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#20
Originally Posted by Laughing Man View Post
When I wrote my above post there was two methods of open and closed i referenced. The first we think of is like maemo versus iPhone. Windows versus Linux. The second is Windows based computers versus Apple's Macs. Where both are considered closed if you use Linux but you can use Windows on more computers than you can OSX.

What is the benefit of the latter? Simple a bigger audience. You can make X dollars given a deal with Apple with the Y number of iPhone users. Or X dollars given the userbase of Y number of whatever OS which is found on alot more phones.

Right now it's in Apple's court but if it's anything like the PC market an "open" competitor that allows their OS to be used on more types of devices is going have more of a userbase, hence a bigger market to sell too. Right now all of Apple's competitors are still growing (Android being slowly adopted for more and more phones) or like Windows Mobile who have been slacking till Apple came on the scene.
The first one is opensource vs closed source, which refers to the (source) code licensing schemes. But I don't know about linux anymore these days. They're incorporating more and more non gpl stuffs for practicaility, no? I know the % is still very small, but still.

The second one (ms vs apple) would have to do with the licensing agreement of (both closed sourced commercial) operating systems and business model of Microsoft's Windows vs Apple's OSX... where Microsoft sells the windows OS to be run on any of its (technically) supported hardware, and Apple ties the sales of OSX to an 'apple branded hardware', correct?

For someone making business decisions (heads of software developer companies), the above factors should (generally) have lesser priority than where the optimal potential income lies, no? It is, after all, a business enterprise. I think Apple has hit a home run with its AppStore's software distribution model, giving great benefit to the users, the developers and right in the middle, to themselves.

I believe they will be trying to put all their other platforms through something similar (selling apps for their desktop and notebooks through iTunes?? And defintely their future tablet product) and other competing companies will try to replicate it also.