This week we look at Fujitsu S1300, iFrogz CS-40, iCasual, O’Reilly, Freeware plus much more. I want to thank you for downloading and listening to the podcast. We have the best in Mac hardware, software and websites reviews. We have a lot of great folks on today’s episode with their reviews and comments on software, hardware and websites that make using the Mac special. Plus I’ll have the top freeware Mac apps of the week and much more.
You can email me at surfbits at Gmail dot Com. I love to hear from you.

Here is the freeware and shareware I look at during the podcast:
The New O’Reilly Media eBook Give-Away coming next week!: http://oreilly.com
The Winners for O’Reilly eBook were:
Larry Jackson, Chris Davies, Dwight Sperry

Fujitsu S1300 Scanner: http://www.Fujitsu.Com
iFrogz CS-40: http://www.iFrogz.Com
Quiet Read: http://bambooapps.com/free
Menuless: http://createlivelove.com
iRunTrains: http://www.iruntrains.com
PhotoTools and PhotFrame: http://www.ononesoftware.com
AtMonitor: http://www.atpurpose.com/atMonitor
Hobiconer: http://www.kodlian.com/en/application
Artwork Gofer: http://objectstack.com/artwork-gofer

Michelle Lopez joins us today from the The Portable Gamer and iCasual Report to review the iPhone/iPod Touch game:
Title: Supermarket Management
Developer: G5 Entertainment
Price: $2.99

Try the new ENHANCED version of the MacReviewCast:
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Take Your Best Shot
Tim Grey Tackles Your Digital Darkroom Questions

Tim’s work combines several of his greatest passions: technology, teaching, photography, writing, and travel. All of these have been part of his life in some way for as long as he can remember, and became a major focus starting in high school. He has been focused on digital photography and imaging for over 10 years.

Tim has written more than a dozen books and hundreds of magazine articles on photography and imaging. He publishes the digital darkroom Questions email newsletter, as well as the Digital Darkroom Quarterly print newsletter. Tim teaches through workshops, seminars, and appearances at major events, and is a member of the photoshop World dream team of instructors.

This book is really one question after another Tim answered over the years, arranged in an order that makes sense and explains how to get the best picture possible from your digital camera. Chapter headings are:
Digital Fundamentals
Digital Cameras and Tools
Digital Capture
Digital Darkroom
Color Management
Optimizing in Photoshop
Creative Effects
Image Problem-Solving
Printing
Digital Sharing

Each of these chapters contain 5-10 questions and the answers that Tim gave to them. They all are interesting and the type of questions that anyone interested in Digital photography would ask.

Grey then adds his Pet Peeves and his final decision to many of the questions that he answered in the past. There are example photos that illustrate a point the author tries to make and he talks about current and specific lens and cameras.

Let me give you a question in the book and Grey’s answer to it. You’ll see what I mean.

I have heard a lot about how RAW capture is so much better than JPEG, but I don’t understand what RAW is exactly. Can you explain?

I can, and I will.

For now, know that the imaging sensor in your digital camera captures a scene by translating light into an electrical charge. This happens millions of times for every image you capture (the actual number depends on how many megapixels the imaging sensor has). So when an imaging sensor records a scene, it is not recording actual colors but rather the intensity of light recorded for each photodiode, measured as a voltage value. In most cases, each photodiode is measuring the intensity of light for only a single color (typically red, green, or blue, but sometimes other colors as well). What this means is that the result of the information gathered by the imaging sensor isn’t a photographic image at all, but rather the information needed to assemble a photographic image. For example, since each photodiode is generally recording only the intensity of light for a single channel (normally red, green, or blue), the other two values must be calculated for each pixel in the final image.

A raw capture is not an image file at all. Rather, it is a data file that contains all those voltages measured by the imaging sensor. That’s why there is some additional effort involved when working with raw captures. You have to convert the data into an image.

It is worth noting, by the way, that a jpeg capture is in fact a raw capture as far as the imaging sensor in your camera is concerned. the only difference is that a jpeg gets processed from the raw data in the camera, while a raw capture does not, and thus must be processed using special software after the capture.

This book is not a missing manual type book, it’s not a “how to” type book as much as it’s a book that answers questions, and I found that most of the questions it answers were ones that I had. It’s a great read for anyone starting into Digital photography. I recommend it.

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I would not be surprised if everyone reading this post already have their own Dropbox account. But if you’ve not had the chance to download and use Dropbox, you’re missing a wonderful application that makes your computer time so much more enjoyable. With Dropbox you can share files, and preference settings between all your computers whether they’re Macs or PC’.s You can also share files with other users and friends just by sharing folders.

So why are we talking about Dropbox now? If you sign up for your free Dropbox account, you’ll get an extra 250 megs of storage which brings your total storage to 2.25 gigs. It also means I receive a free 250 megs of storage on my account too. That’s good for you and good for me and did I mention it’s free?

Head over to the Dropbox Web site and take a look at what it has to offer. We love it on the MacReviewCast and Surfbits and I think you will too.
Here is my referral link to sign up. DropBox Referral

In December I purchased a new MacBook Pro. I am using it at the office 9 hours a day and then for any travel I do or as on a casual basis at home. I wanted it to be mobile so I ordered the 13 inch model. I wanted it to be powerful enough to run the applications I needed it to run. I purchased the 2.53 GHz Core 2 Duo model with 4 gigs of ram. But I wanted more. So instead of purchasing a 7200 RPM hard Drive to speed it up, I took the leap of faith and purchased the 256 gig Apple SSD (Solid State Drive).

It was not cheap, if I recall it added $800 to the price of the laptop and to be honest, if the company I work for didn’t pay for a percent of the purchase, I would have probably not made that decision.

After four months of using the MacBook Pro day in and day out, the one thing about the Mac that surfaces in every conversation is the speed and silence of my SSD drive. It is the one option I could have purchased with my Mac that made the biggest impact on my Mac, period. I am now in the process of deciding the best path to take to upgrade my Mac Pro to SSD. I believe that with that one upgrade, I can prolong the effective life of my Mac Pro at least two more years.

I hear you screaming over your Mac right now, “That type of money doesn’t just grow on trees Tim, wake up already!”

I understand your concern and let me explain. First of all, let’s look at why I believe that the answer to my Holy Grail of computing speed is the Solid State Drive. All of you with a laptop, especially a MacBook or older MacBook Pro, will understand when I say that booting up a laptop is a slow and sometimes painful process. Plus, launching apps can be slow and the noise from your hard drive is noticeable to say the least. My MBP with the SSD boots up in 19 seconds flat. That includes all the apps that are loaded at start up, my Remote Desktop app, Textexpander, Dropbox, SecondBar, Quiet Read, WeatherVane, Carbonite and iStat Menu. That was 19 seconds.

Next is the speed of the drive itself. Here is a screen grab from a free benchmarking application called Xbench. Download it and run it on your Mac for comparison. You’ll see the speed in my drive.

Screen shot 2010-04-01 at 10.17.43 AM.jpg

Keep in mind that these numbers are from an older, slower SSD then what is now available by companies such as OCZ, and Intel. Plus, the prices have fallen a bit, especially for the smaller sizes. You can buy a 60 gig OCZ at the link above for $169.00. That’s on sale, but it shows that SSD prices will be falling and if the price is not in your range now, it soon will be.

So the next question I get asked is how can I live with such a small hard drive. If you can afford a 256 gig SSD, you’ll find it’s more room then you may actually need. As I write this article, I have 66 items in my applications folder and I am using 23.45 GB of storage with 210 GB free. What about those of us that need more storage for our iTunes library, iPhoto library, iMovie library or any other storage monster you have hiding on your Mac?

You have several options, one was fully explained by my friend Don McAllister on his members only screencast number SCO0224: Solid State Drives and Optibay. Rather then rehash it, just check out the links above and you’ll get the step by step instructions you’ll need to increase your laptop storage. The Optibay is a great solution for turning your DVD drive bay into another storage option, and it comes with an external USB drive enclosure for your DVD drive.

For my Mac Pro, it has 4 drive bays in it already. I have 3 TB of storage in it and if I replaced the 500 gig HDD that’s in it with a 60 gig SSD, I really would not miss the storage space and I have to believe that the increased speed would make the Mac Pro seem like a new machine. I would just use one of the drives in my Mac Pro for keeping my iTunes, photos, movies and documents stored. The SSD would be for the operating system and applications.

I have pretty much talked myself into upgrading my Mac Pro to SSD, the logistical part of this still needs to be tweaked. As always, I will keep you informed and I’d love to hear your feedback too.

This week we look at PulpMotion, Shady, Quicken Essentials, RocketBox, iCasual, O’Reilly, Freeware plus much more. I want to thank you for downloading and listening to the podcast. We have the best in Mac hardware, software and websites reviews. We have a lot of great folks on today’s episode with their reviews and comments on software, hardware and websites that make using the Mac special. Plus I’ll have the top freeware Mac apps of the week and much more.
You can email me at surfbits at Gmail dot Com. I love to hear from you.

Get DropBox Free and Get an extra 250 Megs too!

Here is the freeware and shareware I look at during the podcast:
The New O’Reilly Media eBook Give-Away coming next week!: http://oreilly.com
The Winners for O’Reilly eBook were:
Angela Bautista, Joe Cosentino, Edward Lindquist

Rivet can be found at: http://thelittleappfactory.com/rivet
SimpleCap: http://xcatsan.com/simplecap-en
Click: http://customsolutionsofmaryland.50megs.com/click.htm
Nambu: http://www.nambu.com
Mutools: http://mutools.com/products.html
Fraise: http://github.com/jfmoy/Fraise

Michelle Lopez joins us today from the The Portable Gamer and iCasual Report to review the iPhone/iPod Touch game:
Zombie Farm
Developer: The Play Forge
Price: Free
Michelle then reviews: Quicken Essentials from Intuit

Gazmaz Joins us again this week to review:
Shady for Mac: http://instinctivecode.com/shady

Allison Sheridan from the NosillaCast Podcast looks at:
Pulp Motion 3: http://www.aquafadas.com

David Sparks from MacSparky joins us this week and reviews:
Rocketbox: http://www.getrocketbox.com

Try the new ENHANCED version of the MacReviewCast:
And now we have the Podcast in Bit-Torrent Feeds!
Subscribe in iTunesSubscribe To Bit-Torrent Feed
You can either click on the podcast link on the left and listen to it via QT from the browser, or you can right click on the podcast link and choose to “download linked file”. That will download the mp3 and you can play it from you hard drive with iTunes.
The right link below is the URL for the podcast RSS feed. Just right click it and choose to copy the address and then paste it in your podcast reader, or ipodder, or newsreader that will download enclosures automatically.

Please Click Here to vote for us on the PodcastAlley Website. Thank you!

Podcast MP3 File Use This Link To Subscribe To Our Podcasts
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By Gazmaz:
Some while ago I was having a conversation with my friend Mike Potter from the formaceyesonly podcast about the awful way iTunes imports Audiobooks that I own on CD, or rather doesn’t import in a way that is useable.

After both agreeing that iTunes doesn’t do a very good job, he pointed me to a product that I have used a lot since AudioBook Builder. Since my girls have a number of audiobooks all on CD, they still want to listen to them but on their iPods.

If you’ve never tried importing an audio book into iTunes, you haven’t experienced the way it seems to randomly name the files or if it doesn’t randomly name them, it doesn’t seem to put them in the correct order, and even if it puts them in order it then sees them as music. Guess what iTunes does every time you play music? Yep, you got it, it starts at the very beginning, now as Julie Andrews said in the sound of Music, it’s a very good place to start, but not when you want to listen to a book where you left off.

Some of you maybe shouting at me right now saying, “yeah, but you can make adjustments in iTunes”, but I can assure you, I have tried and it didn’t always work.

OK, so what did we do? Well, nothing, until I was pointed to AudioBook Builder that is. I think this has been on the MacReviewCast in the past but not for some time, and we all need reminding at times about really useful software.

Once you’ve installed the application the welcome screen gives you 3 options, these being, Create a new project, open an existing project or help. To start off with you’ll be interested only in Create new Project of course. When you click on Create a new project the app asks you to name a file and asks you where to save it to. Audiobook Builder defaults to an audiobook builder folder within your Music folder in your home directory. This is where I placed the files as who needs an argument.

The next part is to enter a title for the book an Author, and finally a Genre, although I only see Audiobooks under that option when first starting off. You can also drag Artwork here as well but in fact you can come back and drag artwork here at any time before you finish the project, you can also rename prior to finishing off as well, so don’t worry at this stage too much about the naming conventions.
At the bottom of the window you’ll see Cover which is where we start but also Chapters and Finish.

Once you have popped your CD in your machine, click onto Chapters and click on import CD, you can also import the current iTunes highlighted item or choose from files on your system. My main use was to import CD’s though. Once the CD has been imported you’re then able to name the Chapter or chapters and then of course if it’s a long book you need to import the other CD’s to complete the book.
Now once you have all your CD’s imported this is where you have to decide how many splits in iTunes you’d like, as you can combine all of those CD’s or spit each of the tracks or even chapters within the book.

Let me tell you what I did for my daughter. She had recently asked if I could put “An Unfortunate Series of Events” onto her iPod. I imported all 13 books which had, at least 3 CD’s per book and sometimes 5. I decided to import all of the CD’s as one book, you have the facility to join and split the files you import in AudioBook Builder. Sometimes moving the files around took a bit of thinking and fiddling but if you do it all in order you’ll have no issues. Now having mentioned that, I did find that after I’d completed the book I had recorded 1 CD and added it at the start of a book and at the end of that same book, but I found it easy to rectify as I’d kept the audiobook file after exporting to iTunes, I re-recorded the correct CD and added it into the correct place within the files, I of course deleted the duplicate file.

I did rename some of the files, but actually I only really had to rename the top file, difficult to explain here but Audiobook Builder gives you a main file into which you have each of the CD’s for an individual book. Once I had finished, and it didn’t take to long, although at first it does seem that the copying process is taking some time, however it seems to suddenly speed up and you’ll soon have all those CD’s copied. So now I had 13 books all with the separate CD’s within the whole series of books. Now it was time to export to iTunes, click on finish and here you have 2 options, they are ‘build book’ and ‘build options’. First click on the build options and here you can adjust the quality of the recording. This impacts the size of the file you end up with, you can change the format from the default M4B which is book markable or M4A. You also have the options to break between files or break between chapters, have equal length or have it split per chapter, this is the option I used. You can experiment here to see how it exports into iTunes and what you’d prefer. The finish window also tells you the title you have given the books or book, the author, genre, also the length, chapters, quality and the destination. You’ll also see the artwork that you’ve used.

So I now have a neatly created book in my audiobooks section of iTunes. Job Done, the only slight glitch I came across was occasionally the application didn’t see a CD I had popped into the disc drive, although it could be seen in iTunes or Finder, however a quick eject and after the CD being pushed back in, the software then saw the CD. Not a big problem, but don’t panic if it happens to you.

The cost of AudioBook Builder is $9.95, £6.99 or €7.72, there are also family packs available at currently at $14.95, £10.50 or €11.60.

You can find the software over at www.splasm.com/audiobookbuilder

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I’ve owned a scanner of one type or another for many years. They were all flatbed scanners and the only time I really used them was to scan photos and get them into a computer. But as the years wore on, more and more of my photos became digital and were stored on my Mac naturally. The need for a scanner seemed to be reduced to maybe once or twice a year.After all, cranking up that flatbed scanner and putting papers in it to scan seemed like a lot of work. Plus, when you did get your papers scanned into your Mac, they sat there as jpegs normally or maybe the occasional PDF.

Times have changed and scanners changed along with our needs. Now you can feed sheets of paper, business cards, maps, invoices, bills and more through a small 4×11 inch scanner and expect that scanner to read both sides of the paper in one pass, read color and black and white scans, work with USB only connections and have the software available to turn those scans into editable forms, documents, spreadsheets and addresses via accurate OCR software. You can, that is, if the scanner is the new S1300 ScanSnap from Fujitsu.

For the last several years Fujitsu has been the brand synonymous with the paperless office. I received an S1300 for review from Fujitsu after Macworld Expo and have been totally impressed with the speed and functionality of the hardware and the included software. Fujitsu was the first to introduce multi-sheet, duplex performance in a USB powered mobile scanner with the ScanSnap S300 series and now the next generation ScanSnap S1300 provides even more intelligence, productivity features and flexibility.

If you listened to the MacReviewCast Episode #237 you heard my interview with the Fujitsu folks in the booth at Macworld Expo. They talked about the main features, but in a nutshell, here they are again.

Users can utilize a standard highlighter pen on a black & white document to automatically create searchable keywords of the highlighted text, such as an invoice number or last name. ABBYY FineReader for ScanSnap allows users to be productive by quickly transforming their paperwork into editable Word and Excel files at the push of a button.

In addition to automatically detecting color and monochrome, users can now scan images or text in grayscale. This is especially important for small images or text within business cards and small receipts that typically includes fine print. Users are able to scan a document up to 34 inches long, allowing ScanSnap S1300 to support a wider range of documents, such as long grocery receipts or lengthy rental agreements.

ScanSnapMgr.png

ScanSnap Manager: Provides Mac and PC users one button searchable PDF creation, access to intelligent features and custom scan settings (profiles) for simple operation with sophisticated results.

“Scan to” Functions : Offers Mac users a flexible way to manage their PDF, searchable PDF and JPEG files. Users can save content to a folder, a network folder, iPhoto, and even directly to their iDisk account.

Cardiris 3.6 : Provides Mac users a convenient way to scan their business cards and export the contact information directly to Address Book or Entourage.

Additional features include:

· Scanning speeds of up to 8 double-sided color pages per minute (ppm)

· Automatic document feeder (ADF) holding up to 10 pages (letter size)

· One button searchable PDF: Converts scanned data into searchable PDF files that let users quickly and easily find the documents they have scanned.

· Scan to Email, Scan to Folder & Scan to Print functions

· Automatic paper size detection: From 2×2 inches to Legal

· Automatic de-skew & orientation

· Automatic blank page detection & deletion

· Small footprint (compact and 3.1 lbs)

· Can be powered by USB (USB cables and AC power adaptor included)

I can tell you that the software works as advertised and the scan to MS Word or MS Excel is amazing to see and a breeze to use. The S1300 scanner itself is portable and has a very small footprint on your desktop or in a drawer. The moment I got back from the Expo I scanned all the business cards I received and transferred them into address book with Cardiris and it took me a few minutes at the most.

I have started scanning in all the bills I receive and I spent an afternoon going through my old documents for important information I should keep safely offsite. The S1300 is not the workhorse of the product line for Fujitsu scanners, that would be the S1500. But for $279, the portable S1300 does the job for me. The only downside I found is that the photo scanning capabilities do not match those of a good flatbed scanner, but it’s a small concession.

I vow to become paperless this year and the S1300 was the kick in the pants I needed to get it done. Thank you Fujitsu.

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Back in early 2009 Cloud Engines unveiled the Pogoplug, a small device that connects external hard drives to the Internet, making personal files instantly shareable and accessible. The Pogoplug was designed for simplicity. Setup takes seconds and requires no networking configuration or installation. Users simply plug the Pogoplug into an electrical outlet, connect the supplied Ethernet cable to their home network router, and attach their external hard drive. Lastly, the product’s registration code is entered at http://my.pogoplug.com, after which the Pogoplug is online and ready for use. The device is compatible with any external USB 2.0 hard drive or memory stick. Content is accessible with any Web browser, Mac Finder, and through the Pogoplug iPhone application.

I was unable to get a review copy of the first version, but that turned out to be a good thing because I now have the new version for review and it’s better then before. The new Pogoplug hardware sports a new design with multiple USB ports supporting up to 4 external drives for expanded capacity. Pogoplug acts like a gateway from your home or office through the Internet. It allows you to access, share and even stream your personal digital media directly to anybody, anywhere in the world.

From their Web site, here is a list of the new features in Pogoplug;
Automatically Synchronize Photos, Videos, Music and Other Selected Content
Users can synchronize their Pogoplug with their PC or Mac to automatically import new content from popular applications such as iTunes, Windows Media Player, and iPhoto. This feature allows Pogoplug owners to “set it and forget it” and always have access to new photos, videos and music from anywhere on the Internet.

pogoplug2.png

Drag-and-Drop Music and Photo Slideshows
Users can easily create and share fun and engaging slideshows using their stored photos, videos and music. Creating a slideshow with Pogoplug is as simple as drag and drop, and sharing these slideshows is just as easy as ever. Once a user’s link is shared and viewed, their slideshow will immediately begin with the photos, videos and music they selected, playing seamlessly in the viewer’s browser.

Easier Sharing with Pogoplug Address Book
Pogoplug Address Book greatly improves the speed and ease of use of sharing with a user’s friends and family. Pogoplug automatically remembers all email addresses entered in a user’s previous shares – even if that share no longer exists – and makes them available in an easy to use address book to make sharing truly one click away.

Global Search Across Multiple Drives and Pogoplugs
With support for multiple drives on a single Pogoplug (and multiple Pogoplugs on the same account) Pogoplug has added “global” search support across all of a user’s Pogoplugs and drives. Search filters are now a distinct feature, allowing users to view all of their photos, videos and music in a single organized view, or to search for a specific file across all Pogoplugs and drives.

Organize Your Music, Photos and Videos
Pogoplug automatically displays music by Album, Artist and Genre, and shows cover art for quick access to a user’s favorite music. Photos are now displayed by photo timeline and videos are only a click away, including the ability to watch a preview in the thumbnail itself.

Play movies directly from my.pogoplug.com, or even to the iPhone
Pogoplug now supports the playback of videos directly from a Pogoplug, with support for the most popular cameras, video cameras and mobile phones. Movies can be shared and viewed directly from the Pogoplug website – or even from an iPhone!

I have run into very few drawbacks with the new Pogoplug. The only problem is a software conflict of sorts with Pathfinder where the Pogoplug drives do not show up on the list of available local drives. That is a known problem and is being worked on as we speak. I would also like to see access to Pogoplug drives via FTP rather than through their Web site only. I feel Pogoplug is a bit limited by their Web site access. But these are minor gripes and they would not stop me from recommending Pogoplug version 2 to anyone. I like it.

Of course, you can find out more about the features and specs at their website, www.pogoplug.com and the retail cost is $129.00.