andy9 wrote on Nov 13
th, 2008 at 4:02pm:
The remark about circumventing carrier policy is a direct quote of Apple declining to carry an author's product. If you think the comment is a joke, perhaps you might start correspondence to make those views known to Apple.
Good God man! I don't know how I can explain it any more simply, but I'll humour you just this once.
I realize it was Apple who originally accused the author of "carrier policy circumventing", by repeating it you appear to be agreeing with Apple. Let me translate for you because I think you've misunderstood what it means:
carrier - this is US speak for network operator i.e. companies like Vodafone, Orange and especially O2
policy - the policy that these companies have of charging you 20p per minute for calling 0800 numbers
circumventing - encouraging users to dial geographical numbers instead
"carrier policy circumventing" is the whole point of this very web site.
Apple does not want to upset O2 or any other carrier by allowing the author's iPhone application because it could reduce the amount of revenue that O2 gets and O2 might get cross and not like the iPhone anymore. That's why I assumed it was your joke to repeat it, but hey, you're perfectly within your rights to agree with Apple or O2 for that matter.
Quote: Perhaps the amateur iPhone application writers should save their bandwidth-wasting or carrier policy circumventing skills for other projects.
Quote:The example given shows image that contain place names in California, and the data sizes are 150k and 200k.
You don't understand. It's not your fault, you're not a developer. The size of an image of an application has absolutely nothing to do with what size it actually is or how it functions. It's really like saying "that picture of that cake's big, it must have loads of calories in it".
One of the main advantages of applications versus web pages is that the bandwidth used is typically less. Any images needed for the functioning of the application are included within the application itself and downloaded at install time. Subsequent to that, there is no need to continually download the same images as you typically do in a web page, all the application needs to function is the raw data - no more than a few bytes for each phone number request. So you see actually the complete opposite of bandwidth wasting.
I hope that has cleared up a few things, but to be honest the message is loud and clear - no thanks to any site improvements or additions unless it is actually done by the owner, who appears not to be interested. Shame.