The interesting point to me is that a device can be future proof through iOS updates - i.e. for as long as apple is prepared to create software drivers/updates to support the peripheral. Obsolescence is now almost entirely a software rather than hardware problem. Features can be added or removed via updates.
Firmware loaded at runtime is not new (see many of the wifi/bluetooth dongles that don't work in linux).
However, would apple let 3rd party peripherals download driver code? I wouldn't have thought they want to keep baking it into iOS itself as the number of peripherals increase. Perhaps drivers embedded in a controller app via the app store?
I like the idea that with a thunderbolt<->lightning adapter (and a huge amount of hacking) iOS peripherals are a blank canvas and could be used with other non apple devices or for purposes never originally intended (that VGA card as a software radio transmitter springs to mind...)
Firmware loaded at runtime is not new (see many of the wifi/bluetooth dongles that don't work in linux). However, would apple let 3rd party peripherals download driver code? I wouldn't have thought they want to keep baking it into iOS itself as the number of peripherals increase. Perhaps drivers embedded in a controller app via the app store?
I like the idea that with a thunderbolt<->lightning adapter (and a huge amount of hacking) iOS peripherals are a blank canvas and could be used with other non apple devices or for purposes never originally intended (that VGA card as a software radio transmitter springs to mind...)