"Google published its own version of events leading up to releasing Latitude as a browser app instead of a native app. Apple hasn't said anything one way or the other, and we so-called journalists are too lazy to fact check by asking anyone for comment or coming up with an independent source or even talking to the author of the Google piece.
"So we just made up a whole bunch of suppositions and conjectures, bolted on an inflammatory title about Apple screwing Google, and watch the click-through ad revenue roll in."
Is it any wonder that journalism is in a crisis?
p.s. Note that I'm not saying the piece is or isn't accurate. Just that it lacks any evidence that the author did a speck of research, fact-checking, or obtained corroboration for his article. That's what I'm blasting.
On the other hand, this and the lack of an official google voice app (which, anyways, probably won't be able to fully integrate into the phone unlike on the Android) is giving Google plenty of opportunity to tout the benefits of competing phones.
It's your call as a business, of course, but my perspective as a "consumer" is that every Tom, Dick, and Jane has a blog. They all can and do rant away with abandon and "professional" journalists have very little edge over bloggers in wit. It's true that any one journalist might be consistently funnier than any one blogger, but when sites like reddit, HN, and Digg filter the wheat from the chaff, bloggers in aggregate are at least as funny and usually funnier than "professionals."
What I expect from professionals that I don't expect from bloggers is professionalism. I don't think a "fun rant" is professional in tone or substance. So I don't like it.
JM2C.
I'm not saying that Apple has been fair or that I wouldn't like more openness from them.
Followed by a dozen paragraphs of pointless speculation.
> After we developed a Latitude application for the iPhone, Apple requested we release Latitude as a web application in order to avoid confusion with Maps on the iPhone, which uses Google to serve maps tiles.
http://googlemobile.blogspot.com/2009/07/google-latitude-now...