The HTML5 boom is coming. Fast.
The tech industrys movers and shakers have been saying for months now that the HTML5 is very important. New data released Friday indicates that HTML5 is not just going to be big, its going to be huge and its coming fast.
More than 2.1 billion mobile devices will have HTML5 browsers by 2016, up from just 109 million in 2010, according to a new report by ABI Research. Much of this growth will be thanks to Apples massive support for the HTML5 platform, according to the study. And Apple is also likely to be one of the biggest beneficiaries of the technologys wide scale adoption. Because Apple has so much control over its software and devices, it will be most poised to take full advantage of HTML features as they emerge in the coming years.
As is often the case in business, where theres a winner, theres usually a loser. HTML5 could largely replace Abobes proprietary Flash technology. And HTML5s swift ascent could render Flash irrelevant in short order. I think the disappearance of Flash is closer than people think, ABI senior analyst Mark Beccue said in a press release accompanying the data.
HTML5s projected growth is all the more impressive considering that the actual standard is not officially expected to be completed until 2020, according to the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) standards body. But that wont stop companies and independent engineers from developing and deploying HTML5 features, ABI said.
Indeed, Facebook CTO Bret Taylor has said his company is putting a huge amount of our inv! estment in HTML5, and Google recently debuted its first homepage doodle composed entirely with the HTML5 mark-up language. It may seem like buzz about HTML5 is everywhere already, but if the latest research is correct, were only at the beginning.
Feature image courtesy of Flickr user EJ Callow.
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