Get Better Gear!
- Texas Tea for the iPhone and iPod touch from Snakehead Software, $1.99
- Tenqa SP-109 Stereo Wireless Bluetooth Speaker from Tenqa, US$39.99
- RedLaser from Occipital, LLC , US$1.99
- iSkin solo, solo FX, and solo FX SE iPhone cases from iSkin, US$29.99 (solo); $32.99 (solo FX); $34.99 (solo FX SE)
- MobiValet from MobiValet, US$24.99 - $49.99
Top 5 Free Apps
iTunes New Music Releases
Top 5 Paid Apps
Discover New Music
- Modern Lovers
This timeless masterpiece is little known, but it has inspired almost as many bands as The Modern Lovers' own inspiration -- and only slightly better known -- The Velvet Underground & Nico.
- Weather Report
- This is Weather Reports quintessential line-up captured live. Jaco Pastorious and Peter Erskine join Wayne Shorter and, of course, Joe Zawinul to create this masterpiece.
- Red Hot Chili Peppers
- Barenaked Ladies
- These guys know how to put on a live show, and whomever recorded this knows how to capture one. Rock Spectacle is one of the warmest-sounding recordings I've ever heard, and totally fills a room at a
- Amon Tobin
- The genius is in the beats. Amon Tobin creates fantastic, groovy beats behind beats. "Supermodified" rolls through your expectations of breakbeat music, and turns them up a bit. It's a mellow album, p
Reader Specials
Visit Deals On The Web for the best deals on all consumer electronics, iPods, and more!
News
iPhone Devs Find NDA Workaround
Tuesday, August 26th, 2008 at 4:00 PM - by Jeff Gamet
iPhone and iPod touch developers are bound by a nondisclosure agreement that prohibits them from sharing tips and ideas with each other, so the resourceful coders found a work-around: they are subcontracting with each other. The subcontracting fee is typically US$1, and it opens a loophole that lets developers talk with each other about iPhone coding, according to the Los Angeles Times.
The nondisclosure agreement, or NDA, that iPhone developers are bound to prohibits them from discussing how they design their applications and from sharing coding techniques. Those restrictions are typically lifted once the product the NDA protects is officially launched, but in this case Apple chose to leave the restrictions in place.
The end result is that developers are left in isolation with only their own coding experiences to learn from, and those that have valuable experiences to share cant share that information with anyone else. The workaround apparently involves paying each other to subcontract on projects.
While developers may have found a limited way to work around the NDA restrictions, that doesnt help with other information resources that coders typically rely on including books, user groups, conferences and online forums. It also means that most iPhone developers are working on their own because they dont have anyone to turn to for help.
"Ultimately, consumers are suffering here," said Pragmatic Programmers founder Dave Thomas. "Were seeing some bad applications on the iPhone. Its stifling innovation."
Apple hasnt said why the NDA is still in place even after the iPhone 3G and the iPhone Software Developer Kit have hit the streets. The company also hasnt given any hints as to when the NDA might be lifted, so developers may be left in their information vacuum for some time to come.
Recent Headlines
- iPad: A Reason For Being
- Google Lowers Nexus One “Equipment Recovery Fee” to $150
- Texas Tea for the iPhone and iPod touch
- Notebook, iThoughts Add TextExpander touch Support
- Fixing iPhone and MobileMe Sync Headaches
- Juniper Readies Software to Improve Cell Carrier Networks
- Survey: iPad Announcement Increased Awareness, Fails to Convert New Buyers
















Post Your Comments