Apple's list. Apple's rules. I would
think that a report from a good source on a change in what Apple
is providing that leads to a question about a replacement product,
of which there are many, would not be covered by the NDA. Getting
into the details of what exactly has changed and why and how
someone preferred the earlier software vs. the development version
would be, as would any confirmation that it was true.
I read the questions as " I an seeing reports that something is
changing, (if it does) what do I do next. If no one confirms or
denies based on inside information I would hope that we can
provide helpful advice related to a workaround in case of a
change.
On 6/25/12 11:39 AM, Shawn Geddis wrote:
On 6/25/12 10:48 AM, Rowe,
Walter wrote:
Mountain Lion features should only be
discussed on the Apple Developer Forums.
First, I applaud Walter for standing up for what is right!
Because *someone* said something that is accessible on the
internet does not indicate it becomes fair game for open
discussion of content that remains under NDA. if someone else
is violating an NDA, it does not grant immunity to everyone
else. Unless it is stated on a publicly accessible Apple
Website, it would mean it remains under NDA. Keep in mind that
even content shared during Developer Sessions at WWDC (not
including the streamed keynote) remains under NDA - https://developer.apple.com/wwdc/faq/
If there are questions or confusion on what the various NDAs
cover, I would suggest folks read them and possibly consult a
legal advisor for a clear understanding.
- Shawn
________________________________________
Shawn Geddis
Security Consulting Engineer
Apple Enterprise Division
On Jun 25, 2012, at 7:52 AM, Ron Colvin < email@hidden>
wrote:
Hopefully we don't have to take
the Government approach to leaked classified information
and can discuss things that are already in the open press.
https://www.macworld.com/article/1165465/mountain_lion_hands_on_with_mail.html
No more RSS
One thing you won't find in Mountain Lion's Mail
app—at least as it stands today—is the RSS feature.
Whereas in Lion you can subscribe to an RSS feed in
Mail in order to be alerted to, and to read, newly
published articles from your favorite websites, that
feature appears to be gone from Mail in Mountain Lion.
Mail's preferences window has been stripped of the RSS
pane, and there's no longer an Add RSS Feeds command
in Mail's File menu.
What makes this omission especially curious is that
RSS functionality also seems to be missing from Safari
in Mountain Lion. It appears that if you want to
read RSS feeds in Mountain Lion, you'll have to turn
to a third-party app—at least, if nothing changes
between now and the arrival of the final version of
this OS X update in late summer.
On 6/25/12 10:48 AM, Rowe, Walter wrote:
Mountain Lion features should only be discussed on the
Apple Developer Forums.
--
Walter Rowe, System Hosting
Enterprise Systems / OISM
email@hidden
301-975-2885
On Jun 25, 2012, at 9:32 AM, David Emery < email@hidden>
wrote:
It's my understanding Mountain
Lion Safari will no longer support RSS. Anyone have a
suggestion/recommendation for a standalone RSS reader?
(I tried Cyndicate, but it also wants to read my
inbox, which I find totally unacceptable, and it has
no obvious way to import my existing RSS URLs from
Safari.)
dave
-----
David Emery, 703 298 3473 (c) 703 272 7496 (fax)
ASA(ALT) OCSE / SoSE Directorate
--
********************************************************
Ron Colvin CISSP, CAP, CEH
Certified Security Analyst
NASA - Goddard Space Flight Center
<email@hidden>
Direct phone 301-286-2451
NASA Jabber (email@hidden) AIM rcolvin13
NASA LCS (email@hidden)
********************************************************
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