| 2nd November - The group of hackers
behind the AppSnapp application released this week claim that the tool has been
downloaded over 140,000 times since the weekend. Unlike other applications
designed to get the phone to make calls on networks other than the partner carrier,
AppSnapp is a 'jailbreak' tool, which allows users to run third party applications
natively on the Apple iPhone. To date, iPhone developers have only been
able to run web-based applications on the device, promoting much activity from
the hacker community. All this is set to change next year when Apple releases
an SDK allowing native third party applications on the iPhone. The SDK
is expected to be in developers' hands in February. But it looks like there's
a considerable community that just can't wait to write apps for the iPhone. Apple
recently revealed that it has sold 1.4 million units to date, which suggests that
at least 10 per cent of those device owners were interested enough to download
AppSnapp, even if they didn't all install it. Apple recently established
an iPhone development centre to help drive legitimate development of applications.
At present, the centre only supports widgets, or web apps, but this is expected
to change ahead of the February news. Back
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