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BLOGOSPHERE: Flash sparks Apple-Adobe spat

BLOGOSPHERE: Flash sparks Apple-Adobe spat

By:  Rafael Ruffolo  On: 05 Feb 2010 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

Apple’s iPhone and iPad obviously share a lot in common, including the lack of Flash support. Find out why this has become such a big deal in the blogosphere

The blogosphere is buzzing over a fierce debate between Apple Inc. and Adobe Inc. concerning the absence of Adobe Flash support on iPhone and iPad devices.

 

The controversy began earlier this week after Adobe CTO Kevin Lynch proclaimed that his company was on the verge of delivering Flash Player 10.1 for pretty much every smart phone in the world except the iPhone.

 

Apple CEO Steve Jobs responded to this by providing his reasons for why both hugely popular Apple devices lack Flash support. He charged that the technology is “too buggy” and that Adobe has been “lazy” with its development.

 

Apple also said it intends to move toward alternatives such as HTML5 and is asking developers to use standards such as CSS, JavaScript and Ajax instead of Flash.

 

This prompted Lynch to respond on Adobe’s official blog site.

 

“Adobe supports HTML and its evolution and we look forward to adding more capabilities to our software around HTML as it evolves,” he wrote. “If HTML could reliably do everything Flash does that would certainly save us a lot of effort, but that does not appear to be coming to pass."

 

“Even in the case of video, where Flash is enabling over 75 per cent of video on the Web today, the coming HTML video implementations cannot agree on a common format across browsers, so users and content creators would be thrown back to the dark ages of video on the Web with incompatibility issues.”

 

The typical online response from Apple supporters could be summed up by Chris Rawson, a blogger with The Unofficial Apple Weblog.

 

“I know anecdotal data is the worst kind there is, but in nearly a year of using my iPhone to connect to the Internet, not only have I not missed Flash, I've been glad it isn't there,” he wrote.


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Rafael Ruffolo Rafael Ruffolo was a senior writer for ComputerWorld Canada from 2006 to 2011. He was the winner of a Kenneth R. Wilson award for business journalism in 2009.

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