On Aug 30, 2011, at 8:41 AM, Ashley Aitken wrote: > > On 30/08/2011, at 1:54 PM, LuKreme wrote: > >> Ashley Aitken <[email protected]> squawked out on Monday 29-Aug-2011@20:43:29 >>> On 29/08/2011, at 7:33 AM, objectwerks inc wrote: >>> >>>> >>>> >>>> no. Any software you buy on the App Store can be installed on any >>>> machine you own from your iTunes account. This is part of the deal. And >>>> none of the software has user keys. It is all built-in to the store >>>> software that you embed in your app to get it on the store. >>> >>> Yes, this is very enticing (at least for me), BUT this is what we thought >>> as well about the iTunes App Store for all your iOS devices (or at least I >>> did) and now I am a bit wary about this going forward with iCloud and all. >> >> Er, what are you talking about? All App Store purchases are usable on ALL >> your iOS devices. If you buy angry birds for $0.99 and you own 47 iOS >> devices then you can run Angry Birds on all 47 iOS devices for the same >> $0.99. > > IANAL but: > >> When you first acquire App Store Products, as defined below, (excluding >> products acquired from the Mac App Store) or iBookstore Products, as defined >> below, through the App and Book Services (collectively, “Eligible Content”) > ... >> >> (i) You may auto-download Eligible Content or download previously-purchased >> Eligible Content from an Account on up to 10 Associated Devices, provided no >> more than 5 are iTunes-authorized computers. >> >> (ii) An Associated Device can be associated with only one Account at any >> given time. >> >> (iii) You may switch an Associated Device to a different Account only >> once every 90 days. >> >> (iv) You may download previously-purchased free content onto an unlimited >> number of devices while it is free on the App and Book Services, but on no >> more than 5 iTunes-authorized computers. >> >> The above terms (i) to (iv) do not apply to App Store Products. > > > No more than 5 authorised computers, so I guess up to 10 iOS devices? > > Although the last sentence seems to negate all the above? App Store Products?
Mac App store has no restriction, the iTunes app store does. That is what it says. This jives with what Steve said and what I've seen bear out. This is more about media than apps really which makes a lot of sense. --Larry _______________________________________________ MacOSX-talk mailing list [email protected] http://www.omnigroup.com/mailman/listinfo/macosx-talk
