MacBreak Weekly 94: SproutCore

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Daniel Eran Dilger
Leo Laporte invited me to join online luminaries Andy Ihnatko, Chris Breen and Scott Bourne to talk about the SproutCore web application framework, MobileMe, iPhone 3G data plans, Steve Jobs’ health, and more on this week’s MacBreak Weekly podcast.

MacBreak Weekly 94: SproutCore

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Myths of Snow Leopard 3: Mac Sidelined for iPhone

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Daniel Eran Dilger
Apple’s limited comments on Snow Leopard, the next version of Mac OS X due in about a year, have opened the playing field for rampant speculation. Here’s a look at a series of myths that have developed around the upcoming release. The third myth of Snow Leopard:

Apple is de-emphasizing the Mac as it centers its attention on the iPhone.

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The Street: Steve Jobs Health Fears Key to Our Stock Manipulation Game

is Jim Cramer Sick?
Daniel Eran Dilger
The Street’s Jim Cramer, looking close to imminent death as colleague Farnoosh Torabi watched in concerned horror, recently talked about Steve Jobs’ health in the context of Apple’s future viability as a company. Torabi set up a clever stock manipulation scam conversation with Cramer entitled, “Without Steve Jobs, There is No Apple,” where she introduced her boss by insisting that the iPhone 3G introduction was overshadowed by worries about Jobs’ lack of obesity. “Most of the attention right now is going on the health of the founder and the CEO of Apple!” she intoned.

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SproutCore Mailroom Managing Obama’s Presidential Campaign

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Daniel Eran Dilger
In response to my articles outlining the potential of the SproutCore framework in developing a new type of desktop class web applications, a number of critics have attacked the technology based on poking at some simple demos on the web from odd versions of Internet Explorer or the Camino browser. That forces me to point out that not only has Apple been using SproutCore to drive the slick .Mac Web Gallery for several months, but SproutIt has been using the framework in production in Mailroom, which has been used to manage email for the Obama 2008 presidential campaign.

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Talking about SproutCore on TalkingHeadTV

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Daniel Eran Dilger
I did an interview with Justin Young of TalkingHeadTV.com, where we talked about what SproutCore does and how it relates to Adobe’s Flash and Microsoft’s Silverlight. Here’s the YouTube links:

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Myths of Snow Leopard 2: 32-bit Support

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Daniel Eran Dilger
Apple’s limited comments on Snow Leopard, the next version of Mac OS X due in about a year, have opened the playing field for rampant speculation. Here’s a look at a series of myths that have developed around the upcoming release. The second myth of Snow Leopard:

Apple is dropping support for 32-bit Intel Macs because Snow Leopard is 64-bit.

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Apple’s open secret: SproutCore is Cocoa for the Web

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One of the biggest revelations at WWDC was quietly unveiled in a session on Friday morning entitled “Building Native Look-and-Feel Web Applications Using SproutCore.” While Apple maintained high security during the entire NDA-sealed WWDC session, the secret of SproutCore is out because it is an open source project and people can’t stop talking about it.

Continues: Apple’s open secret: SproutCore is Cocoa for the Web

Myths of Snow Leopard 1: PowerPC Support

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Myths of Snow Leopard: 1 PowerPC Support
Apple’s limited comments on Snow Leopard, the next version of Mac OS X due in about a year, have opened the playing field for rampant speculation. Here’s a look at a series of myths that have developed around the upcoming release. The first myth of Snow Leopard:

Apple is dropping support for PowerPC Universal Binaries, so software will dry up for users of PowerPC Macs.

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Cocoa for Windows + Flash Killer = SproutCore

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Daniel Eran Dilger
Regular readers will recall that when Safari for Windows shipped, I suggested Apple was likely looking to move its Mac OS X Cocoa development model into the Windows arena in order to broaden Cocoa’s visibility and adoption.

Over the last year, I’ve also outlined Apple’s efforts to starve Adobe’s Flash and AIR (and by extension, Microsoft’s me-too Flash plugin called Silverlight), at a time when pundits have insisted that Flash was a vital missing element on the iPhone and that Apple could/should/would be scrambling to port Flash to it. It might be a surprise to find that Apple’s air supply attack on Flash and its interest in dusting Windows with Cocoa are actually related.

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WWDC 2008: New in Mac OS X Snow Leopard

OS X Snow Leopard
Daniel Eran Dilger
Apple’s public introduction of Snow Leopard, the next version of Mac OS X, was decidedly brief at WWDC, with only passing public mention of its new feature set. That’s in part because the company is delivering something nearly unheard of in the consumer software industry: Apple is advancing a new software product that improves upon its fundamentals rather than advancing a lot of marketing features.

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