Richard Bannister wrote:
I hear that Apple rejected it...
If this is true it wouldn't surprise me. Apple's iOS policies are among the worst out there (not to say the Android Market is any better in reality). What I'd like to know is what "competition" Glider has. It's by the original author of the old Glider series, yet apple rejects it (assumption that this is indeed true).
I've learned one thing from Apple's iOS policies: They don't like ANY competition. None. How they manage to do what they do without getting an anti-trust suit thrown at them is beyond me. Actually, no it isn't. We live in a time and place where the government is basically putting big business over everybody else in favor of incoming lobbyist money. So consumer choice, freedom, and rights go down the drain. The middle eastern anti-American rhetoric does have one thing that is very likely to end up true: our capitalistic market greed may well be our own undoing if we don't manage it better from here on out.
I'm actually glad I didn't get an iPhone. The ease of use is nice, but the user limitations are just too much. I like control of my device, not having the device and/or its parent company control me. :)