mikelove said:
sui.generis - if Android offered the ability to easily develop a GUI-based application entirely in native C/C++ code then yes, I think there'd almost certainly be a Pleco port then. I still don't like the platform or the company behind it that much - the UI feels inelegant and hacked-together even in the official / built-in apps, and Google has way more power than any company can be trusted with - but business is business, and with full native development support and the commensurate improvements in development time / lack-of-frustration I don't think I'd have sufficient grounds to keep saying no.
(I still don't get why Apple is so evil - what's the worst they can do, force you to go to a website to download pornography instead of getting it an app? Google delisting your company in their search results is basically a corporate death sentence)
Good to hear.
Apple isn't evil, but they consistently limit feature sets to the lowest common denominator and engage in opaque anti-competitive behavior. Apple isn't about hardware anymore really -- they're about content. They learned a lot about mobile profits with iTunes (they exploited DRM to gain market dominance and then once they had all the benefit they could, they proclaimed freedom from DRM and took credit for doing so. Now they've buttressed an anti-ebook coalition of publishers who they'll be screwing a few years from now so they could undermine Amazon's pro consumer stance in the short term...and on and on. It's fair hard ball, but why would I want any part of it?), and the iPhone and iPad are salesmen for their real products. Their motivation is the biggest problem with Apple: they feel they need to lock people in to their system and they've chosen to do so by locking competitors (like Adobe) out rather than by outperforming them. This doesn't disqualify them as a good platform, just as a platform for me.
Google does have more power than Apple, and I'm sure they've abused it before (see google restricts cougars) and will again. Yet the overall policies of the company are to bring a feature rich enviornment (even features Zunie MS engineers will tell us that people just don't use) to the table so I can do whatever I want with my mobile. As to delisting, Google is fairly open about their policies (transparent, not opaque), and has been extremely willing to engage and correct mistakes. They've never been I've never seen a company Google's size be so responsive to their constituents. Yesterday's pacman doodle pissed people off because it autoplayed and blared the pacman music over their speakers. They complained, within
hours Google fixed it. Corporations that size filter complaints so much they cease to exist long before they make it to someone who can fix the problem -- but same day service? No frakking way. Google's motivation and their consistent plans to pursue that motivation, however, is most encouraging. Their product is ad space, period. Don't want to use google services? That's okay (
usually :wink: ), their ads are everywhere. Even their content competitors can use them. Google tries to enhance Android with Google product association, but they don't block competition to their services. Google bought Android to make certain the mobile internet didn't get proprietized or stripped down by a wave of increasingly controlled mobile environments that would ultimately be able to cut out their ad products (mostly to protect themselves from MS hegemony at the time). They're just as soulless as Apple is, but at the end of the day, I like their policies, their way of achieving massive wealth and power more than Apple's. Google wins even when their mobile competitors succeed. But a strong Android platform helps ensure that their mobile competitors don't get too far from providing strong mobile web experiences.
I don't need anyone to like Google because I do, and I recommend iPhones to people all the time when it suits their needs (typically when they have few needs and want a nice clean simple experience). Android will suit my needs better (winmo 6.1 does today, garnet did not that long ago.). I'm glad Apple has worked out well for Pleco, but I'd rather hold on to antiquated hardware to keep Pleco than subject my mobile experience to Apple policies. I'm also glad they now have a real app centric competitor. 10 to 1 Opera Mini never would have been approved if Apple weren't facing stiff future competition. And neither MS nor HPalm (nor BB and Symbian for that matter -- they're playing in a different space) were going to threaten Apple's position enough to keep them honest. For that matter, I'm glad Google will have stiff competition too. It will keep them honest as well. 10 years down the road, when Google is "evil" (when their policies have turned anti-competitive) and Apple has returned to their roots as the freedom machine to take advantage of Google missteps, I'll be begging you to support Apple while ivy league mike defends Google and can't possibly understand why anyone would want to use anything else.
And if you fell asleep half way through that, you have only yourself to blame. You brought it up and essentially insinuated (again) I am/other Android pushers are mindlessly anti-Apple and that's the only reason to push for an Android version. I don't take it personally, but
I felt compelled to correct the record. What else could I do? LEAVE?? Then you'd have kept being wrong!