![]() ![]() We did not find any affordable replacement, as the cheapest solution would cost 25,000 $USD per year. Arrival on the Mac App Store was not really easy because Apple asked us to remove fetching of lyrics from LyricWiki. In addition, all the application will be optimized for Retina display of new MacBook Pro, and that was a lot of work.Īmong new features, TunesArt will be able to use the notification center found in Mountain Lion, the search window will be revamped for better performance, many UI parts will be improved and many bugs will be fixed. TunesArt version 1.6 will also be fully compatible with OS X Mountain Lion, as some issues are occurring with version 1.5.1 (mostly when you switch from one space to another one). For end-user, this does not change anything except that he feels more secure □ This part was not so easy, because we needed to test all parts of our application, in order to detect possible issues. We’re currently preparing an update, with some visible enhancements and some other invisible improvements.įirst, upcoming version will be sandboxed, as requested by Apple for any update on the Mac App Store since 1st June 2012. TunesArt did not receive any update for almost one year, but we did not give up our iTunes companion. So, we hope our customers will understand that this is not an issue, but “on-purpose”…Ĭheck our Frequently Asked Questions to download this add-on. We didn’t find any alternative, after many hours spent to discuss with Apple employees. We think this is a balanced solution: being on the Mac App Store is a chance for us, because it’s very easy to buy and update application for end-users. Hopefully, we’ve developed a small add-on that will allow you to uninstall this sort of applications, by asking your password. This is why you can see a warning message when this situation occurs. The problem is that TrashMe can’t ask for your password due to Apple restrictions. You can test by yourself: if you try to put one of those apps to the Trash, OS X will ask for your account’s password. One of these rules is about privileges: an application must not ask for user’s password in any case.īut some applications installed on your Mac have special privileges, mostly applications installed through the Mac App Store. Apple has written very restrictive rules that developers must conform to. We also receive some emails about the same “issue”, so we think it’s time to clarify this restriction a little bit more.įirst, you need to know that publishing an application on the Mac App Store is something quite difficult, especially for small developers. Many users are posting some comments on the Mac App Store about TrashMe being unable to uninstall apps. ![]()
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