Lukas Burgstaller

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Lukas Burgstaller

Lukas Burgstaller

@voidStern

App Developer. Metal Listener. PC Gamer. Works at https://t.co/4CgZQolTSe, previously https://t.co/g75meWhVrE, also makes apps at https://t.co/VDsk2gcnhi

Graz, Europe Katılım Nisan 2008
777 Takip Edilen366 Takipçiler
Lukas Burgstaller
Lukas Burgstaller@voidStern·
@gekitz I joined at the very beginning… and deleted my account a few months later, because this limited text thing is boring and obviously not going anywhere. Joined again a year later and that was 16 years ago 😂
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Edward Snowden
Edward Snowden@Snowden·
Stallman was right.
Edward Snowden tweet media
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anna
anna@meowkoteeq·
guys im sorry to break it to you but ur bosses will eventually figure this out and your bubble will burst. get a real job already :) ridiculous, utterly ridiculous
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Lukas Burgstaller
Lukas Burgstaller@voidStern·
@waragainstsleep I’m pretty sure you can buy coins, diamonds or whatever in almost all of them. In addition to the ads, of course. I don’t think ads alone bring in enough to make it worth paying for ads for the game, and they all heavily advertise for the game.
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Sebastiaan de With
Sebastiaan de With@sdw·
RIP to all those people that thought the EU would bring macOS style sideloading to iOS, I guess
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Lukas Burgstaller
Lukas Burgstaller@voidStern·
@waragainstsleep @sdw (Honestly I don’t see this happening, even with alternative App Stores. The economics are going to push any store into allowing this nonsense imho)
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Lukas Burgstaller
Lukas Burgstaller@voidStern·
@waragainstsleep @sdw They’re never going to do that, that’s the kind of stuff that brings in the revenue on mobile. But wouldn’t it be nice to have maybe another store that only offers high quality games, that are all vetted like this?
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Lukas Burgstaller
Lukas Burgstaller@voidStern·
@waragainstsleep @sdw This is the App Store brings security is complete nonsense. iOS has a pretty good - technical - security architecture, and this applies to sideloded apps as well. All App Review is checking is that the app doesn’t do payments without giving Apple a cut.
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Dan McCarthy 🗿
Dan McCarthy 🗿@waragainstsleep·
@sdw Can't help but think the EU has been conned by greedy devs and Google here. "Competition is always good [for the consumer]" is one of those "facts" that people never feel they can argue with. Streaming services are a great example that we should.
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LaurieWired
LaurieWired@lauriewired·
Can you believe we've reached a point in tech where a package named "is-even" has millions of downloads? hey guys, there is this thing called the modulus operator, and it works JUST FINE
LaurieWired tweet media
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DHH
DHH@dhh·
Apple is protecting its App Store racket with the same kind of indignant entitlement that characterized Microsoft during its darkest monopoly days. They’re in full “cut off the air supply” mode in Cupertino, pursuing Epic for a $73m legal bill in a lawsuit they partially lost. But the red midst of vindictiveness is blinding Apple’s view of history, and making them repeat the mistakes it took Microsoft two decades to undo. It’s the ultimate monopoly irony too. Apple owes its entire modern existence to the fact that the DOJ was breathing down Microsoft’s neck in the late 90s. This legal threat made Microsoft desperate to prop up a semi-credible alternative to their Windows and Office monopolies, and Apple fit the bill perfectly. A basket case of a company, with an irrelevant, shrinking marketshare, in dire need of a lifeline. So in 1997, Microsoft invested $150m into Apple, and promised to bring Office and Internet Explorer to the Mac. Back then, these were crucial monopolies without which any platform would struggle. This saved Apple, but it didn’t save Microsoft. In Redmond, they were still bent on total domination. At the height of its monopoly power over the internet, Microsoft had an incredible 94% marketshare. It used this marketshare to seriously slow down the evolution of the internet, as it continued to perceive it as a threat to the Windows and Office cash cows. And it worked. They really did slow down the evolution of the internet, and even disbanded the IE team, once total domination was assured. But Microsoft’s brutish tactics also managed to turn an entire generation of developers against them. And the bill for that didn’t come due until Windows Phone. Nobody, and I mean nobody, wanted to lift a finger to help Microsoft gain a foothold in mobile. The wounds from the late 90s and early 2000s were still fresh in many developers minds. So many cheered as Apple went from underdog, favored by developers for their embrace of Unix roots in their operating system, to the dominant player on a new platform. Microsoft has had to work hard to undo that poisoned relationship ever since, and under Satya Nadella, seems to have broadly succeeded in that mission. Microsoft is no longer developer’s enemy #1, Apple is.  Now that’s not a universal statement, just like it wasn’t for Microsoft. There are hardcore Apple stans who will defend every atrocious monopoly abuse they commit, just like there were hardcore Microsoft stans doing the same in 2000. But the vibe has swapped. I don’t know of many developers brewing a burning hatred for Microsoft these days, but I know plenty of developers who feel like that about Apple. Apple would be wise to study the long arc of Microsoft’s history. Learn that you can win the battle, say, against Epic, and end up losing the war for the hearts and minds of developers. And that while the price for that loss lags beyond the current platform, it’ll eventually come due, and they’ll rue the day they chose this wretched path.
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