Apptivate Chat

For discussion about building Windows 8 apps for http://Apptivate.ms
4198d ago – Abby T. Miller
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Oct 2, 2012 17:35
Here is a good article on how to submit apps to the store in case you haven't seen blogs.msdn.com/b/windowsstore/archive/2012/02/13/…
Oct 2, 2012 17:35
@PatrickKlug This is a contest and the site was built specifically for this so it makes sense that the site not function as an avenue for feedback. I'd suggest starting a development blog and sharing your app with users on the MSDN forums as there are many Win8 devs and future users there that could provide you with feedback. Not the biggest stage for feedback but it's better than nothing.
Oct 2, 2012 17:24
@PatrickKlug Yes, good point. This is a common mistake. Also, if log in required in your app, please provide a test account so the app can be tested by the store, otherwise it will consider to be a certification error.
Oct 2, 2012 17:23
@JerryNixon I found a site that generates generic ToS and PP for sites. Could likely be altered to apply to software in general. bennadel.com/coldfusion/privacy-policy-generator.htm
Oct 2, 2012 17:23
for website privacy policy this is a tool you can use but I don't know how appropriate it is for apps. talk to a lawyer is what the answer is usually: generateprivacypolicy.com ...
Oct 2, 2012 17:12
Question about Windows 8 and the store. Is there going to be support for the open source community to create apps that live in the app store?
Oct 2, 2012 17:12
@JohnKoerner yes, of course. Many apps that are in the store already use open source components and services.
Oct 2, 2012 17:09
@sissonb A Windows 8 store style app built using HTML5, CSS3 and JavaScript, uses the same technology that a web site uses. However, a Windows 8 style app is not deployed page-by-page from a web server. Instead, it is installed locally on the user's computer. Like any native Windows application, a Windows 8 style app built using HTML has direct access to the underlying platform and is able to share information with other applications.
Oct 2, 2012 11:17
Mono is okay if you absolutely need to run a Windows app on a non-Windows system - you might be lucky and it works. But it isn't a good choice to start with. It offers about 50% the performance of a native app, comparable to JavaScript. Java is at >80% of a good native app. If only Java would look like a native app on any platform instead of an alien anywhere. It has a great toolchain.
Oct 2, 2012 10:31
How did the Windows 8 room turn into a language bashing room? :)
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