An article posted on the
Washington
University technology group blog has revealed new details about
Apple's iPhone
developer programme.
The posting, which has since been removed, contained notes from a session at
Apple's
Worldwide
Developers Conference (WWDC) called 'Designing Web Content for the iPhone'.
The session gave web developers the specifics on the iPhone and best
practices for optimising sites for the device.
Apple has released only
limited
information about the options that developers have with the iPhone. At last
week's developer event, the company disclosed that developers will essentially
be limited to building websites.
Delegates attending the session were told that the phone will not offer Flash
or Java, the two technologies that developers commonly use for online and mobile
applications.
JavaScript, meanwhile, will be limited to five seconds of runtime, and HTML
pages will be limited to 10MB in size.
The posting also noted that no more than "eight documents" will allowed to
run at the same time, but did not clarify whether this refers to websites
accessed simultaneously or to cached pages.
Apple will also force developers to encode videos in the H.264 format, which
is also being used for the device's
built-in YouTube
player. Online video services such as YouTube have standardised on the Flash
format.
The blog entry was deleted after members of the group realised that posting
the notes online may violate the non-disclosure agreement that all WWDC a
ttendees are required to sign.
Oren Sreebny, director of the emerging technology department at Washington
University, told
vnunet.com
that the group had never intended to leak confidential information and that the
entry was taken down without any request from Apple.
"Our blog is mainly for folks here, and it is not widely read," he explained.
"We just were not thinking."
Although the entry has been removed from the site, the web page containing
the post is still accessible through
Google's
cache.
The ability to run Java and Flash on the iPhone has been a point of
speculation since Apple chief executive Steve Jobs
unveiled the
device in January.
The topic picked up steam when Jobs announced at WWDC that all third-party
applications for the iPhone would be developed
through the Safari
browser.
Ken Dulaney, vice president of mobile computing at
Gartner,
told
vnunet.com
that the decision not to support Java or Flash is merely a case of "Apple being
Apple".
"Apple is about tapping into game-changing ideas," he explained. "What
they're doing is a whole new way of developing applications, so they're not
interested in doing anything with Java."
The analyst does not see the decision having any effect on developers'
willingness to write applications for the iPhone. "Everyone is going crazy doing
whatever they can for the iPhone," he said.
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