Don't drive iPhone developers away, Apple
#127
Posted 27 September 2008 - 02:03 PM
130 posts so far.
Approximately 64 posters. 38 commented once. 26 multiple times. 4 hinted that they are developers. Only one declare himself to be developing an iPhone app.
Certainly, there is no evidence here to support that developers are being driven away as many are postulating here.
A lot of misinformation and misunderstanding being posted. Certainly, nobody has supported or can provided any concrete evidence other than anecdotal hearsay of three rejected apps.
Lets look at another possibility. Apple has from the beginning, i.e., from the launch of the SDK, raised concern about apps that could adversely affect bandwidth. Obviously, they have convinced carriers that they would ensure that the iPhone would not overload their 3G systems and carriers used that assurance in formulating their service plans and charges of such.
One of Apple's answer, as we know, was the incorporation of Wi-Fi in the iPhone and iPod Touch, and another, was not to allow large full file transfers such as videos and podcasts over a carriers network, but via Wi-Fi and/or direct sync via iTunes.
Podcaster did not comply with what Apple itself would not allow its own software to do.
It is interesting the reaction outside the US when most carriers announced that they were not going to provide unlimited data for the iPhone 3G as AT&T was doing or going to do. Hundreds of postings, not only from abroad, but even in the US, appeared on how carriers and Apple were ripping users off, even though AT&T had reported that their US customers had only transferred an average of 100MBs a month on their iPhones in the first year.
For sure, this must have played on Apple's mind. And maybe it influenced the formulation of Apple's iPhone SDK licensing policy. As such, once the fog dissipates, data transfers such as Podcaster was attempting may open up.
And maybe not. Afterall, it is still Apple's legitimate right to set the rules. We may have right to call them on it, but not the right to unilaterally demand it. Certainly, not with the threatening atmosphere that some have spewed here. To continue such strategies may culminate in a future article, namely, "Don't drive Mac enthusiasts away, Macworld."
#128
Posted 27 September 2008 - 03:34 PM
[/quote]
definitive list of product types and characteristics" as you demand.
One of those on the list, say, is a turn-by-turn GPS app, with
"definitivecharacteristics " described as you demand. What exactly is
Macworld and The Street, ZDNet, cnet and Google Finance groups are
going to blabber about the same day? Apple is about to introduce a
turn-by-turn GPS app! Pictures at 11! There's zero doubt about this.
When that mythical app isn't delivered soon, TheStreet and Barron's
goons will try to take down AAPL with reports of delay, problems and
other manner of hysteria. I'm sure a few shareholders migh even try to
sue Apple for the non-delivery or misrepresentation. Who needs any of
this!
> And none of this handicaps them, and it makes it predictable for developers.
[/quote]
> If Apple can't communicate this under NDA to its smartest partners, then what good is the iPhone developer program?
[/quote]
Ask the developers of 100,000,000 apps downloaded.
#129
Posted 27 September 2008 - 06:16 PM
Kontra said:
"definitivecharacteristics " described as you demand. What exactly is
Macworld and The Street, ZDNet, cnet and Google Finance groups are
going to blabber about the same day?
If the NDA is broken. If Apple reveals that much information. If, in fact, Apple hadn't already essentially disallowed turn-by-turn GPS applications, although TomTom says they're negotiating on this point.
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this!
I would like to welcome Artie McStrawman to the conversation. It's been so long since I've heard from him.
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Ask the developers of 100,000,000 apps downloaded.
Yes, 100 million flashlights can't be wrong.
#130
Posted 27 September 2008 - 06:32 PM
[/quote]
product categories for a mobile platform, and hope the NDA is not
broken. AND keep amending that agreement on (what could become) a
weekly basis, as new product plans continually emerge. You really think
this is teneable for a company like Apple? I'd love to see you argue
that with Jobs
> If Apple reveals that much information.
[/quote]
> If, in fact, Apple hadn't already essentially disallowed turn-by-turn GPS applications, although TomTom says they're negotiating on this point.
[/quote]
> I would like to welcome Artie McStrawman to the conversation. It's been so long since I've heard from him.
[/quote]
> Yes, 100 million flashlights can't be wrong.
[/quote]
If you need to denigrate thousands of (successful) iPhone developers, go right ahead.
#132
Posted 27 September 2008 - 06:44 PM
Kontra said:
Now you're just purposely not listening any more.
> Yes, 100 million flashlights can't be wrong.
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I think it's been well said earlier that the vast majority of development that's turned into released applications to date was performed by developers who believed that Apple would apply a fair and consistent standard of evaluation. A program released yesterday (whether another flashlight or a $500 CRM client application) has been in development for weeks or months and in queue for release for likely weeks before the latest firestorm hit.
Fundamentally, we're still at the same point. Developers of interesting products beyond one-trick wonders and simple utilities that aren't at a scale that Apple is willing to negotiate with directly (like TomTom, if that is happening) will not be able to motivate themselves or convince senior management to commit the resources to write software for a platform that has a giant, inconsistent veto button attached.
#133
Posted 27 September 2008 - 06:52 PM
Macalways said:
This forum sometimes cracks me up!
This is my opinion, freely expressed, not reporting.
I have no degree in journalism, thank you. I was an art major at Yale. What, are you indirectly insulting Sarah Palin? Have you no decency?
And the art of satire through hyperbole (I'm sure there's a Latin or Greek term for that that's more specific) has apparently died in the heart of 100 supernovas.
There's actually a lot of great iPhone software out there. I've installed about 15+ applications myself, some free, some from $1 to $15, and I'm happy with most of it.
100 million downloads has nothing to do with developers being happy about the future of the platform, nor the actual interest in applications for which people pay. We don't know what percentage are paid. We don't know if there are more than a handful of small developers making real bank. And developers are clearly stating that Apple's accidental FUD will affect their development plans.
#134
Posted 27 September 2008 - 06:58 PM
Glenn_Fleishman said:
>
>
#135
Posted 27 September 2008 - 07:03 PM
Kontra said:
> > a platform that has a giant, inconsistent veto button attached.
Well, Mr Scarecrow, I would be worried if there was no veto button, as that would indicate Apple was not doing its job as the curator of its own platform. As to "inconsistent" (and other irresponsible adjectives like "draconian," "giant," etc) that's obviously your spin on it.
Again, you misconstrue what I'm saying to make your point: there's no reason Apple can't have a consistent policy; I didn't say there shouldn't be a veto button; etc.
Since conversation is over, I will stop feeding the trolls.
I never said anything like what you're saying I said about code signing, etc., so I have nothing to future-crow about. All I've been representing here is the reality that the iPhone will lose good software unless Apple has a better evaluation policy.
I will be happy to crow when Apple announces a better evaluation policy, as I expect they will.
#136
Posted 27 September 2008 - 08:00 PM
{quote}100 million downloads has nothing to do with developers being happy about the future of the platform, nor the actual interest in applications for which people pay.quote}
True. However, I haven't seen or heard of the deluge of discontent that one would expect from a 100 million flashlight holders.
{quote}We don't know what percentage are paid. {quote}
True. But are you implying that most aren't. in either case, it is none of our businesses.
{quote} We don't know if there are more than a handful of small developers making real bank.{quote}
We also don't know if there are more than a handful of small developers, except those that are giving them away, or don't really care, that aren't making real bank. Again, only they and the IRS has any need to know.
{quote}And developers are clearly stating that Apple's accidental FUD will affect their development plans.{quote}
So far two in this forum and a couple of others who have supposedly stated anecdotally, elsewhere and are the being repeatedly cited over and over again. Out of, what 5 plus thousand you paint with a brush of 5 hairs?
In any event, your reference to 100 million flashlights was a cheap shop in any language.
And you claimed that you were a tech journalist. Not me.
#137
Posted 27 September 2008 - 09:31 PM
http://www.roughlydr...-disaster-myth/
-- LInk edited to direct to original Roughly Drafted article.
#139
Posted 27 September 2008 - 10:52 PM
KPO said:
This is the most egregious conflation yet of consumers vs. a handful of alleged, anonymous developers. Hopefully you can appreciate the difference between the two.
#140
Posted 27 September 2008 - 10:55 PM
Here I thought that the pron sights were getting enough business because I rarely recive those unsollicted porn emails anymore.



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