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Licensed C64 Emulator Rejected From App Store

Miasik.Net writes "A fully licensed Commodore 64 iPhone emulator has been rejected from the App Store. The excuse Apple used is a clause in the SDK agreement which doesn't allow for applications that run executable code. It seems Sega is exempt from that clause, because some of its games on the iPhone are emulators running original ROM code."

4 of 277 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Editorialise much ? by Space+cowboy · · Score: -1, Flamebait

    [Turns politeness gauge down a notch to reply in the same fashion as the parent post]

    And I'm sick and tired of this entitlement meme. Here's another quote "Just because you can doesn't mean you ought to".

    Look, you (and (s)he) haven't got a legal leg to stand on, so you want to claim some sort of moral or ethical stance instead - fuck off yourself.

    If the iPhone doesn't do what you want it to do, or restricts you in any way that you don't like, then just don't fucking use it. How hard is that to understand ? What you don't get to do is agree to a contract and subsequently say "oh, but not for this little area here that means I can make a metric butt-load of cash because Apple's worked hard to make the device really popular".

    Still sounds a lot (to me) like toys exiting a pram at high velocity.

    Simon.

    --
    Physicists get Hadrons!
  2. Re:Editorialise much ? by QuoteMstr · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    If the iPhone doesn't do what you want it to do, or restricts you in any way that you don't like, then just don't fucking use it.

    Oh, get off it yourself. There are many things we don't allow companies to do. They can't enslave people, dump acid into rivers, outright lie in advertisements, or collude to fix prices. Market mechanisms don't prevent companies from doing these things, so the law must. It's not enough to say "just don't use the product." We need something more powerful.

    One more thing companies shouldn't be allowed to do is to make platforms and "reject" applications. Even if it's lucrative for Apple and a few developers, it's anticompetitive and harmful to society as a whole. Look at history: companies that create closed systems inevitably become rent-seeking parasites that stifle innovation.

    Apple has a current legal basis for its behavior. But there's no reason it should continue to enjoy that privilege. Closed platforms like the iPhone ought to be regulated away.

  3. Re:Obligatory Edsger Dijkstra by mustafap · · Score: 0, Flamebait
    >Hundreds of thousands of programmers got their start writing C-64, TRS-80, Apple & Sinclair BASIC on their home computers before graduating to structured languages, and 10s of thousands of them turned out to eat good or great programmers.

    There, fixed that for you.

    Great programmers learned assembly language first, or machine code. BASIC is just something you use when you want a distraction from programming.

    --
    Open Source Drum Kit, LPLC deve board - mjhdesigns.com
  4. Call me when it's an Amiga emulator by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Flamebait

    I don't care about C64.