Linked by Thom Holwerda on Wed 24th Sep 2008 07:50 UTC
Apple The situation regarding Apple's App Store for the iPhone is getting weirder by the day. Several applications have been rejected from the App Store based on seemingly dubious claims such as duplication of functionality (even though they didn't duplicate anything), or alikeness to default applications. Two such cases made headline news over the past few days; Podcaster and MailWrangler. The developers of these applications openly protested against these rejections, and apparently, Apple doesn't really like that. Apple now reiterates that rejections fall under the NDA, prohibiting developers from speaking up about rejections.
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this is frustrating
by Morgan on Wed 24th Sep 2008 15:47 UTC
Morgan
Member since:
2005-06-29

Ok, I've been an Apple user off and on for a few years now, and my workflow is centered around the OS X way of doing things. I tried the iPhone back in March, and it was great until the 2.0 software came out and caused stability issues, so I sold it and I'm now on a BlackBerry Pearl which is working out well.

During this time I also parted with my beloved eMac and built what I intended to be a Hackintosh. However, I am appalled at Apple's recent treatment of the iPhone developers and I'm not so sure I want to use their OS anymore, especially in a quasi-legal capacity; seeing how they treat good-intentioned users, I doubt I'd fare any better if caught in their radar.

Slackware runs exceptionally well on the new hardware, and given time I may be able to approach the same level of productivity as on the Mac. I'll miss the ease of use, the tight integration (Linux is sadly lacking in this) and most of all the great apps. I won't miss the UNIX backend as this is present in Slack, nor will I miss the few proprietary traps inherent in a closed OS. Besides, I'll save the cost of buying a Leopard license which is always nice.

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