MacDirectory Magazine

Fall-Winter 2010 (#43)

MacDirectory magazine is the premiere creative lifestyle magazine for Apple enthusiasts featuring interviews, in-depth tech reviews, Apple news, insights, latest Apple patents, apps, market analysis, entertainment and more.

Issue link: https://digital.macdirectory.com/i/4631

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140 MacDirectory COVER STORY Low-impact Norton protection for both Mac and PC. Norton has been listening to user complaints that Antivirus and Internet Protection utilities drag down system performance too much. The latest Norton Internet Security for Mac and PC, 2009 version, represents a dramatic advance on previous versions and Norton deserves great credit for achieving superb protection without noticeable system impact. It took decades to get it this good, but they have finally done it. Why do Mac users need AV/Security when attacks on Macs are so few and far between? Two reasons: anyone working with Bootcamp, Parallels, or similar, is subject to crippling viruses; and any_ Mac user can unwittingly transmit viruses to PC users via e-mail. Norton makes sure no Mac user will ever be the bad guy. Oxford English Dictionary, 2nd edition, version 4 Oxford University Press publishes the most important as well as the most enjoyable English dictionary in the world, the Oxford English Dictionary, or OED. Often called the single greatest work of scholarship in the English language, it has been available on CD since the early 1990s. Unfortunately, there hasn't been a Mac version for some time. This year, the full OED (more than 24 huge volumes in print) is available in a dual platform version for Mac and Windows — with all the latest definitions from the ongoing OED project. If you have one life to live, live it with the full version of the OED. Less expensive dictionaries define the word. The OED defines the word's universe, thanks to the fascinating quotations it uses to illustrate each definition. MacSpeech The oft-awarded MacSpeech Dictate is the preeminent speech recognition program for the Mac, sharing technology with its equally esteemed Windows sister, Dragon Naturally Speaking. Together, they are the ultimate in speech recognition. On a well-equipped contemporary computer, these programs can recognize your speech at up to 120 words per minute, which is about twice as fast as a very competent typist can type. Not only will they transcribe dictation, but you can run your entire computer with speech commands. MacSpeech 1.5 is more accurate than ever, and this year's new MacSpeech Dictate Legal brings an additional vocabulary of 30,000 words specifically for the legal profession. If you're still on a G4, MacSpeech is one of the best reasons to update to an Intel Mac. PC Programs worth running Windows on your Mac These are the Windows programs you must have — and which are made possible for Mac owners by BootCamp and enjoyable by Parallels and VMware. The most important is dtSearch. This is a professional quality search program that will find more things faster than any other, including Apple's Find and Spotlight and the improved search in Windows. Although dtSearch will find a lot more than text, text is its speciality. It truly will find material no other search engine can locate. Not only that, but dtSearch is always much faster than any other find feature. We wouldn't want to live without it. Other Windows products so good they deserve an award in a Mac magazine include the entire Norton range (including the Mac/PC Internet and AV Suite and the PC-only Norton Utilities and Internet- based backup), Scooter Software's Beyond Compare 3 (the best file- comparison/computer synchronization program on any platform) and Dragon Naturally Speaking for voice recognition. Internet's most unusual music streaming site If you can believe the newspapers, downloading illegal music and videos is down, but music streaming is up. One of the most intriguing music streaming sites, , was recently chronicled by the New Yorker. It features mostly classical music from the 1930s to the 1950s, with a good dose of classic jazz and blues and the best Christmas albums ever. What sets it apart is the superb sound restoration that comes from its founder, Alex Rose. Give him a dreadful, crackly broadcast from the 1930s, and he'll give you back something that almost sounds as if it were recorded yesterday.

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