natmusak said:
First, I want to readdress the jailbreak community, which, whether you want to admit it or not, does provide a decent alternate path to the user and the funny thing is, it provides more than what BlackBerry, WinMobile, and even Google can provide in their official distribution stores thanks to the unified iPhone/iPod touch platform, the modern hardware of the platform, the modern operating system that is OS X, and the intuitive Cocoa Touch SDK. You have to make sure you don't brick your phone, but then again, people actually interested enough in an alternative podcast mechanism and all other software not condoned by Apple probably won't mind the extra work involved. And look at Podcaster's new distribution model that may be even less risky than full-on jailbreaking. Hardly a redneck bumper sticker.
A few problems here.
If you've actually jailbroken your iPhone or iPod touch lately and compare what's available now to what was available prior to the opening of the App Store you'll see there's a world of difference. A good number of the coolest App Store apps were first worked out under Jailbreak. Once the App Store went live, they disappeared. What you're left with is a collection of utilities for getting into the guts of the iPhone and iPod touch (still worthwhile, but hardly the kinds of tools common iPhone users need) and customization tools. What was and what is have very little similarity.
Aside from inventory, the very real difference in jailbroken and App Store apps is that jailbroken apps can disappear with a single iPhone/iPod touch update. The jailbreak community is good about updating their tools, but there may come a time when they can't and jailbreak is a dead end.
Taken together, it's laughable to suggest that the current jailbreak offerings are, in any way, comparable. The App Store is it.
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Apple doesn't have to give developers free reign on the iPhone, just as they don't give them the ability on the Mac to do things like use their Software Update distribution utility for pushing third party updates through.
Who suggested that anyone is asking Apple to give them free rein? Again, developers are simply asking what the rules are so they don't have to guess, guess wrong, and have their application rejected for what appears to be a capricious reason.
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Finally, the comparisons of Apple to the Kremlin, Microsoft, and now, Jeffrey Dahmer, are comically over the top.
Of course they are. They were offered as response to comical excuses for Apple doing exactly what it likes when it holds this kind of power over iPhone application distribution. Justifications such as:
"Considering how many apps are in the App Store, the number of total downloads, and the microscopic number of rejected apps, they're obviously doing something right."
"It's their platform, they can do whatever they want with it."
Imagine someone attributing these statements to Microsoft rather than Apple. How quickly would you condemn them?