For the iOS situation to be limiting you would need to be talking about an app 
that was needed by over 100 people in the company. Even medium sized companies 
rarely have 100 people who have to run a particular in-house app. If you wanted 
many hundreds, you only need another one or two more developer licenses.

Using either BetaBuilder, or Jacque's thing, it's easier to install on iOS than 
Android. With iOS you have to touch the screen three times - once in the email 
you received, once in the web page you're taken to, and once more in the dialog 
that asks if you want to install the app. On Android you can touch the APK link 
in the email message, but then you have to wait for it to download, touch the 
icon that takes you to download, touch the install button, and touch the 
permissions button. That's assuming you've followed the instructions you were 
given on how to set the developer mode to be on.


On Apr 17, 2012, at 9:32 AM, Richard Gaskin <ambassa...@fourthworld.com> wrote:

> >With Apple's current policies, it's so difficult to deploy custom apps 
> >specific to a business that it's prohibitive for many of them.

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