<applause!> ..or, in other words, a browser Which we’ve all known about since January. Yes it is a very nice browser. Safari supports most CSS and web standards very well. It also is now on Windows…hoo-ahh! The iPhone Safari also does some nice zooming and panning and has some nice features. It might even make the iPhone for Business possible. But it is JUST a browser ……..When did Steve Jobs turn into Karl Rove? and therein lies the problem…that this message is just SPIN. The same message could have been relayed by saying this: Yes iPhone! <waits for applause?> So that is the problem here. Every religion/political party/NGO/etc has their mantras and their view of situations – and specifically how to view a bad situation. So let’s make no mistake about it.. Apple is telling all of its developers at its yearly World Wide Developers Conference, that its biggest product in 30 years will not have a dev kit for them but instead they should build webpages is a BAD situation. But now I am sitting here knowing I’ve been SPUN and as a natural reaction, I am looking at the rest of the picture and wondering what else have I got at this WWDC?
Games? So Mac is catching up to windows/Xbox/PS3 on that. That is kind of nice, kinda eh. Leopard? Yep…all of the features you knew about plus some eye candy. ZFS? Sun is on my shitlist now so no…well maybe Leopard Server, nothing new that we haven’t already seen/talked about. Safari for Windows? What’s that got to do with me? A). I don’t use Windows, B). I like Firefox better anyway. Why not build Safari on Linux? Or put the Mac OS on Windows in a Virtual Machine? .Mac is going to suck slightly less and maybe a few of you shouldn’t stop paying us for something you can get elsewhere better, cheaper, Googlier
So what am I supposed to be getting excited about again? In reality, Apple PR should really be advised not to let the SPIN cycle get out of control. Especially at the WWDC. I mean yeah, most of the people in attendance are rabid fanboys, but these particular fanboys are also smart, technical and know when they are being spun (some of them anyway). Here’s a suggestion in the hypothetical senario where this would happen again: Keep in mind that I am a huge fan of porting apps to to the web whenever it is possible and I don’t necessarily think that the iPhone being a closed platform is a bad idea. It is just insulting to be SPUN and detrimental to the rest of the message (WWDC). Let’s leave the “We are harvesting the forests” to the politicians. The good news? This is a platform is the same as the rest of the mac lineup and in a year we’ll be on a processor as fast as a current mac Mini, have quadruple the RAM and more room to maneuver. There will also be faster data speeds and a larger userbase. In the meantime use AJAX webpages to interact with this phone and its computer-like browser, that’s all we can give you at the early stage of this product’s lifecycle.