Hi Dar, We already use Ad Hoc provisioning with apps-- the problem is, they time out and are only available to a total of 100 users cumulative for all apps from a single developer. So, it's not really a solution, and furthermore, Apple frowns on it, and as you know, no one wants to make Apple angry! They bite back-- hard. I'm thinking I'd end up with another visit in the middle of the night from their goon squad! http://tek-bull.com/2011/09/apple-employees-are-being-investigated-for-impersonating-the-police.html
Monte, It's hard enough for us to try and get an Apple developer license. Imagine how confusing this process would be for our client! And, what would they do with it? Remember, they're a marketing group. They would rather we keep track of the technology for now. This sort of delay can actually be something which derails a project for a customer. We started development 3 weeks ago betting on the come we wouldn't have problems here. Looks like a silly bet nowdays. Thankfully, our customers prefer Android to iOS by a significant margin-- but the LC Android build capabilities are still lagging behind. This is the reason we've chosen to develop for iOS first. Like many of us here, part of our job is to sell the client on the appropriate technology-- and for this particular project that meant both iOS and Android, which also works well with our skill set and LC. We provide turn key solutions for them, and having an Enterprise license helps us to do so better-- or at least that's our thinking. Whether or not Apple agrees is a whole other issue. It looks like, after the past 3 phones being iPhones, my next one will be an Android. I wonder how many other 'switchers' are out there? FWIW, I think a really great smartphone concept would be one with a great camera and interchangeable lenses. Esp a macro lens! On Thu, Sep 15, 2011 at 7:04 PM, Dar Scott <d...@swcp.com> wrote: > > On Sep 15, 2011, at 4:51 PM, Monte Goulding wrote: > > My reading of it was your customer would need the enterprise license not > you. Is that wrong? > > Yeah, that is my impression. I suspect I didn't understand Chipp's need. > Not that I know anything; that is just the impression I got. > http://developer.apple.com/support/ios/enterprise.html > > The iOS Developer User Guide describes something called ad hoc > distribution. Maybe that is compatible with LiveCode. Perhaps a few trial > copies might be deployed through ad hoc distribution. That allows control > over exactly what devices are able to run the app and limits the evaluation > time to a year. Not that I know anything about this, either; I just saw it > in the document. Maybe this kind of thing will allow testing until a > customer gets an enterprise license. > > Dar > > --------------------------- > Dar Scott > dba > Dar Scott Consulting > 8637 Horacio Place NE > Albuquerque, NM 87111 > > Lab, home, office phone: +1 505 299 9497 > For Skype and fax, please contact. > d...@swcp.com > > Computer Programming and tinkering, > often making LiveCode libraries and > externals, sometimes writing associated > microcontroller firmware. > --------------------------- > > > > _______________________________________________ > use-livecode mailing list > use-livecode@lists.runrev.com > Please visit this url to subscribe, unsubscribe and manage your > subscription preferences: > http://lists.runrev.com/mailman/listinfo/use-livecode > -- Chipp Walters CEO, Shafer Walters Group, Inc. _______________________________________________ use-livecode mailing list use-livecode@lists.runrev.com Please visit this url to subscribe, unsubscribe and manage your subscription preferences: http://lists.runrev.com/mailman/listinfo/use-livecode