Matt’s Blog – Toy Story 3

On paper, it’s a ridiculous notion. Stifling a rising emotive lump in your throat caused by the on screen antics of computer animated toys.

But that’s exactly what happened when Debbie, Luke and I saw Toy Story 3 earlier today.

Before I continue, I must warn you that this blog is likely to contain spoilers. If you haven’t watched the film then you’re probably better off closing this so it doesn’t ruin the plot for you.

Fifteen years have passed since Toy Story was released. Like Woody’s owner, Andy, we’ve grown up with the characters. They’ve become cherished figures as we’ve enjoyed their adventures again and again on TV and DVD. We’ve passed this love for them down to our children. Indeed, from where I’m sitting right now I can spot half a dozen of Luke’s much loved Toy Story figures. He enjoys repeating their catch phrases and playing with them. His maturing mind creating simple but endearing adventures for them.

The original Toy Story created a new genre. The sequel was one of those rare films that surpasses the original. The characters and plot virtually pitch perfect. When news of the threequel was announced, I was a little wary. Could Pixar pull off another masterpiece? Would it stand next to the other two films and be a fitting send off to those much loved characters?

The answer is a very resounding yes. Pixar have never made children’s films. They’ve made films that kids can enjoy but they’ve always had a more contemporary theme. From the strong eco-message from the little robot left behind to clear up our mess, to the grief stricken man who ties a thousand balloons to his house.

Similar adult themes run through Pixar’s latest. A strong sense that all good things must end is present right from the off. Most of the toys have already been sold and only a handful remain. Andy is now a young man going to college and has no time for his old toys who still crave his attention. They resign themselves to a long spell in the attic holding onto the hope that Andy may have children of his own one day.

This loyalty and friendship runs throughout the series and ties together many of the key scenes in this last installment. During the third act, one scene has them trying to escape a rubbish dump’s metal smelter. Despite their efforts they find themselves being pulled towards the white hot fire, all hope seemingly lost. Jesse turns to Buzz and asks “What do we do now?” and Buzz meets her worried gaze with a look that says ‘Nothing. This is it’. The toys reach out and join hands. Terrified at the prospect at dying but finding comfort in their friendship. This beautifully animated moment was responsible for raising a lump in my throat. It is a credit to Pixar that they are able to wrangle such an emotional response from the audience by displaying so much humanity in their animation.

They manage it again right at the end as Andy plays with his toys one last time before donating them to another child. The long look he gives them before getting into his car and driving away from his childhood things is another wonderfully executed and poignant moment.

As the end credits roll to Newman’s “You’ve got a friend in me” you can’t help but to sit there for a moment and allow the concussion from the sentimental grenade to pass before rising from your seat to leave these characters behind.

I watched Luke skip out of the theatre babbling about “Woody” and “Buzz” and “Ye-haw Bulls eye” and I couldn’t help but to consider that he’ll grow up and leave home one bittersweet day. Another reminder to enjoy all the days we have, no matter how many clouds there are in the sky.

I can’t recommend the film enough. It’s hands down one of the finest animated films I’ve ever sat through. It is simply in a league of its own and Pixar’s unblemished record continues.

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Matt’s Blog – Toy Story 3

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One of the main criteria for IP.Tracker 1.4 is to make it incredibly powerful and allow you to configure it in thousands of ways, custom to your own community and needs. Having complete control over a product allows you to make it fit in with the way your website works. As we’ve stated numerous times over the past few months, we don’t want IP.Tracker 1.4 limited to just a bug-report system, we want you to be able to use it in lots more ways than just bug reports.

We have come up with numerous framework changes to accommodate this and we can’t wait to show you some of the main changes of IP.Tracker, but these areas are not ready yet – so to carry on with our IP.Tracker 1.4 development entries we will be showing you the more advanced permission options IP.Tracker contains.

Every system needs a gatekeeper
A project management system without management is, well, just silly. We know how advanced some of the projects you use IP.Tracker for are, we know you need advanced permissions to customise it to your needs. That is why, in 1.4, we have developed a whole new permission system which will allow you to control access, and ultimately have a completely flexible system.

Moderators before 1.4
IP.Tracker has always had a moderator option, you can assign members as moderators and they can manage your bug reports – simple. They can assign versions, statuses and lock issues. They can even delete replies, basically they have the same array of options that forum moderators get, but specific to IP.Tracker. The trouble we had though, was that you could not easily restrict moderators to the built-in fields such as versions.

The main reason for this was that we added the built-in fields such as ‘fixed in’, and ‘custom fields’ years after the moderator system was made, and it was simply not flexible enough and did not have room to grow. For example, this was the default screen you would see when listing moderators in IP.Tracker 1.3.

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In fact, it was so badly neglected that it would not even tell you that there were no moderators for this project! It simply gave you an empty table, providing no helpful information. Even worse, when you went to add a moderator or group it was even more neglected, a long list of boring form elements. There were also not many options pertaining to the default ‘fields’, most of the moderating power you had in 1.3 was to do with editing/deleting posts.

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Once you had created a moderator, there was also no clear way to view what permissions you had given them unless you went back through the form. It was obvious this had to change.

Moderators in 1.4
We are pleased to reveal the latest copy of the moderator control panel in IP.Tracker 1.4. If you remember from our last blog entry detailing interface changes to the projects listing, you will recognise some of the changes we have made to the moderator area. One of our goals from an interface point of view is to make everything in IP.Tracker uniformed and familiar, whilst keeping it simple and professional.

Remember the screenshot of the moderator listing that I showed you above from 1.3.1? Here is the same area in IP.Tracker 1.4.

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This screen is now the overview for all moderators within IP.Tracker, and can be accessed with one click – you no longer need to go through lots of projects to find the moderators you need to. IP.Tracker also quickly tells you whether or not they are a super moderator, and if they aren’t it will tell you how many projects they moderate. All of this information was not easily locatable in older versions of IP.Tracker. Let’s move onto the moderator creation screen!

As we briefly showed you with the new project creation screen, we’re trying to get rid of boring old lists which took ages trying to find the options you wanted. We’re keeping this uniform throughout the Admin CP in IP.Tracker – we don’t feel its necessary to have five different style of forms when it will just confuse the end-user. Without further ado..

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Now, we’ve just shown you an awful lot, but it gives you a very good idea of how powerful IP.Tracker is, and you know all those hard-coded ‘fields’ we talked about earlier that are in IP.Tracker 1.3? IP.Tracker 1.4 includes a powerful system which means none of these are hard-coded anymore, and 3rd-party developers can create their own ‘fields’ with the exact same integration as our defaults ones! More on that in another blog entry though!

These are just the default fields we have produced at the moment, we have a lot planned for IP.Tracker 1.4, with all these new sets of permissions you can truly customise Tracker to what you want to use it for, this simply wasn’t possible in previous versions.

Moderator Permission Masks
Creating moderators can be a pain if you are adding 5 moderators with the same permission mask, even more so if you then have to go back and update every single moderator. IP.Tracker 1.4 includes a permission mask system where you can reuse permission ‘templates’ across moderators. For example, I could assign a permission mask to the moderators Keith and Stuart, and instead of updating Keith and Stuarts permissions individually I can just update the mask and they will both be updated in the process.

We won’t be showing you the interface, because it is the exact same as the screenshots I have just shown you above, minus the first tab. We reuse a lot of the same templates to keep the backend code of IP.Tracker more efficient

One more thing..
In IP.Tracker 1.3 if you wanted to view what permissions a moderator had, you had to go into the creation system and manually look it up with dozens of radio boxes looking at you – it was not for the faint hearted. If you wanted to view what projects that moderator could moderate, it was even harder – there was no central screen and it meant you had to visit every single project and see if the moderator had access there.

The very first screenshot of the 1.4 moderator area I showed you today contained this link in the moderator table.
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Now, this is the first design of the feature, in fact if I am completely honest I started writing this feature 30 minutes ago. This means the basic look of the feature can, and probably will change. However, clicking ‘View Permissions’ in 1.4 does exactly what 1.3 didn’t do. It shows you all of the moderators permissions, and what projects they moderate in! Couldn’t be simpler!

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Wrap-up
So, thats our moderator and permission masks area in IP.Tracker 1.4 – development as a whole has been progressing rather well, but we are still a long way off from showing you any of the front-end. As always, because it’s so early in the development phase, anything you’d like to see which involves the moderating functions of IP.Tracker, be sure to leave in the comments! Thanks!

IPS Resources – IP.Tracker 1.4 ACP: Moderators and Permission Masks

HP reveled most of its tablet strategy yesterday at the Fortune’s Brainstorm conference. The Windows 7 HP Slate is headed to the enterprise sector this fall while the webOS-power Palmpad will go head-to-head against the iPad later. The plan itself really isn’t that surprising as I saw this coming shortly after Palmpad was trademarked. But what I didn’t expect was the outcry from consumers who actually want a Windows 7 Slate. It’s clear HP should take a long look a limited consumer market release for the Win7 Slate.

I’ve said it over and over and over. Windows 7 is horrible via a touch interface. It’s simply not meant to be used with your fingers. However, the HP Slate is said to come with a stylus and if said stylus is an active digitizer like Wacom tablets, it could be awesome and what’s been missing from Windows tablets for so long. I still believe webOS has a better chance to catch on as Windows tablets have been around longer than Apple has been making the iPod and have yet to sell well, but why not have both options available and let the market decide? At least our readers want it.




HP, Read Our Comments, Consumers Want The Windows 7 Slate, Too

Social media app developer Sobees, offers a number of impressive clients on the market, including a native Windows client, a web-based client and a Twitter app for Android phones. Recently, Sobees ventured into the iPad space with an $0.99 native Facebook app, that allowed for basic functionality on the social network from the device. Today, Sobees is launching a new, paid Facebook iPad app that offers a much more interactive experience for users. The app, called My Friends, costs $3.99 on the App Store.

While the older app allows you to update your status, comment and like a status, My Friends allows for additional interaction on the social network. With the new app you can view and upload pictures, communicate with your friends on Facebook Chat, access your Facebook events, and receive Facebook notifications. Plus you can update your status, comment, like and more.

In addition, My Friends gives you a choice of homepage for Facebook, letting you choose between the Sobees magazine view or traditional stream view. Sobees CEO Francois Bochatay says that the company is planning on adding the ability to filter and more to the app soon.

Sobees’ first Facebook app saw 65,000 downloads, so it should be interesting to see if this pricer app gains traction. Of course, Facebook has yet to release a native iPad app but the expectation is that when the social network does release an app for the device, it will be as popular as its iPhone app.




Sobees Adds Chat, Image Uploading, And More To New Interactive Facebook iPad App

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IPS Resources – Introducing Covenant

Covenant is a smashing gaming skin based on the popular Halo for xBox. Pain-staking attention to detail was paid on this design and we think it shows! With a striking color palette and easy to edit graphics, this skin can easily be adapted to all sorts of gaming genres should one choose…and will definitely set your site apart from the rest!

  • Coded to work with latest version of IP.Blog, IP.Gallery, IP.Downloads and IP.Chat
  • Includes detailed installation instructions
  • Price includes one year free support and access to updates as they become available!
  • Also included is our custom smiley pack containing 21 totally unique smileys!

Available for Version 3.1.2
Each purchase includes our Buy One Get One Free offer! Visit www.transversestyles.com to place your order :)

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IPS Resources – Introducing Covenant