I'm going to add my two cents about this just because this is the one thing I can say of which I
actually am expert at as I have been doing web programming since 1996.
Flash on a "marketing" website: It's true that flash isn't dead, but it only makes sense to use to accomplish things that are difficult or impossible without it because flash doesn't run everywhere and certain places in particular matter a lot. In this case from a business point of view I consider it unacceptable to have nothing for Apple mobiles. I also consider it too onerous for a small to medium sized business to commission and maintain two different websites.
No, the current "state of the art" is to have a
single website that adapts itself to whatever device it is being run on. This is what is referred to as a Responsive website design. Providers: consider the money you spend on a website an investment. You want to get your biggest bang for the buck right now (which a Flash only website fails at), and future proof it as much as possible (Flash will only diminish from here on out, sorry Adobe) so you want to avoid having to commission another website a year or 2 down the road if Flash really gets even more marginalized.
Looking at the 247whispers.com site, it is attractive, but there isnt anything on there that I cant do in straight web technology (without flash) that would run beautify on any phone.
Check it out on an iPad/iPhone and you see a black page. Absolutely nothing. So maybe these folks know about providing alternate content to non-flash browsers, but they certainly aren't practicing it themselves even on their own site. There is not even a phone number available if you cant do Flash. From a business standpoint, it fails in important ways. I would guess its because they dont have that level of service available, they have to sell only what they have. So for $500+ you can start with a site that probably has a limited life span and will be completely invisible to iPhone users in their cars. Not smart.
Ladies, be smart. Think of the future, think of your customers.