Yeah, that one's weak -- I wanted to say Debian, but they're not a commercial company.
As far as I'm concerned, the gold standard for developer relations, including high-dollar/enterprise customer support, (at least at a large company) is Microsoft. It would probably be politically infeasible for Apple to license MSDN though.
Which is weird, because back in the 1980s (and maybe early 1990s, still), Apple was pretty awesome for developer relations. I only faintly remember it (I had Macs from 1985 at school, and from 1990 at home, and only did the most basic of stuff with ResEdit and checked out the books from the library), but stuff like their UI/UX guidelines were way ahead of their time.
As far as I'm concerned, the gold standard for developer relations, including high-dollar/enterprise customer support, (at least at a large company) is Microsoft. It would probably be politically infeasible for Apple to license MSDN though.
Which is weird, because back in the 1980s (and maybe early 1990s, still), Apple was pretty awesome for developer relations. I only faintly remember it (I had Macs from 1985 at school, and from 1990 at home, and only did the most basic of stuff with ResEdit and checked out the books from the library), but stuff like their UI/UX guidelines were way ahead of their time.