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Apple introduces the App Store Resource Center

As part of Apple's efforts to make the ins-and-outs of the App Store more clear to everyone, Apple has just Introduced the App Store Resource Center. Apple states this new site is "a single destination where you can find everything from how to prepare for submitting your app to managing your app once it been posted to the App Store."

Basically, this new site offers an easy way for developers to read over and learn the many different policies and details about the App Store. It covers app submission, the App Store approval process and managing your app details, among other things There's really not much new, but you maybe able to find stuff easier now instead of looking through large PDF App Store guides.

If you're one of those developers who feels lost around iTunes Connect, you'll probably want to look over the guides in this new site. Anyways, if you're a registered iPhone developer, check out this new site, you just might learn something, maybe.

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App Store SDK

As part of Apple's efforts to make the ins-and-outs of the App Store more clear to everyone, Apple has just Introduced the App Store...
 

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Alex Carlson

Hey, great post. We covered this a few days ago, but I edited the post to include a link to you guys, and directed our readers to this post for more info. (Its in an edit at the bottom of the page.)

http://cli.gs/zsH6QD

September 20 2009 at 6:59 AM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
facundo

The site : http://developer.apple.com/iphone/index.action is working ok, but when I try to log in it says something like the server is not responding, does anyone else having this issue?

Thanx

September 19 2009 at 3:14 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
Konstantin

Nothing spectacular, but I noticed one interesting point describing approval process. There're descriptions of approval statuses, and only one of them has this notice:
"Important: When you self-reject your binary, you lose your place in the review queue. Your binary will be placed at the end of the queue when you resubmit."

That means that all other rejected statuses don't place binary at the end of the queue.

September 19 2009 at 10:54 AM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
1 reply to Konstantin's comment
VanillaSpice

No, it doesn't. It only says what will happen when you self-reject.

They might have, for instance, said elsewhere that all rejections put you at the back of the queue, and they're merely reminding you here that that applies to self-rejections, too. Regardless of that, there is simply no information in your excerpt that indicates what happens in other cases of rejection.

c.f. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Denying_the_antecedent

September 22 2009 at 12:38 AM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
dagamer43

I want to say it really adds a bit more, but the info now included is stuff just about every developer already knew if they read any tech sites.

September 19 2009 at 10:18 AM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
1 reply to dagamer43's comment
mike

yea sure, all the bitching that was going on was about stuff that was readily available. did you think developers with bitching about anything legitimate?

this was about geeks a) trying to get paid b) trying to get free phone service

September 20 2009 at 4:21 AM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
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