Apple’s AppStore is certainly very popular with iPhone users, but what about the developers? A lot of people have been complaining about the pains of submitting their apps amongst other problems. Whatever the problems that developers may be facing, Apple will be looking streamyx accounts make navigating the App Store easier for them with its new App Store Resource Center. In the words of Apple, the new site is “a single destination where you can find everything from how to prepare for submitting your internet antivirus to managing your app once it’s been posted to the App Store”. Developers should find it easier to learn the many different policies and details of the App Store, including app submission, the approval process and managing their apps. If you’ve been frustrated when trying to submit your app to the AppStore before this, you’ll certainly want to check out the App Store Resource Center and see if things are any better.
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When Trk Telecom was finally able to deliver ADSL Broadband capability down here to us on the Aegean Seacoast in 2005, it came not a moment too soon Bluehyppo to stop the bleeding of our Internet phone bill, which had leaped suddenly and alarmingly in mid-summer to $150 a month for simple 56kbps dial-up service.
ADSL service came late to our Western coastal township, even later to us beach-side residents. It had arrived in Turkey in the new millennium and had been fully operational in the big cities (starting with Istanbul, Ankara, and Izmir) since 2002 -- and in most smaller West-country municipalities since 2004. But it didn't reach our minor Izmir-province municipality until August 2005.
In fact, we had installed our first Internet phone line in 1994 (a year after the commercial Internet became operational in Turkey) as a separate analog line -- so that Peri could use our first line for voice... And, back then, our dial-up usage costs had been about $20 a month including a small amount of KDV (Katma Değer Vergisi -- Value Added Tax) -- in the neighborhood of 5%, if I recall correctly.
In 1996, when we upgraded to 56kps digital dial-up service, our Internet phone bill increased to about $25. And it stayed around that level for quite awhile -- until KDV for telephone service was boosted in 2003 (coincidental with the coming to power of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan's religious-right AKP political party) to the maximum KDV tax rate of 18%.
But, when 18% wasn't enough to satisfy the new government's tax man, he invented an additional one called İV (zel İletişim Vergisi -- Special Communications Tax) which socked in at 15% right off the bat -- without much warning in 2004.
So, our once perfectly reasonable monthly Internet phone bill during 1994-2002 got bumped by 33% in 2003-4 -- not due to increased usage on our part, but due to phone bill taxes.
And there it stayed, around $35 a month, until 2005 -- when something strange began to happen with Trk Telecom reports of our Internet usage. And, our Internet bill began to climb steeply -- in clear disagreement with my own cost calculations (based on my hitherto impeccably reliable dial-up service computer logs).
Twice we contacted Trk Telecom to check our Internet line for inadvertent overcharging. Twice they checked and found 'nothing'.
And then in July 2005 the lid blew off the pot... We received a dial-up service phone bill for a whopping $150+.
That was absolutely impossible...
So, after we (grudgingly) paid the $150 bill, we lodged a complaint, and requested an investigation...
Refusal to pay a disputed phone [or electric] bill is not really an option in Turkey. If you don't pay your bill on time, they just disconnect the service -- unceremoniously and without warning. They also charge interest on your unpaid balance until you do pay -- and, of course, you have to pay extra to have the service reconnected.
And we waited to hear the result of their investigation.
It never came. The following month, as mentioned, Trk Telecom delivered the ADSL service -- and our complaint (and the details of their investigation) got lost in the shuffle.
But that's not quite the end of the story...
[Click following to access a fully illustrated HTML version of href="http://www.learningpracticalturkish.com/high-speed-internet--006-08-06.html"
target="_blank">Turkish ADSL Chronicles, Part 2 -- of ADSL modems and Ramazan Bey.]
Jim and (co-author) Perihan Masters are a husband and wife team, living on the Aegean Coast of Turkey just 50 miles south of Izmir. Jim was born in Shanghai, China -- of American military parentage. Peri was born on the Black Sea coast of Turkey near Trabzon, of Turkish military parentage...Enticed by a Financial Times advertisement, Jim joined a NATO sponsored enterprise in Ankara in 1974 where he met the beautiful and brainy Perihan, a rising young Turkish banking executive. Settled now in the heart of what was once the ancient Ionian Empire -- the couple live an idyllic life by the sea.. writing, drawing and painting, teaching English, and providing computing service support to local businesses. They also sponsor the MSNBC award-winning Learning Practical Turkish Website which has built an enthusiastic international following of devoted Turkophiles and inquisitive language students of all ages.