
Well, this is interesting. Apple has released iOS 6 beta 4, and it removes one of the staples of iOS, included since its very first release with the first iPhone: beta 4
does not include the YouTube application. YouTube is owned by Google, so that could be an explanation. However, unless Google has its own iOS YouTube application ready, iOS 6 could lead to a lot of unhappy iPhone and iPad users. The large websites with sources inside Apple are probably hard at work trying to find out what's going on here - could just be a bug, or maybe a way to gauge public response by causing news sites and blogs to post about it. Huh.
Update: thank god for sites with clout: The Verge confirms that Google is
working on a stand-alone iOS YouTube application. Good news for users, since the stock one wasn't particularly good to begin with.
Member since:
2008-07-15
Sure, if you jailbreak. Otherwise, iOS is so locked down that what Apple says is law. By your logic, Adobe could've built a Flash player for iOS as well (although I'm rather glad that didn't happen). Bottom line: Apple says no WebM, no WebM. Period. Given what an amazing job Apple have done in the past at supporting open codecs, I'd say we could see a WebM player for iOS in, I don't know, a hundred years from now.