jerome_bent
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15 years ago
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on: Sequoia gives photo-sharing startup more money than they gave Google
(This is offtopic, and probably best put in a AskHN thread, but) Why no love for BlackBerry?
jerome_bent
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15 years ago
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on: Apple alleged web crippling: "not to be fixed by exec order"
The OP said "local caching" not speed.
I'm surprised the local caching hasn't gotten the media spotlight as that's been broken since 4.2.1. and is more important for web apps aiming to replace native apps.
jerome_bent
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15 years ago
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on: WebOS will be on 'every HP PC' shipping next year, says CEO
I agree. Microsoft could undercut HP at anytime with Windows 8, which is rumored to be a tablet friendly OS.
HP should be aiming for web delivery and even their own web browser.
jerome_bent
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15 years ago
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on: Get your own #dickbar
No, they don't. Apple keeps all that information from developers. (By the way, that's the same information publishers are clamoring for).
jerome_bent
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15 years ago
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on: Apple to Unveil IPad 2 on March 2 in San Francisco
Ostylus.com
jerome_bent
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15 years ago
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on: Steve Jobs Email Suggests In-App Subscriptions Don't Apply to SaaS?
If you agree with Apple's strategy (i.e. create apps only within Apple's rules) then it of course makes sense to later defend Apple for only allowing web apps while the AppStore and Apple's development tools were not ready. But if one doesn't stick only to Apple's strategy, then other options present themselves like allowing developers to release their own native apps until Apple got its act together. Developers were ingenious enough to develop, and even sell, native iPhone apps before the AppStore came along.
Gruber wants Google and Android (and Palm and webOS) to succeed so they can keep Apple sharp and on top of the game; Gruber doesn't want Apple's competitors to succeed in and of themselves, his desire is predicated on more success for Apple.
Gruber's views are sufficiently nuanced to allow some disagreements with Apple on minor issues while still remaining in agreement of their overall goals. I'm not the one 'splitting hairs' by pointing that out, indeed it's actually Gruber's arguments that appear so (his dismissal of the Readability blog post because they seem like a content publisher—even though Readability isn't—is an example of him drawing arbitrary lines in the sand)
jerome_bent
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15 years ago
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on: Steve Jobs Email Suggests In-App Subscriptions Don't Apply to SaaS?
You're confusing a strategy (i.e. provide a way for developers to make apps within Apple's rules) to a tactic (i.e. only make web apps, not native apps). It's worth noting that Gruber would later defend Apple's decision to initially offer only web app development because, according to Gruber, obviously the tools for native apps were just not ready and the AppStore was still in development.
By Gruber's own admission, he wants Apple to succeed. Everything else is secondary.
jerome_bent
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15 years ago
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on: Steve Jobs Email Suggests In-App Subscriptions Don't Apply to SaaS?
There is a difference between criticizing the implementation of a policy (e.g. the AppStore review process is too slow, the AppStore review process sometimes makes embarrassing mistakes) and criticizing the policy itself (e.g. Apple's control over the AppStore is a bad thing). Gruber (and Marco et al) might criticize specific tactics by Apple but the Mac pundits largely agree with the strategy and the goals—whatever the strategy or goals may be.
jerome_bent
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15 years ago
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on: TinyGrab abandons iOS because of new App Store rules
Well maybe not for you but Grooveshark moved to Cydia after it was kicked out of the AppStore...
jerome_bent
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15 years ago
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on: An Open Letter to Apple on the Readability App rejection
Apple already had measures in place to block that 'loophole' without these new rules—or new interpretations of the rules, if you will. Apple banned an update to ReadItLater, last year, because the reviewer believed the developer was attempting to circumvent the in-app purchase:
http://readitlaterlist.com/blog/2010/08/version-2-2-rejected...
jerome_bent
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15 years ago
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on: Why I don't care very much about tablets anymore
I got an iPad in April, at launch, and gave it away at Christmas. I wanted a tablet to replace two distinct sets of physical objects that haven't yet gone digital: my moleskine/writing pads and my library of magazines and reference books. The iPad is useless for scribbling and the reading experience (the screen, the weight, the UI) is poor. The iPad doesn't autodeliver new content and I fear Apple has killed the inchoate market for digital newspapers, magazines and the like with the new heavyhanded rules for digital subscriptions. The iPad had great promise but it is unfulfilled.