Love the Mac > Visor: Terminal anywhere

[iNik | A pathetic waste of high technology...] Visor, the new application from Blacktree, creates a half-screen terminal window that pops up with the press of a hot key. This terminal is persistent, so when it’s in the background, it just keeps on going and going and going.

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http://blog.elfredpagan.com  Paganisms: The Occasional Musings of Elfred Pagan: As if Quicksilveris not useful enough, the brilliant folks of blacktree recently released Visor. These people are productivity enabling machines. (via Cosmos)

http://outsidethebox.blankslate.net  Outside the Box: Discovered Visor a few minutes ago. It’s a cool app which lets you assign a keyboard shortcut to pull down a terminal from the top of your screen. (via Cosmos)

BlogLot: Tags, Feeds, And TinyPinger: Responding to a question about problems the company had in developing the Wiimote, Miyamoto stated that in fact "we're still debating on the area of how many buttons to use," which could be taken to mean that Nintendo has PS3-like changes in mind for the controller before the console ships. Of course, it could just as easily mean that although the design has been finalized, the Wii development team still discusses its merits and detriments amongst themselves, and the fact that the interview was translated over from the native Japanese only further muddies the issue, as Miyamoto's comments may have been taken out of context or lost the meaning he intended. (via Cosmos)

splee.blog: Visor (via Cosmos)

Digg.comhttp://digg.com [Digg.com] Quake-style Console for Mac OS X: Follow this Ars Technica forum thread for a Mac OS X application which produces a terminal console that drops down from the top of the screen, a la Quake.

[Hivelogic.com] Hivelogic Narrative Combined Feed: I remember how much I enjoyed writing these posts, and it's interesting how they illustrate the change of perspective I've experienced over the years, and how Hivelogic as a site - through my narrative - has changed as well. If you're new to Hivelogic (or if you think Hivelogic is new), these are a great intro to the "heart" of what Hivelogic is really about (hint: it's not Ruby on Rails).

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