home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Blast Pad v2.4
- by Daniel Church
-
- Blast Pad is the second incarnation of my quick-and-easy application launcher,
- originally titled Launch Pad. I changed the name because (1) Launch Pad
- is already taken, and (2) Blast Pad sounds cooler. Blast Pad is more powerful
- than Launch Pad, because of the two main changes to this version: first,
- the number of onscreen buttons, originally 4, has been changed so that you
- can select 4, 9, or 16. Second, Blast Pad has support for categories, which
- means that you can actually put as many programs into your shortcut list
- as you want. Another addition since 1.0 is the Hardware Buttons cue card,
- so that if you forget what you set them to, just tap the Magnifying Glass
- (the silk-screened Find button) to show you a list of the buttons.
-
- When you first run Blast Pad, it won't do much. You have to customize your
- applications first. To do that, open the menu and select Preferences.
- You'll be told that there are currently 4 onscreen buttons and you are
- in category Default. You may change the number of onscreen buttons to 9 or
- 16, but be warned that in 16 button mode it'll look a little messy.
-
- There are a couple of aesthetic options as well: checking "Display button
- numbers?" at the bottom of the screen will label each onscreen button to
- make it easier for you to find what each button is when customizing Blast
- Pad. The "Display" drop-down box gives you three options: "Name" displays
- just the name of the application, which was the display mode for versions
- of Blast Pad prior to 2.4. "Icon" displays only the program's icon, which
- can make 16-button mode much less cluttered. "Name+Icon" displays both,
- like the Launcher.
-
- Which category you are in determines what each button will do if you press it.
- For instance, you might have a games category where every button is bound to
- a different game, or a productivity category for when your boss is around.
- To create new categories, choose "New..." from the general preferences screen.
- Then, select each category and choose each of the Modify XX Buttons choices
- to set up Blast Pad.
-
- You can set each button to one of three or four things: an application, a
- category, the default, or nothing. (note that in the default category, you
- cannot select "default".) If the button is set to an application, then
- when you press that button, the application will run. If the button is set
- to a category, then pressing the button will change which category you are
- in, changing all the button bindings. If the button is set to "default",
- then the button will take on the value that it would in the Default
- category. This allows you to create buttons with global meaning (for
- instance, being a category changer) by only setting it in one context. If
- one of the four hardware application buttons is set to "none" (or if it is
- set to "default" in the current category and "none" in the default), then
- the button will execute the action it would if you pressed it outside Blast
- Pad.
-
- Blast Pad is designed to be run from one of the hardware application
- buttons, so that you can easily access programs by pressing the Blast Pad
- button and then pressing one or two other buttons. If you don't know how
- to set the hardware buttons, go into Prefs (from the Launcher), select
- Buttons from the drop-down list at the top right of the screen, and set
- one of the buttons to Blast Pad.
-
- If you select "Select category automatically?" from the main preferences
- menu and you set one of the hardware application buttons to Blast Pad, then
- when you run Blast Pad, if that button is set to switch from the Default
- category to another category, then Blast Pad will start up in the new
- category instead. This allows you to assign multiple buttons to Blast Pad
- in the Prefs application, each giving you a different menu. Note that if you
- only tap the button very quickly, it will not register, and you will still
- start up in Default mode. This can also happen if your current application
- takes a long time to exit and you release the button before Blast Pad has a
- chance to read it. This should not be a problem in most cases, however, and
- if it does happen, a second press of the button will get you to the correct
- category.
-
- Here are some possible setups for Blast Pad:
-
- Use the Default category only, which will give you 10, 15, or 22 programs
- you can run with two button presses.
-
- Set the hardware buttons to category switching and the onscreen buttons to
- applications, which will give you 28, 63, or (!) 112 programs you can
- run with three button presses.
-
- Set the hardware application buttons to applications, but set the up and down
- arrows to category switching, making each category call the next one and
- so on. This gives you four applications in easy two-button reach, and
- as many as you want by cycling through the categories with the up/down
- buttons. In this setup, Blast Pad works somewhat like the Launcher.
-
- Of course, you can set up Blast Pad any way you like.. whatever seems
- most comfortable to you. The whole point of the program was to make it as
- customizable as possible, while keeping the goal of easy access to your
- favorite programs intact.
-
- Many thanks go to Richard Boss, without whose ideas and support I would not
- have had the inspiration to write v2.0. Also to Peter da Silva, who helped
- me with some new features and wrote the Makefile.
-
- And, for the curious, I programmed Blast Pad under Linux with a plain text
- editor (MicroEmacs 3.12), built it with prc-tools 2.0 and pilrc 2.5c
- using the OS 3.1 SDK, and transferred it using pilot-link 0.9.3 to my
- Handspring Visor running PalmOS 3.1. However, Blast Pad should run on any
- PalmOS device running PalmOS 2.0 or later. Maybe even 1.0. I don't know.
-
- That's it for now.. if you have any questions, comments, suggestions, or
- anything really, feel free to email me at dchurch@mbhs.edu.
-