Flash初哥

April 30, 2010

Adobe宣布弃守iPhone版Flash程序 战争尚未结束

Filed under: 未想到分類 — Tags: , , , — KAV @ 3:56 am

CNET科技资讯网4月23日国际报道 不过是两周时间,以及两者之间的一些狠话,结果竟对一个广泛使用的程序开发技术产生重大改变。
  在这段时间内,Adobe从原本积极招揽开发者利用自家技术打造可在iPhone跑的Flash程序,转而正式取消这项技术的未来发展。
  当苹果更改了自家iPhone 4.0开发者套件条款时,它的确阻挡了Adobe的行动。但在周二,Adobe宣布将会终止Flash-apps-on-iPhone技术未来开发时,Adobe主要产品经理Mike Chambers依然露出激烈的言词,表示两家公司的战争尚未结束。
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April 29, 2010

乔布斯发文炮轰Flash技术过时 Adobe CEO回应

Filed under: 未想到分類 — Tags: , — KAV @ 11:42 pm

本周四,苹果CEO乔布斯发表一篇长文章,针对封杀Adobe的Flash技术一事,他回应了外界的批评。文章一再重申了乔布斯之前的立场,阐明苹果一直偏爱“非技术专利”的技术的态度,还谈及Flash的稳定性、安全性及性能。
  【搜狐IT消息】4月30日消息,本周四,苹果CEO乔布斯发表一篇长文章,针对封杀Adobe的Flash技术一事,他回应了外界的批评。文章一再重申了乔布斯之前的立场,阐明苹果一直偏爱“非技术专利”的技术的态度,还谈及Flash的稳定性、安全性及性能。
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February 3, 2010

斗气只会令玩家失去更多,Adobe与Apple

Filed under: 未想到分類 — Tags: , , — KAV @ 9:02 am

一个是苹果打死都不用,一个是没问过就被苹果偷了 借了拿去用,Adobe 跟 Delicious Monster 对于 iPad 发表会的『灾后心灵重建』,也有着截然不同的反应跟想法。
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Adobe与苹果公司冷战内幕

Filed under: Java相關 — Tags: , , — KAV @ 8:58 am

如果你仔细观察史蒂夫•乔布斯(Steve Jobs)上周三作的iPad展示,你就会看到他在炫耀这个电脑设备的上网图标:乐高的蓝色方块图标。对于已经在iPhone里面玩过Facebook农 场游戏,或者在iPod Touch上看过Hulu视频的用户,这个蓝色的小图标并不陌生。这表明该装置没有附带Adobe公司的Flash插件,无论你尝试多少次安装游戏或视频 都不会成功。

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The Adobe/Apple Relationship

Filed under: 未想到分類 — Tags: , — KAV @ 8:45 am

Its no secret that, being in the business of developing software for creative professionals, Adobe has traditionally had a proportionately large chunk of Mac users. With Adobe acquiring Macromedia and going all out to extend its reach to web, desktop, mobile and beyond (hosted services seems to be their next big thing) it seems that the business relationship with Apple and others is not as straightforward as before.

I think its fair to say that on a number of fronts Adobe is becoming serious competition to the established companies, just look at the potential of word processing with something like Buzzword — despite its current limitations of being run in a browser (the desktop AIR version is coming soon) it is in my mind already the clear winner. Web development has always centered around user experience and bringing that skill set to the users machine is paving the way for an entirely new desktop experience.

While it might not always be heads-on competition like Silverlight vs Flash, I can see how it is a bit unsettling to find all these software giants suddenly going for the same market space. In one sense this competition is a good thing, on the other hand it does lead to some unfortunate situations where the lack of foresight and strategic relationships causes issues.

I think nobody expects Microsoft to take an effort to distribute the Flash Player or AIR with its operating system, but what about Apple — what is happening there? Just a couple of recent examples.

- Universal binary of Creative Suite
- Apple TV – YouTube H.264 content
- iPhone – Flash support
- Leopard – CS3/Flash Player/AIR issues

This all seems to come down to Apple keeping Adobe in the loop about their plans. Now Apple isn’t the most open company and likes the “one more thing” shock approach but you’d expect them to have a interest in working closely with companies like Adobe.

The whole move to Intel processors for Apple must have been a few years in the making and as far as I understand Adobe only learned about this late in the Creative Suite development cycle. Does Apple do this with everyone? It doesn’t look like it — they successfully partnered with Google and got them to serve their YouTube video content as H.264 rather than the FLV format for Apple TV, the iPhone and iPod Touch.

I don’t know what the whole momentum was here but only recently have we started hearing about the Moviestar Flash Player release supporting H.264, was this in the works or is it Adobe playing catch-up, who knows?

Then there’s the Mac OSX 10.5 “Leopard” release, Adobe apparently did not receive a final copy of Leopard resulting in issues with some CS3 products, one major issue with the Flash Player that cripples a lot of Flash applications (FileReference upload – scheduled to be fixed in Moviestar) and reportedly also issues with AIR (not as huge a problem since its still in beta).

In my opinion this is extremely serious — Flash Player has always been about ‘not breaking the web’ and making sure things stay compatible to the point where we now have two virtual machines in there. How can the lack of communication between Apple and Adobe cause a couple thousand people to deal with broken software? How could Adobe miss the opportunity of getting embedded Flash and/or Flash Lite players on Apple TV, iPhone, iPod Touch.

It doesn’t make sense to me, nobody has anything to gain from broken software and you’d expect Apple and Adobe to stay on top of things and prevent these situations from happening. I can hardly imagine this attitude has anything to do with Aperture vs Lightroom and it is rather an organizational problem with getting the information out there than a structural failure of the two companies to work together.

There are opportunities for everyone and Adobe and Apple have everything to gain from a close strategic relationship.

February 2, 2010

Adobe并购Macromedia: Flash促成的联姻

Filed under: 未想到分類 — Tags: , , — KAV @ 5:33 am

4月18日,全球最大的图像编辑软件供应商Adobe系统公司宣布以约34亿美元的全股票交易方式收购Flash网页设计软件供应商Macromedia。Adobe以静态电脑平面设计见长,而Macromedia则专注于动态多媒体电子出版。

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November 28, 2009

Adobe Flash登陆iPhone仍是一厢情愿

Filed under: 未想到分類 — Tags: , , , — KAV @ 11:01 am

from : http://www.pockoo.com/article/2100.html

两周前,有报道称Adobe公司即将把Flash带到iPhone,但从该公司的反应来看这仍然只是空头承诺。
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Flash on iPhone Political Calculus

Filed under: Flash相關,網上收隼 — Tags: , , , — KAV @ 10:59 am

from: http://daringfireball.net/2008/02/flash_iphone_calculus

With regard to why I doubt that Apple plans to add Flash support to MobileSafari any time soon, the political considerations are more important than the technical ones. In short: Could Apple do it? Yes, but it wouldn’t be easy. But would they? I say no — even if it were easy.

There are currently two ways to develop software for the iPhone (and iPod Touch): using HTML/CSS/JavaScript web standards, and using Cocoa. Cocoa is proprietary, but from Apple’s perspective, it’s the good sort of proprietary: a competitive advantage completely owned and controlled by Apple. Apple doesn’t control the HTML/CSS/JavaScript web standards, but neither does anyone else. And Apple does control and own WebKit, which is by anyone’s measure the best mobile implementation of these standards today.
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