It makes sense for Microsoft’s Xbox game streaming app itself to be held to those same standards. Many of Apple’s policies regarding its App Store make a lot of sense from the perspective of ensuring a certain baseline level of privacy, security, and quality control (they might be bad but they won’t break your phone). How is the fact that my PS4 games are not “reviewed against the same set of guidelines that are intended to protect customers and provide a fair and level playing field to developers” any any less meaningful when I access them over my home network instead of the internet? Protectionism at its finest ![]() It’s a distinction without a difference, though. MacinCloud provides managed and dedicated cloud Mac servers, hosted private cloud solutions and DevOp pipelines. Those apps go through the same approval process as other apps do (security and privacy and content and so on) but they allow users to access vast libraries of games that are not reviewed by Apple. Those apps differ from Xbox cloud gaming because they’re meant to work only over your local network (clever users can link up over the public internet without much trouble, but it’s not the intended use). ![]() Apple allows video streaming services like Netflix and Disney+, but doesn’t require their content to be individually listed in the app store or have its content approved. S., Korakis, T., Panwar, S.: Coopmac: a cooperative MAC for wireless LANs.
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