Wow, this is really coming along nicely guys - well done!<p>I just tested it on my iphone and it's really looking excellent.<p>Direct link (to demo) for those that want to test it out on a mobile:
<a href="http://jquerymobile.com/demos/1.0a3/" rel="nofollow">http://jquerymobile.com/demos/1.0a3/</a>
I was wondering what was going on, since the last missive was targeting a final release in January[1]. I'm excited to see this, and especially excited that we're going to see A-grade support for WinPhone 7 soon. Congrats!<p>[1] <a href="http://jquerymobile.com/2010/11/jquery-mobile-alpha-2-released/" rel="nofollow">http://jquerymobile.com/2010/11/jquery-mobile-alpha-2-releas...</a>
Nice, I love jQuery because it made DOM manipulation a breeze by abstracting everything. But I am getting the feel that jQuery Mobile assumes "what" it is that developers are creating, making it less abstracted and more narrow minded (for instance, that we all want right to left iPod style page navigation). Or perhaps not, I could just be wrong.
Great work, however it's far short of the quality of Sencha Touch.<p>I have to wonder what the point of mimicking native UI is.<p>I've just started learning Obj-C and iPhone dev and getting ones head around basic UI functionality is at most 2-3 days worth of playing around. Is is really worth sacrificing native performance and consistency for such marginal gain?