TidBITS#579/07-May-01
=====================

  Lusting after Apple's new iBooks? Join the crowd, but then read
  through Matt Deatherage's in-depth look at the new machines to
  make sure it's precisely what you want. We also continue to
  distill the most important news about Mac OS X, including a
  look at the recently released Mac OS X 10.0.2, a sudo security
  concern, and a few noteworthy Mac OS X-compatible software
  releases. In the news, we're pleased to note the release of
  an old friend - Fetch 4.0.

Topics:
    MailBITS/07-May-01
    TenBITS/07-May-01
    The Incredible Shrinking iBook

<http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/TidBITS-579.html>
<ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/issues/2001/TidBITS#579_07-May-01.etx>

Copyright 2001 TidBITS Electronic Publishing. All rights reserved.
   Information: <info@tidbits.com> Comments: <editors@tidbits.com>
   ---------------------------------------------------------------

This issue of TidBITS sponsored in part by:
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MailBITS/07-May-01
------------------

**Fetch 4.0 Off the Leash** -- Jim Matthews, who bought the rights
  to his Fetch FTP client from Dartmouth College and founded Fetch
  Softworks with his winnings on the U.S. television game show "Who
  Wants To Be A Millionaire," has now released Fetch 4.0, the first
  major update to the program since 1995. Jim updated his venerable
  12-year-old FTP client by making it compatible with Mac OS X,
  where it features a full Aqua interface, while retaining
  compatibility all the way back to System 7.0. Modern technologies
  supported in Fetch 4.0 include AppleScript, the Keychain,
  contextual menus, QuickTime for viewing media, and text to speech
  for feedback. Other interesting features include a mirror command
  for synchronization between local and remote folders, support for
  creating and editing text and graphic files with BBEdit and
  Graphic Converter, support for Kerberos security, the capability
  to resume interrupted downloads, and a Get Info command that can
  tell you how much data is stored in a folder through recursive
  listing. Most amazing though, is Fetch's new capability to copy
  files from one FTP server to another and to move files within an
  FTP server by dragging them from window to window. Fetch costs $25
  for individual use, though free serial numbers are available for
  educational or charitable organizations, and site licenses are
  available for multiple copies. Despite the transfer from Dartmouth
  at the end of 2000, upgrades from version 3.0.3 purchased any time
  after 30-Apr-00 are free. It's great to see Fetch development
  moving forward again like this! [ACE]

<http://fetchsoftworks.com/Goodies/story.html>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=01227>
<http://fetchsoftworks.com/Features/technologies.html>
<http://fetchsoftworks.com/Features/tricks.html>


TenBITS/07-May-01
-----------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>

**Mac OS X 10.0.2 and iTunes 1.1.1. Add CD Burning** -- Apple last
  week released its second free update for Mac OS X via the Software
  Update control panel, improving overall application stability and
  adding the capability to burn custom music CDs. For a more
  complete list of changes, see Apple's Tech Info Library article on
  the update. (As always, it's a good idea to back up your data
  before upgrading your system software.)

<http://www.apple.com/macosx/>
<http://til.info.apple.com/techinfo.nsf/artnum/n106293/>

  At the same time, the company released a free update to iTunes for
  Mac OS X that enables the audio CD burning feature. The new iTunes
  1.1.1 also enables the full-screen graphics display feature that
  previously worked only in Mac OS 9. Burning audio CDs in iTunes
  1.1.1 isn't without its quirks - iTunes should be set to only 2x
  burn speeds when using USB CD-RW drives, and burning audio CDs can
  fail if your Mac or even just the display goes to sleep while
  iTunes is burning, so set the sleep time to Never in the Energy
  Saver control panel and make sure "Separate timing for display
  sleep" is not selected.

<http://til.info.apple.com/techinfo.nsf/artnum/n60841>
<http://til.info.apple.com/techinfo.nsf/artnum/n60842>

  One odd side effect of installing the Mac OS X 10.0.2 update is
  that on at least some systems (including my PowerBook G3/250), it
  enables the internal speaker even when external speakers are
  plugged in. The software volume controls affect only the internal
  speaker; the external speakers can be controlled only if they have
  an independent volume control. Although some might appreciate the
  stereo-plus-one sound, in many public situations, it's
  inappropriate to send sound out the internal speaker when
  headphones are plugged in. [ACE]

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tlkthrd=1381>


**Mac OS X 10.0.2 Fixes FTP Vulnerability** -- Apple says Mac OS X
  10.0.2 also features a newer version of the ftpd FTP server. Does
  this fix the FTP vulnerability identified by CERT several weeks
  back (see "TenBITS/23-Apr-01" in TidBITS-577_ for more
  information)? Our repeated requests for additional information
  from Apple have gone unanswered; all Apple has posted in public is
  that Mac OS X 10.0.2 has "a new version of Internet file sharing
  (ftpd), which features important security improvements." Luckily,
  Larry Rosenstein <lsr@alum.mit.edu> verified on TidBITS Talk that
  the version of the Mac OS X 10.0.2 ftpd server was the same as the
  most recently updated version of the ftpd server in the Darwin
  open source repository. It's probably safe to assume that Apple
  (or someone else working on the Darwin open source) has
  effectively closed the FTP security hole, and it's great to see
  Apple distributing a fix so quickly. Still, at the risk of
  sounding like a broken record (an analogy which undoubtedly shows
  my age), Apple needs to be more forthcoming with acknowledgments
  of problems to security groups like CERT. [ACE]

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tlkthrd=1372>


**Sudo Security Hole** -- The Stepwise site (which also had early
  information about some of the Apple Mac OS X installer bugs we
  reported on last week) has posted information about a security
  issue in the sudo command line program that enables Mac OS X users
  to execute Unix commands as the root user without logging into or
  even enabling the root user. Unfortunately, as with so many other
  security lapses, it turns out that the version of sudo shipped
  with Mac OS X is vulnerable to a buffer overflow that could enable
  an authenticated user (either in front of the machine or
  connecting via SSH or Telnet) to gain increased privileges. The
  problem first appeared 23-Apr-01, and although Apple didn't
  address it in last week's Mac OS X 10.0.2 update, the author of
  sudo has already issued a patch, and Scott Anguish of Stepwise has
  built a custom installation application (122K download) to replace
  Mac OS X's version of sudo. [ACE]

<http://www.stepwise.com/Articles/Workbench/2001-05-01.01.html>
<http://softrak.stepwise.com/display?pkg=2046&os=20>


**DragThing 4.0.2 Fixes Crashes** -- James Thomson has released a
  bug-fix update to his alternative dock utility DragThing to
  address several crashes in Mac OS X, a problem with DragThing
  clearing the login items at startup (see James's explanation of
  this in TidBITS Talk for more details), and a few other less
  important bugs. The upgrade to DragThing 4.0.2 is free for
  DragThing 4.0 users; it's a 1 MB download. [ACE]

<http://www.dragthing.com/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tlkmsg=10707>


**PowerMail 3.0.9 Supports Mac OS X** -- The tiny Swiss company
  CTM Development has revved their email client PowerMail to add a
  few features, fix a few bugs, and most important, provide Mac OS X
  compatibility (specifically with Mac OS X 10.0.1 and later). As
  with most of the other products made compatible with Mac OS X,
  PowerMail 3.0.9 has a few unresolved issues such as occasional
  crashes related to find-by-content indexing, an error while
  copying and pasting, and printing problems with StyleWriters. The
  free update to PowerMail 3.0.9 is available in a "classic" version
  for Mac OS 8 and Mac OS 9 (1.9 MB download) and a Carbon version
  for Mac OS X (2.0 MB). [ACE]

<http://www.ctmdev.com/powermail3.shtml>
<http://www.ctmdev.com/documentation/Read_me.htm>


**QuickDNS Pro Eases DNS Setups on Mac OS X** -- DNS, the Domain
  Name Service that maps Internet IP numbers like 216.168.32.83 to
  human-readable names like www.tidbits.com, is not for the faint of
  heart. Type one character wrong during an edit and your entire
  Internet domain could become inaccessible. Making DNS easier to
  set up and maintain has long been one of the goals of Men & Mice's
  QuickDNS Pro for the Mac, and now, the just-released QuickDNS Pro
  3.5 for Mac OS X brings that ease of use to Mac OS X. QuickDNS Pro
  actually has two parts - the graphical QuickDNS Manager and the
  server-side utility QuickDNS Remote, which enables QuickDNS
  Manager to configure the Unix BIND 8.2.3 DNS server included with
  Mac OS X, Red Hat Linux 6.2 and 7.0, and SuSE Linux 6.3, 6.4, and
  7.0. QuickDNS Pro 3.5 for Mac OS X costs $350 for a single license
  and $550 for two licenses; upgrades from version 2.x are $195 and
  volume discounts are available. [ACE]

<http://www.menandmice.com/infobase/mennmys/vefsidur.nsf/index/2.2>
<http://www.menandmice.com/download/quickdnsprodownload.html>


The Incredible Shrinking iBook
------------------------------
  by Matt Deatherage <mattd@macjournals.com>

  Apple Computer last week pulled a long-awaited polycarbonate
  rabbit from its design hat. The technical specifications of the
  second-generation iBook are pretty much what you'd expect from a
  revision to Apple's consumer and education portable computer, but
  they come in a package significantly smaller and lighter than its
  predecessor, with an eye-catching Titanium-like design and the
  extra connectivity ports consumers have wanted. The package is so
  attractive, in fact, that the Henrico County (Virginia) school
  district announced that it is leasing 23,000 iBooks from Apple - 
  a large commitment writ larger when you realize Apple sold only
  55,000 iBooks in the entire March quarter.

<http://www.apple.com/ibook/>
<http://www.apple.com/pr/library/2001/may/1henrico.html>


**Thinking Outside the Box** -- Although it's hard to see from the
  pictures on Apple's Web site, the iBook (whose official Apple
  designation is the "iBook (Dual USB)") probably counts as a
  subnotebook computer, for the only definition I can find says a
  subnotebook "is slightly lighter and smaller than a full-sized
  notebook." In that respect, the iBook (Dual USB) certainly
  qualifies. At 11.2 inches (28.5 cm) wide, it's more than two
  inches narrower than the previous iBook design; its width of 9.1
  inches (23.0 cm) is a full two and a half inches narrower than the
  last iBook. The iBook (Dual USB) is 1.35 inches (3.4 cm) thick,
  compared to 2.06 inches (5.23 cm) for the previous iBook models
  (measured at the thickest point). And it weighs an average 4.9
  pounds (2.2 kg), compared to 6.7 pounds (3.04 kg) on average for
  the previous iBook. It's not much bigger than a notebook. In fact,
  it's smaller in all three dimensions than the much-beloved
  PowerBook 2400c (which was often called a "subnotebook") and only
  slightly larger and heavier than Apple's first subnotebooks, the
  PowerBook Duos.

<http://www.apple.com/ibook/specs.html>
<http://www.webopedia.com/TERM/s/subnotebook_computer.html>

  The weight reduction primarily comes from the shift in batteries.
  The new iBook's 42-watt-hour lithium ion battery is slightly less
  powerful than the 45-watt-hour battery in the original iBook, but
  is substantially smaller. The original iBook battery was notably
  bulky, but not so the new one, which is also easier to install and
  has LED charge indicators on it. Apple claimed a six-hour battery
  life for the old iBooks, but only a five-hour battery life for
  this one - the same as for the PowerBook G4. The battery charger
  can recharge the battery in six hours while the iBook is running,
  or in three and a half hours if the computer is shut down or
  asleep.

<http://til.info.apple.com/techinfo.nsf/artnum/n60423>
<http://til.info.apple.com/techinfo.nsf/artnum/n88121>

  According to Apple's iBook Developer Note, there is also an
  "airliner power cable" for use on airplanes. The cable has a
  special sense resistor; when the iBook detects it, it uses the AC
  power supplied by the cable but does not try to charge the
  battery, because voltage on most airplane outlets is not high
  enough to charge the battery and power the computer
  simultaneously.

<http://developer.apple.com/techpubs/hardware/Developer_Notes/
Macintosh_CPUs-G3/ibook/>

  The case is also lighter, a polycarbonate plastic that looks good
  next to the titanium-cased PowerBook G4 but is clearly not
  composed of metal. The new iBook does have a magnesium frame for
  strength, though, and includes metallic shields around the
  rubberized feet to keep them from falling off so easily. It also
  has a thin rubbery coating to help provide a stable grip, "even in
  small hands" as Macworld editor Andy Gore describes it.

<http://maccentral.macworld.com/news/0105/01.ibook.shtml>

  When closed, you see the same magnetic latch and release button as
  on the PowerBook G4. When opened, the iBook (Dual USB) is barely
  wider than its keyboard, which is almost identical to the one
  found in the PowerBook G4 models. As with previous iBooks there
  are no doors or panels that could get detached, as PowerBook port
  covers are notorious for doing. The only hinge is the one that
  opens the case, and even it is different - it pivots so that, when
  open, the top of the case is behind and below the bottom part,
  giving a bit more depth while minimizing height. The keyboard is
  below a pair of speakers. The handle of previous models is gone,
  though few will miss it - even though I always liked the look and
  concept of the handle, it's hard to imagine someone carrying an
  iBook down the street by the handle. The new model instead offers
  a standard security slot for a cable lock, since the handle served
  that purpose in older models.

  On the left side, you'll find a more extensive complement of ports
  than on any previous iBook. The "Dual USB" designation gives away
  that there are two USB ports for the first time on an iBook, as
  well as a single 400 Mbps FireWire port, an internal V.90 56K
  modem, a 10/100Base-T Ethernet port, the same audio/video port
  introduced with the iBook (FireWire) that enables TV and analog
  audio output through a special cable, and a brand new RGB output
  port that connects to any monitor that supports the DDC
  identification standard, complete with an included cable. You can
  only do video mirroring, though, and to do that with Mac OS X you
  need Mac OS X 10.0.2 or later. Unfortunately, the analog "Apple AV
  cable" is no longer included - it's $20 extra. The reset pinhole
  is above the audio/video port; the power connector is on the right
  side of the case.

  In a promotional video about the new computer, a man who works for
  a computer store is shown holding one, and it looks like it's
  barely bigger than his hands. Reporters who witnessed the
  introduction are raving for a reason - the iBook (Dual USB) is
  small and light. For these reasons alone, it should be extremely
  popular in Japan, where compact products command a price premium.
  Yet the iBook doesn't have to coast on its case - it's got game.


**Thinking Inside the Box** -- Like the iMac, the iBook is still
  based on the PowerPC G3 processor family, and with good reason -
  they're inexpensive and don't require a lot of power, but pack
  performance that challenges Pentium III systems with higher clock
  rates. Although the iBook (FireWire) started at 366 MHz and topped
  out at 466 MHz, the iBook (Dual USB) comes in only one speed - 500
  MHz, as fast as last year's top-of-the-line PowerBook (FireWire)
  model, and it can use PowerStep to scale back to 400 MHz during
  non-critical times if you wish. Okay, it's not quite as fast as
  the PowerBook G3 (FireWire) - the iBook is still limited by a 66
  MHz system bus, and by the PowerPC 750CX chip that bundles Level 2
  cache on-board the processor but limits it to 256K. iBook
  performance won't equal PowerBook performance.

  The iBook (Dual USB) display is, however, something to write home
  about - though still a 12.1-inch LCD, it now operates at a native
  resolution of 1024 by 768 pixels, instead of the 800 by 600 top
  resolution of the previous iBook models. That's a resolution of
  over 100 dots per inch, but attendees at the briefing say the
  display is sharp enough to pull it off. You can still use
  interpolation and scaling to get 800 by 600 or 640 by 480 if you
  really need those resolutions. The graphics remain driven by the
  ATI Rage Mobility 128 chip, but not the same one: this one is an
  ATI Rage Mobility 128M. The 128M model provides for the 1024 by
  768 resolution, where the Rage Mobility 128 chip did not. The new
  128M chip also has 3D graphics acceleration. Andrew Gore reported
  that, at the closed briefing, Apple executives said the Rage
  Mobility 128 provides the best trade-off between performance and
  power consumption at present. As before, the chip is backed by 8
  MB of SDRAM graphics memory and sits on an AGP 2X dedicated
  graphics bus.

  Having been criticized for whatever optical drive choice it makes
  in consumer computers (first DVD is the wrong choice, then
  replacing it with CD-RW is wrong, according to critics), Apple is
  now offering a choice of pretty much any tray-loading optical
  drive you want, as long as you don't want to burn DVDs. The base
  model, retailing for $1,300, comes with a 24x CD-ROM drive; a
  $1,500 configuration comes with an 8x DVD-ROM drive that also
  reads CD-ROMs at 24x. A $1,600 model comes with a built-in CD-RW
  drive (8x writing CD-R, 4x writing CD-RW, 24x reading CDs), and a
  build-to-order $1,800 configuration, available from the Apple
  Store or any reseller that sells build-to-order systems, features
  a "Combo" drive that works like the 8x4x24x CD-RW but also reads
  DVD-ROM at up to 8x speeds.

  Except for the optical drive, the three upper-end iBook (Dual USB)
  models are identical. That means the CD-RW drive costs $100 more
  than the DVD-ROM, and the Combo drive costs $300 more than DVD-ROM
  alone. There is no longer an eject button for any of the drives,
  but holding down the F12 key for a few seconds ejects the optical
  disk (if you're using Mac OS X, though, you need Mac OS X 10.0.2
  or later to make F12 eject the tray if it's empty).

  All models but the least expensive come with 128 MB of RAM
  soldered to the motherboard (the $1,300 model has only 64 MB); a
  single PC100 SO-DIMM slot allows adding up to 512 MB of extra RAM
  for a total of either 576 MB or 640 MB of RAM. All models come
  with an Ultra DMA/33 10 GB hard drive, though you can upgrade to
  20 GB for $200 on build-to-order systems. The hard drive is in a
  rubber enclosure, providing extra shock absorbance without
  excessive weight. Like every Apple system since the original iBook
  in July 1999, the new model is ready to accept a $100 AirPort
  card. Extra batteries retail for $130 each, extra AC adapters
  (that also work with the PowerBook G4) cost $70 each.


**The Classroom and Beyond** -- These are hot little products,
  folks. The original iBook garnered a few strong criticisms - it
  was too boldly designed with bright colors, weighed too much,
  didn't have full connectivity, and cost too much. Apple has
  eliminated all of these problems in the new iBook - a strong,
  lightweight, powerful computer with a sharp but conservative
  design. If you need more convincing that there's more to the
  update than style, such as moving from a 366 MHz processor to a
  500 MHz chip in the entry-level models, check out the comparison
  page provided by the Mac Observer.

<http://www.macobserver.com/article/2001/05/01.13.shtml>

  You really need to see the iBook in action. When Apple introduces
  new hardware, it usually produces a short promotional video, but
  it's typically shown only to the audience at the introduction, and
  sent via satellite to press outlets. This time, Apple has posted
  that five-and-a-half minute video so you can watch it. If you're
  at all interested in these machines, it's worth a viewing, but be
  warned: the ISDN-or-faster movie is at least 21 MB (earlier in the
  week, I got a 35 MB version); the version for slower-than- ISDN
  connections is 7.7 MB. Unless you have a broadband connection,
  prepare to spend 20 to 30 minutes downloading the video. You'll
  see just how small the iBook is, and close-up views of most of its
  design.

<http://www.apple.com/hardware/video/ibook.html>

  Reports suggesting this is a full frontal assault on the education
  market are spot on. Three years ago, Apple announced the iMac in
  early May, months before the product was ready to ship, so
  education purchasers knew something good was coming in August.
  Schools are making purchase decisions this month, and Apple is
  right to drum up support for the new machines before they
  actually ship (even though the company says they'll be available
  in "mid-May," and we've seen reports that some units might even
  be shipping now). At $1,200 per unit for schools, plus $70 for
  an AirPort card, the iBook (Dual USB) is a compelling student
  workstation.

  Why all those extra ports if its aimed at the school market?
  Because now, aside from some performance issues, the iBook is just
  as capable as the iMac. It comes with iTunes and iMovie 2, has a
  similar RGB video mirroring port for hooking to school equipment,
  and has two USB ports so you can use one for audio and one for
  other USB peripherals. The only difference between the two systems
  now is performance; the iBook even gets the iMac's higher 1024 by
  768 resolution in this revision. The trade-off is pretty clear:
  the iBook is portable and a little slower, the iMac is cheaper and
  a little faster. This isn't last year's recycled technology,
  either: the iBook (Dual USB) is Apple's first computer to use the
  new Pangea controller chip to run most of the system's hardware
  functions, including DMA FireWire, Ethernet, Ultra DMA IDE, USB,
  and Apple's new Tumbler digital audio sound circuitry, which
  handles audio conversion, volume, and equalization.

  In nearly two years of sales, Apple has moved about 700,000 iBook
  units, so the lease of 23,000 on a single day is quite noteworthy.
  It's also a shot across Michael Dell's bow, as his company has
  been regularly emitting boasts about large sales to school
  districts. Dell is trying to establish itself as the leading
  educational computer company by default, and Apple is reminding
  analysts and press that it is far from the only computer company
  capable of putting a lot of computers in schools. Apple normally
  doesn't brag about specific sales via press release, but since
  Dell implies that large sales make a leader, Apple is happy to set
  the record straight.

  The current line of iMacs is designed more for consumers but great
  for education, and the new iBooks are mostly designed for
  education but great for consumers as well. Small enough to fit in
  a backpack and weighing under five pounds, students of all ages
  will love the new iBook machines. After all, iTunes doesn't have
  that many classroom uses, and while iMovie 2 does, it's more of an
  individual product as well. Our favorite part of the promotional
  video is sixth grade student Harry Tannenbaum, talking about video
  he and his friends shot and that he edited in iMovie, sounding
  surprised that it "actually turned out kind of okay."

  The iBook line has been underperforming for Apple for some time;
  it never quite lived up to iMac expectations, and even the overdue
  iBook (FireWire) didn't provide the kind of bump in numbers I
  thought the product was capable of generating. This may be the one
  that moves the iBook from second-class to first-class product, not
  only for Apple but in the broader computing world. A speed-bump
  revision in six months would position it perfectly for the holiday
  buying season, too.

  This is an iBook whose appearance John C. Dvorak would not insult.
  It addresses every serious criticism of earlier models, costs less
  (or, on the high end, delivers a lot more for the same price), has
  everything schools need, fits well with kids, and runs Mac OS X.
  If Apple can't sell a few hundred thousand of these by September,
  maybe there's no real market for a consumer and education-oriented
  portable Macintosh - because if there is such a market, this
  product fills it perfectly. I want one.

  [Matt Deatherage is the publisher of MacJournals.com, where he
  oversees MDJ, MWJ, and MMJ - daily, weekly, and monthly
  subscription-based, ad-free journals for serious Macintosh users.
  For a free trial of any of the journals, visit MacJournals.com.
  This article was assembled from material that appeared last week
  in MDJ.]

<http://www.macjournals.com/>


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