I haven’t done any iOS apps for a little while but when I was - using an 
enterprise developer license - getting iOS apps onto our users’ (students and 
staff) phones was easy as. The hardest thing was finding a server to host the 
files (ipa, plist etc.) on.

Terry..

From: use-livecode <use-livecode-boun...@lists.runrev.com> on behalf of Richard 
Gaskin via use-livecode <use-livecode@lists.runrev.com>
Date: Thursday, 21 April 2022 at 8:00 am
To: use-livecode@lists.runrev.com <use-livecode@lists.runrev.com>
Cc: Richard Gaskin <ambassa...@fourthworld.com>
Subject: Re: Pixel 5
Mike Kerner wrote:

 > I am on my second droid phone, and I agree, I probably could never
 > go back - but, for corporate app deployment and deployment, ios is
 > happier place.

What have I been missing?  Last time I did native mobile Apple was still
making devs jump through hoops just to install apps that aren't even
going into their app store. On Android we just turn off the sideloading
protection, install, and turn it back on again - no
handholding/gatekeeping from the  OS provider needed, no contact with
them needed at all.

All this time I thought Apple's message for orgs making apps for
internal use was to use Android. I sometimes do medical apps, where iOS
is strongly represented. I'd love it if Apple has a way to beat Android
for ease of deployment.

--
Richard Gaskin
Fourth World Systems


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