>Not so long ago, people were outraged that Amazon could and did arbitrarily delete books from users’ Kindles; last week they clamored for Google to exercise essentially the same power.
There's a significant difference between code and data.
Similarly, when AOL lost to the open web, it wasn't because their code was closed, it was because their community and their content was closed. In a similar manner, iTunes needs to offer a web client if it wants to compete with Amazon, Google, and the rest in the long run. Or at least make Android/WebOS apps.
There's a significant difference between code and data.
Similarly, when AOL lost to the open web, it wasn't because their code was closed, it was because their community and their content was closed. In a similar manner, iTunes needs to offer a web client if it wants to compete with Amazon, Google, and the rest in the long run. Or at least make Android/WebOS apps.