And HEY Calendar!īut none of this even matters. And, finally, some access calendar services that are part of a larger subscription suite you purchase on the web, like Google Calendar. Some access streaming services, like Netflix. Some access consumer services, like JPMorgan. Some access enterprise services, like Salesforce. There are thousands of other apps just like this. Salesforce, JPMorgan, Netflix, and Google Calendar all greet the user with the same gate: Login with your existing account. The App Store is filled with high-profile applications that require an existing service account and simply presents a login screen when first launched. That is because users are required to login with an existing account to use the functionality. This time with our new calendar feature, HEY Calendar, which we dared make a separate app in service of users.Īfter spending 19 days to review our submission, causing us to miss a long-planned January 2nd launch date, Apple rejected our stand-alone free companion app “because it doesn’t do anything”. So now HEY is back on trial in their kangaroo court. We could have used that today!īut unfortunately there is no rule of law with the app stores, except that of the jungle, and Apple is the 800 lbs gorilla, ruling as it sees fit. If you’ve managed to overturn a rejection of your service once, they can’t come after you on the same service again later. There should at least be a standard of double jeopardy when it comes to the app store monopoly regimes.
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