TidBITS#611/07-Jan-02
=====================

  Today's Macworld Expo keynote arrived on a wave of hype that was
  high even by Apple's standards, cresting with the introduction of
  a 15-inch LCD iMac, iPhoto, and an iBook with a 14.1-inch screen.
  Did reality measure up? Jeff and Adam report from the scene. Also,
  we note the releases of Mac OS X 10.1.2, BBEdit 6.5.1, Nisus
  Writer 6.5, a Classic-only Internet Explorer 5.1, plus the
  availability of Combo drives in PowerBook G4s and the Microsoft
  Office X Test Drive.

Topics:
    MailBITS/07-Jan-02
    Macworld Expo SF 2002 Keynote: Hip or Hype?
    iPhoto Joins the iFold

<http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/TidBITS-611.html>
<ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/issues/2001/TidBITS#611_07-Jan-02.etx>

Copyright 2002 TidBITS Electronic Publishing. All rights reserved.
   Information: <info@tidbits.com> Comments: <editors@tidbits.com>
   ---------------------------------------------------------------

This issue of TidBITS sponsored in part by:
* READERS LIKE YOU! You can help support TidBITS via our voluntary <- NEW!
   contribution program. Special thanks this week to Bob Dalsemer,
   the Apple Spice User Group, and Michael House!
   <http://www.tidbits.com/about/support/contributors.html>

* APS Tech -- 800/395-5871 -- <sales@apstech.com>
   Burn a full CD in less than five minutes with the APS CD-RW
   16x10x40 FireWire Plus. FireWire and USB ports let you easily
   connect to all recent Macs. Order at: <http://www.apstech.com/>

* WinStar Northwest Nexus. Visit us at <http://www.nwnexus.com/>.
   Internet business solutions throughout the Pacific Northwest.

* Small Dog Electronics: Combo Mania at Small Dog! <----------------- NEW!
   NEW iBook G3/500 128/10 GB/DVD+CD-RW Combo Drive: $1,449! NEW
   PowerBook G4/667 512/30 GB/Combo & Gig o' RAM: $2,995! Refurb
   iBook G3/600 Combo: $1,449! <http://smalldog.com/> 802/496-7171

* Protect Yourself from Internet Intruders! IPNetSentry is the
   intelligent, easy-to-use way to deter hackers from an Internet-
   connected Mac. NEW v1.3 updated for Mac servers. Just $35
   from Sustainable Softworks <http://www.sustworks.com/tb/>

* BBEdit 6.5 "Not-at-the-Show" Special Offer -- From January 7 <----- NEW!
   to January 11, get BBEdit 6.5 and a very stylish T-shirt for
   only $84 (plus shipping) direct from Bare Bones Software.
   Buy online: <https://store.barebones.com/MWSF2002.html>
   ---------------------------------------------------------------

MailBITS/07-Jan-02
------------------

**PowerBook G4 Combo Upgrades Start 14-Jan-02** -- Consistent with
  our coverage of the PowerBook G4 Titanium's new Combo drive, Apple
  has announced the PowerBook G4 Combo Upgrade Program. Under this
  program, owners of PowerBook G4 Titaniums with either 550 MHz or
  667 MHz processors (check Apple System Profiler if you're not
  sure) can swap their existing DVD-ROM or CD-RW drives for a DVD-
  ROM/CD-RW Combo drive for $300. The program, full details of which
  will become available on 14-Jan-02 on Apple's Web site, will
  involve sending your PowerBook in to Apple or taking it to an
  Apple Store. The program lasts only until 30-Mar-02, so get your
  order in quickly if you want to upgrade. [ACE]

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=06663>
<http://www.info.apple.com/usen/powerbook/upgrade_faq.html>


**Internet Explorer 5.1 Goes Classic** -- In a welcome, though
  slightly unusual move, Microsoft has released Internet Explorer
  5.1 - previously available only for Mac OS X - for Mac OS 8.1
  through 9.2 as well, adding a few minor features and enhancing
  reliability. The feature set of Internet Explorer 5.1 is largely
  unchanged from 5.0, adding the few new features that appeared in
  Internet Explorer 5.1 under Mac OS X. A new Interface Extras
  preferences panel gives you control over a few cosmetic options:
  whether clicking the Address field selects the text or places the
  insertion point, whether Internet Explorer opens new windows or
  uses the front browser window when asked to go to a URL by another
  application, and whether new browser windows open with the toolbar
  expanded or use the current default setting. Another useful
  feature is the Command-Shift-click shortcut that opens the
  clicked-on link in a new window behind the current one. Also new
  is support for NTLMv2 authentication in addition to the previous
  NTLMv1 support. Internet Explorer 5.1 for Mac OS 8.1 through 9.2
  requires at least 16 MB of RAM with virtual memory turned on and
  12 MB of disk space. It's a 5.3 MB download. [ACE]

<http://www.microsoft.com/mac/DOWNLOAD/IE/ie51.asp>


**Mac OS X 10.1.2 Rolls in Fixes** -- Shortly before the new year,
  Apple released an update to Mac OS X 10.1.2 via Software Update,
  building in a number of useful enhancements and fixes (and
  providing better release notes than for previous updates). The
  update improves USB and FireWire support (including support for
  FireWire-based digital cameras), adds support for PC Card storage
  devices and media readers, updates Mail with CRAM-MD5
  authentication support, builds in AirPort 2.0, updates Apache to
  1.3.22, and provides AppleScript 1.8, which is necessary for the
  forthcoming AppleScript Studio. The release also includes
  unspecified bug fixes in the areas of audio, display, speech,
  networking, the File Manager, and printing. Also just released via
  Software Update were a number of printer drivers - if you want to
  avoid continually seeing ones that you'll never use, select them
  and choose Make Inactive from the Update menu. [ACE]

<http://www.apple.com/macosx/upgrade/softwareupdates.html>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=06667>


**Free Microsoft Office X Test Drive** -- Following up on its
  recent Test Drive version of Microsoft Word X for Mac OS X,
  Microsoft has announced a free Test Drive version of the complete
  Microsoft Office X suite of applications for Mac OS X, including
  Mac OS X versions of Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and Entourage. The
  Test Drive runs for 30 days and lets users get hands-on experience
  with Office X's features and capabilities - nearly all the
  features of the retail version of Office X are available in the
  Test Drive. The Test Drive is available now as an enormous 122 MB
  download, or - after 14-Jan-02 - users in the U.S. and Canada can
  order the Test Drive on CD-ROM for a small shipping and handling
  fee. Office X requires a Mac running Mac OS X 10.1 or later.

<http://www.microsoft.com/mac/officex/otdreg.asp>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=06581>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=06637>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=06514>

  In addition, Apple and Microsoft have announced mail-in rebate
  programs for customers buying Mac OS X and Office X. Buying a new
  Mac with Office X makes a user eligible for a $150 rebate; a new
  Mac with the an Office X upgrade qualifies for a $75 rebate, and
  purchasing Mac OS X and either Office X or the Office X upgrade
  qualifies for a $50 rebate. The rebates all run through 31-Mar-02.
  [GD]


**BBEdit 6.5.1 Fixes Bugs, Adds Minor Features** -- Bare Bones
  Software has released BBEdit 6.5.1, adding a number of small
  features such as support for JSP (Java Server Pages), modified
  keyboard navigation, interface tweaks, and minor scripting
  improvements. The list of minor bug fixes is extensive (and is a
  model of how product release notes should be written!). If you use
  BBEdit 6.5 at all seriously, you'll want this free update; it's a
  7.3 MB download. [ACE]

<http://www.barebones.com/products/bbedit.html>
<http://www.barebones.com/support/bbedit/bbedit-notes.html>
<http://www.barebones.com/support/updates.html>


**Nisus Writer 6.5 Adds Outlining, Document Manager** -- Nisus
  Software joined in the holiday tradition of pushing big releases
  out just before the end of the year with Nisus Writer 6.5, a
  significant revision to the company's powerful word processor. The
  new outlining feature has been requested for several years; it
  appears to have the necessary basic outlining features, although
  some use will be required to see how fluid they really are. Also
  new is a Document Manager that's accessible from a new
  hierarchical Documents menu, providing fast access to your
  documents. Other minor changes include a slight modification in
  how copied paragraphs are pasted, a fix for a crashing bug that
  occurred when typing more than 32 characters in the Catalog
  window, and fixed import and export of footnotes, plus a modified
  Plain Text command that doesn't remove user-defined styles to be
  compatible with the new outline feature. For a limited time, the
  upgrade costs $40 for registered users of Nisus Writer (normally
  $50); the limited time discount also applies to new purchases ($80
  versus $100) and competitive upgrades ($55 versus $70). Nisus
  Writer 6.5 requires a PowerPC-based Mac running Mac OS 8.5 or
  later (it works under Classic in Mac OS X) with at least 2 MB of
  available RAM. A 30-day demo is available as a 23.1 MB download.
  [ACE]

<http://www.nisus.com/Products/NisusWriter/Upgrade/VersionChanges.asp>
<http://www.nisus.com/Store/DemoNowRedirect.asp?product=NisusWriter6.5>


Macworld Expo SF 2002 Keynote: Hip or Hype?
-------------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>

  I hope the noodles are soaking in preparation for a serious
  flogging of the people in Apple's PR machine. This keynote was
  perhaps the most hyped event Apple has ever done, making it sound
  as if the reports on the rumor sites were nothing compared with
  what Apple would announce. (The Crazy Apple Rumor Site took up the
  challenge, deciding in the end that the only thing Apple could do
  that would top the wild rumors swirling about was to introduce
  anatomically correct sexbots.)

<http://crazyapplerumor.blogspot.com/>

  But let's face it, the only people who didn't expect Apple to
  release an LCD iMac are those for whom news is the winners at
  Saturday night's Bingo tournament. There's no question the new
  iMac design is cool-looking, and numerous people have said they're
  not sure quite whether they like it or not - which is probably a
  good omen for what could be called an edgy design if it weren't so
  rounded.

  Overall, for a keynote as heavily hyped as this one, the actual
  presentation was bland. Aside from the iMacs, iPhoto generated the
  most talk, but it too has been expected for a year, at least in
  these pages (see "iPhoto Joins the iFold" in this issue for more
  details). And the enhancements to the iBook are mostly just larger
  numbers in the spec sheet, including a model with a larger screen.
  Are we expecting too much from a Macworld keynote? Yes, but
  although that's always been the case, this time Apple deserves
  blame for overheated expectations.


**Mac OS X** -- The biggest news about Mac OS X is that all new
  Macs will ship with Mac OS X as the default operating system,
  starting with the new Macs introduced today and extending to the
  entire product line (well, not the iPod, we assume) by the end of
  January. That's sooner than we had expected, and frankly, sooner
  than we feel is warranted. Apple deserves credit for improving Mac
  OS X so significantly during 2001, but it's nowhere near the
  maturity level of Mac OS 9, as Adam and I just found out when
  trying to share files and an Internet connection using Mac OS X.
  For those using their Macs merely to browse the Web, read email,
  listen to MP3s, and manage their digital photo collection, Mac OS
  X is fine, but it's still easy to find things that Mac OS X simply
  can't do. And that's despite Apple's claim of 2,500 shipping Mac
  OS X applications.

  Nonetheless, the parade of developers during the keynote was
  welcome. Adobe's After Effects 5.5 is now shipping, and GoLive 6.0
  and LiveMotion 2.0 were announced (with no expected ship dates
  yet). But the most eagerly awaited application, Photoshop, remains
  a distant promise. Adobe did show it off, though, including a
  built-in spelling checker, a feature that was greeted with much
  applause, presumably from the people who do all their writing in
  Photoshop.

  The highlight of the Mac OS X portion of the keynote - dare I say
  the entire keynote? - was Theodore Gray of Wolfram Research.
  Demonstrating Mathematica for Mac OS X, he engaged the audience by
  saying, "Okay, it's math... but look at the typography!" To round
  out his appearance, Gray demonstrated modeling a complex formula
  with the quip, "This would have been incredibly useful for people
  designing vacuum tubes."

  Dan Gregoire of Lucasfilm began his presentation with a video clip
  of director George Lucas welcoming the Macworld audience and
  explaining how Macs have been used extensively to build around
  4,000 animatics (low-resolution pre-visualizations of scenes) for
  the upcoming movie Star Wars: Episode II, Attack of the Clones.
  Judging from the circles under Lucas's eyes, using the Macs hasn't
  helped so much that he's gotten a lot of sleep of late, but it's
  no doubt an improvement from earlier methods of creating effects.
  Gregoire then briefly showed how the animatics designers use Maya
  for Mac OS X and After Effects to build the shots.


**iBook's Big Brother** -- Until today, the iBook's bigger sibling
  has been the PowerBook G4 Titanium - little did anyone know there
  was a half brother lingering on the family tree. Available now,
  the 14.1-inch iBook sports the same design as the existing iBook,
  but expanded slightly to accommodate a 14-inch screen. The new
  machine includes a larger battery, which Apple says offers a six
  hour charge. The 14.1-inch model, which also has a 600 MHz G3
  processor, 256 MB of RAM, and a Combo drive, sells for $1,800 and
  weighs about a pound more than the existing model. Hopefully it
  won't suffer the fate of the Cube, orphaned as that machine was
  between the iMac and Power Mac lines, but this larger iBook fits
  more neatly into the price gap. More the question is if it will
  seriously damage sales for the Titanium, given that screen size
  was a primary difference between the PowerBook and iBook lines
  before.

  The other iBooks received some attention, too: the entry-level
  model with CD-ROM is now $100 cheaper at $1,200, and the previous
  high-end 600 MHz iBook with Combo drive now sells for $1,500.


**Flat-Panel iMac** -- Based on the semi-exuberant reception to
  the new iBook, it was clear that the audience was itching for new
  hardware announcements, specifically the rumored flat-panel iMac.
  Jobs teased the crowd, noting that Apple has sold six million
  iMacs since its introduction in 1998, and running a succession of
  iMac commercials, allegedly to demonstrate the model's progression
  (conspicuously absent was any mention of the Flower Power and
  Dalmatian models). He even started quickly running down the
  impressive list of specifications before unveiling what we really
  wanted to see: the design.

  On a platform rising from the middle of the stage was the most
  amazing table lamp you've ever seen. Okay, that's not a fair
  description, but it's the comparison I've heard most since the
  keynote. Retaining the iMac's all-in-one design, the new model has
  a 10.6-inch diameter white hemispheric base that contains all the
  components, including the power supply, which in the G4 Cube
  existed as a bulky external power brick. Despite that, the iMac
  still doesn't have a fan, making it near silent. The 15-inch flat
  screen sits on an adjustable metal neck that rotates 180 degrees
  left-to-right and 90 degrees top-to-bottom; the screen itself also
  tilts up and down, and even retains its angle when you move the
  neck (in other words, a screen that's vertical remains vertical
  when you adjust the neck). A lip around the screen's front face
  makes it easy to move the armature around - no doubt the models in
  the Apple booth will undergo massive user testing over the next
  four days. The screen's viewable area is the same as a 17-inch CRT
  monitor, running at resolutions of 1,024 by 768 or 800 by 600
  interpolated (you can also choose 640 by 480 if you've attached an
  external monitor).

  The base appears rather ordinary at first, but a peek around the
  back reveals a host of ports: two FireWire connections, Pro
  speaker jack, headphone jack, Ethernet, power, modem, three USB
  ports, and an iBook-style video-out port (video mirroring only).
  The machine's sole power switch is a button on the back left side,
  which seems somewhat awkward, especially now that Apple's
  keyboards no longer feature a power button. On the front, looking
  like a white-on-white smiley face, the media bay houses either a
  tray-loading CD-ROM, Combo drive, or SuperDrive, depending on
  configuration.

  Looks aside, what about the iMac's power? Here, the iMac's
  designation as a consumer model is purely a side effect of its
  marketing. The low-end configuration, priced at $1,300, includes a
  700 MHz PowerPC G4 processor with Velocity Engine, 128 MB of RAM,
  a 40 GB hard disk, and the CD-ROM drive. The mid-range model, for
  $100 more, has the same processor and hard disk, but includes 256
  MB of RAM and the Combo drive. The $1,800 high-end iMac sports an
  800 MHz G4 processor, 256 MB of RAM, a 60 GB hard disk, and a
  SuperDrive. Each model also comes with an Nvidia GeForce2 MX
  graphics card, can support up to 1 GB of RAM, and is AirPort-
  ready. The AirPort antenna goes around the outside of the monitor,
  so range should be good, and the RAM and AirPort slots are easily
  available by removing the base's bottom plate. It's unclear how
  easy it will be to perform other upgrades such as swapping in a
  new hard disk.

  Anticipating high demand for what is now an inexpensive
  SuperDrive-equipped Mac, the 800 MHz iMac will be available at the
  end of January, with the middle-tier model arriving in February
  and the entry-level machine showing up in March as the company
  ramps up production.

  Apple is selling the new iMac as the ideal digital hub, and it's
  clearly more than capable in that regard. In fact, the biggest
  question seems to be whether potential buyers will accept or
  reject the new design - an interesting predicament, considering
  that until Apple introduced the original iMac, design was usually
  at the bottom of the list of considerations. But given that the
  "new" iMac will no doubt be the only iMac Apple offers (the two
  previous low-end models are still available, though I'm guessing
  only until Apple can clear out its inventory), the machine's
  impressive capabilities will win over even the most skeptical
  eyes - especially if they belong to someone looking to reclaim
  a fair bit of desk space.


iPhoto Joins the iFold
----------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>

  Along with the completely redesigned iMac and inflated iBook, the
  other big news from Steve Jobs's keynote today was iPhoto, a
  highly welcome, if painfully obvious addition to Apple's suite of
  free applications that by themselves go a long way toward
  differentiating Macs from garden variety PCs. And this year,
  iPhoto will also provide incentive for current Mac users to switch
  to Mac OS X - it's designed solely for Apple's now-default
  operating system.

<http://www.apple.com/iphoto/>

  How painfully obvious was iPhoto? We even guessed at iPhoto's name
  a year ago when it became clear that Apple needed a consumer-level
  application for managing all the images captured from digital
  cameras. After all, if Apple intends the Mac to be a digital hub,
  it needs to do more with digital photos than it has in the past.
  And as much as the image cataloging programs offer extensive
  feature sets, they're all aimed at graphics professionals rather
  than normal users.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=06285>

  iPhoto, on the other hand, is clearly designed for the average
  digital camera owner (and considering that six million digital
  cameras were sold in the U.S. in 2001, that's a nice market). It
  provides a three-pane interface reminiscent of iTunes, with the
  left-hand pane holding user-generated photo albums instead of
  playlists, along with controls for some common functions (adding
  photo albums, running a slide show, getting/setting information on
  an image or album, and rotating images). The large right-hand pane
  shows either a single image or scalable thumbnails of multiple
  images. The third pane, which takes up the entire bottom of the
  iPhoto window, changes to offer additional feedback or commands,
  depending on the current mode.


**Importing and Organizing** -- You bring photos into iPhoto
  either by connecting a supported digital camera or card reader
  (Apple has a list of supported cameras, card readers, and printers
  on its Web site), or by importing images already on your hard
  disk. Importing, even from hard disk, isn't fast, but it's a
  one-time operation. iPhoto imposes a somewhat odd Finder filing
  scheme on you, creating a huge date-based hierarchy of folders in
  your home directory's Pictures folder. So, for instance, I have a
  2001 folder that contains numbered folders for the months in which
  I took photos. And inside each of those are numbered folders for
  each day. Within those folders are the individual files,
  sequentially numbered. Various other files provide the metadata
  iPhoto uses to track albums, keywords, and titles. One advantage
  (or potential gotcha, depending on your images) is that all of
  iPhoto's images are automatically available to Mac OS X's Slide
  Show screensaver module.

<http://www.apple.com/iphoto/compatibility/>

  Once you've brought your images into iPhoto, you can organize them
  in a number of ways - click the Organize button to enter that
  mode. You can make albums and add photos to them, or use the
  controls at the bottom of the window for assigning keywords. You
  can change the default keywords or define your own, up to 16, but
  doing so requires entering keyword editing mode by choosing Edit
  Keywords from the Edit menu - an ungainly interface that you won't
  have to endure often. You can also name images: to see how, select
  one and click the "info" button in the left pane to reveal
  information about the image, including date, image size, file
  size, and user-defined comments. I don't recommend naming images
  generally, since it's a lot of work that I've found inherently
  unhelpful in the end (if you're like most people, most of your
  images are likely to have somewhat similar subjects, making
  coherent names difficult). Two checkboxes let you decide if you
  want to display titles or keywords next to the thumbnails, and a
  third adds dividers to your thumbnail view based on "film roll," a
  method of organizing the pictures into groups based on when they
  were imported into iPhoto.

  It's a little hard to say when you'll want to use albums in favor
  of keywords or vice versa, since once you've assigned keywords to
  images, you can click the keyword controls to display just the
  images matching those keywords. You can produce exactly the same
  results using either keywords or albums - what I'd recommend (and
  keep in mind that as of this writing I have minutes of experience
  with this program) is that you restrict albums to unique labels
  that you're likely to want to use only once, whereas keywords
  should be the kind of thing you could apply to nearly any photo.
  Plus, albums are necessary for making books - more on that later.


**Editing Images** -- One problem most photo cataloging programs
  have is that the only editing they let you do on images is
  rotation. That's probably the primary activity you want to do and
  iPhoto offers a rotate button that works in any view, along with a
  bigger button when you're in Edit mode - click either button to
  rotate an image counter-clockwise; Option-click it to rotate
  clockwise.

  But iPhoto doesn't stop there, providing three additional
  functions that should handle most image editing needs. You can
  crop images, and it provides a way of constraining your cropping
  to specific image sizes. You can also select an area and click a
  button to reduce red-eye - a common problem that can result in
  some truly demonic pictures. Finally, a Black & White button does
  exactly what you'd expect, an effect that works especially well
  with images of people. In Edit mode, the slider that sets
  thumbnail size in Organize mode instead zooms in or out of the
  image. And finally, Previous and Next buttons make it easy to move
  between images without having to switch back to Organize mode.
  Throughout the process, iPhoto uses ColorSync to maintain accurate
  color values.

  If iPhoto's image editing capabilities aren't sufficient, you can
  also set a helper application to kick in when you double-click an
  image. That might be useful if you find yourself wanting to do
  color correction or adjust contrast or brightness on your photos
  regularly. Personally, I'm not bothered by iPhoto's lack of those
  controls - I usually end up botching the job when I try do such
  things.


**Sharing Images** -- Where iPhoto really shines, however, is in
  its functions for sharing and presenting your photo collection.
  Perhaps the most innovative feature iPhoto offers is the
  capability to create a picture book of your images. You can choose
  a number of themes, much as you can in iDVD, and within each them,
  you can customize how many images print on each page and the text
  that accompanies them. You can't print books yourself,
  unfortunately; instead you must upload it to a service that prints
  the images on high-quality paper and wraps it all up in a classy
  linen hardcover binding. Books cost $30 for up to 10 pages, and
  $3 per page after that, plus tax and delivery the following week.
  As a friend moaned after the keynote, the cost will add up fast
  by the time you create copies for all the grandparents several
  times each year (but it may also prove to be an easy and popular
  holiday gift).

  Clicking into Share mode presents you with a number of choices:
  Print, Slide Show, Order Prints, Order Book, HomePage, and Export.
  Print offers four styles, Contact Sheet (where you select the
  number of images to print across and iPhoto does the scaling for
  you), Full Page, Greeting Card (which prints either single-fold or
  double-fold cards with the image on one panel), and Standard
  Prints (which offers 4x6, 5x7, and 8x10 sizes). Slide Show runs a
  standard slide show with configurable delays and background music.
  Order Prints connects to a service run by Kodak for printing
  selected images on photo paper at a variety of sizes (and prices)
  for shipping to any address you choose. Order Book does much the
  same thing, but since you've arranged the book on your computer,
  it's just a matter of how many copies and where to send it.
  Clicking HomePage offers you the choice of different themes, after
  which your images are uploaded to your iDisk and displayed via
  your Mac.com picture page. (These last three options are described
  from memory - we didn't have an Internet connection available
  while writing.) Finally, Export lets you export images as
  individual files, as custom Web pages for uploading to your own
  Web server, or as a QuickTime movie slide show you can send to
  friends or family. Unfortunately, exporting as a Web page isn't
  particularly good - iPhoto provides you with one or more thumbnail
  pages, and clicking a thumbnail expands the image, but it doesn't
  even provide navigation to move on to the next expanded image
  without going back to the thumbnails. I'm still waiting for
  someone to come up with a program that generates a framed Web page
  approach that offers easy navigation for thumbnails and expanded
  images at the same time.


**Close Shutter** -- Perhaps my main criticism of iPhoto right now
  is that it doesn't acknowledge the fact that many families are
  likely to have multiple computers and may wish to share a single
  photo library. It may be possible to work some magic with aliases,
  but we weren't able to figure out any way to fool a copy of iPhoto
  on one computer into using the photo library on another computer.
  iTunes isn't great at this either, but at least you can point
  iTunes at a Music folder that exists on another Mac and have it
  load the music over the network. (Unfortunately, iTunes won't
  automatically mount a volume when you try to play an MP3 track
  shared like this).

  Although we've been able to play with iPhoto for only a short
  time, it's clear that it's going to be a huge win for Apple. Aside
  from the fact that it provides a reason to choose a Mac over a PC
  (though, to be fair, Windows XP offers some of these sort of
  features as well), and Mac OS X over Mac OS 9, iPhoto provides a
  perfect example of how a free application could actually improve
  Apple's bottom line through revenues related to print and book
  orders. Steve Jobs claimed that Apple had sold one million DVD-R
  blank disks in the last year (and Apple has just reduced the price
  to $5 per disk) - I have to believe that there are a lot more
  people who will want to order prints or picture books than wanted
  to burn DVDs in 2001. I know I'll be giving it a try, something
  I've never managed to do with any of the other digital photo
  printing services.



$$

 Non-profit, non-commercial publications may reprint articles if
 full credit is given. Others please contact us. We don't guarantee
 accuracy of articles. Caveat lector. Publication, product, and
 company names may be registered trademarks of their companies.

 This file is formatted as setext. For more information send email
 to <setext@tidbits.com>. A file will be returned shortly.

 For information: how to subscribe, where to find back issues,
 and more, email <info@tidbits.com>. TidBITS ISSN 1090-7017.
 Send comments and editorial submissions to: <editors@tidbits.com>
 Back issues available at: <http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/>
 And: <ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/issues/>
 Full text searching available at: <http://www.tidbits.com/search/>
 -------------------------------------------------------------------




