![]() ![]() More informative disk descriptions, icon overlay for read-only volumes and folders.Scan results are remembered while the application is running, can be “forgotten” to free memory.Ability to scan multiple disks simultaneously.Brand new look, the UI is rewritten on Core Animation.Version 2 is a major improvement over DaisyDisk 1 which many of you know and love: all main parts of the application have been re-written, refactored and improved: ![]() After being in development for more than a year, DaisyDisk 2 is finally released and is available for everyone. Now these points of data make a beautiful line.Īnd we’re out of beta, we’re releasing on time… Spending the same resources on buying ADs is merely useful for anyone ) So, if you happen to win one, improve your design skills and contribute back by creating a great website or application, that would be the best investment for us. We believe we can make the world a better place by sharing books we’ve learned a lot from. Why are we doing this? We’re surely promoting our software, DaisyDisk, but that’s not all. Refer to this article on MacStories for details. An essential book for iOS developers.Īny of these books can be yours, no matter if you are in New York, Munich or Moscow. Tapworthy: Designing Great iPhone Apps.Two of the few books about business that won’t make you asleep. Rework and Getting Real by 37signals, an icy shower for startupers and beginning software developers.What we can add is that it seriously affects the way you’ll start looking at things after reading it. Emotional Design: Why We Love (or Hate) Everyday Things by Norman.Great stories behind cult products like Mac, computer mouse or PalmPilot. Designing Interactions by Bill Moggridge, one the most inspiring books we’ve ever read.About Face 3 and Designing for the Digital Age by Alan Cooper and Kim Goodwin - essential reading for every interaction designer or software developer.While not as mind-blowing as Tufte’s books these are worth reading for any person interested in information visualization. Now You See It by Stephen Few and “The Wall Street Journal” Guide to Information Graphics by Dona Wong.The Visual Display of Quantitative Information, Envisioning Information, Visual Explanations by Edward Tufte.Almost $500 for us - priceless knowledge for you. Most of these have already become live classics and well worth reading by just any person interested in design, data visualization and building software. This week we are celebrating the successful start of DaisyDisk 2 by giving away 12 great great books. Seen this stuff a million times, no cool. We are giving away 5 $10 iTunes cards… so you can download some annoying tunes… We are giving away 3 promo codes to DaisyDisk. There’re some great news we’d liked to share. Mar 22, 2011 Sharing knowledge: win one of 12 great books Love DFeedback and use it in your own projects? Feel free to send us a link/screenshot. Where can I grab the code?įollow this link to get full source code on GitHub: It’s designed with DaisyDisk in mind, but you’re free to modify it to fit your special needs. We haven’t build DFeedback as an all-purpose ultra-flexible component. optional system info (collected in the background, can be previewed by users).visual feedback for missing e-mail address when “reply to” is checked.While both look similar on screenshots, DFeedback has the following advantages: We used JRFeedbackProvider in the very first versions of DaisyDisk, but later replaced it with a custom component. It’s simple, it’s fair and it’s free of all the GPL’s bullshit. So, in order to give back something useful to the Mac dev community we’re making the code of our feedback component freely available. DaisyDisk uses some popular open components that saved us hours of work. ![]()
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