you might have noticed that
Adobe has launched a pretty full-force campaign to call out Apple on its
anti-Flash mission. If you don't know what we're talking about, it's the advertisements that start with "We [heart] Apple." Along with the web ads, the company has also snagged a full page in today's
Washington Post to address the battle in which the two companies
have been engaged. All of this links back to a new statement from Adobe, as well as an open letter from founders Chuck Geschke and John Warnock ("Our thoughts on open markets"), addressing Apple's recent spate of clear and direct attacks against the company and its products. Most of the reading should sound familiar to those of us who've been following the saga, but here are a few choice quotes from the duo...
Replies
On that same point, Apple has the right to do whatever they want with the systems and if Adobe doesn't like that, they shouldn't pout about it. They should have made their app more stable and efficient a LONG time ago.
I would really like Apple to support Flash for now, since HTML5 video isn't completely finalized yet. It works, but not all the command options exist yet and browsers are just starting to support it. Not to mention, Flash does more than just video, which is what Apple keeps hinging this whole argument on. What about Flash based games? HTML5 doesn't cover that.
I'd like to see adobe prove every wrong, but I don't think that's going to happen.
+1
The more intense social games will still use Flash unless adobe really drops the ball and starts losing it's install base.
Apple, Adobe. Hug it out.
agreed. I like apple, I like flash (and I feel there will be places for both for a long time to come, flash is just too ingrained in the web to go anywhere in the next few years)... either fight it out then hug, or just hug it out.
funny how that works huh? I think we'd see apple take a huge hit were adobe to abandon them..
a) People do not know what HTML5 is.
b) People do not know what Flash is.
Benchmarks are showing across the board that even in the trivial applications for which HTML5 is actually appropriate (aka. not-most-of-what-Flash-does) it's slower than Flash, less protected than Flash, less supported than Flash, harder to develop for than Flash, and less stable than Flash. A lot of HTML5 sites don't even work on the iPhone. HTML5 doesn't even do anything it's a freaking markup language.
What all the clueless people on the internet are actually supporting is JavaScript. You can't program in HTML5. HTML5 is a markup language. It's like the BBCode we use on this forum to make words bold. Anything you actually want to do is going to require JavaScript.
But Jobs says pretty things so let's all ignore reality and pretend HTML5 is somehow a Flash competitor, okay? Then we can all sit around a campfire holding hands and writing Silverlight apps because it was totally awesome when Silverlight was a Flash killer wasn't it?
Apple has a trademark on the only part of HTML5 that anyone gives a shit about (the canvas tag). Gee, isn't it interesting they always fail to mention that in their new 'open' future (a future where you aren't even allowed to use the development tools you want to develop for Apple platforms. A future where you aren't even allowed to use Apple-supported features if Apple decides those are restricted for their apps only. A future where you're only allowed to upload content if Apple says so, unless you're a big corporation and can pay them off).
Adobe is at least putting it's money when it's mouth is and opening up the Flash format, allowing and supporting free Flash development, and partnering with other companies instead of trying to lock them out. Most of the messy parts of Flash came from Macromedia (history lesson: Adobe has only had control over Flash for a very short time) and Adobe has made massive strides in cleaning up and opening the platform since then. Flash has sped up by insane amounts over the last couple years.
Blind loyalty to any corporation is bad but c'mon guys, the lesser of two evils here is pretty fucking obvious and it's not the company whose entire business strategy for the last twenty years has been to tell people that they're too stupid to use computers.
Am i being biased and stubborn? Yeah. So.
Heh
Well, perphaps I would care if Apple and Adobe had picked some female representatives to fight it out.
cause you know what happens when the girls are fighting?
SHIRTS
GET
RIPPED
<video></video> is all you need. You put the video link in there. You can use many of the popular compression formats. There are commands to allow it to show controls and autoplay. It's essentially a build in video player, but it's just html markup with a link, like you would a pic.
Flash allows interactivity and to create animations. Video(from other files) wasn't even part of flash initially. It's more than just a video player.
i dont really care that much about the war but i found this amusing.
I dislike how controlling Apple has become with their products and business practices.
I dislike how Adobe has no motivation until now to make their products less bloated.
I dislike Microsoft's opinion on anything.
That makes it fair and even.
I like how Google has solved the issue of getting Flash running smoothly on handheld devices. Stop being a whiny turtleneck wearing little bitch and make it work.
I'm sure HTML5 will be a nice addition to the social networking empire.
hahaha,
"i can has desktop applications?"
ElysiumGX
microsoft has done alot for openig for developpers since they got sued by the EU
theyre not that bad anymore , atleast not worse than adobe or apple
what i dont like is what autodesk does to their software, the're constantly trying to improving the gui, and fail at it, instad of optimizing the under the hood things
Wait. They have?
http://jeffcroft.com/blog/2010/may/08/android-flash-demo-flashcamp-seattle/
When Flash was all Actionscript 2.0, the coding for it was a bit of a pain. Then Actionscript 3.0 came out, and suddenly Flash development improved considerably and became a lot more accessible. The command line tools that Adobe released with AS3 make it possible for anyone to produce Flash files without purchasing the Flash IDE. There are still plenty of issues with Flash. For me the most noticeable is the gross difference in performance between platforms. (the Mac version of the flash player runs like crap)
At the end of the day, this whole thing is a massive hissy fit over standards. Apple want's their software standardized in HTML5, that's why they are trying to push it's adoption. Adobe is just getting caught in the middle of all of this. Flash is its own separate plug-in, so it doesn't really have anything to do with web standards.
Wait, did I just make an attempt to defend Flash? Something is very wrong here.
Then again the only apple products I have are the ones in my kitchen next to bananas and kiwifruit, so thankfully I won't really have to care ^_^
When I use my iPod to browse the net, I feel like I'm at work, and content is being blocked from me, but this is a device and internet that 'I' pay for, so my expectation is to have no limitations. I consider Apple to be the bigger evil in all of this.
And yes, I think that Android Flash demo was just a poorly executed presentation. They obviously didn't try out the site first, rather than finding some save examples of Flash sites. Flash IS bloated, and most cell phones don't have the processing power (and probably not enough RAM) to handle heavy Flash sites. That's going to require some creative coding and I don't fault the Android developers for that crash. I can accept a 'this flash app crashed' error, if it allows me to access most other Flash content.
OH NO YOU DI'N'.