The debt clock started when a friend e-mailed me a years ago and asked how to do a counter like a clock that starts at a specific point. He needed it in Flash so I whipped one together and sent it to him and then realized I could maybe do something worthwhile by putting it out there for people to use. I did.. and it hit myspace and facebook.. and I'm currently seeing about 65,000 views of it each month. I encouraged people to download it and install it on their own servers (it's not sucking too much bandwidth, but they shouldn't have to wait on my server for their page to finish loading..) so I'm not sure how many views it's getting that way.. I know it's being used on quite a few political web sites (both Republicans and Democrats running for Congress for example), in articles, and on some personal web sites.
I don't fuss with the accuracy of it since I figure if they can pull a number like $700,000,000,000 out of thin air just because it's "a really large number" then there's no point in trying to be too accurate on anything based on numbers provided by the same folks. I like to think that over the last few years I've helped a tiny bit to raise awareness of our out of control spending.. I can hope it's not too late to sort things out and maybe someday I'll be able to reverse the clock.
I don't particularly like the idea of smearing a company for no good reason, but if the people who are using the site have submitted bug tickets and feel like Adobe is ignoring them then I guess they have every right to complain.. or just use another product. That's part of how free market economics is supposed to work? If you find a better product then use it. And if the masses yell their complaints loud enough and the company is nimble enough then it'll fix the issues and keep the business.
Here's one I found: "please allow Flash's action window to stay visible when another app is in front, sometimes you need to compare code to something else." .. been an irritation for me for years and has been reported to Macromedia and Adobe many times. It's one of those "minor" issues that becomes major if you have to use the application a lot. I'm pretty sure I saw on one of the demos or heard through the grapevine that this has been changed in CS4.. so when you have the Actions panel open and switch over to another app the Actions panel remains visible. So maybe they did react and fix that. I'll keep my fingers crossed for code folding.
I’ve made the BIG TIME! I’ve been selected as an ActionScript Super Hero. The “Hall of Justhese is filled with a small number of very respectable Flash folks, so I’m quite honored to be included.
I’ve made the BIG TIME! I’ve been selected as an ActionScript Super Hero. The “Hall of Justhese” is filled with a small number of very respectable Flash folks, so I’m quite honored to be included.
If you’d like to check out the aggregated blogs of some of the best Flash Blogs on the web check out the Hall of Justhese here: http://www.actionscripthero.com/rssViewer/index.html
I came across this complete set of documentation for Flash MX 2004 on the Macromedia web site http://www.macromedia.com/support/documentation/en/flash/index.html
I came across this complete set of documentation for Flash MX 2004 on the Macromedia web site http://www.macromedia.com/support/documentation/en/flash/index.html
It includes PDF docs (ugh… I hate PDFs...) that introduce Flash and ActionScript to the complete beginner, as well as docs for the advanced ActionScript coder.. it’s a lot of good info.

