> Simply having to wait a week to get approved for the iOS App Store (and less on Android) doesn't constitute 0 control over distribution. You can still release the app to the store when you want, if you plan ahead, and pull it whenever you like. Less control, yes, but not zero.
You don't have control whether your app will be accepted into the store (like the recent bitcoin apps), you don't have control whether the content in your app will be allowed in the store (such as the many Comixology comics that where banned from being sold).
> Also, how is this different from writing a non-native app? The same rules apply to distributing web apps if you want them to be in the store.
But I don't have to put my web apps in the store at all, I just tell my users to visit a URL.
You don't have control whether your app will be accepted into the store (like the recent bitcoin apps), you don't have control whether the content in your app will be allowed in the store (such as the many Comixology comics that where banned from being sold).
> Also, how is this different from writing a non-native app? The same rules apply to distributing web apps if you want them to be in the store.
But I don't have to put my web apps in the store at all, I just tell my users to visit a URL.