TidBITS#677/21-Apr-03
=====================

  Remember how computers were going to make our lives easier? Matt
  Neuburg takes a look at NoteTaker, an application that's helping
  to organize and quickly access all sorts of information. Plus,
  we'd like you to help TidBITS experiment how to integrate TidBITS
  Talk discussions into our weekly issues. Also, Apple posts a
  surprising second quarter profit of $14 million, and we note
  releases of Snapz Pro X 1.0.7 and StuffIt Expander/Deluxe 7.0.3.

Topics:
    MailBITS/21-Apr-03
    Exposing More of TidBITS Talk
    Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk/21-Apr-03
    Take Note of NoteTaker

<http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/TidBITS-677.html>
<ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/issues/2003/TidBITS#677_21-Apr-03.etx>

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MailBITS/21-Apr-03
------------------

**Apple Posts $14 Million Q2 Profit** -- Apple Computer posted a
  small $14 million profit for its second fiscal quarter of the year
  on revenues of $1.474 billion for the quarter. Overall revenue was
  down 1 percent from the same time last year, but margins were up
  to 28.3 percent and international sales accounted for 47 percent
  of Apple's total sales volume. Apple shipped 711,000 Macs in the
  quarter, with fully 40 percent of them being notebooks - a strong
  debut for the new 12-inch and 17-inch PowerBooks.

<http://www.apple.com/pr/library/2003/apr/16earnings.html>

  Although Apple's profit isn't stunning, the company managed to
  increase its cash-on-hand to over $4.5 billion, and has reduced
  the time in channel of its products to four-and-a-half weeks.
  Apple says its next quarter should be relatively flat (e.g., a
  small profit), assuming no major news shakes the Apple tree. The
  market has been abuzz of late with rumors Apple may apply some
  of its considerable cash assets towards the purchase of Universal
  Music, although both Apple CEO Steve Jobs and Vivendi director
  Claude Bebear have denied Apple has made an offer for the world's
  largest music label. Apple is widely speculated to be preparing
  the imminent launch of a commercial music service to tie in with
  iTunes and the iPod; Universal Music's catalog would be a key
  component to any online commercial music service. [GD]


**Snapz Pro X 1.0.7 Released** -- Ambrosia Software has released
  Snapz Pro X 1.0.7, the latest version of their Mac OS X screen
  capture utility. The new version can capture movies of screen
  actions with less impact on the Mac during capturing (at the
  cost of a lower frame rate). The update also adds localization
  for Korean (joining Dutch, Finnish, French, German, Japanese,
  Spanish, Swedish, and Traditional Chinese) and makes localized
  documentation a separate download, thus reducing the size of the
  Snapz Pro X download significantly. A number of annoying bugs have
  been fixed, including problems Snapz Pro X would cause when taking
  screenshots of X11 applications, a conflict with SpellCatcher X,
  and problems with capturing full-screen applications like games
  (and possibly Keynote presentations). And, in a welcome change,
  Snapz Pro X now defaults to overwriting screenshots if you enter
  the same name as an existing screenshot; this eases the process of
  replacing bad screenshots. Registered users who purchased directly
  from Ambrosia can upgrade for free; if you received a licensed
  copy of Snapz Pro X with your Mac, you can upgrade to 1.0.7
  for $19. It's a 4.1 MB download. [ACE]

<http://www.ambrosiasw.com/utilities/snapzprox/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=06779>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=00696>


**StuffIt Expander/Deluxe Updated to 7.0.3** -- Aladdin Systems
  has released StuffIt Expander and StuffIt Deluxe 7.0.3 for
  Mac OS 8.6/9.x and Mac OS X. StuffIt Expander, which is free
  but available only as part of the StuffIt Standard Edition bundle
  with DropStuff, DropZip, and DropTar, gains support for expanding
  RAR 3.0 archives. StuffIt Deluxe 7.0.3 shares that enhancement;
  squashes a few bugs; and can now browse archives in Tape Archive
  (.tar), Bzip2 (.tbz2), Gzip (.tgz), and compressed Tape Archive
  (.tar.Z) formats. All the applications feature better compression
  in the StuffIt X format and a new custom compression settings
  dialog. Note that if you're running StuffIt Deluxe 7.0 under
  Mac OS 8.6 or 9.x, you must first update to 7.0.1 before updating
  to 7.0.3; the downloads page linked below offers the necessary
  updater. You can find release notes in the ReadMe files that
  appear after installation. The StuffIt Expander update is free
  for everyone; the other updates are free for registered users
  of StuffIt Standard Edition 7.0 and StuffIt Deluxe 7.0. StuffIt
  Standard Edition 7.0.3 is a 5.8 MB download; StuffIt Deluxe 7.0.3
  is a 17.1 MB download. [ACE]

<http://www.stuffit.com/expander/macupdates.html>
<http://www.stuffit.com/stuffit/deluxe/updates.html>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=06942>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=06970>


Exposing More of TidBITS Talk
-----------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>

  Last week, a reader named Peter Rock suggested that we start
  a Letters to the Editor column. I replied, telling him about
  TidBITS Talk, since that's where reader replies about our articles
  generally go, along with any clarifications or minor corrections
  we have that don't warrant a full correction in the next issue of
  TidBITS. Continuing the discussion, he noted that he reads TidBITS
  in email, never visits our Web site to see the TidBITS Talk
  archive, and wasn't up for receiving another discussion list.
  That's when I thought, "Hmm! He has a point."

  For those that haven't read TidBITS Talk, it's somewhat unusual.
  I personally choose which submissions to post, adding commentary
  as appropriate in the messages and rejecting redundant or off-
  topic messages. I also edit out unnecessary quoting, fix spelling
  mistakes, and regularize subject lines to maintain threads. It's
  something of a cross between a moderated mailing list and the
  reader reports from other news sites. Because of this significant
  amount of effort, we consider TidBITS Talk to be an integral
  component of our overall publishing effort. Nonetheless, fewer
  than five percent of TidBITS readers subscribe to TidBITS Talk
  or read it on the Web.

<http://www.tidbits.com/about/tidbits-talk.html>
<http://www.tidbits.com/about/list.html>
<http://www.tidbits.com/search/talk.html>

  For the next few weeks, then, we're going to try a small
  experiment in exposing the high-quality content in TidBITS Talk
  to more TidBITS readers. Each week we'll try a different approach
  to describing and linking to the current discussions. At the end,
  we'll run a poll asking which, if any, of the approaches you
  prefer and continue from there. We start this week with an
  extremely abbreviated presentation that provides just the subject
  of each thread, a message count, and a link to the thread in
  the archive. Future versions will offer additional description
  of each discussion.

  Of course, feel free to send feedback about the experiment to
  TidBITS Talk itself at <tidbits-talk@tidbits.com>.


Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk/21-Apr-03
------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>

* SLIMP3 comments (21 messages)
   <http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tlkthrd=1908>

* The ubiquitous Fred (8 messages)
   <http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tlkthrd=1894>

* TidBITS Content Management System (40 messages)
   <http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tlkthrd=1902>

* TidBITS SETI@home Group (12 messages)
   <http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tlkthrd=1905>

* Safari Public Beta 2 (4 messages)
   <http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tlkthrd=1910>

* Mac OS X 10.2.5 changes (7 messages)
   <http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tlkthrd=1909>

* Yet More Headphones (27 messages)
   <http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tlkthrd=1913>

* Print Spooling in Mac OS X (16 messages)
   <http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tlkthrd=1833>

* Printing to Windows shared printers from Mac OS X (13 messages)
   <http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tlkthrd=1897>

* TidBITS Turns 13 (3 messages)
   <http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tlkthrd=1911>

* iData Pro as Palm Memo Pad replacement (5 messages)
   <http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tlkthrd=1906>


Take Note of NoteTaker
----------------------
  by Matt Neuburg <matt@tidbits.com>

  In our perpetual journey towards better ways of storing and
  retrieving information, a simple text-snippet keeper like iData
  Pro, discussed in TidBITS-675_, was merely a side trip to a
  simple, restful pool. Now we rejoin the main trail, clambering
  up the slippery Relationship Rocks beside the pounding falls of
  Content Cascade, ascending the heights to survey in one massive
  view all the surrounding countryside of hierarchies, hyperlinks,
  keywords, to-do lists, and snippets of every kind.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=07145>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbser=1196>

  As you can tell from the extended metaphor of the previous
  paragraph, I'm excited. And what I'm excited about is a Mac OS X
  program called NoteTaker, from AquaMinds. NoteTaker is an
  outliner, a writing tool, a categorizer, a snippet keeper,
  a presentation tool, a Web site maker. It can organize your
  thoughts, your files, your life. Its potential seems vast, and
  everyone will use it differently. Remember the feeling of wild
  surmise when you first mentally glimpsed the possibilities of
  HyperCard or Apple events? NoteTaker is like that.

<http://www.aquaminds.com/product.jsp>

  NoteTaker is a descendant of a NeXT original called Notebook;
  and as an added complication, it isn't the only one! Another
  descendant, NoteBook from Circus Ponies Software, made its debut
  just as I was finishing this article. I'm sure there's one heck
  of a story here, but this article won't be about that, and it
  won't compare the two products. I started using NoteTaker first,
  and that's what this article will describe.

<http://www.circusponies.com/pages.aspx?page=products>


**Outline** -- NoteTaker is an outliner, so let's start by
  reviewing what an outline is. An outline is a way of arranging
  pieces of text not just linearly but also hierarchically for ease
  of viewing, rearrangement, and retrieval. Each piece (called an
  "entry" in NoteTaker) is either at the top level or subordinate
  to some other entry. An entry's subentries can be hidden
  ("collapsed"); this makes it easy to view as much or as little
  of the outline as needed at the moment. If you move an entry -
  by cut-and-paste or by dragging - all its subentries travel
  with it.

  NoteTaker as an outliner is pretty good, though still not as good
  as MORE, the gold standard. For example, it lacks promote and
  demote features. It doesn't behave as conveniently as MORE when
  you create a new entry. Until recently, it didn't even have a
  keyboard command for moving an entry up or down. Navigation and
  manipulation of entries are now implemented fairly well, but since
  NoteTaker is explicitly inspired by ThinkTank (MORE in its
  earliest form), one would hope for a better appreciation and
  implementation of its virtues.

  A NoteTaker entry can consist of multiple paragraphs, and you
  can easily split an entry into two (though you cannot merge two
  entries into one, as in MORE). These paragraphs can have
  formatting - tab stops, justification, line spacing (again,
  like MORE). NoteTaker lacks MORE's superb system of "rules,"
  which rationalizes such formatting on an outline-level basis;
  but it has the built-in Cocoa capability to copy and paste
  paragraph formatting. And every paragraph of a multi-paragraph
  entry has its own formatting; thus, NoteTaker doesn't need MORE's
  distinction between "topics" and "paragraphs," since an entry
  consists of paragraphs already.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=02381>

  In fact, NoteTaker will accept just about anything as an entry.
  You can paste in styled text or a picture. Drag in an Address
  Book entry: NoteTaker will parse it into an outline. You can draw
  directly into NoteTaker using Inkwell. You can even record a voice
  message, directly within NoteTaker; it's saved as an MP3 file as
  part of the document.


**Links** -- An entry can be a hyperlink to another entry, in the
  same or another NoteTaker document. To make a link, select the
  first entry and choose Link To Entry; a floating palette appears.
  Now go to the second entry, select it, and click the Link button
  on that palette. The first entry is now marked as being the source
  of a link; click the button to its left and you navigate instantly
  to the second entry. The only downside is that an entry that is
  a link must not have any subentries, a rather silly limitation.

  Links also allow your document to relate to the world around it,
  meaning other files on disk as well as the Internet. An email
  address or a Web URL is automatically recognized; click it to
  send the URL to your preferred email program or Web browser.
  If an entry is a Web URL, you can even view the page's content
  rendered right within NoteTaker, provided it's a fairly simple
  page.

  Drag a file from the Finder into a NoteTaker document, and you've
  got a link to it (though NoteTaker stores the link as an absolute
  path, so if you move the file in the Finder, NoteTaker loses
  track of it). In many cases, this link is displayed with extra
  information. If it's an image file or single-page PDF, you see
  the image. If it's a movie file, you can play the movie. If it's
  a sound file, you can play the sound. And in any case, you've got
  a link to a file on disk, which you can treat as if you were in
  the Finder: you can open it, you can drag it to the Finder to
  make a copy, and you can Option-Command-drag it to the Finder
  to make an alias. If you hold down the Option key as you drag
  a file into NoteTaker, it is copied right into your document
  (and is then called an "attachment"); this is possible because
  a NoteTaker document is a package, a folder that looks like
  a file. Thus you could use a NoteTaker document as a kind of
  suitcase, storing other files of all sorts.


**Marks and Categories** -- You can mark an entry in various ways.
  For example, there's a mark called Flag; an entry is either
  flagged or it isn't. There's a Command key shortcut to toggle
  an entry's flagged state; alternatively, in some situations you
  can double-click to the entry's left. Whether or not an entry's
  flagged state is visibly expressed is up to you. To the left of
  every entry is an area where you can show or hide any of several
  columns. If you choose to show the Category Icons column, a
  flagged entry has a checkmark in that column. An obvious use
  for this would be as a to-do list: when you've performed an
  item, flag it so that it has a checkmark. But even without being
  visible, marks can be useful; for example, there's a way of
  searching for them.

  The second type of mark is called Priority. You get three
  priorities: Low, Medium, and High (or None). If you mark an entry
  as having a priority, then if you show the Priorities column, you
  see an L, M, or H in that column. Again, this could be useful for
  a to-do list, and again, you can search by priority.

  A third type of mark is the Date. Every entry is assigned the
  current date on creation, and the date when it was last changed is
  maintained as well. You can also set either of an entry's dates
  manually; that date then stops updating automatically, so you can
  associate dates with entries in whatever way you like. You can see
  either set of dates by showing the Date column, and you can search
  by date.

  Things start to get hot with the fourth type of mark, the
  Category. This is simply a keyword; that is to say, it cannot
  be any old word, but must be chosen from a list maintained at
  document level. Every document comes with some built-in
  categories, but you also get to define your own. If you show
  the Categories column, you see the category assigned to each
  entry. An entry cannot have more than one category, and like
  the other columns, you can search by category.

  Under certain circumstances, NoteTaker assigns categories to
  entries on creation. For example, if you drag an image file into
  a NoteTaker document, the resulting entry is assigned to the Image
  category. If you drag in an Address Book item, the resulting
  entries are each assigned a category corresponding to their
  original Address Book field: Full Name, Email, X-Aim, and so
  forth.

  Categories become even more powerful in conjunction with
  Templates. A template is simply boilerplate, letting you
  insert often-used information rapidly into your document. Such
  boilerplate can consist of a hierarchy of entries (possibly empty)
  with categories. This is NoteTaker's equivalent of WebArranger's
  wonderful capability to let an outline entry be a specific kind
  of entity with the fields appropriate to that entity.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=01149>

  For example, let's say you want to maintain a list of your friends
  and their favorite flavors of ice cream. You would define a
  category Friend and a category Ice Cream, make two empty entries
  where one is a subentry of the other, assign one entry to the
  Friend category and the other to the Ice Cream category, and turn
  them into a template. Now, at any time you can insert that
  template anywhere in a NoteTaker document, and presto, there's
  a blank Friend with a blank Ice Cream subentry, ready for you
  to fill in the data. NoteTaker comes with one template, Contact,
  which inserts categories like Name, Address, Phone, and Email,
  so any document can be used as a contact manager right away.


**Pages and Sections** -- A NoteTaker document as a whole is based
  on a notebook metaphor. It consists of multiple outlines; every
  outline is a page of the notebook. Every page that you create
  consists of a new outline, and you can give the page a title.
  Pages are clumped into sections; you can create a new section,
  and you can give it a title. The section titles may be viewed
  as tabs sticking out the side or bottom of the document, and
  you can click a tab to navigate instantly to the start of that
  section. Individual pages can optionally have tabs too - useful
  if you must navigate frequently to particular pages. Keyboard
  shortcuts let you navigate to the first, last, next, or previous
  page or section. Plus, from any page you can save a "page mark"
  file, which is essentially a bookmark, a link that lets you
  navigate instantly from anywhere (meaning the Finder or another
  NoteTaker document) to that page of that document.

  Now, you might say that pages and sections are really just outline
  entries in another guise: they merely add another couple of levels
  of hierarchy to the organization of the outline. That's true, but
  it doesn't mean they're just fluff. It's useful not to have to
  deal with all your information at once. True, an outline is
  collapsible, and many outliners (including NoteTaker) let you
  temporarily hide those parts you're not interested in; but even
  so, a multi-outline document sometimes feels better than one big
  outline. It's nice to be able to put some kinds of information off
  on a page of their own, where you don't have to come in contact
  with them until you need them; for example, rather than
  interspersing images with text in an outline, you could have
  a page of images, and link from the text to the relevant image.

  The metaphor of pages and sections leads to the further metaphor
  of tables of contents. NoteTaker creates and maintains these for
  you automatically. The first page of any NoteTaker document is a
  complete table of contents, listing every section and page; the
  first page of any section is a table of contents listing every
  page of that section. The entries here are links, so you can
  navigate to any section or page instantly. (Unfortunately there's
  no keyboard command to navigate directly to the table of contents
  for the section you're currently in.) To rearrange pages or
  sections, you move the entries in a table of contents.


**Hunting and Gathering** -- You can find things in various ways.
  First, there's a normal word-processor find, which just cycles
  through the document looking for the next occurrence of a given
  bit of text.

  Second, there's a global search, which finds by text, by flagging,
  by category, by priority, and by date. The results of a global
  search can be perused in two different ways. All found entries
  can simply be highlighted (marked in yellow), and you can cycle
  through the document from one highlighted entry to the next.
  Alternatively, found entries can be copied; a Summary section
  is created at the end of your document, and the copies are placed
  in a new page there. The whole feature is strongly reminiscent of
  MORE's Mark and Gather; the NoteTaker name for it, Highlight and
  Summarize, even says the same thing in different terms.
  Unfortunately the gathered copies are not links, so there
  is no way to relate what was found to the document itself.

  Third, your document can have an Index section. This appears
  instantly when you ask for it, so I suspect that it is constantly
  being maintained behind the scenes even if your document isn't
  showing it. Each page of the Index is an outline consisting of
  links to entries of your document, filtered and clumped in
  different ways. There's a page of links by priority (that is,
  a link to each low-priority entry, then a link to each medium-
  priority entry, then a link to each high-priority entry). There's
  a page of links by category. There's a page of links to all email
  addresses and Web sites in your document. There's a page of links
  by date. There's a page of links to every entry that's a document
  link, arranged by file extension. And there's a word index -
  that's right, every word of your document is indexed!
  Unfortunately what you're shown here is a page number, not
  a context, so finding the passage you were looking for can
  be rather clumsy.


**What's Doing** -- Although I've used a to-do list as an example
  of how you might use certain NoteTaker features, you don't have to
  implement this yourself, because NoteTaker does it for you. You
  ask for a To Do Section, and a section is created which has some
  magical properties: every day, a new page is created and titled
  with that day's date, and all unflagged entries from the previous
  day's page are copied to it. Thus you have an ongoing daily list
  of tasks. Of course, you could also deliberately misuse this
  feature as a diary - take advantage of the automatic daily new
  page, and flag each day's entry so it isn't copied to the next.


**Pathways In and Out** -- NoteTaker provides a number of ways to
  move information into and out of a document (besides cutting and
  pasting, of course). For getting information in, the most
  impressive is the Clipping Service. From any page in a NoteTaker
  document, you choose a menu item called Create Clipping Service.
  Now you can close the document and even quit NoteTaker if you
  like; the Service you've created exists independently (in your
  ~/Library/Services folder). In any application that can see
  Mac OS X services, an item appears in the Services submenu of
  the application menu; choose it, and the currently selected text
  is copied into that page of that NoteTaker document. Since
  Carbon applications mostly don't see the Services menu, AquaMinds
  also provides a contextual menu item that accesses the same
  functionality. They describe this as a beta, but it seems to
  work decently everywhere I've tried it.

  You can also create a search service, which allows you, in some
  other application, to look for selected text in a particular
  NoteTaker document. If the text is found but isn't the occurrence
  you wanted, you can repeat this action to look for the next
  occurrence, or just stay in NoteTaker and do the rest of your
  searching there.

  You can view your document as a "slide show," which is really
  just your same document seen in full-screen mode; there are no
  scrollbars, so pages need to be short, but everything else works,
  including links, QuickTime movies, and so forth, so you could use
  a NoteTaker document as the basis of a multimedia presentation.

  NoteTaker also provides the capability to import from and export
  to various formats, including text, tab-delimited, RTF, and OPML
  (an outline-specific XML format originally designed by UserLand).
  A particularly intriguing form of export is the Web Notebook,
  which exports your document as a set of Web pages, showing as much
  of the content as possible, and, though the magic of JavaScript,
  with expandable and collapsible outline structure!

<http://www.opml.org/>


**Let's Get Personal** -- You might be curious about how I use
  NoteTaker. In part I use it just as a Mac OS X-native version
  of MORE, to plan and take notes on books I'm hoping to write,
  to compose talks, and so forth. But that doesn't really take
  advantage of NoteTaker's special powers. More interesting is how
  I used it to structure and track my activity while I was doing
  some custom Cocoa programming for a corporate client. As a feature
  specification or bug report would arrive from the client, I would
  drop it into its own NoteTaker page, along with any screen shots
  or other ancillary material. Then I'd go to the main page of my
  document, which functioned as a to-do list. Here I'd create an
  entry describing the problem, along with subentries containing
  my musings on how to proceed, plus a link to the page where the
  material from the client was stored. I assigned the main entry to
  the To Do category, gave it a priority, and showed its creation
  date. I continued the same procedure as I discussed the matter
  with the client, making additional notes of my own thinking, and
  often pasting entire email messages into the ancillary pages; thus
  I had an easily searched record of the whole conversation, tracing
  the evolution of the spec, so that I could prove later on, if
  necessary, that what I had done was what we had agreed upon. When
  I felt clear on how to proceed on an item, I gave it a subentry
  assigned to the Resolution category and described my decision.
  When the task was done, I removed its priority and flagged it,
  and added a subentry assigned to the Done category so that the
  date was recorded. In this way I knew at all times what most
  urgently needed working on and what the state of my thinking
  was on each task, plus I had complete documentation of the
  discussion, evolution and resolution of each item.


**A Final Note** -- NoteTaker's manual is rudimentary, vague,
  and anecdotal. The program has some AppleScript support; you
  can crash it by saying the wrong thing to it, but once you get
  the hang of things you can do quite a bit through scripting.
  In general, NoteTaker works pretty reliably and has a good Undo
  implementation, but things can go wrong, so do take advantage of
  its auto-save and auto-backup features.

  NoteTaker is being actively developed, and many improvements will
  probably be appearing in future versions. If you're intrigued by
  NoteTaker's possibilities, now is a great time to try it out; the
  sooner you start bending it to your own purposes, the sooner you
  can provide feedback that will help shape its evolution.

  NoteTaker costs $70, or $40 academic. A thirty-day demo is
  available as a 5.3 MB download.

<http://www.aquaminds.com/download.jsp>


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