iCapture
“iCapture is a great tool for Windows-based web developers who don’t have access to a Mac. Just enter a URL and wait 30 seconds to see a screenshot of that URL as seen in Safari” – Nick Bradbury
“iCapture is a great tool for Windows-based web developers who don’t have access to a Mac. Just enter a URL and wait 30 seconds to see a screenshot of that URL as seen in Safari” – Nick Bradbury
This sure seems to be an arguement against web-based applications: The IE Factor
It depends what your priorities are. Rich client apps have it’s benefits and shortfalls as does web-apps.
The promise of having one “code” base (HTML, Javascript, CSS files) isn’t a true reality when you have to jump through hoops to create common “code” that all browsers on all platforms will like. This is trial-and-error programming. Perhaps it’s still better than writing multiple client apps for each platform; again, if your priority is to have a product on multiple platforms.
When the time comes that Windows does not garner 90% of the user market and home users are spread more evenly across various platforms, the economics will devalue the choice to only develop windows-based client apps. But not today.
I wonder what they cover? Is this an arguement for going back to binary files?
A report by a School Technology Specialist. [via Scobelizer]
Here is an online dictionary that includes the categories: Computer, Thesaurus, Dream, Medical
eHostPros starting at $3.00/month
LunarPages starting at $8.00/month
I am always launching Windows Explorer and navigating to my development folder multiple times per day. The thing to do is create a shortcut with the following options:
“C:\WINDOWS\EXPLORER.EXE /e,/root,C:\Dev\SocialDynamX”