http://www.pcpro.co.uk/news/263380/palm ... o-pre.htmlI think the obvious question here is: who owns iTunes, as well as who thinks that Palm has the right to sync via it?
My answer: Apple has the ultimate right to say what can and can’t work via their software - whether it’s morally right or wrong, they are the final arbiters on the subject.
I also think the Palm are very wrong in “disguising” their hardware as iPods to trick iTunes into syncing it. That, I think, is where the wrongness is. If Palm were to connect using more legal methods - for example, writing an iTunes plug-in to connect (yes, iTunes can have plug ins), or writing their own syncing software which access the iTunes library. I’ll remind you that MarkSpace has been doing this for years, and has yet to run into any kind of trouble.
http://www.markspace.com/ - if Palm really wanted simple syncing software for their hardware, then these are clearly the guys to do it.
I’m not convinced by the arguments that Apple should allow others the right to plug into iTunes. Yes, they did it once, but that was a
very long time ago before the iPod appeared.