Signatures 405 total
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1
Name: Steve Scott (Scotty) on Jul 23, 2008Comments:Flag
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2
Name: Martin Pilkington on Jul 23, 2008Comments:Flag
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3
Name: Saul Mora on Jul 23, 2008Comments:Flag
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4
Name: Michael Rentas on Jul 23, 2008Comments: Pretty pleaseFlag
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5
Name: Michael Furtak on Jul 23, 2008Comments:Flag
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6
Name: Anonymous on Jul 23, 2008Comments:Flag
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7
Name: Anonymous on Jul 23, 2008Comments:Flag
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8
Name: Emanuele Vulcano on Jul 23, 2008Comments: It is in Apple's best interest to let us talk among each other -- sharing code leads very often, if not always, to better code quality and therefore a better environment for everyone.Flag
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9
Name: Mark Grimes on Jul 23, 2008Comments:Flag
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10
Name: Jason Kurczak on Jul 23, 2008Comments:Flag
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11
Name: Bill Dudney on Jul 23, 2008Comments: pleaseFlag
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12
Name: Jack Holt on Jul 23, 2008Comments:Flag
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13
Name: Scott Little on Jul 23, 2008Comments: Yes. please remove the NDA. It made lots of sense before the release of the OS 2.0 but now we want to discuss things to learn how to make better applications!Flag
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14
Name: Greg Mueller on Jul 23, 2008Comments:Flag
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15
Name: Simon Wolf on Jul 23, 2008Comments:Flag
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16
Name: Gareth Fleming on Jul 23, 2008Comments:Flag
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17
Name: Uli Kusterer on Jul 23, 2008Comments:Flag
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18
Name: William Dahlberg on Jul 23, 2008Comments:Flag
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19
Name: Brent Rowland on Jul 23, 2008Comments: It's nearly-impossible to develop great software these days without the ability to tap the community for help.Flag
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20
Name: Devon on Jul 23, 2008Comments: What's the hold up Apple App Store and 2.0 are officially out so why are you hampering development by keeping us under NDA What purpose could you possibly haveFlag
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21
Name: Mike on Jul 23, 2008Comments:Flag
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22
Name: Mark Hughes on Jul 23, 2008Comments: The F---ING NDA is driving us all crazy, and keeping us from making better apps.Flag
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23
Name: Dan Wood on Jul 23, 2008Comments: The reason that the Mac developer community is thriving so much is the exchange of information among developers to help fill in the gaps in documentation and understanding of the details. Most Mac applications have been developed because of the open access to information about development and the ability to share that information. I can understand the iPhone SDK being under NDA before the release of 2.0, but to continue the silence is making things very bad. It's preventing conferences, classes, books, and tutorials from happening. Is there *anything* good about the NDA continuing I think not.Flag
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24
Name: Marcel Molina on Jul 23, 2008Comments:Flag
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25
Name: Robert Marini on Jul 23, 2008Comments:Flag
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26
Name: Timothy Ritchey on Jul 23, 2008Comments:Flag
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27
Name: Brent Simmons on Jul 23, 2008Comments:Flag
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28
Name: Tim Buchheim on Jul 23, 2008Comments:Flag
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29
Name: Mark Dalrymple on Jul 23, 2008Comments: Not that internet petitions do a lot of good, but I must say the iPhone SDK NDA (and other TLAs) are impeding the developer community, and impeding the development of high quality software for the device. A lot of free support is developer-to-developer.; and right now many of us are working in a vacuum. And vacuums suck.Flag
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30
Name: Ryan Goodlett on Jul 23, 2008Comments:Flag
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31
Name: Anonymous on Jul 23, 2008Comments:Flag
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32
Name: Chris Ryland on Jul 23, 2008Comments: I'm an iPhone developer, and I desperately need to be able to share comments and questions in public discussion groups.Flag
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33
Name: Benjamin Reed on Jul 23, 2008Comments: I want to be able to commit iphone-related open-source code!Flag
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34
Name: Mitchell Koch on Jul 23, 2008Comments:Flag
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35
Name: Jonathan Wight on Jul 23, 2008Comments: Set my people free!Flag
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36
Name: Greg Wiseman on Jul 23, 2008Comments:Flag
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37
Name: Rod Schmidt on Jul 23, 2008Comments: Please lift the NDA and approve all the developer applicationsFlag
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38
Name: Adam Leonard on Jul 23, 2008Comments:Flag
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39
Name: Anonymous on Jul 23, 2008Comments:Flag
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40
Name: Anonymous on Jul 23, 2008Comments: Its difficult to develop for a platform that you cant discuss with anyone.Flag
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41
Name: Alexander Repty on Jul 24, 2008Comments: It is about time.Flag
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42
Name: Charles Parnot on Jul 24, 2008Comments:Flag
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43
Name: Jean-Denis Muys on Jul 24, 2008Comments:Flag
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44
Name: Gernot Poetsch on Jul 24, 2008Comments: There are much too many bugs and poorly documented details for one developer to be able to work on more complicated stuff without being able to consult others. The NDA is severely harming the platform.Flag
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45
Name: Theodore Rattei on Jul 24, 2008Comments:Flag
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46
Name: Anonymous on Jul 24, 2008Comments:Flag
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47
Name: Anonymous on Jul 24, 2008Comments:Flag
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48
Name: Klaas Pieter Annema on Jul 24, 2008Comments:Flag
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49
Name: Florian Albrecht on Jul 24, 2008Comments: IMHO, part of the success of the Mac Software Market is related to the great community that exists for sharing information on all levels, from business related to technology related aspects. There clearly is the need for an iPhone community and the basis for that could not be better, as a big part of iPhone developers are very active members of the Mac community!Flag
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50
Name: Florent Pillet on Jul 24, 2008Comments: Please lift the NDA. We need to be able to share experience, tips, tricks & pitfallsFlag