Yearly Archives: 2012

iStorage 2 [Sponsor]

Ultimate file manager for iOS. Connect, browse and edit your files in the cloud.

Decoding share prices

Jean-Louis Gassée takes a look at Apple, Amazon and Facebook and the things that affect their share prices.

CSS3 best practices

But if you don’t have a lot of experience with CSS, then you’re probably trying to figure out what is the best way to handle some of the challenges that arise from using multiple vendor prefixes, dealing with older versions of Internet Explorer, and other CSS3-specific dilemmas.

Facebook’s smartphone

The company has already hired more than half a dozen former Apple software and hardware engineers who worked on the iPhone, and one who worked on the iPad, the employees and those briefed on the plans said.

I think Facebook could build a good smartphone — certainly better than many that are on the market now.

Creating a Lightbox with CSS3 and JavaScript

There have been many imitations – Fancybox and Thickbox to name just two – but Lightbox still remains as the favoured way to present images to a user. This, primarily, is due to its 3d animation and background dimming which allows the user to view the image without any distraction. It’s a useful, timeless technique.

75 years of the Golden Gate Bridge

CNET:

On May 27, 1937, a brand new bridge opened to the public for the first time. Connecting San Francisco to its northern neighbor, Marin County, the new bridge — controversial at the time — became one of the most photographed man-made projects in history. The Golden Gate Bridge is now a worldwide icon, and this Sunday, it turns 75.

We usually hate slideshows but there are some fantastic pictures of the beautiful Golden Gate Bridge included here.

How the chicken conquered the world

Smithsonian:

Chicken is the ubiquitous food of our era, crossing multiple cultural boundaries with ease. With its mild taste and uniform texture, chicken presents an intriguingly blank canvas for the flavor palette of almost any cuisine. Long after the time when most families had a few hens running around the yard that could be grabbed and turned into dinner, chicken remains a nostalgic, evocative dish for most Americans. When author Jack Canfield was looking for a metaphor for psychological comfort, he didn’t call it “Clam Chowder for the Soul.”How did the chicken achieve such cultural and culinary dominance?

An interesting, if not very detailed, look at how the chicken became such a staple of our diets.

iCloud push email

I received an email from a reader today about push email being broken on iCloud. I was sure he was wrong, but when I sent myself an email to my Cloud address, it arrived immediately on my Mac, but didn’t arrive on my iPhone until I opened the Mail app. Weird 1.

It’s not a new issue though. People have had intermittent problems from at least last October.


  1. I have no idea when this started for me. 

A guide to San Francisco in 1937

It’s the “Official Souvenir Program for the Golden Gate Bridge Fiesta,” which began precisely 75 years ago today. Inside it, you find a bunch of high-fallutin’ rhetoric about Progress and Commerce, but you also find more than 130 advertisements for various businesses that wanted to be included in what functioned as a visitor’s guidebook.

This is the year the Golden Gate Bridge was completed.

User experience can be designed

Rian van der Merwe:

I’ve never fully bought into the “user experience cannot be designed” argument. You could say I’m biased because user experience design is how I choose to make my living, but I would (surprise!) disagree with that as well.

It seems to me it’s the clients that hinder most designs.

Designing for multiple mobile densities

Travis Hines:

The sharpness of your phone or tablet’s display is referred to as density. iOS devices measure density in PPI (pixels per inch) and Android in DPI (dots per inch). The more pixels or dots you fit in one square inch on a screen, the higher the density and resolution of it.

I don’t envy designers.

Apple to DOJ: Bite me

Philip Elmer-Dewitt:

In the space of six paragraphs the document characterizes the Justice Department’s assertions as “absurd” and “fundamentally flawed,” accuses the government of “ignoring inconvenient facts” and of siding with monopoly rather than competition.

Apple seems pretty aggressive and confident in this battle with the government.

Apple settles patent dispute with SimpleAir

SimpleAir does not appear to have any actual products available for sale, as the company is self-described as “an inventor-owned technology licensing company.” It said it has “interests and intellectual property in the wireless content delivery, mobile application, and push notification market spaces.”

I don’t mind a company protecting its intellectual property, but I hate patent trolls.

Capo: Reverse Engineering Rock and Roll

I want to thank SuperMegaUltraGroovy for sponsoring The Loop the last two weeks. I use Capo all the time to figure out how to play songs on the guitar and it works like a charm.

Reverse Engineering Rock and Roll: Capo is a revolutionary tool that helps you learn the music in your iTunes library. Available for your Mac, iPhone, iPod, and iPad.

Download the free trial for the Mac, and check out the new mastering-quality slowing engine that retains the detail in your music all the way down to quarter-speed!

Steve Jobs Atari memo at auction

Sotheby’s announced on Friday that it will be auctioning off what the auction giant says is the only known surviving Steve Jobs documents from his time at Atari. The document being auctioned is a five page memo from Mr. Jobs to engineer Stephen Bristow on ways to make Atari World Cup Football, an arcade console soccer game.

I can’t even guess how much they’ll get for this.

The fake iTunes 11 story

Clayton Braasch:

Until I see a screenshot from a better source, this is complete hogwash. I would have revealed this first, because it’s possible to fake an iTunes version string through Xcode; creating something like this would’ve been a bit more difficult, but it doesn’t matter. The entire build that was received is fake, and if any other sources call it “credible”, I find that very hard to believe.

I have no knowledge of this one way or the other, but Clayton seems pretty sure of himself.

A Mac users view of Windows 8

John Moltz:

But how far does my respect for Windows 8 go? Well, would it surprise you to know that I wrote this entire article on Windows 8? It should. Because I didn’t. I wrote most of it on my MacBook Pro and my iPad.

John is a funny guy.

The Gruber prototype

Daniel Jalkut:

I see The Talk Show’s format as the prototype for many other successful podcasts on the 5by5 network: Dan Benjamin plays the cool, somewhat disinterested straight-man to a “star” whose own temperament, philosophies and interests ultimately define the show. After the initial success of The Talk Show, Dan threw the net wide, inviting folks such as Marco Arment, Andy Ihnatko, Merlin Mann, John Siracusa, Horace Dediu, and Jim Dalrymple to indulge audiences with their own personalities and areas of expertise.

Very true, it’s a great formula for podcasting.

The 7-inch iPad

Steve Jobs was quoted as saying that the 7-inch iPad was too small. While the technologies that would allow such a device have changed in the last couple of years, the reasons Apple would release it haven’t. […]

History of UA’s 1176 Compressor

That same year, Bill Putnam is making the transition from the old standard vacuum tubes to new solid-state technology with his Universal Audio-brand preamps and compressors. The legendary engineer and equipment manufacturer had previously redesigned his original 108 tube microphone preamp (taken from his UA/United Recording consoles in Chicago and Hollywood), into the new 1108 — utilizing the recently invented Field Effect Transistor (FET). Subsequently, he redesigned his successful 175/176 tube compressor (based on the popular variable-Mu design) using FETs, and thus was born the 1176.

Bill Putnam was an absolute genius.

Talent

Guy English:

Ultimately, the retention of talent will be Apple’s Achilles’ heel.