| # | Name | Comments |
|---|
| 101 | Niklas Saers | about time |
| 102 | Leonardo Cassarani | FUCKING NDA |
| 103 | Austin Ziegler | Since I'm new to Cocoa development in general, but my app development ideas are for the Cocoa Touch platform, I can't get any help from developers with more experience on the platform so long as the NDA stays in place. |
| 104 | Michael Gruetzner | Lift the NDA! Now!!! |
| 105 | Warren Dodge | |
| 106 | Doug Penny | |
| 107 | Chris Partish | |
| 108 | Toby | I want to develop an open source application for iPhone/iPod Touch – and furthermore I might want to discuss its development to help other developers. This can only be GOOD for your platform, Apple, get it? |
| 109 | nathan vander wilt | srsly u guys. |
| 110 | King Chung Huang | |
| 111 | Chris Thomson | |
| 112 | jon deal | |
| 113 | Vinay | Seriously, fucking NDA! Mac development is great because we have such an open community. |
| 114 | Michael Bach | |
| 115 | Steve Streza | |
| 116 | Steve Streza | |
| 117 | Brian Jones | |
| 118 | Chris Foresman | Pretty please? |
| 119 | Josh Holat | |
| 120 | Geof F. Morris | I'm not a developer. I'm a user. But I think the NDA is killing the growth of the iPhone apps market as much as the "review process". I understand NDAs in general, but if you're going to put an NDA for a next-generation device, put it in then---leave the current generation of publicly available hardware free! |
| 121 | Timothy Wood | We have lots of code and tips to share. We'd like to see what others have to share too. Let's make the platform better by letting people work together! |
| 122 | Anonymous | |
| 123 | Timothy Luoma | Let the developers talk to one another so they can help each other solve problems rather than each one having to reinvent the bug-fix wheel! |
| 124 | Mike Cohen | The NDA should have been lifted when the iPhone 3G shipped. |
| 125 | Anonymous | |
| 126 | Mike Gowen | Duh! |
| 127 | Anonymous | |
| 128 | Bradley MacDonald | I feel that a more open platform for development will only enhance and expand the iPhone. |
| 129 | Ivan Weiss | this needs to be lifted so a greater communication can occur between iphone developers. All this does is hinder the amount of educational material that can be distributed by outside developers thereby encouraging the reinvention of the code "wheel" |
| 130 | Michael Lake | |
| 131 | Neil Cowburn | |
| 132 | Jim Thorpe | It's highly troublesome that I can't collaborate or share ideas with my contemporaries on projects as simple as an iPhone 2.0-compatible web app.
Also, being a complete newbie to Cocoa/Objective-C development, I would find great value in open forums centered around programming with the iPhone SDK. |
| 133 | Devin Lane | |
| 134 | Jeffrey Long | None of us is as smart as all of us. Let us collaborate and share our experiences with each other so we can deliver better apps to the platform. |
| 135 | Collin Donnell | |
| 136 | Zac White | |
| 137 | Tim | useless thing that's stifling creativity |
| 138 | Mitchell J Laurren-Ring | Communication between developers is important to getting a new platform established. |
| 139 | Snorre Milde | This is just silly. |
| 140 | Matthew Craig | The secrecy really has no point now. |
| 141 | Mike Taylor | |
| 142 | Connor Cimowsky | |
| 143 | Wolfgang Ante | |
| 144 | Anonymous | Apple - Don't be development nazis. |
| 145 | Ned Schwartz | |
| 146 | Jakob Wells | Way to Fsck things up, Apple. |
| 147 | Stephen Christopher | Looking forward to Apple embracing their developer community in a little more friendly of a manner. |
| 148 | Joachim Bengtsson | |
| 149 | David Catmull | Failing to even explain why the NDA continues after the release of the iPhone 2.0 software is insulting to the developer community. |
| 150 | Joachim Bengtsson | |