Forum Discussion
Unfortunately, I know of no iOS apps that will schedule downloads, but I do know of several apps that you can use to download them with.
Regarding iOS being somewhat 'closed'. There's basically only one integrated development environment for it: Apple's Xcode, and one specific language: Swift. Xcode is free (albeit huge - over 6GB) and you can develop things for yourself and others to test. BUT, in order to be able to distribute things you need to buy (forget how much.. think $100) a license from Apple. The license basically authenticates you with them as an authorized developer.
I have a free license where I can develop apps for myself and install them on my own device. I can even give them to people to test on their own devices. I just can't put anything up on the store for mass distro.
Bottom line: On one hand this keeps out a lot of blatant malware (although some does sneak in through ads) since it helps pay for testers prior to putting things up in the store. One the down side, it really puts a crimp on 'just throwing something out there' and seeing if it catches on, like in the old shareware days. So there's a lot less available, and a lot less overall creativity for the sake of security.
MarkJFine, does Apple exercise any kind of quality control or oversight on these apps and developers?
- MarkJFine7 years agoProfessor
More QA on the apps than the developers themselves. The apps go through rigorous testing before they're posted. this is true for the macOS app store as well as the iOS app store. Though I'm pretty sure some developers could get their hands slapped for repeated breaches and failures I don't think they have a developer rating system, if that's what you're asking.
- maratsade7 years agoDistinguished Professor IV
As long as the apps are monitored for quality, that's fine. :)
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