I agree with you, Greg. I don't even have an iPhone, but python on the iPhone definitely would be nice. I hear Nokia phones already run Python. > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "Forrest Voight" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > To: pygame-users@seul.org > Subject: Re: [pygame] pygame on iPhone > Date: Sat, 4 Oct 2008 20:37:15 -0400 > > > It seems the NDA was dropped, just a little while ago, FYI. > > On Fri, Oct 3, 2008 at 7:22 AM, Greg Ewing > <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Jack Nutting wrote: > > > >> However, the fact is that what you *can* write with, Objective-C, is > >> not too shabby at all. > > > > You can write it, and maybe run it on your own phone, > > but nobody else can run it unless you go begging to > > Apple for approval (and pay them for the privilege). > > Or unless they're willing to hack their phone and > > risk the ire of Apple and/or AT&T. > > > >> So far, Apple's position on the iPhone has been a continual > >> loosening/expansion of what is possible... I am pretty hopeful > >> about the prospects of Apple removing the onerous clause that rules > >> out language interpreters in the iPhone. > > > > That would help, but to become truly enlightened, > > they'll have to abandon all attempt to restrict what > > people can run. It's that fundamental attitude that > > disappoints me more than the details of the restrictions. > > > > I rather like Google's "Don't be evil" motto, and wish > > Apple would take it to heart as well. > > > > -- > > Greg > > > >
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