Newly-Revealed App Store Guidelines Discourage ‘Amateur Hour,’ ‘Fart Apps’

Newly-Revealed App Store Guidelines Discourage ‘Amateur Hour,’ ‘Fart Apps’ is a post from: Best Iphone Apps Review Website

Apple made two key moves on Thursday by freeing up restrictions on the use of third-party development tools on its iOS mobile devices (iPhone, iPod Touch, iPad) and also making its App Store review guidelines readily available to app developers for the first time.

By being more transparent with the review guidelines, Apple hopes to help developers potentially avoid frustration that comes when a game or app is rejected after a submission.

Among those review guidelines (obtained by Gamasutra and separately posted by Engadget [PDF]), are several notes about the newly-released Game Center, a networking service that links iOS gamers together by adding community features such as matchmaking and achievements.

The Game Center guidelines are generally common sense rules designed to protect users, the hardware and Apple’s services. Games that utilize Game Center, for instance, cannot “send unsolicited messages, or [be used] for the purpose of phishing or spamming”.

They also cannot “attempt to reverse lookup, trace, relate, associate, mine, harvest, or otherwise exploit Player IDs, alias, or other information obtained through the Game Center.”

There are also a number of ground rules related to offensive material in apps and games. For example, “‘Enemies’ within the context of a game cannot solely target a specific race, culture, a real government or corporation, or any other real entity.”

Additionally, “realistic depictions of weapons” that encourage illegal activity could also lead to an app’s rejection, and games and apps with “excessively objectionable or crude content” may be cut, as well as apps designed “primarily [to] upset or disgust users.”

The company is vague in describing where exactly it draws the line between acceptable and objectionable content. The guidelines state, “We will reject Apps for any content or behavior that we believe is over the line. What line, you ask? Well, as a Supreme Court Justice once said, ‘I’ll know it when I see it.’ And we think that you will also know it when you cross it.”

Any apps that target an individual or group with “defamatory, offensive [and] mean-spirited” content are also susceptible to rejection — although “Professional political satirists and humorists are exempt from the ban on offensive or mean-spirited commentary.”

Apple also reminded developers that a lot of kids use apps, and their parents don’t typically set content restriction parameters on their iOS devices, “So know that we’re keeping an eye out for the kids,” the company said.

And unfortunately for developers working on games and apps focusing on flatulence, Apple said plainly, “We have over 250,000 apps in the App Store. We don’t need any more Fart apps. If your app doesn’t do something useful or provide some form of lasting entertainment, it may not be accepted.”

With such a wide array of content available on the App Store, Apple is cautious of letting the quality apps become drowned out by poorly-made products. “If your App looks like it was cobbled together in a few days, or you’re trying to get your first practice App into the store to impress your friends, please brace yourself for rejection. We have lots of serious developers who don’t want their quality Apps to be surrounded by amateur hour.”

Apple said that its extensive 22-part laundry list of guidelines might make the company seem like a bunch of “control freaks,” but the statement argued, “it’s because we’re so committed to our users and making sure they have a quality experience with our products. Just like almost all of you are too.”


Expanding the Theme Review Experiment

Expanding the Theme Review Experiment is a post from: Best Iphone Apps Review Website

When I was a kid my dad used to practice his typing skills (on a real typewriter no less) with the phrase:

Now is the time for all good men to come to the aid of their country.

For some reason that has stuck with me all these years. Today I’m going to rephrase and repurpose that line:

Now is the time for great theme developers to come to the aid of their community.

The theme directory has been chugging along for more than a year now. During that time we’ve tinkered with the review process and some of the management tools, but haven’t really opened it up as much as we’d like. Time to rip off the band-aid and take some action, I’m asking for more community members to come and help with the process of reviewing themes for the directory.

Right now this is a bit like a New Year’s resolution to excercise every day, it’s what we need to do, but we’re still figuring out exactly how it will all work. And that’s part of the community involvement as well, I expect that those who come and help will also shape the process.

What’s involved in reviewing themes for the directory? There are the obvious things, you should be familiar with PHP and WordPress theme code (and the theme development checklist), with an eye for security issues. Also the ability to setup a separate install of the latest version of WordPress to test submitted themes with.

Hopefully a few people reading this right now are saying to themselves: I’d love to help, how do I to get started? Send in a subscription request to the theme-reviewers@lists.wordpress.org email list – http://lists.wordpress.org/mailman/listinfo/theme-reviewers – and we’ll get you hooked up!


WordPress 3.0 Release Candidate

WordPress 3.0 Release Candidate is a post from: Best Iphone Apps Review Website

As Matt teased earlier, the first release candidate (RC1) for WordPress 3.0 is now available. What’s an RC? An RC comes after beta and before the final launch. It means we think we’ve got everything done: all features finished, all bug squashed, and all potential issues addressed. But, then, with over 20 million people using WordPress with a wide variety of configurations and hosting setups, it’s entirely possible that we’ve missed something. So! For the brave of heart, please download the RC and test it out (but not on your live site unless you’re extra adventurous). Some things to know:

  • Custom menus are finished! Yay!
  • Multi-site is all set.
  • The look of the WordPress admin has been lightened up a little bit, so you can focus more on your content.
  • There are a ton of changes, so plugin authors, please test your plugins now, so that if there is a compatibility issue, we can figure it out before the final release.
  • Plugin and theme *users* are also encouraged to test things out. If you find problems, let your plugin/theme authors know so they can figure out the cause.
  • There are a couple of known issues.

If you are testing the RC and come across a bug, you can:

We hope you enjoy playing with the 3.0 RC as much as we’ve enjoyed making it for you. Enjoy!

Download WordPress 3.0 RC1


Lucky Seven

Lucky Seven is a post from: Best Iphone Apps Review Website

Has it really been seven years since the first release of WordPress? It seems like just yesterday we were fresh to the world, a new entrant to a market everyone said was already saturated. (As a side note, if the common perception is that a market is finished and that everything interesting has been done already, it’s probably a really good time to enter it.)

The growth over the past year has blown me away. Since our last birthday we’ve doubled theme downloads to over 10 million, and doubled plugin downloads to 60 million. Most importantly, we continued to grow the development community to 1,528 people active on Trac and 13 committers, both numbers the highest in the history of WordPress.

That’s 1,528 people pouring their hearts and souls into GPL software we all own, we all build on, we can use as we please, we can all make better. We’ve evolved from a simple script to a web platform.

We’re on the cusp of version 3.0, with a release candidate coming out any minute now.

If you’d like to celebrate WordPress’s birthday with us — tell a friend! Help them upgrade their blog or find the perfect theme. Talk about how WordPress is built by and for a community. Drop in to help test 3.0, including all the plugins you use. Write something to take advantage of the new 3.0 features, or teach your friends how to. If you buy any themes or plugins, make sure they’re GPL or compatible just like WordPress. We’ve got a long road ahead of us, it’s important that we not forget that Open Source got us this far, and is the only way we’re going to get to the next level. The whole of what we can build together is far greater than the sum of our parts. Spread the good word. :)


WordPress 3.0, Beta 2

WordPress 3.0, Beta 2 is a post from: Best Iphone Apps Review Website

Following the successful post-WordCamp San Francisco code sprint, we are now ready to release the second beta of WordPress 3.0.
Things to test:

  • Revised menu user interface
  • Changes to the WordPress exporter and importer to make it more flexible

Already have a test install that you want to switch over to the beta? Try the beta tester plugin.

Testers, don’t forget to use the wp-testers mailing list to discuss bugs you encounter.

We hope you like it! And if you don’t, well, check back when the release candidate is ready. :)

Download the WordPress 3.0 Beta 2 now!


Coming up on Beta 2: Sprint!

Coming up on Beta 2: Sprint! is a post from: Best Iphone Apps Review Website

Early next week, we’re hoping to release the 2nd beta release of WordPress 3.0 on our journey toward the final version. There are still over 200 bugs in the 3.0 milestone, and we can use all the help we can get on fixing these problems. If you’re a developer, take a look at the list of bugs that still need fixing in 3.0. Write a patch, or test and give feedback on someone else’s. The tickets around custom post types and taxonomies are especially in need of help. Every little bit helps, so if you’re a developer who’s never contributed to core before, maybe now is the right time! Check out our information on contributing to WordPress core, and head over to Trac to see if there’s a problem you might know how to fix. If you get stuck, need collaborators, or have a question about the best way to approach a fix, hop into the dev channel on IRC at irc.freenode.net, channel #wordpress-dev. Core developers will be around over the weekend working on bugs themselves, so if you’re trying to help, don’t be afraid to ask questions. With your help, maybe by Monday we can knock the bug count down to half of what it is right now. How great would that be? (Answer: pretty great)

The sprint will go full force until Monday afternoon, when the lead developers and core committers will all stop to take a breath and look at the remaining bug reports to see how we did over the weekend, so don’t wait! And thanks!


Unity Update Includes iPad Support, Powers Several iPad Launch Games

Unity Update Includes iPad Support, Powers Several iPad Launch Games is a post from: Best Iphone Apps Review Website

unityThe latest version of Unity Technologies’ popular Unity development environment includes Apple iPad support, and the company said today its software is already in use in more than 15 iPad games.

All iPhone licenses of Unity, including Unity iPhone Basic and Unity iPhone Advanced, will now support iPad when upgraded to version 1.7 of the engine.

Along with that free upgrade comes a software emulator for developers who do not yet own iPad hardware, and tools to allow simplified multiplatform development for iPhone, iPod Touch, and iPad.

Although Unity says some 15 iPad games currently use Unity, that number is likely to grow quickly; developers have employed the engine for more than 600 iPhone games to date.

“Getting Monster Ball onto the iPad was literally just a matter of setting up a few player preference parameters in Unity and hitting build,” said Thomas Hentschel Lund, whose port of the PC and iPhone game Monster Ball was built with Unity. “The Unity GUI system already took care of aspect ratio changes, so the iPad port was simple, pain free.”

Seweryn Panczyniak of Infinite Dreams, which has released three iPad games so far, said his studio was able to use Unity to “get our games submitted and accepted to the iPad App Store without ever seeing hardware.”

[This news item was written by Chris Remo and originally appeared at FingerGaming sister site Gamasutra.]


WordPress 3.0, Beta 1

WordPress 3.0, Beta 1 is a post from: Best Iphone Apps Review Website

Remember when I posted earlier about the Twitter account, and I said that hopefully you’d find out later today what has been keeping us all so busy? Beta testers, this is your moment: the WordPress 3.0 Beta 1 has arrived!

This is an early beta. This means there are a few things we’re still finishing. We wanted to get people testing it this weekend, so we’re releasing it now rather than waiting another week until everything is finalized and polished. There’s a ton of stuff going on in 3.0, so this time we’re giving you a list of things to check out, so that we can make sure people are testing all the things that need it.

You Should Know:

  • The custom menus system (Appearance > Menus) is not quite finished. In Beta 2, the layout will be different and a bunch of the functionality will be improved, but we didn’t want to hold things up for this one screen. You can play with making custom menus, and report bugs if you find them, but this is not how the final screen will look/work, so don’t get attached to it.
  • The merge! Yes, WordPress and WordPress MU have merged. This does not mean that you can suddenly start adding a bunch of new blogs from within your regular WordPress Dashboard. If you’re interested in testing the Super Admin stuff associated with multiple sites, you’ll need some simple directions to get started.
  • We’re still fiddling with a few small things in the UI, as we were focused on getting the more function-oriented code finished first.

Things to test:

  • Play with the new default theme, Twenty Ten, including the custom background and header options.
  • Custom Post Type functionality has been beefed up. It’s really easy to add new types, so do that and see how it looks!
  • WordPress MU users should test the multiple sites functionality to make sure nothing broke during the merge.

Already have a test install that you want to switch over to the beta? Try the beta tester plugin.

Testers, don’t forget to use the wp-testers mailing list to discuss bugs you encounter.

We hope you like it! And if you don’t, well, check back when beta 2 is ready. :)

Download the WordPress 3.0 Beta 1 now!