Going to the Movies (and More) in iTunes
-- Have you played with the video functionality in iTunes?
If not, J.D Biersdorfer presents a few things that Steve Jobs has
mentioned--and a few he hasn't. J.D. is the author of iPod and iTunes: The
Missing Manual, 3rd Edition.
Podcasting with Your iPod Photo
-- With Apple's release of the iPod photo, podcasting just
got more fun. Using iPodderX, a podcast client for the Mac, you can
download audio, movies, images, documents, and any other kind of files
from the internet onto your Mac. Cool, huh? Wei-Meng Lee explains how.
For more fun tips for your iPod photo, check out Wei-Meng's All About Your iPod
Photo.
Ten PowerPoint 2004 Tips to Beat Tight
Deadlines -- PowerPoint 2004 lets you turn text,
graphics, sounds, and movies into dazzling presentations that get your
message across in high style. But what if you're on a short deadline?
Franklin Tessler shows you ten ways to use PowerPoint to put together
slideshows in no time. Frank is the coauthor of Office 2004 for
Macintosh: The Missing Manual.
Display Your Favorite Album Artwork in iTunes -- Love your iPod but miss the album art? In iTunes 4, you can associate an album's artwork with a song so it can be displayed while you play the song. Wei-Meng Lee shows you how to use two free programs, Clutter and art4iTunes.com, to simplify the task. For more tricks and tips on using your iPod photo, check out Wei-Meng's latest eDoc, All About Your iPod Photo (PDF).
DTG's Best
Books of 2004 -- DT&G;: Design, Type &
Graphics Magazine has announced its selection of the best products
in 2004 for the visual communications fields. O'Reilly titles won in
several categories: Best in Digital Photography went to Digital
Photography Hacks; We the Media took the Best for All
Computer Users category; and The Cult of Mac (by O'Reilly
publishing partner No Starch Press) was named the Best for Macintosh
Computer Users.
Top Ten AppleScript Tips--AppleScript lets you control
Microsoft Word, Adobe Photoshop, FileMaker Pro, and hundreds of other Mac
programs with just a few lines of code. But if you think of AppleScript as
just a nerdy workflow-automation tool, you're missing out on a lot of power.
Adam Goldstein has hand selected ten of the most useful tips for making
AppleScript work for you. Adam is the author of AppleScript: The Missing Manual.
Reclaiming Hacks -- The books
in O'Reilly's Hacks series celebrate the positive aspects of the
hacking spirit. The curious nature of the hacker ethic, whether
prompted by a spark of genius or the urge of an annoyance, is all about
rolling up one's sleeves and taking action. But "hack" means different
things to different people, and for some it has negative connotations.
Hadley Stern discusses some of the issues he faced while writing iPod and iTunes Hacks.
Something
That Reeks of Honesty -- Andrew Leonard writes in
this Salon.com book review, "Reading Revolution in the
Valley, you may feel as though you're sitting in a bar listening to
engineers swap stories. You may not understand every word, but you know
you're getting the real thing, and that has value." Learn how the Mac
was made: Revolution in The
Valley.
David Pogue's "CBS News Sunday Morning" Wins an Emmy -- The National Television Academy has announced the winners of the Annual Emmy Awards for Business and Financial Reporting. In the category of "Outstanding Interpretation and/or Analysis of a Business News Story -- Regularly Scheduled Newscast," David Pogue's "CBS News Sunday Morning" won the Emmy: "David Pogue takes complex technological applications such as Google or Spam and makes them comprehensible to the ordinary, non-technophile viewer." David is the creator of the Missing Manuals Series.
2004 MDJ Power 25 -- MDJ has released its fifth annual list of the 25 most influential people in the Mac world. We're proud to see that our own Tim O'Reilly, David Pogue, and Derrick Story all made this year's list. For all the latest happenings in the Mac world, visit O'Reilly's Mac DevCenter.
Five Favorite Mac Annoyances
-- As much as we love our Macs, we've got to admit that
sometimes they annoy the patience out of us. Don't get mad; get clever.
Here are John Rizzo's favorite annoyances, along with their fixes, of
course, from his book, Mac
Annoyances.