My Dream App
 
Russell Heistuman Russell Heistuman

Introducing Ground Control

Productivity Unleashed!

Ground Control is a simple, elegant solution to regain control of your workflow. It will allow you to access information and resources stored with Apple's basic iApp suite of productivity apps such as: Address Book, iCal, iChat, iTunes, iPhoto and Calculator and basic Activity Monitor information. Ground Control is designed to be extensible so other modules could be developed for future releases, third party developers and hopefully, by the users themselves. The list of possible productivity modules is endless and could easily foster a module-developing community that will further enhance specialized workflow environments.

Some of the Developer's Comments from First Round

John Casasanta — Development Team

...Ground Control isn't without it's obstacles but my gut feeling is that it will have much more of a longevity factor than Dashboard. I'm confident that this will go pretty far throughout the elimination rounds so I'll be saving more of my commentary on it for later rounds. I will say that it has the potential to improve productivity in a way that Quicksilver has, but possibly in a more significant way. The bottom line here is that even though it'll continuously be compared to the Dashboard, Ground Control isn't about fun, it's about streamlining your workflow. As of now, this one is my personal favorite of the bunch.


Jason Harris — Development Team

...What’s challenging about GC is that each individual module would be moderately challenging to write on its own. Putting them all together, the task becomes pretty formidable. But the idea’s compelling enough that it’s probably worthwhile.

Something I’d really like to see in GC is a unified skin system. I definitely see skins being popular for something like this, but doing it correctly would take some thought. Basically, I envision the skin designer basically creating a CSS stylesheet for various text types (app name, section header, explanatory text, etc.). The skin designer would also provide graphics for panel backgrounds, buttons, checkboxes, etc. Finally, the skin designer would provide a set of Core Image filters that would be applied to application icons. This would allow, for example, the Mail.app icon to appear nicely monotone and desaturated, blending with the GC background.

With a skin system like this, I think the modules could just use standard Cocoa widgets and the underlying engine would theme ‘em appropriately.


Martin Ott — Development Team

When I first read the idea I thought it was kind of lame. After looking at the mock-ups I thought differently. It blends functions of the Dock and major Dashboard widgets together for really easy access to your calender, mail and what not. The aggregated information is really at your fingertips. The Dock status icons usually only feature some kind of badge giving you a hint that something is going on, but with Ground Control you get more. The suggested plug-in architecture is very important for customizing it for the users needs and also for being open for new kind of apps. It’s also great for releasing a 1.0 version with just the basic set of plug-in, e.g. mail, calender, and weather. Then it can be extended in future versions with new plug-ins and functionality. You can also create a community around it for providing plug-ins. What worries me is the fact that it is more or less yet another Dashboard-widget-aggregation kind of app. But Ground Control seems to make it right.


Austin Sarner — Development Team

Sounds like Dashboard done right to me. Reminds me a bit of Statoo from Panic, and this could be a slick app with a decent module community behind it.


Wil Shipley — Developers

I’m always leery when people say, “It’s like this free app that bundles with the system, but done right!” (c.f. OmniWeb) How would I program Ground Control? Is it compatible with Dashboard? Who is the target market? People who love widgets so much that they *have* to have them on their main screen? If you actually came up with a clearly better innovation here, Apple would just copy it and you’d end up with no market again. Writing this kind of software is a quick way to stay poor.

Aaah, Wil doesn't know what he's talking about ;-) Actually he does, but Apple will never "copy" it unless it's done first. And there's always the hope that Apple might reach into their pocketbooks and buy it rather than copy it. Right now, I think they have too much vested into the current Dock and Dashboard concepts and it would be admitting that they might have been wrong. Kind of like the one-button mouse. I still think no one at Apple has told Steve that it now has multiple buttons—that's why it's designed to look like it only has one.

 
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