- Microsoft
- Fetch Softworks
- Readers Like You!
- VMware
- Web Crossing
- Mark/Space, Inc.
- Bare Bones Software
Most Popular Articles
- Five iTunes 7.7.1 Bug Fixes Detailed (31 Jul 2008)
- MobileMe Mail and Gmail Go Down Simultaneously (11 Aug 2008)
- DNS Clients Have Small Vector of Risk after Patch (01 Aug 2008)
- Apple Finally Fixes DNS Flaw and ARDAgent Vulnerability (01 Aug 2008)
Recent TidBITS Talk Discussions
- Airport Extreme Disk Problem (1 message)
- iPhone Apps That Go Beyond Entertainment (7 messages)
- Odysseus, "Eudora style email client" (43 messages)
- Problems with Eudora on OSX 10.5 (Leopard)? (46 messages)
Published in TidBITS 769. Subscribe today to receive TidBITS in email every Monday.
- Timbuktu Pro 8.0 Finally Adds Encryption
- Stream Anything to an AirPort Express Using Airfoil
- Office 2004 for Mac 11.1.1 Update Improves Stability
- LinkBack Brings Back Data Linking
- Mac OS X Window Behavior
- Why DRM Offends the Sensibilities
- Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk/07-Mar-05
Two-Fingered Blackout PowerBook Dropping
I asked Apple to loan me a new PowerBook so I could test first-hand the hardware features they added in the latest refresh a few weeks ago: the scrolling trackpad, the Sudden Motion Sensor for hard drive protection, and increased backlighting for the keyboard. You can read about these features in Apple's marketing materials, but it's nice to test them first hand.
<http://www.apple.com/powerbook/>
Using the scrolling trackpad is more natural than it may sound. You use two fingers to gesture across the trackpad to simulate a mouse's scroll wheel, which works horizontally as well as vertically; the sensor has no trouble telling the difference between one finger or two. (I've been waiting since college for 3D gestural recognition; a scholar-in-resident spent a year working on that, but obviously we're not there yet.)
Apple says the keyboard backlighting is up to 10 times brighter than in the previous models, and, man, are they right. In a fully darkened room in the back of my office, I kept hitting the brighter-backlight function key and the room got brighter and brighter. It's so bright, in fact, you'll set it below maximum for most situations.
As for the Sudden Motion Sensor, which detects quick movement and locks the hard drive heads, you may ask, did I drop the PowerBook from a great height? Hey, this is a loaner, and I'm responsible for returning it intact. So, no. But I did shake it and drop it in my hands, and it surely did pause and restart the drive without a skip. For a more entertaining test of the Sudden Motion Sensor, see Amit Singh's exploration of the sensor's capabilities, including software that adapts to the PowerBook's position (such as a self-adjusting window that stabilizes itself according to how the laptop is tilted).
<http://www.kernelthread.com/software/ams/>
VMware Fusion. The most seamless way to run Windows on your Mac.Backed by nearly a decade of proven virtualization technology.
Try VMware Fusion today for free, or order online for only $79.
Visit: <http://www.tidbits.com/about/support/vmware-fusion.html>






