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No Third-party Music Apps on the iPhone?

It might stand to reason that Apple would disallow certain types of music apps to be distributed via the App Store come June, but has the iPhone maker banned all music-related apps? iTunes rivals such as Napster, Amazon and Rhapsody could logically be banned as they are direct competitors. We’re not saying that we would agree with the decision, if that is in fact the case, but you can at least rationalize the thinking. According to an article on the Inquirer yesterday however, Dr. J is said to be disallowing any and all music-related apps. Huh? The assertion was made due to the fact that third-party applications have not been given access to any iTunes functionality or components in the SDK. The article goes on to hypothesize that streaming services such as Last.fm and iLike might be banned as well do to the lack of iTunes integration. We’re not sure what one has to do with the other, but we’re calling shenanigans. Certain music services may indeed be disallowed but we have a good feeling wink, wink that there are a few music apps currently being developed by third parties that will most definitely be making their way onto the iPhone legitimately. Only time will tell, but don’t get your panties in a bunch over a ban on music apps just yet.

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6 comment(s) for this post.

  1. On Mar 20, 2008 @ 8:49 am, Glenn Said:

    That kinda makes a lot of sense. The iPhone, if anything at all, is one hell of a music phone. So its kinda spittin in apples face adding other music players

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  2. On Mar 20, 2008 @ 9:44 am, mingkee Said:

    F’ iSuck!
    iPhone is simply the worst phone in the decade
    proud to be iFree!

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  3. On Mar 20, 2008 @ 10:17 am, Dtest5477 Said:

    I agree, who the hell thought they would allow music apps? I mean did you think they would allow amazon to put an app on their to sell their own songs? Of course not, come on people.

    Although I would like an last.fm app on my iphone, i can understand apple refusal.

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  4. On Mar 20, 2008 @ 2:13 pm, Jim Said:

    Sounds kind of illegal to me. I thought iPhone had a pretty large market share and to not not allow apps that compete with Apple seems like anti-competitive behavior. If Microsoft did this they’d be fined at least a trillion $…

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  5. On Mar 20, 2008 @ 2:27 pm, Galvatron Said:

    o come on a little competition enver hut anybody fi inay thing it forces all parties to step their game up

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  6. On Mar 20, 2008 @ 4:37 pm, Eric5273 Said:

    The site seeqpod.com already has a great web-based music program that can be used from the iPhone. There is no need for a full program.

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