He's not saying it's Apple's term exclusively, only that Apple prefers to call it Golden Master (GM) instead of Release To Market (RTM). It's not a copyrighted term by any means.
I'm actually really curious as to why people are down-voting me so much. Did I cross some invisible line? Are people interpreting my comments as some sort of attack or aggression?
I just made the observation that it seems misleading to call this "Apple's term" since they are not the only ones that use it. Note, that I'm not claiming that anyone is lying or trying to be intentionally deceptive. I'm not making some sort of "No! Apple didn't invent the term! They are non-innovators that steal everything!" comment. I'm just stating that it is a widely used term in the industry, and that calling it "Apple's term" might lead people who have never heard the term before to attribute it as some sort of Apple-specific jargon. Rather than not contributing to the conversation in a meaningful way by just down-voting the parent because I think that he/she is wrong, I just posted a minor correction in the interests of correctness/completeness.
[I can't even believe that I need to specify these things in such excruciating detail lest someone on HN feels that I'm being an asshole by trying to attribute my emotional state to a block of text rather than just reading it for what it is. Really, HN? I thought that we were better than this.]
(Meta comment, only because you asked for it at length) To my mind, you're being needlessly pedantic and argumentative. It is Apple's choice of term. Why the comment, "Why Apple's?"? Isn't it obvious that the comment was responding to a question about Apple? It seems like a needless attack on the author, who was providing useful information.
If you'd left the comment with just the interesting part, "I've heard that used with respect to PC games too," you would probably have stayed at 1, possibly gone up to 2.
Because you asked: I did not initially downvote your comment. However, as the asker of the question, I understood the phrase "Apple's term for RTM" was just a compact way of saying, "the term used by Apple for the concept some others call RTM". I did not detect any implication in that wording that "Golden Master" was uniquely or primarily or even originally Apple's term.
But you read those more specific implications into the statement. Out of two ways to read the answer, you chose the less-charitable interpretation: that the writer was making a stronger claim, and misleading people. In that sense, I can understand downvotes as trying to send the message: read charitably, assume the best-possible-interpretation of comments, and save your corrections/clarifications for things that are wrong under all interpretations, not just one strict interpretation. Otherwise we get crazy meta-tangents like this.
Finally, though, the 'dispute' (such as there is one) motivated me to actually read the Wikipedia article and Google ["golden master"] on both the web and old Usenet postings. It turns out the phrase is overwhelmingly associated with Apple, and perhaps Apple was the first to use exactly that term for a software release, in the late 80s. So the implication that it is an Apple-originated term may be appropriate, despite you having heard the term in other software contexts.
the video is titled "iPhone 3GS 4.0 GM Jailbreak" - I don't think the guy filming is actually trying to conceal any information. The guy who posted the story did, however, jump the gun and talk about the iPhone 4 when he should be talking about iOS 4.
This is a very deceptive title. The "Dev Team" -- the guys who do the iPhone cracks like redsn0w, etc. -- often crack prelease versions of iPhone OS updates well before they go final, but keep the cracks private to prevent Apple from "prematurely" patching them so they can be used when the final (or GM) version is released. This crack was almost certainly not found in the last 24 hours.
"..the iphone 4 or known as iOS4 hits the market.." However, I should add that to the title.. which I will do now.
As for crack in 24 hours, its more about the speed of a successful crack, not about a release version. So you know its not final. Here is where I got the info..
http://www.redmondpie.com/jailbreak-ios-4-iphone-3gs-with-pw...
20 comments
[ 4.9 ms ] story [ 55.4 ms ] threadhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Golden_master
I just made the observation that it seems misleading to call this "Apple's term" since they are not the only ones that use it. Note, that I'm not claiming that anyone is lying or trying to be intentionally deceptive. I'm not making some sort of "No! Apple didn't invent the term! They are non-innovators that steal everything!" comment. I'm just stating that it is a widely used term in the industry, and that calling it "Apple's term" might lead people who have never heard the term before to attribute it as some sort of Apple-specific jargon. Rather than not contributing to the conversation in a meaningful way by just down-voting the parent because I think that he/she is wrong, I just posted a minor correction in the interests of correctness/completeness.
[I can't even believe that I need to specify these things in such excruciating detail lest someone on HN feels that I'm being an asshole by trying to attribute my emotional state to a block of text rather than just reading it for what it is. Really, HN? I thought that we were better than this.]
If you'd left the comment with just the interesting part, "I've heard that used with respect to PC games too," you would probably have stayed at 1, possibly gone up to 2.
But you read those more specific implications into the statement. Out of two ways to read the answer, you chose the less-charitable interpretation: that the writer was making a stronger claim, and misleading people. In that sense, I can understand downvotes as trying to send the message: read charitably, assume the best-possible-interpretation of comments, and save your corrections/clarifications for things that are wrong under all interpretations, not just one strict interpretation. Otherwise we get crazy meta-tangents like this.
Finally, though, the 'dispute' (such as there is one) motivated me to actually read the Wikipedia article and Google ["golden master"] on both the web and old Usenet postings. It turns out the phrase is overwhelmingly associated with Apple, and perhaps Apple was the first to use exactly that term for a software release, in the late 80s. So the implication that it is an Apple-originated term may be appropriate, despite you having heard the term in other software contexts.
I speak English. It's my language. I certainly don't claim any ownership.
(I do find it a bit odd that I have to explain this...)
The fact that the phone isn't shown, and he's on a canadian carrier doesn't help the case either.
http://wikee.iphwn.org/howto:rsbeta
Best to hold of until they are updated.
That said, I love iOS 4. Pretty rad.