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More Apple TV hacks. From the MAKE blog.
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Another hack from the MAKE blog.
links for 2007-04-04
Posted on April 3rd, 2007 at 11:18 pm · No Comments
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Links Worth Following
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Excel Book Done
Posted on April 3rd, 2007 at 5:30 pm · No Comments
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Excel Books
That’s book number 68.
I put the finishing touches on Microsoft Office Excel 2007: Visual QuickStart Guide. It’s my 68th book (I just counted) and right now, I feel as if I wrote them all yesterday.
Okay, so not that tired.
I had some trouble with this book. First, there was the beta software situation. Not only did I have to work with the Office 2007 beta, but I had to run it on the Vista beta. Double Microsoft Windows betas for a person who usually works on a Mac! You can imagine my concern.
But everything went pretty smoothly with that and I’ve been using release versions since January, so I know everything in the book is based on the final software.
Motivation slowed me down a bit in the middle of the project. I think I really need an editor cracking a whip over my head to get me to work at my old pace. These days, I’d rather fly than write about Excel. (Can you imagine?) The thing that snapped me out of it was money. If I don’t make milestones, my publisher does not send checks. Although Flying M Air is now paying all of its own bills — thank heaven; you should see some of those bills! — it’s not paying my bills. If I don’t write, I don’t eat. And since I like to eat, I became motivated.
Of course, the killer was my February hard disk crash and the two weeks it took me to get everything back to normal here. What a productivity killer! But it taught me a new valuable lesson about backups — you think I would have learned the last two times — and my old dual G5 is still running, now with a new hard disk to go with last year’s new motherboard. Sheesh. (Now you know why I bought AppleCare for my MacBook Pro.)
I churned through the last few chapters relatively quickly, anxious to meet deadlines tied to promotional opportunities. (I’m not sure of those promos really exist or if my editor has learned to tell me about fantasy promos to get me to work faster. I wouldn’t blame her if she made it up.) I had first pass files done last week and spent the past few days finalizing files based on edits. Today, after fooling around a bit — I’m the queen of procrastination — I laid out the index, created an ad for the book’s companion Web site, and turned it all in. The e-mail message I sent to my editor said:
I think I’m done. Can you ask them to send that final check? (Still waiting for the last one, too.)
The book weighs in at 360 pages, which is about the same as the last edition. It’s got the new VQS cover design. It lists for $21.99, but you can buy it from Amazon.com for $14.95 right now, which is 32% off. (Not a bad deal.) It should be in stores by April 20 or thereabouts.
Meanwhile, life goes on.
Tomorrow, I have to take my helicopter in to the avionics shop in Mesa to see if they can figure out why my radio isn’t working right. I have a meeting with a marketing guy down there at 10 AM. Then a tour of Phoenix for a man and his daughter at 2. Somewhere in between, I’ll have lunch with Mike, who has been away for the past few days. Then a flight home.
Friday I get started on my next book. Those of you who know me should know what that is.
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Apple Unveils Higher Quality DRM-Free Music on the iTunes Store
Posted on April 3rd, 2007 at 5:48 am · No Comments
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Mac OS Books
An Apple Press release brings good news.
In January 2007, I whined in my article, “CDs vs. Downloads” about the inconvenience of dealing with DRM in my music. I said that I’d gotten to the point where I’d rather just buy a CD and rip it to iTunes than buy from the iTunes music store. I didn’t like the restrictions Apple put on the music to make the music industry happy.
Steve Jobs later wrote an essay about the DRM situation “Thoughts on Music,” in which he proposed an end to DRM for downloaded music.
Was he preparing us for Apple’s latest announcement?
From Apple Unveils Higher Quality DRM-Free Music on the iTunes Store on Apple.com:
Apple® today announced that EMI Music’s entire digital catalog of music will be available for purchase DRM-free (without digital rights management) from the iTunes® Store (www.itunes.com) worldwide in May. DRM-free tracks from EMI will be offered at higher quality 256 kbps AAC encoding, resulting in audio quality indistinguishable from the original recording, for just $1.29 per song. In addition, iTunes customers will be able to easily upgrade their entire library of all previously purchased EMI content to the higher quality DRM-free versions for just 30 cents a song. iTunes will continue to offer its entire catalog, currently over five million songs, in the same versions as today—128 kbps AAC encoding with DRM—at the same price of 99 cents per song, alongside DRM-free higher quality versions when available.
Holy cow! Not only does this make the iTunes Music Store a more attractive place to buy music, but it’s a great way to suck another 30¢ per EMI song sold from previous customers. Idiots like me who have downloaded over 500 songs since the iTunes Music Store went online years ago. (That’s got to do good things for my Apple stock.)
The big question now is this: will the other music publishers follow suit? Or will they attempt to push through the Microsoft model — you know, the one where Microsoft pays them for every Zune sold?
It should be interesting to watch how this develops.
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