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by RKearney 2761 days ago
> This provides no basis for comparison because the App Store has been the only way to install apps on iOS

This has never been the case. You’ve always been able to side load apps that are either signed by an Enterprise code signing cert (used to be $300/yr), or your own developer code signing certificate ($99/yr). The former allowed for redistribution outside of the App Store.

1 comments

Neither of those methods permits the general public to install the app.
They absolutely can and absolutely did back in the day. Now it’s even easier because you can load apps on to your own device for free via Xcode.

Anyone who claims Apple prevented side loading clearly never bothered to research that claim.

Good, imo.
Okay, I used to be an iOS user, I'm not rich, and blowing $99 per year to sign apps is a lot of money for something that should be free. What if I'm just a normal techie who wants to use software that Apple doesn't like? Sure, bury sideloading in the settings or make it only able to be activated from a computer, but charging that much money for the privilege of loading software is ridiculous.
You can sign and run apps on your own device for free now. You no longer have to pay $99.
You can, but you have to reinstall them once a week, AFAIK.
> ...for something that should be free

What reason should it be for?

The reason that my devices belong to me.
The devices do, the software doesn’t.