It's a little-known fact that iPhone applications can be shared amongst family members or a select few trusted friends. The process is similar to that of sharing purchased songs within iTunes, and goes something like this:
- Make sure the Application you wish to share is on your computer. If you downloaded it directly to your iPhone, you must first sync with your computer to copy it there.
- On the computer which has the Application in question, open iTunes, go to Applications, find the app you wish to share, right (or control-) click it, and choose "Show in Finder."
- Copy the file shown to the second computer (i.e. the computer that syncs with the iPhone on which you'd like to share this application).
- Drag the Application file into iTunes on the second computer, then double-click it within the Applications section of iTunes.
- Give iTunes the password of the requested iTunes Store Account -- this will be the account from the first computer you originally used (in Steps #1 and #2)
- Sync the iPhone with the second computer.
That should do it. You now will have the App in question on both iPhones, and it should work perfectly. Again, this is similar to the music purchased on the iTunes store and will only work on up to 5 other computers.

Dave Hamilton
11” MacBook Air 1.6GHz dual-core Intel Core i5: $999.00 Delivered

You don’t get it, do you?
If I spent $150.00 on apps for my iPod Touch or iPhone, I CAN NOT transfer the apps to a person who buys the Touch or iPhone from me.
That’s $150 I’ve lost.
That’s $150 of value I can not use as a selling point.
That’s $150 more that the buyer would need to spend to get those same apps.
Oh, Apple claims that the ownership of this “software” can be transferred, but short of authorizing their computer on a PERMANENT basis with MY ACCOUNT and with MY PASSWORD, Apple does not provide any other means to transfer the software’s ownership.
I’ve fought Apple 3 times on this in the last 2 years, winning all three times. I have purposely bought an iPod Touch g2, $500 in software and I am now selling it for $450, software included, but the software can not be transferred. The buyer will be made fully aware of this. Then we will contact Apple to discuss this, and Apple will, once again, say “well there is no other way other than giving them your account and password to authorize their computer to use this software you bought.”
We will then begin a $500 million class action lawsuit, (lawyers are already standing by, literally) which I am confident will grow to $2 billion at the least.
But, why is the blind Media (like TMO) never noting that software can not truly be transferred yet Apple claims it can? Oh, silly me; forgot to put the word “deaf” before the phrase blind Media above; my bad.