I quote: "At present, developers may only create iPhone and Mac OS applications 
from within Apple's own Xcode development suite which only runs on Macs." That 
is not strictly true. You can use any environment whose native language is 
either Javascript, ObjectiveC or C++. I am not sure there IS another 
environment that fits those restrictions, but technically if there were, you 
could. 

Bob


On May 26, 2010, at 8:56 PM, Richard Gaskin wrote:

> The weird world gets weirder:
> 
> 
>   Microsoft's Steve Ballmer to Present During WWDC 2010 Keynote?
> 
>   Barrons  reports that one analyst is predicting that Microsoft
>   CEO Steve Ballmer will be part of Steve Jobs' WWDC Keynote
>   presentation.
> 
>   According to Trip Chowdhry, an analyst with tiny Global Equities
>   Research, 7 minutes of Steve Jobs' keynote is allotted for
>   Microsoft. Microsoft will reportedly be talking about their
>   development tool Visual Studio 2010. The new version of Visual
>   Studio will reportedly allow developers to write native
>   applications for the iPhone, iPad and Mac OS.
> 
> <http://www.macrumors.com/2010/05/26/microsofts-steve-ballmer-to-present-during-wwdc-2010-keynote/>
> 
> 
> --
> Richard Gaskin
> Fourth World
> Rev training and consulting: http://www.fourthworld.com
> Webzine for Rev developers: http://www.revjournal.com
> revJournal blog: http://revjournal.com/blog.irv
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