Technology

What a treat - iTunes U

I was reading the 'Hot News' off the Apple site and it mentioned ITunes U, so I went there in iTunes to see what it provides and was literally blown away. Apple explains it in the iTunes area of its website, here. But to see the breadth of the offerings [much or maybe all of which are free] you need to go to the U itself in iTunes.

For instance, that's where you can find Randy Pausch's Last Lecture: Really Achieving Your Childhood Dreams, a moving experience provided by Carnegie-Mellon University. Steve Jobs's Commencement Address at Stanford. And a host of PBS and affiliate shows. There's something for everyone, audio, video and long and short features. Well worth diving in.

The Mac Guru of Damascus

A charming and good natured tale of getting one's laptop back in a foreign country. From Wired : The Mac Guru of Damascus

Macs in Trial #2

A great seminar over two days is being held in Dallas, Macs in Trial #2, which [I hope] will become an annual event.  It's put together by lawyers on the MacLaw listserve, primarily Kern Lewis.  I couldn't attend due to a conflicting conference, but, fortunately, there's some blogging going on by Brett Burney [author of the eDiscoveryinfo blog on the blog-site of Blake Boyd, Trial Technologist's View.  I am really jealous!

Great help for computer organization and Sanity

I have clipped some information from this site - 43Folders - at times and thought I'd provide the link here, as it's helped me figure out which email program to use and how to cut down on the residue and also how to clean up the syncing process at .Mac.  I commend the site to you for linking or feeding.

Computer Related Items for Sale

Here, downloadable and 40k -  computer_items_for_sale.pdf  is a list of various computer-items - Airports, software, booklets for older software, etc. - that I'm selling prior to listing on eBay or elsewhere.  The full list explains features and specifics of each item.  Contact me by email at Victoria @ VictoriaHerring.com

www.maclife.com

Link: www.maclife.com.

Apple makes it easy to resell your Macs if you purchased an AppleCare Protection Plan. These protection plans are fully transferable to the person buying your used equipment.

Which doesn't mean one shouldn't give it away, just make sure the AppleCare information goes with it so the recipient can truly enjoy his or her "new" Mac [also true of iPods, iPhones, etc., I suppose]

BookReview: Switching to a Mac for Dummies.

I have a few friends who have switched from a PC to a Mac either at home or in the office setting and at times they'd expressed certain frustrations to me with how their brand new shiny Mac is working.  It's hard for me to feel the pain, as I've always used Macs [Apples] but I can understand a bit of the disconnect.  So, when I came across this book review at MacCompanion, I just had to tell them about it.  The review, by Dr. Eric Flescher, is of one of the newest entrants to the Dummies line of books, Switching to a Mac for Dummies.  His conclusion?  "This book is a solid and in-depth guide to learning and knowing all that you need to switch from a PC to your Macintosh. . . . The author covers the material in depth and breadth."

WONDERFUL Time Machine in Leopard OS X!

My paralegal was working on a client's Filemaker Pro database with around 500 entries in it about the documents we have bates numbered etc.  Apparently, when she was OCR'ing documents a screen also popped up for Deleting the FMP database and when she meant to click the OCR dismiss the dialog box she instead deleted the FMP database === lost all 500 entries!  Obviously, she felt sick.  I felt worried, but relying on TimeMachine, thought there was an answer.

We opened up TM on the drive and went back an hour or so to the database before it was deleted and restored it = VOILA ,it came back, with all 500 or so entries == I decided to Keep Both and we'll delete the bad one once we check the new restored one.  But so far so good....TM is great!!!  It took all of 3-5 minutes to do it, by the way.

How to prevent theft of an iPhone

Good advice.

InfoManager for Macintosh Users Groups

InfoManager has a number of interesting articles of interest to those who use Mqacs and this one might
be important to read -- in fact reading it now, it is == theft of
iPhone is Identity Theft...what to do to prevent it. As with most things, the thing to do is to close the barn door shut before the horse gets out!!

Why Use a Mac in a Law Firm?

Jeffrey Kabbe wrote an article for his blog at AppleBriefs on the topic of using Macs in a Law Firm and I thought it might be of some interest to readers here.

Ouch! Email bites the Dust!

An interesting blog post from another site was referred to on the MacLaw listserve and I thought it worth noting for general consumption: As a result of an error by Charter Communications in cleaning up its email servers, some 14,000 people whose email resided on the company's server had their email erased recently. More information can be found on this tragedy [assuming those people wanted their business and personal emails saved until they decided to trash them] at an interesting website/blogsite on the whole topic and technology of email, DeathByEmail.

Mac OS X Security: Being Careful

As president of local Des Moines Macintosh Users Group, I took detailed notes at last night's meeting on Mac OS X Security and think they are worth reading for more than just MUG members, so are excerpted here. The full version is accessible at the DMMUG site :

Mac OS X is no more secure than any other OS, and it too needs to have protective steps taken to prevent theft, breakage, hacking and the like. The test of how paranoid you need to be and how secure you should be is: how and where is your data stored and how could someone use it against you? If your on line banking records are on your computer, they're not safe if you don't take steps to protect them. If your personal family information, health history, etc., is on your computer, it's not safe if you don't take steps to protect it. If your business records are there, you have obligations to those clients or businesses to protect them from access by others. If you have written the Great American Novel, the Greatest Piece of Music, its special nature is compromised if it's not secured. In other words, it's NOT paranoia, it's a necessity to be concerned about security whether you're a home user or someone with other needs as well.

The whole issue of Physical Security is forgotten, but it's really the first and primary barrier: you need to make sure no one has access to your computer/data through theft, hacking, etc. Once someone gains entry to your computer and its data, they can take information and use it to hurt you or others. So you need to prevent thefts, stolen laptops or harddrives or USB Flash sticks, and the Q is how to do that. There are plenty of good software resources for that [more information will be on the website of DMMUG, www.DMMUG.org].

Use a Lock: cables with keys or combinations lock to the computer thru its locking port and you attach it then to some immoveable object [don't tie it to a chair or pillow and expect it not to wander away]. If some determined thief comes across it, he/she will turn and steal someone else's unlocked laptop and yours will probably be safe. There are alert systems, tracking down systems and the like which also deter theft or, if it happens, finds the culprit and lets you rip them limb from limb. [There are more advanced technical steps within OS X such as setting up the open firmware or EFI to require passwords before booting and the like, which may be worth exploring]

Reset the various OSX defaults: there is a tradeoff between Security and Useability and Apple's defaults err toward the latter. So, if you want a more secure machine you will have to jump through some hoops to use it, but it'll be more protected, your data will be more protected, and the hoops won't be that difficult to handle given the pay back. (1) in System Preferences, set the machine to go to sleep regularly and require a password to wake it from sleep, (2) disable the IR [infrared], (3) use an encrypted Disk Image created by Disk Utility [free program, part of Utilities in OSX] to store things that you want protected especially and use AES-128 security to encrypt, (4) reset your Account preferences to keep the Administrative user only for limited purposes and use only a Standard account for yourself, (5) limit the number of Log In items to those you really need and recognize.

Have a good way to generate passwords and use it. Passwords should have: uppercase and lower case letters, numbers and punctuation. They can be created in and stored in Keychain Access [an encrypted file reachable thru a special password you better remember, again a free program in the Mac OS X Utilities]. There're also programs such as 1Password and Password Wallet that leverage the keychain and allow for all sorts of things to be secured, remembered and accessed beyond the main computer [such as thru syncing with Treos, iPhones, .Mac etc.] [shameless plug, I have a Password Algorithum article I wrote on my website for download ]

Use your Firewall: You need to prevent easy access to your computer by those who would come into it thru wifi or landline or whatever and get your data. If you don't both set up your software OS X Firewall [Sharing pane in System Preferences] AND have a hardware firewall between the cable or DSL modem and your computer, you are asking for trouble.

QuickTime is a major security hole - apply all updates and security patches, disable Auto Play and Instant On in the preferences.

Get a Virus Program - Macs can have viruses and, more to the point, pass them on if they are received. Be good to yourself and your data and protect it from viruses. I use VirusBarrier, there are programs from Symantec, Virex [a bit old], Sophos, and free programs ClamAV and ClamXAV. And be sure to update your definitions regularly, and run it.

Wireless is like Radio - it not only receives data, it sends it. You need to make it difficult for people to steal or obtain your wireless signal or use it to access your comptuer. Use encryption of messages and material over wireless, set up your Airport Utility to use WPA security.

Practice Safe Computing: don't click on links in emails - enter the URL directly in the browser instead; if you can, use cable not wireless, in public hotspots [coffee cafes, city libraries, other general access points] do NOT do any banking or handling of extremely confidential information. The old saw about 'you're not paranoid, they really are out to get you' holds true -- maybe no one is targeting you, but they will target your data and use it for their own purposes [and hurt you in the process]. Make it hard to do so.

Your banks, brokerage accounts and other such are all interested in security. Don't pay attention to emails from them [probably spoofs or phishing] but go to your bank's or credit card or brokerage sites and check their information on security. Lots of good tips there too.

Security of WiFi networks

Generally speaking, there are lots of wifi [wireless fidelity] networks popping up all over and they're great to use because they are so fast and so easy to log onto [if free]. The problem is that others are doing it as well and once Joe, Susan, Tom, Sally, Jane and George log on and you do too, if your computer is open, you are all networked and any one of you [or others] can jump onto your machine and take or leave things that you'd rather them not taking or leaving [such as private information or malware].

First rule of thumb is to turn filesharing off of your computer if you're accessing an open wifi network. A friend of mine recently wrote:

BTW, recently, when I was in a hotel, I could see about a dozen computers in
my Finder. Some were completely open and files could be accessed by anyone.
Leopard automatically connects to open systems. Curiosity made me look but I
didn't stay.

My advice: when traveling, keep your file sharing off.

The article which started this ruminating is at the JiWire website, the blog comment [newsletter] for 12/14 [Ask JiWire]

Leaping Leopards!!

I'm using my Thanksgiving weekend to get to know my Leopardized Mac Book Pro.  Apple's new operating system, called Leopard, has lots of new, nifty features.  One of them is Quick Look which allows you to sneak a peak at a document or item without opening any program.  A good discussion and set of hints to open a QuickLook'd document is found at Miraz Jordan's blog, Mac Tips.

Check out things before you forward them.

I just received an email from a friend warning me of some dire thing that might happen and alleging that the warning is TRUE!!! Well, before I forward things I always check them out at Snopes.Com, a site where all the various urban legends and other Internet riff-raff are collected and searchable. Sure enough, the warning is 'false' and the background and history of it is laid out so you can judge for yourself.

Don't forward emails unless and until you have checked them out, if only to cut down the traffic on the Internet to a reasonable load for your friends.

Upgrading to Leopard in OS X

Take the time and do a good job and all should be fine.

I very carefully worked my way through the Kissell eBook on Taking Control of Upgrading to Leopard...doing all the maintenance steps and backing up [2X] and etc. It has taken the better part of the day but then I wanted to be slow and careful. I'm eager to work with it tonite and customize it a bit [another Take Control book] - but for now just know that using the step by step explanations in the TC book was great == and reminded me of or taught me about a number of other things as well about OSX.

Password Wallet for iPhone

from Selznick Software is the upgrade that allows export to iPhone - in fact, it exports the entries to an iPod [text] file, to a stand alone encrypted web page, and to a Safari Bookmarklet for iPhone. Then you choose which Safari collection to put it in. You sync your iPhone and it shows up in Safari [no need to be online] and you enter your password [which is WAY easier than with the stylus on the Treo] and voila, you can see and access your passwords, notes and etc. on your iPhone! Sans WiFi.

Adventures with iPhone

So, I go out of town for client meeting. Take MacBookPro and iPhone with me. Am awaiting ruling on motion in limine dispute and guidance regarding a hearing on Monday, for which there is alot of preparation yet to do. Before leaving, I changed the preferences in PageSender so when fax came in a copy was mailed with fax as attachment to my DotMac account [not the usual Gmail account I use]. Finish my meeting and start to drive home, still anxious to receive word. Turn on iPhone and click to gather Mail while I am driving = I'm not watching it mind you [not safe] but as I drive, the Edge network is downloading email from my .Mac account...So, I see something from court administration. It's the court's ruling faxed to me. It's in my .Mac account on the iPhone and after I pull over, I select that message and the faxed order appears. I move my fingers over the glass screen to make it appear larger and easier to read. And I read the bottom line, seemingly no hearing on Monday. After which there's a flurry of conference calls to be sure of that, but in any event, my iPhone received the fax from PageSender and it was easy to open and read, and to forward onto my client. And get back on the road to home.

The Jobs-ian iPhone Rebate

My initial take on the Jobs open letter to the early-adopter iPhone customers:

This is really a brilliant move == sort of like bringing back Coke as Coke Classic....I know that when Aperture was upgraded and the price lowered and Apple gave me a rebate of $200 on my early adopter price, I spent it happily at the Apple Store but I also felt quite good about doing so [probably would have anyway] - I sort of expected this might happen and am pleased to see prayers answered.. . .

And one which apparently resonates with others: BuzzMachine.

Another techie post, on the iPhone

Sorry I am not getting myself back to law commentary, but I did want to report on my use of the iPhone on two trips out of town. I went for a week to Chicago & Indiana for a legal convention [I became Chair of the Employment Rights Section of the American Association for Justice there] and then to shoot photos on the return trip in July and then in early August went to New York City to visit our daughter. On both trips I took my iPhone, of course, and my MacBookPro so I could do some work as well.

In both instances I found that I carried the iPhone with me and used it everywhere and left the MBP back in the room and used it only occasionally at night. With the exception of some 'dead' areas in the convention hotel [where the MBP wouldn't get wireless either] where neither wi-fi or Edge network worked, the iPhone did a great job of keeping me up to date and providing all I needed. If I couldn't get a signal, I just went upstairs and got the Edge network [or found free wi-fi to use] and did just fine. The Edge network is slow, but I usually do other things [multi-tasking] while waiting for my computer or whatever to finish what it's doing so I just let it download while I read a magazine or something. In New York I could find free wi-fi easier and did so.

If I was sitting somewhere and was fairly bored by what was going on, I could just turn on the iPhone and grab my mail via either Wi-Fi or Edge and read it, or just plan to read it later.

My main quandry, which I haven't taken the time to research and resolve, is that you download all this mail to your iPhone and I'd like to trash it now but am not sure how. With the .Mac email account it's easy, to either sync or overwrite; but I also have a Google GMail account for picking up mail via my iPhone and I'm not sure how to clean it off. Yet.

iPhone Sensitive to Releases, not Pushes

I've found this to be true with both taking pictures with a camera and using the keyboard. It is not the initial touch or push on the keyboard or camera button that activates the key selection or camera, it is the release of the finger from where you touched.

With the keyboard, that's really neat. It means you don't need to use 3 keystrokes to move from alphabetical to numerical and back to alphabetical. You can touch/push the number selector key and drag your finger to the symbol or number you want and then let go and the number/symbol will be selected and you'll be back in alphabetical keyboard immediately.

An Apple Store instructor the other day showed the camera suggestion to me: Click/push the camera button and hold it until you have the picture you want in the viewer and then lift up. The camera takes the picture then, when you and the object are not moving and without the lag time problems. Seems to work better.

Safari Searching on Steroids

I found this reading through a Mac|Life blog posting = AcidSearch = which expands the methods for searching for things in Google...I don't know much about it yet, but it may prove useful. You can find more information here.

What to do with all that left over electronic gear.

I don't know about you, but I do upgrade my equipment [computer and office equipment as well as photography equipment] fairly regularly [I'm one of those geeky early adopters, as you might know from reading my blog posts of late. Well, a friend of mine on the MacLaw listserve, Carol Ruth Shepherd recently posted on her blog about SecondRotation which seems like a perfect solution for busy people to recycle useful items and move on. I did a trial run on my Canon 20D camera [which I love, but which is getting a bit 'long in the tooth' and for the condition and lack-of-hassle feature, the price offered wasn't too bad. Now I may have to get serious about a trade in. Now to test it by running it by a camera shop, which might do the same thing at a better price [don't know yet].

More on the iPhone, with apologies

I just spent a week at the AAJ [American Association for Justice] convention in Chicago, soaking up knowledge and becoming chair of the Employment Rights Section for this coming year. I took with me my new iPhone and the following are my findings, so far [some of many]:

To keep the battery as full as possible, I have Bluetooth off and Searching for Networks off and had the phone fully charged early yesterday. I used it a fair amount [mainly for phone calls] yesterday. I did watch YouTube's The Ultimate Canon [Pachibel's Canon played by rock guitar - very neat] for about 6 min. I just checked and the battery bar is almost full [prob. 90%].

It works great - I have it set up to cc to me [so my GMail account has my sent messages in it too] and I don't sense email is not getting through. I have email transferred/forwarded from my HL account [a GoDaddy email acct.] to my GMail acct. from whence I get it via my iPhone. I have had iPhone set on getting mail every now and then but switched it back to Manual so it wouldn't be doing it all the time. If I have my laptop, as I do now, I go into GMail and delete or archive out of the inbox all the emails that have gathered there [such as those for yesterday] so they won't be picked up by the iPhone, as I don't need to read them on the phone. However, they are in the archive area if needed. And they've been downloaded to the laptop, as I check my mail. David Pogue recently wrote about this in his blog.

As for finger size, that could be a problem though the letters get a bit larger when you're on top of them so you know what you're punching. The auto complete feature is great - instead of punching the last letter I can just hit space, which certainly is big enough. So you have 4-5 or so regular letter punches and the big space punch. Another thing is that one's fingers have edges on them. I find that if I use my right pointer finger just slightly turned that works best - it's just more of an edge there. Fat fingers may or may not have a similar high point or edge which can be used. I do know that pressure doesn't help and a light touch is all that is needed.

All in all it was a wonderful experience, going to a convention without hauling around my laptop and instead, using my iPhone to gather emails and check the web.

More on the iPhone

I was discussing with a friend and mentor [Mike Sansone, a blog coach assisting me with my meager efforts at becoming a regular blogger]  [and showing off my new iPhone] what I like about the iPhone and decided to look into whether one can [yet] create Typepad posts using the iPhone rather than hopping on one's laptop.  I came across an excellent comment at the Passionate Users blog describing the User Interface ["UI"] which makes the use of the iPhone so pleasant.  It's in the floppy dog ears.

The other point I made to Mike fits in with this observation of the fluidity of the UI:  the packaging.  Anyone receiving an Apple product, whether it be the MacBookPro, the Nano or the iPhone, receives a minimalist black box which to the touch feels almost glasslike.  Touch a sheet or pad of paper and you can still feel some roughness but touch the paper or cardboard of an Apple product box and it's like touching glass, it's fluid, not rough.  Not only visually stunning but tactilely pleasant. 

I got an iPhone and friends and family think I am crazy.

My experience so far = is not extensive. I just set up a new GMail account so I can have my herringlaw mail [which is full of spam which is caught by SpamSieve on my computer but won't otherwise be caught if I set that account up to be checked on the iPhone] forwarded to it and then to be able to download my herringlaw email via iPhone via GMail account....at least the GMail spam filter will help.

I'm still a bit confused about quitting the apps but do know the home button does that = of course, I haven't read any material and it might be good to do that....or at least watch the iPhone tutorial. I filled up the 8G with music and videos and have used it some - I found out that I could create a playlist [click and drag type, not smart] and just clicked all my 5* pieces and purchases - that's 12G and now I'm going thru and deleting from that playlist what I don't want or need then the only thing that needs to be synced is this playlist...this works great.

Tonight.....We just had dinner and I was going to put on the stereo but my favorite music is also on the iPhone so I just brought it upstairs, and played background music during dinner then we called our daughter....not that I couldn't use my iPod or stereo just as well, but it was a nice little change and certainly when one is not near the stereo or other source, it's an option = no need for speakers....nothing fancy about speakers and the music aficionados might not be happy with it but it'll do in a pinch. For now I have my Verizon account set to forward to the new ATT number = still need to shut down the Verizon account and negotiate the family plan stuff. All in all though it'll save my husband alot of $ and it'll cost me the same for more minutes [450

How to cut down on spam in your iPhone mailbox

I'm still playing with it and trying to learn how to use it. One use for me is the ability to get my email from my .Mac account and from others. But the downside is the spam that makes it through, since cell phones don't have much server-side nor any client-side protection. This was alluded to in a recent article in the New York Times by Michelle Slatalla"An iPhone Changed My Life [Briefly]".

I'm hoping David Pogue will cover this issue in his Missing Manual series, although he certainly has a start on a number of tricks at that site.

I use SpamSieve and know what Ms. Slatalla means every time I have to clean out my Eudora junk box. But that's not possible on the iPhone [or on Verizon's Treo for that matter]. What I was going to do with my 'old' Treo & Verizon Wireless account but have done with my iPhone much more simply is use GMail to trap spam. Basically, I forward email from my email account to a GMail account which then is checked as an email account by the iPhone [after setting it up to be checked on the iPhone in the settings area].

Email goes to my usual account and is forwarded to GMail [staying on my regular account server for the typical download and reading in my office] then iPhone checks the GMail account and gets, for the most part, only good messages. I'm sure some spam will slip through but looking at my Gmail account it shows several spam messages that were not in the inbox of GMail and thus, not sent to my iPhone. There may be a more elegant workaround but for now this appears to work. I see that iPhone can also be set up to check other email accounts [e.g., Yahoo etc.] and using those alternatives probably would work likewise.

Microsoft Settlement in Iowa

Rush Nigut has a good, short summary of the recently preliminarily approved settlement of the Microsoft class action which was tried and settled in Des Moines, Iowa. http://www.rushonbusiness.com/2007/04/iowa_microsoft_.html

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