> How does that changes in the way Apple controls iPhone and iPod app
> right now?
It doesn't, AFAIK, except in the sense that it applies this concept to
what people perceive as a computer. People are sadly used to the idea
that a phone is something over which they have no control, which is why
the iPhone *appeared* to most users as more open than the rest (via its
application store). For a tablet, that's the exact opposite, since
until now tablets were typically Windows machines where you were free to
install anything else on it and where Microsoft made no attempt to
restrict the set of applications you could install.
Stefan
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