Thursday, July 27th, 2006
John Siracusa recently wrote about Apple’s almost universally condemned strategy of distributing recorded conference materials after the show is over. He asks “Why does Apple jealously guard the content presented at WWDC?” It’s a good question, and it probably has to do with compelling future attendance at conferences. After all, Apple is probably thinking, if […]
Posted in Apple, Business, Carbon, Cocoa, Darwin | 10 Comments »
Wednesday, July 26th, 2006
Cocoa contains an awesome but sort of half-baked infrastructure for “autosaving” UI configurations for the user. Many of the common UI elements, such as windows, table views, and toolbars possess the ability to write out their configuration to the app’s preferences so they can be automatically restored the next time the app is launched. When […]
Posted in Cocoa, Free Code, Hacking, Programming | 3 Comments »
Monday, July 24th, 2006
Anybody who packages software (or other files) for distribution on the Mac is probably familiar with the tedious process of setting up the icons “just right” in the Finder so that when your customer opens the folder for your app, they see things neatly organized the way you left them. I don’t know how many […]
Posted in AppleScript, FastScripts, Usability | 12 Comments »
Monday, July 24th, 2006
The feedback I’ve gotten on FlexTime since releasing the last beta almost two weeks ago has been simply amazing. I really appreciate all the thoughtful comments people have made. While there has been some scrutinizing the limited feature set of this initial version, most of the feedback has focused on eliminating annoying bugs and making […]
Posted in FlexTime | 11 Comments »