I always wanted to work for Apple, and the documentation for DragThing and PCalc had a line in it to that effect. How was it working there and what made you decide to go independent? ![]() You joined Apple for a bit a few years ago. But, I also think the market has moved on to some extent – regular users use the Dock, and power users use Spotlight or some other keyboard based launcher. DragThing is still running over 20 years later – I’ve been more focused on PCalc of late, but I hope to get back to it and give it the rewrite it deserves. It was inspired by the NeXT dock, but then DragThing went on to partially inspire the Apple app switcher in Mac OS 8.5, and the Dock in Mac OS X. It was really an excuse to learn the new drag and drop APIs that were coming in Mac OS 7.5. Tell us a little about DragThing.ĭragThing is an application dock, inspired by the original NeXT dock and other Mac launchers of the time like Applicon / The Tilery. It’s still possible though.Ī lot of new PCalc customers are probably unaware of DragThing and how important it was for OS X and iOS. The market is significantly bigger, but a lot harder to convince to hand over their money. The main difference is the commercial environment in which I am trying to sell software. But it still takes the same amount of time to do anything. The actual day-to-day process of developing software hasn’t changed a great deal in that time – just the platforms are thousands of times faster. Some of that code is still running today on my phone. Twenty three years, this December! The first version of PCalc was released in 1992, and I wrote it in Pascal on an original Mac Classic with a nine inch 512×384 1-bit black and white screen. Tell us about the journey and how developing software has changed in the 2 decades. You have a long history with Mac and Apple since PCalc is now 20 years old. You probably know him from PCalc - a scientific calculator that is available on every Apple platform. He founded TLA Systems with his wife nearly 20 years ago, and now works full time writing software. James is an indie developer of iOS and Mac software, living in Glasgow, Scotland. Hello there, I have a question and wonder if somebody had a good answer.In Dialogue, Featured The Dialogue: James Thomsonįor this edition of The Dialogue, we had the pleasure of talking to James Thomson. For the past 3 years I have been helping manage a 300 acre (no fence) place we own in south Alabama. We keep the hunting pressure down and provide resources for the deer and are seeing some results. I have been scouting some trail cameras placed on our feeders since August and are seeing several good young bucks. Best I can tell we have 5-7 good 2-3 year old bucks. (8 pointers) Haven't seen anything larger that 10 points or older than 3 years old. What is the best general rule for small buck management? Is it helpful to remove some of the young spikes or do they all have potential to become nice deer in 2-3 years?* Up until a buddy asked me about this recently, I hadn't considered removing any, but should I reconsider? I plan on taking one of these bucks if i get an opportunity and letting the others grow. If you are looking for deer on flat terrain, a topographic map can be one of the best things that you carry along with you. Would be happy to read any literature but thought asking somebody here would be the best source of information. 11-07-2010, 04:03 PM A button buck usually tends to be a buck that is only 6 months old. ![]() This is something that can help you figure out the best spots that the deer are more likely to be in. Since it is within their first year, they only have little nubs where their antlers will develope. ![]() Start out by first looking into the inside corners of the map. TikTok video from connor miller (connormiller): 'first elk shed of the year and a spike deer my buddie lukehughes90 found thr 4 point shed shedhunter shedhunting cowboy western utah utahguys viral foryou fyp'. Deer Hunting in Utah Golden Spike Scores Access Notes Deer Notes Photos and Terrain Notes Deer Drawing Stats (2021) Deer Harvest Stats (2020) Weather. TikTok video from cooper (cooperplunkett): 'spike deer hunting'. Again this is not a fence managed property. This is how I feel after shooting a spike. TikTok video from Henry (henryjons50): 'It’s totally there I swear deer hunting'.
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