I thought about it but for just over a pound it didn't seem worth it. I doubt it is illegal even if it should probably be - they seem to have been able to get away with it quite openly. However I do think that if Apple want to ensure this iAd doesn't alienate iPhone users, that they should make damn sure this sort of thing is not allowed to happen again, which was my main point really.bmanic wrote:That is really funked up! Have you sent apple an email demanding a refund? I've heard people successfully doing this when apps refuse to work/get too bloated after an update.
Surely that must be illegal. I hope those developers go bust.
Apple reveals iPhone OS 4 with iAd. Great revenue for developers!
- KVRAF
- 37415 posts since 14 Sep, 2002 from In teh net
- KVRAF
- 8700 posts since 9 Jan, 2004 from leroyaumeuni
apparently it's propably to do with multitaskingwhyterabbyt wrote:That's almost certainly aimed directly at Adobe, but if it affects Titanium, then it possibly effects Unity et.c. as well.
http://daringfireball.net/2010/04/iphon ... h_compiler
http://iphone.appleinsider.com/articles ... #13082-1-0
My other host is Bruce Forsyth
- Beware the Quoth
- 35446 posts since 4 Sep, 2001 from R'lyeh Oceanic Amusement Park and Funfair
Ive gotta say that's the most bullshit attempt at a rationale yet. Nothing prevents code generated from a third-party toolchain from properly using the multitasking environment of the OS. The new conditions, however, dont ban apps that dont use the multitasking API properly, they ban apps built in a third-party toolchain. Full stop.spaceman wrote:apparently it's propably to do with multitaskingwhyterabbyt wrote:That's almost certainly aimed directly at Adobe, but if it affects Titanium, then it possibly effects Unity et.c. as well.
http://daringfireball.net/2010/04/iphon ... h_compiler
http://iphone.appleinsider.com/articles ... #13082-1-0
Remember; there's three iPhone generations worth of apps (how may tens of thousands do apple say it is?) which dont utilise any of the new multitasking stuff at all. Are they all retrospectively banned from v4 of the OS?
Here's the fallacy it hinges on:
By the time the application has been installed on the iPhone, its 'structure' is that of something which has been compiled to ARM code. Nothing prevents any other toolchain from building the same 'structures' (whatever those supposedly are), at the compilation stage. The toolchain Apple use is based on the GPLd GCC compilers for f**ks sake.The system will now be evaluating apps as they run in order to implement smart multitasking. It can't do this if apps are running within a runtime or are cross compiled with a foreign structure that doesn't behave identically to a native C/C++/Obj-C app.
Its handwaving bullshit, pure and simple. The objective is control over the hardware and software iPhone developers have to buy.
An idiot on Set Theory:
"In some cases there is an object called red that contains everything that is red. In much the same way a pot is a plate."
"In some cases there is an object called red that contains everything that is red. In much the same way a pot is a plate."
- KVRAF
- 8700 posts since 9 Jan, 2004 from leroyaumeuni
well yes, that's never been a secret, hasn't it?whyterabbyt wrote:
Its handwaving bullshit, pure and simple. The objective is control over the hardware and software iPhone developers have to buy.
My other host is Bruce Forsyth
- KVRAF
- 8700 posts since 9 Jan, 2004 from leroyaumeuni
To blow some live in this..
Why is Google so keen on buying AdMob, even after they already 'snatched' them away from Apple?
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2010/04/12/admob_iad/
Why is Google so keen on buying AdMob, even after they already 'snatched' them away from Apple?
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2010/04/12/admob_iad/
My other host is Bruce Forsyth