Quote:
Originally Posted by natlinxz
With an attitude like that, it's hard for the technology industry to evolve. Do you remember when the iMac originally came out? It was very controversial because it lacked a Floppy Disc drive. Now, weather this was a convenience or an inconvenience is irrelevant, the point is: Apple dropped the format of the past (in this case, Flash) for the format of the future, Compact Disc (in this case, HTML5). And for those who say I'm comparing "apples to oranges", HTML5 and Flash both play games and web video. The only difference for me is that Flash sucks on Apple products, end of story.
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If I lived in a world in which floppy discs were consistently used for many things, which I did at the time? Then yeah, I'm going to want floppy support. In fact, I remember having floppy disc support in my computer towers WELL after they had been phased out.
I don't have a floppy drive in my tower now, no. I have a USB floppy drive, but not an internal floppy drive. Why? The world adapted to not need floppy drives, NOT because Apple paved a golden future for every one of us, praise be to the Apple, but because the CD tech was better and eventually reached the point where it had a big enough market share that it was profitable.
When will all the Homestar toons go to HTML5? When will Newgroiunds switch to an all-HTML5 site? When will flash all of the Flash-based menu navigation sites that litter the web completely disappear?
All of my computers support Flash
and HTML5. My browsers are ready for both types of content. Chrome OS is ready for it. Almost all other commercial tablets are ready for both types of content.
Apple is fighting the battle of "World, change to MY product's design". You generally can't get away with that, but it's Apple, so who knows? But out here, in the real world, when I go to a website and it doesn't work because there is no Flash support, that doesn't
feel like innovation. That feels like Apple locking me out of
another thing because it's not good for their bottom line.
I'm not going to buy a toaster that only toasts future bread. Future bread may be AWESOME, and there may even be a few companies making future bread. But if I go into my grocery store and the stock of future bread is intermittent and unreliable, with only promises of "big things" in the future, I'd rather have a toaster that could handle the bread I can get from my grocery store NOW.
Technology moves forward fairly naturally, as cost goes down and availability goes up. No slapping consumers on the wrist and saying "You don't want that" required.
The best place to be on either of these graphs is generally Early or Late majority. At some point along that top of the curve, the technology is heavily supported, costs and has less problems overall. If you're going to adopt the tech early, don't pretend the still-prevalent tech does not exist. The early adopters that pretend floppies didn't exist or were stupid were in some trouble when someone wanted to transfer files
via floppy, which still was the norm and had been the norm for ages. And what of people who adopted early to Betamax? To HD-DVD? To Laserdisc? To...oh, that one video format where you slid in the cartridge thing and the disc came out into the player? Whatever that was called. There was a first-generation iPhone, what happened a year later? New tech categories are at the very least risky in the short term.