Article says people wanted native apps on top of iOS because the Javascript engine was slow.<p>That's not the only or the most important reason - the integration of the browser with core functionalities of the iPhone (like location awareness, taking pictures, uploading those pictures, handling keyboard input) -- absolutely sucked and still sucks. Creating a web app on the iPhone that has to behave like a regular app, with some of the core iPhone standard functionalities, goes somewhere between an exercise in frustration and impossible.<p>And another reason - Apple clearly provided (useful) native apps, with which you could never integrate, or if the integration is available (like dialing a phone number, or opening Google Maps), iOS doesn't return the user to the originating app.<p>Building something like Skype in the browser would be clearly doable, if only Apple provided the hooks. Otherwise the only web apps you're going to see on the iPhone are the traditional web apps, minus important functionality available on the desktop (like you're not able to upload freakin' images, or focus automatically on freakin' form inputs; how fucked up is that?).<p>I'm fairly certain that Apple's suggestion (for building web apps) was tongue-in-cheek, more as in "get off my lawn".