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James thomson dragthing
James thomson dragthing






  1. JAMES THOMSON DRAGTHING MAC OS X
  2. JAMES THOMSON DRAGTHING MAC OS
  3. JAMES THOMSON DRAGTHING UPDATE
  4. JAMES THOMSON DRAGTHING CODE

But it’s the sort of app that is going to make some users sad that MacOS 10.15 Catalina has dropped 32-bit app legacy support.

JAMES THOMSON DRAGTHING MAC OS

It was felled not by the transition from classic Mac OS to OS X but by the gradual sunsetting of Carbon APIs. And TLA founder James Thomson actually worked for Apple and helped create the Dock - it’s a complicated story.ĭragThing hasn’t been updated in years - it wasn’t even updated to support retina displays. It was the Dock before Mac OS had a built-in dock.

JAMES THOMSON DRAGTHING MAC OS X

Pour one out for DragThing, which has had a great run.ĭragThing’s heyday was back in the classic Mac OS era, but it was a very credible utility in the early days of Mac OS X as well.

james thomson dragthing

Updated the DragThing website with a very definitive final The ground up, a process which would take us at least a year toĬomplete, with no guarantees we could re-implement all theĮxisting functionality, or how much of a future it would have

JAMES THOMSON DRAGTHING CODE

We are sorry to say, DragThing has launched its last app.Ħ4-bit support would require completely rewriting the code from

JAMES THOMSON DRAGTHING UPDATE

Update to Catalina, and there are no plans to make a new version Hopefully this won't ever affect little guys who can't afford to defend themselves, but if there's a major company behind an app, or if an app is commercially very successful, it can happen and it has now apparently started to happen.DragThing is written using the 32-bit Carbon APIs that Apple have I'm really afraid we're now going to see more patent lawsuits against application developers. The move is a worrying one for developers, and follows a similar filing at the end of March by another Texas-based company, H-W Technology, which asserted a patent on an "internet phone with search and advertising capability".įlorian Mueller, who closely watches developents in smartphones and patent claims, analysed the claims by H-W Technology and commented: "What's really disconcerting about this lawsuit is that it's the first such lawsuit to attack – besides operating system vendors and device makers, which are routinely sued by patent holders – a number of companies because of their smartphone apps. The Guardian attempted to contact Mark Small of Lodsys by phone and email, without success, to seek an answer to whether Apple had ever licensed any of the named patents, and what validity was claimed against the apps developers.Ī number of the developers, including Thomson, have referred the claims to Apple's legal department, on the basis that they have built their apps using Apple's developer toolkit.Īpple's iOS Paid Apps agreement says that developers will be reponsible for "claims that any of the licensed applications and/or the end-user's possession or use of those licensed applications infringes the copyright or other intellectual property rights of any third party".īut it is seen as highly likely that Apple will fight Lodsys's claim, because it would destabilise its App Store, which is an essential element in maintaining the attraction of its iPhone. "The idea was that if you're sitting and holding in your hand a product and you use it, why shouldn't it be aware of your behaviour, digitally, and conduct your needs to the vendor, who could interact with you." He filed for the patent in 1992 and it was granted in 1999, making it valid for at least another 15 years. "The concept of the Lodsys-owned patents predates the internet," Abelow told the Guardian. His site said the licensees of his patents include Apple, Google, Microsoft and Nokia along with roughly 200 other companies. Lodsys is a patent licensing company for inventions developed by Dan Abelow, a Harvard graduate who sold five of his patents outright in 2004: four went to Lodsys and one to a company called Webvention.Ībelow told the Guardian that he has no knowledge of which companies have licensed the patents.

james thomson dragthing james thomson dragthing

The claims come from a Texas-based company called Lodsys, which said it has four patents relating to in-app purchases, interactive online ads, online help and subscription renewals. Patrick McCarron of MobileAge, based in Chicago, has also received a demand. Another who received the couriered legal package was Matt Braun, a developer based in Toledo, Ohio, author of the best-selling iPhone kids game MASH who runs a mobile app development company, Magnate Interactive. One claim was served on Friday by hand on James Thomson, a Glasgow-based developer who wrote the apps PCalc and DragThing.








James thomson dragthing