Dear Friends,

The weather has not been very summery here in the Green Mountains, as we have received a lot of rain and cooler temperatures. This has impacted some farmers who cannot get into their fields to harvest their first cut of hay both because the tractors don’t work that well in mud and because the sun is an important element in hay harvesting. Back when I first moved to Vermont and was a student at Goddard College, I worked at many odd jobs, including helping a French-Canadian farmer with his haying. On a sunny summer day, he would call and say in his heavily accented voice “time to pick up da bales.” I’d gather together a few friends and we would spend a hot summer day loading hay bales onto a trailer and then haul them to his barn and to stack them. Hard work, but a very fond memory.

The 4th of July was wet, too, although the gigantic slug we had for the Prickly Mountain float made it through the parade without getting rained upon. We have some interesting traditions for our float. We cannot come up with the idea more than 4 or 5 days before it is built, it must be people-powered and we have a strict $300 budget. Nevertheless, we have created some amazing floats and usually win the “Best Overall” award. I was inside the slug helping to carry it down the parade route. I haven’t been in the Prickly float for a couple of years since we have ridden our bikes in the parade in support of the local motorcycle rally. This year, I noticed that the inside of our float had been upgraded with duct tape cup holders and other accoutrements.

As you may have heard, the great news is that Steve Jobs is back on the job at Apple. Reports coming from the campus in Cupertino say he is looking good and energetic. While Apple seemed to roll on while Steve was on his medical leave, there is no question that he is the heart and soul of Apple. It is his vision and business sense that have led one of the most remarkable business stories in history. Welcome back, Steve!

In other Apple news, the latest Guide to Greener Electronics from Greenpeace continues a trend in reversing their pointed criticism of Apple by giving them higher marks. While Dell, HP and others are delaying plans to remove PVC and brominated flame retardants (BFR), Macs are nearly free of PVC and have no BFRs whatsoever. We encourage Apple to continue to lead in this important area!

Similar Posts

  • Happy 1st Birthday, App Store!

    *Tomorrow, July 11, the App Store turns one year old.* To date, well over 1 billion apps have been downloaded from the App Store (Apple celebrated that milestone in April 2009).

    In Apple’s own words:

    bq. Light a candle and cue the music. Okay, forgive us for sounding like doting parents, but we’re just so proud–having watched the App Store go from promising newcomer to full-fledged revolutionary. To celebrate its first birthday, we’ve gathered some of our favorite games and apps. Part fun. Part function. Entirely amazing.

    “See their favorite apps here.”:http://itunes.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewRoom?fcId=321249751&id=25204&mt=8
    “See their favorite games here.”:http://itunes.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewRoom?fcId=321249752&id=25204&mt=8

    “Click here for our Top 10 list of paid apps.”:http://blog.smalldog.com/article/2041/top-10-paid-iphone-apps

    Happy Birthday, App Store! Here’s to many more!

  • I almost had to turn on the heat last night, it was so chilly. Grace reminded me that it was “against the law” to heat the house in the summer so I just put on a sweater and cuddled up with Hammerhead to stay warm. We are looking forward to some better weather and so are the plants in my garden!

    Your Kibbles & Bytes Team,
    Don, Kali & Ed

  • Small Dog Electronics Social Mission

    We measure our success by the triple bottom line of People, Planet and Profit with our social mission being as important to our success as our commercial goals.

    We look at our “money machine” of Small Dog Electronics as a tool to provide livable jobs to our employees, build an extraordinary workplace and to provide the fuel for our social mission by supporting local and national organizations and by continuing our ewaste initiative that allows us to be the only electronics retailer that can boast that we recycle more electronic ewaste than we sell.

    Our employees are active in the communities we serve. While we provide a mandatory paid day off to perform community service, we have found that many of our employees put in time well in excess of the company-sponsored community service program.

    Our charitable giving program grew out of an employee suggestion and is customer driven. We have a number of “pet charities” that we support by matching customer donations from our active web site.

    Our social mission defines our soul and is an essential part of Small Dog Electronics. Our commercial mission supports our social mission and vice versa. It is who we are.

  • FEATURED SPECIAL | 07/10/09 – 07/17/09

    This week we have a *Small Dog Refurbished 2008 Time Capsule on sale for only $169.99!*

    Time Capsule includes an AirPort Extreme Wi-Fi base station along with a 500GB hard drive. This allows you to wirelessly back up your Mac (via Time Machine + Leopard) or PC, as well as use Time Capsule as a wireless community-shared hard drive! Time Capsule also serves as a network router.

    The refurbished Time Capsule doesn’t include any software discs or manuals, but does include the original packaging and (of course) a power cord. You can download all manuals and software directly from Apple by “clicking here.”:http://www.apple.com/support/airport/ For PC users, you can “download Bonjour for Windows here.”:http://support.apple.com/downloads/Bonjour_for_Windows

    These have been throughly inspected and tested by our Service Department.

    “Perfect for home or office, and only $169.99!”:http://www.smalldog.com/wag19316/

  • Mailplane: The Marriage of Gmail and Apple Mail

    “Over 100 million people are using Gmail.”:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gmail Having grown over 40% last year, it seems to be hot on the heels of Yahoo, AOL (really?) and Hotmail, and it’s no wonder, considering the unique “conversation-style” way to group email exchanges, labels instead of folders, 2GBs of free storage, the search capabilities and highly-tuned spam filters.

    But enough about that. Even with the inclusion of themes and other preferences, Gmail still lacked some of the features that make me hold Apple Mail so dear, such as *offline access* (for when I need to read/find/compose an email without internet), *the ability to drag an attachment directly into my email* (because I’m -lazy- efficient) and *the personalization options that come with desktop applications* (hey, I like to customize my stuff!), among other things.

    *Mailplane,* an application designed to “bring Gmail to your Mac desktop,” takes what is already great about Gmail and makes it better.

    Here’s what Mailplane adds to Gmail (in their own words):

    *Drag ‘n’ Drop Attachments*
    Attaching files and folders has never been easier. Drag ‘n’ drop your files and folders to Mailplane. Watch as they attach to the message and instantly upload.

    *Send Optimized Photos*
    Picture-sending made simple. Mailplane automatically resizes and optimizes your pics to reduce the size of your message.

    *Instantly Send Screenshots*
    With Mailplane, capture your screenshot and attach it to your message in a single click.

    *iPhoto Plugin*
    With Mailplane’s iPhoto plugin, sending pics from iPhoto is as simple as selecting your photos and pressing the email button.

    *Unlimited Gmail Accounts*
    Add unlimited Gmail accounts (or Google apps for domain accounts), and switch between them without restarting Mailplane. And there’s no need re-enter passwords every two weeks. Mailplane store them safely in your Mac’s Keychain.

    *Download Features*
    Download attachments and then reveal them in Finder. Or, if the attachment is a photo or .ZIP file containing pictures, you can directly import to iPhoto.

    *Get Notified*
    Mailplane lets you know when new mail arrives–by playing a sound, displaying your unread messages in the application icon, or by the Growl notification system. Plus: Monitor all your accounts using the Accounts Drawer or the Status Item.

    *Talk with your Buddies*
    Mailplane shows a Growl notification when someone wants to chat. The Google Talk Gadget (displayed in separate window) offers Video/Photo Preview and other nice features.*

    __*Sidenote: Growl is awesome. More on this next week…__

    *Extras*
    Full keyboard-control of Google Mail using Mac keystrokes, flexible and customizable toolbar; mail-sending from address book, safari or any application showing “mailto” URLs and more.

    Gmail is not my primary account since I have a “MobileMe”:http://www.smalldog.com/product/71629 membership, but I use it for all email that doesn’t directly come from friends or family (i.e. newsletters, contests, etc.). However, with Mailplane and Google’s added integration and other services (see above!), it may just win out as my main mail client yet…

    If you’re not using Gmail already, Mailplane just might change that. “And you know what they say about Gmail users…”:http://mashable.com/2007/05/10/gmail-users-are-younger-richer-good-in-bed/

    *Mailplane is $24.95 for a single license, and $15 per license for 2 or more. It requires Mac OS X v10.4.11 or higher.*

    “Read more about Mailplane.”:http://mailplaneapp.com/
    “Watch screencasts on how to use Mailplane.”:http://mailplaneapp.com/screencasts/
    “Download Mailplane.”:http://mailplaneapp.com/download/