An Answer

In reply to David Passell's earlier request asking about iMovieHD 6, Art Gorski sends an answer. "This article indicates that Apple removed the free download when iLife '09 came out.

http://arstechnica.com/apple/news/2009/01/imovie-hd-fading-into-the-ether-as-apple-removes-download.ars

"Bummer. All you can do at this point is buy an old DVD of iLife '06 and do the free Apple updates. Amazon has it for $50 and other places on-line may have it cheaper."

And my search has turned up http://discussions.apple.com/search.jspa?search=Go&q=iPhoto+09+slideshow which is the Apple forum for questions and answers. See if your circumstances fit in to any of these replies from Mac users. Let us know how it turns out.

Have a Solution for iMovie?

With iLife 8 on David Passell's Mac, purchased 1-08, he has the latest version of iMovie '08. He's found a problem with trying to get the previous iMovie HD6. This is the version that Bill Williamson demonstrated at our PMUG meeting last week.

Can anyone help? Read on. . .

" A couple of people in the last Mac Meeting said that I can get iMovie HD 6 by 'simply' going to the Apple site and downloading it. It has not turned out to be that simple.

"First: I went to the Apple Site to downloads, and I found iMovie HD 6.0.3 (I never found iMovie HD 6.0.4 which is supposed to be the latest) and I downloaded its .dmg. When I tried to install, red exclamation points and a dialog told me that I needed HD 6.0.2.

"Next: I went back to the Apple Site and downloaded 6.0.2. When I tried to install that package a similar indication told me I needed version 6.0. No version 6 is available. That is probably because it must have been purchased with an earlier system. That is similar to the 8.1 upgrade which actually is for those who have purchased iLife 09. (You don't find out about this until you try to install it and dialog says 'it is unnecessary.'

"I also looked on my installation disks that came with the Mini. I did not find it.

"So I am stuck. It does not appear that Apple provides this 'downgrade' in a transparent fashion. Does anybody have a solution for this? Perhaps somebody will provide a download for it. Regards: David"

How to Create a DVD

Today's PMUG meeting at the Prescott Public Library featured Bill Williamson demonstrating how to create a DVD on the Mac. Using iMovie, then importing photos and clips he showed how easily he could format, add transitions, and add music to the production.

Thanks, Bill, for these notes you've written:

Part 1 – Creating the movie:

1. Select photos & video clips to be used for your DVD. (Optional: Put them all in a folder)

2. Double click on iMovie icon in the applications folder.

3. “IMPORT” photos and clips. They will appear in the Clip Pane. You will see “Clips” highlighted at bottom of the Pane.

4. When all your photos are in the Clip Pane, click on the left mode rectangle below the monitor and drag the photos in the order you want them to be viewed into the Clip Viewer at the bottom of the screen. Note: If you change your mind about the order later, they can be moved.

5. When all the photos and videos are in the Clip Viewer, click on “Media” below the now empty Clip Pane and select “Photos” at top. Decide how long you want each photo to be on the screen, then click on the photo and then on “Show Photo Settings” above “Media." A box will appear that allows you to move the bottom slider for the time needed adding about 2 seconds for transitions. Ten seconds is a reasonable time. This box also gives you the ability to use the Ken Burns effect to simulate motion in a still photo. When you have all the settings as you want them, click “update." Repeat with each photo, but experiment with a few until you see how it works. All can be done together using shift click.

6. Click on “Editing” and then on “Titles” at the top of the screen. Choose a title type and a box will appear for you to select a color, font, size, length of time to stay on screen, & speed of motion for the text. Enter text in the box and a preview will show in the black monitor. When you like the preview, click on the title type you selected and drag it to just in front of the picture you want it to appear on. A red line along the bottom will let you know that it is “rendering."

7. Next in “Editing” select “Transitions” at the top of the screen. This allows you to choose how to move from one picture to the next. Drag the type of transition selected to the space between the clips.

8. When you have a few titles and/or transitions placed on the Clip Viewer, go to the first and click on it, then shift click on the last one. The headers and footers should now be blue for the pictures selected. Click on the middle play back button above the Clip Viewer. Watch the show so far to see how it looks. Make adjustments and continue until the entire line of pictures have transitions and/or titles, testing as you go. To remove a transition, click on it and then on delete. If you don’t like a title, it is best to delete the picture that has the title on it and start over.

9. Click the left playback control to go to the beginning, and then right hand playback button to view the entire show in full screen mode.

10. Remember to “Save Project” under File on toolbar often and especially when going on to the next step in the process.

Part 2 – Adding music:

1. Click on the Audio Mode next to the Video mode just above the Clip Viewer. The viewer will split with the photos above and spaces for sound below.

2. Click on Media above the Clip Viewer and Audio at the top and your iTunes list should appear. Select music wanted and drag it to the lower part of the Clip Viewer. You can have multiple songs within the two audio lines shown on the viewer. Music can also be imported.

3. Adjust the volume by clicking on the song to turn it purple. Then move the playhead line to where you want to start and click to see a yellow bullet. Move the bullet up or down for volume control and back and forth to where it should start. A dark purple dot or box will appear on the line and it can be dragged to below the desired volume in order to fade in and out. If you are using two songs, the bullets can be manipulated to fade one out as you fade another in.

4. If a song is too long it can be cut off by “splitting the audio at playhead” under Edit on the toolbar. The song to be split must be clicked to turn it purple in order to split it. Choose the part to be removed and click delete. It is a good idea to cut off the end of the music if it goes past the end of the photos, because the finished DVD will keep going until the music ends.

5. When you are satisfied with the movie, choose Save Project under file, and then go on to create your DVD.

Part 3 – Creating your DVD:

1. Except for very short movies it is a good idea to create chapters at logical breaks. This allows the DVD to be watched by selected scenes. Select Chapters above the Clip Viewer, then select the first picture of a new topic and click on “Add marker." The picture will show in the box to the right and you can type in a title for the Chapter.

2. After inserting all the chapters, be sure to Save Project and you are ready to go on to iDVD. On the toolbar, select Share and click iDVD. Click on “render and proceed.”

3. iDVD will now open automatically. You can select a theme from the list presented in the iDVD monitor window. To change the preset title, double click on Menu and change the text, color, size, font, placement, etc. Choose a picture for the drop zone. Choose music for the theme and drag it where indicated.

4. Preview and if OK, click on left button and select Burn DVD.

Beginning Mac Class to Start

Here's what you've been waiting for! Alert your switching-from-PC friends, and you plan to come, too.

PMUG's new SIG (Special Interest Group) class, "Beginning Mac," will start Friday, March 20, at 10 am in Founders Suite B at the Prescott Public Library - the same room where PMUG General Meetings are held. The SIG sessions will go from 10 am till noon, with a break after the first hour. Additional dates, at this time, are Tuesday, March 24 and Thursday April 2, same room and time. The dates have to vary due to availability of the room at the Library.

Please mark your calendar and attend if you are new to the Mac and would like to learn more about the basics of using and enjoying it. Bring your questions, too.

If you have a Mac laptop, bring it to the session, fully charged, plus paper and pencil to take notes, and your library card (if you have one) in case you want to connect to the internet. The instructor will have a Mac to project information onto a screen for those that can't bring a laptop.

Must be a PMUG member for this class, and there's no charge for the session. We plan to continue them as long as there is sufficient interest.

De Prez Jim Hamm is key instructor, so you know the class will be informative and fun!

Handy Mac "Geeky" Tips


If you don't subscribe to MacLife there's an interesting article recommended to us by De Prez Jim Hamm. "Fifty Things Every Mac Geek Should Know" turns out to be an 8 page piece, with such subheads as "Why OS X is Better Than Windows" and "Spotlight Can Do Math." There are short handy lists about iPod, iPhone, iChat, Safari, Terminals, on and on. http://www.maclife.com/article/feature/50_things_every_mac_geek_should_know

Take a look for yourself.

Safari 4 Top Sites

One of the appealing aspects to me of Safari 4 is Top Sites. This page is similar to the Speed Dial in Opera, only much fancier. I tried to find an entry in Safari 4 Help on this topic, couldn't find one, so I'm making up what follows based on my own experience.

Top Sites is a page in the browser that displays previews of pages from your history list (an assumption on my part that the history list is where these previews are generated from).
In the upper left corner of the browser is a symbol that looks like this: Click on that image to get a full page of images like the one on the left (but without the symbols in the upper left corner as shown in this image). In the lower left corner of that page you'll see an Edit button. Click on that button and then you will see those symbols in the upper left corner of the images.
Notice that the stick pin in this image is highlighted. Clicking on the stick pin toggles the highlight. When highlighted, that prevents that image from being replaced as you visit other sites. Clicking on the 'X' removes that image from the Top Sites, everything shifts left, and a new image is created in the lower right corner of the page - which will be the next page found in your history list. In the Edit mode, you can move the images around to be in the order that you like, and I'm assuming that the order is left to right from the top.
Items that are not pinned will be updated with previews of pages from your bookmark history, picking off the topmost sites as needed. (Another assumption on my part.)
In the lower right corner of Top Sites there is a button to select the size of the images. The smaller the size, the more images you see. The options are Small, Medium, and Large. With Small, you get 6 across and 4 deep. Medium gets you 4 x 3. Large gets you 3 x 2. The image size adjusts with the browser window size.
When you've finished editing the images, click on the Done button in the lower left corner.
Enjoy Safari 4!

Improving Safari Usefulness

Read more about Safari Beta. Here's David Passell's report: "In using Safari I noticed the absence of any buttons on the tool bar to increase or decrease the size of the web page. I researched a little and found that it has to be installed. While Safari 4 is displayed, click on View and then Customize Tool bar. The size button looks like this:

"There are a lot of other buttons there that you can also drag for other functions.

"You are instructed to drag the button to the Toolbar. You can drag it anywhere you want. I dragged it near the left side, and it looks like the following. (I don't know why designers don't make things look the same from one appearance to the next, but I quibble:))

"Now when you are viewing a web page, you can click on the big A or little A to change the size of the text and images. One good feature of Safari 4 is that both are changed. Other browser size bars often change only the text and leave the images untouched. Also they may garble the page.

"Now there is a 'gotcha' here. Some websites (for example with a newsletter) may link to a PDF file. If you click on this link, it is displayed on your page. There is apparently a PDF plug-in that is part of Safari. You may see a hand on your screen.

"Sometimes the text appears impossibly small to read. So you try to click on big A. Nothing happens, but don't give up. Right click your mouse and you will see the following. You only see this menu if you are looking at a PDF file.

"You now have some choices, and the choice you make is 'Marquee Zoom.' This will cause a + sign in a small circle to display. Hover your mouse over the page and click the mouse. The page(s) will increase in size. You can keep doing this and now it is too large (:.

"What to do?: Hold down the OPTion key and the + changes to a -. Now click away till it is the size you want.

"When you are through sizing the page, you can right click to get the whatchamacallit again. (I think its official name is 'context menu'). To eliminate the + button, you can click on Hand Tool (which will put a hand on the screen). Or click on Select Tool and there will be no special cursor there.

"Note that there are other choices available. Page Display Preferences gives you another menu which controls how the document is displayed. Single Page Continuous is a good choice.

"Hope this helps in making your use of Safari 4 even more enjoyable." Regards: David

Don't Miss Out!

(Safari, Opera and Firefox use different symbols)

The next time you log in to PMUG.us, look in the right corner of the address bar. John Carter makes it easy to keep up with the latest info. He explains,

"That symbol is for subscribing to the RSS feed. When you click on that the first time, your browser will notify you that you are choosing to subscribe to the PMUG RSS feed. There are nine items to choose from (nine PMUG pages). You can subscribe to as many as you like. When the page you have subscribed to changes, your RSS reader will notify you of that change.

"Please note that sometimes a page will be updated and you won't be able to see any change. That's because the changes may be in the code structure itself and not a visible change. I don't know yet if I can keep that kind of update from showing up."

That Pesky White Lettering

If, like me, your eyes grow tired of white lettering over dark backgrounds try two remedies. Enlarge the font (a lot!) by doing Command and + (plus) several times in succession. To go back to the original size do Command and the - (minus.)
Or, have a technicolor laugh as you hold down at the same time these three keys, Control, Option, Command, then touch 8. (Not the keypad 8, I mean the 8 in the line of keys above qwerty, etc.) To toggle back to the original color scheme do these same 4 keys. Try it, you might like it.

Details About Safari Beta

Want a little more technical info on the new Safari Beta? Here's http://daringfireball.net/2009/03/safari_4_public_beta a commentary about one person's likes and dislikes about it. De Prez Jim Hamm comments that it was an interesting read.

Anyone else using the new Safari Beta? How's it going? Personally, I like the Top Sites, and have set up a dozen of my most-frequently visited sites. When something new has been posted it is indicated by a star. You can rearrange the Top Sites. Anyhow, it looks snazzy.

Grab a Screen Capture

In OS 10.5 the screen captures are saved as PNG files by default. However, it’s possible to change them in a variety of formats including JPG and GIF. Here’s what David Passell recommends:
http://www.maclife.com/article/feature/terminal_tips_every_mac_usershould_know The article is "25 Terminal Tips Every Mac User Should Know."

Scroll down to tip #8 which gives directions to change file format for screenshots. (Note: this article continues for 5 more pages.)
After following those directions, David tells us to Quit the Terminal and restart your computer. Then try it out, using CMD-SHIFT-3 for the whole screen or CMD-SHIFT-4 for only the part that you scroll over. You should be able to find Picture n.jpg which launches with Preview. “Worked fine with me,” are his closing remarks. Thanks for the info, David, you’ve been one busy guy today!

Switchers Encouraged to Consider Mini

Know any switchers who want to upgrade from PC to Mac? If they already have monitor, mouse, and keyboard all they need is Mac Mini. David Passell has been happily using his Mac Mini which he describes as "post September 2007 Mini (2 GB RAM) and, except for the Super Drive getting dirty and needing cleaning, has never had any problems." He recommends an article from PC magazine which links to this review, http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2342488,00.asp

More On Safari


Is it time to try it?  With a little time on my hands this afternoon I tracked down a review of Safari http://weblogs.baltimoresun.com/business/appleaday/blog/2009/02/new_version_of_safari_kicks_ap.html

Writer David Zeller explains the features, and closes with a complaint and a remedy.  A reader, Jack, gives the link to reinstall Safari 3, in the event that problems are experienced. http://support.apple.com/downloads/#internet

Now, to try the Safari Beta for myself. . .  

Using Safari Beta

A short review of Safari Beta comes from David Passell. He says he's been using it a lot, and he finds it very smooth and fast. He cautions, "Some of their preselected sites leave tracking cookies.  Primarily it seems to be CNN.com and Monster.com" adding, "Other than that, I like it." He refers us to http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2009/03/03/1235842416419.html  David mentions that he has MacScan that locates, isolates and lets him remove cookies.  

Where On Earth Are Your Friends?

Member Art Gorski sends us a nifty site with a mind-boggling feature: see where your friends are. From this site: http://earthlingsoft.net/Earth Addresser/  when you download the donationware program Earth Addresser it takes addresses from your Mac Address Book, looks up their coordinates on the map and writes that info to a "KLM" file.  Google Earth can open that file to display your friends' places.  And, if you've added photos of your friends to their cards in your Address Book, these photos will appear right on the planet instead of the usual drawing pin.

Do your friends' names appear on everyone else's Google Earth? Art clarifies for us, "It sends only the addresses to Google Earth, just to get latitude and longitude data. You can save the preferences so it stays in Google Earth."
Besides this program the authors Steffen Kamp and Sven-S. Porst list 13 other imaginative software programs on their home page.
No sooner had I emailed Sven that I'd posted about his site than he replied, correcting me that it's "KML" — not "KLM."  He adds, "For some reason that's a common error for that name. Perhaps because of the airline  . . .   Regards, Sven."
Thanks for your eagle eyes!

Really Simple (Nearly)

Perhaps you’re puzzled with RSS, but you’d like to simplify getting news, weather, sports, and the latest stuff.

RSS means Really Simple Syndication, and now a free app, NetNewsWire, aggregates news from sources you choose. And you can link the RSS content on your computer with your iPhone or other mobile reader.

De Prez Jim Hamm alerts us to this very useful app he’s started up with. To get a quick overview of NetNewsWire view a short video at http://www.newsgator.com/individuals/default.aspx   Click on “Video” near the top on the right hand side of the “Welcome” page.

Look at the RSS Learning Center, http://www.newsgator.com/rsslearningcenter/default.aspx and you’ll see why this might be helpful to both individuals and businesses. The link you’ll go to to download this free app is http://www.newsgator.com/INDIVIDUALS/NETNEWSWIRE/

You can subscribe to our PMUG newsletter while our page here is open and then opening NetNewsWire and choosing New Subscription from their menu.  Our URL comes up, and there you are!

Soon you'll find RSS is really simple.