> What's nice about Apple's approach here is that developers
> don't have to do anything... it's a good way of improving the code
> quality for *all* apps. I was pretty surprised and happy when it
> came online a month or two ago because it confirmed that what
> was crashing across our user base were known issues. Most of
> the battle is getting *any* information about how the app is
> behaving in the field, so the auto-crash reports are really nice.
>
> I don't think there's an inherent conflict with Android's openness.
> The crashes are anonymized, and developers and users do chose
> to go through the Android Market -- which unlike Apple isn't the
> only way to get apps.
And it would give feedback to the Android developers what kinds of
bugs appear, because their users (the devs) don't seem to grasp the
API or because there are bugs in the system that they would have
consider minor until they see how often they really occur.

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