I just think that I would rather have an iPhone that is reliable and secure, 
than one I cannot be sure about because I downloaded something that is buggy or 
has a hidden exploit. What if in the initial stages of the iPhone, people were 
writing apps helter skelter that were unstable? How many support calls would 
Apple have gotten? What kind of bad rap would Apple have gotten for their 
"unstable insecure mobile device?" I can see the headlines: "Apple's iPhone 
just like the rest!" "Will the iPhone be just another Windows Update nightmare?"

I think if that had been the case, people would be complaining much more 
loudly, only their complaint would have been, "Apple has the resources. They 
should have been able to do something about this mess!" Well they did do 
something about it right out of the gate. Consider how many more sales of these 
custom apps made by small developers happened, because the weight of Apple's 
quality control was behind it? People freely purchase and download apps without 
any fear at all about stability and security BECAUSE of Apple's app store 
model. How much more profitable have developers been because of that 
confidence? 

In the past people only purchased from established developers and vendors (and 
paid good money for it too) because that was their way of ensuring stability 
and security in what they got. Apple has provided a way that a simple toad like 
me, who has a good idea for an app can either bless the world with my genius, 
or else make a little cash on the side. 

Everything is give and take. You give up convenience for security and 
stability. That is the bargain to be struck. For those who don't like it, don't 
make the bargain. And haven't we always had rules to play by? The difference 
here is that the rules are strictly enforced, and IMHO rightly so, because a 
mobile computing device that is also a phone that also has bluetooth and 
wireless could be conceivably be turned into a traveling pandemic infecting 
every computer it could exploit. 

And as far as the Flash thing, personally I am happy our children cannot easily 
view porn at will on their iPhones. It's the old tradeoff again, but this time 
it's a bit of freedom for security. 

Bob


On May 7, 2010, at 9:06 AM, Peter Alcibiades wrote:

> Jerry may be right, joining Apple may be the profitable choice.  I don't
> know.  But what's clear is, if you are going to be in, you have to play by
> the rules.  There is no way around this one, as long as the App Store is the
> bottleneck.

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