Disappointed
***Update:** I should make a clarification: I haven’t written anything for the iPhone yet, nor have I had a rejection letter (though after a re-read, it does sound like I’m a little bitter that way). I’m just disappointed at the whole situation, and frustrated for the victims. I’ve been an Apple fan for twenty years, and I don’t ever remember such blatant Microsoft-like behavior.*
I’ll finally say it: I’m disappointed with Apple.
Since before it was cool, I’ve wanted a device that consolidated all my pocket gadgets: iPod, phone, PDA, etc. More than a year and a half ago, Apple finally introduced the long-rumored iPhone: everyone’s dream device, promising convergence, productivity, and the sheer joy users and developers have come to expect from using an Apple-designed user interface.
I didn’t buy one when they were first announced, in large part because of the wallet-busting $600 price tag, and in small part because there was no official way to develop or install my own applications and games on it. When I had my Palm, I’d become rather attached to SimCity and Pocket Quicken, and the thought of being able to carry Real Software with me wherever I went was very exciting.
When the SDK was announced nearly a year ago, the stage was set, and with the 3G iPhone came subsidization. Finally, an iPhone was nearly within my financial grasp.
Then this mess happened. First, Apple inexplicably kept all developers under an NDA, which had the (however unintended) effect of stifling collaboration and developer assistance, traditionally very important processes when writing software for a new platform.
Second, Apple has now decided that not only will their App Store be the sole source of iPhone software, but that they reserve the right to bar any software from the store they see fit. The gist of it is that a prospective developer (let’s call him, oh, I don’t know, *Daniel*) can conceive an idea, spend six months of his free time pouring his creative energy into it, submit his software for distribution, and be denied the fruit of his labors without any warning or real explanation.
I usually try to give Apple the the benefit of the doubt. But I was excited about using and possibly developing for (should I find any holes to fill) the iPhone. This doesn’t exactly make it sound like fun.

Bring on the comments
Tuesday, September 23 September 23, 2008 @ 10:35pm
That is no fun. Did they give reasons to why it was rejected? Can you tweak it some and send it back in? I never thought of it that way, that people are putting so much time into apps and then having them rejected. Although a majority of the apps available right now are pretty useless, it seems like it should be fairly simple to get accepted in. Hope you can get yours accepted and if it does let me know.
Wednesday, September 24 September 24, 2008 @ 8:45am
I didn’t actually write one yet.
I’m just annoyed in general with Apple.
That’s the problem, though .. it should be fairly simple, and it’s become a guessing game.
Thursday, October 2 October 2, 2008 @ 9:02am
Don’t let your disillusionment in Apple hinder the fun. I signed on to the program early on and I haven’t found it all that bad. Besides, it’s amazingly cool to see your app run on your iPhone. If the app is turned down for the app store but still useful to you, well, then you just keep it on your phone and use it. If you have fun developing an app that you can use, entertain yourself writing many exciting lines of code, and you gain a little more mac development experience, then it’s well worth the price of admission!
P.S. I’d have posted this last, but the baby arrived on the 15th and I haven’t had much time to do anything since.