LiveDiscKit
June 30, 2008
Filed under: Software, Odds and ends, Open Source, Developer
Moments before our Macworld 2008 interview with Paul Kafasis he told me about the one-of-a-kind way the demo CDs they were giving out worked. What’s the main problem with software on CDs? Those apps are suspended in amber, frozen in time, and many other overused metaphors. The fine folks at Rogue Amoeba make living, breathing code. They don’t stop updating it for a second, and they wanted to make sure that the app you installed off of that CD was the most up to date version available.
Impossible, you say. Piffle! Not for Rogue Amoeba (that one celled organism is a determined little guy). They looked at the problem and thought of LiveDisc. LiveDisc is an application that is burnt onto the CD. This application points to the most recent versions of the actual app that you want the user to install (an World wide web connection is required). A simple solution to a highly specific problem, which is why I enjoy it so much.
Rogue Amoeba is now sharing LiveDisc with other devs in the form of LiveDiscKit, an open source plugin for Interface Builder. Simply tweak a few settings, point it at the right places, and you’re set to press a massive number of CDs which will never go out of date (CD pressing functionality is not included with LiveDiscKit), that’s assuming CDs stick around for much longer.





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