- iPhone SDK: Interface Builder added; WebKit kicks into overdrive
- iPhone 2.0: Safari hosts local apps; SQL on a smartphone!; go get Safari 3.1 now
- New iPhone enterprise developer program, $299; musings about iPhone app licensing
- iPhone/iPod touch Q & A
- Apple's iPhone software strategy moves me
- Apple distributes 3rd-party apps through AppStore and iTunes; how developers can get it
- iPhone native SDK opens Apple's own dev tools to public
- iPhone gets Exchange support, aims for BlackBerry
- On the demise of Xserve RAID
- 10.5.2 update: Way more than security, and Apple fixed Stacks
March 06, 2008 | Comments: (0)
iPhone/iPod touch Q & A
Q: Why is Apple the exclusive distributor of third-party software for iPhone and iPod touch?
A: Somebody has to take full responsibility for customer security. Apple is taking responsibility for security by issuing developer certificates that irreversibly link every app a traceable, physical creator. Apple is a good groundskeeper, too; the site's always going to look splendid.
Q: Why do I have to pay $99 to write code for iPhone, and what's that buy me?
A: You can write code for iPhone for $0; download the tools from developer.apple.com. Mess around in the simulator to see if it piques your interest. If it does, then $99, plus answers to the validation questions that Apple will ask, gets you a certificate that will burn your name into your code. When you get that, you can start debugging with a physical iPhone or iPod touch. And you can upload your software to AppStore.
Q: What is AppStore, and how do I get in it?
A: The AppStore icon will be added to iPhone and iPod touch
Q: I meant, how can I get my software in it?
A: Sign up as an iPhone developer. They'll guide you through it.
Q: What kind of merchant account, PayPal, Kagi thing will I need to get my software sold?
A: This is much as you need to worry about money: a) Pay Apple $99 to be a developer; b) write something worth buying; c) decide what people should pay for it; d) upload it to Apple; e) rejoice as you're paid 70% of your monthly sales.
Q: Is anything about this program open source?
A: Steve Jobs says no. You will find references to ARM (the MCU used in iPhone and iPod touch) scattered around the Darwin source code.
Q: Do you think it's possible to completely overwrite the software on iPhone so I can do what I want?
A: For carrier unlocking: a) Buy iPod touch; b) Buy unlocked telephone
Posted by Tom Yager on March 6, 2008 04:31 PM
RATE THIS ARTICLE:
-

- COMMENTS
TOP STORIES
Top 10 stories of the weekA new place to hide rootkits
Sun exec on OpenSolaris, Linux
AT&T: No free iPhone Wi-Fi info
MS to appeal E.U. fine
XP SP3 causes endless reboots
Vista as insecure as Win 2000
Google grilled on human rights
Java ubiquity an edge in RIA battle
The InfoWorld news quiz
ADDITIONAL RESOURCES

- Virtualization: A Step by Step Approach to Success
- Dialing up Agility with Business Transformation
- 5 Things You Need to Know About Storage Virtualization

- Need to Secure Your Virtualized Environments?
- When you need backup will it be there?
- Is your storage capacity holding you back?





