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Every iOS developer has been made aware of this for quite some time now. Most of us knew it was coming before it was announced because they've been doing this every year for quite some time now. The itunes connect/app approval team needs a break. They work 51 weeks out of the year, including weekends (I've had an app get approved on a Sunday). They deserve a vacation more than anyone I know.


It would be nice if you could still view existing reports, crash reports, and issue promo codes during this time period though. Those are all automated and will still function without the employees there. Last year was the first year I experienced this, and I definitely wasn't expecting the entire thing to be offline.


If you have a problem during that period, though, there'll be no one there to help you out.


By that same logic, half the Internet should just shut down on major holidays; or even simply on weekends. There was no one working at my bank to help me if I had a silly website issue yesterday, but they didn't take the site down because of that: I could still check my balance, and if I had a problem with the site I'd just have to wait until their working hours came back.


Not to mention the insane hours they work. I had apps approved well after midnight, California time.


Wouldn't that be resolved by having people work rotating shifts?


There really aren't that many skilled, mentally healthy people who actually want to work overnight/holiday shifts. It's pretty much always the guy who drew the shortest straw or desperately needs the night shift differential


I can't imagine it'd be that hard for a corporation the size and global breadth of Apple to find workers in their European, Australian, etc. offices to do "overnight" shifts during their daytimes, and I've known Jewish/Muslim/atheist/Hindu/etc. folks who love holiday pay.


Presumably they have employees working from other timezones, they can't all be in US zones... can they?


Are reviewers skilled?


I had the opportunity to talk to two ladies from the review team in person at a recent Apple event and my impression was that they really know what they're doing.


Weird given the completely ridiculous decisions that come out of that team. I wonder if they're tremendously overworked or if the skill level of their staff is wildly inconsistent.


I wonder if they have teams working elsewhere. How else can they sensibly approve apps that are available (only) in non-English languages?


Agree, and in addition if you know the URL you can still acces the iAd reports and the sales and trend web interface. Only the web app for managing existing apps or changing prices is not available.




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