...but...but doesnt these restrictions mean iOS is considered more secure? Which is what enterprise customers are looking for. Almost all big companies I know use iOS these days (although it may change one day).Erel got the point. And as a serious developer, it is also my duty to spot my customers to such points. Because many times, they MAY use iOS devices but they normally also neither thought deeply about the restrictions nor did they fully understand them.
And for many industrial usage, this restrictions are just not reasonable, with other words a "NoGo"
btw...by industrial usage, do you mean you need to interface with machinery etc?
+1 to thatSo, to my eyes, Apple and Google are not very different.
+1 to thatI will not blame Beja for wanting to involve politics in this case because there are probably only politics that still have a chance to change things by law. I do not really see why we should dissuade him, although like many I think it's utopian and that the US government has no interest to go against its national companies (usually laws are made to support them, not to fight them). But the number of dreamers that really changed our world is countless. And it would be stupid to yell and quarrel because of a multinational company where none of us are working and whose we can very well boycott products.
I think he should get involved but he needs to get his arguments correct first.