Following Apple on the road to rich web apps

June 15, 2008 · Print This Article

Roughly Drafted has an interesting (and long) write-up that discusses Apple, Adobe, Google and Microsoft, and their different approaches to developing rich applications for the web. The spread is very readable for a non-technical audience, and well-researched, too.

The exposition contrasts Apple’s mature development tools and platform frameworks with Google’s new open-source tools (like Google Gears). Further, it discusses closed frameworks like Adobe Flash and Microsoft Silverlight, and why Apple is ignoring those in favor of open-source, standards-based development for both apple.com and support for the iPhone.

Then it gets good. Daniel Eran Dilger writes about Charles Jolley’s SproutCore, a JavaScript framework that Apple has adopted for its own rich web apps,

based on a Cocoa-like model-view-controller foundation with bindings, key value observing, and view controls. Think JavaScript on Rails. SproutCore bares its teeth at Adobe AIR, all ready to show off in Apple’s upcoming release of Mobile Me.

“That makes SproutCore a light Cocoa alternative for deploying web apps that look and feel like Mac OS X desktop apps,” Dilger writes.

It’s a good read for a Sunday afternoon, and will get you thinking about the kinds of apps that you can build (more easily than ever) for the web. whether you enjoyed Brett’s earlier video about 280 North, you’re certain to love that.

Thanks, William!

[Source] Robert Palmer

Share and Enjoy: These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages.
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Netvouz
  • DZone
  • ThisNext
  • MisterWong
  • Wists

Comments

Got something to say?