Apple Plans Native WebApps, Homescreen Icons?

According to Ars Technica, an unnamed source at Apple has informed them that Apple is currently working on updating their current iPhone SDK for web apps. The source said that Apple is planning a handful of software updates that they hope will appease complaints about the lack of native app support, though they still have no intention of releasing a true native-app SDK in the near future.
Apple's decision not to allow native application development on the iPhone has the developing community frustrated to say the least. It looks like they got the message, or at least partly. The source claims that Apple has planned a series of additions to the iPhone's software and Safari application in an attempt to help appease some (probably most) of these complaints.
One such update they are currently working on will add offline storage capabilities to Safari. This would still be limited to web applications, but would host them locally on the device for offline use, simulating a native app, similar to Google Gears.
In conjunction with this, they also might be planning more local JavaScript access for useful iPhone functions, and may even be able to create home screen icons for these native web applications.
"The entire purpose of all this work is to make the iPhone 'SDK' (WebKit) more usable," the source said.
Unfortunately, this means that the Apple's SDK for the iPhone will most likely remain web-app based for some time to come, limiting development primarily to HTML, CSS, and AJAX.
"You can't write [bleep]ing [bleep] in that," says our source. Needless to say even Apple insiders are disappointed with the web 2.0 limitations. So, how does he explain the lack of a native SDK?
"Jobs is a control freak and doesn't want people messing with perfection."
Yep, that sounds like Steve.
[via Ars Technica]

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Coverflow
Imagine all the cool ideas you could buy and integrate into apple products if you just let us write for iPhone like we wrote coverflow?
Or you could just steal it, like Konfabulator, I don't care. Just let us write code.
My old Nokia (The Brick) from 1996 had more features then my iPhone...