Linked by Thom Holwerda on Fri 13th Feb 2009 20:25 UTC, submitted by Moulinneuf
Apple The iPhone, Apple's current cash cow and best selling cellular phone in the United States, is a completely closed phone in that only applications from the App Store can be installed on the phone. However, by jailbreaking the iPhone you can install applications from whatever source you want, which might be desirable if an application you want isn't allowed into the App Store by Apple. The Cupertino company has never had an official stance on jailbeaking, but this has now changed: according to them, it's a breach of copyright.
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Apple has always been like this
by 3rdalbum on Sat 14th Feb 2009 10:07 UTC
3rdalbum
Member since:
2008-05-26

Apple has always been like this, really. They've never wanted you to open your computer.

The designers of the Macintosh tried to add hardware expandability to the Mac, but Steve Jobs refused to let the change go through. They tried a number of times, actually; in the end only the memory of the original Macintosh was unofficially expandable with a soldering iron, and this change was sneaked past Steve.

The Mac || was the first Macintosh with a "slot"; the machine nearly didn't make it off the drawing board.

The original iMac had an expansion slot that was to be for Apple's use only. Certain third party companies reverse-engineered the slot and started releasing addon cards, so Apple removed the slot from future iMacs.

Only one RAM slot could be reached on the rev A, B and C iMacs. There was one that was only accessible by taking out the CPU. Any other upgrade involved a new motherboard. The Rev C iMac was the last Macintosh I bought, but I know from reports that the later Macintoshes are still not designed to be opened or upgraded. I was always wondering why Apple bothered to waste time and money on this "unibody" stuff for their laptops, until I realised that it becomes much more difficult for users to upgrade a unibody machine.

Apple has never wanted users to be able to do anything with their computers except what is approved, and there's absolutely no surprise that they want to class jailbreaking iPhones as being illegal.

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