![]() Head over to the archive if you’re interested, and let me know what embarrassments you dig up. While Nicecast is now retired, we are considering future solutions to help users broadcast to more modern streaming options. I’m sure there’s plenty more to see and mock. Now let’s compare it against a nearly 20-year-old version of the same product, when this functionality was first introduced:Īs you can see, rather than providing a checkbox to turn this option off as we do now, the default setting was “Stop recording after Eternity”. Audio Hijack has long provided optional limits which can be used to end a recording automatically. Speaking of time, I’ll close by noting my favorite thing I’ve spotted thus far. That Time field was beyond my ability to code in 2003”. While talking to my co-founder Quentin about it, he said “Theres some amount of ‘I’m happy I got this to work at all’ going on too. Development tools at the time just didn’t provide much help with things like that. If you look closely, you’ll see that the “Start Time” and “End Time” fields aren’t properly aligned, with “End” riding multiple pixels high. Next, take a gander at the “Timer” section from version 1.0 of our recording tool Audio Hijack Pro: list of officers they consider unreliable Danny and Baez recruit a retired mobster to assist in an investigation a predator poses as a ride-share driver. But what I notice most are the speed recommendations, which include a suggestion for how to broadcast from a 28.8 modem. It’s also got a drawer, an interface element that has long gone the way of the dodo. Broadcast to the world, or just across your house. Of course, it’s got pinstripes, which were the style at the time. Nicecast is the easiest way to broadcast music from OS X. ![]() Start with a look at this 2003-era screenshot from our now-retired broadcast app Nicecast: We also administer the Supplemental Retirement Plans (NC 401(k), NC 457 and NC 403(b)), retirement savings accounts designed to help public employees in North Carolina achieve. It can also be humbling and amusing, and thus worth writing about on this mildly-popular humor site. The North Carolina Retirement Systems is a division of the Department of State Treasurer, and we administer the pension benefits for state and local government employees. It’s quite gratifying to be able to look back on our work, which now spans more than two decades. Putting together the archive was quite an undertaking, but as I wrote in our announcement post, the end result feels weighty and worthwhile. It’s a repository of screenshots of our products dating back to 2002, along with details and stories about many of our biggest updates. Over at my day job, we unveiled something very cool today: The Rogue Amoeba Historic Screenshot Archive.
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