waiting_for_OSX
Registered
I like OSX, it has a lot of potential. I like Cocoa / Objective-C. This is good technology.
My new Apple-culture term that I am coining right now is
"carbon-dated"
Most everyone knows of the the process called "carbon-dating" which is used to identify the approximate age of fossil remains, often tens of millions of years old.
This expression should be used to describe any application that uses the dinosaur "carbon" technology when it should use the sweet multithreaded "cocoa" technology.
Examples in conversation:
1. Yes, I confess, sadly the application I have just written is "carbon-dated".
2. Is Adobe's Photoshop 7 for OSX a "carbon-dated" application?
3. Is the OS X Finder a "carbon-dated" application?
If you want to be hip at the comming Apple Developers Convention, show that you are on the cutting edge by using this descriptive term.
My new Apple-culture term that I am coining right now is
"carbon-dated"
Most everyone knows of the the process called "carbon-dating" which is used to identify the approximate age of fossil remains, often tens of millions of years old.
This expression should be used to describe any application that uses the dinosaur "carbon" technology when it should use the sweet multithreaded "cocoa" technology.
Examples in conversation:
1. Yes, I confess, sadly the application I have just written is "carbon-dated".
2. Is Adobe's Photoshop 7 for OSX a "carbon-dated" application?
3. Is the OS X Finder a "carbon-dated" application?
If you want to be hip at the comming Apple Developers Convention, show that you are on the cutting edge by using this descriptive term.