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Original text from The Complete HyperCard Handbook (Expanded 2nd Edition with HyperCard 1.2 supplement!!!) Open HyperCard Stacks with just 512K RAM via HyperDA. If copying HyperCard was such an obvious idea, where did all the AmigaVision productions go? What happened to all the Asymmetrix Toolbook-ware? David Greelish “Before Macintosh” interviews with Bill Atkinson: Parts 1, 2, 3 Make beautiful Atkinson-dithered images with HyperDither, GraphicConverter (Effects => Dithering => Atkinson) or in your browser with DitherIt! More than you could ever possibly want to read about dithering and an undergrad lecture on Floyd-Steinberg dithering. Bill Atkinson's Rolodex, a.k.a. Casady & Greene QuickDEX (v1.4, II). Bill Atkinson's 10 Rules for Making Interfaces More Human Quotes from: Bill Atkinson Presents HyperCard at the Apple Corps of Dallas (1987) Legacy of HyperCard Event (2017) HyperCard Training Solutions (1987) Bill Atkinson on PhotoCard and HyperCard at the Eyeo Conference (2013) Bill and Andy Hertzfeld demonstrating oldmac stuff at the Computer History Museum (2010) David Pogue hosts “The Macintosh at 20” (2004) Triangulation Interview with Bill Atkinson, 2016 (part 1, 2) Triangulation Interview with Atkinson, 2018 (part 1, 2) CHM - Bill Atkinson on how Apple obviously doesn't do user testing anymore (2022) CHM - The Macintosh at 40 Churchill Club - Steve Jobs' Legacy (2011) Asymmetrix Toolbook Demo - Computer Chronicles on Windows 3.0 (1990) Hackers: Wizards of the Electronic Age - “People don't read encyclopedias cover to cover. It just doesn't happen! But …” Designing Interactions interviews: Bill Atkinson Unused 1984 Macintosh commercials: “I think of myself as a cross between an artist and an inventor” R.I.P. uliwitness, a.k.a. Uli Kusterer, longtime Macintosh programmer and HyperCard enthusiast. We will miss you too. Fun fact: I recognized Uli's name when it popped up in the podcast Discord. Back in the late 1990s a friend and I used “Uli's Panes” as the playlist interface for a classic MacOS MOD player. Remember Uli, HyperCard and Bill with: Myst Reverse Engineering Write Your Own XCMD with CodeWarrior Other HyperCard streams hypercard.org Stacksmith Classic MacOS programming streams “Why programming sucks and how to make it better” (SwiftConf 2015) with references to what made HyperCard a uniquely intuitive development environment. Get a load of Uli's HyperCard stack icon shirt! Partial HyperCard stack file format documentation Uli's Moose, an updated version of The Talking Moose for classic MacOS. Uli told me he tried to submit a new version of Mac OS X to the App Store but it was rejected several times and he eventually gave up. Thanks, Apple!
15/03/26 - PowerBook 2400c, MacOS X, PowerBoog G3, iOS 26.5, macOS 26.5, Migração entre Plataformas, Moeda Steve Jobs, Apple Watch Series 12, Safari no iOS 27, Foxconn sequestrada, Botão de ligar Mac mini, Câmera no AirPods,https://www.doctorapple.com.br
James, John discuss eBay finds: Apple/Canon sign from Japan, PowerBook 100 in box, and NIB Macintosh numeric keypad. They take look at the Apple PowerCD, and news includes porting Mac OS X to Nintendo Wii, an excerpt from David Pogue's new book, RetroGate, and the Steve Jobs Archive. Join our Facebook page, follow us on X (Twitter), watch us on YouTube, and visit us at RetroMacCast.
This week: CSA issues guidance to CISOs on Mythos Vuln management woes Windows tells you about Secure Boot AI-assisted firmware vuln hunting The dumbest hack Edge decay and the failing perimeter Mac OS X on a Wii Little snitch comes to Linux CPUID served malware Buying plugins to backdoor them Addicted to hacking Is Mythos just a sales pitch? We are still talking about Adobe Acrobat vulns A single line AI jailbreak Hacking Apple Intelligence Don't leave your ICS device or RDP exposed to the Internet! Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/psw for all the latest episodes! Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/psw-922
This week: CSA issues guidance to CISOs on Mythos Vuln management woes Windows tells you about Secure Boot AI-assisted firmware vuln hunting The dumbest hack Edge decay and the failing perimeter Mac OS X on a Wii Little snitch comes to Linux CPUID served malware Buying plugins to backdoor them Addicted to hacking Is Mythos just a sales pitch? We are still talking about Adobe Acrobat vulns A single line AI jailbreak Hacking Apple Intelligence Don't leave your ICS device or RDP exposed to the Internet! Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/psw-922
This week: CSA issues guidance to CISOs on Mythos Vuln management woes Windows tells you about Secure Boot AI-assisted firmware vuln hunting The dumbest hack Edge decay and the failing perimeter Mac OS X on a Wii Little snitch comes to Linux CPUID served malware Buying plugins to backdoor them Addicted to hacking Is Mythos just a sales pitch? We are still talking about Adobe Acrobat vulns A single line AI jailbreak Hacking Apple Intelligence Don't leave your ICS device or RDP exposed to the Internet! Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/psw for all the latest episodes! Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/psw-922
This week: CSA issues guidance to CISOs on Mythos Vuln management woes Windows tells you about Secure Boot AI-assisted firmware vuln hunting The dumbest hack Edge decay and the failing perimeter Mac OS X on a Wii Little snitch comes to Linux CPUID served malware Buying plugins to backdoor them Addicted to hacking Is Mythos just a sales pitch? We are still talking about Adobe Acrobat vulns A single line AI jailbreak Hacking Apple Intelligence Don't leave your ICS device or RDP exposed to the Internet! Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/psw-922
Sometimes an episode of AwesomeCast really shows the full range of what makes the show fun. Episode 775 goes from the emotional high of a successful Artemis 2 splashdown all the way to the absurd joy of seeing someone force macOS onto an original Nintendo Wii. Sorg and Podnar open with one of the week's best feel-good tech stories: Artemis 2 made it home successfully, and Dave shares the unexpectedly charming story of the mission mascot RISE. In a week that needed some good news, the conversation lands on something larger than space hardware alone. This was about optimism, engineering, and a rare moment of collective excitement. Then the show pivots back to Earth with the kind of story that feels custom-made for AwesomeCast: yes, someone got early Mac OS X running on a Nintendo Wii. It is not practical. It is not necessary. It is absolutely wonderful. That same spirit carries into Sorg's hands-on experiment with Mythic, a tool aimed at helping M-series Mac users access Windows games through the Epic ecosystem. The conversation explores how much better Apple Silicon has become for compatibility, even if some rough edges still show up in real-world testing. A big chunk of the episode also digs into Amazon Luna's latest changes. Sorg reacts to the platform ending game purchases and outside store access, and the discussion quickly becomes about more than Luna itself. It becomes a conversation about trust in digital platforms, cloud gaming ownership, and what happens when convenience gets taken away after users have already bought in. It is one of the sharpest segments in the episode because it blends personal use with a bigger industry trend. There is also a lighter side this week. Dave shares The Weather Channel's retro weather experience, which sends both hosts into a funny and surprisingly thoughtful conversation about the old cable era, nostalgic interfaces, and how channels drift from their original purpose. On the more practical side, they also touch on Overcast's new transcript support and Waymo's plan to help cities identify potholes using vehicle data. That latter topic turns into a very Pittsburgh-flavored discussion about 311 systems, local government tech, and whether cities are really taking advantage of the tools they have. Finally, Dave closes with his Arab American History Month spotlight on Tony Fadell, best known for his work on the iPod and Nest. It is a fitting end to an episode that is really about the many layers of tech: breakthrough engineering, strange experimentation, product design, infrastructure, nostalgia, and how all of it shapes everyday life. Links from this episode: Artemis / RISE: https://www.space.com/space-exploration/artemis/how-artemis-2-commander-reid-wiseman-saved-the-missions-moon-mascot-its-hard-not-to-love-this-little-guy-i-cant-let-rise-out-of-my-sight macOS on Wii: https://apple.news/AJdU3eghQT2-jfhrGvzI2_g Mythic: https://getmythic.app/ Amazon Luna: https://www.ign.com/articles/amazon-luna-will-no-longer-allow-owners-to-buy-games-access-game-stores-or-third-party-subscriptions-starting-today?utm_campaign=trueAnthem%3A+Manual&utm_medium=trueAnthem&utm_source=facebook Amazon Luna alt link: https://apple.news/A2cb25SwgQX-AuvSPHdRsHw Waymo potholes: https://apple.news/AnxW6o9QWQJOcCGLqCsW6XQ Overcast transcripts: https://9to5mac.com/2026/04/08/overcast-launches-podcast-transcripts-in-new-app-update-for-iphone/ Retro Weather Channel: https://weather.com/retro/ Tony Fadell: https://design.mit.edu/community/people/tony-fadell Subscribe for more tech talk from Pittsburgh and support the show at Patreon.
Sometimes an episode of AwesomeCast really shows the full range of what makes the show fun. Episode 775 goes from the emotional high of a successful Artemis 2 splashdown all the way to the absurd joy of seeing someone force macOS onto an original Nintendo Wii. Sorg and Podnar open with one of the week's best feel-good tech stories: Artemis 2 made it home successfully, and Dave shares the unexpectedly charming story of the mission mascot RISE. In a week that needed some good news, the conversation lands on something larger than space hardware alone. This was about optimism, engineering, and a rare moment of collective excitement. Then the show pivots back to Earth with the kind of story that feels custom-made for AwesomeCast: yes, someone got early Mac OS X running on a Nintendo Wii. It is not practical. It is not necessary. It is absolutely wonderful. That same spirit carries into Sorg's hands-on experiment with Mythic, a tool aimed at helping M-series Mac users access Windows games through the Epic ecosystem. The conversation explores how much better Apple Silicon has become for compatibility, even if some rough edges still show up in real-world testing. A big chunk of the episode also digs into Amazon Luna's latest changes. Sorg reacts to the platform ending game purchases and outside store access, and the discussion quickly becomes about more than Luna itself. It becomes a conversation about trust in digital platforms, cloud gaming ownership, and what happens when convenience gets taken away after users have already bought in. It is one of the sharpest segments in the episode because it blends personal use with a bigger industry trend. There is also a lighter side this week. Dave shares The Weather Channel's retro weather experience, which sends both hosts into a funny and surprisingly thoughtful conversation about the old cable era, nostalgic interfaces, and how channels drift from their original purpose. On the more practical side, they also touch on Overcast's new transcript support and Waymo's plan to help cities identify potholes using vehicle data. That latter topic turns into a very Pittsburgh-flavored discussion about 311 systems, local government tech, and whether cities are really taking advantage of the tools they have. Finally, Dave closes with his Arab American History Month spotlight on Tony Fadell, best known for his work on the iPod and Nest. It is a fitting end to an episode that is really about the many layers of tech: breakthrough engineering, strange experimentation, product design, infrastructure, nostalgia, and how all of it shapes everyday life. Links from this episode: Artemis / RISE: https://www.space.com/space-exploration/artemis/how-artemis-2-commander-reid-wiseman-saved-the-missions-moon-mascot-its-hard-not-to-love-this-little-guy-i-cant-let-rise-out-of-my-sight macOS on Wii: https://apple.news/AJdU3eghQT2-jfhrGvzI2_g Mythic: https://getmythic.app/ Amazon Luna: https://www.ign.com/articles/amazon-luna-will-no-longer-allow-owners-to-buy-games-access-game-stores-or-third-party-subscriptions-starting-today?utm_campaign=trueAnthem%3A+Manual&utm_medium=trueAnthem&utm_source=facebook Amazon Luna alt link: https://apple.news/A2cb25SwgQX-AuvSPHdRsHw Waymo potholes: https://apple.news/AnxW6o9QWQJOcCGLqCsW6XQ Overcast transcripts: https://9to5mac.com/2026/04/08/overcast-launches-podcast-transcripts-in-new-app-update-for-iphone/ Retro Weather Channel: https://weather.com/retro/ Tony Fadell: https://design.mit.edu/community/people/tony-fadell Subscribe for more tech talk from Pittsburgh and support the show at Patreon.
En el Podcast de Manzanas Enfrentadas de hoy, vamos a comentar las siguientes noticias:¿Por Qué Falló el Lanzamiento del Apple Vision Pro? 03:00El Debate: ¿Fracaso del Vision Pro, como del Watch Cero? 14:19La Batalla Legal de Apple Contra Samsung 28:59Apple Abre la Puerta a GPUs Externas en Macs 44:28El Futuro de las Tiendas de Apps y un Feliz Cumpleaños 53:31La Batalla por los 5GHz en Chips de Smartphone 58:36Cierres de Tiendas, M5 Ultra y el Museo Apple 01:11:17.De Carlos Latre a Mac OS X en Wii 01:23:14Resultados de la Encuesta y Recomendaciones Finales01:27:20Este podcasts es parte del compromiso 7 de 7 de Manzanas Enfrentadas. Lo tenemos!!!
-OpenAI has closed a yawning gap in its ChatGPT subscription pricing with a new $100 per month Pro plan that slots between the $20 per month Plus plan and $200 per month Pro plan. -The International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers, which leads the union the Towson workers had joined, released a statement about the closure. "Apple's claim that the collective bargaining agreement prevents relocation is simply false and raises serious concerns that this closure is a cynical attempt to bust the union," -Because they said it couldn't be done, a developer was able to get Mac OS X 10.0 to run on a 2006 Nintendo Wii. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Retro and current gen gaming chat, with Trev and Stu, its the Console Shockcast! Not quite March—but close enough… so it's Marchintosh time! Or maybe Appril? Either way, Trev and Stu return to the annual YouTube tradition of diving into Apple tech. This year, we're spotlighting the machine that redefined portable computing for decades to come: the iconic Titanium PowerBook G4—the blueprint for modern laptops. Apologies for the audio issues in this episode—there's some glitchiness on Trev's side from the original recording. In this episode: DLSS 5 & AI visuals – Is NVIDIA heading toward a future of AI-generated, “yassified” game assets? Mac portable evolution – The journey of Apple laptops leading up to 2001 Design legacy – How the Titanium G4 stacks up against modern laptops Ahead of its time – Why it was such a leap in both performance and industrial design First impressions – Trev's memories of encountering the Titanium G4 in early-2000s UK, when Macs were still a rarity Design contrast – The sleek, pro titanium look vs the playful “jellybean” iMac era Best of both worlds – Why it's still a perfect machine for classic Mac OS and early Mac OS X software Check out Trev and Al’s other podcast where they reminisce about a different episode of Star Trek every month! : https://longrangesensors.com/episodes Intro/Outro Music – Turn The Page (Tutorial Theme) – Ridge Racer Type 4 (1998) – Sony Playstation – Composer(s): Hiroshi Okubo
This is a recap of the top 10 posts on Hacker News on April 08, 2026. This podcast was generated by wondercraft.ai (00:30): Git commands I run before reading any codeOriginal post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47687273&utm_source=wondercraft_ai(01:56): I ported Mac OS X to the Nintendo WiiOriginal post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47691730&utm_source=wondercraft_ai(03:23): Veracrypt project updateOriginal post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47686549&utm_source=wondercraft_ai(04:50): US cities are axing Flock Safety surveillance technologyOriginal post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47689237&utm_source=wondercraft_ai(06:17): Škoda DuoBell: A bicycle bell that penetrates noise-cancelling headphonesOriginal post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47687248&utm_source=wondercraft_ai(07:44): Microsoft terminates VeraCrypt account, halting Windows updatesOriginal post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47690977&utm_source=wondercraft_ai(09:11): They're made out of meat (1991)Original post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47688678&utm_source=wondercraft_ai(10:38): ML promises to be profoundly weirdOriginal post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47689648&utm_source=wondercraft_ai(12:05): LittleSnitch for LinuxOriginal post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47697870&utm_source=wondercraft_ai(13:32): OpenAI says its new model GPT-2 is too dangerous to release (2019)Original post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47684326&utm_source=wondercraft_aiThis is a third-party project, independent from HN and YC. Text and audio generated using AI, by wondercraft.ai. Create your own studio quality podcast with text as the only input in seconds at app.wondercraft.ai. Issues or feedback? We'd love to hear from you: team@wondercraft.ai
El 1 de abril de 1976, tres personas firmaron un papel en un garaje. Hoy, es una de las empresas más valoradas del mundo. En este episodio especial de cumpleaños recorro los 50 años de Apple desde el único ángulo que de verdad importa: el software. El código que hubo detrás de cada producto. Las decisiones técnicas que nadie cuenta y que lo explican todo. ¿Sabías que el Apple I nació porque Wozniak quería programar en BASIC un videojuego que había diseñado en hardware para Atari? ¿Que escribió su propio intérprete de BASIC a mano, instrucción a instrucción, traduciendo ensamblador a código máquina en papel, sin ninguna herramienta? ¿Que el primer pedido del Apple I acabó en sorpresa porque Terrell esperaba un ordenador completo y recibió una placa de circuito? ¿Sabías que el sistema operativo que hoy corre en tu iPhone lo construyó Jobs cuando lo echaron de Apple? ¿Que Apple compró NeXT porque su propio proyecto interno de nuevo sistema operativo —500 ingenieros, 250 millones de dólares al año— fracasó sin lanzar nada? ¿Que iOS nació de la competición interna entre dos equipos, uno liderado por Tony Fadell con el OS del iPod, y otro por Scott Forstall con Mac OS X comprimido, y Jobs eligió la opción más arriesgada? ¿Sabías que Chris Lattner pasó año y medio construyendo Swift en secreto, sin contárselo a nadie, ni a sus compañeros más cercanos? Y que Jobs mató voluntariamente el iPod —cuando representaba casi la mitad de los ingresos de Apple— porque sabía que si no lo hacía él, lo haría el mercado. 50 años de Apple contados desde donde nadie los cuenta: desde dentro del código.
Le grand Mac Pro est sorti par la petite porte. Apple a retiré jeudi soir de son catalogue ce qui fut pendant longtemps le Mac le plus puissant, celui qui faisait rêver les utilisateurs exigeants. Mais voilà, le Mac Pro est abandonné et il n'aura pas de successeur. Cette fin était-elle inéluctable ? On en discute dans cette émission.Au programme également, la WWDC 2026 est officielle, la pub va faire son arrivée pub Plans et on fête le 25e anniversaire de Mac OS X.___Vous aimez ce podcast ? Mettez-lui ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ ! Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.
Mark Zuckerberg was all in on VR. He renamed his whole company to Meta because of it. This week, they were going to shut it down; now, maybe it will stay around, kind of. Plus, of course, Apple had some news this week, and so much more to cover, so you can get out there and tech better. Watch on YouTube! - Notnerd.com and Notpicks.com INTRO (00:00) Apple announces WWDC 2026 will take place June 8 to 12 (03:10) Mac OS X launched 25 years ago today: 'The Future of the Mac' (05:15) MAIN TOPIC: Does the future of VR have legs? (10:25) Meta backtracks. Will keep Horizon Worlds VR support "for existing games" DAVE'S PRO-TIP OF THE WEEK: Live Captions (17:30) JUST THE HEADLINES: (24:25) Amazon plans to test four-legged robots on wheels for deliveries Cyberattack on a car breathalyzer firm leaves drivers stuck The asteroid Ryugu has all of the main ingredients for life Nvidia expects to sell 'at least' $1 Trillion in AI chips by 2028 Samsung ends $2,899 Galaxy Z Trifold sales after just 3 months New Windows 11 bug breaks Samsung PCs, blocking access to C: drive Amazon plans smartphone comeback more than a decade after Fire Phone flop WITHIN REACH! Dave 2-1, this is round 5 Nate Goes First (28:55) TAKES: 50 percent of consumers prefer brands that avoid GenAI content (39:35) PC Gamer recommends RSS readers in a 37MB article that just keeps downloading (44:05) Spigen's new AirPods Pro 3 case is modeled after the original Macintosh mouse (46:55) BONUS ODD TAKE: VHS Slipcover Maker (48:20) PICKS OF THE WEEK: Dave: Lamicall Tablet Floor Stand Holder - [55" Height Adjustable][ Flexible Arm] 5lb Base Tablet Holder, Multi Angle Bed Mount Gifts for 4.7-13" Devices, iPad Pro Air, Tabs, E-Readers, Kindle Accessories (52:40) Nate: KNORK Eco Astrik Lunch Utensil Carry Case, Gray (55:45)
Miguel Ángel González Suárez te presenta el Informativo de Primera Hora en 'El Remate', el programa matinal de La Diez Capital Radio que arranca tu día con: Las noticias más relevantes de Canarias, España y el mundo, analizadas con rigor y claridad. Hoy hace un año: Amplio respaldo político a Ángel Víctor Torres tras anunciar que padece cáncer. El presidente del Gobierno, Pedro Sánchez, lo reconoce como uno de los servidores públicos más brillantes: "Mucho ánimo. Estamos todos contigo”... y hoy hace un año: El 22,6% de los habitantes en Canarias nació fuera de España. Suponen ya 505.075 personas en el archipiélago, la mayoría de ellas provenientes de Venezuela, Cuba, Colombia e Italia. Por continentes, la mayoría (261.422 personas) procede de América, con una nacionalidad predominante: 82.890 venezolanos. Otros 172.717 residentes son europeos (sin contar a los españoles) de los cuales 43.390 son italianos. Otros 47.077 residentes son africanos, de los cuales 29.314 marroquíes. De Asia provienen 23.490 personas, de las cuales 9.213 son chinas. Por último, 369 personas proceden de Oceanía. Hoy se cumplen 1.495 días de guerra entre Rusia y Ucrania. 4 años y 28 días y 25 días de Guerra en Oriente Próximo. Hoy es martes 24 de marzo de 2026. Día Internacional del Derecho a la Verdad en relación con Violaciones Graves de los Derechos Humanos y de la Dignidad de las Víctimas. El Día Internacional del Derecho a la Verdad en relación con las Violaciones de los Derechos Humanos y de la Dignidad de las Víctimas se celebra el 24 de marzo gracias a un decreto de las Naciones Unidas en el año 2010. El objetivo de conmemorar este día, es rendir un homenaje a todas aquellas personas que han sido víctimas de la violación de sus derechos humanos, como son los casos de secuestro, tortura, desaparición y muerte. Este día también se le rinde un homenaje a Monseñor Oscar Arnulfo Romero asesinado en el año 1980 por denunciar abusos de este tipo, en su país, el Salvador. 1933: en Nueva York (Estados Unidos), manifestantes judíos exigen un boicot contra los productos alemanes en respuesta a la persecución a la que son objeto los judíos en la Alemania nazi. 1934.- El Congreso de los Estados Unidos aprueba la ley de independencia de Filipinas. 1949.- Por primera vez una película extranjera obtiene un Oscar de Hollywood. Fue la británica "Hamlet", interpretada por Laurence Olivier. - El tren español Talgo es probado con éxito en Estados Unidos. 1976.- Un golpe militar encabezado por el general Videla derroca a la presidenta argentina, María Estela Martínez de Perón, e implanta una dictadura en el país. 1999: la OTAN inicia la campaña de bombardeos sobre objetivos en Yugoslavia. 2001: en California (Estados Unidos), la empresa Apple presenta la décima versión de su sistema operativo, Mac OS X. 2006: en España, la banda terrorista ETA comienza un alto el fuego permanente. Santos Agapito, Timoteo, Dionisio, Rómulo, Segundo, Simeón y Epigmenio. Trump amplía a 5 días el plazo para reabrir Ormuz y revela conversaciones "muy productivas" con Irán. El responsable antiterrorista de la UE acusa a Irán de desestabilizar. Rusia recauda miles de millones en dos semanas de guerra iraní, según los analistas. El barril de petróleo baja de los 100 dólares y las bolsas suben después de que Trump aplace atacar a energéticas iraníes. Meloni pierde el referéndum de su reforma judicial y tilda el resultado de "ocasión perdida" de modernizar Italia. Juanma Moreno convoca elecciones autonómicas en Andalucía el próximo 17 de mayo. CC ve “insuficiente” el decreto anticrisis para Canarias y pide compensaciones extra. Valido expone que su impacto en una economía como la del archipiélago, "especialmente vulnerable en este contexto bélico, es insuficiente" Patronal y sindicatos respaldan que Canarias pueda tener medidas específicas por la guerra de Irán. El presidente regional, Fernando Clavijo, ha dicho que espera hablar en las próximas horas con la ministra de Hacienda, María Jesús Montero, para matizar que no se trata de una guerra con el Ejecutivo de España sino buscar “justicia” para las islas, para advertir de que el Archipiélago “no va a restar ni un euro de servicios públicos” a los canarios. Canarias vuelve a cambiar la hora este fin de semana con la llegada del horario de verano. En la madrugada sábado al domingo 29 de marzo, los relojes deberán adelantarse una hora en todo el Archipiélago.. El ajuste se producirá a la 01:00 de la madrugada, momento en el que pasará a ser directamente las 02:00, por lo que esa noche tendrá una hora menos. Dos presas de Gran Canaria, en riesgo de rebosar en las próximas horas por la borrasca Therese: el Cabildo pide “máxima precaución” El Cabildo de Gran Canaria alerta del posible desbordamiento de las presas de Fataga y La Sorrueda y pide a la población no exponerse y seguir los consejos de las autoridades, ya que puede haber víctimas mortales si la gente “se toma a broma la borrasca” El plátano de Canarias no levanta cabeza en lo que va de 2026. La fruta expedida al mercado de la Península, el principal destino del género canario pues llega a captar en torno al 90% de la oferta anual, acumula 11 semanas de este año con precios medios con pérdidas para los productores locales, siempre por debajo de los 0,64 euros por kilo para calidades superiores. El 24 de marzo de 1973, Pink Floyd, banda británica de rock progresivo, lanzó el álbum «Dark Side of the Moon», que se ha convertido en el sexto álbum más vendido de todos los tiempos con ventas que superan los 40 millones de copias en todo el mundo. Lo que muchos no saben es que se produjo en los famosos Abbey Road Studios de los Beatles en Londres.
Pre-show: Marco’s Watch and snow blows woes TruFuel Follow-up: Casey got the CableCARD email
La próxima gran actualización del sistema operativo de iPhone se centrará principalmente en mejorar la calidad y el rendimiento, con un enfoque similar al que tuvo Mac OS X Snow Leopard en su momento, priorizando la estabilidad y eliminación de errores sobre la inclusión de nuevas funciones llamativas. Sin embargo, sí se incorporarán algunas novedades importantes de inteligencia artificial, como un agente de salud con IA y un motor de búsqueda en la web potenciado por IA que se integrará con Siri, Safari y Spotlight. También se menciona que esta actualización sentará las bases para futuros dispositivos plegables de Apple y podría incluir suscripciones de Apple Health+ con recomendaciones de salud personalizadas. https://seoxan.es/crear_pedido_hosting Codigo Cupon "APPLE" PATROCINADO POR SEOXAN Optimización SEO profesional para tu negocio https://seoxan.es https://uptime.urtix.es PARTICIPA EN DIRECTO Deja tu opinión en los comentarios, haz preguntas y sé parte de la charla más importante sobre el futuro del iPad y del ecosistema Apple. ¡Tu voz cuenta! ¿TE GUSTÓ EL EPISODIO? ✨ Dale LIKE SUSCRÍBETE y activa la campanita para no perderte nada COMENTA COMPARTE con tus amigos applelianos SÍGUENOS EN TODAS NUESTRAS PLATAFORMAS: YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@Applelianos Telegram: https://t.me/+Jm8IE4n3xtI2Zjdk X (Twitter): https://x.com/ApplelianosPod Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/applelianos Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/39QoPbO iOS 27, Apple iOS 27, actualización iPhone 2026, inteligencia artificial Apple, Siri AI, Snow Leopard calidad, rendimiento iOS, Tim Cook Apple, salud Apple Watch, búsqueda web AI, Apple iPhone plegable, software Apple 2026, Apple CEO Tim Cook, iOS 27 estabilidad, novedades iOS 27, Apple AI features
Wed, 06 Aug 2025 20:30:00 GMT http://relay.fm/connected/564 http://relay.fm/connected/564 Would Snell as Sweet 564 Federico Viticci, Stephen Hackett, and Myke Hurley Jason joins Stephen and Myke to talk about hard drives, window management, and charts. Jason joins Stephen and Myke to talk about hard drives, window management, and charts. clean 4975 Jason joins Stephen and Myke to talk about hard drives, window management, and charts. This episode of Connected is sponsored by: Squarespace: Save 10% off your first purchase of a website or domain using code CONNECTED. Zocdoc: Find the right doctor, right now with Zocdoc. Sign up for free. Guest Starring: Jason Snell Links and Show Notes: Get Connected Pro: Preshow, postshow, no ads. Submit Feedback snellworld.com September 10, 2014: A Personal Announcement – Six Colors San Francisco Rat - The Incomparable Mothership #458 - The Incomparable Apple accelerates the roadmap and ratchets its revenue – Six Colors This is Tim: Complete transcript of Apple's Q3 2025 financial call – Six Colors Upgrade #575: I Love to Accelerate a Roadmap - Relay CCATP #808 — Jason Snell on The Magic Behind the Six Colors Charts - Podfeet Podcasts Building self-updating charts in Numbers – Six Colors Rogue Amoeba - Under the Microscope » Blog Archive » Turn Speech Into Text With Audio Hijack 4.3's New Transcribe Block Stephen and Jason at Myke's Bachelor Party Mail in Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger - 512 Pixels New Mail Message in Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger - 512 Pixels 'Macintosh HD' Icon Updated in macOS Tahoe Beta 5 - 512 Pixels UNAS Pro - Ubiquiti Here's the redesigned AirDrop icon in iOS 26 - 9to5Mac "Pizza Slice" Icons First Look: iPadOS 26 Public Beta – Six Colors Thoughts on iPadOS 26: Hello, It's Good to Be Back - MacStories iPadOS 26 is way more Mac-like. Where does that lead? - Fast Company Does iPadOS 26 steer the iPad in the wrong direction? – Six Colors iPad Pro (2nd generation) - Wikipedia iPad Pro 12.9‑in. (2nd generation) vs iPad Air 13‑in. (M2) vs i
Wed, 06 Aug 2025 20:30:00 GMT http://relay.fm/connected/564 http://relay.fm/connected/564 Federico Viticci, Stephen Hackett, and Myke Hurley Jason joins Stephen and Myke to talk about hard drives, window management, and charts. Jason joins Stephen and Myke to talk about hard drives, window management, and charts. clean 4975 Jason joins Stephen and Myke to talk about hard drives, window management, and charts. This episode of Connected is sponsored by: Squarespace: Save 10% off your first purchase of a website or domain using code CONNECTED. Zocdoc: Find the right doctor, right now with Zocdoc. Sign up for free. Guest Starring: Jason Snell Links and Show Notes: Get Connected Pro: Preshow, postshow, no ads. Submit Feedback snellworld.com September 10, 2014: A Personal Announcement – Six Colors San Francisco Rat - The Incomparable Mothership #458 - The Incomparable Apple accelerates the roadmap and ratchets its revenue – Six Colors This is Tim: Complete transcript of Apple's Q3 2025 financial call – Six Colors Upgrade #575: I Love to Accelerate a Roadmap - Relay CCATP #808 — Jason Snell on The Magic Behind the Six Colors Charts - Podfeet Podcasts Building self-updating charts in Numbers – Six Colors Rogue Amoeba - Under the Microscope » Blog Archive » Turn Speech Into Text With Audio Hijack 4.3's New Transcribe Block Stephen and Jason at Myke's Bachelor Party Mail in Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger - 512 Pixels New Mail Message in Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger - 512 Pixels 'Macintosh HD' Icon Updated in macOS Tahoe Beta 5 - 512 Pixels UNAS Pro - Ubiquiti Here's the redesigned AirDrop icon in iOS 26 - 9to5Mac "Pizza Slice" Icons First Look: iPadOS 26 Public Beta – Six Colors Thoughts on iPadOS 26: Hello, It's Good to Be Back - MacStories iPadOS 26 is way more Mac-like. Where does that lead? - Fast Company Does iPadOS 26 steer the iPad in the wrong direction? – Six Colors iPad Pro (2nd generation) - Wikipedia iPad Pro 12.9‑in. (2nd generation) vs iPad Air 13‑in.
Original text by John Calhoun. MacScene's interview with John re: The History of Glider. Part 1, Part 2. Mr. Advisador for the Newton has been revived! Told you it was creepy. Original Newton version. The Computer Chronicles covers Glider at Macworld Boston 1994. Today, as back then, you're not supposed to notice that the game was first released five years prior to this show airing; you're supposed to be amazed that anyone is saying anything positive about the Mac at all. Yes indeed, Jeffrey Robbin, an Apple employee, wrote SoundJam, the Classic environment for Mac OS X, and Conflict Catcher. Casady and Greene turned out the lights in 2003. In their own words. Casady & Greene's website in happier times.
Pre-show: G4 Doorbell Pro Bespoke 3D-printed mount Fancy-schmancy Marco-recommended Flashlight What betas are we running? Virtual Buddy
View this video at https://macmost.com/10-ancient-mac-features-you-forgot-were-still-on-your-mac.html. Mac OS X and before came with some very useful features that are still present on Macs today, but many people have forgotten about. Re-discover these handy apps and functions that are already on your Mac.
This program is supported by educational grants from Amicus Therapeutics, Inc. and Chiesi USA Inc.Fabry disease is an inherited lysosomal storage disease caused by mutations in the GLA gene, disrupting the function of the enzyme, α-galactosidase. This results in the accumulation of globotriaosylceramide (GL-3) and its deacylated form, globotriaosylsphingosine (lyso-GL-3), leading to progressive disruption of multiple organ systems. There are currently three treatment options available for Fabry disease, including two enzyme replacement therapies, agalsidase beta and pegunigalsidase alfa, and a chaperone therapy, migalastat. There are also other treatments in development (e.g., gene therapy, other enzyme replacement therapies) and some that are available in other countries (e.g., agalsidase alfa). Due to the small patient population and variability in Fabry disease severity, it is challenging to develop properly powered, placebo-controlled clinical trials. As such, data shared at conferences like WORLDSymposium 2025 are crucial for guiding best practices in this disease area. This program, led by Dr. Eric Wallace, provides a summary of clinically relevant data presented at WORLDSymposium 2025 that can enhance the care of patients with Fabry disease. Target AudienceThis activity has been designed to meet the educational needs of physicians specializing in neurology, nephrology, cardiology, gastroenterology, ophthalmology, and dermatology. Other members of the care team may also participate.Learning ObjectivesAfter participating in the activity, learners should be better able to: Describe the latest research being presented to better manage individuals with Fabry disease and its clinical relevance.Eric Wallace, MDProfessor of MedicineDepartment of NephrologyUniversity of Alabama Medical SchoolDisclosure StatementAccording to the disclosure policy of the Academy, all faculty, planning committee members, editors, managers and other individuals who are in a position to control content are required to disclose any relationships with any ineligible company(ies). The existence of these relationships is not viewed as implying bias or decreasing the value of the activity. Clinical content has been reviewed for fair balance and scientific objectivity, and all of the relevant financial relationships listed for these individuals have been mitigated.Disclosure of relevant financial relationships are as follows:Faculty Educator/PlannerDr. Wallace discloses the following relevant financial relationships with ineligible companies:Advisory Board Consultant: Sanofi-Genzyme, Chiesi, Kyowa Kirin, Sangamo, NateraGrant/Research Support: Sanofi-Genzyme, Chiesi, Uniqure, Idorsia, Amicus Other Planners for this activity have no relevant financial relationships with any ineligible companies.This activity will review off-label or investigational information.The opinions expressed in this educational activity are those of the faculty, and do not represent those of the Academy or CheckRare CE. This activity is intended as a supplement to existing knowledge, published information, and practice guidelines. Learners should appraise the information presented critically, and draw conclusions only after careful consideration of all available scientific information.Accreditation and Credit DesignationIn support of improving patient care, this activity has been planned and implemented by American Academy of CME, Inc. and CheckRare CE. American Academy of CME, Inc. is Jointly accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME), the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education (ACPE), and the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC), to provide continuing education for the healthcare team.PhysiciansAmerican Academy of CME, Inc., designates this enduring material for a maximum of 0.50 AMA PRA Category 1 Credits™. Physicians should claim only the credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity. Other HCPsOther members of the care team will receive a certificate of participation.There are no fees to participate in the activity. Participants must review the activity information including the learning objectives and disclosure statements, as well as the content of the activity. To receive CME credit for your participation, please complete the pre and post-program assessments. Your certificate will be emailed to you within 30 days.Hardware/Software RequirementsWindows Requirements: • Operating system: Windows XP Service Pack 2 or later • Browser: Internet Explorer 7 or later, Mozilla Firefox 2.5 or later • Internet connection: DSL, cable modem, or other high-speed connectionMacintosh Requirements: • Operating system: Mac OS X v10.3 or later • Browser: Mozilla Firefox 2.5 or later • Internet connection: DSL, cable modem, or other high-speed connectionPrivacyFor more information about the American Academy of CME privacy policy, please access http://www.academycme.org/privacy.htm For more information about CheckRare's privacy policy, please access https://checkrare.com/privacy/ContactFor any questions, please contact: CEServices@academycme.orgCopyright© 2025. This CME-certified activity is held as copyrighted © by American Academy of CME and CheckRare CE. Through this notice, the Academy and CheckRare CE grant permission of its use for educational purposes only. These materials may not be used, in whole or in part, for any commercial purposes without prior permission in writing from the copyright owner(s).
iPad-livsstilen, Mac OS X 10.4 fyller år, och Jönköpings andra iPod hifi har siktats.
Original text by James Thomson. DragThing, one of many Dock-like tools for classic Mac OS. PCalc for classic and modern Mac OS/iOS. Some PCalc history. The One True Place for the Dock may be at the bottom of the screen, but ever since the advent of widescreen everything, it always made more sense–at least to me–to put it on the right. This frees up what precious little vertical screen real estate there is on a 16:9 display. Sorry, James! Jon Rubinstein on the iMac's early days as an “Internet Appliance”, a.k.a. a diskless web terminal. Macworld San Francisco 2000 keynote video.
Questions! The time to answer them is here again, and this month we do our best with such topics as the relative scarcity of nuclear energy, nested comment systems, USB thumb drives versus portable SSDs, browser RAM usage, why CPUs get faster from one model to the next, the difficulty of naming operating systems, phones without camera bumps, learning to read an analog clock (and a lot of other things), and when we'll finally get around to reviewing that high-tech toilet.Submit ideas about secret information encoding in the world around us for an upcoming episode: https://forms.gle/VYgL9gLeSBKkNtfy9 Support the Pod! Contribute to the Tech Pod Patreon and get access to our booming Discord, a monthly bonus episode, your name in the credits, and other great benefits! You can support the show at: https://patreon.com/techpod
Fredrik talks to Jon Sterling about user interfaces old and new. Jon has created Aquaui - a Mac user interface library which is a small love letter to the Aqua user interface style for Mac OS X. Based on that, we discuss understandable and consistent user interfaces, how there seems to be little evolution and improvement, wish for brave new ideas, and a lot more. Oh, and we also discuss living with old technology, like a seventh-generation Ipod. Plus liability laundering and the problems of building the whole house of out fire alarms. Thank you Cloudnet for sponsoring our VPS! Comments, questions or tips? We a re @kodsnack, @tobiashieta, @oferlundand @bjoreman on Twitter, have a page on Facebook and can be emailed at info@kodsnack.se if you want to write longer. We read everything we receive. If you enjoy Kodsnack we would love a review in iTunes! You can also support the podcast by buying us a coffee (or two!) through Ko-fi. Links Jon Cambridge Clare college Aquaui - Jon's library Aqua - the user interface design language Steve Jobs introducing Aqua The dock Windows XP Windows 98 Iphone 4 IOS 6 IOS 7 - the great flattening of everything Apple's old human interface guidelines Accidental tech podcast The purple button for single-window mode in the Mac OS X beta - scroll down or search for “purple” Stage manager Lion Infinite Mac - the website where you can run old Mac operating systems The spatial Finder - and why the modern Finder isn't Support Kodsnack on Ko-fi Elementary OS - and their interface design guide GTK A post about the original dock Discussion about Mica - Apple internal design tool Core animation Webkit Blink WKWebview Appkit NSScrollview NSScroller 12-inch Powerbook Seventh-generation Ipod Itunes Intel Imac Tiger Tenfourfox- browser for old versions of Mac OS X Charles proxy jonmstirling.com Jon on Mastodon Titles A love letter A very different era Beautiful blue liquid The great flattening of everything Unbelievable user interface regression I feel powerless today when I'm using my computer They did mess up the photo app Like a pill A long-lasting Ibuprofen That upper-right corner Bigger than my wingspan Beautiful, unsullied whitespace During the decline of Mac OS Time to be a bit bold A passable gradient Start from a point of inspiration Too much for the old hardware The Aqua fire alarm SSL fire alarms
In this week's episode, we take a look at five reasons to buy direct from authors through platforms such as Shopify and Payhip. We also take a look at my choice of computing platforms for 2025. This week's coupon code will get you 50% off the audiobook of Ghost in the Tombs, Book #3 in the Ghost Armor series, (as excellently narrated by Hollis McCarthy) at my Payhip store: TOMBS50 The coupon code is valid through February 7, 2025. So if you need a new audiobook for next week's cold weather, we've got you covered! 00:00:00 Introduction and Writing Updates Hello, everyone. Welcome to Episode 235 of The Pulp Writer Show. My name is Jonathan Moeller. Today is January the 17th, 2025 and today we are discussing the advantages of buying direct from the author. I will also share an update on what I've done for my writing computers this year and we also have Coupon of the Week, Question of the Week, and an update on my current writing projects. So let's get right to it. Let's start with Coupon of the Week. This week's coupon code is for the audiobook of Ghost in the Tombs, as excellently narrated by Hollis McCarthy. That is Book Three of the Ghost Armor series, and this coupon will get you 50% off the audiobook at my Payhip store: TOMBS50. This coupon code will be valid through February 7, 2025. So if you need a new audiobook for next week's cold weather, we have got you covered. Now let's share an update on my current writing projects. As of this recording, I am 116,000 words into Shield of Deception, which puts me on chapter 28 of 31. So I'm hoping before too much longer I will be able to be done with the rough draft, which I think I'm hoping I'm going to be able to finish it on Monday the 20th if all goes well, but we'll see how things work out. I think it's going to end up being around 125,000 words, which will make it the longest book in the Shield War series and probably the longest book I've written since the end of my Dragontiarna series back in 2021. I kind of wanted a break from really long, complex epic fantasy, but I had my break. I'm rested and now we're doing it again. I'm also 13,000 words into Ghost in the Tombs, which will be the fourth book in the Ghost Armor series, and I'm hoping to have that out in March and Shield Deception out in February. In audiobook news, Cloak of Masks is entirely done and working its way through processing. As I mentioned last week, it should be up on a couple of the stores like Google Play, Kobo, and Chirp, though it is not up on Audible yet. On Audible, though, is Ghost Armor Omnibus One (again narrated by Hollis McCarthy). That is an omnibus bundle of the first three books in the Ghost Armor series. That is available in audio at Audible, Amazon, and Apple. If you're on Audible, it is 31 hours of listening for just one credit, which in my opinion is a pretty good deal. That is where I'm at with my current writing projects. 00:02:32 Question of the Week Now let's move on to Question of the Week. Question of the Week is intended for enjoyable discussions of interesting topics. This week's question: what is your favorite Mexican dish? No wrong answers, including not enjoying Mexican food. A little bit about semantics. I'm aware that Mexican food is a very broad net and like all such definitions is prone to a substantial bit of haziness. Mexican cuisine is not the same as Tex-Mex, which is not the same as Puerto Rican cuisine, which is not the same as Guatemalan cuisine and so on. And the various regions of Mexico itself all have their own distinct culinary traditions. But this is true of all cuisines. By Mexican food, I mean Mexican food as it is generally defined in the United States, which tends to be an assemblage of various foods from the American Southwest, Mexico, and Latin America. And as you might expect, we had numerous responses. Our first response is from Justin who says: We have taco night here once a week or so, but no actual tacos are used. A pan of seasoned crumbled hamburger meat along with standard toppings is available for folks to make what they want. That generally becomes beef and cheese burritos and taco salad (regular bowl, corn chips added as desired). Hollis (who narrates the Ghost and Cloak audiobooks as we as mentioned) says: Quesadillas. Taste decadent but can pack in healthy spinach and peppers and whole wheat tortillas with decadent meat and cheese. Juana says: burritos, loaded! Tracy says: chicken and guacamole with roasted veggies. Becca says: Chile en nogada, basically a meat stuffed grilled chili. I have had it with chicken and beef, usually comes with pomegranate or other fruit containing sauce. John says: Three barbacoa tacos with cilantro, onion and the green salsa and three beef fajita tacos the same way. With large horchata from a sketchy food truck usually found in front of the local tire shop. I have to say some of the best Mexican food I've had has come from somewhat sketchy food trucks in front of local tire shops. Bob says: Any kind of mole. One nearby restaurant had a duck mole that was excellent. A different John says: I'm always searching for a great cheese enchilada. At least three, please. Cheryl says: Never had Mexican, so can't comment. Jenny says: Queso dip, especially when it's got beef and chili seasoning (not like chili peppers, but the southwest chili seasoning and beef). Scott says: Anything Al Pastor (burritos taco, et cetera). Steve says: Fish tacos, any way I can get them. Yet another John says: Brisket quesadillas. I've actually had those and they're very good. Andrew Abbott says: Quesadilla. Gary says: Al pastor. Mandy says: Carnitas. For myself, I think my favorite would be arroz con pollo with mushrooms. Tasty, very filling, and so long as you don't go too heavy on the cheese, it's not too terribly bad for you. I've had a couple of different variations of it, including one that had carrots and I admit I was dubious when it came out with carrots in the arroz con pollo, but it was really good. Steak fajitas would be a close second in my Mexican food preference list. The inspiration for this question was that I made homemade nachos for dinner twice this week and I also made tacos twice for dinner this week because if you make up enough taco mix, you can get a couple of meals out of it. So that's it for Question of the Week. 00:05:37 Work Computers/Writing Computer for 2025 Now I thought I'd talk a little bit about what I'm going to use for a computer in 2025. The reason for this is a couple of weeks ago, I posted a meme about choosing a new computer on Facebook and promptly forgot I had done so, but then I looked back a week and a half later to see it had gone viral and people are still arguing about the best computer in the comments, which is good summary of social media, isn't it? You can carefully consider a 1,500 word post that will get like three likes at the most but toss a meme up and forget about it and you'll come back in a week to see it had thousands of views and almost 300 comments, all of them arguing for or against specific computing platforms. So that is the reason I thought I would share what I actually picked for my computing needs in 2025. Three caveats: One, for your own computing requirements, pick whatever meets your needs and that your budget will allow. Windows, Mac OS, Linux, a tablet, whatever. It doesn't really matter. Honestly, I think 90% of people can do 95% of what they need in a web browser nowadays anyway and maybe use a cheap laser printer to print something out like every other month or so. I recently helped an elderly relative with a computer problem and she does about 95% of her computer needs on her Kindle Fire tablet and only breaks out her laptop when a webpage doesn't render properly on mobile. She can even print from her Kindle Fire. That said, I definitely fall into that 10% that cannot use a web browser for everything. Caveat two, my objective isn't to have the best computer or the most powerful computer, it's to have the computer that will be the most efficient in helping me write and publish books. And finally, caveat three. I worked for a long, long time in IT support and I did in fact write an internationally bestselling book about the Linux command line. I have done tech support for operating systems that no longer exist. Remember Windows CE on phones, Palm OS, Windows Phone, getting Mac OSX to talk to Windows Print Services, getting Mac OSX to talk to Active Directory, and Windows Millennium Edition (ugh)? I remember them and none too fondly. That means whatever objection you may have to Windows, Mac OS, Linux, or any other operating system, I probably know about it already have personally experienced it and have in fact tried to fix it while on the phone with someone having a panic attack about that particular problem. So with all that in mind, this is what I will use for computers in 2025 and hopefully for several years longer than that. For my writing/editing computer, I have picked a Mac mini M4. I've mentioned before that I'm increasingly unhappy with Windows 11 because of Microsoft's turn towards AI. I thought long and hard about either Linux or Mac OS and in the end, I decided on Mac OS because I have several subcontractors who all use Excel. Granted, you can install Excel on a Linux system with an emulation layer, but it never works 100% right. Some of the more advanced Excel stuff, which I do use, freaks out with it. There are a number of excellent spreadsheet programs available for Linux as well, but none of them have 100% compatibility with Excel, which is what I need. Additionally for ebook and paperback formatting, I use Vellum, which is Mac only. I have been very happy with Vellum since 2018, which means I've it to format around 60 different eBooks and paperbacks. So based on all that, I chose the Mac mini M4. I've been reasonably happy with it so far, since I've written about half of Shield of Deception on it. It's quite fast, which shows there are some advantages to the same company producing the CPU and the operating system. Microsoft Word is definitely faster on the M4 and the M Series Macs than it was on the Intel based Macs. I wasn't expecting this, but the overall lack of distraction in Mac OS is nice. It's very unobtrusive. Windows 11 is a very cluttered environment by default with lots of distractions and it is very annoying how Microsoft has been encrusting ads throughout the operating system. You can turn on quiet mode of course, but it's pleasant to have the overall lack of distraction be the default. So the Mac mini M4 will be the computer I use for writing, editing and book layout, but that's not all I do. My everything else computer will be a Windows 11 Intel Core I7 desktop. My previous computer before the Mac mini, a Windows 11 box with Intel Core I7, will also remain in use. The thing about being an indie publisher is that writing and editing isn't all I do. I do my own covers now, which means Photoshop and DAZ3D. Both of those applications are big, fat memory hogs. I definitely did not want to shell out the money for a Mac with that much memory. There's also advertising, which means a lot of spreadsheets and using Photoshop to make those ad images and other miscellaneous tasks like recording expenses, web design, audio proofing, podcast recording, and so forth. In fact, I'm recording this podcast on that computer right now, so my Windows 11 box is now my everything else computer. It doesn't have an NPU chip, which means that Windows 11's more odious features like Recall won't work on it, therefore I plan to nurse it along as long as possible. I have to admit there was an unanticipated pleasant psychological effect to this. When I write, I go to my writing computer and when I need to do something else, I use my everything else computer, so it's easier to avoid getting distracted by something else I need to do while I'm writing. I should mention gaming. I don't really use desktop computers for gaming any longer. They're for work. If there's a PC game I want to play, it needs to be able to run on my laptop while I sit on my couch. Otherwise, it's not going to happen. In the past five years, I spent more time playing games on the Switch and the Xbox than on desktop PC. So that is my computer plan for 2025, write on the Mac, do everything else on the PC. I should mention that the day before I started recording this, Microsoft pushed out an update that added this big ugly Copilot AI button to Word and Excel. So while I'm going to finish Shield of Deception in Microsoft Word, I am probably going to write Ghost in the Assembly in either Libre Office Writer or maybe MobiOffice. I need something that's cross compatible between Windows and Mac, so I'll be investigating other word processor options with all this Copilot stuff they're jamming into Word, but in the end, I'm grateful I'm able to use two different desktop computers and hopefully I will use these computers to produce many good books for you to read in 2025. 00:12:00 Main Topic of the Week: 5 Reasons You Should Buy Direct from Authors Now on to our main topic, five reasons you should buy direct from authors. What do we mean by selling direct? It's when the author has his or her own store hosted on a site like Shopify or Payhip that allows the author to sell eBooks, audiobooks, and sometimes paperbacks direct to readers. I should mention this is not intended in any way to be shaming or bullying. If you are most comfortable buying your eBooks from Amazon or Kobo or Apple Books or Google or any other platform, that is what you should do. This is just to talk about the advantages for both readers and writers for buying direct from authors. Payhip and Shopify are the two most popular platforms for selling direct to readers. I use Payhip since I'm mostly interested in selling eBooks and audiobooks direct and not paperbacks. You can actually look at my Payhip store, which is https://payhip.com/jonathanmoeller. The links are also available on my website and indeed in the show notes for the show for Coupon of the Week. So why even bother with direct sales when most people are now locked into a platform like Amazon or Kobo and their libraries? Why take the time to convince readers to buy directly from the author? What are the advantages to the author and more importantly, what are the advantages to the reader? And there are five of them, which we'll discuss now. #1: Faster access to new releases. The reason Payhip is always the first platform to become available for one of my new books by about a day or so is that when a new title releases, it's because I'm uploading it myself. With Amazon or other sites, my books are essentially put into a line with many, many other titles and I can't control or predict when it will become available for customers. Various stores can take longer to process or be unavailable/down when a new book releases. Kobo glitched quite badly at various points throughout 2024. In 2021, Barnes and Noble suffered a ransomware attack that blocked the ability to upload new books to the platform for about a month, and all the other stores have had various technical glitches throughout time. That's just the nature of running a large website, but having a site like Payhip gives me a place where people can turn to when it happens. Quite a few people bought Cloak of Illusion from Payhip because Kobo was down for a week when I was trying to upload the book to the site. #2: The second reason, which is a big advantage for both readers and writers, is that I can control discounts and permafree so it's easier to get discounts from an author's store. It's easier to provide discounts on Payhip because I'm getting a higher profit margin. Even with the 50% discount on Ghost in the Tombs we mentioned this week, I still would make from that discounted audiobook more than on Audible and pretty close to what I get from some of the more generous sites like Chirp or Google Play or Kobo. Just like with the uploads, I also have complete control over when the discounts happen on Payhip. Otherwise, as I mentioned earlier, I'm at the mercy of when the uploaded book processes on various stores, just like with release dates. It's hard to promote discounts or short-term freebies on those other platforms because the price change move slowly (and often unreliably) there, whereas they're instant on Payhip. Payhip is also my hub for providing free content to my readers beyond my Permafree series starters. Keep an eye on my blog and Facebook page for Coupon of the Week, where as I mentioned earlier in the show, I give out codes with steep discounts for my Payhip store. I also provide free short stories on my Payhip store for a limited time when new books release. Subscribe to my newsletter if you'd like to know when those free short stories become available. I also make a dozen older short stories (both ebook and audiobook) free on my Payhip at the end of each year, an event called 12 Days of Short Story Christmas. If you follow my website and blog, you might remember that from recently. It would take too much time away from writing to do all these things on all the other platforms, and it often isn't technically possible. Using Payhip frees up my time to do more writing instead of trying to work with the tech support of six different vendors when something doesn't switch price in time to run a specific promotion. #3: A third advantage, and that is a big advantage for readers, is I am not interested in your data and I am not spying on you the way that a large e-commerce site might be. Payhip basically just shows me the buyer's email for an individual's data. I can't see any other purchases you make. I can't see any individual demographic data and I can't see anything that would be uncomfortable for me to know. Basically all I see is your email address and your geographic location (your rough geographic location), which obviously the store needs in order to calculate sales tax liability. I intentionally set up the Payhip store so that you don't need a user account to buy books or audiobooks there. We also try and turn off the more annoying site settings like follow up emails that request reviews. Even the aggregate data on the Payhip app dashboard is extremely limited compared to other platforms. I can see a map shaded in with countries of visitors, which isn't accurate or useful in an age where you can use a VPN to switch your location with the click of a button. [We can see] if users are accessing the link directly from a Google search and the raw number of clicks on the page. Compared to the amount of data collected by other sites, [that is very minimal]. For example, other sites can show that men ages 23 to 28 who like Taylor Swift, own a cat, and live in Canada are looking at your page at midnight on Tuesday. That is much less data than Payhip collects, so therefore, if you're concerned about data privacy, Payhip is a stronger choice than most other ebook and audiobook platforms. For details about what Payhip tracks separate from what the individual author does, check out their privacy policy. #4: The fourth advantage is the reader gets a choice of file formats and you can send files to another ebook library. With Amazon or indeed any of the other ebook stores, you get your chosen format for an ebook and can't switch that format without using third party software. At my Payhip store, you get three ebook formats: epub, PDF, and when possible, the ancient .mobi format (which is kinda depreciated and gradually going away). I've noticed that people who like PDFs really like PDFs, and so if you want your ebook in PDF form, you can get them in PDF form from my Payhip store. Having a choice of different file formats allows you to more easily import the books into the platforms you already use like Kindle or Kobo. It's a pretty simple process to send files to your Kindle, Kobo, iPad, or other device so you have access to them in your library there. All my eBooks are integrated with Book Funnel, so if you have a Book Funnel account, they automatically show up in your library. Book Funnel also has directions for sideloading the files onto your various devices. #5: The fifth advantage, and this is a really big one for readers, is all the files you buy from me on Payhip are DRM free files that you can self-archive. Digital rights management limits your ability to transfer books and audiobooks through apps, devices, and so forth. It controls the way that you access things you have purchased. It's often said that you don't buy digital content, you have a conditional lease on it that's controlled by the platform you buy it from. The content that you buy can disappear, especially when a platform is sold or closes. We've all heard horror stories of people whose accounts at various online retailers get closed for some reason, and then they lose their access to the library of any media they have purchased there or a platform can go out of business. There was a minor, well, actually a fairly major scandal a few years ago when a romance themed ebook store went out of business and everyone lost their access to their libraries. And for a while Microsoft was offering eBooks for sale through the Edge browser, but as we know, Microsoft tends to change mind about things a lot, and that went away and eventually people lost their ability to access any eBooks they had purchased through the Microsoft store. And this isn't even the first time Microsoft did this. Way back in the ‘90s and early 2000s, Microsoft was trying to be become a music retailer to compete with Apple's iTunes store, and they used a kind of a DRM called Play For Sure. Eventually they got out of that business and shut down Play For Sure's servers and anyone who had purchased music locked to that DRM could no longer play it. Our Payhip store has DRM free files. These allow you to store and archive the files separate from the ebook and audiobook stores so that doesn't happen. It allows you to actually own the content that you buy and build a library that best suits your needs. So that way, if for some reason (let's say for example, your audiobook store account gets hacked and you get locked out of it), you won't lose all your eBooks that you bought through my Payhip store if you downloaded them and stored them on a local storage device or some other kind of archive system. One final advantage that is more for the author than for the reader, it is a better profit margin for direct sales than is for any of the other stores. The best percentage you can get in the ebook sales on any of the other stores is Amazon, which offers 70% for eBooks between $2.99 and $9.99. Whereas with Payhip, I get about 85% of each sale (minus sales tax and credit card processing fees). The Coupons of the Week we have been doing so far this year are a good example of that. I'm selling the Ghost audiobooks connected with the coupon for 50% off and the standard sales price is $11.99, which means you get them for about $5.99. Even though that's cheap, I still get almost as much money from a $5.99 sale than I would from a purchase on Audible or any of the other major audiobook platforms. Those are five reasons to buy direct from an author. I should note, it's just not good for the author. It offers many advantages for the reader as well. So that is it for this week. Thank you for listening to The Pulp Writer Show. I hope you found the show useful. A reminder that you can listen to all the backup episodes at https://thepulpwritershow.com. If you enjoyed the podcast, please leave a review on your podcasting platform of choice. Stay safe and stay healthy and see you all next week.
The MacBreak Weekly crew celebrates the 25th anniversary of Mac OS X, discusses Apple's $95 million settlement over Siri privacy concerns, and shares their thoughts on new gaming capabilities coming to the Vision Pro headset. The hosts also debate the future of Google search in light of the US government's antitrust case and touch on the possibility of non-invasive glucose monitoring coming to the Apple Watch. • Release of iOS and iPadOS 16.3.1 with important bug fixes and security updates • 25th anniversary of Mac OS X and its importance in providing a modern, Unix-based foundation that became the basis for Apple's other operating systems • Apple's $95 million settlement over Siri privacy concerns related to accidental recordings, while maintaining that user data was never sold or used for marketing • Speculation on why Apple is unlikely to create its own search engine, particularly due to its lucrative deal with Google and the economic risks involved • Concerns over Apple's AI-generated news summaries sometimes being wildly inaccurate, prompting calls for the company to suspend the feature until it can be improved • Expansion of Apple Fitness+ with new workouts and integration with the Strava workout tracking platform • The gang discusses the ethical implications of Apple potentially securing exclusive rights to non-invasive blood glucose monitoring on the Apple Watch • Nvidia announcing upcoming support for its GeForce Now game streaming service on the Vision Pro headset, plus the ability to use the device for capturing movement to train AI for robotics • 'Wicked' director Jon M. Chu used Apple Vision Pro during the film's post-production process Picks of the Week: • Leo: Ghostty - a macOS terminal with metal integration • Jason: Govee Christmas Lights 2, programmable LED lights for festive decoration • Alex: iPhone Cinematic mode, which allows for impressive video capture and post-production focus adjustments • Andy: Anker's new 140W 4-port charger, offering fast charging capabilities for multiple devices simultaneously Hosts: Leo Laporte, Alex Lindsay, Andy Ihnatko, and Jason Snell Download or subscribe to MacBreak Weekly at https://twit.tv/shows/macbreak-weekly. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsors: zscaler.com/security Melissa.com/twit cachefly.com/twit
The MacBreak Weekly crew celebrates the 25th anniversary of Mac OS X, discusses Apple's $95 million settlement over Siri privacy concerns, and shares their thoughts on new gaming capabilities coming to the Vision Pro headset. The hosts also debate the future of Google search in light of the US government's antitrust case and touch on the possibility of non-invasive glucose monitoring coming to the Apple Watch. • Release of iOS and iPadOS 16.3.1 with important bug fixes and security updates • 25th anniversary of Mac OS X and its importance in providing a modern, Unix-based foundation that became the basis for Apple's other operating systems • Apple's $95 million settlement over Siri privacy concerns related to accidental recordings, while maintaining that user data was never sold or used for marketing • Speculation on why Apple is unlikely to create its own search engine, particularly due to its lucrative deal with Google and the economic risks involved • Concerns over Apple's AI-generated news summaries sometimes being wildly inaccurate, prompting calls for the company to suspend the feature until it can be improved • Expansion of Apple Fitness+ with new workouts and integration with the Strava workout tracking platform • The gang discusses the ethical implications of Apple potentially securing exclusive rights to non-invasive blood glucose monitoring on the Apple Watch • Nvidia announcing upcoming support for its GeForce Now game streaming service on the Vision Pro headset, plus the ability to use the device for capturing movement to train AI for robotics • 'Wicked' director Jon M. Chu used Apple Vision Pro during the film's post-production process Picks of the Week: • Leo: Ghostty - a macOS terminal with metal integration • Jason: Govee Christmas Lights 2, programmable LED lights for festive decoration • Alex: iPhone Cinematic mode, which allows for impressive video capture and post-production focus adjustments • Andy: Anker's new 140W 4-port charger, offering fast charging capabilities for multiple devices simultaneously Hosts: Leo Laporte, Alex Lindsay, Andy Ihnatko, and Jason Snell Download or subscribe to MacBreak Weekly at https://twit.tv/shows/macbreak-weekly. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsors: zscaler.com/security Melissa.com/twit cachefly.com/twit
The MacBreak Weekly crew celebrates the 25th anniversary of Mac OS X, discusses Apple's $95 million settlement over Siri privacy concerns, and shares their thoughts on new gaming capabilities coming to the Vision Pro headset. The hosts also debate the future of Google search in light of the US government's antitrust case and touch on the possibility of non-invasive glucose monitoring coming to the Apple Watch. • Release of iOS and iPadOS 16.3.1 with important bug fixes and security updates • 25th anniversary of Mac OS X and its importance in providing a modern, Unix-based foundation that became the basis for Apple's other operating systems • Apple's $95 million settlement over Siri privacy concerns related to accidental recordings, while maintaining that user data was never sold or used for marketing • Speculation on why Apple is unlikely to create its own search engine, particularly due to its lucrative deal with Google and the economic risks involved • Concerns over Apple's AI-generated news summaries sometimes being wildly inaccurate, prompting calls for the company to suspend the feature until it can be improved • Expansion of Apple Fitness+ with new workouts and integration with the Strava workout tracking platform • The gang discusses the ethical implications of Apple potentially securing exclusive rights to non-invasive blood glucose monitoring on the Apple Watch • Nvidia announcing upcoming support for its GeForce Now game streaming service on the Vision Pro headset, plus the ability to use the device for capturing movement to train AI for robotics • 'Wicked' director Jon M. Chu used Apple Vision Pro during the film's post-production process Picks of the Week: • Leo: Ghostty - a macOS terminal with metal integration • Jason: Govee Christmas Lights 2, programmable LED lights for festive decoration • Alex: iPhone Cinematic mode, which allows for impressive video capture and post-production focus adjustments • Andy: Anker's new 140W 4-port charger, offering fast charging capabilities for multiple devices simultaneously Hosts: Leo Laporte, Alex Lindsay, Andy Ihnatko, and Jason Snell Download or subscribe to MacBreak Weekly at https://twit.tv/shows/macbreak-weekly. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsors: zscaler.com/security Melissa.com/twit cachefly.com/twit
The MacBreak Weekly crew celebrates the 25th anniversary of Mac OS X, discusses Apple's $95 million settlement over Siri privacy concerns, and shares their thoughts on new gaming capabilities coming to the Vision Pro headset. The hosts also debate the future of Google search in light of the US government's antitrust case and touch on the possibility of non-invasive glucose monitoring coming to the Apple Watch. • Release of iOS and iPadOS 16.3.1 with important bug fixes and security updates • 25th anniversary of Mac OS X and its importance in providing a modern, Unix-based foundation that became the basis for Apple's other operating systems • Apple's $95 million settlement over Siri privacy concerns related to accidental recordings, while maintaining that user data was never sold or used for marketing • Speculation on why Apple is unlikely to create its own search engine, particularly due to its lucrative deal with Google and the economic risks involved • Concerns over Apple's AI-generated news summaries sometimes being wildly inaccurate, prompting calls for the company to suspend the feature until it can be improved • Expansion of Apple Fitness+ with new workouts and integration with the Strava workout tracking platform • The gang discusses the ethical implications of Apple potentially securing exclusive rights to non-invasive blood glucose monitoring on the Apple Watch • Nvidia announcing upcoming support for its GeForce Now game streaming service on the Vision Pro headset, plus the ability to use the device for capturing movement to train AI for robotics • 'Wicked' director Jon M. Chu used Apple Vision Pro during the film's post-production process Picks of the Week: • Leo: Ghostty - a macOS terminal with metal integration • Jason: Govee Christmas Lights 2, programmable LED lights for festive decoration • Alex: iPhone Cinematic mode, which allows for impressive video capture and post-production focus adjustments • Andy: Anker's new 140W 4-port charger, offering fast charging capabilities for multiple devices simultaneously Hosts: Leo Laporte, Alex Lindsay, Andy Ihnatko, and Jason Snell Download or subscribe to MacBreak Weekly at https://twit.tv/shows/macbreak-weekly. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsors: zscaler.com/security Melissa.com/twit cachefly.com/twit
The MacBreak Weekly crew celebrates the 25th anniversary of Mac OS X, discusses Apple's $95 million settlement over Siri privacy concerns, and shares their thoughts on new gaming capabilities coming to the Vision Pro headset. The hosts also debate the future of Google search in light of the US government's antitrust case and touch on the possibility of non-invasive glucose monitoring coming to the Apple Watch. • Release of iOS and iPadOS 16.3.1 with important bug fixes and security updates • 25th anniversary of Mac OS X and its importance in providing a modern, Unix-based foundation that became the basis for Apple's other operating systems • Apple's $95 million settlement over Siri privacy concerns related to accidental recordings, while maintaining that user data was never sold or used for marketing • Speculation on why Apple is unlikely to create its own search engine, particularly due to its lucrative deal with Google and the economic risks involved • Concerns over Apple's AI-generated news summaries sometimes being wildly inaccurate, prompting calls for the company to suspend the feature until it can be improved • Expansion of Apple Fitness+ with new workouts and integration with the Strava workout tracking platform • The gang discusses the ethical implications of Apple potentially securing exclusive rights to non-invasive blood glucose monitoring on the Apple Watch • Nvidia announcing upcoming support for its GeForce Now game streaming service on the Vision Pro headset, plus the ability to use the device for capturing movement to train AI for robotics • 'Wicked' director Jon M. Chu used Apple Vision Pro during the film's post-production process Picks of the Week: • Leo: Ghostty - a macOS terminal with metal integration • Jason: Govee Christmas Lights 2, programmable LED lights for festive decoration • Alex: iPhone Cinematic mode, which allows for impressive video capture and post-production focus adjustments • Andy: Anker's new 140W 4-port charger, offering fast charging capabilities for multiple devices simultaneously Hosts: Leo Laporte, Alex Lindsay, Andy Ihnatko, and Jason Snell Download or subscribe to MacBreak Weekly at https://twit.tv/shows/macbreak-weekly. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsors: zscaler.com/security Melissa.com/twit cachefly.com/twit
The MacBreak Weekly crew celebrates the 25th anniversary of Mac OS X, discusses Apple's $95 million settlement over Siri privacy concerns, and shares their thoughts on new gaming capabilities coming to the Vision Pro headset. The hosts also debate the future of Google search in light of the US government's antitrust case and touch on the possibility of non-invasive glucose monitoring coming to the Apple Watch. • Release of iOS and iPadOS 16.3.1 with important bug fixes and security updates • 25th anniversary of Mac OS X and its importance in providing a modern, Unix-based foundation that became the basis for Apple's other operating systems • Apple's $95 million settlement over Siri privacy concerns related to accidental recordings, while maintaining that user data was never sold or used for marketing • Speculation on why Apple is unlikely to create its own search engine, particularly due to its lucrative deal with Google and the economic risks involved • Concerns over Apple's AI-generated news summaries sometimes being wildly inaccurate, prompting calls for the company to suspend the feature until it can be improved • Expansion of Apple Fitness+ with new workouts and integration with the Strava workout tracking platform • The gang discusses the ethical implications of Apple potentially securing exclusive rights to non-invasive blood glucose monitoring on the Apple Watch • Nvidia announcing upcoming support for its GeForce Now game streaming service on the Vision Pro headset, plus the ability to use the device for capturing movement to train AI for robotics • 'Wicked' director Jon M. Chu used Apple Vision Pro during the film's post-production process Picks of the Week: • Leo: Ghostty - a macOS terminal with metal integration • Jason: Govee Christmas Lights 2, programmable LED lights for festive decoration • Alex: iPhone Cinematic mode, which allows for impressive video capture and post-production focus adjustments • Andy: Anker's new 140W 4-port charger, offering fast charging capabilities for multiple devices simultaneously Hosts: Leo Laporte, Alex Lindsay, Andy Ihnatko, and Jason Snell Download or subscribe to MacBreak Weekly at https://twit.tv/shows/macbreak-weekly. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsors: zscaler.com/security Melissa.com/twit cachefly.com/twit
Mon, 06 Jan 2025 21:30:00 GMT http://relay.fm/upgrade/545 http://relay.fm/upgrade/545 The Bee Bonnet Company 545 Jason Snell and Myke Hurley A new year dawns! We consider what it has in store for Apple and why the company's A.I. features need to be judged critically. Then we turn back the clock to 2000 and consider the moment when Mac OS X changed everything. A new year dawns! We consider what it has in store for Apple and why the company's A.I. features need to be judged critically. Then we turn back the clock to 2000 and consider the moment when Mac OS X changed everything. clean 5799 A new year dawns! We consider what it has in store for Apple and why the company's A.I. features need to be judged critically. Then we turn back the clock to 2000 and consider the moment when Mac OS X changed everything. This episode of Upgrade is sponsored by: Squarespace: Save 10% off your first purchase of a website or domain using code UPGRADE. Fitbod: Get stronger, faster with a fitness plan that fits you. Get 25% off your membership. DeleteMe: Get 20% off your plan when you use this link and code UPGRADE20. Links and Show Notes: Get Upgrade+. More content, no ads. Submit Feedback The Rest Is History Apple Stops Selling iPhone 14 and iPhone SE in More EU Countries - MacRumors Apple Intelligence falsely claimed Luke Littler had already won - BBC News Jason's post on Bluesky 2025 will be the year of Apple Intelligence (again) | Macworld Vision D'oh: The "Fun" Problem Facing Apple's VR Ambitions – Julia Alexander Apple, Google, and Samsung will accept Matter certification of smart home products - The Verge 25 years since the Dock's debut – Six Colors 25 years on, Mac OS X continues to be Apple's standard bearer – Six Colors Looking back 25 years later, even Steve was wrong about Mac OS X | Macworld Macworld 2000 Keynote - YouTube
Mon, 06 Jan 2025 21:30:00 GMT http://relay.fm/upgrade/545 http://relay.fm/upgrade/545 Jason Snell and Myke Hurley A new year dawns! We consider what it has in store for Apple and why the company's A.I. features need to be judged critically. Then we turn back the clock to 2000 and consider the moment when Mac OS X changed everything. A new year dawns! We consider what it has in store for Apple and why the company's A.I. features need to be judged critically. Then we turn back the clock to 2000 and consider the moment when Mac OS X changed everything. clean 5799 A new year dawns! We consider what it has in store for Apple and why the company's A.I. features need to be judged critically. Then we turn back the clock to 2000 and consider the moment when Mac OS X changed everything. This episode of Upgrade is sponsored by: Squarespace: Save 10% off your first purchase of a website or domain using code UPGRADE. Fitbod: Get stronger, faster with a fitness plan that fits you. Get 25% off your membership. DeleteMe: Get 20% off your plan when you use this link and code UPGRADE20. Links and Show Notes: Get Upgrade+. More content, no ads. Submit Feedback The Rest Is History Apple Stops Selling iPhone 14 and iPhone SE in More EU Countries - MacRumors Apple Intelligence falsely claimed Luke Littler had already won - BBC News Jason's post on Bluesky 2025 will be the year of Apple Intelligence (again) | Macworld Vision D'oh: The "Fun" Problem Facing Apple's VR Ambitions – Julia Alexander Apple, Google, and Samsung will accept Matter certification of smart home products - The Verge 25 years since the Dock's debut – Six Colors 25 years on, Mac OS X continues to be Apple's standard bearer – Six Colors Looking back 25 years later, even Steve was wrong about Mac OS X | Macworld Macworld 2000 Keynote - YouTube
Jointly Provided by the American Academy of CME and CheckRare CE Inc.Support for this accredited continuing education activity has been made possible through educational grant from argenx US Inc. and UCB.Estimated time to complete: 0.25 hoursStart date: November 7, 2024End date: November 6, 2025This quarter-hour CME-accredited program, hosted by Richard J. Nowak, MD, MS, discusses the safety and efficacy of neonatal fragment crystallizable receptor (FcRn)-directed therapies for patient with myasthenia gravis.To obtain CME credit, visit https://checkrare.com/learning/p-fcrn-and-myasthenia-gravis-treatment-options/ Activity FacultyRichard J. Nowak, MD, MSDirector, Program in Clinical & Translational Neuromuscular Research (CTNR) Director, Yale Myasthenia Gravis Clinic Associate Professor of Neurology Division of Neuromuscular MedicineDepartment of Neurology Yale School of Medicine New Haven, CTTarget AudienceThis activity has been designed to meet the educational needs of physicians specializing in neurology and ophthalmology who may be involved in the diagnosis and care of individuals with MG. Other healthcare providers, including neurology NPs and PAs, may also participate. Learning ObjectivesAfter participating in the activity, learners should be better able toDescribe the efficacy of the treatment options for MG that target FcRn.Compare the safety of the treatment options for MG that target FcRn.Accreditation and Credit DesignationIn support of improving patient care, this activity has been planned and implemented by American Academy of CME, Inc. and CheckRare CE. American Academy of CME, Inc. is Jointly accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME), the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education (ACPE), and the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC), to provide continuing education for the healthcare team.PhysiciansAmerican Academy of CME, Inc., designates this enduring material for a maximum of 0.25 AMA PRA Category 1 CreditsTM. Physicians should claim only the credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity. Other HCPsOther members of the care team will receive a certificate of participation.Disclosure StatementAccording to the disclosure policy of the Academy, all faculty, planning committee members, editors, managers and other individuals who are in a position to control content are required to disclose any relationships with any ineligible company(ies). The existence of these relationships is not viewed as implying bias or decreasing the value of the activity. Clinical content has been reviewed for fair balance and scientific objectivity, and all of the relevant financial relationships listed for these individuals have been mitigated.Disclosure of relevant financial relationships are as follows:Dr. Nowak discloses the following relevant financial relationships with ineligible companies:Advisory Board/Consultant: Alexion (part of AstraZeneca), argenx, Amgen, Cour Pharmaceuticals, Immunovant, Janssen, UCBGrant/Research Support: Alexion (part of AstraZeneca), argenx, Amgen, Cour Pharmaceuticals, Immunovant, Janssen, UCBPlanners for this activity have no relevant financial relationships with any ineligible companies.This activity will review off-label or investigational information. The opinions expressed in this educational activity are those of the faculty, and do not represent those of the Academy or CheckRare CE. This activity is intended as a supplement to existing knowledge, published information, and practice guidelines. Learners should appraise the information presented critically, and draw conclusions only after careful consideration of all available scientific information.Method of ParticipationThere are no fees to participate in the activity. Participants must review the activity information including the learning objectives and disclosure statements, as well as the content of the activity. To receive CME credit for your participation, please complete the pre and post-program assessments. Your certificate will be emailed to you in within 30 days.Hardware/Software Requirements Windows Requirements: • Operating system: Windows XP Service Pack 2 or later • Browser: Internet Explorer 7 or later, Mozilla Firefox 2.5 or later • Internet connection: DSL, cable modem, or other high-speed connectionMacintosh Requirements: • Operating system: Mac OS X v10.3 or later • Browser: Mozilla Firefox 2.5 or later • Internet connection: DSL, cable modem, or other high-speed connectionPrivacyFor more information about the American Academy of CME privacy policy, please access http://www.academycme.org/privacy.htm For more information about CheckRare's privacy policy, please access https://checkrare.com/privacy/ContactFor any questions, please contact: CEServices@academycme.orgCopyright© 2024. This CME-certified activity is held as copyrighted © by American Academy of CME and CheckRare CE. Through this notice, the Academy and CheckRare CE grant permission of its use for educational purposes only. These materials may not be used, in whole or in part, for any commercial purposes without prior permission in writing from the copyright owner(s).
Jointly Provided by American Academy of CME Inc and CheckRare CE Inc.Support for this accredited continuing education activity has been made possible through an educational grant from argenx US Inc.and UCB.Estimated time to complete: 0.25 hoursStart date: November 7, 2024End date: November 6, 2025This quarter-hour CME-accredited program, hosted by Richard J. Nowak, MD, MS, explains the role of neonatal fragment crystallizable receptor (FcRn) in myasthenia gravis (MG).To obtain CME credit, visit https://checkrare.com/learning/p-fcrn-and-myasthenia-gravis-pathophysiology/ Activity FacultyRichard J. Nowak, MD, MSDirector, Program in Clinical & Translational Neuromuscular Research (CTNR) Director, Yale Myasthenia Gravis Clinic Associate Professor of Neurology Division of Neuromuscular MedicineDepartment of Neurology Yale School of Medicine New Haven, CTTarget AudienceThis activity has been designed to meet the educational needs of physicians specializing in neurology and ophthalmology who may be involved in the diagnosis and care of individuals with MG. Other healthcare providers, including neurology NPs and PAs, may also participate. Learning ObjectivesAfter participating in the activity, learners should be better able toDescribe the role of FcRn in MG.Accreditation and Credit DesignationIn support of improving patient care, this activity has been planned and implemented by American Academy of CME, Inc. and CheckRare CE. American Academy of CME, Inc. is Jointly accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME), the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education (ACPE), and the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC), to provide continuing education for the healthcare team.PhysiciansAmerican Academy of CME, Inc., designates this enduring material for a maximum of 0.25 AMA PRA Category 1 CreditsTM. Physicians should claim only the credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity. Other HCPsOther members of the care team will receive a certificate of participation.Disclosure StatementAccording to the disclosure policy of the Academy, all faculty, planning committee members, editors, managers and other individuals who are in a position to control content are required to disclose any relationships with any ineligible company(ies). The existence of these relationships is not viewed as implying bias or decreasing the value of the activity. Clinical content has been reviewed for fair balance and scientific objectivity, and all of the relevant financial relationships listed for these individuals have been mitigated.Disclosure of relevant financial relationships are as follows:Faculty EducatorDr. Nowak discloses the following relevant financial relationships with ineligible companies:Advisory Board/Consultant: Alexion (part of AstraZeneca), argenx, Amgen, Cour Pharmaceuticals, Immunovant, Janssen, UCBGrant/Research Support: Alexion (part of AstraZeneca), argenx, Amgen, Cour Pharmaceuticals, Immunovant, Janssen, UCBPlanners for this activity have no relevant financial relationships with any ineligible companies.This activity will review off-label or investigational information. The opinions expressed in this educational activity are those of the faculty, and do not represent those of the Academy or CheckRare CE. This activity is intended as a supplement to existing knowledge, published information, and practice guidelines. Learners should appraise the information presented critically, and draw conclusions only after careful consideration of all available scientific information.Method of ParticipationThere are no fees to participate in the activity. Participants must review the activity information including the learning objectives and disclosure statements, as well as the content of the activity. To receive CME credit for your participation, please complete the pre and post-program assessments. Your certificate will be emailed to you in within 30 days.Hardware/Software Requirements Windows Requirements: • Operating system: Windows XP Service Pack 2 or later • Browser: Internet Explorer 7 or later, Mozilla Firefox 2.5 or later • Internet connection: DSL, cable modem, or other high-speed connection.Macintosh Requirements: • Operating system: Mac OS X v10.3 or later • Browser: Mozilla Firefox 2.5 or later • Internet connection: DSL, cable modem, or other high-speed connectionPrivacyFor more information about the American Academy of CME privacy policy, please access http://www.academycme.org/privacy.htm For more information about CheckRare's privacy policy, please access https://checkrare.com/privacy/ContactFor any questions, please contact: CEServices@academycme.orgCopyright© 2024. This CME-certified activity is held as copyrighted © by American Academy of CME and CheckRare CE. Through this notice, the Academy and CheckRare CE grant permission of its use for educational purposes only. These materials may not be used, in whole or in part, for any commercial purposes without prior permission in writing from the copyright owner(s).
Jointly Provided by American Academy of CME Inc and CheckRare CE Inc.Support for this accredited continuing education activity has been made possible through an educational grant from argenx US Inc. and UCB.Estimated time to complete: 0.50 hoursStart date: November 7, 2024End date: November 6, 2025This half-hour CME-accredited program, hosted by Richard J. Nowak, MD, MS, explains the role of neonatal fragment crystallizable receptor (FcRn) in myasthenia gravis (MG) and how treatments that target FcRn are being used to manage patients with MG.To obtain credit, visit https://checkrare.com/learning/p-fcrn-and-myasthenia-gravis/ Activity FacultyRichard J. Nowak, MD, MSDirector, Program in Clinical & Translational Neuromuscular Research (CTNR) Director, Yale Myasthenia Gravis Clinic Associate Professor of Neurology Division of Neuromuscular MedicineDepartment of Neurology Yale School of Medicine New Haven, CTTarget AudienceThis activity has been designed to meet the educational needs of physicians specializing in neurology and ophthalmology who may be involved in the diagnosis and care of individuals with MG. Other healthcare providers, including neurology NPs and PAs, may also participate. Learning ObjectivesAfter participating in the activity, learners should be better able toDescribe the role of FcRn in MG.Describe the efficacy of the treatment options for MG that target FcRn.Compare the safety of the treatment options for MG that target FcRn.Accreditation and Credit DesignationIn support of improving patient care, this activity has been planned and implemented by American Academy of CME, Inc. and CheckRare CE. American Academy of CME, Inc. is Jointly accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME), the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education (ACPE), and the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC), to provide continuing education for the healthcare team.PhysiciansAmerican Academy of CME, Inc., designates this enduring material for a maximum of 0.50 AMA PRA Category 1 CreditsTM. Physicians should claim only the credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity. Other HCPsOther members of the care team will receive a certificate of participation.Disclosure StatementAccording to the disclosure policy of the Academy, all faculty, planning committee members, editors, managers and other individuals who are in a position to control content are required to disclose any relationships with any ineligible company(ies). The existence of these relationships is not viewed as implying bias or decreasing the value of the activity. Clinical content has been reviewed for fair balance and scientific objectivity, and all of the relevant financial relationships listed for these individuals have been mitigated.Disclosure of relevant financial relationships are as follows:Dr. Nowak discloses the following relevant financial relationships with ineligible companies:Advisory Board/Consultant: Alexion (part of AstraZeneca), argenx, Amgen, Cour Pharmaceuticals, Immunovant, Janssen, UCBGrant/Research Support: Alexion (part of AstraZeneca), argenx, Amgen, Cour Pharmaceuticals, Immunovant, Janssen, UCBPlanners for this activity have no relevant financial relationships with any ineligible companies.This activity will review off-label or investigational information. The opinions expressed in this educational activity are those of the faculty, and do not represent those of the Academy or CheckRare CE. This activity is intended as a supplement to existing knowledge, published information, and practice guidelines. Learners should appraise the information presented critically, and draw conclusions only after careful consideration of all available scientific information.Method of ParticipationThere are no fees to participate in the activity. Participants must review the activity information including the learning objectives and disclosure statements, as well as the content of the activity. To receive CME credit for your participation, please complete the pre and post-program assessments. Your certificate will be emailed to you in within 30 days.Hardware/Software Requirements Windows Requirements: • Operating system: Windows XP Service Pack 2 or later • Browser: Internet Explorer 7 or later, Mozilla Firefox 2.5 or later • Internet connection: DSL, cable modem, or other high-speed connectionMacintosh Requirements: • Operating system: Mac OS X v10.3 or later • Browser: Mozilla Firefox 2.5 or later • Internet connection: DSL, cable modem, or other high-speed connectionPrivacyFor more information about the American Academy of CME privacy policy, please access http://www.academycme.org/privacy.htm For more information about CheckRare's privacy policy, please access https://checkrare.com/privacy/ContactFor any questions, please contact: CEServices@academycme.orgCopyright© 2024. This CME-certified activity is held as copyrighted © by American Academy of CME and CheckRare CE. Through this notice, the Academy and CheckRare CE grant permission of its use for educational purposes only. These materials may not be used, in whole or in part, for any commercial purposes without prior permission in writing from the copyright owner(s).
Tonight we warp reality and defy physics with the Portal games. ________________________________________________________________________ Find Us on these platforms: https://twitter.com/_RetroRenegades https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100077718475122 https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/retro-renegades https://www.tiktok.com/@retro.renegades ________________________________________________________________________ Join this channel to get access to perks: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCcT8wcspekw5tSzbc3qWPCg/join ________________________________________________________________________ Portal is a 2007 puzzle-platform game developed and published by Valve. It was released in a bundle, The Orange Box, for Windows, Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3, and has been since ported to other systems, including Mac OS X, Linux, Android (via Nvidia Shield), and Nintendo Switch. ________________________________________________________________________ Grab a beer, a slice of pizza and come hang out with us. We play the greatest games from yesterday while discussing today's gaming news and reminisce on the past. A no topic, no fuks given eccentric cast. Come hang with us at 7:00PM EST | 6:00PM CST | 5:00PM MST | 4:00PM PST.. ________________________________________________________________________ TRY DUBBY FROM GAMERS TO GYM JUNKIES TO ENTREPRENEURS, OUR PRODUCT IS FOR ANYONE WHO WANTS TO BE BETTER. SAVE 10% WITH THIS LINK. https://www.dubby.gg/discount/Renegade238?ref=NePXKdCFpypc8b ________________________________________________________________________ Listen to RetroRenegades on all major podcast platforms https://anchor.fm/retro-renegades ________________________________________________________________________ Like some merch? https://retro-renegades-shop.fourthwall.com/ https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCcT8wcspekw5tSzbc3qWPCg/store & https://willijay.redbubble.com ________________________________________________________________________ THE RETRO RENEGADES ARE: Graphic God Twitter: @Graphic_God Youtube: https://Youtube.com/GraphicGod Twitch: https://twitch.tv/Graphic_God SUPERSONICSTATION Youtube : https://youtube.com/user/SuperSonicSt... Twitch : https://twitch.tv/supersonicstation STINKINCORPSE Twitter: @stinkincorpse Youtube: https://youtube.com/channel/UChhVxkV0... UK Dazarus Twitter: @UKDazarus Youtube: https://youtube.com/channel/UCud_ef29... Jago Kuken Twitter: @RetroRenegade_ Youtube: https://youtube.com/channel/UCqKT2pP9... CRISPYBOMB Twitter: @Crispybomb EnFin3t Twitter: @EnFiN3t Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/c/RetroRenegades Jeepers VR Twitter: @Jeepers2u Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCAHs-KAWDIYYN-cE5F-WiAQ DragonHeartYoby Twitter: @DragonHeartYoby Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/dragonheartyoby Cerebral Paul | Living Differently Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/c/CerebralPaul Twitter: https://twitter.com/CerebralPaul1 DoggyDog420 Twitter: @DoggyDog420Xbox Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/user/Axle1324 ________________________________________________________________________ Music by: Judzilla Music Title: Sounds of the room Title: Closer To The Stars Find this and more at: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCKlI... License: Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/retro-renegades/support
James and John discuss eBay finds: black NIB Apple //e Card, boxed Power Macintosh G4, and Mac OS X banner. They look at the results of the most recent RR Auction sales, and news includes recent Apple announcements, Apple screensavers, Understanding the Apple //e book, and a 3D printed Mac. Join our Facebook page, follow us on Twitter, watch us on YouTube, and visit us at RetroMacCast.
In this episode of Double Tap, hosts Steven Scott and Shaun Preece are joined by Brett Hallie, a retired software engineer with a background in working at Apple. Brett shares insights into his journey at Apple, starting from his hardware engineering work with the Apple II to his involvement in the development of software like Mac OS X and Final Cut Pro. He discusses the challenges and successes of transitioning Apple's operating system, the pressure of working under Steve Jobs, and the importance of prioritizing accessibility in software development. Brett highlights the significance of user feedback in improving accessibility features and emphasizes the benefits of making software accessible for all users. He shares his personal experience with VoiceOver and offers advice on approaching software accessibility challenges with patience and a problem-solving mindset. Brett also delves into the culture at Apple, where product excellence was prioritized over short-term financial goals, leading to the company's success. The conversation touches on the evolution of technology, the democratization of video editing through software like Final Cut Pro, and the impact of making products accessible on a broader scale. Brett's insights shed light on the importance of user feedback, creativity in problem-solving, and the long-term benefits of prioritizing product quality over immediate financial gain. Keep in touch by emailing us feedback@doubletaponair.com or call 1-877-803-4567 and leave us a voicemail. You can also find us across social media.
Fri, 21 Jun 2024 22:15:00 GMT http://relay.fm/rd/237 http://relay.fm/rd/237 Filmographies Directors 237 Merlin Mann and John Siracusa Merlin can't tell whether John is mad at him, but John claims that he's not. Merlin can't tell whether John is mad at him, but John claims that he's not. clean 4756 Subtitle: It's rotten, Mohammed.Merlin can't tell whether John is mad at him, but John claims that he's not. This episode of Reconcilable Differences is sponsored by: Squarespace: Save 10% off your first purchase of a website or domain using code DIFFS. Links and Show Notes: Merlin can't tell whether John is mad at him, but John claims that he's not. In follow-up, listeners share even more upsetting information about ice machines, and John has further remarks on a podcast Merlin likes. Also, Merlin remembers to tell John about his health problems. Names and pronunciation are further explored, and John criticizes Daisy's herding skills. Then, for some reason, they talk about lunchboxes for a while. John thinks Merlin should do more due diligence on his realizations. In an unexpected burst of Macintosh nostalgia, your hosts recall weird hard drive problems and Kerry from MacWarehouse. Then, Merlin has to go home to turn off the smoke alarm. (Recorded on Tuesday, June 4, 2024) Credits Audio Editor: Jim Metzendorf Admin Assistance: Kerry Provenzano Music: Merlin Mann The Suits: Stephen Hackett, Myke Hurley Get an ad-free version of the show, plus a monthly extended episode. Big Brother and the Holding Company Imogen Poots Dale Carnegie quote about names“Remember that a person's name is to that person the sweetest and most important sound in any language.” An example name-pronouncing YouTube video using the Dale Carnegie quote A look inside a fountain drink machine Adam 12 lunchbox John's Super Hero lunchbox MacWarehouse catalog Kerry from MacWarehouse LaCie Tsunami external SCSI hard drive A larger image of the LaCie Tsunami hard drive John's Mac OS X reviews Will Ferrell (Ashley Schaeffer) - "Let The Boy Watch" - Eastb
Fri, 21 Jun 2024 22:15:00 GMT http://relay.fm/rd/237 http://relay.fm/rd/237 Merlin Mann and John Siracusa Merlin can't tell whether John is mad at him, but John claims that he's not. Merlin can't tell whether John is mad at him, but John claims that he's not. clean 4756 Subtitle: It's rotten, Mohammed.Merlin can't tell whether John is mad at him, but John claims that he's not. This episode of Reconcilable Differences is sponsored by: Squarespace: Save 10% off your first purchase of a website or domain using code DIFFS. Links and Show Notes: Merlin can't tell whether John is mad at him, but John claims that he's not. In follow-up, listeners share even more upsetting information about ice machines, and John has further remarks on a podcast Merlin likes. Also, Merlin remembers to tell John about his health problems. Names and pronunciation are further explored, and John criticizes Daisy's herding skills. Then, for some reason, they talk about lunchboxes for a while. John thinks Merlin should do more due diligence on his realizations. In an unexpected burst of Macintosh nostalgia, your hosts recall weird hard drive problems and Kerry from MacWarehouse. Then, Merlin has to go home to turn off the smoke alarm. (Recorded on Tuesday, June 4, 2024) Credits Audio Editor: Jim Metzendorf Admin Assistance: Kerry Provenzano Music: Merlin Mann The Suits: Stephen Hackett, Myke Hurley Get an ad-free version of the show, plus a monthly extended episode. Big Brother and the Holding Company Imogen Poots Dale Carnegie quote about names“Remember that a person's name is to that person the sweetest and most important sound in any language.” An example name-pronouncing YouTube video using the Dale Carnegie quote A look inside a fountain drink machine Adam 12 lunchbox John's Super Hero lunchbox MacWarehouse catalog Kerry from MacWarehouse LaCie Tsunami external SCSI hard drive A larger image of the LaCie Tsunami hard drive John's Mac OS X reviews Will Ferrell (Ashley Schaeffer) - "L
Nicky and Eric are both Batman as they celebrate their favorite extra super hero in an episode all about Batman: Arkham Asylum. Arkham Asylum is a 2009 action-adventure game developed by Rocksteady Studios and published by Eidos Interactive for Playstation 3, Xbox 360, and Windows. A Mac OS X version was released later in 2011. In the game's main storyline, Batman battles his archenemy, the Joker, who instigates an elaborate plot to seize control of Arkham Asylum, trap Batman inside with many of his incarcerated foes, and threaten Gotham City with hidden bombs. Press Any Button hosts Nicky (a new gamer) and Eric (a lifetime gamer) are a married couple who both love video games. For every video game they will discuss its past (history of the game, developers story, and fun facts), present (game play, game review and strategy), and future (will there be a sequel?? A movie?) BUT WAIT THERE'S MORE… Every game also comes with a challenge presented by the host that chose the game. If the challenge is not completed then whoever failed has to do a video game rap! So if you want to learn more about video games, hear some nerdy video game raps, or just have a good time this is the podcast for you. We try to cover all types of video games including: Retro and New video games Playstation, Nintendo, Xbox, Sega, and PC games Any and all genres including RPG, Simulation, Beat em up, platforming, mystery, first person shooter, sandbox, puzzle, action adventure, etc. Follow us on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/pressanybutton_podcast Credits: Nicky Smith Eric Luedtke Music by Mark Spurlock References: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Batman:_Arkham_Asylum https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eidos_Interactive https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arkham_Asylum:_A_Serious_House_on_Serious_Earth http://content.usatoday.com/communities/gamehunters/post/2009/08/the-rest-of-the-story-batman-arkham-asylum/1#.UV9IM5NthNJ https://www.telegraph.co.uk/technology/video-games/6126146/Batman-Arkham-Asylum-interview-with-Paul-Dini.html https://www.cbr.com/unused-arkham-asylum-art/ https://gamerant.com/batman-arkham-asylum-combat-stealth-radar-detective-mode/ https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1282022/trivia/ https://www.ign.com/articles/2013/04/29/eight-of-the-most-hilarious-anti-piracy-measures-in-video-games https://arkhamcity.fandom.com/wiki/Luke_Oliver https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suicide_Squad:_Kill_the_Justice_League https://www.ign.com/articles/wb-games-says-it-plans-to-double-down-on-live-service-despite-suicide-squad-failing-to-meet-expectations
Sometimes, an operating system has served its purpose and it's time to go live on a farm. We take a look at some operating systems that are no longer supported and explore why moving on can sometimes cause a problem.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Simplicity, sophistication, oversimplification, and At Ease. I rant about the usability of modern Apple software, Steven Levy rants about the oversimplified environment provided by At Ease and the complexity of the Mac, and Josef Morell rants about the damage At Ease does to first impressions of the Macintosh in retail channels. Original text by Steven Levy, Macworld December 1992 and Josef Morell, MacFormat March 1995. datagubbe.se laments the usability of modern desktop computer software. Product manager for At Ease Dave Pakman demonstrates At Ease for a user group in ~1992. Bruce Tognazzini on the user-centered design philosophy of the Macintosh. R.I.P. (The philosophy, not Bruce.) Thanks as always to the Unofficial Apple VHS Archive for both of these. Phrases I never expected to learn while producing a computer history podcast: “spoiling the ship for a hap'orth of tar” (pronunciation). You definitely need to install the Talking Moose on your old Mac right now and/or Uli's Moose on your Mac OS X 10.1-10.7 machines.
Sun, 05 Nov 2023 22:00:00 GMT http://relay.fm/mpu/717 http://relay.fm/mpu/717 The Apple Notes Deep Dive 717 David Sparks and Stephen Hackett While it had humble beginnings, Apple Notes has grown into a true competitor over the years. On this episode, David and Stephen explore its history, features and what Apple should take it next. While it had humble beginnings, Apple Notes has grown into a true competitor over the years. On this episode, David and Stephen explore its history, features and what Apple should take it next. clean 5976 Subtitle: Gone Are the Marker Felt DaysWhile it had humble beginnings, Apple Notes has grown into a true competitor over the years. On this episode, David and Stephen explore its history, features and what Apple should take it next. This episode of Mac Power Users is sponsored by: 1Password: Never forget a password again. Electric: Unbury yourself from IT tasks. Get a free pair of Beats Solo3 Wireless Headphones when you schedule a meeting. Zocdoc: Find the right doctor, right now with Zocdoc. Sign up for free. CleanMyMac X: Your Mac. As good as new. Get 5% off today. Links and Show Notes: Sign up for the MPU email newsletter and join the MPU forums. More Power Users: Ad-free episodes with regular bonus segments Submit Feedback “Unwrap the Gift of Podcasts” - New Relay FM Shirt! Daring Fireball: iPhone First Impressions Notes in Mail in Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard – 512 Pixels iOS 9: The MacStories Review, Created on iPad - MacStories - Part 8 (Notes) Use Notes on your iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch - Apple Support Notes User Guide for Mac - Apple Support Set up iCloud for Notes on all your devices - Apple Support Gall's Law Alfred Search Notes - Github How to scan documents on your iPhone or iPad - Apple Support Fast Capture with Quick Note for iPad and Mac: The MacStories Overview - MacStories Use Notes on iCloud.com - Apple Support Draw with Notes on your iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch - Apple Support reMarkable - The Paper Tablet Field Notes A Closer Look at Apple Notes's Smart Folders – The Sweet Setup Exporter on the Mac App Store How to lock or unlock notes on your iPhone or iPad - Apple Support Lock your notes on Mac - Apple Support Secure features in the Notes app - Apple Support Mac Power Users #667: Revisiting Apple Reminders & Notes - Relay FM