Filed under: Software, Blogs, Developer
Cocoa Blogs, by Scott Stevenson
I have to admit right up front that I'm not as familiar with the Mac dev community as I'd like to be. I don't know a lick about developing, and I get a bit intimidated as I know it's one of those trades that has a completely different set of constraints and connotations to manage; there's nothing like trying to swim in the big kid's pool while still wearing floaties. Though, for the record: that's just an analogy; I don't wear floaties when swimming in real life. I got rid of those months ago.That said, I'd like to pass along Cocoa Blogs, a new venture from Scott Stevenson, whose name I only know from its mention on a number of Mac developers' blogs I've stumbled across from time to time. As you might glean from the title, Scott waxes on Cocoa, one of Apple's major (and dare I say preferable?) programming environment for Mac OS X, as well as the world of development and its community. He also wrangles a number of Cocoa developer resources and notable blogs for skills both advanced and new.
While much of the language in Scott's code-oriented posts and links might as well be Latin to me (and no, you don't get points for noting that up to 80% of English is Latin-based), this looks like a great new resource for Cocoa developers in all walks of life.
[via Gus Mueller]

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Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Steven Fisher said 4:33PM on 12-12-2006
Cocoa is definitely not the best way to solve all programming problems on the Mac. Indeed, at a glance at least one of the blogs listed there is entirely unrelated to Cocoa (the WebKit one).
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Scoo said 9:51AM on 12-13-2006
Site crashes Camino. Tsk tsk!
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Scott Stevenson said 4:46AM on 12-13-2006
Indeed, at a glance at least one of the blogs listed there is entirely unrelated to Cocoa (the WebKit one)
Even though WebKit is not part of the Cocoa umbrella framework, but it is an Objective-C API. That makes it closer to Cocoa than anything else, I think. Splitting hairs, though.
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