My Twitter stream and the headlines of sites across the web yesterday lit up with Facebook's CEO blaming its stock price (failure to meet hyped expectation) on HTML5 (and its failure to make the Facebook mobile experience suck less).
Even ZDNet jumped on that bandwagon with a post titled Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg knocks HTML5 in favor of native apps, using the summary, Mark Zuckerberg didn't hold back in acknowledging Facebook's mistakes, citing a focus on HTML5 as the biggest one.
Bolstering its point, ZDNet included this quote from Zuckerberg:
The biggest mistake we made as a company was betting too much on HTML5 rather than native.
That's it. No additional context, no more justification. An article clearly buying into the notion that Facebook is doing poorly because it built its mobile experience using HTML5.
Blaming a technology is easy. It takes the burden off the organization using it. No longer do you need to justify that your business model is broken, or the user experience is impenetrable, or that you didn't factor all the use cases. You can just blame the "savior" technology for letting you down.
That would be as silly as blaming responsive web design for Facebook's poor IPO performance.
The W3C, one of the organizations developing HTML5, today tweeted a link to a message from one of its mailing lists that includes the full Zuckerberg quote:
When I'm introspective about the last few years I think the biggest
mistake that we made, as a company, is betting too much on HTML5 as
opposed to native... because it just wasn't there. And it's not that HTML5
is bad. I'm actually, on long-term, really excited about it. One of the
things that's interesting is we actually have more people on a daily basis
using mobile Web Facebook than we have using our iOS or Android apps
combined. So mobile Web is a big thing for us.
That statement better summarizes the situation. HTML5 is not done yet. It's not fully formed. Browsers haven't implemented everything and the rules are changing as (parts of the group of specifications that make up the marketing term) HTML5 gets into the wild. It also demonstrates that Facebook made a poor strategic decision by expecting too much.
In Facebook's case, relying on HTML5 to mimic an app just won't cut it for some of its features. While it has worked in other cases, that doesn't mean it will work in all cases. Facebook has consistently had a poor user experience on mobile. That's not the technology, that's strategy and implementation.
You can watch the full interview in the embedded video below. Make your own judgments about Zuckerberg's comments and compare it to how it's being reported across the web.
Head to ~11 minutes for the conversation about mobile.
Related
- Facebook: bet on HTML5 a 'big mistake' from .net Magazine.
- Mark Zuckerberg: Our Biggest Mistake Was Betting Too Much On HTML5 from TechCrunch.
- Zuckerberg’s Biggest Mistake? ‘Betting on HTML5′ from Mashable.
- HTML5 is dead. Long live HTML5! from CNET.
- Failure of Responsive Design is Why Facebook's IPO Tanked, on this blog, May 23, 2012.
- Don't Choose Between Mobile Web and Mobile Apps, on this blog, February 26, 2011.
- Apps Are Not Killing the Web, on this blog, February 5, 2011.
Update, September 18, 2012
Yesterday .net Magazine had a piece about Facebook's W3C representative posting to a W3C mailing list his troubles with the HTML5 approach. I read it not as a complaint but as someone raising issues and asking for help. I also saw some interaction on Twitter this past weekend, spawned by a tweet of mine pointing to the W3C email, between Tobie Langel (Facebook), John Dowdell and Brian Leroux (Adobe), and Steve Souders (Google). Following the link embedded in the tweet below demonstrates that there is discussion among the industry players and perhaps this entire media storm could help move standards further along.
@souders would love your feedback on etherpad.mozilla.org/appcache /cc @brianleroux @jdowdell @aardrian
— Tobie Langel (@tobie) September 17, 2012
More Update, September 18, 2012
Quora answers questions about rebuilding its app, a la Facebook, providing context from a different perspective.
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