Linked by Thom Holwerda on Fri 12th Feb 2010 22:55 UTC
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Member since:
2006-01-06
Nonsense. For the iPad, the experience will be the same as the iPhone; where you have the "Managed Web"; that is, local native applications that consume content from the Web, but provide a better experience than a Web browser. Google is trying to create programming environment within Chrome OS where devs can access Web content primarily via HTML5, but also have local device access via Javascript. Spending a few minutes in Safari or Chrome browser on one of these portable devices is all that it takes to convince you that, while Google's proposed platform is more "open" (unless you consider its native OS Javascript extensions), Apple will provide a better user experience with local native apps. Apple is not really interested in marginalizing their platform with HTML5. They want to make the Web accessible, but only to the extent that it doesn't cannibalize their ecosystem.
Sun is not a consumer-focused company. They are first and foremost a workstation and server company. It's their DNA. It's why they failed.
Agree. For Sun, "the network is the computer" really meant "buy our server hardware and just use thin client software". Complete non-starter which ignored the reality of how people use portable computing devices.
Apple, Google, and Microsoft will all succeed in varying ways. Of these 3, Apple and Microsoft are the most similar: They want you to use local native apps that consume Web/cloud content. Apple wants to lock you into a closed ecosystem, which limits your choice and flexibility but offers greater security/robustness. Microsoft doesn't mind where apps come from, which provides flexibility but limits security/robustness. Google wants you to primarily use Web technologies to consume Web content, and also access some local capabilities. None of their separate strategies can possibly satisfy all broad-based market need.
If you assume a future where infinite bandwidth exists, then the differences between local and Web start to fall away, and what starts to matter is ubiquity and standards. So Google probably aligns better with the year 2030. But it's not clear whether HTML5-based apps can match the local native app experience. Google is betting on that happening. It's the only way they can continue to grow the search market; without it, Google knows that Apple and Microsoft will only benefit.