More and more often we are hearing issues dealing with iPhone developers and their applications. In the past few days alone, we have seen a story where an app has been abandoned and another referring to how long it is currently taking new developers to get approved. Now this latest comes with a little disappointment.
I say that only because this app, unlike some other apps that have been released that will remain nameless, actually is trying to help children. While I will not say it should get special treatment, it just seems like it is one that should not have gotten caught in App Store approval limbo.
The app in question is the AMBER Alert app, and according to the developer it has been sitting “In Review” for “nearly a month.” Based on this delay, the developer, Jonathan Zdziarski has written an open letter (which you can read below) to Steve Jobs. This action may not see any results, but it does seem to be a new way to go. Hopefully it will work and the AMBER Alert app will soon be available.
[zdziarski.com via iPhoneWorld]
Open Letter to Apple, Inc., and Steve Jobs
To the Executive Team at Apple, and Steve Jobs,
The need to send an email such as this represents the magnitude of the problems the App Store faces, and everything that is wrong with its lengthy and ambiguous review process. The mere fact that a free utility that can quite possibly save lives cannot make it into people’s hands within a reasonable amount of time is just a highlight of the ongoing problems independent developers like myself have been experiencing with Apple for the past year.
This letter is to make you aware of an application I’ve volunteered my time to engineer with the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children – AMBER Alert. This App Store application has the potential to revolutionize how missing children are reported to law enforcement. By using the iPhone’s GPS and some geo-analytics, we’re able to build a number of automated logistics tools and quickly relay sightings to law enforcement agencies. With an audience of millions of iPhone users, the missing kids that are out there stand to gain a LOT more exposure.
Yet nearly a month has passed since my February 14th submission, and the application continues to sit “In Review”. NCMEC has adapted their infrastructure to handle these submissions and has a call center trained to respond to them, as well as their CIO, regional directors, and many others ready to devote time to making this application successful – yet this entire team continues to wait on Apple to approve this application.
The App Store review process is non-responsive to a cruel degree, and unfortunately, a month is sadly only a small amount of time compared to some of my other applications that Apple has chosen to flat out ignore for three months or more. While spending time developing commercial applications only to face Apple’s silence is frustrating, to have an application (like AMBER Alert) developed solely on a volunteer basis, and for such a good cause as finding kidnapped children – to have this non-profit application ignored is entirely insulting.
Is it the belief of many that these discriminating and opaque review processes are hurting Apple’s relationship with independent developers – a demographic that once carried Apple for many years. With the advent of the Android store, the Blackberry store, and competing iPhone application stores such as the Cydia Store, continuing to operate in this mode of cold silence will only drive away more developers.
While these matters are better left for lengthier conversations, I’m asking that you pick up the phone today and help push the AMBER Alert application through. If you had to sit and look at these kidnapped children, as I have while working on this application, you’d realize just what a depraved world we live in, and how urgent it is to have an application like this be able to get information out (and sightings back in). As a developer and a human being, I’m anxious to see this application released. If I were the parent of one of these missing children, I would be beside myself with anger over Apple’s apparent lack of interest in this application. The reprobate and fearful world these children are surviving in – if they are still surviving – may very well be prolonged because of Apple’s lack of interest in independent developers like me.
Please feel free to contact me if you’d like to discuss this. Otherwise, I hope you’ll do the right thing and light a fire under someone’s seat in the App Store. If there is any application that should be getting reviewed today, this is it. I would be glad to put all of my other application submissions on hold to see this processed as soon as possible.
Jonathan Zdziarski

March 11th, 2009 at 10:27 am
I commend Jonathan on his hard work to get this application developed. I think it is absolutely pathetic how the elitists at Apple can have such a negative and hindering effect on the great potential that applications such as this can have on the iPhone. So many things are ridiculously wrong about how Apple chooses to stall development and approval of quality applications such as Voice Turn-By-Turn navigation; true send/receive native MMS; Copy/Paste; landscape email and sms; forwarding sms messages, the list goes on and on. Thank you Jonathan for your good work and effort.