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We're days away from submitting our first app to the appstore and last night I was horrified to hear that it does not work on jailbroken devices. I got a few seconds with the device and saw the OS version, and free memory available (36MB, I guess that's low).

Should I care?

Presumably jailbreak users can buy the app and write scathing reviews. If so and jailbroken iPhones are common, then the iPhoneJB becomes a de facto shadow-platform that I'm obliged to support.

EDIT

I got some ball park figures, sounds like I should care about the new de facto shadow platform. So either I can try reducing memory requirements and cross my fingers, or get out the credit card and go get me an illicit iPhone.

I'm not happy to have been put in this situation, yet another example of being left in the lurch by Apple. Thanks, guys.

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not programming related... – Mitch Wheat Aug 1 at 5:39
Apple will like you if you don't :) – Isaac Waller Aug 1 at 5:45
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very programming related. – Chacha102 Aug 1 at 5:45
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it is not programming related; it's a business question – Mitch Wheat Aug 1 at 5:46
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@Mitch Business is programming-related. – Imagist Aug 1 at 6:27
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4 Answers

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With around 2.3 million jailbroken iPhones, it is a significant portion of the market. I have a jailbroken iPhone, but most of my apps are from the App Store. I vote yes.

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This is a similar issue to what many web developers run into: should they support Internet Explorer 6? While as of this writing 14.9% of the market still uses IE6, many web developers choose not to support it because it is difficult and takes too much time. My own experience was that supporting IE6 caused 50% of my work; that's obviously not a good trade-off.

As Jergason mentioned, there are 2.3 million jailbroken iPhones. Obviously that's a large market. But compare that with the 30 million iPhones total sold as of March 2009. You could probably find better numbers to compare, but assuming those numbers are roughly accurate, less 10% of the market is jailbroken. Look at how much work, money, etc. it's going to take to support jailbroken phones. I don't know how much work it would take, but when it comes to money, my guess is that simply the cost of getting a jailbroken iPhone to test on will be more than 10% of your cost (iPhone dev tends to be a small-scale operation, but I don't know the nature of your product so I could be way off-base here).

So my vote is neither yes nor no: do the research and get more detailed stats than I've provided here. When you have your information, don't spend a larger percentage of your cost supporting a segment of the market than that segment is a percentage of the whole.

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We're a small shop, but we've been working for 5 months, so no, a 2nd hand iPhone shouldn't be more than 10% of our costs. Thanks. – Rhythmic Fistman Aug 2 at 7:03
10% of revenue, not 10% of cost. But you also need to factor in good will, word of mouth, etc. – Craig McQueen Aug 17 at 11:49
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Of course you don't have to support anyone you don't want to! Ultimately, as others have noted, it's a business decision.

In my experience, you'll spend a disproportionate amount of time supporting users with jailbroken handsets. I spent more than twenty hours tracking down one problem that only affected jailbroken phones and even then only found the solution entirely by accident.

Having said that, some of my most enthusiastic (or at least vocal!) users have jailbroken handsets.

At the time of writing, about 25% of users of my free version have a jailbroken handset and 10% for the paid version.

In the end I try to support all users but I do put a higher priority on users with vanilla handsets. I'd draw the line at users of cracked versions, but I have no reason to suspect that's the case.

Incidenally, technically you'd be in breach of your iPhone Developer Program agreement if you used a jailbroken handset. And 36Mb sounds like a lot of available memory for anything other than a 3GS.

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Thanks for the considered answer. Developers can't even "use" a JB handset? What's the clause no.? What constitutes use? Can we touch one? What if we didn't know it was JB-ed at the time? Anyway, technically we shouldn't have to support non-standard handsets, but the reality is different. – Rhythmic Fistman Aug 17 at 12:58
I can't find a publicly available link to the agreement, but the story is here: arstechnica.com/apple/news/… – Stephen Darlington Aug 17 at 19:29
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Do your market research. Do you expect to sell to alot of users with jail broken iPhones? Then you need to decide how important that revenue is to you...

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And exactly what demographic uses jailbroken iPhones? Hardened criminals and developers, I guess. Would they be interested in a music-entertainment category app? – Rhythmic Fistman Aug 1 at 5:55
Seriously, I'm more worried about the app store comments. A disgruntled jailbreak user can convince non-jailbreak users to not buy. Not sure how a market researcher would model that problem. – Rhythmic Fistman Aug 1 at 5:58
@Rhythmic Fistman: like I said, only you can decide whether it makes financial sense to YOU. – Mitch Wheat Aug 1 at 6:10

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