Apple App Devs – Now Allowing 3rd Party Development Tools For iOS … Mostly
So you’re a developer for the iPad, iPhone, iPod Touch, etc. and you want to use, say, Flash to write your app. Well, that hasn’t gone so well in the past. What with Apple first vehemently denying you that option. Though Apple, perhaps out of the kindness of their hearts, or because they were under scrutiny from the Department of Justice and the Federal Trade Commission, started to release that stranglehold on development restrictions by allowing some apps to have third-party development tools involved, if you had written consent and it was only to provide minimal additional functionality to a homegrown app.
But rest assured, that Apple has seen the error of their ways, and now completely allows third-party development! Err … almost.
In a company statement, Apple’s new stance is: “We are relaxing all restrictions on the development tools used to create iOS apps, as long as the resulting apps do not download any code.*”
(* = Underlining is my own emphasis.)
So there you have it. Soon you’ll be able to go back to developing apps for iOS with your naughty naughty third-party tools. Just so long as your apps don’t ever download any code.
Err … yeah. So no updates then? No install apps? No download managers? No third-party web browsers or email clients? Etc.
This should be interesting to see how Apple officially words this in the SDK…
But I guess it’s at least yet another step in the right direction. Maybe sooner or later Apple will finally get it.
Or maybe not.
Apple is, after all, king of The Closed System. It wouldn’t be Apple if they didn’t prevent you from developing on/for them.
