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Zuckerberg: Betting On HTML5 Was Facebook's Biggest Mistake

An anonymous reader writes "Speaking yesterday at TechCrunch Disrupt, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg acknowledged that the company's stock performance was disappointing. He also made an interesting remark about Facebook's development efforts over the past couple of years: 'The biggest mistake we made as a company was betting too much on HTML5 as opposed to native. It just wasn't ready.' According to Mashable, 'the benefits of cross-platform development weren't enough to outweigh the downsides of HTML5, which pulls in data much more slowly than native code, and is much less stable. ... Now, Zuckerberg says, Facebook is focused on continuing to improve the native mobile experience on iOS, as well as bringing a native app to Android.'"

2 of 290 comments (clear)

  1. Re:HTML 5 Java by Xest · · Score: 5, Informative

    "HTML5 is roughly equivalent to Java as far as a multi-platform programming language and development platform."

    No, not in the slightest. Not even close

    "The only successful approach I've ever encountered to using a virtual machine was employed by the Digitalk VM which cached successive VM invocations so that you ran at native 'raw iron" machine speeds after encountering the performance hit the first and only time an pseudo-instruction was executed in a method.".

    When did you last read anything about the JVM? 1995?

    "The lethal performance problems that WordPerfect encountered trying to implement their suite of office products in Java still apply."

    No, no they don't. That was the best part of a decade before Hotspot even came along, which was basically a complete rewrite.

    You could've typed your post about 15 years ago, and you might've had a point. Now however, your post makes absolutely no sense, and shows an understanding that only someone who had literally been living under a rock for 15 years would have. Java has changed a lot since 1997, and your criticism is nonsensical in the context of those changes.

  2. Re:Correction... by hawguy · · Score: 5, Informative

    If he lives in California and the divorce proceedings are started there that prenup is worthless after 5 years.

    Under California Law, she's not entitled to property he owned prior to getting married (gee, I wonder why he waited until the day *after* the IPO to get married!?). She'd be entitled to any gains the stock made after they were married, but she's probably in for a long wait before the stock rises to meet the IPO price again.