Sorry, my point was supposed to be that killing flash is one of the things that Apple wants desperately to do. I'm saying it in the sense that it's a BAD thing, not a good thing.
Same goes for hobbling or eliminating competing software by banning it from the app store or playing by different internal rules (entitlements not available to outside developers, for example), or strategically refusing to grant entitlements from on high.
Basically, Apple is doing successfully what Microsoft failed to do. The difference is that Apple is being celebrated for doing what Microsoft was reviled for attempting. You certainly don't hear mention of the Sherman act when Apple locks a competing app out of the iOS ecosystem, and I doubt things will be different in the locked down Mac ecosystem.
Same goes for hobbling or eliminating competing software by banning it from the app store or playing by different internal rules (entitlements not available to outside developers, for example), or strategically refusing to grant entitlements from on high.
Basically, Apple is doing successfully what Microsoft failed to do. The difference is that Apple is being celebrated for doing what Microsoft was reviled for attempting. You certainly don't hear mention of the Sherman act when Apple locks a competing app out of the iOS ecosystem, and I doubt things will be different in the locked down Mac ecosystem.