On Apr 22, 2009, at 9:20 AM, Benjamin Dobson wrote:
On 22 Apr 2009, at 17:06:10, Chris Williams wrote:
So you'd rather the user sits there wondering if this huge, highly
complex
application (like any Office or Adobe app) that takes 10-15 seconds
to load,
even longer on a slow laptop, is
On Apr 23, 2009, at 8:10 AM, Glenn L. Austin wrote:
I hate to bring this up, but I believe that defending your copyright
means that it must be visible at launch of your app.
This is incorrect. There are many examples of works that are protected
by copyright but that do not display a
Chris Williams wrote:
I would also argue that in general splash screens are an anachronism.
They're a holdover from slow hard drives attached to slow CPUs and
the
idea that an app taking several seconds to finish preparing itself
for
user interaction was normal. Today there are relatively
On 22 Apr 2009, at 06:32:55, Mario Kušnjer wrote:
Greetings everyone !
So the question is how to make a window that doesn't have a title
bar and borders ?
Actually I would like it to be just like user login window of OS X.
This could also go for a so called Splash Screen on app launch.
On 2009.04.22, at 08:55, Benjamin Dobson wrote:
Although I'd appreciate it if you could in any way avoid the latter.
I have always found them extremely annoying on OS X. If you're app
takes a long time to load, something small and simple like what
iWork does seems
Mario Ku?njer wrote:
Greetings everyone !
So the question is how to make a window that doesn't have a title bar
and borders ?
Actually I would like it to be just like user login window of OS X.
This could also go for a so called Splash Screen on app launch.
Thanks to all in advance.
This
On Wed, Apr 22, 2009 at 12:06 PM, Chris Williams ch...@clwill.com wrote:
So you'd rather the user sits there wondering if this huge, highly complex
application (like any Office or Adobe app) that takes 10-15 seconds to load,
even longer on a slow laptop, is actually starting up, or should I
On 22 Apr 2009, at 17:06:10, Chris Williams wrote:
So you'd rather the user sits there wondering if this huge, highly
complex
application (like any Office or Adobe app) that takes 10-15 seconds
to load,
even longer on a slow laptop, is actually starting up, or should I
click it
again, or
Below:
From: Michael Ash michael@gmail.com
I don't really mind splash screens, although I find them to be
pointless. However, if your splash screen does not go into the
background when I click on another app while waiting for your app to
load, then your app goes into the trash
Completely agreed. That's just arrogant and insulting.
From: Benjamin Dobson importedfromsp...@googlemail.com
I have seen splash screens that have a higher
window level than normal. This is just wrong. If you're app takes long
enough to load to warrant a splash screen, it takes long enough
On Wed, Apr 22, 2009 at 1:07 PM, Chris Williams ch...@clwill.com wrote:
Below:
From: Michael Ash michael@gmail.com
I don't really mind splash screens, although I find them to be
pointless. However, if your splash screen does not go into the
background when I click on another app while
Michael Ash wrote:
I'm not saying that you load it lazily on demand. I'm saying that you
get the app up and running in a minimal fashion, and *then* establish
the connection. Do it immediately, but after you've officially
launched. If you do it modelessly, then the user can still access
On Wed, Apr 22, 2009 at 9:06 AM, Chris Williams ch...@clwill.com wrote:
blah blah... Far better than a spinning beach ball.
If written well an application can launch quickly and then get into UI
that informs the user that a lengthy process is taking place while
ideally letting them do other
Le 22 avr. 09 à 20:31, Shawn Erickson a écrit :
On Wed, Apr 22, 2009 at 9:06 AM, Chris Williams ch...@clwill.com
wrote:
blah blah... Far better than a spinning beach ball.
If written well an application can launch quickly and then get into UI
that informs the user that a lengthy process
On 22 Apr 2009, at 17:06, Chris Williams wrote:
So you'd rather the user sits there wondering if this huge, highly
complex
application (like any Office or Adobe app) that takes 10-15 seconds
to load,
even longer on a slow laptop, is actually starting up, or should I
click it
again, or is
You shouldn't always show a log-in panel in your application either;
Mac OS X has the Keychain for secure storage of user credentials, you
should only ask the user to log in to your service if there's no
stored credential or they've done something like reset their password.
And instead of
On Wed, Apr 22, 2009 at 10:08 PM, Chris Hanson c...@me.com wrote:
And instead of checking network connectivity, your application should just
try to use the network and fail gracefully when it's not available. After
all, it could go away between when you check and actually start using it, or
On 2009.04.23, at 04:08, Chris Hanson wrote:
You shouldn't always show a log-in panel in your application either;
Mac OS X has the Keychain for secure storage of user credentials,
you should only ask the user to log in to your service if there's no
stored credential or they've done
On Wed, Apr 22, 2009 at 10:21 PM, Kyle Sluder kyle.slu...@gmail.com wrote:
On Wed, Apr 22, 2009 at 10:08 PM, Chris Hanson c...@me.com wrote:
And instead of checking network connectivity, your application should just
try to use the network and fail gracefully when it's not available. After
all,
On Apr 22, 2009, at 7:30 PM, Mario Kušnjer wrote:
Well I was thinking this way: First window that shows when you start
the app is login window because user can't use an app if he doesn't
log in.
My point is that this isn't the logic your application should be
following. Instead, your
Greetings everyone !
So the question is how to make a window that doesn't have a title bar
and borders ?
Actually I would like it to be just like user login window of OS X.
This could also go for a so called Splash Screen on app launch.
Thanks to all in advance.
Mario
On 21 apr 2009, at 22.32, Mario Kušnjer wrote:
So the question is how to make a window that doesn't have a title
bar and borders ?
Actually I would like it to be just like user login window of OS X.
This could also go for a so called Splash Screen on app launch.
Hello Mario,
I think
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