Linked by Thom Holwerda on Thu 26th Jan 2012 15:13 UTC
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Member since:
2005-07-06
How is that related to the original statement you made:
They have ceased furthering its development but it is still supported as so far as receiving critical updates such as addressing security vulnerabilities.
As for the original point of deprecating API's without making them Mac AppStore only - given that there is only a single reference to a persons experience and so far all searches seem to be pointing to this one story I really question whether one is getting the full story.
Sandboxing and restrictions on the API's one can use if one sells via the AppStore - how is this surprising? one of the first things Apple said was 'no private API's to be used' then said they were going to make sandboxing mandatory (November) but later back-pedalled (now March) given that a significant number of programmers didn't have the time, resources and critical parts of the Mac OS X API were off limits of which their software relied upon to function. Even then there are exceptions one can invoke and as long as you can justify it to the AppStore curators then you're good to go.
As for iCloud - it is their service and the last thing they want are third parties screwing it up; if there are third parties going rogue they can trace if back and take corrective action. Don't think it'll happen in the future? just you wait, when Google and Microsoft's own cloud offerings before more sophisticated I can almost assure you that there will be a set of restrictions in place when accessing their services.
As I've said in the past, I know that all the 'cool kids' are beating up on Apple but lets stand back, take a deep breath, sip a cup of tea, nibble on some shortbread and chill out for a moment.
Edited 2012-01-27 14:24 UTC