Whose? Mine or Ghostface?Look, your reputation is on the line for this.
I'm in agreement with youThe app store contains millions of apps downloaded and used and shared by jailed and jailbroken users alike every second. That's how it is.
That is debatable. To techie types like us, i agree that jailbreaking is mainstream, but if the percentage of JB devices are less than a percent or even 10% of the overall devices then it is not mainstream.Jailbroken devices are mainstream.
Okay. No problem.Whether or not my device is Jailbroken, I have the exact same number of apps download to my device.
If you're referring to me then you are mistaken. I've made it perfectly clear that I don't have a problem with JBing and that the focus of my replies were on the developers right to configure their apps to not work on JB devices if they do chooses.You don't respect jailbreaking. You don't see it as mainstream or normal, or even moral.
I'm not a developer so I'm assuming this is targeted at someone elseBut here's the thing: The fact of the matter is that anything you download to your device can cause it to act up. YOUR app included.
No comment-N/ASo when you've gone through the trouble to make your app half available, half unavailable, (when it doesn't matter anyway, because we're jailbroken) and people tell you that your app is crashing (read the reviews for yourself) what does that tell you?
I disagree. See my earlier reply about "being a business decision".It tells you one thing. It doesn't matter. You don't want the money of a person with a Jailbroken device. You don't need the money of a person with a jailbroken device. You think you're better than that. What do you think you're trying to prove?
No problem.Software is software, jailbreaking is not a virus. It's the same device.
Just Me, D
(Tapatalk - iPhone 4S)