

With the new iNo from Sababa Toys, you can use your iPod’s music collection as the basis of a four-person music trivia game. Most Social Use of an iPod - iPods generally encourage anti-social behavior, but it doesn’t have to be that way. Discounts kick in for licenses purchased for

Buying 1.5 now gets you a free upgrade (and thus $5 discount) for 2.0 when it ships in February. BusySync 1.5 currently costs $19.95 per computer, but the price will rise to $24.95 for version 2.0. It’s a hack, but it’s a nifty one, as Google Calendar is free. With Google Calendar support, you publish a calendar to Google, then other computers subscribe to that Google Calendar.

You might use Google Calendar already, but if not, you can adopt it as a sort of publishing relay to enable synchronizing between a Mac with a private IP address and computers elsewhere on the Internet. The latest version of BusySync – due to ship in February 2008 – skirts that problem by supporting Google Calendar. BusyMac’s limitation is that it can’t work over the Internet without the publishing computer for a given calendar having a publicly reachable IP address. One computer acts as the calendar host, but other Macs with BusySync can have as much access to that calendar as the publisher chooses to offer. BusySync is a tiny server product that runs in the background and lets multiple people share iCal calendars as if they were completely readable and writable over a local network or via the Internet. Most Welcome Fix for Glaring iCal Failing - BusyMac shipped their BusySync software a few months ago, but brought a new feature to Macworld Expo that’s sure to help.

Contributions this year come from Adam Engst, Glenn Fleishman, Tonya Engst, and Rich Mogull. It’s once again time for our annual roundup of all those things at Macworld Expo that caught our attention for one reason or another and deserve to be called out.
