Apple iPhone Water Damage
Below are 12 easy steps to follow if you're iPhone has experienced water damage.
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iRonic: Super Meat Boy for iPhone
Apple puts itself in an untenable position trying to play gatekeeper while simultaneously having such a broad and deep marketplace structure. It's like watching a character from Alice in Wonderland attempt to beat Kurt Godel at a game of chess by ...
Derek Powazek - Thoughts on Designing for iPad
Apple’s App Store was a constant source of stress in the development process. Every time another story of Apple randomly booting an app from the store came out, the whole team quaked. The idea that we could do all this work and then Apple could de...
Knowing .NET » Blog Archive » The Absurdity of Apple’s New iPhone Restrictions
You know how you tell when an app for the iPhone was written in MonoTouch? It doesn’t leak memory.
I’m Abandoning iPhone Development. Mobile Orchard To Stop Publication.
I’m a principled person. Apple’s offended my principles. Consequently, I’ve decided to abandon iPhone development. I won’t work in this ask-permission environment any longer.
Boing Boing: iPhone - the roach motel business model
It's ironic that a company whose name is synonymous with "Switch" has built its entire product strategy around lock-in. The iTunes/iPhone/iPod combo is a roach-motel: customers check in, but they can't check out.
Communities Dominate Brands: Full Analysis of iPhone Economics - it is bad news. And then it gets worse
Don't do iPhone apps.
Daring Fireball: Why Apple Changed Section 3.3.1
So what Apple does not want is for some other company to establish a de facto standard software platform on top of Cocoa Touch. Not Adobe’s Flash. Not .NET (through MonoTouch). If that were to happen, there’s no lock-in advantage.
Obama: iPad, Xbox Turn Information Into A 'Distraction'
"You're coming of age in a 24/7 media environment that bombards us with all kinds of content and exposes us to all kinds of arguments, some of which don't always rank that high on the truth meter," he told the students.
Marco.org - That's a problem.
When so many obviously spammy and trademark-infringing apps are getting through, it makes every trivial rejection by real developers even more frustrating.