Randy,

I get the fact you're not a very technology smart individual. Let me dumb it 
down a bit for you.

A tool which generates C code from xtalk code, creates similar patterns of C 
code, which when compiled, are unique, like human fingerprints. So, it's easy 
to figure out where the initial C code comes from, just as if you were trying 
to identify a person by the fingerprint they left behind.

I'm sorry, I don't know how to say it any simpler. 

Chipp Walters
CEO, Shafer Walters Group, Inc

On May 9, 2010, at 4:29 PM, Randall Lee Reetz <rand...@randallreetz.com> wrote:

> Wow, the logic in your argument makes absolutely no sence and is in no way 
> comparable in this context.
> 
> To wit.  The problem to which you allude is one of people attempting to build 
> flash apps from C source.  Of course thus would violate apples policy!  But 
> the discussion here is centered on the possibility of generating C source 
> from rev stacks and then building apple compliant apps within the apple 
> blessed IDE.  No harm, no foul, no secret sneak.
> 
> Rev, in this scenario would not be asserting any new external third party 
> protocol into the app space.  It would simple act as an app prototyping and 
> sketch helper tool.
> 
> 
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