As always, I think freedom is beautiful; and it would be also beautiful to have the "possibility" of using the full potential of a programming language brilliant as Revolution.
On other hands, "hacking" the system may be a way to increase its power; I don't think Apple really feel hurt by this, considering that all the applications I mentioned before are advertised by Apple itself on Apple's official site. Take a look at: http://guide.apple.com/action.lasso?-database=macosguide&-layout=cgi_detail& -response=/ussearch/detail.html&prodkey=66163&-search you will find a beautiful Apple's page dedicated to the "hackers" of MenuCalendarClock. If a new program is useful and good, Macintosh users are satisfied and Apple is happy too (in spite of the menubar has been violated...). on 20-02-2006 16:22, Richard Gaskin at [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > It may be worth noting that there is no sanctioned API for that, as > Apple considers those menus to be exclusively for their own use: > > Reserved for use by Apple, the right side of the menu bar > may contain items that provide feedback on and access to > certain hardware or network settings. > <http://developer.apple.com/documentation/UserExperience/Conceptual/OSXHIGuide > lines/XHIGMenus/chapter_16_section_4.html> > > > Third-party programs which make such menus for themselves do so by > violating Apple's design mandate and effectively "hacking" the system. > > -- > Richard Gaskin > Managing Editor, revJournal _______________________________________________ use-revolution mailing list use-revolution@lists.runrev.com Please visit this url to subscribe, unsubscribe and manage your subscription preferences: http://lists.runrev.com/mailman/listinfo/use-revolution