Fifty paintings of scenes from the Bible: they could easily have been so bland. Not for Blake, though, whose genius shines through.
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.
