March 29, 2012
Written by Jim Dalrymple
Selected from a pool of six finalists among more than 30,000 entries from 100 countries, design student Rodolfo Kusulas of Monterrey, Mexico and freelance designer Lee Dunford of Sydney took top honors in the Heineken Limited Edition Design Contest, and their winning design will be featured on the brand’s 140th anniversary bottle.
No, no, no! I like my Heineken in a green bottle.

Written by Jim Dalrymple
MailTags 3 is an enhancement for Apple’s Mail client in OS X 10.7 to add powerful tagging and search capabilities. MailTags 3 seamlessly integrates into Mail.app to make the attachment, search, and collation of tags, such as keywords and notes, a powerful part of email management.
I’ve heard a lot of good things about MailTags.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
I don’t know what to say about this comparison.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
Apple’s newest iPad hit the market three weeks ago and already their have been a number of controversies surrounding the device. As expected, all of the issues fizzled out because there was really nothing there in the first place.
My latest column on Techpinions.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
Macworld:
Samsung Electronics has shipped 5 million units of its “smart notepad”, the Galaxy Note, surpassing most expectations, according to analysts.
How can shipping 5 million units possible surpass anyone’s expectations? That is not the number of Galaxy Notes sold, that’s just the number that Samsung managed to get out of its factory.
Samsung could ship 100 million Galaxy Notes and have them sit in a warehouse somewhere — that doesn’t mean they sold 100 million. I’m never impressed with shipped numbers because they don’t mean anything.
Update: A number of sites are updating their stories noting that Samsung told them its 5 million sales, not shipments.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
It was recorded before this became news (about a week ago actually), so it’s kinda weird it came up in this chat! Loren talks about how he came up with it and about the patent itself, but also talks about much more interesting things regarding being an indie dev, supporting your apps, paid upgrades and dispenses some sage wisdom on those topics.
Loren is the guy that came up with the concept. Worth a listen.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
I don’t know much about photography, but I know what I like. I like these, especially “Park.”
Written by Jim Dalrymple

TechCrunch:
After talking to VCs and tech moguls, the TechCrunch teamed huddled up and picked these 10 companies as the best. They’re disrupting commerce, evolving how we communicate, and making our phones even more powerful.Here’s a cheat sheet to the startups we think are going to remodel big industries, change the world, or at least make a ton of money.
Some of these you’ll have no interest in but some of them might just pique your interest further.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
Very nice eBook written by my friend Jeff Carlson:
Apple’s popular iPad tablet is an incredibly useful tool for photographers on the go. Instead of hauling a laptop on the road or to a photo shoot, you can tuck the lightweight iPad in your camera bag and take advantage of its large screen, third-party apps, and online access to effectively complete and share your work.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
I’m excited to tell you that I have accepted an invitation to speak at the Úll Conference in Dublin, Ireland next month.
Úll is a conference for iOS / OSX / mobile web developers and designers. The three day event will include workshops, keynotes, talks and in-depth presentations on all the aspects of building, designing and marketing your apps.
I’ll be joining a nice line-up of speakers including Michael Lopp, Michael Simmons, Horace Dediu and Matt Gemmell, among others.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
Abdel Ibrahim:
Since Apple’s first iPad came on the scene in 2010, people have wondered if tablets could stand in for computers. Few would argue they’re not up to casual tasks like Web browsing and emailing, but what about the more demanding ones? What about, say, photo editing? Until recently, that was firmly out of the question. The graphics and processing power of even the top tablets couldn’t hack it. But now, with the new iPad, I’m not so sure.
Quite easily one of the best articles I’ve seen on the topic.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
This is just classic. For those that don’t know, the mic is supposed to be on the cabinet on the bottom, not on the amp.

Written by Jim Dalrymple
Eric Slivka for Mac Rumors:
Concerns over the 4G marketing are now getting the attention of regulators in several European countries as well.
This is starting to snowball.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
Úll is a conference for iOS / OSX / mobile web developers and designers. The three day event will include workshops, keynotes, talks and in-depth presentations on all the aspects of building, designing and marketing your apps.
The conference takes place April 27–29, 2012 and there are still tickets available — I’m looking at making the trip myself. They also have a great list of speakers that includes Michael Lopp, Horace Dediu, Matt Gemmell, and others.
The conference organizers have kindly offered The Loop readers a €50 discount. You can claim the discount here.
March 27, 2012
Written by Jim Dalrymple
Twitter now owns this patent. I use pull-to-refresh all the time — I even try to use it on apps that don’t have it, which annoys me.
Update: The patent hasn’t been approved yet. It’s technically a patent application.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
I used to love this cartoon.
Written by Jim Dalrymple

WOO HOO! It’s time for March Madness! We’re down to the Elite 8!
Final Four? No – we’re not talking about Ohio State, Louisville, Kentucky or Kansas. We’re talking about The Consumerist’s “Worst Company In America” contest.
Companies like Wells Fargo and Netflix, UPS and Comcast, even Apple have been voted on at The Consumerist web site all month. There are only eight wide ranging companies left vying for the title – Bank of America, AT&T, Ticketmaster, Paypal, Walmart, Facebook, Comcast and Electronic Arts.
This is a contest none of these companies wants to win.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
“We decided to make BlackBerry World more focused on customers, developers and partners,” RIM spokeswoman Tenille Kennedy said on Tuesday. “We will hold a separate session targeted at the interests of the investment community later this year, once BlackBerry 10 is launched.”
Translation: We’re so screwed right now and we want to have something — anything — to show analysts.