Hoping for a Web App Future

Posted by magician | Posted in Web | Posted on 02-02-2012

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If I think back to 2006/2007 I was very happy with how things were shaking out. The web was on the upswing and we were moving away from native applications. All of the great things about the web–its ubiquity, its freedom, its openness–were being harnessed to create native-like experiences that, I hoped at the time, would see us all do away with native apps. At the time, there wasn’t much (I thought) that web apps couldn’t do that we needed native apps for. How wrong I was. With the introduction of the iPhone, and subsequent smartphone releases, we’ve seen a huge shift back to native applications. Part of that is performance, right now native apps just feel better than mobile web apps, but it also came about because of just how many things native mobile apps could do. Geolocation, accelerometers, contact info–the smartphone showed how many things “apps” needed access to and for the most part those features have been exclusive to native applications. So just as the web was starting to really take off, we’ve slid back into native application territory.

It bummed me out, and still does. I thought AIR was an okay solution to the problem, but by the time AIR came around it was pretty clear that “the web” had come to mean HTML/JS, and I’m fine with that. So as PhoneGap started getting traction, and then Adobe took a major interest in the project, I was excited about the prospect of working on it as an Adobe evangelist, and more importantly, working with the teams behind it to see what else they had up their sleeves as the web moves forward.

But another side benefit is that it’s put me on what I’d consider the “right” side of the web argument. Two things got me thinking more about this. One was a very good post by a VC named Mark Suster, who while not telling his companies to focus exclusively on the web, has told them to make it a big part of what they do. So many startups nowadays are thinking completely mobile-first while ignoring the web, I’d say at their peril. When I think of my own usage, I’m still using a lot of native apps (for reasons I can’t quite figure out) but the ones I enjoy most have a web component that is well done and part of the overall experience. Yelp comes to mind. Another is Untappd. I can do almost anything I need to on the website version of Untappd so it’s not as though I’m getting a watered down experience. It more easily lets me move between contexts and devices while still using the service. I contrast that to something like Foursquare or Path. Both are mobile-centric, and with Foursquare I can’t check in because it wants to be sure that I am where I say I am (using GPS) but it still makes the web side of it less useful for me. Path is unusable when you’re not on a mobile device as far as I can tell. When I log in all I get is “download the app”. Which I hate. Mobile is clearly important but the web can’t be ignored.

Path Login

If this is what I see when I log into your site, you’re too mobile-first.

The second thing that got me thinking more about this was something Brian Leroux pointed to on the Cordova mailing list, a post by Tim Berners-Lee about Installable Web Apps. This is a model I would love to see take hold. As Tim notes, there are a few things that users need to have when they’re installing web apps, and some trust/permissions issues that need to be figured out. Right now, I think PhoneGap is closest to this model, but a huge, huge, part of me wishes PhoneGap didn’t need to exist. If we could somehow skip the native shim and just take for granted that every platform supported, and at its core used, installable web apps. Maybe something like the WebOS model. But we’re not there yet. So for now, I’m glad I get to work with PhoneGap and build apps with web technologies. Eventually though I think PhoneGap can be used as inspiration for installable web apps. This is kind of how the standards world moves, as more and more people adopt something, people find ways to bring that something back into the standards. I think some of PhoneGap’s APIs and methodologies would make a great start at the idea of installable web apps. And I think the guys behind PhoneGap will be at the forefront of making those things happen, which means Adobe is going to be a really cool place to be over the next few years. It feels like there is a lot of potential to change the world and while I miss spending time with Flash, I feel like the HTML/JS/CSS work I’ve been doing and that Adobe is investing in, will make a similar impact on the web down the road.

View full post on Digital Backcountry – Ryan Stewart’s Flash Platform Blog

Android is OS of the Future, Software Developers Say

Posted by magician | Posted in Technology | Posted on 30-09-2010

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Android is OS of the Future, Software Developers Say
Google’s Android operating system will muscle past rivals Apple and Microsoft, dominating future devices to power everything from tablet computers and smartphones to touchscreen refrigerators, according to a poll of developers published Monday.

Read more on HispanicBusiness.com

Apple patent app for solar cell on iPhone and iPod hints at future

Posted by magician | Posted in Technology | Posted on 09-06-2010

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Apple patent app for solar cell on iPhone and iPod hints at future
Patent apps from Apple are often very interesting and point to the features we might expect to find on future devices from the company. The latest Apple patent application to surface has to do with integrating solar panels onto different Apple devices like the iPod or iPhone. The patent application from Apple popped up earlier this month and had to do with embedding solar panels behind the …

Read more on SlashGear

Submit Edge – Does it change the future of your website?

Posted by magician | Posted in Web | Posted on 25-04-2010

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Search Engine Optimization has indeed become the term of the season. This would increase your popularity in online! There are lots of websites that are been hosted everywhere. In order to increase the number of visitors to your computer, it is necessary to implement search engine optimization. SubmitEdge offers services for search engine optimization and it promises to offer high traffic to your website! Having a high traffic would increase the market value of your website and offers you with lots of advantages like High PR ranking, better sales etc. There are lots of SEO firm in the market which offers these SEO services. One will have to carefully pick the company in order to get the best for the money that they have paid. The list of SEO companies is rather long and one has to be shrewd enough in building links and article submission. All these factors would promote your chances of success!

Link Building service is also an efficient skill which would require one to make use of the right opportunity. The websites to which you link must be relevant enough. For instance, building a cloth company related link to an oil company’s website would be meaningless. ‘Submit edge’ does a great job in linking your website with suitable links. This would help you a lot in bringing lots of visitors to your website and also would result in more sales! With more number of visitors to your site, you would eventually get a higher PR ranking. There are lots of special features offered by ’submit edge’ that would outweigh all other SEO companies. The company has well trained staff and they are practically experts and do all your work with great level of excellence. All submission guidelines would be followed with utmost care. The links that are provided are permanent and these are one-way links. Hence there isn’t any need for any reciprocal link. The company also offers excellent submission services and also does a good job in verification and updating of link. There are more than 8000 link to various directories. The website provides a great customer service and any query would be replied within 24 hours. One would be able to get full report on whatever details that are submitted on the website. This would provide you the ability to compare the details on your website. ‘Submit edge’ indeed does a great job in submitting your website to a director with a high PR rank. There are lots of directories and one would be able to view the full list from the website.

Each submission would cost around 8 cents and the directory submission used by ’submit edge’ is one of the most competitive in the internet. You could just pay $60 and submit your websites to nearly 750 directories. Thus you would make the most by paying a very less amount. Submit edge thus offers great directory submission service and subscribers are given chance to enter 10 unique titles in order to prevent their article to get duplicated.

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