Apple Allows 3rd Party Web Browsers in App Store
MacRumors : Mac News and Rumors —
... ($0.99) - Web Mate simplifies browsing by queuing up all the links you click on, then allowing you to view them one by one when you're ready. - Shaking Web ($1.99) - adds a sophisticated algorithm to compensate for small hand shaking to allow for easier reading. This could open the door for mobile versions of prominent web browsers such as Opera and Firefox, though there remain other SDK restrictions that could prevent full-featured versions of those browsers from appearing. Still, Apple appears to be loosening some early restrictions they had applied to the App Store ...
Hell freezes over: Apple allows third party browsers on iPhone
The Apple Core —
... ($0.99) - Web Mate simplifies browsing by queuing up all the links you click on, then allowing you to view them one by one when you’re ready. - Shaking Web ($1.99) - adds a sophisticated algorithm to compensate for small hand shaking to allow for easier reading. MacRumors ...
Apple Approves New Browsers in App Store, As Long As They're Based On Safari [App Store]
Gizmodo —
In the last day, Apple has started approving quite a few "new" browsers in the app store, seeming to contradict their long-standing "duplication of functionality" prohibition. The catch? They're all Safari at heart. The chromeless Edge, vibration-countering Shaking Web, privacy-inclined Incognito and enhanced-tab WebMate browsers all claim functionality that you can't get with Mobile Safari, but they're all based on Safari's WebKit. In a sense, they're like browser extensions, but which can only run one at a time and as completely ...
Third Party Web Browsers Appearing in the App Store
TheAppleBlog —
What?! Apple allows 3rd party browsers into App Store!
iPhone Buzz —
Since Apple said no to Opera Mini browser because it copies a feature that the iPhone already has in place, it's a really big surprise to get noticed that Apple suddenly allows third party browsers put into the App Store. These new 'lucky' applications include: Edge Browser (free), Incognito ($1.99), WebMate:Tabbed Browser ($0.99) and Shaking Web ($1.99).
MacRumors wrote:
While Apple has made no official acknowledgements, it appears these applications were likely in a special queue ...
What?! Apple allows 3rd party browsers into App Store!
Top iPhone News —
Since Apple said no to Opera Mini browser because it copies a feature that the iPhone already has in place, it’s a really big surprise to get noticed that Apple suddenly allows third party browsers put into the App Store. These new ‘lucky’ applications include: Edge Browser (free), Incognito ($1.99), WebMate:Tabbed Browser ($0.99) and Shaking Web ($1.99).
MacRumors wrote:
While Apple has made no official acknowledgements, it appears these applications were likely in a ...
Apple Lets Alternative Browsers Onto the iPhone. Sort of!
Technologizer —
iphone4 The single worst thing about Apple’s capricious iPhone App Store policies has probably been the fact that it’s rejected some applications on the grounds that they compete with Apple’s own offerings –including third-party browsers. Now the company is approving some alternative browsers , including Edge Browser (a browser without space-hogging navigation bars), Incognito (private browsing), Shaking Web (which compensates for shaky hands by adjusting the display), and WebMate:Tabbed Browser (which queues up links in new tabs). ...
Browsing the App Store: More Ways To iSurf The Web
iSmashPhone —
... Shaking Web (US$1.99), with its "image stabilization" algorithm to combat readability due to hand shake. ...



