The iPad Paradox: A Completely Closed System Promoting Open Standards

April 5th, 2010 by Dan York

appleipad.jpgUnless you have been living under a rock or been completely offline for the past several months, you know that Saturday was Apple iPad day and, today being the first “work” day post-iPad-emergence, the news and media sites are predictably in full-on iPad fever. Apple announced that it sold over 300,000 iPads on Saturday alone, along with close to a million applications and over 250,000 ebooks. A look at Techmeme this morning at 9:05am US Eastern showed that 10 of the 14 top stories were all about the iPad. It’s hard to find a single media site that is not referencing the iPad in some way.

I haven’t bought one yet, although I have the perfect use case for it. As much as I love chasing bright, shiny objects, I’m waiting in part to see how the “1.0″ release goes – and also to find out how I can connect a webcam to it for video. That said, it’s very tempting… and since I use Macs and an iPhone, it’s a natural fit with my infrastructure.

But as a strong supporter of open standards, I also find it philosophically hard to buy a completely closed system, even one that is rather bizarrely helping promote the growth of open standards!

A COMPLETELY CLOSED SYSTEM

The reality of the iPad is that Apple chose the “iPhone model” of development versus the “MacBook model”. With a MacBook, such as the one I’m typing this on, you have a very open UNIX-based operating system that you can hack away on to your heart’s content (in the original good form of the work “hack”). You can add new software, you can install, compile, and do whatever you want with it. Sure, you get your “official” software updates from Apple, as you would from any manufacturer, but you have the freedom to do whatever you want with the system.

In contrast, no application gets on the iPhone – and now the iPad – without going through Apple. Sure, you can “jailbreak” the iPhone, and people are already reporting jailbreaking the iPad, and some small percentage of the techie audience will do that… but at the cost of losing some of the syncing with Apple… and the constant challenge of future Apple updates that may block the jailbreaks. It’s not an easy path.

Harvard professor Jonathan Zittrain hit on this in an article back on February 3 entitled “A fight over freedom at Apple’s core“:

This is the significance of the iPad. It could have been built either like a small Apple Macintosh – open to any outside software – or as a big iPhone, controlled by Apple. Apple went with the latter. Attach a keyboard to it and it could replace a PC entirely – boasting plenty of new apps, but only as Apple deems them worthy.

He goes on to note this fundamental shift:

Users no longer own or control the apps they run – they merely rent them minute by minute.

And ends with the plea:

Mr Jobs ushered in the personal computer era and now he is trying to usher it out. We should focus on preserving our freedoms, even as the devices we acquire become more attractive and easier to use

As one who believes in “The Internet Way” of distributed and decentralized applications and services, it’s hard to think of dropping $500+ on a completely closed device… even though it may be a very cool and sexy device that would be outstanding to have in our family room as an entertainment guide, web browser and so much more!

PROMOTING THE OPEN WEB

And yet.. in an incredible bit of irony, the iPad may be one of the single biggest drivers of open standards for the web. Take a look at point #2 on Apple’s technical note on “Preparing Your Web Content for iPad”:

apple-webtech.jpg

Use W3C standard web technologies instead of plug-ins.” Most importantly… no support of Adobe Flash for video – use HTML 5 instead. Now, it’s tempting to merely categorize this as a contest between two corporate giants – Apple not wanting to cater to Adobe’s desire to control all the formats people use to view online content. And undoubtedly that plays a factor here, too… but for open standards advocates, it’s truly a beautiful thing.

Take a look at Apple’s list of “iPad Ready” web sites. Here are major web content providers that have switched from Flash-based video and audio to HTML5 – and Apple invites you to add your site using the language of standards:

apple-lateststandards.jpg

Just do a Google search on “ipad HTML5″ to see a stream of other related stories. Or read the Gizmodo article from last week, “How the iPad Is Already Reshaping the Internet (Without Flash)“:

The iPad doesn’t run Flash. If your website uses Flash, it won’t play well on the iPad. Turns out, a lot of people want their sites to look pretty on the iPad. So the internet’s already starting to look different.

and:

It’s interesting, to say the least, that a device promising to be the best browsing experience—cue Scott Forestall crazy eyes— is in fact reshaping the internet. You could argue it’s for the better, moving sites away from proprietary formats and heavy, resource-sucking designs to more open standards, and more efficient layouts that are easier to use

As the article goes on to note, if you care about the market of the people viewing your site on the iPad (and, in my opinion, you’d be crazy NOT to care), you really have no choice but to look at how you can ensure your content is viewable.

YouTube, of course, has been experimenting with a HTML5 video player and you can join the beta program to try it out. Many, many others appear to be experimenting with HTML5. Some engineers have even ported the Quake II game to HTML 5. Expect much more to follow…

RESOLVING THE PARADOX

So what should an open standards advocate do?

  • Drop the $500+ on a new bright shiny toy with the knowledge that even while you are funding a company to promote a completely closed end device you are also helping promote the opening up of the web?

  • Wait and look forward to buying a more open end device – but be very glad for the open web that so many other people are buying iPads?
  • Ignore the whole topic and wonder why Apple is able to attract so much attention.

Which will you choose?

P.S. Me? Sooner or later I expect I’ll probably own one… :-)

Related posts:

  1. Using an iPad or iPhone 4 with IPv6
  2. P2P SIP – an effort to make a open standards/SIP version of Skype?
  3. Welcome to “Speaking of Standards”, a Voxeo weblog about industry standards
  4. Apple joins Oracle in the OpenJDK project to ensure open source Java for Mac OSX
  5. Video: Interview with Dan Burnett on being named 2008 Speech Luminary as “Man of Standards”

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12 Responses to “The iPad Paradox: A Completely Closed System Promoting Open Standards”

  1. voxeo Says:

    The iPad Paradox: A Completely Closed System Promoting Open Standards – http://bit.ly/90eExN

    This comment was originally posted on Twitter

  2. danyork Says:

    My long post today -> RT @voxeo: The iPad Paradox: A Completely Closed System Promoting Open Standards – http://bit.ly/90eExN

    This comment was originally posted on Twitter

  3. danyork Says:

    @ir_practice But the *device* you use to access the Internet is locked. I wrote about the paradox today: http://bit.ly/90eExN

    This comment was originally posted on Twitter

  4. danyork Says:

    @zittrain FYI, I quoted you here: RT @voxeo: The iPad Paradox: A Completely Closed System Promoting Open Standards – http://bit.ly/90eExN

    This comment was originally posted on Twitter

  5. DJ345 Says:

    RT @danyork: My long post today -> RT @voxeo: The iPad Paradox: A Completely Closed System Promoting Open Standards – http://bit.ly/9

    This comment was originally posted on Twitter

  6. danyork Says:

    @techmeme tip Speaking of Standards -> The iPad Paradox: A Completely Closed System Promoting Open Standards – http://bit.ly/90eExN

    This comment was originally posted on Twitter

  7. mjgraves Says:

    RT @danyork: My long post today -> RT @voxeo: The iPad Paradox: A Completely Closed System Promoting Open Standards – http://bit.ly/9

    This comment was originally posted on Twitter

  8. Tim Panton Says:

    It isn’t _totally_ closed.

    Apple place no restrictions on websites content or functionality – only on apps.

    As a developer I can produce a ‘test’ app for a cohort of ~ 100 users _without_ apple’s approval. Ok that costs me $99/year in membership to apple, but that isn’t absurdly expensive – Visual Studio costs at least that to keep reasonably up to date.

    I think there is a case for extending the casual distribution model so that clubs etc can distribute to members.

    As someone who regularly wastes time virus checking the family PC, I welcome the advent of ‘safe’ software with known and verified provenance.

  9. John Dowdell Says:

    Hi, this line at the Apple site seems delusional: “Use W3C standard web technologies instead of plug-ins.”

    Opening up browsers to third-party rendering engines started with Netscape 2.0, the same time JavaScript arrived, and has been specified in W3C HTML Recommendations ever since.

    The tags Apple is recommending in that document were introduced by Apple and written up by the WhatWG. Some of these tags (CANVAS, eg) are patented by Apple. Other tags (VIDEO) are implemented to conflict with the world’s most popular desktop “HTML5″ browser (Firefox) and the world’s most popular mobile “HTML5″ brower (Opera). The W3C is currently evaluating and reworking the WhatWG’s submission.

    Plug-ins are part of the spec. Apple’s tags may be integrated into future versions of the spec. Their marketing misstates reality.

    jd/adobe

  10. Dan York Says:

    @Tim – okay, I’ll grant you that if you include the developer program the iPad isn’t *totally* closed, but going through the program in order to install something is a step most people won’t take – and developer apps don’t show up in the AppStore so people can’t find them unless they know the developer. And yes, websites are open and unrestricted. The *device*, though, remains effectively locked down (except for apps made available through the dev program or if you jailbreak the device).

    @jd – Apple’s marketing would be different from reality?? Say it isn’t so! ;-)

    Sure, HTML specifications have allowed for plugins, as you note, since the very early days. But just because the spec allows a browser to use a plugin to render content doesn’t mean it makes for a great user experience. I can’t count the times I’ve gone to a site and been unable to view part of the site because I didn’t have the correct plugin – or the correct version of a plugin. Given how much audio and video are now part of our web experience, I welcome solutions that can remove the plugin hell and incorporate that functionality in the base HTML spec implemented by all browsers.

    To you comments about specific tags and conflicts with other browsers, I will admit I’m not personally up-to-date with all the specific details of HTML5 and need to learn more. Obviously having a “video” tag that doesn’t work across all the major browsers is not what the end goal should be.

    Thanks for the comments and for raising the questions.

  11. Rahulbose Says:

    Sad part is that most users don’t have a clue what they are giving up by accepting this model. You cannot do anything on the device that is not Apple approved, so they are the real owners. You are just leasing it.

  12. John Dowdell Says:

    Thanks Dan, I’d agree that a vendor could say “We want to make the experience better”… that’s always a good thing, and is pretty straightforward to compare.

    I was objecting more to the promotional line “use standards not plugins” when the plugins are demonstrably more standard than the proposed standards…. ;-)

    jd/adobe

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