Today was 'one of those days'. You know, when every webserver you reach times out, every document is difficult to understand, every point of contact congested.
Here's what my network has looked like for the past 30 minutes or so (and yes, 30 minutes of pure network downtime is a huge hamper on productivity).
Tracing route to atdn.net [64.12.181.62]
over a maximum of 30 hops:
14 88 ms * * ow1-mc1-so-0-0-0.atdn.net [66.185.143.202]
15 92 ms * 88 ms 172.20.148.22
16 * * 92 ms atdn.net [64.12.181.62]
Trace complete.
ATDN.net is the AOL Transit Data Network, and carries all of AOL's backbone traffic from our many peering partners. Some big BGP-4 router is probably dumping core right now, or rebuilding its giant 300,000+ node tables. Assuming that AOL's backbone has multiple BGP peers, they really could benefit from some RouteScience boxes.
Posted by stephend at February 18, 2003 04:13 PMSame thing happened to me yesterday, same day as your post, and since I need the internet for my job I just got to sit there staring at the monitor wondering about nothing.
Posted by: Steve on February 19, 2003 01:25 PMBy building an application that takes advantage of Aqua's many facets, you help ensure that your application will not only look good, but have a chance of becoming a raging success. After a new user clicks on the icon of your program, the first thing he or she sees is the application interface. I know that when I review a product, I am very critical of its visual design. I usually have a short time to learn the new software, so design and ease of use are very important. Aside from those who marvel at the beauty of the command line, most users tend to react the same way.
Posted by: Anthony on January 27, 2004 04:58 AMAdhere to Layout Guidelines. Did you leave 12 pixels between your push buttons? Does the positioning of your pop-up menus make sense, and when do you use a pop-up versus a scrolling list? Are you using the right types of buttons for the proper functions?
Posted by: Pompey on January 27, 2004 04:58 AMDock Animation. Sometimes animating icons in the dock can be useful in communicating the status of the system or application.
Posted by: Wombell on January 27, 2004 04:59 AMThis is the first thing your users see, and probably the single most important visible part of your application. It is the first chance you have at making an impression and the best chance to help establish your brand.
Posted by: Ellis on January 27, 2004 04:59 AMFor example, if you see an AIM window peeking out from behind your browser and you click on it, that window will come to the front, but the main application window will not. The Mail.app/Activity Viewer is another example. The Aqua system of layers works well in many instances, but not in all. Thank goodness that the Dock is always there to come to the rescue. I know that clicking on an application icon in the Dock will always result in not only the application coming to the front, but also any non-minimized windows associated with it. And if the application is active but no windows are open, clicking on the Dock icon should create a new window in that application.
Posted by: Josias on January 27, 2004 05:00 AMClicking an application in the dock should always bring forward an active window. If the user clicks on an open app's icon in the Dock, the application is active and all unminimized windows come along with it. I have found a few problems with windows behaving independently of their application.
Posted by: Jasper on January 27, 2004 05:00 AMFor example, if you see an AIM window peeking out from behind your browser and you click on it, that window will come to the front, but the main application window will not. The Mail.app/Activity Viewer is another example. The Aqua system of layers works well in many instances, but not in all. Thank goodness that the Dock is always there to come to the rescue. I know that clicking on an application icon in the Dock will always result in not only the application coming to the front, but also any non-minimized windows associated with it. And if the application is active but no windows are open, clicking on the Dock icon should create a new window in that application.
Posted by: Mary on January 27, 2004 05:00 AMThe simple fact is that, when all other factors are equal, where will consumers spend their money? I believe that in the long run, the best looking, easiest-to-use applications will also be the most successful. I think that's why Apple encourages developers to write programs that are 100 percent Aqua-compliant.
Posted by: Annabella on January 27, 2004 05:01 AMAdhere to Layout Guidelines. Did you leave 12 pixels between your push buttons? Does the positioning of your pop-up menus make sense, and when do you use a pop-up versus a scrolling list? Are you using the right types of buttons for the proper functions?
Posted by: Magdalen on January 27, 2004 05:01 AMIn building your amazing Aqua application, one of the most important things to consider is the Dock. There are three things your app needs to be "Dock Compliant." Now, I write this knowing that the Dock will be going through some major changes soon, but for the most part, these should still hold true.
Posted by: Paschall on January 27, 2004 05:01 AM