Leatherface Tree Service - He's A Real Hack

Leatherface Tree Service by Dansmash

If you're looking for someone to put on a bit of a show while trimming your trees then you need to call Leatherface Tree Service, with the most skilled chainsaw wielding maniac in the great state of Texas. Let Leatherface prune those fruit trees, trim that pesky pine, and shut up your neighbors when they complain about your tree dropping needles in their yard. With a skin mask wearing weirdo like Leatherface on your side you know you're getting the best cut for your buck! (Warning: company not responsible for any massacres that may occur, whether tree or human based...hire Leatherface at your own risk!)

You'll be the biggest cut up in the room when you sport this Leatherface Tree Service t-shirt by Dansmash, it's one howling good design!

Visit Dansmash's Facebook fan page, Tumblr and Twitter, then head on over to his NeatoShop for more bloody good designs:

What'cha Want Santa Now Yous Can't Leave Captain Jamaica Donnie And Frank

View more designs by Dansmash | More Funny T-shirts | New T-Shirts

Are you a professional illustrator or T-shirt designer? Let's chat! Sell your designs on the NeatoShop and get featured in front of tons of potential new fans on Neatorama!


Comments (0)

While many will tell you that it's unnecessary to kill background Apps in iOS (and that iOS should fluidly and effectively manage performance/memory use without any user intervention).... I've not found this to be true in every day usage.

The pattern I've noticed on my iPhone4/iPad2 (both have latest iOS5.1.1) is that over longer and longer lengths of time between rebooting AND heavier and heavier multitasking ( a wide range of memory intensive apps).. that the devices/iOS stability and performance seems to be impacted to a slightly noticeable degree.

I can show this by using an App like iStat to watch a variety of indicators (Uptime, memory usage, memory-paging, etc)

If I force-close individual Apps (or better yet, do a full shutdown/reboot of the device).. it instantly regains snappy performance. I've found the best strategy (for me) is to do full reboots of my devices about every 3 to 4 days.
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Well, the spears.org article is mostly right. However, I would assume the iPhone practices aggressive power management, which typically includes shutting down DRAM banks that aren't currently needed. So you can potentially save power if you flush enough apps from memory, but that's not quite the same thing as closing them from the task bar (which may include applications that were already flushed from memory).

And it certainly has little to do with them "running" in the background. That was Apple's complaint about giving apps free reign to do whatever they wanted, and why they implemented a rather restrictive model that leads to funny behavior occasionally.

The most important side effect closing apps in the task bar can have is speeding up load times for other applications you may open/reopen later, since you can avoid the flushing phase if there's already free memory available. That's the only reason I tend to manage my task bar; because I want better responsiveness on other apps after I close a memory hog.
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