Third Party Apps on the iPhone

“Let me just say it: We want native third party applications on the iPhone, and we plan to have an SDK in developers’ hands in February. We are excited about creating a vibrant third party developer community around the iPhone and enabling hundreds of new applications for our users. With our revolutionary multi-touch interface, powerful hardware and advanced software architecture, we believe we have created the best mobile platform ever for developers.

It will take until February to release an SDK because we’re trying to do two diametrically opposed things at once—provide an advanced and open platform to developers while at the same time protect iPhone users from viruses, malware, privacy attacks, etc. This is no easy task. Some claim that viruses and malware are not a problem on mobile phones—this is simply not true. There have been serious viruses on other mobile phones already, including some that silently spread from phone to phone over the cell network. As our phones become more powerful, these malicious programs will become more dangerous. And since the iPhone is the most advanced phone ever, it will be a highly visible target.

Some companies are already taking action. Nokia, for example, is not allowing any applications to be loaded onto some of their newest phones unless they have a digital signature that can be traced back to a known developer. While this makes such a phone less than “totally open,” we believe it is a step in the right direction. We are working on an advanced system which will offer developers broad access to natively program the iPhone’s amazing software platform while at the same time protecting users from malicious programs.

We think a few months of patience now will be rewarded by many years of great third party applications running on safe and reliable iPhones.

Steve

P.S.: The SDK will also allow developers to create applications for iPod touch. [Oct 17, 2007]”

All hail the great Steve!!!

iPhone Updates?

One might be wondering why I have not been posting about the iPhone or the iPod Touch. Well, here’s the update.

I’m officially not interested in the iPod Touch anymore.

Am now officially hoping for the dev team to continue with their breaking in of the iPhone’s new firmware, and am actually hanging out in irc every night just to check on the progress. After all, who won’t be excited if their first visit to the iPhone-dev channel is the same night that the recent biggest iPhone hacking progresses happened.

Hell that night was exciting.

MacRyu loves the iPhone. We want one.

Bungie, Microsoft, Halo – Yeah right

So Bungie left Microsoft (sort of). Finally. What’s on the radar for them next then?

One wonders if Apple will be benefiting from this split. After all, it’s not so long ago that we were watching Bungie talking to us about the great new Mac game Halo on the Mac platform during one of Steve’s keynote, and then all of a sudden they were bought up by Microsoft, and that’s it. Pro-Apple people resigned and left after a while, and Bungie was never the same again. Halo became a hit series, as we all know, but that was about it. Bungie was just living off the earnings of a great hit made many years ago by people who left the company, with little or no new ideas. Now that they are independent again, one wonders if they will be able to churn out anything other than more Halo spinoffs.

And I wonder if they’ll ever be a major Mac game developer again.

Heck. I don’t even like Halo.