Apple Design Award Winners Announced
EccentricAnomaly writes "Apple has announced the winners of this year's Apple Design Awards. And the winners are: Best New Mac OS X Product: Toon Boom; Most Innovative Mac OS X Product: Watson; Best Mac OS X User Experience and Best Mac OS X Technology Adoption: OmniGraffle; Best Mac OS X Open Source port: TeXShop; and Best Mac OS X Student Product: MacJournal." The last one appears to be down, due to "excessive bandwidth consumption." Maybe the Apple Design Awards people should've gotten together with the Apple iTools HomePage people.
I'm kind of surprised OmniOutliner didn't get a nod. Like OmniGraffle, it's an impressive show of what cocoa can do. I'm guessing they just didn't have version 2.0 out in time.
Oh, and LaunchBar. I can't live without that.
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So are these the Darwin awards???
Best New Mac OS X Product:
Winner: Toon Boom Studio 1.1, Toon Boom
An animation tool for traditional animators that includes 2D drawing, 3D scene painting, panting to film, and sound synching.
Runner Up: Marketcircle DayLite 1.0.1, Marketcircle Inc.
A comprehensive customer relationship management tool.
Most Innovative Mac OS X Product:
Winner: Watson 1.5, Karelia Software, LLC
An innovative tool for viewing Internet-based information, with an auto-updating feature.
Runner Up: Toon Boom Studio v1.1, Toon Boom.
An animation tool for traditional animators that includes 2D drawing, 3D scene painting, panting to film, and sound synching.
Best Mac OS X User Experience:
Winner: OmniGraffle 2.0, Omni Development Inc.
An innovative, flexible diagramming and charting tool.
Runner Up: STX 1.0, Salon Transcripts
A powerful, integrated business management tool with timesheets, payroll, inventory, billing, and accounting capabilities.
Best Mac OS X Technology Adoption:
Winner: OmniGraffle 2.0, Omni Development Inc.
An innovative, flexible diagramming and charting tool.
Runner Up: Vektor 3 3.1.3, Manfred Schubert
A full-featured chess program with an innovative use of Quartz, Speech, and other Mac OS X technologies.
Best Mac OS X Open Source Port:
Winner: TeXShop 1.19, Richard Koch, Mathematics Department, University of Oregon
The ultimate tool for formatting scientific and technical documents.
Runner Up: SIDekick 1.1, Axel Wefers
A tool for salvaging legacy sound files stored on Commodore64 SID file players.
Best Mac OS X Student Product:
Winner: MacJournal 2.1, Dan Schimpf
A tool for keeping and organizing logs, diaries, journals, notes, and ideas.
Runner Up: CanCombineIcons 2.1.0, David Remahl
This tool helps you easily create icons for your applications.
Is there any concrete information about this? Did Apple really license/buy it and integrate it into Sherlock 3, or does it just have a lot of the same features? Has there been an announcement about it from Apple or the guy who makes Watson, or is it just jibbajabber?
Working toward a usable PDA environment in the spirit of Newton OS: Dynapad
We wouln't want *Akamai* to get Slashdotted now *would we*? Thank God Slashdot can take up the slack.
Come on, posting articles is nice and all, but this server was not going to be slashdotted(period), it didn't require registration, and it isn't even noticably loaded.
And, of course, there's the legal issue that this is Apple's copyrighted content that you're moving to another site.
May we never see th
I used to compile to dvi and then convert to Postscript because most of the figures I used were eps files. Most people in the lab are still working this way. When there are eps figures, xdvi basically call ghostview to convert the eps to a bitmap.
The advantages of compiling to pdf are numerous:
Watson development to continue, says developer
Dan Wood of Karelia Software, the developer of Watson, confirmed for MacCentral that he had no part in the development of Sherlock 3. Wood also confirmed that Watson is alive and well and he will continue the development of the product.
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