Then you have things like Docs To Go that will
support your files, so you can pick up a Word doc from Dropbox, open it and sensibly
edit it, all of which is much appreciated at a native level
without having to buy additional apps or install anything, making working on the go easy.
By submitting an entry, you: (a) irrevocably grant the Sponsor, its agents, licensees, and assigns the unconditional and perpetual (non-exclusive) right and permission to copyright, reproduce, encode, store, copy, transmit, publish, post, broadcast, display, publicly perform, adapt, modify, create derivative works of, exhibit, and otherwise use your entry as - is or as -
edited (with or
without using your name) in any media throughout the world for any purpose,
without limitation, and
without additional review, compensation, or approval from you or any other party; (b) forever waive any rights of copyrights, trademark rights, privacy rights, and any other legal or moral rights that may preclude the Sponsor's use of your entry, or require any further permission for the Sponsor to use the entry; and (c) agree not to instigate,
support, maintain, or authorize any action, claim, or lawsuit against the Sponsor on the grounds that any use of the entry, or any derivative works, infringes any of your rights as creator of the entry, including,
without limitation, copyrights, trademark rights, and moral rights.
In other words, any changes to the text will now be subject to Apple's standard App Store review process.The requirement will extend to
editing an app's
support URL or marketing URL, according to Apple's announcement posted in iTunes Connect.While this is a minor change, Apple evidently felt the need to have a little more control over information passing through the App Store
without its approval.