Jobs Promises iPhone Will Bring Web 2.0 To Mobile

Steve Jobs today in his keynote (or is it Jobsnote) at WWDC in San Francisco talked up the iPhone as a truly mobile Web 2.0 solution.

dsc 5307 Jobs Promises iPhone Will Bring Web 2.0 To Mobile

Jobs said that the power of the “full” Safari browser on the iPhone lets developers design and use real, Web 2.0 applications like widgets.

That’s right, third-party developers will be able to make applications for the iPhone but just how easy will it be? Is this real or just more of the reality distortion field?

Jobs said that it will be easy for developers to design new applications for the iPhone. Here is a look at Jobs’ pitch:

We have been trying to come up with a solution to expand the capabilities of the iPhone so developers can write great apps for it, but keep the iPhone secure. And we’ve come up with a very. Sweet. Solution. Let me tell you about it.

An innovative new way to create applications for mobile devices… it’s all based on the fact that we have the full Safari engine in the iPhone.

And so you can write amazing Web 2.0 and AJAX apps that look and behave exactly like apps on the iPhone and these apps can integrate perfectly with iPhone services.

They can make a call, check email, look up a location on Gmaps… don’t worry about distribution, just put ‘em on an internet server. They’re easy to update, just update it on your server.

They’re secure, and they run securely sandboxed on the iPhone. And guess what, there’s no SDK you need! You’ve got everything you need if you can write modern web apps…

So, it looks like those earlier rumors about there being no GPS on the iPhone are correct. There is no mention of GPS, only of manual entry of addresses, etc.

After all this, we still don’t know much about how easy it will be to develop apps for the iPhone or just how open the developer platforms, SDKs, etc. will be… and as Jobs kept pointing out, it’s only 18 days until the iPhone arrives.

While it’s great news that there will be third-party apps on the iPhone, I remain skeptical about how “full” Safari will be on the iPhone.

We still have no idea how easy the device will be to use to surf the Web, not to mention how slow the EDGE data connection will be.

What do you think? Will the Safari browser on the iPhone offer users full access to Web 2.0 on their handsets? Or is this more of the reality distortion field at work?

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