News

Building a smartphone app - should your developers be going HTML5 or native?
Apple's new rules have forced e-book sellers to remove buy links from their iOS apps. Now Kobo says it's developing an HTML5 Web app that can be accessed from any Web browser, circumventing Apple ...
Developers dissatisfied with waiting three weeks (or longer) to have their apps and updates available on the App Store are turning their attention to the Web and flocking to HTML5. HTML5 also ...
Amazon on Aug. 7 launched Web app support in its Mobile App Distribution Program. Developers can now submit URLs for their HTML5 Web apps and mobile Websites and have Amazon offer that content to ...
Web apps use HTML5 to create an interactive experience on web browsers that is similar to the downloadable apps found in Apple's App Store.
Flixster Underlying tech: HTML5 Compatibility: Chrome, iPad (app, almost web), Galaxy Tab (phone app, almost web) Offline: No Notes: The iPad and Galaxy tab seemed to load Flixster's UI just fine ...
Amazon is announcing a change to its Appstore today, which will now allow developers building HTML5 (web-based) applications to price those apps to sell, just the same as their natively coded ...
HTML5 versus native apps. It's a debate as old as — well, at least three years ago. And pretty much since the beginning of that debate, there has been a general underlying current among the geek ...
Google has updated its mobile web version of the Gmail app for Android devices and the iPhone, and the new version is now available in 44 different languages.