Mon - July 11, 2005
Latest news: iChat still doesn't work
Must.. keep.. calm.
Apple's iChat AV 3.0 - the version that shipped with
Tiger - is still refusing to work for me. I can't connect to other Tiger users
in Ireland or New Zealand, nor Panther users in the US (in other words, everyone
I know). I can however connect to the test Apple iChat servers, and so can
everyone else. So my router and ISP are not to
blame.Speaking of which, I'm tired of
being told on the Apple support boards that the problems with iChat are due to
MY firewall settings, or MY router, or MY Internet Service Provider. Listen
guys, it's not my fault - iChat is
broken.The facts are
these:1. Before Tiger was installed,
iChat worked. I could connect to anyone.2.
After Tiger was installed, iChat stopped working. I can't connect to
anyone.To me, that doesn't mean my
router or ISP suddenly went crazy at EXACTLY THE SAME TIME as I installed Tiger.
It means the Tiger version of iChat is broken. It's that simple. It's a buggy
application.ThinkSecret
reported today that the 10.4.2 Mac OS update includes iChat improvements, and
has been seeded to developers.For the
love of all that's holy, I hope that it's released soon and that it fixes iChat.
It's intolerable that iChat doesn't work. I've bought three Macs - for me and my
relatives - precisely because iChat is the best video conferencing solution
available. Don't make me a liar, Apple!
Posted at 10:17 PM
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Sat
- July 9, 2005
10.4.2 where art thou?
Apple continues to work on Mac OS Update,
rumoured to include iChat fixes.
I'm still having terrible trouble with iChat AV
after the Tiger update, and I'm not alone. AppleInsider
reports that the long-awaited Mac OS Update version 10.4.2 is nearing
completion, and rather than a simple patch it is now a major update covering
many, many features. Not only is iChat in for some repairs (hurrah!), but
Tiger's Widgets are getting an improvement management utility to improve ease of
use and security. Originally rumoured
to be released last month, pre-release editions of 10.4.2 continue to be sent
out for testing to developers. Maybe this week it'll be ready? huh? huh? Pretty
please?
Posted at 09:10 AM
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Wed - June 15, 2005
Tiger and iChat - just plain broken?
Now it's starting to annoy
me.
I tried to use iChat video with a friend on a
Panther system this evening, and it just wouldn't connect. Apparently I wasn't
responding (I was. Loudly at times). We had to give up in the end.
I think using iChat under Tiger
stopped working around the 10.4.1 timeframe, and darn annoying it is too. And
it's not just me - lots of Tiger users have been having the same issues. Here's
a comment from someone (who just happens to be in my old home
country) who has the same issues. There are some home remedies (which didn't
work for me) that you might try. This site has some
good suggestions on setting up ports on your Firewall and Router.
You can check if this is your problem just by temporarily turning off your
Firewall ( from System Preferences / Sharing) and by using your Router to put
your Mac in the DMZ (see your Router instructions for details). This didn't help
me. My iChat was working perfectly until Tiger and the last OS update came
along.The bottom line is that Tiger's
iChat is broken, Apple knows it, and apparently they will
fix it soon. Hopefully with OS 10.4.2, and I'm hoping, very soon
indeed.
Posted at 10:22 PM
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Sun - June 12, 2005
Sometimes it works..
.. and sometimes it doesn't. Connections
problems with iChat
Today, during my weekly video-conference call to the
UK, iChat stopped working. In fact, it stopped working before my weekly call -
it just wouldn't connect. The other party was told I wasn't responding, and I
was told the other party wasn't responding. And yet the exact same set-up worked
perfectly the previous weekend. Neither network had changed, but iChat stopped
working.
Obviously,
something,
somewhere
must have changed, so it was time to experiment. The "not responding" part made
me think of a router not forwarding information to certain ports, so I set my
home network router to put my iMac in a DMZ - in other words, the router would
pass everything no matter what. I then talked the other party into doing the
same.
No
difference.
Then I tried limiting the
bandwidth, audio-only calls, turning off the Mac OSX Firewall - you name it, I
tried it.
Disappointed at this stage, I
warned them to disable their DMZ setting before switching off, and amazingly
they decided to try once more to establish a connection and boom! - it
worked.
I can't see any logic to this,
other than maybe a bug in the router (a Linksys WAG54G) that needs an option
changed to reset itself, but anyway, it worked. Maybe if you are having problems
connecting, turn on and off the DMZ options on your router and hope for the
best.
Also, keep your eyes peeled for
the next Mac OS update to 10.4.2. Rumour sites have this one down for a hefty
update that includes serious enhancements to iChat as well as other general OS
features. It should be out very soon. Perhaps even this coming
week.
Let's hope it improves the
connection reliability with petulant routers.
Posted at 01:21 PM
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Sun - June 5, 2005
Mac Broadband in the UK - a Sorry Tale
Poor support options for UK broadband
users
I use iChat mainly to talk to relatives in the UK.
They use Wanadoo (formerly Freeserve) for
their broadband needs. I helped set up their accounts, and they all use the
rather ugly and horrible Wanadoo USB-based DSL modem. Yes, USB. Not Ethernet. In
the UK and Europe using USB-based DSL modems seems quite common. Personally I
hate USB modems, as they are less flexible than a good, sensible Ethernet based
one, and they rely on having the right drivers. Also, the Wanadoo one a SpeedTouch 330 and
looked like an ugly, dead green
fish.Wanadoo didn't officially
completely support Mac OS X , but they had a driver for their SpeedTouch USB
modem for downloading, and although rather clunky at times, it
worked.That is, it used to work. Once
Tiger was installed, suddenly everything stopped working. The SpeedTouch drivers
don't work under Tiger, and Wanadoo had no answer for how to get the Mac online
again.When I contacted them, Wanadoo
initially told me it should work fine. So I check the Apple Support forums and
of course, dozens and dozens of users had the same issue: once Tiger was
installed, it stopped working. The simple fact of the matter was that SpeedTouch
USB modems aren't supported under Tiger, and there is no driver
available.I told Wanadoo that they
were wrong about the Mac working, and they more or less just shrugged. Great
customer support. There only suggestion was to use their dial-up service. And
dial-up, as you recall, is SLOW and doesn't support iChat
video.I tracked down the SpeedTouch
drivers, and apparently there will be an update for Tiger. In July. That's just
amazing. I can't believe that Wanadoo just discounted every new Mac and updated
Mac customer they have. Way to
go.Anyway, I wasn't prepared to not
see my relatives until July, so I bought a WAG54G Linksys wireless-DSL modem and an
Airport Extreme card, and had it sent to them. Unfortunately the only place I
could order from was Amazon.co.uk , who are the
slowest and most incompetent online retailer I've ever used - matched only in
slowness by ParcelForce their so-called
"delivery" service (are you detecting a note of bitterness about Amazon.co.uk
and ParcelForce? Good. That is my intension - they completely screwed up last
Christmas for me, so I try very, very hard never to use them unless I absolutely
have to). Amazon.com I like. Amazon.co.uk I
do not like at all. It's hard to believe they are parts of the same
company.Phew. Ok, that was a rant.
Any, I then had an enjoyable weekend talking the relatives through the install.
The hardest part was setting up the DSL-modem part of the WAG54G, as the default
settings didn't work, and of course, Wanadoo has no information on the matter
because they only support their SpeedTouch and a rather bizarre combined
VoIP/Wireless solution which is going to get its ass kicked by Vonage.
So, luckily I'd already set up another
relative with a PC to use the WAG54G, and I was able to use the Linksys remote
access mode to log into their system, and copy their settings. I then talked
through the setting up of the new modem, and lo - it
worked.Conclusion: Mac users think
carefully before using Wanadoo. (And Amazon.co.uk/ParcelForce
suck.)
Posted at 11:03 AM
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Dashboard widgets for iChat
Adding features to iChat
I'm not entire sure how useful Tiger's new
Dashboard Widgets might be to an iChat user - mostly because the Dashboard view
is hidden until you press a key - but that hasn't stopped developers from
creating some iChat-themed utilities. Check out Locket, which
displays a nice, old-fashioned picture of your favourite iChat
contact.I'm more interested in linking
Automator to iChat, to make it easier to create "intelligent" automated iChat
clients, but that doesn't seem possible at the moment.
Posted at 10:41 AM
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Use MSN Messenger with iChat
Why use two clients when one will
do?
This is an amazingly cool trick, which I had no idea
was possible. Because the new iChat supports Jabber, it's possible to configure
it to use MSN Messenger. So instead of having to have two clients open - one for
iChat, one for MSN - you can keep both sets of buddies present in one client:
iChat. Check it out on the All
Forces blog.
Posted at 10:17 AM
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Skype Adds Video
Skype adds video - but not for
you.
Have you used Skype? It's very neat. It's a VoIP
client - in other words, it does iChat style voice calling - but it is
cross-platform. Skype running on your Mac can call Skype running on your
friend's PC. In fact, you can even get Skype for Pocket PCs, which means I can
walk around my house with my WiFi enabled iMate
JAM Pocket PC using it like a wireless phone. That is cool
(although I know in a few years I'll look back and laugh at how clumsy that is).
And Skype is free, which is good. And if you pay, you can all regular phones and
regular phones can call you - so you can save money calling friends overseas.
What with Skype, iChat and Vonage, my telephone bill has
never been so low.Anyway, Skype have
teamed up with Dialcom to launch Video4Skype, which takes the
form of a plug-in that adds video conferencing. The quality doesn't seem to
quite be up to iChat's standard, but it looks better than MSN Instant Messenger,
which up until now has been the best of the Windows based
solutions.There's no Mac version, but
it's promising. If they add a video plug-in for Mac, it would be nicer than the
very ropey iChat to AIM system that we're forced to use at the moment to talk to
PC buddies.See the ever-gadgedty Engadget
for more details.
Posted at 10:08 AM
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Tiger and iChat
What's new? A lot.
After a little time away from updating this site,
I'm back. And I've brought Tiger with me.
As dedicated Mac fans, you'll no doubt
be aware of Tiger - the update to Mac OS X, also going under the name 10.4. In
fact, already there is an update to 10.4.1 so make sure to run a Software Update
if you haven't already.
Tiger brings a
new version of iChat, and also a new version of QuickTime - the mechanism that
compresses and displays the video. The end result is an improvement in quality.
Tiger also adds the ability for up to four people to video-chat at once, and
dozens to take part in voice-only calls. There are other changes too - Jabber is
now supported as a connection standard (adding to AIM - the default- and Bonjour
- the renamed Rendezvous protocol for local networks). Jabber means you can
text-chat with more buddies and still use iChat, so that's nice. There are a few
little tweaks as well - better buddy list handing, better handing of Away
messages, and the ability let iTunes update the status message with the
currently played song (which can be
embarrassing).
My experiences with
Tiger's new iChat have been good - in that it works much as before. I've not had
any connection issues, and the picture quality seems better (although that could
be my imagination). I've read reports of other people having problems with
connections not working, and bandwidth warnings. Rumour sites point to the next
Mac OS update (10.4.2) having some substantial work to iChat to address
these.
Although I've an iMac G5 and a
Mac Mini sitting side by side, I've not managed to connect them both to a third
party to test the 3 or 4 person at once chat scenario. I'm guessing that the
second Mac notices that all the DSL bandwidth is taken up by the first, and
doesn't even try to connect.
Overall, I
continue to be impressed with iChat, and use it weekly. I'm not sure it alone is
worth the price of the Tiger update, but it certainly adds to it.
Posted at 09:59 AM
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Tue - February 1, 2005
iPod Playlists
In a slight diversion from
video-conferencing, some tips on iTunes Playlists
So you have a Mac - and that means you probably have
and use iTunes. I adore iTunes, its simplicity, its integration - and above all
the flexibility of its playlists. Playlists not only contain the songs you drag
into them, but they can be "smart" in the sense that iTunes decides what goes
into them. You can create a playlist that contains only the tunes you haven't
listened too before, for example. Or only those you have rated five stars. Or U2
songs over five minutes. The options are almost
endless.If you have an iPod, you might
like to experiment with playlists in order to create a good mix of music for
when you are on the move. I happen to like the Random selection features (rather
like the iPod Shuffle's built-in randomizer). However, the problem with random
playlists is that they don't refresh themselves - they remain the same every
time. That is, unless you refresh them either manually, or using a cunning
AppleScript, like the one I've written about here: Create Random
Playlists.Here are some
other great sources of Playlist
information:SmartPlaylists.com - site of useful
playlist ideas Bactroid.net - Managing your
iPod with Smart Playlists Dummies
Guide to Playlists CodePoetry
- DIY radio station
Posted at 10:29 PM
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Wed - January 12, 2005
New Mac Ideal for VideoConferencing
The Mac Mini released
It seems that everyone has been asking Apple for a
low-priced, entry level Mac. And finally, the Mac mini is here. This
tiny little computer is designed to be dropped into the space where your aging
old PC sits, crawling with viruses and malware. Plug in your existing USB
keyboard and mouse, and hook up your old monitor, and you have a very neat, not
too slow Mac OS X computer ready to
go.And the Mac mini is perfect (well
almost) for video conferencing. The FireWire socket means you can hook up an
iSight, and the included iChat AV will run very nicely on that 1.25 or 1.42Mhz
G4. This makes it a perfect computer for, say, your parents so you can update
that weekend telephone conversation into a great video experience, and not have
to provide Windows customer support every other
week.The only flaw in my view is the
lack of an audio input, so you really need either a webcam with a built-in
microphone (like the iSight), or a USB Audio In port. It seems a little mean of
Apple to drop that input, but till, $500 for a G4 Mac? That's the best Apple
deal ever. I hope to get one soon, and get it configured and packed off to my
own mother.
Posted at 07:33 PM
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Thu - January 6, 2005
Happy New Year
2005: year of the gadget?
Best wishes for the new year, and don't forget to
check out the news from the MacWorld Expo in San Francisco. Rumours abound on
everything from new Powerbooks, new $500 iMacs, new iPods, new iLife
applications and new hardware for GarageBand. If even one half of the rumours is
true, this is going to be one heck of a show: and I for one have my Credit Card
standing by. A $500 iMac (the price is low because no monitor is included) would
be perfect for a web server, or for my mother to use as a home computer and
iChatAV station. Imagine a tiny little Mac connected to your television: the
applications are very exciting. Fingers crossed!
Posted at 05:25 PM
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Mon - December
20, 2004
iSight as a Nanny / Security Cam?
Sure you can do it. But there's a better
way.
This question crops up a lot - can I use an iSight
as a Nanny Cam, or as a security camera? And the answer is - sure you can. There
are plenty of articles on the Web - such as this
MacWorld piece - on setting up a spare Mac with an iSight to do
just that.Well, I don't know about
you, but I'm not lucky enough to have a "spare" Mac that has the minimum specs
required to run iChat with an iSight. Also, running iChat requires someone to
answer at the other end, and although you can use AppleScripts to detect and
answer an incoming call, it's not terribly
reliable.So if, like me, you don't
have a spare Mac but you do have an Airport network in your house, what are the
alternatives? Well, perhaps you haven't been checking out the gadgets aisle in
your local CompUSA for a while, but webcams that come complete with built-in
wireless networking-based webservers are now available for abut the same price
as an iSight. So, instead of getting that second iSight, and tying up a
perfectly good Mac to drive it, try looking out for a Linksys WVC54G Wireless-G
Internet video camera, or a D-Link DCS-1000W 802.11b Wireless Webcam. Amazon
have a whole bunch of them, starting from about $100. Read the small print
carefully to see if they support video streaming - some of the cheaper ones will
only serve up still images. Even then,
these solutions may be too high-tech. If you don't REQUIRE the video to be
streamed over a network, there are plenty of wireless video cameras (for
example, the X10
ones) that will send a live picture to your TV set. Sometimes expensive
technology isn't necessarily the best solution!
Posted at 10:50 AM
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Holiday Treats for Mac Lovers
I'll have that, and that, and one of
those...
O'Grady's
PowerPage has a great list of gadgets and gizmos for Mac users.
Treat someone! Or yourself.
Posted at 10:36 AM
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Sat
- December
18, 2004
New Domain: www.applechat.info
Easier way to remember this site
address.
You can now reach this site by entering
"http://www.applechat.info" into your browser.
Posted at 03:23 PM
Read More
Merry Christmas!
Why is an iSight better than a cheap webcam?
Free 60 Day Trial for .Mac
Careful with that magnet, Eugene
iChat/iSight Resource
Cameras and Image Quality
iSight on an iMac G5
Be a News Anchorperson
iSight iMac G5 Mounting Confusion
Software Update
No more iChat for Jaguar
Apple's new iMac
More rumors on iSight 2
101 Uses for Apple IChat
iChat Tips
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Published On: Jul 11, 2005 10:18 PM
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