I might be wrong, but Mac OS X has been around for quite a long time  
now, and it is possible to create Mac compatible apps without using  
the Cocoa framework. This is were I might really be wrong, but from  
what I heard yesterday from the WWDC keynote, and from what I've read,  
developers who make iPhone apps can only use a series of tools  
provided by Apple, with some 1000 API's, to create their software. So  
in such a restricted environment (that is, if I'm still not really  
wrong) shouldn't most apps just work with VO?

Ignasi
On Jun 9, 2009, at 10:54 AM, Buddy Brannan wrote:

>
>
> On Jun 9, 2009, at 10:38 AM, Alex Jurgensen wrote:
>
>>
>> HI,
>>
>> YOU ARE MISSING THE FEATURE THAT ALLOWS YOU TO FIX APPLICATIONS THAT
>> ARE NOT ACCESSIBLE.
>
> ...Which I only saw mention of in the OS X section, not in the iPhone
> section. Not to say it won't be possible. And this feature likely
> won't fix apps that simply expose nothing (or very little) to VO in
> the first place.
>
> All that said, my understanding is that iPhone apps, like most modern
> OS X apps, use a common set of development tools and standard
> controls. This should mean that most will be at least somewhat
> accessible from the start. No?
>
>
> >


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