If you're talking about this:

http://www.mobilecrunch.com/2010/06/15/lesson-not-learned-att-locks-down-the-htc-arias-app-selection/

(or similar) then there is pretty much nothing you can do short of
actually publishing the app to the app Market.

Of course there's nothing wrong with this, you could just put some
sort of password on the app so if anyone else downloaded it they
couldn't use it.

I think there may also be some options regarding who can see the app
on the market that may be useful, but I haven't actually published yet
myself so not sure.

Maybe someone with more knowledge of the Market could help

On Sep 18, 12:20 pm, Yepher <[email protected]> wrote:
> I am developing an Android application for a customer. I want to be
> able to provide them (no one else) incremental updates but I am not
> clear what the procedure should be.
>
> I don't want them to have to install development tools or root their
> phone. These are non technical folks who would have no idea how to
> accomplish root a phone or use a command line interface.
>
> When I develop iPhone applications for them this was easy. They just
> give me the device UDID and I send them a binary that can be drag and
> dropped into iTunes.
>
> How is this done on Android. I have tried loading the application from
> a web server but the devices says it is not allowed to be loaded
> because of security reasons. In setting->Applications there is no menu
> option to "Allow Unknown sources".
>
> Thank  your for any help you can provide on this matter.

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