
I’m sure it’s something you’ve cursed Apple’s name for not adding with each update to iPhone OS. It’s an addition to your iPhone or iPod touch that would “complete” the device in your opinion. Yet, with each additional OS update (or product), Adobe’s Flash technology is missing. There’s a reason for this.
Flash is buggy. Really buggy. It’s the number one reason a Mac will crash, and the number one reason Safari will unexpectedly quit. TUAW also reports on a bug that is sixteen months old. SIXTEEN months. That is an unacceptable amount of time to fix an outstanding bug within software. Imagine if Apple released an update to iPhone OS, and it contained a bug that erased all of your contacts every time you ended a call. Imagine if they didn’t fix that bug for over TWO years. This is exactly why Apple does not add Flash support to the iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad.
Apple is a company that thrives it’s software on 3 things: Usability, simplicity and stability. One line that Steve Jobs uses in every keynote address is “it just works”. They have a constant demand that their products are very stable. Even though they can’t really control what gets developed for the Mac by third party developers, they sure can and always will with their mobile devices. It’s all about the experience to Apple, and poorly managed software like Flash will hurt that experience. Working for Apple at it’s Genius Bars, people literally lose faith in a product very quickly, even an Apple one, from software related issues. Apple is just making it’s products as best it can, not only to sell more of them, but to keep customers in the long run.
So instead Apple has adopted HTML5. HTML5 allows for the same experience you get from Flash, but that doesn’t require a plug-in installed into a browser to get the same results. The internet will and already has started to adopt HTML5. Flash is on the out, as weird as that sounds. Its an age-old technology that even YouTube and Vimeo has begun to move on from. They have already turned on HTML5 video tags.

Kevin Rose, founder of Digg.com, Revision3 and Pownce, sums up why Amazon needs to be worried. I guess that’s why they are buying multi-touch technology.
Here is the excerpt taken from his blog:
Kindle DX 9.7” - $489.00
—
1024x768 color display upgrade - $1.00
Internet browsing upgrade - $1.00
iPod w/16GB upgrade - $1.00
Run iPhone apps upgrade - $1.00
1Gz A4 processor upgrade - $1.00
H.264 720P HD video upgrade - $1.00
Bluetooth upgrade - $1.00
10hr battery upgrade - $1.00
Multi-touch display upgrade - $1.00
Digital compass/accelerometer - $1.00
—
Your cost: iPad $499.00

The iPad will be launching in late March. You want one, and I want one. Right now, the bliss of a new Apple product line is fogging your memory. A few months pass by, and your iPads touch screen stops being responsive. Or you think that it’s so “magical”, it can survive a dip in the pool. Breaking: It can’t. What happens when your $500+ investment breaks?
Apple will handle the iPad service strategy like this:

Well now. Don’t these two images look similar? On the left, we have the newly announced Apple iPad. On our right, a Jailbroken iPhone. It seems to me that as much as Apple despises Jailbreaking the overly controlled iPhone OS, they have gotten many ideas from those pesky-brilliant hackers. Some quick thoughts on ideas Apple borrowed from the jailbreak scene:
Well there you have it. What feature from jailbroken iPhones will Apple take next? A Categorize system for apps? We will only see!