Linked by Thom Holwerda on Fri 4th Jun 2010 22:36 UTC
Thread beginning with comment 428584
To view parent comment, click here.
To read all comments associated with this story, please click here.
To view parent comment, click here.
To read all comments associated with this story, please click here.
I disagree.
Webkits performance results in a superior user experience over other browsers. The last thing Apple would want is for their competitors to be apple to provide comparable performance, it is just something apple has to live with.
LLVM and CLANG began as university research projects, had they originated with apple they might note be open source.
Even if they had originated at apple, they do not provide any benefit that is visible to the end-user, so from the Apple perspective they don't lose anything by sharing the source code.
Webkits performance results in a superior user experience over other browsers. The last thing Apple would want is for their competitors to be apple to provide comparable performance, it is just something apple has to live with.
LLVM and CLANG began as university research projects, had they originated with apple they might note be open source.
Even if they had originated at apple, they do not provide any benefit that is visible to the end-user, so from the Apple perspective they don't lose anything by sharing the source code.
Exactly. An open-source software which originated with Apple still remains to be seen. On the other hand, things like the App store...
Edited 2010-06-07 14:16 UTC




Member since:
2009-07-08
I disagree.
Webkits performance results in a superior user experience over other browsers. The last thing Apple would want is for their competitors to be apple to provide comparable performance, it is just something apple has to live with.
LLVM and CLANG began as university research projects, had they originated with apple they might note be open source.
Even if they had originated at apple, they do not provide any benefit that is visible to the end-user, so from the Apple perspective they don't lose anything by sharing the source code.