| > No its not, you know since flash is disabled. Did you try to open your web browser on your phone and go to http://youtube.com ? please try. I don't have a windows phone, but when I tried it in a store, it seemed to work well - and other people on this thread claim it also works well, > And they did respect the terms of service with their new app - nothing more, nothing less. Using a HTML5 client is not part of that terms of service. The terms of service actually mandate either flash or html5, nothing else. Microsoft chose not include flash. Microsoft chose to avoid using HTML5 for the youtube app. They are not complying with the terms of service, and it is ENTIRELY their fault. > Remember when google maps was blocked on Windows phone's browser? A negative PR was required to caused Google revert the stance. Yes, and at that time Google was at fault, and it took them a couple of days to make things right. In this case, Microsoft has been playing the PR game for more than 3 months now, instead of doing the right thing (honoring terms of service). > Again, no they don't work perfectly and Youtube is sadly not something you can just substitute! Again, go to youtube in your web browser. it worked for me. Yes, it's not as nice as a YouTube app, but you don't actually lose out on any content. |