Funny that the two ipad models are dead even considering they've shipped more than twice as many original ipads. It would seem a full 50% of gruber's readers replaced their ipad's with the ipad 2. No wonder apple is crushing tablet sales.
Does anyone know of any other developers that have published these kind of stats?
I suspect that Instapaper was extremely popular with the techie/start-up crowd when it first launched but it has become quite well known in these last three years and I'm wondering if it has pushed through to your regular Joe consumer yet.
It would be great to get a couple more points of data so we can show that most people are using iOS 4 to help push forward the phasing out of iOS 3 support.
I completely agree. Using 4.x today allows to write code in a much cleaner and efficient way; a few examples: gestures (for iPhone), blocks, GCD. Besides multitasking and background processing allows features that were impossible to get or required complicated hacks. And now that we must provide iOS4 and iOS5 mixed compatibility, we cannot absolutely maintain any compatibility with iOS3.
It is quite impressive that in just over a year developers are able to start requiring iOS 4.
I hope that iOS 5's OTA updates we could get to the point where iOS versions older than a few months are considered obsolete.
Apple has done a great job at fostering this culture of upgrading as soon as possible. Microsoft and Google still have problems were the average consumers see OS updates as something that can cause problems, not bring new features.
>I hope that iOS 5's OTA updates we could get to the point where iOS versions older than a few months are considered obsolete.
While a very nice idea, I'm not convinced it much will change due to old hardware being incompatible with new versions of iOS. It's rarely the x.y versions which are the barriers to progress, but the x.0 versions.
That is true but Apple does seem to have a higher adoption rate with their physical products. iOS 4 killed support for the original iPhone and now iOS 5 is killing support for the iPhone 3G.
When the iPhone 5 comes out this fall I think by June of next year there will be enough penetration of iOS 5 that some apps will be able to put that requirement on it.
Heck if we're lucky iOS 6 will finally kill support for non-Retina displays.
Interesting stuff. Keeping the OS so up to date has got to help both users and developers. As a nitpick, the "OS/CPU is at least this" plots are screaming for a CDF graph.
1) Reading List is Safari only.
2) Many popular apps (such as Twitter for iOS) actually support Instapaper's Read Later, whereas I'm not sure that there is a Read Later API (someone correct me if I'm wrong).
3) Instapaper has social sharing built in.
I've been using the iOS 5 betas and I can tell you I use Reading List and Instapaper completely differently. Instapaper has always been long form reading, stored for later (and potentially offline). Reading List, I use to quickly transfer a site I'm currently reading from my desktop to my iPad or iPhone, incidentally replacing an app I wrote to do exactly that. I guess it's time to take Panic's Audion advice and retire that app ("When you double click the competition in the morning, that's a pretty good sign that it's time to hang up your hat!", http://panic.com/extras/audionstory/)
The Reading List is just a folder named "Reading List" within your Bookmarks folder; anything that can create a bookmark can add something to it. (It's actually all your bookmarks that are iCloud-synced, not just the reading list.) I imagine there are a bunch of apps with code for an "Add to Reading List" button already written but #define'd out until iOS5 is released, to avoid confusing people who press it and don't get any syncing.