30 Apps You Need to Run Your Business from Your iPad
http://thenextweb.com/lifehacks/2012/09/08/everything-need-run-business-ipad/
http://thenextweb.com/lifehacks/2012/09/08/everything-need-run-business-ipad/
My iMac was rock stable, right up until I installed Mountain Lion on it. Then, at random times, it would suddenly reboot. Fortunately, most of it seemed to happen at night – I’d get up in the morning and find my Mac had rebooted. Weird. So, I finally got around to investigating the problem – …
How To Fix A Randomly Rebooting Mac (OS X 10.8 – Mountain Lion)Read More »
From time to time I find myself using the JSON API plugin for WordPress – it works good, and is handy for providing connectivity with mobile apps. Just form a query, snag the data, sort out what you need, and done. Nice. Except – one of the projects I’ve got involves a LOT of data. …
Getting post counts from JSON API plugin for WordPressRead More »
Remember those old Joke-A-Day desk calendars? Well, Davis’s Daily is bringing it back and modernizing it for the iPhone, iPad, and iPod Touch, along with other platforms in the future!
This is just a placeholder for the upcoming announcements section for iPhone / iPad / Android apps!
MAME comes to the iOS App Store – Donkey Kong on my iPad, here I come! How long with it last?
Uses the Google Chart Tools API for charting data entered in WordPress posts using MetaTags. Tracks up to 10 different data points, supports Area Chart, Line Chart, Pie Chart, Bar Chart, and Column Chart styles, any custom style options you’d like to include, and number of other options. Be sure to read the webpage for full notes and updates. Based on Tom Fotherby’s Fotherplot, however shares very little code with the original, and instead of requiring changes to a page or template, it uses shortcode to add graphs to a page or post.
Mobile Flash and Silverlight are dead – and Flash for the desktop isn’t far behind.
Projects are sometimes done on dated time-lines: for instance, in month 1 (x) should be done, in month 2 (y) should be done, and in month 3 you’re supposed to have released the project. Then there’s that other sort of project – the one that has a nebulous timeline that is based on when customers …
Part of every website project I do is a training component – usually two hours, give or take a little based on how quickly the customer picks it up. It’s a hands-on training for creating new posts, new pages, editing menus, and the other core features of WordPress. It’s not the worlds most in-depth training, …