August 2007
Transcription
August 2007
August 2007 MaUsE DoubleClick Summer Holidays Issue From The Editor What you are looking at is the August 2007 Summer edition of the MaUsE DoubleClick magazine from the Macintosh Users East, (MaUsE), a motley collection of mostly harmless cranks who reside in Southern Ontario with their motley collection of old and new Macintosh computers. 2007 MaUsE Executive • President: Michael Shaw [email protected] • Vice President: Aaron Vegh [email protected] • Apple Liaison: Bruce Cameron [email protected] • Treasurer: John Kettle [email protected] The August 2007 DoubleClick is published using Quark XPress 7.2. This issue was created with help from an OWC Mercury Extreme 1.4 GHz G4 Power Macintosh AGP Graphics tower, (with our thanks to OWC), and a 1 GHz G4 iBook. A Kodak DX7590 is used for all pictures. Everything not specifically attributed to someone else can be blamed on the Editor. Back issues can be downloaded from the <www.mause.ca> website. Submissions from MaUsE Club members are almost always welcome. Send articles to me at < [email protected] >, especially if there are files or pictures attached. I have never refused a submission yet. There is always room for another piece on ANY Mac-related topic and I’ll make room if there isn’t. I would like your submissions. But I won’t beg. • Publicity Director: Jim Danabie Apple, Macintosh, and the Apple logo are trademarks of Apple Computer, Inc., registered in the U.S. and other countries. The MaUsE (Macintosh Users East) is an independent Mac user group and has not been authorized, sponsored, or otherwise approved of by Apple Computer, Inc. Its very much like they donʼt even know we exist. Shhhh. • DoubleClick Editor: Michael Shaw [email protected] Notice • Logistics: Chris Greaves [email protected] • Secretary: Stan Wild [email protected] • Director: Guy Lafontaine • Director Marcel Dufresne Macintosh Users East 208 Winona Avenue Oshawa, ON L1G 3H5 Message Line 905-433-0777 This is the August 2007 Issue. These summer MaUsE DoubleClick issues may be shorter than the usual issues because we have no scheduled MaUsE activities during the summer months. The next MaUsE Meeting will be September 28th. Check the < www.MaUsE.ca > website for updated news. See you in September. Meeting Notice The next MaUsE Meeting will be held on the evening of Sept. 28th at 7:00 P.M. at the Whitby Public Library on the southeast corner of Hwy. 2 and Henry Street in Whitby. The Meeting is open to the public but only MaUsE members in attendance will receive raffle tickets for the items raffled at this meeting. iF am ily fo r Tig e r By Guy Lafontaine Through using other genealogy or family tree data base software I have developed a sense about the softwareʼs purpose and the features that are expected and useful to genealogical researchers. Selecting software for storage of research data is very personal. It is not just about the features, but it is how the user interacts with the program that is important. A genealogistʼs researching style, whether ʻvisualʼ or ʻtextʼ focussed, is key in determining whether the selected software is a good ʻfitʼ. Keith Wilson and his team at iFamily for Tiger (iF4T), from down under, got it right side up to satisfy these concerns. I dove in without reading any documentation. Over the years I have used and evaluated many types of software. Users learn much by this method. Right from the start, I liked the feel of iF4T. Its focus on each individual person, rather than on a family unit, is what makes this software simple to use, intuitive, yet powerful. The split screen view further enhances the ease of use. The upper window has a descendent / ancestor horizontal hourglass chart with the Focal Person colour highlighted (see Queen left). In the bottom window you can view: the immediate family, the extended family, life events, notes, source citations, pictures, ancestors, descendants and individualʼs stories. You control the depth of information by toggling on or off those you wish included - siblings, cousins, parents, in-laws, etc. For the stories, the interface has a word-processor so there is no need to leave iF4T to record the stories. Finding people is easy with iFamily. You have three ways to search: 1 - By using the search field at the right hand end of the toolbar. It is based on "words that start with", so to search for Elizabeth Alexandra Mary Windsor you could enter e, a, m, w, or eliz win. This ʻintelligentʼ completion saves time in searching. This works during data entry of repetitious data like names, cities, counties, events and so on. 2 - By going to the index list which can be sorted by given name or surname field, or you can perform a Boolean search. 3 - By using your mouse (clicking) to meander back and forth in the ancestor / descendant hourglass chart (upper window of split screen display). Throughout my exploration of iF4T I was impressed by the implementation of these features which make it so user friendly: • Rollover pop-up contextual hints. • Many preferences available while working with specific functions or in specific sections. • Extensive use of the ʻRIGHT clickʼ for contextual actions. Photographs are incorporated easily via either the Finder or iPhoto. No preparation is needed since the image can be cropped and / or adjusted right in iF4T when it is linked to the data base. The image can be readjusted at any time, even months after its inclusion in iF4T. The actual image data does not sit in the data base file, only a reference to it is created. This means the iF4T data file does not become huge. It is very important to ensure that picture files are moved with the data file when migrating to another computer or flash drive. This extra step is worth the time it takes. Ancestor and descendant charts and reports are easily created by simple mouse clicks. How they will print, including when printed over multiple pages, is clearly previewed. The software supports export and import of data via GEDcom files. The designers have applied a simple but powerful concept in their design of adding or editing data that makes this one of the easiest pieces of genealogy software I have used: If you can see it, you can change it. There is no need to go to a special edit screen. While entering data you are not always required to save after each entry. I recommend iFamily for Tiger if you want a no nonsense genealogy data base with the tools needed to properly add, edit, search, view, cite and annotate data, include photos and to tell the stories. Visit http://www.iFamilyforTiger.com The version of iFamily for Tiger used in this evaluation / review is V2.227, Copyright 2005-07. KS Wilson & Associates, Australia July 29, 2007. SKYPE - Calling All Computers by Marcel Dufresne I had heard about Skype many years ago and I knew it was some sort of application to help telephone calls. It does do this but also a whole lot more. The program of choice by most teens to connect computer to computer is MSN. While this is fine for PC to PC connection (it allows video and audio), all you can do with MACs is to text message. We have kept in touch with all of our daughters at University this way. It works fine but you have to type all that you want to say. The first question I had about Skype was how did it compare to iChat or MSN. I am going to use my daughter as a testimonial to what Skype is like. Due to my high level of computer illiteracy, I was extremely reluctant even to download Skype. My Dad eventually got tired of trying to convince me and went on my computer to download it himself. I then followed the steps to create an account, which were self-explanatory even for me. I have barely used the phone since I have had this program, which is incredible for a girl my age. I now use Skype to make almost all my long-distance calls. It is easier to use than a regular phone since you donʼt even have to dial. You simply select your contact and click the call button. It is also great to be able to walk around the room hands free while talking. The ring can be heard from other rooms in the house, making it as practical as a regular telephone. Even better than a landline, Skype offers the possibility of seeing the person you are talking to by use of a webcam, which really makes it feel like the other person is right there in the room with you. Best of all, Skype is cheaper than using a telephone. Computer to computer is free, which has almost eliminated all my long distance charges. All in all, it is one of the most practical, useful and efficient programs I have ever used on my computer. And if I can use it, anyone can.” The day after she set it up. her boyfriend was looking to find a webcam. He could see her but she couldnʼt see him. She has not used MSN since and she is getting all her friends to try it out. Another thing she likes is that she can be on Skype to one person and take a phone call from someone else. Skype has two types of interactions. You can call computer to computer for free. You can also use your computer as a landline. This is called SkypeOut. In this mode you add a phone number to Skype and it will dial the other personʼs phone. There is a charge for this, even for a local call. Skype is not meant to be a replacement for your normal phone. The sound quality is that of a cell phone or a speakerphone. Once you are set up with Skype it is very easy to add someone to your phone list. One method is to search their name or their Skype user ID or part thereof. Once you type it in, Skype will give you a list of possibilities with their real name and city. As long as the person you are looking for has Skype turned on, you will easily find them. To “call” someone, you simply push the green phone button next to their name in your buddy list. Their computer will ring just like a phone would do at home. They can choose to answer or not as they can see who is calling them. A second method of using Skype is to put the personʼs phone number in the appropriate spot. Now when you click the phone icon your computer will call directly to their own home phone. This is called SkypeOut and there is a fee for this type of usage. You can get Skype Unlimited which is $35 for a year calling anywhere in Canada or the US using SkypeOut. The MAC has iChat which is an excellent system, but it requires the other person to also have a MAC. The best system thus is Skype which will allow audio and video from any computer. There is no end of the ways to use Skype. I caught another daughter using her cell phone for audio and Skype for video when talking to her boyfriend. If I was in business or had a network set up, Skype would be invaluable. I am totally sold on this system and I will be passing the word along. Logitech Wheel Mouse Optical Although I donʼt find them very often, I still look for treaures a garage sales. I picked up a gig of PC133 RAM (four 256-meg chips) for a Sawtooth AGP Graphics G4 tower at the beginning of the season but not much since then. A few weeks ago I was out at a local garage sale and saw some brand new Logitech optical USB wheel mice still in the original boxes and grabbed one. Says PC ? Mac right on thebox. The asking price was just one dollar and I did not dicker. As you can see from the picture I took (bottom right) this really is new old stock. I plugged it into the iBook and it worked like a charm under OSX 10.4.9. I was also pleased by the easy software installation and setup. Since the mouse was not new I went directly to the Logitech website and got the newest version of the Mac OSX drivers. I really didnʼt get much of a chance to use it because Irmaʼs mouse was acting up at the same time that the Logitech Wheel Mouse Optical was on its way into service so it pretty quickly wound up on her computer instead of mine. I did get to use it for a few weeks but Iʼll have to find another one for myself if I really want to have one. She has mentioned on a few occasions that its a much better mouse than the genuine Apple Pro mouse she had been using. The Apple Pro digital mice are prone to failure in a specific way. The cable or cord that attaches the mouse to the computer is completely unsupported as it exits the mouse body and I have had several Apple mice suffer from a premature death because the cord was bent or twisted severely right there, probably from running up against another cable or something. On the other hand, Apple optical Pro mice do make excellent Christmas tree decorations ! As a general rule, I prefer digital mice. No more finding cat hair wrapped around the rollers, no more cleaning mice rollers & balls with Iso-propyl alcohol, and no more dependence on mouse pads. If you are looking for a sturdy, reliable, easy to install, comfortable, versatile, no frills optical mouse then I highly recommend the Logitech Optical Wheel Mouse. The buttons and the wheel are programmable and the acceleration is adjustable and the touch is very sensitive. The best place to find a terrific selection of Macintosh-compatible digital mice is on eBay. Shipping should be under $10.00 from anywhere in Canada or the States and there are so many colours and styles to chose from. A little research on the internet will tell you which ones are the four or five star models and which ones retailed for big bucks when they were first released. What to do, What to do... Although it doesnʼt happen very often now, there once was a time when my enthusiasm for all things Macintosh kept me out too often and too late visiting with people whose Macs were misbehaving. That was especially true before MacOS X. In several many cases people called me simply because their Mac would not start up at all: they went through the usual startup process and got absolutely no response from their Macintosh. No chime, no video, no snap, crackle, pop, nothing. If this happens to you, hereʼs a few suggestions for you to check out before you panic and assume the worst. 1. Check the power cord at the wall or power bar. Is it securely plugged in? Is it securely connected to the computer? Unplug it from both sources and plug it back in. They can come loose. People who repeatedly adjust the viewing angle of their new iMacs can often accidentally wiggle the power cord until it becomes loose. 2. Is your surge strip turned on and plugged in? A while ago I drove to Whitby to plug in a power bar that had been secretly unplugged from the wall receptacle to make room for a vacuum cleaner. 3. Try another outlet on your surge strip. The one you are currently plugged into could have gone bad. It doesnʼt happen very often but it happpens. 4. If #3 does not accomplish anything, try plugging the surge strip into another wall outlet. Preferably, the outlet would be on another wall, or even another room. 5. Plug a lamp into the wall outlet to verify that it has power. Not the outlet? Plug the computer directly into the wall to determine if the entire surge strip has died. 6. Find another power cord, and plug that into your computer. Your power cord could have gone bad or been munched on by four legged creatures in the middle of the night. 7. Unplug everything FireWire, SCSI, and USB from your computer, except for the keyboard, mouse and power cord and see if it works. One of your external devices could be causing the problem. 8. Try any combination of the above. 9. This is extreme, but you can always try the computer in another office or house as a last resort. 10. This is one of my favourites: replace the PRAM battery if the computer is a desktop model or give it time to charge up if its a portable. 11. And hereʼs another suggestion: if all else fails remove all of the memory from your Mac except one stick of RAM and try to start it. If all of the steps above prove to be useless, it might be time for a new computer or a visit to the repair shop. Of course, you could bypass all of these steps and use this power issue as an excuse to get a nice, new, shiny Apple computer. And when your old Mac finally dies, or gets too old, tired and stupid to carry on with the latest operating systems, as one day it surely must, remember the box of delights that it once was and remember that it can still do everything that it could when it was new. There are lots of Mac users who still have and use computers ten years old so see to it that your old goes to a good home. It may not be worth much but RAM for older computers is cheap now and to someone who it struggling with MacOS9.1 on an old PowerMac 8600 or 9600 your antique G3 tower or iMac could be the beginning of a new adventure. IPEVO USB Phones by Marcel Dufresne As a Skype user, the experience is so much better if you have a webcam. The newer MAC has this built in and a lot of others already have an iSight. It is not a necessary item but it does allow us to feel more like "The Jetsons". Another item that I heard about was a USB phone. I contacted a few companies and IPEVO was kind enough to send me three of their MAC friendly phones. The company's headquarters is in Taiwan, but it was their office in the US that responded. It is a relatively new company that has been developing hardware for Skype since 2005. All three phones are installed the same way. Put in the CD that comes with the phone. Add one small application to your folder and that's it. There were a lot more instructions for the PC users but they did not apply to me. The application allows you to control the audio output device, either the USB phone or your computer. It also allows you to control the input and output volume. The rest of the work is done by Skype. The three phones I tried were the Free.1, the Free.2 and the Trio. The IPEVO motto is smart design, good price and the first two phones look really good. They have a sleek and stylish appearance. They have a solid casing but are very compact. They have won numerous design awards, much to their merit. The third phone is more of an office type heavy duty phone but it still has a real good feel to it. Look at the photos to see what I mean. All three phones have a button that opens up the Skype application so you don't have to search for it. They also let you control the buddy list with some simple clicks right on the phone so that you can use the USB device to do all the work. The Free.1 and Free.2 both have the numeric keypad for dialing out. You would use this only if you had not already added that person to your buddy list. Otherwise, only one button is needed. The Free.1 was the first Skype phone for both the PC and MAC systems. The Free.2 has a LCD display which allows for easy Skype control right from the phone. It has quite a few Skype specific hotkeys. The third phone is called the TRIO. It acts as a handheld phone, a speakerphone and a recording device if you wish to keep an audio record of the call. It has a 360° microphone and is definitely for the business world. All three phones are USB powered which means they get their power right from the computer without an extra electrical cable. The Free.2 will be on sale in Canada later this year for $45. It is available online now from http://www.ipevo.com. The other two sell for $35 and $80 online. The question that I had was why use a USB phone when the internal mike and speakers will do the job. I have two answers. First, the phone has echo cancellation built into it. The biggest difference between normal telephone calls and SkypeOut calls is that it sounds like a cell phone is being used. The echo cancellation makes the audio sound better. Secondly, the USB phone offers privacy. If you are using your computer, it is like using a speakerphone. Everyone can join into the call, whether invited to or not. Also if I am calling someone long distance it just feels better to have a phone in my hand. Old-fashioned, I guess. Other Skype add-ons include the headset-microphone combination that you see with bluetooth. There is also a special phone that allows you to use Skype without a computer. And there is a Wi-Fi phone that can be used with any wireless network. As far as I can tell, Skype works fine with the built in audio and video equipment that comes with the MAC. Skype works more clearly with the USB phone. Because all MACs come with a built in microphone and speaker, I would not rush right out and buy a phone. I would try Skype first and then delve into the add-ons. FullMeasure 4.0 by Michael Shaw Badia FullMeasure is an XTension for QuarkXPress that creates a powerful control palette that gives the user instant access to more than 160 functions, attributes and tools in one easy-to-use palette. This latest update, FM v4.0, is designed expressly for the new QXP7. The FullMeasure tool palette is organized into 12 panels that comprise text and paragraph formats, rule settings, picture information, item and frame settings, document preferences, table functions, guide management, item alignments, search tools and value conversions. Along the top of the FullMeasure 4 control window there are 12 buttons that give the user access to the 12 themed controls panels. Each panel is full of useful tools so the FullMeasure tools palette is the key to what might be considered twelve different Quark 7 XTensions. And single licenses start at only US $89.99. FullMeasure allows you to view and change dozens of attributes – no more travelling through menus, opening dialogs or squinting at screens cluttered with palettes. It can also be configured to be context-sensitive, meaning that its panels switch automatically to present only the information relevant to the current context. In addition, you get many tools otherwise unavailable in QuarkXPress, such as box reference points, functions for redefining style sheets, character and paragraph count, nudge controls, complete picture information, keyboard shortcuts and more. New to FullMeasure 4.0 for QuarkXPress 7 is the ability to search for item attributes, including box dimensions, background color, shade and opacity, suppression status, offsets, text columns, frame style, picture format, resolution, color model and status. FullMeasure 4.0 has a powerful set of useful tools that can very quickly become highly addictive. Unique FullMeasure Tools • Complete Picture Information and Linking Tools: picture name and full path, reveal picture/folder in Finder, open picture with creator or any application you choose, file size, color model (RGB, CMYK, etc.), format (EPS, TIFF, etc.), picture compression, picture suppression, resolution and effective resolution, update picture, link status, embedded EPS fonts/colors. • Update All Modified Pictures: in one step, updates all pictures that have a 'Modified' status. • Picture Alignments: aligns picture to the top/left/right/bottom side of the picture box. • Redefine Style Sheet: redefines the current style sheet incorporating local formats. • Remove Local Formats: reverts paragraph or character settings to those specified by the style sheet. • Case Conversion: changes the text case to sentence case, title case, all lowercase or all uppercase. • Fit Box to Text: shortens or expands the text box to fit tight to the text inside. • Character, Word and Paragraph Count. • Keyboard Shortcuts: allows you to set keyboard shortcuts for several FullMeasure functions. • Up/Down Controls: allows you to increase/decrease any field value using Up/Down buttons. • Font Menu: includes at the top a list of fonts used in the document. • Add Guide at Baseline: adds a page guide along the baseline of the selected text. • Apply Insets to All Boxes: globally applies the same box insets to the entire document. • Remove All Tabs: removes all paragraph tabs in one step. • Rules Panel: allows you to set paragraph rules and modify all settings. • Table Panel: allows you to quickly access common table functions. • Find Panel: searches for item and picture attributes in the entire document. • Reference Points: allows you to specify item coordinates and dimensions relative to any reference point (top-right of the box, center, etc.). This allows you to increase the box width by its center point, for example. • Nudge Controls: gives you buttons for moving items up / down / left / right by any custom amount that you specify. • Convert Measurements Between Units: allows you to convert measurements between inches, picas, points, millimeters, centimeters, ciceros, agates and pixels. • Guide Placement: allows you to view the exact position of all horizontal and vertical guides. • Delete All Guides: deletes all horizontal or vertical guides at once. • Step and Repeat Guides: allows you to place guides numerically and step and repeat guides. • View Slider: allows you to change the document view percentage using a slider. • Add Custom Views: allows you to save any document view. Puzzle Pro 2.2 by Michael Shaw There are useful Photoshop plug-ins and filters for the pros designed to help fix up pictures that have problems and there are neat & nifty Photoshop plug-ins and filters that are designed to make working with pictures more fun by allowing anyone to create special features and achieve amusing effects. If you are not using your Mac to play with your digital images and photos yet then you soon will be. And you donʼt need to drop awad of cash for Photoshop to join the fun. Adobe has made Photoshop Elements a real bargoon and plug-ins that work with one will work with the other. AV Bros. Puzzle Pro 2.2 is an extremely high quality, powerful and flexible Photoshop plugin, which greatly increases your creativity and productivity. I showed a slide show of images created with Puzzle Pro 2.2 at the June MaUsE Meeting that demonstrated the types of effects that can be achieved with Puzzle Pro and Iʼm pleased to say that it was grabbed up pretty fast in the June MaUsE Raffle. When you first invoke Puzzle Pro from your Filters menu in Photoshop, you're presented with your picture in the Cutter portion of the interface. This is where you define the size and shape of the jigsaw puzzle sections and the number of rows and columns in the puzzle. Not only can you load preset shapes and create your own, you can adjust every conceivable element of the shape--even apply an element of randomness to the puzzle sections. After the cutting stage, you enter the puzzle mode where you can select and modify individual puzzle cells. You can set certain cells to be hidden, adjust the bevel effect, and apply other effects. You can also save the image as a PSD file with each puzzle section on its own layer. This way, individual sections can be moved, rotated and manipulated with filters, layer effects, and other tools. A great feature! Puzzle Pro offers more customizable options than any other similar plug-in. You may never use all the customization options in Puzzle Pro, but they're sure to open up a whole new world of creative opportunities for you. The selection of images created with Puzzle Pro 2.2 on the AV Bros website will delight and amuse you with the wide range of possibilities. Although this Photoshop filter is targeted to help you create a jig-saw puzzle effect, it also produces a plethora of various high quality image effects. Thanks to both the superb engine and the convenient graphic user interface, this plugin gives you absolute control over the process of creating the desired effect. AV Bros. Puzzle Pro 2.2 provides you with an almost absolute freedom in the creation of a puzzle's shapes, a large number of built-in effects for modifying the content of a puzzle's pieces, the possibility of not only being able to split an image into pieces, but being able to draw the splitter's shape too, an option to save the shapes in .EPS or .AI formats for using them in such applications as Adobe Illustrator, Macromedia Flash, Corel CorelDRAW as well as many other features. Alien Skin Exposure by Michael Shaw In this issue I will be continuing with some more scathingly brilliant plug-ins from Alien Skin, the people who make the BlowUp plug-in we featured last month. First up is Exposure. The sad truth is that to a great extent digital photos do not capture th nuance, feel and immediacy of film any more than CDs capture the clarity and range of vynal recordings. Something usually gets lost in translation. For many of us who are merely gifted or ungifted amateurs there is no discernable difference between images captured by digital and images taken using film cameras but for photograpers who deliberately use specific film a lot the differences are apparent and obvious. Thats where Alien Skin Exposure steps in. Exposure brings the look and feel of film to digital photographs, enabling photograpers to simulate the warmth and softness of real world film, both color and black and white. Now they can reproduce realistic film grain, and simplify their digital photography workflow. Some professional photographers jumped readily across the digital divide from film to digital photography. Others are crossing over more reluctantly. One thing they all have in common is nostalgia for their favorite film stocks. Alien Skin Software is making them feel a bit more at home with Exposure, a Photoshop plug-in that simulates the look of photographs shot with a variety of color and black-and-white films. With one click, your digital photographs can be given a treatment indicative of real film cameras. Alien Skin Software developed Exposureʼs many film simulations by carefully analyzing real films and using that information to emulate the characteristics of each, and paying special attention to film grain. Exposure re-creates the size, shape, color, and location of real grain, rather than just throwing singlepixel digital noise into images. The plug-in also includes some imageoptimization and darkroom-effect presets such as cross-processing (which mimics processing slide or negative film with incompatible chemistry) and soft focus. You access Exposure right from the Filters menu in Photoshop or Elements. The plug-inʼs detailed interface is well organized and relatively easy to use, considering the number of controls it packs in. Besides the two main Settings windows (one for colour film, one for black & white) with lists of actual film types, there are four anciliary windows for sliders to control Colour, Tone, Focus and Grain. The Tone tab features an intuitive set of sliders for individually adjusting shadows, midtones, highlights, and contrast. The Color tab contains a useful Cooling/Warming slider for varying color temperature while preserving image luminosity. The preview screen is large and offers a choice of split or toggle previews. Itʼs easy to save your custom recipes for reuse or export them to share with colleagues. The product performs well, applying its presets within seconds. And it ships on a CD with a comprehensive 48-page manual, Help files, and demos of all of the other Alien Skin plug-ins.. At a MSRP of US $199.00, Exposure is more expensive than most of the other other Photoshop plug-ins that we have looked at for the MaUsE DoubleClick, but Exposureʼs cost is justified by its realistic film-grain simulations and its comprehensive controls, and by the fact that it is marketed primarily to photography professionals. In the Puzzle Pro 2.2 article previous to this one I mention that there are some Photoshop add-ons that are just neat & nifty filters that are designed to make working with pictures more fun by allowing anyone to create special projects and achieve amusing effects, and there are other plug-ins that are used as tools by serious photograpers. Alien Skin Exposure is definitely one of the latter. You would not buy this plug-in simply to amuse yourself with. As a film emulator based on detailed analysis of actal film stock Exposure is designed to reproduce in digital images the size, shape and colour of real world film grain as it is encountered in the process of taking and developing pictures with real film. The plug-inʼs film emulations look quite authentic and are easy to preview and apply. Alien Skin Exposure at any price is a good tool choice for professional photographers who want a quick way to simulate and reproduce the look of a favorite film stock. Look up Alien Skin Exposure on the internet to see what can be done with this amazing plug-in. And while you are there have a look at the other Alien Skin software as well. This stuff is scathingly brilliant. Alien Skin has kindly provided MaUsE with raffle copies of BlowUp, Exposure and Snap Art ! Alien Skin Snap Art by Michael Shaw Alien Skin Snap Art creates beautiful, natural media artwork in a single step. It installs into the Plug-ins folder in your Photoshop or Elements Folder and you access it through the Filters menu. As you can see, when you select Snap Art you get a list of TEN possible rendering styles to choose from. Render any image in an unlimited variety of real-world art styles including oil paint, pencil sketch, pen & ink, comics, and more. Great for stylizing photos or graphics, Snap Art works without laborious hand editing and is more versatile than Actions or brushes. Conventional artists often use an underdrawing to outline key objects within a composition. This lightly drawn sketch serves as a guide and is usually painted or drawn over in the final composition. Similarly, Snap Art uses edge detection to discern the objects, edges, lines, and shapes of an original image. Then, using this outline, an advanced paint engine strokes and fills this outline using the brushes and colors you specify. This allows realistic reproduction of detail, but balances that realism with convincing artistry. Loaded with hundreds of settings, Snap Art distills this complicated process down to a single step. Simply find the factory setting that works for your image. And for the advanced user, detailed controls are available to fine tune a composition for the desired effect. In this review, we're taking a look at Snap Art, which takes your images to another level altogether--and probably another dimension, considering the vast amount of possibilities Alien Skin is famous for with their plug-ins. Snap Art is unlike any other painting plug-in for Photoshop, because it meticulously recreates a more realistic representation of real-world art styles. Snap Art is a special plug-in for those graphics editors and photographers who want more realism to their images, while retaining the individuality of the effect itself. Since this is the introduction page, I'll keep it brief, but the ten filters included in Snap Art, are very comprehensive, meaning you have several settings within each filter which will make your image unique, as well as create the realistic effect you want. The filters are: • Color Pencil • Pen and Ink • Comics • Pencil Sketch • Impasto • Pointillism • Oil Paint • Stylize • Pastel • Watercolor Some of the major key features are : • Realistic natural media effect create uniquely styled artwork • Canvas, paper, and other media textures further enhance realism • Lighting controls simulate the direction, intensity, and color of a light source • Hundreds of one-click settings offer instant results OnOne Softwareʼs QX Tools Pro 7 by Michael Shaw As long as so few MaUsE members are sending in contributions to the DoubleClick to tell us about the new software they have found, I will continue to fill up this issue with reports about my own experiences with the exciting new things that are happening in the world of desktop publishing and the excellent and amazing new software that is making it possible. Back in the 1990s, Extensis QX-Tools was a vital set of DTP add-ons to QuarkXPress versions 4 & 5. Professional users could work faster and easier with the optimisations offered by QX-Tools. QX-Tools has been designed to help professional QuarkXPress users get the most out of their layout software. The return of this suite of QuarkXPress XTensions after a lengthy absence and a change of ownership is welcome. QX-Tools is now better than ever and Iʼve got it and Iʼm loving it ! QX-Tools Pro 7 is the latest release of the popular collection of Quark XTensions from OnOne Software. The new UB (Universal Binary) release for Intel and PowerMacintosh is compatible with QuarkXPress 7 and offers several new features along with enhancement to existing XTensions. In all, QXTools Pro 7 comprises 15 XTensions designed to boost Quark's capabilities and make a designer's everyday tasks easier and quicker to complete. One of the nicest features of QX Tools Pro 7 XTensions is that they are recognized so thoroughly by QuarkXPress 7 that all of the QX XTensions appear in the list of XTensions that you can chose from when you customise your palette groups. You can load as many or as few as you want. (QuarkXPress allows you to create palette sets for each project or document type you wish to create so only the group of XTensions you want will load). Each XT Tool has the XT- prefix and just like other Quark XTensions they hide discreetly in the palette until called for by clicking the little triangles beside their names so they donʼt clutter up your Desktop with floating windows or obscure parts of your document by floating in front of it (like the XTensions from some other companies do). I could fill this entire issue with descriptions of the fifteen tools that QX Tools Pro 7 but I wonʼt. For one thing, there is more information available with lots of illustrations of the features of QX Tools Pro 7 on the internet at the OnOne Software website. Every QX XTension in the list of tools has its own feature set and window and I canʼt go into them all here. Instead I will mention a couple of the tools that I have found useful in the short weeks that I have had QX Tools Pro 7. One of the QX Tools that has a lot of potential is QX-SuperSelect – a handy selection tool that lets you select non-contiguous text anywhere in a document and then apply changes to the selected words in one go rather than having to make a single selection over and over again. QX-DragAndDrop lets you skip the import dialog box when placing images or text in your document. With QX-Tools Pro 7 installed, you can simply drag images and text directly onto your page from the desktop, the Mac OS X Finder, or from Adobe Bridge. QX-WYSIWYG is a palette that displays all of your available fonts in their own typeface making it easier to see what your fonts look like before you apply them to your selected text. The benefit of using QXWYWIWYG is you will have an easy place to access all of your active fonts directly from within QuarkXPress. Other XTensions in the collection have been enhanced including the QX-ItemStyles, which lets you create item styles for picture/textboxes, lines and tables and the QX-Viewer. QX-DragAndDrop allows you to drag and drop images and text documents directly into a QuarkXPress 7 document from the Mac OS X Finder or from Adobe Bridge. QX-Shortcuts now allows users to create their own keyboard shortcuts or reassign existing Quark keyboard shortcuts. QX-Tips&Tricks: Every time I launch QuarkXPress 7 I get a Tip of the Day dialog window with some great tips and tricks specifically for QuarkXPress 7 from the Quark guru and editor of Design Tools Monthly, Jay Nelson. Jay is the author and presenter of the short training video included in the QuarkXPress 7 box, as well as the comprehensive training video at Lynda.com. The QX Tool that Iʼve used most frequently is the QX-Viewer. This tool provides a viewer window in my tools palette that has navigation buttons that moves the view to the next or previous page or spread while preserving the page zoom and zoom position. It provides a movable scalable red outline box to indicate how much of the current page is presently visible on my monitor and plus and minus buttons that expand and contract the visible portion of the page. It shows the size of the document as perentage of actual size and has its own Undo button and page number indicator. All of the XTensions have been completely re-written to take full advantage of the new palette technology in QuarkXPress 7. Wireless Internet Options For Older Macs I got a call from the daughter of a Mac user whose family had changed over their ISP (Internet Service Provider) from Bell Sympatico to Rogers wireless while she was on holidays. In other words, they got the family off the telephone system and onto the cable TV system while she wasnʼt looking. The problem the family failed to notice was that the telephone DSL modem had been very close to Momʼs old Mac upstairs and easily connected to it with an ethernet cable but the new Rogers cable modem is now located in the basement and not at all within close proximity to the Mac. For the other computers in the house it doesnʼt matter where the cable modem is because they have wireless internet built in but Momʼs Mac does not have an AirPort card in it so when Mom comes back from holidays she is going to find that she is off the internet and that the cable modem is too far from her Mac for a cable to reach. What to do, what to do... Solution 1: Install an AirPort card in the Mac. Unfortunately, Apple does not make these anymoreand the go on eBay for about $80.00 US. Solution 2: Run an ethernet cable through the floor & walls from a LAN port on the back of the cable modem to the ethernet port on the Mac. This could get messy unless its done carefully but it can be done if necessary using the cold air returns and without drilling too many conspicuous holes. Solution 3: Move Momʼs Mac down into the basement where it can be closer to the cable modem. In this particular case this idea stinks and I can tell you right now Mom is not going to go for it. Solution 4: Connect a wireless adaptor to the USB port on the Mac if you have USB. At a cost of $30 to $50 this sounds like the best solution but it can be fraught with perils. If you are considering buying a wireless adapter for your older computer that's equipped with USB 1 consider all options carefully before investing your money in one of these inexpensive and convenient devices. USB 1 is considerably slower than newer computers that are equipped with USB 2. USB 2 wireless adapters come in different speeds, but for explanation sake, lets consider a standard 54 mb/s USB 2 wireless adapter. The 54 mb/s file transfer rate on your network is only obtainable with the use of USB 2. With USB 1, (which is what many older computer's motherboards are equipped with) there is a slower transfer of data onto your computer so you can only receive files at a maximum of about 11 mb/s. USB 2 wireless adapters will still work in a USB 1 environment, being backwards compatible, but at about 20% of their potential speed. Fast enough for email, yes. Fast enough for downloading attachments and music while surfing the internet, no. Solution 5: Install a PCI wireless adapter card (only possible if you have a PCI bus with an empty slot). PCI wireless adapters plug right into an open PCI port on your motherboard. To receive a signal, they often have a small antenna extending out the back of your computer. These PCI devices can take advantage of the 54 mb/s transfer rate of your router unlike USB 2 wireless adapters. For transfering large files or computer gaming I would reccomend this type of wireless device over a USB adapter. The only disadvantage I can see is that it takes up a PCI port. However, not using a USB adapter means more USB ports to use for mice, keyboards, etc. And there is a considerably less amount of USB ports on older computers. The use of a USB adapter might be more convenient and cost effective, because you can just unplug it and plug it into any computer in your home that you need to use the internet on. Then you don't need to buy PCI adapters for each computer. But if you need the speed, go with a PCI adapter. Whichever one you choose, you will still have the convenience of wireless internet and you can move your computer to any area of your house and use the internet (provided you have signal). It's a question of what speed you need to your network to run at, and how convenient you want your internet use to be. My own preference is to use wires whenever possible andI have wired up my entire house with Cat 5e cable so that ethernet is available on every floor wherever it is needed. I ordered a RJ-45 crimping tool and a bunch of cable ends for the job and everything works perfectly. To preserve the data on the drive with the deleted files, all recovered files must be saved to another storage device or another drive attached to the system. You should not download the software to the drive that you want to recover or try to save the files back to the drive that you want to recover from. To use this software you need a minimum of free hard disk space as large as the media you wish to recover. You may also need a card reader for your Iʼm always on the look out for Macintosh utilities that are outstanding and for this issue I have PHOTORECOVERY for Digital Media from LC Technology. With megapixels on the rise and the cost of entry-level digital cameras steadily dropping, and the quality of the images they produce continuing to increase, more and more of us are forgoing traditional film cameras for the new generation of digital cameras. In some families every adult and child has his or her own computer and camera. Amateurs and professionals alike are using digital cameras to capture even the most mundane events. The ability to economically go out and take hundreds (or thousands) of photos and develop them yourself without any added expense has made digital image addicts out of many of us. Believe it or not, only a very small percentage of pictures taken actually end up on paper. Unlike their predecessors that used film, new cameras have potentially huge storage and allow images to be erased and the space on the internal media reused. The media can also be bulk erased or formatted, removing any images from the storage media. Sometimes this happens by accident and that is where PHOTORECOVERY comes to the rescue! With this program you can salvage hundreds of different types of files from camera cards and from other storage devices. media if the camera is not supported as a removable disk device. Look up PHOTORECOVERY for Digital Media on the internet and download a free demo of the software. With products available in 25 countries and 14 languages LC Technology is a global leader in data recovery whose mission is designed to help clients resolve catastrophic problems. MarkzTools 7 by Michael Shaw In the case of a badly corrupted file in which the page layout data cannot be salvaged, the "scavenge text" feature provides the ability to extract at least the text stories from a document file. This way you can quickly re-create a replacement copy of a damaged document if you still have the images on hand. MarkzTools alerts the user whenever they are about to save a lower version document to a higher version. There was more big news from Markzware in July: Markzware's updated “UB” version of MarkzTools XTension for QuarkXPress is just out. And there will be more and other Markzware UB updates soon. This makes me and every other QuarkXPress 7 user happy. There should be a new Intel iMac in everybodyʼs future. If you pay attention you will see a lot of “UB” designations from a lot of software companies over the next few quarters as more and more programs and utilities get updated to take advantage of the differences introduced in the new Intel Macs. This is similar in some ways to the “Accelerated for PowerMacintosh” labels that we saw years ago on 68k software titles that were being re-written to take advantage of the improved PowerPC. Markzware's new version of the popular MarkzTools XTension has been updated to take advantage of the way the new Intel-based Macs operate. This improved Universal Binary update of MarkzTools has so many potent lifesaving tools that no serious QuarkXPress 7 user should be without it. It can be used to prevent corrupted QuarkXPress documents (overcoming the dreaded bad file format) and retrieve text from corrupted documents. Users can also use the Verify Document File... com- mand to verify their existing documents, so they will immediately know whether the integrity of any of their older Quark documents is suspect. Additionally, users can first save a temporary copy of a document before saving the original document, so that in the event that something goes seriously wrong during the save process, the temporary file is still available for recovery. The MarkzTools Preferences and a list of the operations included in MarksTools are accessed under the Utilities menu from within the QuarkXPress 7 program. MarkzTools provides the additional functionality of allowing users to save QuarkXPress 7 projects directly to Quark 4.1 document files. It can also convert all of the image previews in a document to grey place-holders drastically reducing the file size and storage requirements of Quark projects. Some QuarkXPress projects can require multiple layouts with hundreds of megabytes of images. Some of the updated features included in MarkzTools 7 are: • The conversion of Quark 7 documents directly to Quark 4 file format without the need for the interim step of opening files in QuarkXPress 5 and downsaving to Quark 4 format files • The prevention of corruption of Quark documents from occurring in the first place through the use of a special temporary file • The ability to recover many bad file format or corrupt QuarkXPress documents • The recovery of text data from badly damaged or corrupted documents • The conversion of picture previews to grey placeholders. This feature lets users archive their Quark documents more easily by reducing the size of the Quark documents, and leaving image links intact. When users are ready to work on the file again, image previews are easily restored. Although, as MaUsE DoubleClick Editor, I am responsible for the content of this issue I can honestly say that the rest of the MaUsE Membership is responsible as well. I have asked for contributions and since there have been so very few I will continue to fill up the extra pages in this magazine with whatever I feel like writing about. With no sanctioned MaUsE Club activities scheduled until September the summer issues run the risk of becoming more like a blog and less like a MaUsE Club magazine. It really is a shame that more MaUsE Members are not using this latest version of QuarkXPress. There are so many fantastic things happening with new Quark software and I know that nobody else in the MaUsE is as interested as I am. For instance, Iʼll bet than nobody else in the MaUsE is aware that QuarkXPress has a promotion on right now in cooperation with other members of the QuarkAlliance to offer huge savings to anyone who upgrades to QuarkXPress 7. The QuarkAlliance is a partnership of Quark and the many companies that market XTensions and other Quark-related materials, like training materials and books. It provides technical support, product and program discounts, and other benefits that a third-party network of partners needs to deliver on-target solutions to customers working with Quark software. This program assists Alliance partners with marketing, sales, training, and implementation efforts by bringing together partners with key members of Quark teams. QuarkAlliance promotes member visibility in the Quark community and provides marketing resources, technical support, free or discounted products, and other benefits that partners can use to expand their customer base and help their customers. If you are a customer who needs a custom solution, this third-party network of Quark partners can help implement a Quark solution. Over 320 certified XTensions developers have released or are working to release XTensions that are specifically designed to extend the value of QuarkXPress 7 by providing users with new functionalities and features. To date, Quark has certified more than 2,000 XTensions developers in nearly 50 countries, providing millions of XTensions to Quark customers worldwide. The names of a few of these partners and some of their products should be familiar to DoubleClick readers because I have featured them in recent issues including this one. I will continue to write about Quark XTensions in future issues but I will also include articles about alternative desktop publishing software for those of you who are getting into it now and do not want to shell out big bucks for InDesign CS or QuarkXPress. Watch for next monthʼs DoubleClick to see articles about two more of my favourite Mac publishing programs, DesktopPublisher Pro and Ready, Set, Go. They are simply wonderful software from companies with a lot of experience at producing first-rate Mac OS applications and selling them at a price that anyone can afford. And copies of these two programs will be available for the September MaUsE Raffle (for MaUsE Members only). Markzwareʼs New Q2ID v3 By Michael Shaw Last month designers, printers and creative professionals struggling with re-creating intricate details of content from older QuarkXPress documents into the latest version of Adobe InDesign CS got a big break. They can now save themselves many hours with this exciting new release of the Markzware Q2ID v3 InDesign plug-in that supports InDesign v5 for Macintosh, (also known as InDesign CS3) and recognises over a decadeʼs worth of Quark files. For people who prefer using Adobe InDesign CS over QuarkXPress it is a tremendous benefit to be able to convert and open older XPress document for updating rather than recreate a whole new comparable InDesign CS document from scratch. The Q2ID document conversion plug-in obviates countless hours of scanning, re-keying and formatting. This product converts and transforms files created with all versions of QuarkXPress on both Microsoft Windows and Apple Macintosh systems, into new Adobe InDesign CS3 files. To use Q2ID with InDesign CS, simply install it in the InDesign Plug-ins folder, relaunch InDesign, and then select a QuarkXPress document to open just as if it were an InDesign document. A progress bar will indicate the Q2ID conversion process (a 16.4 Meg QXP 7.2 file was converted to an InDesign file in under a minute on a 1 GHz iBook) and the results were very usable. The plug-in works with Adobe InDesign CS3 for Macintosh and allows the user to open, import and convert Quark files created with any version of QuarkXPress from v3.3 through the latest v7.x. The Mac version of QuarkXPress 3.3, released back in 1996, was seen as stable and trouble-free, worked seamlessly with Apple's TrueType fonts, and remained an industry standard well after subsequent versions of the software were released. Q2ID v3 is available for immediate download or can be ordered from Markzware on CD-ROM, starting at US $199 MSRP for new users. Registered users of previous versions of Q2ID v1.x and above can upgrade The converted file maintained the original Quark document's page for US $99.00. Educational pricing and volume discounts are available. positioning, colour models, fonts and styles, images and text attributes, as well as tables, blends, linked text and anchored boxes. For more information, visit: On several pages the text had crept behind the picture boxes and http://www.markzware.com/q2id/ their runaround had to be reset in order to restore the appearance of the original document but no other changes were necessary.
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