![]() ![]() Besides, you do get something similar on iOS - it bugs you, as it should, whenever an app wants new permissions. Someone did mention "migration from previous licensing schemes", but that's about not making people pay twice for the same app, not bugging people about license changes. The only app store in the discussion that does ask you about updates by default is the MAS. Both automatically update apps, and have done for ages. WTF? iPhone and Android have almost exactly the same upgrade policy. ![]() > What I love as a consumer in my iPhone (compared to Android, etc.) is no upgrades - annoying like hell. Or,, same situation but with a $6.99 in-app-purchase.Įverything you mention is either A: still part of the MAS or B: needed by both developers and consumers. For example, by a developer who published 60+ (!) apps of similar quality. Hey, at least it's free.Īnother: seemingly dozens of poor clones of built-in apps like Preview, complete with one-star reviews. By "freeing" memory you're purging the cache and forcing the system to reload things. Macs don't need users to manually manage "free" memory. ![]() Seeing apps like repeatedly in top 10 makes me lose faith in the review process. ![]() Check out the reviews for countless "disk cleaner"-type apps. Unlike on iOS, MAS apps have a bigger responsibility with user data, since even with sandboxing you can lose files or have your data sent across the wire. But Apple could do a better job at curation here. I see MAS as a good entry point for novice Mac users. The Mac App Store is basically the antithesis of what Apple is theoretically about ("the details") while at the same time highlighting everything Apple is bad at (ahem hem >services mac app store pages)Īt least (1) has been finally fixed as of late. Its just as bad if not worse from a customer perspective. ![]()
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