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Mobile
Will Widgets Make The Mobile Web Better?
Apple isn't the only one banking on mobile widgets, either. Many mobile developers are betting on widgets. Nokia last fall announced widgets for the S60 platform. As for a definition of mobile widgets, Jag at Route 79 offer perhaps the best layperson's explanation I've read to date. In this post Jag explains the nature of widgets, cleverly quotes the Eurythmics, and makes the case for mobile:
Now, don't get me wrong. Apple isn't betting that the iPhone will spell the end of the browser. Quite the contrary, they're making one of the biggest pushes for the mobile browser I've seen to date by using Safari to forge a tight link between the smartphone and the Mac. However, based on what I saw today in Apple's new iPhone video, it sure looks like the iPhone relies on widgets to make the device easier to use. And if the iPhone really is this easy to use, then you can bet we're going to see more widgets soon. Earlier this year, I questioned the future of the mobile browser. Now that I think about it, I think the widget, and not the browser, could be the future of the mobile Web. A future where users download and swap widgets and use them for their core tasks, and rely on the browser for locating new information outside of those widgets or for getting tools (like new widgets). As for mobile business, widgets seem just like the solution this market has been looking for. On Tuesday this week when I was at Enterprise 2.0, everyone there was talking about how widgets will be the future of enterprise applications. If the iPhone succeeds in forging the trail, we could see a world where Web-based enterprise apps scale and interact seamlessly between desktop and smartphone. What do you think? Will the widget form the base of the mobile Web? And will the iPhone lead us to this future? « How Do IT Workers Know How To Act? | Main | Simplifying Web Searching From The Mac » |
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