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From: headgap
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Subject: iMac Update November 15, 2001
Date:Thu, November 15, 2001 06:08 PM


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iMac Update
November 15, 2001
Volume 4, Issue 24
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1. Compatibility and Security Soar with AirPort
2. Ready or Not...
3. Art and Science to Go
4. iTunes 2 Quick Tips: Creating an Equalizer Column
5. Mac Games: Age of Empires II
6. Flying High with AirPort
7. Technically Speaking: Ready for iPod and iTunes 2
8. Quick Takes

Read today's issue of iMac Update online:

    http://www.apple.com/enews/2001/11/15enews2.html


1. Compatibility and Security Soar with New AirPort

We've opened the gates.

Now, thanks to our second-generation wireless networking solution,
America Online (AOL) customers can launch into cyberspace with
AirPort.* In fact, AirPort is the very first product of its kind to
offer access to AOL via a wireless local area network.

But AOL connectivity is only the beginning of the new features built
into our all-new AirPort. It also offers:

* Compatibility
- AirPort Card compatibility with Cisco LEAP, a security
method popular in many higher education institutions

* Security
- Support for up to 128-bit password and data encryption
- Integrated firewall prevents unauthorized Internet users
from accessing your private network
- Support for RADIUS, a protocol allowing schools and
businesses to manage user access control lists from a
central location

* Performance
- New antenna provides more uniform reception over 150-foot
coverage area
- Two Ethernet ports--one 10BASE-T and a new 10/100BASE-T port
- Supports up to 50 users simultaneously

The AirPort Base Station also sports a new design. Come take a look:

http://www.apple.com/airport

* Compatible with AOL 5.0, U.S. only.
Wireless Internet access requires AirPort Card, AirPort Base
Station,and Internet access (fees may apply). Some ISPs are not
currently compatible with AirPort.


2. Ready or Not...

Here it comes.

Hard though it may be to believe, Thanksgiving is just a week away,
and in addition to posting some tempting Thanksgiving Day iCards, we
just launched our 2001 Holiday Gift Guide.

We've been making our lists for quite some time now, checking and
rechecking to make certain that we've compiled the best collection
of gifts for the Mac enthusiast you'd like to surprise this holiday
season.

Designed to make it as easy as possible for you to find the perfect
gift for that digital artist, photographer, gamer, music lover, or
cinematographer, the guide offers a wide assortment of software,
hardware, bundles, and accessories. If they use a Mac, you'll be
able to find something perfect just for them.

http://www.apple.com/giftguide/


3. Art and Science to Go

Normally, you don't want the classroom walls to move around on you.
But when the classroom itself has the kind of get up and go that the
Technitorium has, you make allowances--especially when its
curriculum moves students the way it does.

A wireless classroom-on-wheels, the Technitorium brings "a
turbo-powered dose of art and science" to 55 elementary schools in
Arizona's Mesa School District. As teacher Dale Pickering explains,
students visiting the mobile classroom create "cyberholograms," and
in the process master many skills--critical thinking, logical
sequencing, visual interpretation.

"We cover how the human eye perceives objects--its structure, and
the way light with additive colors is mixed and created. In
addition, since students are working in pairs, they learn about
collaboration and sharing." And...they have a blast.

http://www.apple.com/education/k12/imagine/technitorium/index.html


4. iTunes 2 Quick Tips: Creating an Equalizer Column

You may have heard by now that iTunes 2--which is now available for
download--includes a great 10-band equalizer with 22 presets.

But did you know that you could tell iTunes 2 to display an
Equalizer column and then set Equalizer preferences for each song in
a playlist?

It's true. And it's easy to do. Simply select one of your
playlists to have iTunes display all of the songs in the list.
Then pull down the Edit menu and choose "View options." Click the
check box next to Equalizer and click OK.

iTunes will add an Equalizer column and add a drop-down menu in each
row of your playlist, making it easy for you to assign a preset to
each title in your list.

Like to learn more about iTunes 2?

http://www.apple.com/itunes/


5. Mac Games: Age of Empires II

If we could take you back to the fifth century, do you think you
could build an empire to rival the Roman, Byzantium, or Ottoman
empires?

No, we don't have a time machine, but we do have Age of Empires II:
Gold Edition. Available now for your Macintosh computer, AOE II lets
you choose one of 18 civilizations--from the Aztecs to the
Vikings--and gives you the chance to mold it into a mighty empire
over the course of 1000 years.

But your opponents, whether human or electronic in origin, will also
be hard at work amassing their own armies and resources. So you'll
need to temper brute force with diplomacy if you want to rule the
world.

http://www.apple.com/games/articles/2001/09/ageofempires2/


6. Flying High with AirPort

When Galen Wright comes in for a landing, it's often on a park
bench, a coffee house stool, or a seat at the blues club.

That's where the creative director at Emma (an up-and-coming West
Coast ad agency) often goes to clear his head, collect his thoughts,
get away from office mayhem, get some serious work done. And
where he depends on AirPort to keep him in touch with his network.

"At Starbucks across the street," says Wright, "I have complete
access to our own extranet. I can download TV commercials, rough
edits, print ads and storyboards. We post those for client approval,
so I can be talking on my cell to a client while I'm reviewing work
right there in the coffee shop. It's amazing."

How does AirPort help Emma compete effectively? "We can be more
responsive," Wright says. "AirPort helps us do that."

http://www.apple.com/hotnews/articles/2001/10/emma/


7. Technically Speaking: Ready for iPod and iTunes 2

We posted iTunes 2 nearly two weeks ago, and iPod began appearing on
store shelves on November 10, so many of you are already discovering
the new features in iTunes 2 and taking iPod--and your music
collection--wherever you go.

So we thought you'd like to know that if you have any questions, we
have quite a collection of articles available in our Knowledge Base.

Interested in reading about the Sound Enhancer in iTunes 2? How to
take advantage of the 20 preset equalizer settings? How to share
iTunes libraries between Mac OS 9 and Mac OS X? Then visit our
iTunes Support page.

http://www.info.apple.com/usen/itunes/

Or visit the iPod Support page
<http://www.info.apple.com/usen/ipod/>. You'll find the iPod FAQ,
information about iPod accessories, and directions for joining an
iPod discussion group.

http://www.apple.com/support


8. Quick Takes

"The latest iBook," one reads in CNNMoney's "Best of the New"
roundup, "may well be the best all-around computer Apple has ever
made."

http://money.cnn.com/best/best01/2.html#6


iTunes 2, says Jim Heid, "Is the Maestro Behind iPod." And he sings
its praises--and waxes enthusiastic about iPod, too--in this
discussion of the musical duo in his recent article for the Los
Angeles Times.

http://www.apple.com/enews/quicktakes/maestro.html


And then there's PC Magazine's Troy Dreier. "Leave it to Apple," he
says, "to come out with the world's coolest MP3 player. Flash an
Apple iPod around and your friends will be begging to play with it."

http://www.pcmag.com/article/0,2997,s%253D1470%2526a%253D17994,00.asp


BusinessWeek Online's Charles Haddad writes about Mac OS X, "It's
the most stable personal computer operating system I've ever seen.
Not once in eight months of use has it crashed on me. Not once."

http://www.businessweek.com/bwdaily/dnflash/nov2001/nf2001117_3525.htm


"No one else has this much storage in a package this small," writes
Chris Taylor in TIME magazine. "Never has digital music been this
well organized. The trackwheel on the front scrolls quickly and
precisely through all your songs, arranged by title or by artist,
and the display is crisp and readable. When I gave the iPod to my
techno-suspicious parents, they figured out how to select and play
in under a minute. Why can't all gadgets be like that?"

http://www.onmagazine.com/on-mag/reviews/article/0,9985,183107,00.html


We wish you all a happy and healthy Thanksgiving.

Thank you for reading this issue of iMac Update. Look for your
next issue on Thursday, November 29.


iMac Update is a free electronic newsletter from Apple published
every other week.

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Event dates are subject to change. Some products, programs, or
promotions are not available outside the U.S. Visit your local Apple
site or call your local authorized Apple reseller for more
information. Prices are estimated retail prices and are listed in
U.S. dollars. Product specifications are subject to change.

Copyright 2001 Apple Computer, Inc. All rights reserved. Apple
permits reproduction of the contents of Apple eNews for publicity
and promotional purposes. AirPort, Apple, iBook, iMac, Mac, and
Macintosh are registered trademarks, and iPod, and iTunes are
trademarks of Apple Computer, Inc. Other product and company names
mentioned herein may be trademarks of their respective companies.
Mention of third-party products is for informational purposes only
and constitutes neither a recommendation nor an endorsement.








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