Unlike Apple&'s iPhone App Store, developers won&'t be able to submit trial versions of applications to the company&'s upcoming Mac App Store.
Beta and demo versions won&'t be accepted either, Apple announced on its developer news site last night.
&''Your website is the best place to provide demos, trial versions, or betas of your software for customers to explore,&'' the company wrote. &''The apps you submit to be reviewed for the Mac App Store should be fully functional, retail versions of your apps.&''
It&'s a surprising move by Apple given how successful trial apps have been for the iPhone, iPod Touch, and iPad. Trial versions allow users to test out new games or apps with no commitment to purchase. They also serve as a gateway to paid apps. While it&'s not all that difficult for users to download the trial versions from a website instead, it seems like an odd choice for Apple to keep them off the Mac App Store entirely.
The extra steps of going to a website, downloading the software, and installing it, could easily keep some users from experimenting with Mac desktop apps as they have with iPhone OS apps. It seems like a key element of the app store model &8212' which offers consumers a one-stop location to find and purchase new apps. Leaving room for trial versions of apps seems like a given.
Apple announced the Mac App Store in late October at its &''Bring Back the Mac&'' event. The store will be available on the upcoming Mac OS X &''Lion&'' update, and it will also be available on the current &''Snow Leopard&'' OS by the end of January.
Via Apple Insider
Next Story: Groupon is Google&'s $6 billion Facebook hedge Previous Story: Will the rise of natural gas threaten solar and wind T. Boone Pickens &''might get his way&''
Print Email Twitter Facebook Google Buzz LinkedIn Digg StumbleUpon Reddit Delicious Google More&8230'
Companies: Apple
Companies: Apple
Devindra Hardawar is VentureBeat's lead mobile writer and East Coast correspondent. He studied philosophy at Amherst College, worked in IT support for several years, and has been writing about technology since 2004. He now lives in Brooklyn, New York. You can reach him at devindra@venturebeat.com (all story pitches should also be sent to tips@venturebeat.com), and on Twitter at @Devindra.
VentureBeat has new weekly email newsletters. Stay on top of the news, and don't miss a beat.
Comments