All of that stuff can be speeded up say within a year perhaps. GMaps
API 3 is still in Beta after all.
Look how fast they speeded up Javascript recently. So suppose in one
year everything is speeded up and
we can use location in terms of mobile web apps? That means over
Android, IPhone, etc.
That's the question I'm asking.

- Juan

On May 30, 4:05 pm, JP <[email protected]> wrote:
> On May 30, 12:51 pm, Brian Conrad <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > jtaylor wrote:
> > > Wave Goodbye To Native Android Apps From Google?
>
> Well it's not too long ago when everybody with an interest in the
> iPhone was complaining about Apple's position that devs shall rely on
> web apps for the development of iPhone apps. Over there, I don't get
> the impression that mobile web apps are considered The Answer.
> I suppose I'll experiment with HTML 5, Gears and the other tools that
> are brought to battle. I really like GWT and agree with all the good
> things that are said about it, but I tend to believe that in a mobile
> environment, methods like code splitting are not powerful enough to
> provide answers to meet user expectations for fluid app flow. In
> particular as these expectations are driven by nicely animated games
> and inclusion of app behaviors. As an example, I make extensive use of
> MapController to animate to map locations, and the maps API 3 seems
> nowhere near that level of support. Having developed with GWT, and
> listening to the experience that the Lombardi guys have had (and they
> didn't even have a mobile angle), mobile web app development remains a
> scary proposition.
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