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Version 1.2.3 Submitted for Approval
costmo — Tue, 10/28/2008 - 12:52
TimeLogger version 1.2.3 was submitted to Apple for approval today. This update addresses:
- Stability issues that affect a relatively small number of people.
- Fixed a problem introduced in version 1.2.2 that prevented being able to recover data from a backup created by the same version.
- Added 6 minute intervals as an option for people who bill by 1/10th of an hour
In the past, it has taken Apple 5 - 7 days to approve updates, but our last update was approved in only 3 days. This new update should arrive in the App Store soon, and is a free upgrade for all owners of TimeLogger.
To the best of our knowledge, we have addressed all crash conditions. Obviously, some conditions that have caused crashes escaped our QA a couple of times in the past. Fortunately, these conditions have only ever affected a very small number of our users, but we don't like anyone to experience crashes at all. If you have crashes in the application after this update, please let us know through our forums or by sending a message to chris@costmosoft.com.
Thanks to everyone who has made TimeLogger a great success!
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alexdenipaul — Mon, 12/14/2009 - 03:34General copyright notice: The official Thomas E. Kennedy website contains proprietary data and images that are protected by copyright law web design. Resale use of any content (text, graphics, images, photographs, and computer code) of this website is prohibited.
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The “Kerri Man” figure is based on an electronic image rendered by Roger Derham (publisher of Kennedy’s The Copenhagen Quartet) on the basis of a sculpture done in wrought iron by John Behan, nephew of the lengendary Irish poet and playwright, Brendan Behan. Image used by permission home based business.
The Kerri Man represents Terrence Einhorn Kerrigan, the main character of Kerrigan’s Copenhagen, A Love Story, who walks around Copenhagen from bar to bar carrying a leather satchel containing his dog-eared, never-read copy of Finnegan’s Wake. The Behan sculpture itself, in fact, depicts the Jesuit Father Conmee from Joyce’s Ulysses, who is about as different from Kerrigan as a man can be. But, as Kennedy notes, the visual fits well cheap web hosting