Linked by Thom Holwerda on Tue 16th Oct 2012 15:47 UTC
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Furthermore, the last version brought out "Gatekeeper" which is a application that checks from where other apps can be installed in your mac.
But they are providing a way out. Plenty of osx developers and apps do not use the app store.
MS is pushing people hard to Metro by making the regular desktop paradigm harder to use, yet it isn't providing a way out to create apps for an open system.
RE[3]: So long, Windows.
by franksands on Wed 17th Oct 2012 02:27
in reply to "RE[2]: So long, Windows."
But they are providing a way out. Plenty of osx developers and apps do not use the app store.
MS is pushing people hard to Metro by making the regular desktop paradigm harder to use, yet it isn't providing a way out to create apps for an open system.
MS is pushing people hard to Metro by making the regular desktop paradigm harder to use, yet it isn't providing a way out to create apps for an open system.
Apple is still providing a way out. But, as I said, who knows for how long. The way OS X is being dumbed down, I wouldn't be surprised if a future OS X version forced to only install applications through the Mac App Store.




Member since:
2009-08-18
And how is Mac OS X any different? Every new version brings the os closer to iOS. Furthermore, the last version brought out "Gatekeeper" which is a application that checks from where other apps can be installed in your mac. Right now it's possible to say "allow from everywhere", but there's another saying "only from Mac App Store", and the way things are going, it looks like it'll be the only option 2 or 3 versions down the road.