Apple iAds Producer helps you produce iAds for iOS devices
We know how it is, you want to be a hotshot developer, but all that coding sounds like daunting work. Never mind, Apple's got your back with its new iAds producer, which automates all the HTML5 and CSS3 stuff into the background and leaves you to focus on the crucial task of picking out templates and components for your perfect iAd
Categories: Mobile Phone Tags: app, apple, css, entry, html5, mobileadvertising, source, template, templates, Tool, your-perfect
Netflix ported WebKit to the PS3 to enable HTML5 goodies, a dynamically updatable UI
Netflix caused a lot of head scratching in October when it started rolling out its new, disc-free Netflix experience for the PS3. Namely, different people were getting a different UI , and there didn't seem to be any rhyme or reason to the differentiation. Well, it turns out Netflix was flexing a bit of its HTML5 muscle, rapidly testing different experiences to see which ones worked best for users, all without having to push out app updates or back-end changes to accommodate its indecision
Categories: Android, Mobile Phone, Other Tags: html5, ipad, monotony, netflix, ps3, rhyme-or-reason, scattered-rapid, took-advantage
PlayOn’s web app brings Hulu and Netflix to iPod touch, iPhone
Tired of waiting around for Apple's "review process" to complete? So was PlayOn .
Categories: Mobile Phone Tags: apple, apps, hard-at-work, html5, mobile, netflix, playon, stream, streaming
Adobe decries Apple’s ‘walled garden,’ yet pledges ‘best tools’ for HTML5
Adobe CTO Kevin Lynch says Flash works just fine on the Apple iPhone, thank you very much -- and he thinks that's exactly why Apple keeps on denying it access. Speaking at the Web 2.0 Expo in San Francisco, he explained his belief that by eliminating Flash, Cupertino is forcing developers to build apps natively for iPhone OS rather than one of Adobe's cross-platform solutions, and thus creating a "walled garden" of applications that users must flock to an iDevice to be able to use. Lynch compared Apple's control over development formats to 19th century railroad lines that competed for customers by using differently sized rails, and pledged that Adobe would not be part of such a competition.
Categories: Mobile Phone Tags: apple, entry, garden, html5, iphone os, iphoneos, kevin lynch, kevinlynch, tools, walled-garden