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#338 From: RAY M THOMPSON <raymack@...>
Date: Tue Oct 18, 2011 2:07 pm
Subject: Interesting Read from New Tidbits...
raymackt
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How iOS 5 Will Affect Developers — and You
------------------------------------------
 by Matt Neuburg <matt@...>
 article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12560>
 1 comment

 The term “iOS 5” means different things to different people. To 
 the general public, it means a whole new face for iOS devices, with 
 new apps like Reminder, new icons like Newsstand, new interface like 
 notification banners and the Notification Center, and new features 
 like Reader in Mobile Safari and hourly forecasts in Weather. But to 
 a developer, iOS 5 also means the iOS 5 SDK (software development 
 kit) that comes with Xcode 4.2, released at the same time as iOS 5 
 itself. The SDK represents the toolbox, the built-in bag of tricks 
 that an app can take advantage of.

 Most existing apps have probably not been significantly affected by 
 users shoving iOS 5 onto their devices; my own apps, for example, 
 seem to be running precisely as they were under iOS 4. (A sad 
 casualty, however, is Stanza, which is toast on my devices; but 
 then, somehow one already suspected that Amazon had bought Lexcycle 
 for the sole purpose of killing it.) But many developers are rushing 
 (or have already rushed, during the beta period preceding the 
 official release) to recompile their apps with the iOS 5 SDK, making 
 those apps iOS 5-native and enabling them to take advantage of the 
 expanded toolbox that the iOS 5 SDK brings.

<http://www.lexcycle.com/>

 Those changes, in turn, will affect what _you_ see on your 
 device’s screen. As more and more apps adopt iOS 5, iOS 5 SDK 
 features will become part of your own user experience. So what are 
 some of these features, and how might they manifest themselves in 
 your daily usage?

 The main place to look for answers is Apple’s own release notes 
 for iOS 5. I can’t tell you anything you couldn’t ferret out for 
 yourself by perusing that document; but in case you’d prefer that 
 I peruse it so you don’t have to, here are some thoughts about the 
 main changes you can expect to see as the iOS 5 SDK catches hold 
 among developers.

<http://developer.apple.com/library/ios/#releasenotes/General/WhatsNewIniPhoneOS/Articles/iOS5.html>


**Hey (Hey) You (You), Get Onto iCloud** -- The big story, as is 
 perfectly obvious from the amount of space devoted to it in the 
 release notes, is iCloud. iCloud offers developers the opportunity 
 to store an app’s documents and other data online in a way 
 that’s intended to be convenient and even transparent to the user. 
 Thus, a user could work on a document using Device A, then later 
 pick up Device B and, in essence, find the very same document there, 
 in the very same state.

 It will help to think of iCloud as having two different purposes: 
 backup and sync. The iCloud backup is largely just a substitution of 
 wireless technology for something you were already doing every time 
 you hooked your device to your computer and backed it up in the 
 course of a sync. But iCloud sync is a way of sharing data across 
 applications running on different devices. In the past, this sort of 
 thing has been implemented through a variety of ad hoc solutions 
 (such as Dropbox integration, or even building your own server); 
 iCloud’s promise is a universal solution that all Lion and iOS 
 apps can use fairly easily.

 Your first 5 GB of iCloud storage are free, so developers will 
 expect a significant proportion of their users to have iCloud space 
 that their apps can use. Moreover, iCloud can also store small 
 preference files that don’t count against a user’s iCloud 
 storage quota. I think the result will be that many apps will 
 integrate iCloud, and that users, in their turn, will soon _expect_ 
 iCloud integration in their iOS experience. For example, if I’ve 
 entered my New York Times paywall username and password into the 
 NYTimes app running on my iPod touch, I’m going to be miffed if I 
 have to enter it again into the NYTimes app running on my iPad, when 
 I know darned well that the app itself could be taking advantage of 
 iCloud to share my preferences between instances of itself.

 More broadly, I also wonder whether the document-oriented nature of 
 iCloud may not constitute an invitation for apps to become 
 document-centric in a way that previously they were not. 
 Unfortunately, as far as I can tell, iOS 5 does nothing to help apps 
 provide a uniform interface to let the user manage documents; iOS 
 has no Finder, so each app must forge its own way of displaying 
 documents and helping the user operate on them. Compare, for 
 example, the Pages “document manager” screen with the GoodReader 
 “manage files” pane; from an interface perspective, they have 
 basically nothing in common.


**Who Built the ARC** -- The next big change called out in the release 
 notes is ARC (automatic reference counting). This is the sort of 
 feature only a programmer could love; it happens right down at the 
 level of the programming language, Objective-C, in which iOS apps 
 are written. But it’s an important change to the user, in one 
 respect: If things go as planned, ARC should mean that apps will 
 crash less often.

 The reason is, simply, that Objective-C is not a very good language, 
 and one of the ways in which it’s not very good is memory 
 management. Up to now, memory management has been handled manually 
 by the programmer; this, in turn, has meant not only that writing an 
 app for iOS is an unusually fussy and tiring business, but also that 
 memory management itself is a prime opportunity for the programmer 
 to make a mistake that will result in the app either leaking memory 
 and eventually crashing, or attempting to access an object that has 
 gone out of existence and (you guessed it) crashing.

 Unfortunately, for a variety of reasons, it’s difficult for Apple 
 to take the step they really should have taken long ago, namely, to 
 make some other language the native iOS programming language. It’s 
 easier for them to adopt a different compiler (LLVM), which can take 
 the programmer’s Objective-C code and do things with it that 
 couldn’t be done by the previous compiler (GCC). In particular, 
 LLVM can now insert, automatically, the manual memory management 
 code that the programmer has up to now had to write by hand. 
 That’s ARC.

 Memory management in an iOS program is still manual, but, thanks to 
 ARC, it’s written by the compiler instead of the programmer; the 
 programmer effectively omits all the memory management code and lets 
 the compiler write it instead. Since the compiler is more reliable 
 at this sort of routine task than the programmer, memory management 
 should be more correct more of the time (and the programmer won’t 
 be so bored and can apply creativity to making the program do its 
 actual tasks).

 So, as iOS apps are rewritten using ARC, certain kinds of crash may 
 become less frequent. Of course, there are other kinds of crashes; 
 in particular, multithreading is still hard and will still probably 
 be a source of trouble.


**Structure My Screen** -- In iOS 5, the ways in which apps can 
 physically lay out their interfaces are expanded. For example, 
 without getting too technical, on the iPhone especially the unit of 
 view substitution has been, up to now, the screen itself: a primary 
 view, managed behind the scenes by something called a view 
 controller, took over the entire screen and responded to things like 
 rotation of the device; and the programmer was not supposed to use a 
 view controller except to manage this primary whole-screen view. The 
 framework then provided a limited number of ways in which a view 
 controller could manage other view controllers, such as the 
 navigation interface and the tab-bar interface — which is why 
 those styles of interface are so common.

 But in iOS 5, the programmer is at last permitted to write a custom 
 view controller that manages other view controllers; so I would 
 expect to see completely new interface management idioms. It will be 
 easier, for example, to split the screen into panes and have each 
 pane do its own navigation between views. Moreover, iOS 5 gives the 
 programmer more control over the transition animation when one view 
 is substituted for another. There is much room here for creativity 
 and originality.

 A completely new style of application supported by the system is the 
 _page-based_ application. In effect, this lets any programmer 
 implement the look of iBooks (including the snazzy page-curling 
 animation), except that the view shown on each “page” can be any 
 view whatever. For example, my Greek and Latin vocabulary apps 
 display flashcards, with the user scrolling left or right to reach 
 the next or previous “card”; I could now probably convert this 
 quite easily to a book metaphor where the user pages between cards, 
 and in the process I could remove a lot of code where I was 
 inventing just the sort of wheel (e.g. preparing the next card 
 before the user scrolls to it) that the page-based application hands 
 me on a plate.


**Wild, Wild Widgets** -- Changes involving the onscreen widgets that 
 the user can see and touch should be extremely obvious. Some of 
 these are legitimate, system-based versions of things that 
 programmers were doing for themselves by a variety of sometimes 
 dubious means, and that’s a good thing — fighting the framework 
 is a lot of work, and it’s risky, so the more the framework 
 _gives_ programmers the capabilities they clearly want, the better.

 Prepare for your screen to become much more colorful! In previous 
 iOS versions, the supplied widgets came either in a single color 
 scheme or in a limited set of optional color schemes. A switch (the 
 thing that says ON and OFF) was blue when ON and that was that; now 
 it can be any color. That sort of thing is true for most of the 
 standard widgets that constitute the interface. Custom images can be 
 added to most widgets, and it’s easy for the programmer to enforce 
 a uniform custom color scheme throughout an app.

 A number of widgets are altered in subtle ways; a switch, for 
 example, now has a round sliding part instead of a square. Alerts 
 (tiny dialogs with buttons) can now accept text input. A completely 
 new widget is the stepper, allowing the user to increase or decrease 
 a number by tapping. Table views are more powerful. A split view, 
 like what you see in landscape orientation on the iPad in our 
 TidBITS News app, is no longer forced to hide the “master” view 
 into a popover summoned by a toolbar button when the user rotates to 
 portrait orientation.

 Drawing effects such as blurring, previously available only in Mac 
 OS X, are now provided also in iOS. Applications now have direct 
 access to the hardware for dimming the backlight on the device 
 (previously, only Apple’s own iBooks could do this). Any 
 application can display the dictionary definition for a selected 
 word. 


**Conclusion** -- Let’s sum up. Based on the changes in the 
 capabilities with which iOS 5 endows the programmer, what changes 
 can you, the user, expect to see as more and more iOS 5-native apps 
 come online? Data, such as documents and preferences, will be 
 optionally stored in the cloud and thus shared between instances of 
 an app on different devices. Apps should run more reliably as it 
 becomes easier for programmers to avoid memory-management mistakes. 
 The screen should become a brighter, peppier place, as programmers 
 endow their widgets with color. And interfaces generally should 
 become more expressive and more original, as programmers are able to 
 let you navigate between subviews in novel ways.

 The genius of iOS is that it allows the programmer to do much with 
 little. There are remarkably few built-in widgets; yet they are 
 sufficient to endow the tiny iPhone screen with great power and ease 
 of use. To me, iOS 5 (from the programmer’s point of view) is a 
 natural development, based largely on Apple’s own observation of 
 the ways in which programmers have pushed at the boundaries of what 
 the framework was readily permitting them to do; it’s an 
 evolution, a coherent growth, gently expanding the programmer’s 
 range of abilities while continuing to respect the conventions that 
 have made iOS such a hotbed of great apps. 


#339 From: RAY M THOMPSON <raymack@...>
Date: Tue Oct 18, 2011 2:12 pm
Subject: How to Change the World: What I Learned From Steve Jobs
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October 08, 2011

What I Learned From Steve Jobs

Many people have explained what one can learn from Steve Jobs. But few, if any, of these people have been inside the tent and experienced first hand what it was like to work with him. I don’t want any lessons to be lost or forgotten, so here is my list of the top twelve lessons that I learned from Steve Jobs.

  1. Experts are clueless.

    Experts—journalists, analysts, consultants, bankers, and gurus can’t “do” so they “advise.” They can tell you what is wrong with your product, but they cannot make a great one. They can tell you how to sell something, but they cannot sell it themselves. They can tell you how to create great teams, but they only manage a secretary. For example, the experts told us that the two biggest shortcomings of Macintosh in the mid 1980s was the lack of a daisy-wheel printer driver and Lotus 1-2-3; another advice gem from the experts was to buy Compaq. Hear what experts say, but don’t always listen to them.

  2. Customers cannot tell you what they need.

    “Apple market research” is an oxymoron. The Apple focus group was the right hemisphere of Steve’s brain talking to the left one. If you ask customers what they want, they will tell you, “Better, faster, and cheaper”—that is, better sameness, not revolutionary change. They can only describe their desires in terms of what they are already using—around the time of the introduction of Macintosh, all people said they wanted was better, faster, and cheaper MS-DOS machines. The richest vein for tech startups is creating the product that you want to use—that’s what Steve and Woz did.

  3. Jump to the next curve.

    Big wins happen when you go beyond better sameness. The best daisy-wheel printer companies were introducing new fonts in more sizes. Apple introduced the next curve: laser printing. Think of ice harvesters, ice factories, and refrigerator companies. Ice 1.0, 2.0, and 3.0. Are you still harvesting ice during the winter from a frozen pond?
  4. The biggest challenges beget best work.

    I lived in fear that Steve would tell me that I, or my work, was crap. In public. This fear was a big challenge. Competing with IBM and then Microsoft was a big challenge. Changing the world was a big challenge. I, and Apple employees before me and after me, did their best work because we had to do our best work to meet the big challenges.

  5. Design counts.

    Steve drove people nuts with his design demands—some shades of black weren’t black enough. Mere mortals think that black is black, and that a trash can is a trash can. Steve was such a perfectionist—a perfectionist Beyond: Thunderdome—and lo and behold he was right: some people care about design and many people at least sense it. Maybe not everyone, but the important ones.

  6. You can’t go wrong with big graphics and big fonts.

    Take a look at Steve’s slides. The font is sixty points. There’s usually one big screenshot or graphic. Look at other tech speaker’s slides—even the ones who have seen Steve in action. The font is eight points, and there are no graphics. So many people say that Steve was the world’s greatest product introduction guy..don’t you wonder why more people don’t copy his style?

  7. Changing your mind is a sign of intelligence.

    When Apple first shipped the iPhone there was no such thing as apps. Apps, Steve decreed, were a bad thing because you never know what they could be doing to your phone. Safari web apps were the way to go until six months later when Steve decided, or someone convinced Steve, that apps were the way to go—but of course. Duh! Apple came a long way in a short time from Safari web apps to “there’s an app for that.”

  8. “Value” is different from “price.”

    Woe unto you if you decide everything based on price. Even more woe unto you if you compete solely on price. Price is not all that matters—what is important, at least to some people, is value. And value takes into account training, support, and the intrinsic joy of using the best tool that’s made. It’s pretty safe to say that no one buys Apple products because of their low price.

  9. A players hire A+ players.

    Actually, Steve believed that A players hire A players—that is people who are as good as they are. I refined this slightly—my theory is that A players hire people even better than themselves. It’s clear, though, that B players hire C players so they can feel superior to them, and C players hire D players. If you start hiring B players, expect what Steve called “the bozo explosion” to happen in your organization.

  10. Real CEOs demo.

    Steve Jobs could demo a pod, pad, phone, and Mac two to three times a year with millions of people watching, why is it that many CEOs call upon their vice-president of engineering to do a product demo? Maybe it’s to show that there’s a team effort in play. Maybe. It’s more likely that the CEO doesn’t understand what his/her company is making well enough to explain it. How pathetic is that?

  11. Real CEOs ship.

    For all his perfectionism, Steve could ship. Maybe the product wasn’t perfect every time, but it was almost always great enough to go. The lesson is that Steve wasn’t tinkering for the sake of tinkering—he had a goal: shipping and achieving worldwide domination of existing markets or creation of new markets. Apple is an engineering-centric company, not a research-centric one. Which would you rather be: Apple or Xerox PARC?

  12. Marketing boils down to providing unique value. Think of a 2 x 2 matrix. The vertical axis measures how your product differs from the competition. The horizontal axis measures the value of your product. Bottom right: valuable but not unique—you’ll have to compete on price. Top left: unique but not valuable—you’ll own a market that doesn’t exist. Bottom left: not unique and not value—you’re a bozo. Top right: unique and valuable—this is where you make margin, money, and history. For example, the iPod was unique and valuable because it was the only way to legally, inexpensively, and easily download music from the six biggest record labels.

Bonus: Some things need to be believed to be seen. When you are jumping curves, defying/ignoring the experts, facing off against big challenges, obsessing about design, and focusing on unique value, you will need to convince people to believe in what you are doing in order to see your efforts come to fruition. People needed to believe in Macintosh to see it become real. Ditto for iPod, iPhone, and iPad. Not everyone will believe—that’s okay. But the starting point of changing the world is changing a few minds. This is the greatest lesson of all that I learned from Steve.

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  –
Earl Reaves
Guy Kawaskai shares how to change the world - What he leared from Steve Jobs.
Today, 9:11:01 AM CDT
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Gui
Very good.
Today, 8:57:20 AM CDT
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Trish Weatherby
Love you Guy, but please spare the Experts at the Apple Store around the world with point #1. Tell us that you think Steve approved the title before it was established in his stores; that this lesson you learned doesn't leave us all out in the cold.
Yesterday, 11:38:56 PM CDT
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drdjp11
In some ways, duh! but in other ways, yeah, that was the genius of Steve.
Yesterday, 10:33:25 PM CDT
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Djaka Dwiandi
This should be made into book.
Yesterday, 3:37:17 PM CDT
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Sherzod Salomov
Must read article!
Yesterday, 2:51:36 PM CDT
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Rob Headrick
Solid list.
Yesterday, 10:45:31 AM CDT
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kirkrr
This list is very similar (near verbatim in some points) to Harry Beckwtih's first chapter in his famous marketing book "What Clients Love - A field Guide to Growing Your Business". This sequel to his bestselling "The Invisible Touch" and "Selling the Invisible", contains many references to Apple, and, as a bestselling author in this field, I would suspect, well known to Steve Jobs.  
 
Still, there are unique nuggets of wisdom here, that allude to a culture driven by genius, and well beyond the narrow confines of technology.  
 
Guy, we have not talked in years - we should catch up. -- Kirk Rheinlander
Yesterday, 10:13:14 AM CDT
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Keshav Bhat
Great list!
Yesterday, 10:02:14 AM CDT
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Peter Payne
Excellent post, Guy. Tweeted, Facebook'ed and +1'ed. I also learned a lot about how to evangelize my own company through The Macintosh Way (old school now, I know).
Yesterday, 9:39:06 AM CDT
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Eric Strait
I love the point that customers can not always tell you want they want. The truth is, is that you need to listen to customers but you can not be a visionary if you are seeing the same thing as everyone else. Everyone has their own set of gift and talents, hence everyone can't be a visionary! Rock on and big ups to the thinkers of our time and those that came before us!
3 days ago, 4:37:00 AM CDT
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Jim Rudnick
"Real CEOs ship" about says it all for me....excellent list here Guy.... I would have loved more on your POV of what it was like to get called out by Steve when a mistake was noticed by him....but that's personal I suspect....and while I never met this icon - I too will miss him!
4 days ago, 9:00:26 AM CDT
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Jonathan L. Gal
Its so funny that one of the featured ads on your blog is for "experts", after you make the point that "experts are clueless".  
 
Apparently, Google's ad-matching algorithm is not as smart as its made out to be! *LOL*
5 days ago, 7:32:28 PM CDT
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Guest
So you're an advisor, by your own logic!
5 days ago, 6:57:16 PM CDT
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Thirteen
"Stay hungry stay foolish" he knows what I'm going through. 13
5 days ago, 12:09:35 PM CDT
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tourismdentalindia
Steve Jobs was a visionary. He has shown the world that it is more important to think big .
5 days ago, 10:55:59 AM CDT
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flipvamp
This is possibly the best blog post I have ever read. Thank you Guy!
5 days ago, 8:47:22 AM CDT
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Jonathan L. Gal
Very interesting. I sent you an email with two attachments.  
 
Subject Line: Algae Oilfield Equipment - A Nascent & Explosive Market Opportunity.
October 12, 2011, 10:13:33 PM CDT
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Bill Murray
Great list - thanks.  
www.winninginc.sandler.com  
October 12, 2011, 9:04:25 PM CDT
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Jim Parker
Thank you for this list. I will share it will my leadership class just as I have shared your book, Enchantment.
October 12, 2011, 1:21:38 PM CDT
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Patrick Ruggeri
Thanks for sharing Guy! The inside scoop places a different view on the "why" and the "how" of Steve Jobs and Apple.  
 
I liked your point, "If you ask customers what they want, they will tell you, “Better, faster, and cheaper”—that is, better sameness, not revolutionary change. They can only describe their desires in terms of what they are already using." I have the opportunity to meet customers face to face. This comment has sparked a new thought process in me. Coupled with your comment, "Woe unto you if you decide everything based on price. Even more woe unto you if you compete solely on price. Price is not all that matters—what is important, at least to some people, is value." I find that I must add value to what I do. I work for a corporation, so I cannot control price. But, I can control the value that I add which will positively affect my team members and my customers.  
 
You made me think. I will be "chewing" on this for a while.  
 
Thanks for sharing!  
 
October 12, 2011, 1:15:31 PM CDT
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Deb Vander Bogart
When I lived in the Bay area I was fortunate enough to be around Guy Kawasaki, his wife Beth and their amazing family...knowing them is a gift. Reading his words is always inspiring...
October 12, 2011, 8:53:45 AM CDT
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Rashi Arora
Amazing insights into the real work of Steve Jobs...Thanks for sharing Mr. Guy Kawasaki...  
 
However, I have a question here, Point no. 8 that you made, " Value is different from Price", being from a third world country, India, where most people view the opposite of the statement, & where most brands are compelled by the competition to decrease their prices in order to tap markets & generate volumes, I would like to know that by following such philosophy by Apple, can we say that the technology that it provides is really not meant for the masses in such countries? Because Indians love new technology except that most are limited by their pockets...Now what value proposition can Apple bring into such markets which are driven by Price wars?  
 
October 12, 2011, 5:55:15 AM CDT
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dvdphn
By not competing in the "price wars", that is how Apple wins. They are better than "having the lowest price". As a business, they focus on having high profits, but on the tech development side, Apple can focus on providing high quality, true value, and ease of use. No point in buying a cheap device that only lasts you a year or two, Apple devices last for at least twice that time.
Yesterday, 10:21:49 AM CDT
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Nasser Ahmed
I'd add one more. Being brave enough to kill an unsuccessful product line. Most large corps can't do this or don't do it very well.
October 12, 2011, 5:12:47 AM CDT
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Joel Sciamma
Guy, an interesting and typically positive post but many of the lessons are self-referential to Steve’s modus operandi. Many superb & successful products have come to market via quite different routes. It worked for Apple because it was Steve’s company, imbued with his personality & standards.  
 
Your references to jumping beyond sameness are noted but looked at objectively, Apple is just building incrementally better mousetraps at a faster rate than the competition, + a touch of class, which we all appreciate.  
 
Under Steve’s watch, lack of research means we are still basically using the OS of 20 years ago. Critical areas like the file system are virtually untouched, not because they are good enough, but because no imagination is being applied to the tech foundations that would really improve the user experience.  
 
My iPad is very conservative in nearly every way. A triumphal repackaging of 80s computer thinking but like Mac OS, it’s looking & feeling very old under its pretty surfaces.
October 11, 2011, 3:52:07 PM CDT
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Mitch Devine
Thanks for passing on the lessons, Guy. Especially love #2 about "Apple Market Research" being an oxymoron. Great points, each one.
October 11, 2011, 12:32:01 PM CDT
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StepByStepMarketing
Terrific, Guy, and thanks as always. Barry Lenson
October 11, 2011, 12:06:59 PM CDT
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Roberto Lebron
Thank you for this, Guy. I'm printing it out and putting it up where I can see it. You are the bomb.
October 11, 2011, 10:50:59 AM CDT
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Dave Yankowiak
Awesome post, Guy. I think between you and every other leader that has been influenced by Jobs, an entire book could be written with valuable lists such as this. Thank you for sharing!
October 11, 2011, 8:55:49 AM CDT
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Divaker Vittal
12 Effective traits to learn from Steve ....Identified by Guy Kawasaki!!
October 10, 2011, 9:26:52 PM CDT
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Stan
Wow Guy, you seem to have all the answers. Must have been fun riding steve's coat tails all those years.
October 10, 2011, 8:26:44 PM CDT
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ringlerun
great learnings... hope they weren't blogged as a consultant ;) tell us how u have executed each point...
October 10, 2011, 8:03:47 AM CDT
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Raju
point #10
October 10, 2011, 6:50:53 AM CDT
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Hari Pudipeddi
Thanks Guy. It is nice to see what you took away from Steve.  
 
What i learnt from him is "Patience, Perseverance and Clarity". When he got fired from his own company, it was devastating and he did not break down or change his ideas just because few people (indeed, key people) did not like his thoughts. He was clear of his ideas and just executed them in his next two companies he founded. This is the Clarity what he had for himself and this is the belief he had in himself.  
 
This is what each one of us need.
October 10, 2011, 5:12:22 AM CDT
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Lakshman Pillai
Excellent lessons! Thanks for sharing.
October 10, 2011, 4:28:22 AM CDT
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Thomas Metzeler
Great essence, by Guy Kawasaki on Steve Jobs: What he learned.  
October 10, 2011, 3:43:41 AM CDT
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Cameron Cunningham
Thanks for sharing these insights Guy. I really connect with number 10. We live in a world where the higher people climb up the corporate ladder, the less they do - creating uninspiring leaders who fail to be role models. I hope that the legend of Steve will help to inspire not only the next generation but those in powerful positions today.
October 9, 2011, 3:22:46 PM CDT
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Jason
These are great thoughts, but for those that work in companies that are just happy maintaining the status quo it becomes difficult to get people to think differently. It's a hard road to travel and without help or connections it's almost impossible for us little guys.
October 9, 2011, 2:46:48 PM CDT
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Guest
“Apple market research” is an oxymoron. The Apple focus group was the right hemisphere of Steve’s brain talking to the left one.  
 
So Apple doesn't do any formal market research? I have trouble believing that.
October 9, 2011, 9:22:58 AM CDT
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Guest
Sure, what "market research" could have foretold  
the Macintosh, for instance?  
 
Everyone thought that DOS was the bomb. :-)  
 
Popular opinion is in no way equivalent to the mind  
of a genius visionary.  
 
Say, do you suppose Thomas Edison did market research?  
Or Henry Ford? I don't think so, Cisco.  
 
Sunny Guy
Yesterday, 6:42:20 PM CDT
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maz iqbal
Interesting post by Guy Kawasaki on Steve Jobs
October 9, 2011, 4:57:08 AM CDT
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Roger
Mr. Kawasaki,  
 
Hi. I think I remember from one of your books ("The Macintosh Way") that one of the ways to be a better innovator is to not overly idolize great thinkers of the past because that can keep your thinking stuck within their visions. And, based on this, tear down the picture of Einstein on a bike from your wall. While Steve Jobs (and Einstein) was a great visionary and business leader, and I'm sorry that anyone dies, including Mr. Jobs, I wonder if maybe people are making him too much of an icon to live by? While not denigrating his great business leadership and visionary qualities and honoring his and everyones' lives, I'd vote to not let our visions be hindered by wondering if we're being "Jobs'ian" enough. I'm guessing he might feel the same way? Thanks.  
 
Roger  
 
 
 
October 9, 2011, 12:45:44 AM CDT
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Guest
Don't forget, "To maximize profits, send your manufacturing jobs to China."
October 8, 2011, 5:19:07 PM CDT
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Guest
not any more. China ain't cheap any more. Living costs in China just becomes a disaster, soon we will see that curve will shift to else where in the world.
October 9, 2011, 4:23:52 PM CDT
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Guest
not any more. China ain't cheap any more. Living costs in China just becomes a disaster, soon we will see that curve will shift to else where in the world.
October 9, 2011, 4:24:31 PM CDT
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Enkhbat
Welcome to Mongolia!
October 9, 2011, 9:32:41 PM CDT
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Sarah
The best one:" Changing your mind is a sign of intelligence... and the starting point of changing the world is changing a few minds." I loved that!  
October 8, 2011, 5:17:31 PM CDT
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3 Guests
tony bordonaro
Guy. I have been a big fan of yours for the longest time.....I think tou have always been giving us. Bits of what you learned at Apple. And I thank you for it....I don't know if you consider yourself. A disciple. Of sorts. But we surely appreciate You. For giving us your thoughts. And Steves ...
October 8, 2011, 4:36:32 PM CDT
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marco barsotti
very interesting reading, expecially after all the articles one the copy of the other.  
 
I Love the "expert are clueless" -- should be applied to current Euro crisis I guess.
October 8, 2011, 4:32:40 PM CDT
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Angela Harrison
Great Post. RIP Jobs, and thanks for changing the world via your special 'marketing research'! I especially love A plays hire A players (or A+ ! ) Gold.
October 8, 2011, 1:17:41 PM CDT
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Peter Ent
I had a boss (Bruce Riddle - an honor to have worked with him) once tell me to hire people smarter than I was. That was in 1983/84 - how ironic. I think I'll pin this list to my wall. Or maybe send it anonymously up the management chain!
Yesterday, 10:46:18 AM CDT
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#340 From: RAY M THOMPSON <raymack@...>
Date: Fri Nov 4, 2011 7:17 pm
Subject: Stats: Ray's Tribute to Steve Job, Embed on ACD Home Page
raymackt
Send Email Send Email
 
I'll never get over being amazed by the internet, and I learn a little bit more about it nearly everyday...its overwhelming how much there is to see, understand, learn, and use!

When I began posting some of my little video's on Vimeo I learned that Vimeo allows websites to "imbed" a link on THEIR webpage to play one of MY video's!  This was all new to me...  Then I discovered that Vimeo produces statistics of HOW MANY have played my video's AND what country they are in!

Of course, I always invite, by e-mail, small groups of my own family and friends to view my work, but "imbedding" brings viewers that I don't even know to see my work....amazing!  Of course, one viewer "likes" what he sees and spreads the link to others and some of them watch it in turn.

For our Apple Corps of Dallas meeting in October, we devoted our time to remembering our hero, Steve Jobs.  I prepared an 11-minute video for the meeting, most of it extracted from a much longer video done previously, but with a current focus on the passing of Steve.  I sent the "IMBEDDING" code to John Jones (you can't link to a video without the creator's permission) and he posted it on our ACD home page.

This morning I looked at the statistics for my tribute video and found: to date, my Tribute to Steve Jobs video has been played 914 times in 73 countries! (Nearly that many more "loaded" the video but did not watch it all the way through.... :-( )

SIMPLY AMAZING! Arthur C. Clark said it well...
---
Bye R@y

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  “Any Sufficiently Advanced Technology Is Indistinguishable
    from Magic”  (Arthur C. Clarke)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ray M. Thompson - www.raymack.com


#341 From: RAY M THOMPSON <raymack@...>
Date: Fri Nov 4, 2011 7:18 pm
Subject: Stats: Ray's Tribute to Steve Job, Embed on ACD Home Page
raymackt
Send Email Send Email
 
I'll never get over being amazed by the internet, and I learn a little bit more about it nearly everyday...its overwhelming how much there is to see, understand, learn, and use!

When I began posting some of my little video's on Vimeo I learned that Vimeo allows websites to "imbed" a link on THEIR webpage to play one of MY video's!  This was all new to me...  Then I discovered that Vimeo produces statistics of HOW MANY have played my video's AND what country they are in!

Of course, I always invite, by e-mail, small groups of my own family and friends to view my work, but "imbedding" brings viewers that I don't even know to see my work....amazing!  Of course, one viewer "likes" what he sees and spreads the link to others and some of them watch it in turn.

For our Apple Corps of Dallas meeting in October, we devoted our time to remembering our hero, Steve Jobs.  I prepared an 11-minute video for the meeting, most of it extracted from a much longer video done previously, but with a current focus on the passing of Steve.  I sent the "IMBEDDING" code to John Jones (you can't link to a video without the creator's permission) and he posted it on our ACD home page.

This morning I looked at the statistics for my tribute video and found: to date, my Tribute to Steve Jobs video has been played 914 times in 73 countries! (Nearly that many more "loaded" the video but did not watch it all the way through.... :-( )

SIMPLY AMAZING! Arthur C. Clark said it well...
---
Bye R@y

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  “Any Sufficiently Advanced Technology Is Indistinguishable
    from Magic”  (Arthur C. Clarke)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ray M. Thompson - www.raymack.com


#342 From: THOMPSON RAY M <raymack@...>
Date: Tue Nov 8, 2011 6:39 pm
Subject: Re: In case you don't know about this
raymackt
Send Email Send Email
 
JACK!  Thanks! I had not seen this…. 
---
Bye R@y

On Nov 8, 2011, at 9:50 AM, Jack Waller wrote:

<Mail Attachment.gif>
Long-lost interview with Steve Jobs coming to theaters

By JOE FLINT

Los Angeles Times

Published: 07 November 2011 05:56 PM



Steve Jobs is coming to a theater near you, with an assist from Mark Cuban.

Missing footage from an interview Apple co-founder Jobs gave about 15 years ago for a public TV miniseries has resurfaced and is the basis for a new documentary that will be shown at Dallas’ Magnolia and other Landmark Theatres on Nov. 16 and 17.

Curiosity about the compelling and enigmatic man behind the Apple computer, iPod , iPhone and iPad has skyrocketed since his death from cancer a month ago. A new biography of Jobs by Walter Isaacson is on top of the best-seller list, and a 60 Minutes show featuring a lengthy segment on the book drew almost 13 million viewers for CBS.

The movie, Steve Jobs: The Lost Interview, is from a conversation Jobs conducted with Robert Cringely for the 1996 miniseries Triumph of the Nerds: The Rise of Accidental Empires . The show, about the origins of the personal computer industry and the emergence of Silicon Valley as a technology hub, ran on PBS in the United States and Channel 4 in Britain.

Although Jobs gave a 70-minute interview to Cringely, only 10 minutes of it were used in the finished product. When Cringely was making the sequel Nerds 2.0.1: A Brief History of the Internet, he went looking for the rest of the Jobs interview, but the footage had vanished.

Unbeknown to Cringely, Paul Sen, director of Triumph of the Nerds, had dubbed a VHS copy of the Jobs interview and chucked it in his garage in a London suburb, where it sat collecting dust for years.

After Jobs died, Sen went looking for the interview. He told Cringely of his find and suggested that Cringely put it on his technology blog, “I Cringely,” as a “gift to the world.”

Cringely sent Landmark Theatres co-owner (and Dallas Mavericks owner) Mark Cuban an email late one night, less than three weeks ago, to see whether there would be any interest in screening it in theaters. Less than five minutes later, Cuban fired back that he was game.

Steve Jobs: The Lost Interview

7:15 and 9 p.m. Nov. 16 and 17, at the Magnolia, 3699 McKinney Ave., Dallas




#343 From: THOMPSON RAY M <raymack@...>
Date: Tue Nov 22, 2011 2:28 am
Subject: November 22nd, 1963
raymackt
Send Email Send Email
 
Couple of days ago, I watched again KERA's excellent documentary about how Dallas handled and survived this terrible day. Its hard to believe that next year will be the 50th anniversary.

A few days after the assassination, I wrote my own feelings about the event. I also went to the site and took some pictures.  When the internet came along and I built my own webpage, I posted these memories there, which many of you have read before.  My Letter of 1963

Tomorrow, please remember our nation and our leaders in prayer, with this tragedy in mind. Thank God that He has protected us from many such national tragedies, and pray that he will continue to bless our nation and draw us closer to Him..
---
Bye R@y



#344 From: THOMPSON RAY M <raymack@...>
Date: Tue Nov 29, 2011 1:55 pm
Subject: iPhone Cable Release Tip
raymackt
Send Email Send Email
 
Neat tip!  Bye R@y

iOS 5: Cable Releases for Photography iOS devices
If you're a photographer, then you know that a cable release is a tool to take a picture without touching your camera. Now, the iPhone can do this, too. 

iOS 5 introduced many new features for photographers. Among these is the ability to use the Volume up button to take photos. As a result, the Volume up button on your headphones also works to take photos! It seems perfectly obvious that it should after the fact, but it's not something most of us are likely to try. 

This means, every iPhone includes a free cable realease. This is huge for an iPhone photographer because the current shutter buttons aren't very good for keeping your phone steady. Interestingly, I've found that it's often much easier to get burst shots when using my headphones compared to just the volume up key. 

Perhaps the best part is that this can be paired with Bluetooth devices! I'm not sure if every headset with volume controls will work (as the buttons need to map correctly to the iPhone), but if a Bluetooth headset can increase the iPhone's volume it should work. 

What I have been able to confirm so far is that a Bluetooth keyboard is perfectly capable of acting as a remote. In addition, Joseph Linaschke over at ApertureExpert.com has said that his Bluetooth headset works as well, but I'm not sure which model. 

Using a wireless remote opens up even more possibilites, especially when considering that the remote will start and stop video capture, or take self portraits which don't have your arm in the photo. 

Hope someone else will make use of this for their iPhone photos. 

#345 From: THOMPSON RAY M <raymack@...>
Date: Mon Dec 12, 2011 6:41 pm
Subject: Where is Thunderbolt?
raymackt
Send Email Send Email
 
Here is an up-to-date and practical review of this question…


#346 From: THOMPSON RAY M <raymack@...>
Date: Tue Dec 13, 2011 3:23 pm
Subject: Using Clarify for Tips/Instructions
raymackt
Send Email Send Email
 
I created this "help" file in "Clarify".  Really easy and fast to do and I can end up
with this, a PDF, or a weblink.  Neato!
---
Bye R@y


I Can't See My Sidebar in Mail

Problem

OK, I understand you are using the new Mail in Lion and have lost the side bar. Try this:

Screen Shot 2011-12-13 at 9.03.32 AM.png

In the upper left corner of your Mail, notice the tiny arrow in a box and the word "show"

Screen Shot 2011-12-13 at 9.03.49 AM.png

Click on this feature:

Screen Shot 2011-12-13 at 9.04.04 AM.png

You should now have your sidebar restored!

Hope this helps..... Bye R@y raymack@...


#347 From: THOMPSON RAY M <raymack@...>
Date: Fri Dec 23, 2011 1:09 am
Subject: Dropbox Squares Off With Apple's iCloud | Epicenter | Wired.com
raymackt
Send Email Send Email
 
#348 From: THOMPSON RAY M <raymack@...>
Date: Tue Dec 27, 2011 2:10 am
Subject: Apple's Monster Quarter And The Pending Share Price Advance - Seeking Alpha
raymackt
Send Email Send Email
 
#349 From: THOMPSON RAY M <raymack@...>
Date: Tue Dec 27, 2011 8:36 pm
Subject: Life after iWeb: The state of Web design on the Mac | Macworld
raymackt
Send Email Send Email
 
Good run-down of the whole gamut of web design on the Mac.  I'm a big fan of Rapid Weaver if anyone has questions about it…
---
Bye R@y

http://www.macworld.com/article/163747/2011/12/life_after_iweb_the_state_of_web_design_on_the_mac.html#lsrc.nl_mwnws_h_crawl


#350 From: THOMPSON RAY M <raymack@...>
Date: Thu Jan 19, 2012 7:39 pm
Subject: Blood Drop for DropBox!
raymackt
Send Email Send Email
 
If you use DropBox, you've GOT TO GET THIS (AND GROWL!) Works great and is the missing link to get "easy public links!"
---
Bye R@y

Bloodrop Dropbox droplet for Mac OS X Dock.
Drag files to Bloodrop Dock icon and paste public Dropbox links from clipboard.

Features:

  • multiple files drop,
  • put files to Public or Public subfolder on drop,
  • Growl notification,
  • interactive setup.


How to use:

  • unzip Bloodrop to any folder you like on the filesystem,
  • drag Bloodrop.app to Dock,
  • execute Bloodrop once to configure (enter Dropbox user ID and choose Public subfolder or Public folder itself where to put files on drop),
  • drop files on Bloodrop Dock icon, wait for Growl notification, than paste public Dropbox links anywhere you want.


Where to find your Dropbox user ID? Open Dropbox Public folder in Finder, choose Dropbox->Copy Public Link in context menu of any file. You'll get a link in clipboard like: http://dl.dropbox.com/u/12345/mycoolpic.jpg. Numbers 12345 (you have another your own of course) in the link is required user ID.

Tested on: Mac OS 10.6.8


#351 From: THOMPSON RAY M <raymack@...>
Date: Mon Jan 23, 2012 6:56 pm
Subject: Fw: Concordia Pictures
raymackt
Send Email Send Email
 
Amazing pictures of the entire disaster scene, with diagrams of the route taken by the Concordia.
(forwarded by Tom Pruett, thanks!)
---
Bye R@y



#352 From: THOMPSON RAY M <raymack@...>
Date: Wed Jan 25, 2012 3:10 pm
Subject: Fwd: FW: Remote Controlled Airplane
raymackt
Send Email Send Email
 

Forwarded by Ken Stephens…thanks!

---
Bye R@y


How much time do you think this kid used up learning to do this?  I also wonder how many planes he's wrecked learning to do this.

If you think you have seen a remote controlled Airplane put through its paces……nope…not til you have seen this demonstration!!click on below:!


 

 

 

 

 



#353 From: THOMPSON RAY M <raymack@...>
Date: Mon Feb 6, 2012 8:01 pm
Subject: Booting from Multiple Systems
raymackt
Send Email Send Email
 
Running Lion and I believe there is a sub-partition of the Lion volume for rest/restore purposes, right? In fact, I've even booted from it at least once, but now I'm totally confused!

I have 3 bootable drives in my MacPro, including the Lion drive, but I've forgotten how to switch to a different boot drive!  Tried restarting with Option and then Control, but that didn't show all the drives…!

Help, please!
---
Bye R@y

#354 From: THOMPSON RAY M <raymack@...>
Date: Mon Feb 6, 2012 10:03 pm
Subject: Hands on with Intel's new Cherryville 520 SSD | Macworld
raymackt
Send Email Send Email
 
Wow!  This is happening much faster than I expected.  Wonder if the Israeli company Apple purchased is going to play in this space?
---
Bye R@y

http://www.macworld.com/article/165227/2012/02/hands_on_with_intels_new_cherryville_520_ssd.html#lsrc.nl_mwnws_h_crawl


#355 From: David Hale <david_hale137@...>
Date: Wed Feb 8, 2012 3:58 am
Subject: Re: Booting from Multiple Systems
david_hale137
Send Email Send Email
 
Did u find answer to changing boot drives??

Sent from my iPhone

On Feb 6, 2012, at 2:01 PM, THOMPSON RAY M <raymack@...> wrote:

 

Running Lion and I believe there is a sub-partition of the Lion volume for rest/restore purposes, right? In fact, I've even booted from it at least once, but now I'm totally confused!


I have 3 bootable drives in my MacPro, including the Lion drive, but I've forgotten how to switch to a different boot drive!  Tried restarting with Option and then Control, but that didn't show all the drives…!

Help, please!
---
Bye R@y

=

#356 From: THOMPSON RAY M <raymack@...>
Date: Thu Feb 16, 2012 4:22 pm
Subject: OSX Mountain Lion
raymackt
Send Email Send Email
 
FYI!  Bye R@y

Apple today released a developer preview of OS X Mountain Lion, the ninth major release of the world's most advanced operating system, which brings popular apps and features from iPad to the Mac and accelerates the pace of OS X innovation. Mountain Lion introduces Messages, Notes, Reminders and Game Center to the Mac, as well as Notification Center, Share Sheets, Twitter integration and AirPlay Mirroring. Mountain Lion is the first OS X release built with iCloud in mind for easy setup and integration with apps. The developer preview of Mountain Lion also introduces Gatekeeper, a revolutionary security feature that helps keep you safe from malicious software by giving you complete control over what apps are installed on your Mac. The preview release of Mountain Lion is available to Mac Developer Program members starting today. Mac users will be able to upgrade to Mountain Lion from the Mac App Store in late summer 2012. 
  [...] The developer preview of Mountain Lion features the all new Messages app which replaces iChat and allows you to send unlimited messages, high-quality photos and videos directly from your Mac to another Mac or iOS device. Messages will continue to support AIM, Jabber, Yahoo! Messenger and Google Talk. Starting today Lion users can download a beta of Messages from www.apple.com, and the final version will be available with Mountain Lion. Reminders and Notes help you create and track your to-dos across all your devices. Game Center lets you personalize your Mac gaming experience, find new games and challenge friends to play live multiplayer games, whether they're on a Mac, iPhone, iPad or iPod touch. 
  Mountain Lion presents notifications in an elegant new way, and Notification Center provides easy access to alerts from Mail, Calendar, Messages, Reminders, system updates and third party apps. System-wide Share Sheets make it easy to share links, photos and videos directly from Apple and third party apps. Twitter is integrated throughout Mountain Lion so you can sign on once and tweet directly from Safari, Quick Look, Photo Booth, Preview and third party apps. Mountain Lion also introduces AirPlay Mirroring, an easy way to wirelessly send a secure 720p video stream of what's on your Mac to an HDTV using Apple TV. 
  More than 100 million users have iCloud accounts, and Mountain Lion makes it easier than ever to set up iCloud and access documents across your devices. Mountain Lion uses your Apple ID to automatically set up Contacts, Mail, Calendar, Messages, FaceTime and Find My Mac. The new iCloud Documents pushes any changes to all your devices so documents are always up to date, and a new API helps developers make document-based apps work with iCloud. 
  Gatekeeper is a revolutionary new security feature that gives you control over which apps can be downloaded and installed on your Mac. You can choose to install apps from any source, just as you do on a Mac today, or you can use the safer default setting to install apps from the Mac App Store, along with apps from developers that have a unique Developer ID from Apple. For maximum security, you can set Gatekeeper to only allow apps from the Mac App Store to be downloaded and installed. 
  Mountain Lion also has features specifically designed to support Chinese users, including significant enhancements to the Chinese input method and the option to select Baidu search in Safari. Mountain Lion makes it easy to set up Contacts, Mail and Calendar with top email service providers QQ, 126 and 163. Chinese users can also upload video via Share Sheets directly to leading video websites Youku and Tudou, and system-wide support for Sina weibo makes microblogging easy. 
  Hundreds of new APIs give developers access to new core technologies and enhanced features within OS X. The Game Kit APIs tap into the same services as Game Center on iOS, making it possible to create multiplayer games that work across Mac, iPhone, iPad and iPod touch. A new graphics infrastructure underpins OpenGL and OpenCL and implements GLKit, first introduced in iOS 5, to make it easier to create OpenGL apps. Using Core Animation in Cocoa apps is easier than ever, and new video APIs deliver modern 64-bit replacements for low-level QuickTime APIs. Enhanced Multi-Touch APIs give developers double-tap zoom support and access to the system-wide lookup gesture. Kernel ASLR improves security through enhanced mitigation against buffer overflow attacks. [...]

#357 From: THOMPSON RAY M <raymack@...>
Date: Tue Mar 20, 2012 2:27 am
Subject: Never Give Your Parents an iPad
raymackt
Send Email Send Email
 

Never give your parents an iPad


The clip is in German. A daughter is visiting father and is helping in the kitchen.

She asks: “Tell me dad, how are you managing with the new I-Pad we gave you for your birthday?”

Father asks: ”What’s wrong?”


Bye R@y

 



#358 From: THOMPSON RAY M <raymack@...>
Date: Tue Mar 27, 2012 1:33 pm
Subject: Missing Icons on Desktop
raymackt
Send Email Send Email
 
Has anyone else experienced various apps or files not showing their icon on the desktop until they are selected or moved?  I've had the problem thru several reves of Lion and it is still happening.

Also, I'm disgusted with the slowness of iCloud in handling GROUPS in my Address Book…in fact the whole Address Book for Lion is a total disaster!  Hoping for a fix with Mountain Lion.

Going to check on Allen Yoder at Forest Park Hospital today; he had major surgery yesterday.
---
Bye R@y

#359 From: John Perser <jrperser@...>
Date: Sat Mar 31, 2012 3:55 am
Subject: Re: Missing Icons on Desktop
jrperser
Send Email Send Email
 
Not sure what you mean in terms of slowness of handling groups.  Is this via the web interface to iCloud?

Regards,
John

--
JOHN PERSER
jrperser@...
214.450.7053

"If you drop your keys in molten lava just leave them, cause man, they're gone."



#360 From: THOMPSON RAY M <raymack@...>
Date: Mon Apr 2, 2012 4:53 pm
Subject: Re: Missing Icons on Desktop
raymackt
Send Email Send Email
 
John, no, I'm talking about inside Mail.  When I drag a large group into a mail address, Mail is very finicky about accepting it.  Sometimes I have to click in the empty address block and wait for it to refresh; THEN drag in the group of addresses.  Also, some of my address groups quite working after I moved to iCloud and I had to completely re-do them.
---
Bye R@y

On Mar 30, 2012, at 10:55 PM, John Perser wrote:

 

Not sure what you mean in terms of slowness of handling groups.  Is this via the web interface to iCloud?


Regards,
John

--
JOHN PERSER
jrperser@...
214.450.7053

"If you drop your keys in molten lava just leave them, cause man, they're gone."





#361 From: THOMPSON RAY M <raymack@...>
Date: Sat Apr 21, 2012 5:04 pm
Subject: FBI — International Cyber Ring That Infected Millions of Computers Dismantled
raymackt
Send Email Send Email
 
#362 From: THOMPSON RAY M <raymack@...>
Date: Tue May 22, 2012 11:51 pm
Subject: Why You Might Be Disappointed By The Resolution Of Those New Retina Display Macs [Feature] | Cult of Mac
raymackt
Send Email Send Email
 
Boy!  Wish I uderstood all of this!  Still, this is about the best description of how the Retina display works!
----
Bye R@y

http://www.cultofmac.com/168509/why-you-might-be-disappointed-by-the-resolution-of-those-new-retina-display-macs-feature/


#363 From: THOMPSON RAY M <raymack@...>
Date: Sat May 26, 2012 2:12 pm
Subject: Memorial Day Rememberance
raymackt
Send Email Send Email
 
I haven't posted this story every year, but I always think about it on Memorial Day weekend.  A true happening in my neighborhood...
---
Bye R@y


#364 From: THOMPSON RAY M <raymack@...>
Date: Wed May 30, 2012 6:40 pm
Subject: Apple! Please Tell Us the Status of the MacPro!
raymackt
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Hey, get the link below and go and vote for Apple to let us know the status of the MacPRO!  Thanks!
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Bye R@y



From Larry Jordan's Blog:

THE CASE OF THE MACPRO TOWER

Two months ago, Lou Borella sent me an email asking if I had any insight on the MacPro. I told him that I had just had a meeting with Apple where I asked them that question and they declined to answer. (This is not surprising because, as we all know, Apple does not comment on unannounced products.)

Lou told me he was going to start a Facebook petition to ask Apple to clarify its plans for the MacPro. This is Apple’s last remaining tower computer and a daily workhorse throughout the creative world. I told him that he could do what he wanted, but that Apple does not pay attention to petitions or respond to discussion groups on social media.

Still, he set up the page – https://www.facebook.com/MacProsPlease - and I tweeted about it.

This last week, he caught the eye of Gizmodo – along with other Mac rumor sites – and his page exploded. More than 7,000 likes as I write this and adding more every minute.

There are two ways to view this: as a forlorn attempt to get Apple’s attention, or as a way to show that the MacPro is still relevant in today’s mobile society. This could go either way.

Apple locks its hardware plans LONG before any product is announced. The decision on the future life, if any, of the MacPro was made, probably, last year. Most likely, earlier than that. So, Apple already knows what it intends to do.

For those of us running businesses using a hardware tool that can not be sourced from any other vendor, it would be very, very helpful to know if it has a future life.



#365 From: THOMPSON RAY M <raymack@...>
Date: Fri Jun 1, 2012 10:32 pm
Subject: IGM: Ivy Bridge vs Sandy Bridge Benchmarks + the Mac upgrades (Video)
raymackt
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#366 From: THOMPSON RAY M <raymack@...>
Date: Wed Jun 27, 2012 3:08 pm
Subject: Video of Skillman Volunteers Participating in Operation Hope
raymackt
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Well, S-L-O-W-L-Y moving up the learning curve with FCPX and with learning to capture the elements needed for a good video....please take a look!  Camera: Sony Cybershot.
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Bye R@y


#367 From: THOMPSON RAY M <raymack@...>
Date: Wed Jun 27, 2012 9:24 pm
Subject: Mac OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion Developer Preview 4 - Personal-tech/desktop-os - Desktop Operating Systems - BYTE
raymackt
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A good review of Mountain Lion, coming to our desktop Mac's next month!
---
Bye R@y

http://www.informationweek.com/byte/reviews/personal-tech/desktop-os/240002721


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