Linked by David Adams on Wed 29th Oct 2008 20:55 UTC, submitted by Geir Johasen
Opera Software An interesting NYT Bits blog entry covers Opera's mobile browser. Buried in the middle of the article is this quote: "Opera's engineers have developed a version of Opera Mini that can run on an Apple iPhone, but Apple won't let the company release it because it competes with Apple's own Safari browser." It also talks about Opera on the Wii and browsers in cars. A good read. My Take: But back to the iPhone. As tempted as I am to just shrug it off, since Apple is free to run its App Store any way it pleases, as an enthusiastic iPhone user, I think Apple is shooting itself in the foot here, as it is with all the "competitive" apps being rejected. Apple does stand to lose some Google revenue by letting people use other browsers, but they have much more to gain by unleashing the creativity of the developer community and giving them the freedom to improve or replace core iPhone functionality. Hopefully competition from Android forces them to wake up.
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RE: But
by Morgan on Thu 30th Oct 2008 13:06 UTC in reply to "But"
Morgan
Member since:
2005-06-29

I've never understood Apple's contention that it is "just a hardware company" myself. Without OS X, my Mac mini is just a very stylish and compact PC. The OS is the main reason I use Macs, as it is the best fit for me and the way I use a computer. Similarly, without the subset of OS X and the fancy interface, the iPhone is just a slab of glass and metal/plastic.

Some of Apple's greatest achievements have been in the software development arena; OS X itself is quite obvious, but also look at suites like iLife and iWork, both of which are sold separately from the OS.

As for your question: It scares Steve because Safari is the most used component of the iPhone and is the reason a lot of people buy them. Mail is the other great iPhone app, and I'm pretty sure that if Mozilla made a mobile Thunderbird it wouldn't make it into the app store either. Apple may be a hardware company in Steve's eyes and those of its hardcore fans, but it still is wholeheartedly dependent on its own custom software to power its hardware.

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