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Honors Theses - Providence Campus
Title Developer/publisher Release date Genre License Mac OS versions A-10 Attack! Parsoft Interactive 1995 Flight simulator Abandonware 7.5–9.2.2.
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The Ground Meat Packaging Kit contains the poly bag tape machine, 1 roll poly bag tape and 50 - 1 lb. Add a 2' stuffing tube (sold separately) over the plate of your grinder for the second grind. Slide a bag on the stuffing tube and grind meat directly into bag. Squeeze air out, twist bag and seal with taping machine. Explore the world of Mac. Check out MacBook Pro, MacBook Air, iMac, Mac mini, and more. Visit the Apple site to learn, buy, and get support.
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Honors Thesis
Abstract
Soon lab-grown meat will be on the market for everyday consumers to purchase, but will it be successful as the companies producing it are predicting? Scholarly discussions on lab-grown meat are in their beginning stages with most attention being directed toward the production process (Kowitt 2017; Mitchell 2017: Schwartz & Conley 2018). The late decade of the 2010’s saw an increasing amount of coverage and interest in lab-grown meat. As the technology continues to advance, I hypothesize thatlab-grown meat will become more readily available to consumers; however, I question whether or not consumers are ready for such a change even if it turns out to be both affordable and sustainable. This thesis analyzes results from a longitudinal study conducted from Fall 2018 until Winter 2019-2020. I surveyed a diverse spectrum of people from different origins, ages, income and education levels. These surveys would have to briefly explain what clean meat is. The surveys would then gauge respondents' opinions of clean meat is and how commonplace they believe clean meat will become in the future to answer the question of how we have changed during this short and exciting time in regards to clean meat. The majority of the results of the data from this survey is inconclusive. Many trends in the data were not able to be formed. Trends show people’s awareness of, readiness for, and eagerness for this product and industry to be decreasing in areas and increasing in other areas. To answer my question posed in the title of this thesis. I believe that I did overestimate how far awareness of, readiness for, and eagerness for this product and industry could grow. I hope that the knowledgegained from this research supports the future culinary endeavors of not just my fellow students, but culinary professionals across the globe.
Repository Citation
Glick, Tyler R., 'Clean Meat: Did We Under or Over Estimate How Far This New Industry Could Grow?' (2020). Honors Theses - Providence Campus. 41.
https://scholarsarchive.jwu.edu/student_scholarship/41
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When Apple announced this year's Worldwide Developers Conference, there were two major differences compared to WWDCs past. One is that Apple waited until the end up April to announce that the conference would take place in early June, giving developers just over five weeks to clear schedules, book flights, and secure hotel rooms. The other is that Apple is clearly focusing this year's conference on iPhone OS, and for the first time since Apple started giving awards in 1997, the company won't be awarding any Apple Design Awards for Mac applications. Combined with the recent retiring of the Mac Downloads page on Apple's website, many Mac developers feel shunned or ignored, though the overall community seems divided on what the changes mean for the future.
High costs: a great equalizer?
The first problem—the 'late' notification—seems universally upsetting. Previous WWDC dates were announced in March or early April, giving developers two months to plan. This year, developers not only face a price increase for tickets, they also have to book flights and hotels at much higher prices.
'I think it's going to damage attendance, particularly for developers outside the continental US,' Instinctive Code's Matt Legend Gemmell told Ars. 'It's much harder for people to book an entire week off when the event is so soon, and the cost of flights and accommodation obviously skyrocket too.'
It's not just international users that are affected, though. The value proposition is a tough one, even for those already located in San Francisco. '$1600 on WWDC ticket, or a new 13' Macbook Pro and the [next-gen] iPhone?' mused Springs and Struts' Colin Barrett via Twitter.
However, Apple may be using higher ticket prices and (by virtue of the later notice) higher prices for flights and hotels, to offset the huge demand that the last two WWDCs saw, both of which sold out. 'There's supply and demand at work,' explained Iconfactory's Craig Hockenberry. 'WWDC is not a profit center for [Apple], so this isn't some evil plan to dig deeper into developer's pockets.'
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On the issue of iPhone versus Mac content, developers seemed less surprised. 'It's obvious that, for the moment at least, iPhone OS is the focus at Apple,' Rogue Amoeba's Paul Kafasis told Ars. 'iPhone OS 4 is a big update, and there's a lot of new things for developers to see.'
'I'm neither surprised nor upset that it's all about iPhone OS 4.0,' agreed Connected Flow's Fraser Speirs. 'I don't believe it says anything about the future of the Mac except that the Mac won't have a major OS release before the iPhone, and we knew that already.'
Hockenberry noted that last year's WWDC was too crowded, and covering both Mac OS X and iPhone OS topics 'was too demanding for both developers and Apple.' We know that work on Mac OS X 10.7 is already under way, and most developers believe that it is still in the very early stages of development.
'The Mac will have its year,' Flying Meat's Gus Mueller told Ars. 'WWDC 2009 was mostly a rehash of stuff from the year before, which was sort of a bummer; I can't imagine the same 10.6 topics for the third year in a row would be much fun.'
No Mac ADAs for Old Men
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The thing that developers seem most upset by is that Apple has left Mac OS X out of its annual Apple Design Awards. Apple began giving these awards for outstanding Mac applications beginning in 1997. The awards have varied in the last 12 years, with Apple creating and dropping arbitrary categories like 'Best Automator Workflow' or 'Best Scientific Computing Solution' to highlight new technologies. This year, Apple is only awarding the top five nominated iPhone apps and the top five nominated iPad apps.
'It's often observed that the ADAs are not so much about rewarding excellence as about encouraging developers to adopt the latest and greatest technologies,' Red Sweater's Daniel Jalkut told Ars. 'This move by Apple sends the message that they would prefer all Mac developers stop what they're doing and work on iPhone stuff instead.' Jalkut believes Apple is missing an easy opportunity to keep Mac OS X developers excited about the platform, even though there might not be many new Mac OS X-related topics to discuss. 'Combined with the late notice, it reeks of disrespect.'
AdvertisementKafasis agreed that it seems like the Mac platform is getting short shrift from Apple lately. 'The iPhone OS has grown enormously in the past 3 years, and that's incredible, but that doesn't make Mac OS X suddenly irrelevant.'
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'Apple Design Awards now being iPhone-only is contentious,' Gemmell added. 'ADAs are both very public and visible, and probably also very low-cost for Apple; there seems to be little reason to not have Mac categories alongside the iPhone ones.'
Other developers had less eloquent things to say about the lack of Mac OS X awards.
Maybe next year
Long-time Mac developers are definitely feeling the sting with Mac OS X taking a back seat at WWDC, and many worry that Apple's newly defined focus on mobile devices might mean that Apple devotes less and less effort on its desktop platform. However, there is cautious optimism that next year's WWDC will bring a renewed focus to Mac OS X.
Gemmel noted that the Mac isn't going away, especially since it is required for iPhone and iPad development. 'It's indeed discouraging to see Mac seemingly sidelined, but I think it's too early to tell whether it's just timing and promotional preference rather than an actual shift in focus at Apple,' he said.
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The expectation is that next year's WWDC will highlight Mac OS X 10.7, though historically Apple has released a new version of iPhone OS every year following WWDC. 'Hopefully, this is just an anomaly caused by Mac OS X 10.7 being slow, and iPhone OS 4.0 being a major update,' Kafasis said.
Mueller agreed that timing is likely a bigger part of the problem. '10.7 will come out eventually, it'll be awesome, and we'll learn lots of new stuff then,' he said.
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Whatever Apple's thinking might be, the company declined to comment for this story.