> But again, I would be very happy to be wrong on this.
>
> Anyone here know whether the App Store agreement is an exclusive one?
AFAIK (and its gone through a host of Japanese lawyers Ive worked with),
Apple isn't asking for exclusivity. But they are asking for specifics on the
version that is s
Some people are getting games accepted into the Mac App Store, and I'm pretty
sure those don't have standard buttons and other controls. Maybe the concern is
if you have a standard control that doesn't behave in a standard way?
One thing I know that apps are rejected for is if they have PowerPC
Richard Miller wrote:
Could you expand on the issue of non-standard GUI elements?... perhaps
some examples of what is not acceptable?
Hard to say specifically beyond those I cited earlier. There seems to
be a subjective element to the App Store review process, so the precise
expectations a
Thanks, Richard.
Could you expand on the issue of non-standard GUI elements?... perhaps
some examples of what is not acceptable?
If self-updating is not allowed, what is the easiest alternative? Or is
this app store going to operate like the iPad store, where the OS always
informs the user w
Richard Miller wrote:
Could someone please list the (primary) issues developers need to pay
attention to in order to make Mac apps compliant with the new store?
Prohibited items include self-updating (even though iTunes itself does
that), and non-standard GUI elements (even though iTunes itse