You should probably take to standing whilst coding!
It means they inevitably turn into the "yes, they will," "no, they won't," "yes, they will SO!"That doesn’t mean we can’t discuss them on an internet forum
"I've retired and thus haven't paid attention to what's really happening in the app world, so I definitely know it sucks" is also not a convincing argument.It’s really not a lot, now that I think about it.
We’ve moved from the importance of developer relations to the latest installment of Spend Tim’s Money.
The point was that these threads always devolve into Apple should spend billions on THIS! NO, THIS! And it becomes only slightly more interesting than the threads about Why Apple Should Release An Update For My iPhone 8.Respectfully, Tim’s money is going to get spent
Okay (noting that @hrpanjwani has essentially backed off the point for non-games), but do you find "very little" in the way of good apps in the last decade plausible? I don't.
Aside from games, I primarily use communications apps like Safari, Mail, Messages, Google Translate, and Overcast, and basic utilities like Pages, Photos and Google Maps. Before I retired, I used Microsoft Word and Google Docs. All of these were introduced more than a decade ago. In the last decade? I dunno…I guess IQ test scoring software and Apple fitness? It’s really not a lot, now that I think about it.
Just looking at my phone, I give you: Duo Mobile, Parcel, Coinless, Bookends, Sports, Flightradar24, Flighty, Metropulse, United, and Amtrak. That's just a first cut. All of these are insanely useful in different ways and for different things. I haven't triple checked that they're all post 2016, but all of them have become what they are since then (eg, United and Amtrak took massive leaps in the last few years).
That is the complete opposite of buying defunct titles, and updating them themselves to keep them running. That’s a fool’s endeavour, given that any app that grew from a good idea rather than a structured environment is full of spaghetti code that even the guy who once wrote it probably no longer understands, except to know where not to touch things lest they break.
Apple absolutely doesn’t need to be a serious player in the gaming space.
The point was that these threads always devolve into Apple should spend billions on THIS! NO, THIS! And it becomes only slightly more interesting than the threads about Why Apple Should Release An Update For My iPhone 8.
Given Apple's history with wonky system updates in the era of both of those things, I would say absolutely yes.
I don’t see how ‘it stands to reason that Apple having positive relationships with developers is likely to lead to more and better apps than if Apple has antagonistic relationships with developers’ necessarily leads to “yes, they will,” “no, they won’t,” “yes, they will SO!”It means they inevitably turn into the "yes, they will," "no, they won't," "yes, they will SO!"
Attacking strawmen is noise, not signal. Though clearly, you’re right—since I retired two years ago, I must have no idea what’s happened in the app world over the last decade. Moreover, moving to another country; traveling around the world; communicating with people and businesses around the world in multiple languages; and dealing with international banking, taxes, and other commerce clearly would not expose me to anything going on the app world."I've retired and thus haven't paid attention to what's really happening in the app world, so I definitely know it sucks" is also not a convincing argument.
Flight tracking, sports scores, and the like don’t strike me as new or innovative, though it’s nice that they’ve had incremental improvements. And if you have to point to an app that lets you pay for car washes with your phone as a sign of great progress in apps, well….Just looking at my phone, I give you: Duo Mobile, Parcel, Coinless, Bookends, Sports, Flightradar24, Flighty, Metropulse, United, and Amtrak. That's just a first cut. All of these are insanely useful in different ways and for different things. I haven't triple checked that they're all post 2016, but all of them have become what they are since then (eg, United and Amtrak took massive leaps in the last few years).
I think it's been said that this year's OS is going to be a sort of Snow Leopard bug-hunt. Of course they'll also be doing the whole Apple Intelligence/Siri makeover.All the other issues aside, I really hope the advancement of LLMs lets Apple focus on this stuff and burn down some outstanding bugs. Even if they don't let Opus or whatever loose on the guts of their OS, I've found it to be remarkably effective at finding random bugs that could then be actioned on by their developers once identified.