Archive for April, 2008



23
Apr

Switcher: Salesforce.com!

Now here’s something I hadn’t heard yet: Apple’s about to have a new big enterprise shop to add to its evangelism of the value of switching from Windows — no less than the 4000-odd employees of

The proverbial Impeccable Source™ tells me

Salesforce.com is giving Macs to all employees. Yup, all 4000 of us; we are going to be one of the largest enterprise software Mac shops around.  As the leases come up for the Dells, IT is replacing with Macs.

And why, you ask, Security! The resources it takes to defend against all the stuff the baddies throw at a PC, it’s just cheaper/easier to pay a few bucks more for a Mac and not have any of those issues.

With the Google Apps integration, and moving to the Mac, we will be free of the clutches of the Redmond Beast!

You really couldn’t ask for a much better endorsement of your value to the forward-looking enterprise than being officially adopted by Salesforce.com, could you now? 

22
Apr

DMG Canvas 1.0

A new and slick-looking disk installer image making utility was released this morning: DMG Canvas 1.0 from the Araelium Group. I’ve been using MindVision’s handy and capable FileStorm Pro to perform that task so far, but at first glance it appears that DMG Canvas handles all the capability I’ve ever actually needed for a drag install .dmg, plus it includes a command line tool that presumably would be convenient for scripting, and — awesomely — it’s free. Well worth checking out, I’d say.

h/t: cocoa-dev!

21
Apr

Review: iGiki Ultra Games

So we’re naturally interested in the idea of developing games for the iPhone/iPod touch, and thus we were intrigued by the offerings of iGiki, “the world leader in iPhone and iPod touch games,” and particularly the Ultra Games Bundle II Interactive, which they say “includes over 40 premium games, software to create your own games, widgets, and extraordinary extras.” Wow! What a deal, huh?

iGiki

So we checked it out, and here’s how it went:

Continue reading ‘Review: iGiki Ultra Games’

20
Apr

Shipped! D-Star Play MPE Player

And in the first of what will certainly be a veritable plethora of posts on this humble blog announcing shipment of our manifold wildly successful development projects, tonight we bring you news that the d-Star Play MPE Player is now available to members at the d-Star MPE website. This is the Australia and New Zealand partner edition of the Play MPE Player which we first shipped a couple years back for Destiny Media Technologies, whom we’ve had a long running relationship with going back almost a decade and a half now, beginning with the port of the Giger-inspired Dark Seed II adventure game to the Mac. Yes, we build enduring relationships, indeed we do. And what is Play MPE, you ask? Well, here’s an ad for you:

Continue reading ‘Shipped! D-Star Play MPE Player’

20
Apr

Making iPhone Webclip Icons

So the first thing a new iPhone blog needs is a catchy icon for when a webclip of it is put on the Springboard, which no doubt anyone who reads this will be doing immediately. Thus, today let’s experiment with that process.

We start out by selecting possible source graphic assets, namely these portraits of the Troll done (from life, naturally) by fantasy artist extraordinare Toren Atkinson back in the day before he got all professional:
Continue reading ‘Making iPhone Webclip Icons’

19
Apr

Long tail, indeed

Pretty much the first thing I did after the first post on this blog yesterday was to head over to Technorati and create an account and claim it as mine, since that looked like a good place to keep tabs on whether anybody actually noticed that anything was showing up here. Immediately upon creation, it was assigned a Technorati Authority of zero and an Authority Rank of 10,280,644. 

Now, if I follow how things work over there, what those numbers mean was at the moment of creation of this blog yesterday, nobody linked to it, thus the Authority of zero; and out of the “over 112.8 million blogs” that Technorati indexes, there were only 10,280,643 that had an authority greater than zero, and the other 102 million-odd of us had absolutely no one acknowledging their existence whatsoever within the last 180 days, thus we all shared that bottom rank.

So, as we finish up day number 2 of this blog’s existence, we’ve been linked back to by one other blog which Technorati tracks: this Pink iPhone place which, I’m guessing, has some very very good spidering routines in place to catch any blog posts that come out of the blue with “iPhone” in them as soon as they’re posted. That gives us an authority of 1 now — w00t! — and a consequent jump in Authority Rank all the way to 5,137,428.

Assuming I do follow this ranking thing correctly, that means that as I write this there’s 5,137,427 blogs with more than one site recently (last 6 months) linking to them; 5,143,216 blogs that have exactly one site linking to them; and somewhere around 102 million blogs that got as far as being indexed by Technorati at some point in their existence but have been ignored by the rest of that over 112 million for at least six months.

Wow. I was vaguely aware that, like everything social preference can be applied to, blog readership followed a power law distribution, but judging by these observations, the “long tail” isn’t a tail at all, it’s a flat line. 

Or, it could just be that Sturgeon’s Law is off by 5.54%, if we define “crap” as “Authority < 2″. Whichever. Hopefully somebody else will see fit to increase our Authority at some point, and we’ll see how the percentages break down in those lofty greater-than-1 skies above us.

19
Apr

The iPhone Debug Console

Here’s a new tool release which will no doubt be of interest to all you online application developers: a remote console debugger for querying and manipulating your iPhone pages remotely.

As announced by author Jon Brisbin,

I grew frustrated with trying to debug my iPhone Ajax apps and wanted a way to interrogate the DOM and JavaScript stack while my page was running. Joe Hewitt had written a tie-in to firebug that gave me the idea to take that to the next logical step: a COMET-based JavaScript debugger and console. It allows you to log to a remote desktop console from your JavaScript code, but most importantly, it lets you send commands to the iPhone to be executed there. You can inspect style properties of your elements, set new ones, call JavaScript functions, etc… Anything that can be eval’d can be sent via the command line.

Sounds pretty sweet!

The code is GPLv3, posted on Google Code as the iphonedebug project.

Screenshots of remote iPhone debugging in action can be seen here.

h/t: iPhoneWebDev!

18
Apr

Review: Stitcher.com Custom Radio for iPhone

Ah, yes. What could be more natural a web application for an iPhone or iPod than a custom radio feed over teh InterTubes? Well, that’s the theory behind Stitcher.com, “Custom radio that plays the news and talk you want.”

In their words,

Our service enables you to hear the audio content you care about. We “stitch” it into personalized, always-current stations that you can easily listen to on your iPhone or computer.

Stitcher revolutionizes information radio because it is:

Customized: we learn what you like and don’t like - so we can serve you better and better content 
Easy: just start listening, we’ll take care of the rest 
Portable: stream Stitcher anywhere: no satellite device, Wi-Fi or syncing required

It does work to the desktop as well, but the interesting part to us is its iPhone support. Let’s go log in, which is free and straightforward, if you have an iPhone:

Continue reading ‘Review: Stitcher.com Custom Radio for iPhone’

18
Apr

Welcome.

“What’s wrong with being a troll under a bridge?” he said. “I was brought up to be a troll under a bridge. I want young Scree to be a troll under a bridge after I’m gone. What’s wrong with that? You’ve got to have trolls under bridges. Otherwise, what’s it all about? What’s it all for?”

     - Terry Pratchett, Troll Bridge

Welcome to Under The Bridge, created today with Technorati Authority rank 10,280,644. These are the chronicles of your humble host, Alex Curylo, widely known as ‘the Troll’. Expect to find herein a compendium of iPhone and iPod touch news and resources of interest to Cocoa Touch and Mobile Safari developers harvested from the wild Web; the annals of the development initiatives towards which the Troll bends his mighty efforts; and whatsoever other gallimaufries may be found piquant.

Enjoy your visit!