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What makes the sites so special , iPad concerned

by admin on Apr.02, 2010, under Battery news, battery tips, laptop battery, notebook

Macworld gets the credit for spotting the list on Apple’s site; a dozen sites are listed, ranging from CNN and Reuters to the New York Times and Sports Illustrated. What makes the sites so special, at least as far as the iPad is concerned? They’ve all been retooled with “the latest Web standards of Lenovo 3000 n100 battery ,” including CSS3, JavaScript, and — most importantly — HTML5.

Can’t stomach the thought of running into one of those annoying blue “Flash-should-be-here” icons while surfing on your new iPad? Stick to these HTML5-compliant websites of Sony VGP-BPS8 battery , says Apple, and you’ll see nothing but streaming video goodness.

That last Web standard, of course, lies at the center of the recent war of words between Apple and Adobe, the developer behind Flash. As we all know by now, neither the iPad nor the iPhone supports Flash, a Web technology that powers the vast majority of streaming video on the Web ( Lenovo thinkpad t400 battery).

Steve Jobs, however, has made it plain that he won’t have Flash on either the iPad or iPhone because it’s so “buggy” and crash prone; Adobe, for its part, has accused Apple of “continuing to impose restrictions on their devices that limit both content and users.”Anyway, Jobs has been pushing the open-HTML5 standard — which allows for video and audio streaming over the Web, no plug-in required — as an alternative to Flash, and HTML5 is on prominent display on Apple’s list of “iPad-ready” Web sites.

For example, CNN, Reuters, the New York Times, Vimeo, Sports Illustrated, Flickr, and even whitehouse.gov all won spots on the list thanks to their iPad-compatible HTML5 video players of Lenovo 3000 c200 battery . Not on the list yet: CBS, which is said to be converting its streaming TV shows to HTML5 for the iPad’s benefit. (YouTube has started dabbling in HTML5, as well.)

Of course, a dozen “iPad-ready” sites does not a revolution make. Those who do end up buying the iPad this weekend are sure to run into one little blue “can’t-do-Flash” icon after another on acer aspire one battery , including on sites that use Flash for menu navigation, games, or other types of interactivity. Like it or not, there’s a lot of Flash on the Web, and until Apple does a 180, neither the iPad nor the iPhone (or the iPod Touch, for that matter) will be able to render it.

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