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Currently, smartphone app developers must support different development languages, frameworks, tools, etc., in order to deliver apps for the iPhone, Blackberry, Android, WebOS, Symbian, WinMo, etc. platforms. Modern mobile browsers would allow developers to build a single web app that would run on all of these platforms.
If the Chrome OS (and other platforms) were to support BONDI, which specifies secure JavaScript interfaces to device resources (files, cameras, accelerometers, GPS, etc.), it would be possible to develop full-featured applications that run in the browser.
A link to the BONDI website is here:
http://bondi.omtp.org
Adobe Flash has been one of the reasons the mass market would not move away from Microsoft and X86. But now that Adobe is moving away, supporting ARM and Linux, Microsoft feels threatened and have to try to force their own proprietary and bloated silverlight onto consumers. Bing is not getting more traffic, Microsoft is forcing all users of Windows OS that use Internet Explorer to search by default in Bing, obviously that brings a certain amount of users overnight to their bing search engine. But nobody is voluntarily moving over to Bing.
HTML5 will not be replacing Flash until/unless a video codec is decided on (http://is.gd/1tJud). Although Google could of course solve this for *their* browser. But that would not be a standards-based solution.
That's actually not true - IE gives you a choice on startup.
That's more true of the current Microsoft than it is of Adobe. Having been a part of the Cameron Myhrvold era of Developer Relations at Microsoft, where 3rd party developers were Windows royalty... the past 5 to 8 years for Microsoft has been all about defense. Even the fact that Google can use the word 'chrome' when it was originally a Microsoft codeword for tech that would have beaten Flash and Unity.
Now Silverlight is just like the busted strategy of competing with Apple with Video For Windows. Following the competition instead of listening to the developers.
Disregarding Flash video for the moment (which is obviously the leader now in Internet video), how often do you see Windows media formats being used compared to Quicktime formats?
You're right Walid, it's not part of a plan to end Microsoft's dominance. It's part of a plan to rid the planet of a pestilence.
he's saying it is like when the cable companies go into telephony and the phone company go into television service. it's all about keeping the competition buzy defending their turf so they are too buzy to develop into a competitor.
now is that true for google android, I'm not sure.
The simplest answer is usually the correct one, and it's likely Google has grown large enough to introduce multiple product lines, each with their own product cycles and agendas. Is Chrome meant as a distraction? Probably not, it's just growing on it's own. There is no doubt it has gained considerable market share.