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The Future of the Internet Is Your Desktop.

October 29th, 2007 at 12:06 am

Source:CenterNetworks -

HuluIt appears what they said on the Drudge Report is true. Hulu is in the process of launching from what I can tell. The site is moving into production (still on a private beta). So far CenterNetworks does not have an invite but if you do, please report in on how the application works.

They do have a groovy new logo (see left) and a Memphisto blog. In the meantime, check out our previous Hulu coverage.

More details as they come in.

Update: Liz at NewTeeVee has a lengthy review of the application. Here is the official launch release.

The following shows will be included in the launch:

24

Breaking Away

30 Days

Buck Rogers

30 Rock

Buffy the Vampire Slayer

The A-Team

Bulworth

Adam-12

Chicago Hope

Age of Love

Chuck

Airwolf

The Comebacks

Alfred Hitchcock Hour

Conan the Barbarian

Alfred Hitchcock Presents

Cops

American Dad!

Death Sentence

Andy Barker P.I.

Doogie Howser, M.D.

Are You Smarter Than A 5th Grader?

Dr. 90210

Arrested Development

Dragnet

Back To You

Family Guy

Battlestar Galactica

Firsthand

Battlestar Galactica Classic

Flipping Out

Big Ideas for a Small Planet

Fox Movie Channel presents "Casting Session"

Bionic Woman

Fox Movie Channel presents "Making a Scene"

The Blues Brothers

Fox Movie Channel presents "World Premier"

The Bob Newhart Show

Night Gallery

Bones

October Sky

The Breakfast Club

The Office

Friday Night Lights

Over There

Heroes

Picket Fences

Hill Street Blues

The Practice

House

The Pretender

Inside the Actors Studio

Prison Break

It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia

Psych

The Jerk

Queer Eye

Journeyman

The Riches

K-Ville

Rob and Amber: Against the Odds

King Of The Hill

Saturday Night Live

Kitchen Confidential

Scrubs

Kitchen Nightmares

Sideways

Kojak

Simon & Simon

Las Vegas

The Simpsons

Late Night with Conan O’Brien

Solitary

Life

St. Elsewhere

The Loop

Stacked

Lost in Space

Standoff

Lou Grant

Talkshow with Spike Feresten

The Mary Tyler Moore Show

The Tonight Show

Master and Commander:
The Far Side of the World

Vanished

McHale’s Navy

Weekend at Bernie’s

Miami Vice

WKRP in Cincinnati

Monk

Woody Woodpecker

Murder One
My Bare Lady
My Name is Earl

Source:CenterNetworks -

Mozilla PrismIn a recent post I wrote on MentallyRetired, I discuss Adobe’s recent decision to move all of their applications to the Web. I gave my opinion as to why this is a bad idea. In summary, the web can’t handle it. Code that is interpreted in multiple ways by multiple browsers will never be good enough because it’s too expensive to support. That’s the cliff notes version of my post.

In addition, I left the door open to a solution, as I always have in this discussion. Whatever the future of the web is, it will have to come in the form of a desktop install.

As if on queue, Mozilla released the windows version of Prism this week. Prism is intended to be a simple desktop viewer for your favorite web applications, but I believe it has the ability to become much, much more. Although browser based, Prism solves the issues I mentioned with web browsers. It does interpret code, but if your application was made to run in Firefox, then Prism will display it exactly as you intended.

Some might call me hypocritical because of how I bashed browsers in my previous post, but I hope they understand my point. Although Prism is pretty much a navigation-free browser, it is an application and it is based on one browser. If your application was made for Prism, it will run in Prism. All the power of the net funneled through a viewfinder that you intended it to be seen through. Additionally, because it’s a desktop installation, it has the power to do so much more. Offline storage, file system access, the canvas tag, and even more impressive… it can run XUL applications. I’m not sure yet if it’s possible to embed XUL inside of XHTML, but damn that would be powerful. Imagine a XUL based file upload form. (If you’re a developer, you’re salivating at this thought.)

Isn’t Mozilla already working on a standalone XUL platform, though? Well, yes, but XULRunner stands on it’s own because it already has things like DLL support, file system access and offline storage. Prism is more of a window through which to view web applications.

What I want to know is, will we start to see Prism-only applications? Will we be able to bundle their application as a download with Prism? All the things that Firefox supports are supported in Prism, so it makes sense that developers finally take advantage of the great standards support that Firefox provides.

Some will now criticize me and say "If people haven’t made Firefox-only websites already, why would they start just for Prism?" My answer to them would be to look at the delivery. Look at it from your grandma’s point of view. If she downloads this program and installs it, it works on her machine, plain and simple. If she were forced to download Firefox and start it up just to pull up a website, she probably wouldn’t. This is a very intelligent way for the team at Mozilla to get people to use Firefox, and a very intelligent way for developers to forget about cross browser headaches and get on with their development. This is very smart on Mozilla’s part.

Those same devil’s advocates and Web purists are now steaming mad. "The web is supposed to be an open platform! Interpretation is the name of the game! Any device can access from anywhere! People shouldn’t be locked into a system!" is what they’re saying to themselves. Trust me, I understand. I come from a 15 year background of CSS, XHTML, and JavaScript. However, I have a big big problem with all of it. Browser interpretation cannot be relied upon. It’s as simple as that. If we want the advantages of web standards, we have to use Web standard supporting platforms. It’s naive to think any less. As much of a fan as I am of Web standards, I’m a bigger fan of fast development and technologies working.

"But the developers should be doing a better job!" you say. I agree… but the reality of it is that they are not. One application to read code that was intended for that application is going to be a lot smoother of a process, from front to back.

Overall, I think this is a great move by Mozilla. The only way I can see this backfiring is if Microsoft releases their own application in the same class as Prism, based on Internet Explorer. At that point we’d have to support multiple interpretations again… but that’s kind of the beauty of this. We can choose not to support the MS version, and people won’t expect it to work. By jumping straight to your application through Prism, it takes the browser-based ideology away from the user and makes them feel as if they’re using a real, solid application… and they will be.

Hats off to Mozilla for coming up with a possible solution to this ever-lingering issue.

James Thomas is a web developer and recent transplant to Orange County, California. By day, he develops websites for Oakley. By night, he programs websites and plots to take over the world, which is the same thing he does every night, Pinky.

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