>>> >> AH, if that is the case, then there is hope. If you could modify things so >> that only the official site could supply "content" then perhaps the policy >> can be circumvented... > > Not really. Apple wants to ensure that the behavior they test is the same as > the behavior the users see. So no "active content" download. > > Typical apps do not download code, they are only updated when a new version > gets released (and each new version is tested again by Apple). > > In that sense John's other apps are fine, they are just an executable written > in a mix of C and Objective-C, plus a fixed datafile we usually call "image".
This is exactly what I was wondering... What is a C application nowadays :) Still I think that the message from apple is blurring their image. Stef _______________________________________________ Pharo-project mailing list Pharo-project@lists.gforge.inria.fr http://lists.gforge.inria.fr/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/pharo-project