Not back to the Bluetooth purgatory of El Capitan, but still some worrying moments when your trackpad goes missing.
There’s a lot more to this painting than first meets the eye: a bit of Brueghel, some Leighton, and even some Signorelli.
Time to pause for breath, I think, for macOS and Xcode. Apple needs to bring the docs up to date, and attend to the detail.
A dozen major works, created as monoprints and then hand-painted to finish, show some of Blake’s most powerful and unique images.
There’s no point trying to script in Swift if you can’t deploy it to a user’s Mac. Here are two solutions available now.
He demonstrated that you can paint from your mind’s eye, however unusual your mind may be. A major influence of William Blake.
What good is a fiddly miniature display strip when you can’t see it properly? With the right controls, it can be a great improvement.
Running shell scripts from Swift playgrounds is easy, but there’s more work needed to support droplets and folder actions.
Take a couple of similes from Macbeth, and depict them word for word in a painting to express a tough abstract concept. And doesn’t it work well.
A success at last: scripting file operations works now. But don’t trust much of the documentation; it just frustrates.
