48.2 F
Los Angeles
Saturday, November 16, 2024

Trump Lawyer Resigns One Day Before Trial To Begin

Joseph Tacopina has filed with the courts that he will not represent Donald J. Trump. The E. Jean Carroll civil case is schedule to begin Tuesday January 16,...

Judge Lewis A. Kaplan Issues Order RE Postponement

On May 9, 2023, a jury found Donald J. Trump liable for sexual assault and defamation. The jury awarded Ms. Carroll $5 million in damages. Seven months ago,...

ASUS Announces 2023 Vivobook Classic Series

On April 7, 2023, ASUS introduced five new models in the 2023 Vivobook Classic series of laptops. The top laptops in the series use the 13th Gen Intel® Core™...
TechnologyProgrammingDan Bricklin goes back to his developer roots

Dan Bricklin goes back to his developer roots

Dan Bricklin is returning to his developer roots and is working on some new utilities for his company the Software Garden. And for his new development machine he picked up a….drumroll…PowerBook:

“So…for the first time since I bought a Mac SE in the late 1980’s, I’ve bought a computer made by Apple. (Some of my long time Mac-user friends are enjoying laughing at me for being “forced” to go their way after singing the praises of Wintel machines for so long.) I’ve been a satisfied Microsoft DOS and Windows person since I bought my first 64K IBM PC in the early 1980’s. I type this on my Tablet PC.”

PowerBooks are definitely impressive machines. Is Dan setting a developer trend? Hmm. His choice makes lots of sense in light of the fact that he’s planning on developing some cross-browser utilities. You need all sorts of machines for testing applications like these.

Dan also blogs his thoughts on his return to product development:

“I just want to spend a lot of time programming and then we’ll see what happens. I love programming and hands-on product development.”

and

“I am also interested in understanding how a small software company can make money in today’s world. The old business models of the early Software Garden days are from a different era. Today we have an even more fertile field for innovation. There is still evolution in how best to afford to produce each of the different types of software we need. Once I have some new products to distribute, I can experiment and learn myself.”

Why do I think I’m going to be checking Dan’s blog everyday now to see what he’s up to?

Loren
Lorenhttp://www.lorenheiny.com
Loren Heiny (1961 - 2010) was a software developer and author of several computer language textbooks. He graduated from Arizona State University in computer science. His first love was robotics.

Latest news

Related news