- From: Duncan Bayne <dhgbayne@fastmail.fm>
- Date: Sun, 17 Nov 2013 14:00:25 -0800
- To: public-restrictedmedia@w3.org
http://www.zdnet.com/theyre-killing-the-pc-7000023265/ "Here's what I see happening: Amazon, Apple, Google, and Microsoft all want us to buy appliances, not PCs. An appliance is a closed box. It can only run the operating system they stick you with. It will only run the applications they approve for it. Apple and Microsoft are particularly strict about this. A corollary to this is that you must buy a new appliance every few years because the company will only support it that long. For example, you simply can't upgrade to the latest applications or operating system on older Apple or Android tablets and smartphones. With a PC, you could upgrade it, baby it, and run the newest programs and operating system for up to a decade. That isn't even an option with appliances." In a decade, the web might be the only practical way to write and 'distribute' software. That wouldn't necessarily be a bad thing (although I wouldn't have picked Javascript as the language of the Singularity if I'd a choice in the matter). But what it does mean is that we have a great responsibility to build the best Web that we can. That *should* involve rejecting as a standard any technology that is not compatible with the Open Web as currently defined by the W3C. (It *should* also involve giving access to their own data in interop-friendly formats, or allowing users to use their own data storage. But that's another battle altogether.) -- Duncan Bayne ph: +61 420817082 | web: http://duncan-bayne.github.com/ | skype: duncan_bayne I usually check my mail every 24 - 48 hours. If there's something urgent going on, please send me an SMS or call me.
Received on Sunday, 17 November 2013 22:00:47 UTC