In 20 years time, those of us still in tech will look back on Apple's App Store and reminisce fondly -- probably in a Top Ten list. Seriously though, we will. We'll remember it for reinvigorating the ...
After a lengthy process that had previously met with rejection, Manomio’s Commodore 64 emulator for the iPhone and iPod touch has finally been accepted by Apple. This marks the first time a ...
The Commodore 64 emulator application for iPhone was pulled from the App Store by Apple in September 2009 for leaving its BASIC interpreter intact and accessible via a backdoor hack. This week, the ...
Apple rejected a fully licensed emulator of the venerable Commodore 64 (C64) based on the SDK rules that specifically prohibit interpreted or executable code. Manomio's application, also called C64 ...
C64, a well received Commodore 64 emulator for the iPhone, has been pulled from Apple's App Store. The developer hopes it will soon return. But there was a glitch in the company's plans. When C64 was ...
UPDATE: C64 Emulator has yet again been pulled from the App Store for sneaking in an easter egg that allows the execution of code in a BASIC interpreter. See the end of the post for details. Finally, ...
Some purchasers have asserted that the C64 application is based on the Frodo emulator originally created by Christian Bauer and released under the GPL. If true, that could mean legal problems for ...
The first emulator app has appeared in the iPhone app store, the Commodore 64 Emulator iPhone App from Manomio. The Commodore 64 Emulator iPhone App was initially rejected from the App Store by Apple ...
We're always a little hesitant to get too optimistic about changes to the App Store approval process, but it looks like there's been a few hopeful changes to the way things are done in the past few ...
It’s happened again. Apple has officially rejected an app that at first blush seems harmless and fun. This time it’s a Commodore 64 emulator from Manomio that offered a realistic joystick and keyboard ...
Manomio’s C64 emulator wasn’t refused for licensing reasons. It was refused because “an Application may not itself install or launch other executable code by any means.” That means booting ROMs, which ...
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