My daughter Autumn, who teaches 4th Grade up in the Burlington School system, had been juggling that with raising three kids and drumming and dancing in the Jeh Kulu dance company plus going to school to earn her Masters! She graduates from Bennington College on Saturday and proud mom and dad will be riding down to southern Vermont on their motorcycles to watch her receive her diploma.

Thank you for reading this issue of Kibbles & Bytes!

Your Kibbles & Bytes Team,
Don, Kali, Dawn and Mike

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  • _Dear Friends,_

    I think I like the 4th of July falling on a Wednesday. It breaks up the holiday week nicely. There were storms in the forecast and I was a little apprehensive as I jumped on board the electric motorcycle. We finished the bike on Tuesday night and I drove it from Steve Miracle’s shop in Montpelier to Small Dog in Waitsfield. It is a bit underpowered right now, but we are working on solutions to that. (It was plenty fast for the parade which rolls at a snail’s pace anyway.)

    I don’t know if the bike garnered that much attention, though–only the most observant could look past Hammerhead in the sidecar to notice the huge bank of batteries and lack of sound from the motorcycle. As I was leaving the parade, I had to use my horn to let people know I was behind them as the bike is so quiet I can sneak up on them!

    The Warren 4th of July parade was awesome again and we had a bunch of friends drop by for strawberry daiquiris and mountain croquet afterwards. The rain held off and we ended up just getting some showers after dark. Other parts of Vermont were harder hit by storms, though.

    We had a successful eWaste Recycling Event down in Rutland last Saturday with almost 500 cars dropping off waste. It was great to talk to customers from Vermont’s 2nd largest city. I want to thank the town’s leaders for all of their help and of course, Apple, for providing the recycling services.

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  • Speed Up Apple Mail

    Lately, I’ve been noticing that my email was being very sluggish and it seemed to take forever to move from one email message or inbox to another. I was getting frustrated because I do much of my work in Mail and performance like that not only slows me down, but each time I saw that spinning beach ball, I wanted to go out for a cup of coffee (or abandon my computer for my iPad).

    So, I did a little research and with the size of my mailboxes and number of messages I have, my index file had grown to be quite large and needed to be rebuilt. There are terminal commands that will do this for you, but what worked for me was the following:

    * Find the index file
    * Drag it to the desktop (which forces Mail to make a new one)

    Sounds pretty easy, right? Well, Apple in its wisdom decided to hide the Library folder within your user account in Lion, so finding that index file can be a bit tricky.

    There are two options to expose your Library: temporarily and permanently. The easiest way to do that temporarily is to hold down the ‘Option’ key in Finder and select ‘Library’ from the ‘Go’ menu. To permanently expose the library, you need to launch Terminal and enter the following command to show or hide the directory:

    chflags nohidden ~/Library/

    The users’ Library folder will immediately become visible. __(Reverting this back to the standard Lion invisible setting is simple, too: chflags hidden ~/Library)__

    Once you have made the Library directory available, quit Mail and go into the ‘Mail’ folder, find the ‘MailData’ folder and then drag the ‘Envelope Index’ file to your desktop. Then, simply launch Mail and it will tell you you need to “import” your messages. In the process, it creates a new ‘Envelope Index’ file in your Library.

    My index went from over 250MB to under 75MB and now Mail works speedily again; no more beach balls and no more frustration!

  • MAC TREAT #184: Create Ultra-Compatible Mail Signatures

    Recently my husband became aware of a minor quirk related to Apple Mail and how its sent messages may render in other programs (such as Microsoft Outlook).

    For business emails, many of us utilize Signatures in Mail to give us a professional signature at the bottom. However, he discovered (via a recipient of one of his emails) that his signature didn’t look quite as he intended on the other end: the fonts rendered much larger and thus, didn’t have the professional feel he was going for.

    It turns out that Apple uses “*WebKit*”:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WebKit in Mail that Outlook for Windows doesn’t seem to like, and thus, enlarges the font dramatically.

    If you use Mail for business email and you send to largely PC-based clients, you may want to consider this solution:

    * Make a signature in Mail and save
    * Close Mail
    * In Finder, under the Go menu, press Option and navigate to [Your User Library] > Mail > V2 > Mail Data > Signatures*
    * Open webarchive signature file in Text Edit (or HTML editor)
    * Make it how you want it and save (you will be asked if you want to overwrite–say yes)

    Then open Mail again and your ultra-compatible signature will be intact. (If you have a willing test recipient using Outlook on a PC, send it out and verify that it looks the way you intended.) Note that a drawback of this is that you won’t be able to use an image in your signature.

    __*As Don mentions also in his article below, you can temporarily show your user Library by pressing the Option key; keep reading for a permanent option as well!__