Or another example with HTML5 and/or Javascript taking over from Flash. Which is an application based technology that showed how a closed system could present information in new and dynamic ways now with these technologies becoming part of the open-framework of the web. On the iPhone you've got Google's own CSS/Javascript/html5 driven web pages for Youtube, Calendar, Mail, etc which outstrip the functionality of the closed app which Apple provides... The facade is already cracking. Sure companies like apps. But ultimately, wouldn't companies want to create something that didn't only work on a set number of devices, but on everything?
Recently O2 Broadband, here in the UK, changed the definition of unlimited to mean 40GB however they still market and sell their plan as unlimited. Of course they didn't actually inform the customers when they redefined it, they simply started throttling and threatening disconnects to customers who purchased unlimited plans and used them as normal. After hundreds of complaints due to the threats of disconnect with no recourse they finally, on a users forum, presented their new definition of unlimited though finding that anywhere connected to their sales and marketing is not likely any time soon. For more info:
On the post: Reports Of The Web's Death Are Greatly Exaggerated Through Lies, Damn Lies & Statistics
Apps...
Long live the web.
On the post: Why Aren't More Companies Sued For Bogus 'Unlimited' Service Claims?
O2 does the same thing...
http://forum.o2.co.uk/viewtopic.php?t=44553&postdays=0&postorder=asc&start=0&am p;sid=9afa6945a3420c74433e7bd5ad7cbc92
Next >>