Officially confirming what Dan reported earlier, Jo told Newsweek (at the bottom) that the iPhone will indeed be a closed platform. He is quoted as saying: "You don't want your phone to be an open platform.... You need it to work when you need it to work. Cingular doe 't want to see their West Coast network go down because some a lication me ed up."He also said something similar to the New York Times: "These are devices that need to work, and you can't do that if you load any software on them," he said. "That doe 't mean there's not going to be software to buy that you can load on them coming from us. It doe 't mean we have to write it all, but it mea it has to be more of a controlled environment."
I think it's interesting that Jo is sort of blaming Cingular for the restriction (though his scenario is obviously gro ly hyperbolic). Of course this simply carries over the iPod model to the iPhone, so I gue it would probably have been the case even if Cingular hadn't i isted. It doe 't mean, however, that we can't be disa ointed.
[Via iLounge via Digg and Thanks to Matt for the NYT tip]
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