Apple is really pushing its luck

Apple has been the undisputed darling of electronics marketing since the introduction of the iPod.  Everything they touch turns to gold, and they've built the mystique of the Apple brand into a legendary golden goose.

Image representing iPhone App Store as depicte...
Image via CrunchBase

But it's been a tough week for Apple.

People have been grumbling about the arbitrary and seemingly random approval process for apps on the iPhone, but the applesauce really hit the fan this week when Apple revoked apps that work with Google Voice app:

There's No App For That

This has set off a small firestorm among developers:

Is this the beginning of the end for Apple?  Probably not.  This isn't the first time Apple has made some consumers mad, but there's only so many times they can pull stunts like this before it starts to catch up with them.

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12 Replies to “Apple is really pushing its luck”

  1. Last month, I was seriously considering picking up a MacBook for the purposes of iPhone/iPod touch development, when I stumbled across these same (and some similar) articles. I will always have a strong distaste for AT&T, but the seemingly arbitrary policies of application approval at the Apple Store was the final straw in my deciding to pass.

    1. Yeah. It seriously amazes me that Apple can consistently and vigorously close their environments and bully anyone who tries to open them, yet it's always someone else coming under fire for anti-competitive practices…

      Until people start voting with their wallets, though, I don't see them changing.

  2. Yeah. It seriously amazes me that Apple can consistently and vigorously close their environments and bully anyone who tries to open them, yet it's always someone else coming under fire for anti-competitive practices…

    Until people start voting with their wallets, though, I don't see them changing.

  3. In addition to the delays, Apple won’t give third-party developers the kind of deep access to the iPhone’s address book that Google gives its own Android apps. As a result, you can’t automatically dial out from a GV number using the phone’s native dial …

  4. In addition to the delays, Apple won’t give third-party developers the kind of deep access to the iPhone’s address book that Google gives its own Android apps. As a result, you can’t automatically dial out from a GV number using the phone’s native dial …

  5. Each one of those companies, let alone the men behind them, are fantastic (remember Apple bought Lala) and easily could parlay their networking experience into a powerful social network based on location-grouped photos. Except, in my opinion, …

  6. Now they have PR people helping them out whenever they launch a game and they’re not just a backyard name getting lucky. You have to be either really lucky, or producing the most amazing applications to get noticed without marketing. …

  7. Welegedara’s really worked himself into a rhythm here. Sri Lanka are
    buzzing. OVER 8: ENG 26/3 It’s all going to be all right, I think. Ian
    Bell, apple of …
     

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