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by lstamour 1845 days ago
But you need Safari to test the extension and Safari only has these extensions on a Mac? This is Apple’s way of avoiding their store getting cluttered with extensions that haven’t been tested to work on Safari. And yes, it also encourages developers to buy Macs. It can do both…
1 comments

Have you ever looked at the Mac App Store? It is a literal dumpster fire.
Can you explain what you mean by “literal dumpster fire” because this doesn’t align with my own experience. I’ve used it for purchasing a number of apps recently and I saw nothing eyebrow-raising. So long as the app you want has been uploaded to the store, it works perfectly fine.
The App Store is OK for the apps you know are on it and you search for them directly. But the rest of the store is just junk and scams, mostly.
That’s true of pretty much any App Store that isn’t strictly invitation only. If you have an app follows Apple’s rules, it gets listed. Whereas Steam, by comparison, exercises editorial control over all of its content. The solution for a better Mac App Store would require Apple to be similarly dictatorial about content.

In that sense I agree with you; personally I think it was a mistake of Apple to have the Mac App Store so closely mirror the iOS App Store. They should have made it a more aggressively curated experience.

Could you give me an example of this please? I'd love to see what you're referring to.
Here's one article about it: https://www.howtogeek.com/281849/dont-be-fooled-the-mac-app-.... It's still pretty bad.