Is it possible to have more agents in one Apple Developer program (for companies)?
There can only be one Team Agent.
Source: https://developer.apple.com/support/roles/
But you can have multiple Admins.
See also: Team Agents and Admins - Apple Developer
Related
I'm got an account for iOS Developer Program.
Can I upgrade my current account to iOS Developer Enterprise Program?
Can iOS Developer Enterprise Program allow developer to distribute the application to app store?
Can iOS Developer Enterprise Program and iOS Developer Program account join together? Or it's different account?
No, once you buy one of a certain type, it stays that type
No, only enterprise distribution is allowed for enterprise accounts
No - they must remain separate accounts
You can not upgrade your current account. You have to create a new one for enterprise.
Basically an enterprise account is used for internal purpose to distribute the build within your organisation but you can also upload a build to the AppStore. For that you have to pay $299.
No, Enterprise and Developer both are separate accounts.
For more details about Enterprise accounts: https://developer.apple.com/programs/enterprise/
No, once you buy one of a certain type, it stays that type
No, only enterprise distribution is allowed for enterprise accounts
No, they must remain separate accounts
my question is actually a little more specific than this. I was asked to develop an iPhone application for my high school. I've completed said application, but I have reached the stage of publishing the app for them to use.
My school owns the $300 Enterprise license which allows them to publish in-house applications, which is what I had planned to do.
I do not have access to this Developer Account, nor a developer account, and was wondering if someone could clarify/outline the process of compiling/signing an .ipa then distributing it in-house.
You'll need to find the person who's in charge of your school's developer program subscription. Only the "team agent" for the program can build and sign your app for distribution. If they're willing, they can also add you to their developer program team so that you can get a development certificate and access the various online documentation and other resources. You still won't be able to distribute the app by yourself, but it'll be an improvement.
The building and distribution process is described in in Apple's Tools Workflow Guide for iOS.
You have to request for the administrator "Enterprise program" add it as a member Developer.
link with every step generation:
http://www.apple.com/business/accelerator/deploy/
You'll need access to the developer account, to get the necessary certificates and mobile provisionings to publish this app, or you'll need someone else who does have that capability to get them for you.
Following Links may help you on this:
http://manuals.info.apple.com/en_US/Enterprise_Deployment_Guide.pdf
https://help.apple.com/iosdeployment-apps/#app43ad8905
iPhone Application Enterprise Distribution Process
Hope it works for you...
I'm enrolled in my company's apple developer program, but am looking to develop apps outside of work.
My partner and I plan to develop apps together and publish them to the Apple App Store, but by the looks of things, we can only do this if we are registered as a business and have business licenses etc. As this is just a small, joint venture, we have not really set ourselves up as a business.
Is there any way around this? I can enroll as an individual, but then my partner would also need to enroll, and we would only be able to publish under one of our names.
I am building an app using the apple "in-house" deployment of the enterprise program. But I want to distribute this app free of cost to few non member of enterprise. we cannot make those person an employee of the organization because of some company policy. Is this possible and is there any legal issues associated on apple side with this kind of distribution? Thanks in advance.
You'll probably need to do some digging into Apple's policy, but I'm pretty sure I read that the Enterprise Deployment method is strictly for in-house employees. In order to distribute to outside individuals, you may have to go on the App Store.
Unless you could have the company those individuals work for sign up for the Enterprise Deployment program and distribute it internally there?
To be safe, check with Apple
Some companies have both Enterprise and regular developer accounts. They use the regular developer account for giving Ad Hoc apps to "beta testers", or for submitting suitable apps to the public App store.
I am writing an iPhone apps for in-house use. There is 4 of us in the project team. We need to deploy the application to around 20 iTouch devices via ad-hoc distribution mode and there is no intention to put the application in the App store.
The question is, should I go for the Standard Individual Program or the Standard Company Program?
Note: I am not asking to choose between Standard and Enterprise. Since I only need ad-hoc distribution and the application is running on only 20 devices, I believe the standard program should be good enough for this purpose. However, for the standard program, there is option for Standard Individual Program or the Standard Company Program.
revised response:
This info is readily available on the iphone developer application page. Both accounts allow ad-hoc distribution. The enterprise program allows in-house distribution or proprietary apps for companies with 500 or more employees.
original response:
You have to go for the corporate program. It's the only one that allows you to distribute apps within an organization as far as I know. The individual account is only for apps that you intend to sell in the app store.
Review the licenses for each program with your legal team if you have one. I believe you will need the corporate one.
If the company has less than 500 people, you don't mind a slightly more difficult distribution system, and the $200 difference is really important, than register with the standard program as a company. Otherwise, sign up for the enterprise program.
You should only register as an individual if the company does not own the software being distributed and doesn't want to own the software. Which I doubt is the case.
For any business with multiple users I would recommend getting a Corporate account. That way you can have a team leader, and separate account logins for each member of the team.
For a Corporate account you will need to provide a legal contact at your company who has authority to bind your company to the terms and conditions of the Apple agreement.
Check out my post here for a bit more detail about what you have to do, and how long it takes:
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/1876333/how-long-does-it-take-to-get-an-iphone-app-into-the-app-store-closed
To clarify: the iOS Developer Enterprise Program does not require that your company has 500 employees or more. This restriction was lifted in September 2010.
To learn more check out the article "Apple iOS Enterprise Developer Program Summary" at http://www.apperian.com/technote/Apple_iOS_Enterprise_Developer_Program
Please note that access to the actual "license agreement" requires that you agree to the SDK License first (it is not shown to the public).
Here's the main differences if you get the Standard Company program (and not plain old standard program):
You get to run a team in the provisioning portal, i.e. you can invite other iOS developers to be in your team, and they can download provisioning profiles for your app, etc.
You need info like your DUNS company number and a company address
Your organization's legal entity name would be listed as the seller of your apps on the App Store (if you published there)
The first item is the most pertinent. Without a dev team, only the person signing up will have access the provisioning portal.