rosenz

   Learn how to capture the entire screen or only a portion, then compress it to send it in an email. This is handy for sending bug reports or pointing out problems.
   
   


   
   

MacMost Now 162: iPhone OS 2.2 New Features

Friday, November 21st, 2008 by rosenz

   The update to the iPhone adds Google Maps Street View and other map features, the ability to download podcasts directly to the iPhone, and fixes and improvements.
   
   


   
   

Apple TV 2.3, DRM News, Snow Leopard Rumors

Thursday, November 20th, 2008 by rosenz

   Several small announcements and updates this week from Apple. The AppleTV OS version 2.3 was released, with AirTunes streaming and the support for third-party remote controls. That’s a good idea considering how small the Apple remote is and how easy it is to lose. And, of course, the fact that anyone with a home theater setup (AppleTV’s target market) is using a multi-device universal remote anyway.
    But in other home theater news, Apple has given in to another draconian anti-piracy measure by building in HDCP (High Bandwidth Digital Content Protection) into the new line of MacBooks. That means that you can’t play protected movies you bought from iTunes on large TVs and projectors unless they are “HDCP authorized.” If you are wondering how this is supposed to prevent piracy, or do anything other than upset Apple’s paying customers, you are not alone.
    But then on the other side of the DRM battle, Apple is supposedly in talks with Sony, Warner and Universal to join EMI in allowing Apple to distribute non-DRM versions of their music through iTunes.
    This week we are also finally starting to hear Snow Leopard rumors. The Mac OS X 10.6 operating system is potentially ahead of schedule and may ship earlier in 2009 than expected — perhaps in the first quarter.

MacMost Now 161: iPhone Voice Search with Google

Wednesday, November 19th, 2008 by rosenz

   The free Google app now allows you to search the Web by speaking into your iPhone. It will attempt to translate what you say into text and search the Web or pinpoint a location on the map.
   
   


   
   
Video Transcript (Click to Expand)
    Hi, this is Gary with MacMost Now. Want to see something really cool?
    So every once in a while, something really simple but really cool comes along, and I just got to share it with you. Google has an iPhone app that allows you to search Google and access some of their apps through a free application. I’ll put a link to it in the show notes. But they just updated it, changing its interface. Instead of typing, you can now talk to it.
    So let me show you. Here’s the Google application. All you need to do now is hold the iPhone up to your ear and speak the certain term you want it to search for. ‘Macintosh tutorials.’ It will go ahead and analyze your voice and perform the search. Clicking on one of these will then take you to the webpage.
    Now let’s try something else. ‘Pizza.’ Now not only will it use the word that I spoke, but it’s also going to use my GPS location to find pizza places that are near me.
    Now let’s go ahead and change where we search. We’ll go to ‘Maps’ and we’ll try again. ‘Mexican restaurant’. Now it’ll return a list of results like before. But this time, when we click on them, we’ll go to the iPhone Maps application and it’ll show you the locations of the places you searched for. Here you go.
    Unfortunately, one of the potentially coolest things doesn’t quite work it. It’s the ability to be able to search your contacts. By default, it’s set to iPhone and the web, and if you speak somebody’s name, it should give you their contact information and basically be one step away from voice dialing. However, it doesn’t work with voice recognition. It does work if you type into the Google application, so we know it’s just around the corner.
    Now you can also use this to search for anything that you usually search Google for. So maybe you want to do a conversion or a calculation. Look at episode #140 of MacMost Now to see some examples.
    The app also gives you some alternatives, so if you speak something and it doesn’t get it quite right, you can click on the button and it will list things that it thought it might have been, but it wasn’t its first choice.
    If you like quick little tips like this, you can find more of them in the MacMost email newsletter, which comes out every Thursday. You can subscribe to it at MacMost.com/newsletter. I usually include a quick tip and also a featured iPhone application and a featured Mac OS X application that I like. So check it out. Until next time, this is Gary Rosenzweig, with MacMost Now.

   

Show Notes:
    You can find the Google iPhone app in our iPhone Apps directory.

iPhone’s Promise of “The Real Web”

Tuesday, November 18th, 2008 by rosenz

   Back in January of 2007 when the iPhone was announced, many people cheered. People cheered the touch screen. People cheered the beautiful design. People cheered the fact that the rumors were right.
    I cheered what Steve Jobs said about the built-in Safari Web browser: that it would allow you to surf the real Web. In other words, that it would be a real Web browser, capable of displaying Web pages just like a Mac or PC.
    (more…)

MacMost Now 160: Safari 3.2 Anti-Phishing Protection

Monday, November 17th, 2008 by rosenz

   The new version of the Safari Web browser includes a feature that will alert you if you go to a suspected malicious Web site. Learn more about this protection and how you can further protect yourself against phishing attacks.
   
   


   
   

MacMost Now 159: Using Data Detectors

Friday, November 14th, 2008 by rosenz

   Data Detectors allow you to turn addresses, phone numbers and dates in mail messages into Address Book contacts and iCal events. You can also turn selected text into to-do items or stickies.
   
   


   
   
Show Notes:
    To turn off Data Detectors, open the Terminal program from your Applications, Utilities folder, and type:
    defaults write com.apple.mail DisableDataDetectors YES
    To turn it back on again, type:
    defaults write com.apple.mail DisableDataDetectors NO