Telling you how we see the world.
Over the last week Cadmus has gotten great reviews from blogs all over the world! We added a new section to highlight some of these reviews. We also have a full list over at OneForty.

I would like to give a huge thanks to everybody that took the time to review our service. And to all our new users; stay tuned we’ve got some great stuff lined up for you.
![]()
Cadmus & ViewPoint needed social media icons and as we all know designing social media icons is the designer’s equivalent of the Hello World program. So I spent some time making these 24px icons. They are free to use; just link back to me. I’ll be updating them and adding more to the pack as I go along. So save the link to this post and check back once in a while or just follow me for updates. Also, if you have any requests or feedback about them, please don’t hesitate to let me know. I consider myself fairly novice when it comes to icon design so feedback is greatly appreciated.

Social Media Icons by Jay Air is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License.
Based on a work at anomalyinnovations.com. They are free to use; just link back to me.
s3.amazonaws.com/anomaly/Social Media Icons.zip
Please do share this on Twitter.
Inspired by @rogieking’s drop dead gorgeous Social Media Network Icons.
We had a chance to demo Cadmus @ DCT #24. And here are the videos from it.
First the demo itself.
And the Q&A session after.
Huge thanks to @geoffreywiseman for editing and putting these up. You can find his post here.
Now you can share posts from your RSS feeds and FriendFeed using the Share button in Cadmus. You can share it using any of your accounts. Also, long URLs get shortened automatically.

So give it a try and let me know what you think.
If you are used to seeing the “processing updates” sign frequently on Cadmus, here is why.

If a user has not logged into Cadmus in the past week we set the user’s service as inactive. This means that we do not pull the data from the user’s services. And so when an inactive user signs in again we take a few minutes to process their updates and activate their services. We do this to conserve the user’s Twitter API call count, so that we don’t needlessly use it up.