 "Man I love HTML5, but that Flash really gives me a headache!" "Me too, Steve, oh my gosh!!" (Source: Coder Log)
Microsoft also supports use of proprietary video codec -- h.264
Proponents
of HTML5, a hot new web standard that adds video and audio
capabilities to the HTML stable, say that it is essential to free the
web from the proprietary clutches of Adobe, maker of
Flash. Critics says
that it's just a pretty box for another proprietary offering.
They point out that while HTML5 as an open standard could support
open video standards like Ogg Theora, all the industry' major players
have embraced h.264 -- a proprietary video codec -- as the future of
HTML5, essentially killing the hopes of widespread support or
adoption of an open codec.
Apple is a big
fan of h.264 and a big fan of HTML5. It doesn't think
much of Adobe, though.
Perhaps a more important question,
though, is where does Microsoft, who holds more than 90 percent of
the operating system market, stand on this issue?
Interestingly,
in a blog
to web developers, Microsoft's General Manager for Internet
Explorer, Dean Hachamovitch agrees with Apple's assessment. He
states that HTML5 is the "future of the web". He then
proceeds to toss dirt at Adobe, commenting that their "reliability,
security, and performance" haven't been so great.
He then
softens the blow a bit, remarking that Flash is important to "a
good consumer experience on today's web" -- but only because
there's not many alternatives widely available currently (most users
use Internet Explorer, which doesn't currently support
HTML5).
Interestingly, in the talk the Microsoft exec totally
ignores Microsoft's own proprietary plug-in Silverlight that it's
long been trying to peddle.
Microsoft and Apple agreeing on
HTML5? Microsoft following
"Apple's line" with the Windows Phone 7 smart
phone operating system? Windows 7 being fully
supported on Boot Camp? You'd think that Microsoft and
Apple were old buddies, not bitter rivals. What's the world
coming to?
"Well, we didn't have anyone in line that got shot waiting for our system." -- Nintendo of America Vice President Perrin Kaplan
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