Things Apple killed today

Petri

Senior Insider
With the introduction of OS X Lion and the Mac App Store today, Apple set the path to a future full of changes. In the process, they’ve killed a few things.

Let’s take a look.

“Applications”

Wait, what? Apple didn’t kill applications.

Actually, yes. With the Mac App Store, Apple is putting the term “application” away – it’s going to be an “app” invasion all over again. Whether this means we’ll have to see fart apps and Doodle Jump on the desktop is still unknown.

Many developers will keep on distributing applications out of the Mac App Store for a long time, though. It’s just that most consumers and new Mac users won’t know about that. They’ll get used to finding “apps” in a single, useful location.

Sparkle

Sparkle is an update framework used by Mac developers to notify users of available updates for an application. With the Mac App Store, there’s no need for it anymore. But of course, developers distributing “applications” out of the App Store will rely on Sparkle for years to come.

iSight

If you listened to the Stevenote carefully, you may have noticed they referred to the iSight as “FaceTime camera”. Apple’s website says the same. It’s been a great run, iSight.

iChat

Well, if you think about it: you’re going to have to use a Facetime camera for your iChat video sessions. So it makes perfect sense for Apple to fully integrate iChat into FaceTime in the future, we just didn’t see it today. So let’s say it’s “partially dead”.

Bodega

Bodega had a great run as well. It’s an independent “App Store” for Mac apps that has been around for some months now, but it won’t stand any chance against Apple’s own Mac App Store. Sadly, as it was (is) a great project.

Hard Drives

Because it’s SSD all the way on the new Airs. It was about time to kill that old clicking noise.

DVD Install Disk

The new MacBook Air comes with a tiny and elegant software reinstall drive. Plug the stick in, your OS is brand new. A taste of the future.

http://www.macstories.net/news/things-apple-killed-today/#
 
One more?
New MacBook Air Doesn't Ship with Adobe Flash
Thursday October 21, 2010 01:33 AM EST
Written by Arnold Kim


Engadget revealed today that Apple's new MacBook Air doesn't ship with Adobe's Flash plug-in.
Amusingly enough, you know what's missing from the new MacBook Air models? Adobe Flash Player. While preloaded on Apple's past hardware, out of the box here it just says missing plugin, with no click to install option. To be fair, Flash doesn't come standard on a lot of machines, even for Windows, but we wonder if past models will continue to ship out with Adobe's plugin, especially once OS X 10.7 becomes de facto.

It seems Apple is continuing to distance itself from Adobe's Flash plug-in. The omission appears to be no accident with Engadget Editor Joshua Topolsky confirming with Apple that this is how the machine ships. Previous Mac OS X installations have shipped with Adobe's Flash plugin preinstalled.

Apple's dislike of the Adobe Flash plugin has been a very public debate. The controversy began when Apple first shipped the iPhone without support for Adobe's plugin. Over time, Apple has reiterated its stance against Flash in favor of HTML5 standards. Steve Jobs' open letter on Flash outlined his criticisms. While end-users are still free to install Flash on their machines, the removal of Flash as a standard component on the Mac serves to destroy the near ubiquity of Flash for the end user. This may further influence website owner's decisions to support HTML5 in addition to or instead of Flash over time.
 
JEK said:
Engadget revealed today that Apple's new MacBook Air doesn't ship with Adobe's Flash plug-in.

This is the kind of aggravating BS that caused a near-death experience for Apple previously when Jobs had to beg Bill Gates to save Apple.
 
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