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Re: Apple iPad
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Re: Apple iPad
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Re: Apple iPad
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Would be neat to see what could be done with that code, and a bit of interactivity - could be pretty neat - albeit, probably not as useful across all browsers/devices depending on the amount of JS. |
Re: Apple iPad
Gizmodo has picked up on this now
http://gizmodo.com/5461306/war-of-wo...adobe-heats-up As on here, there are many professionals making comments. |
Re: Apple iPad
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Re: Apple iPad
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Re: Apple iPad
The iPad (and its kins iPod Touch and iPhone) won't need Flash. The sites that currently have Flash will make specific Apps of their sites tailored for the iPad's screen, just like the way Apps have been made for the iPod Touch and iPhone. Apple gets to count more Apps in the AppStore and developers get to tout their special iPad-designed user experience for their site. The iPod Touch and iPhone don't currently have the full web, but do users care if they have "an App for that"?
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Re: Apple iPad
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As for the Flash IDE, after the CS5 there probably won't be any Flash IDE - everything is moving towards using the whole CS package as a content builder system, and leaving the ActionScript/MXML part to the Flash Builder (ex Flex Builder), and connecting everything seamlessly via the Flash Catalyst. Which actually is a good thing - leave the coding to the developers, plenty of crappy Flash sites/implementations are done by designers that cannot grasp the development side of the story. Quote:
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Re: Apple iPad
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The iPad is an ebook reader and stand-alone media player that as a bonus, can even run iPhone applications... It's not "the next big thing", it's just an iPhone that you are supposed to use on the couch instead of standing up on the bus stop. As for the lack of Flash: I am not a huge fan of Flash myself, and I kinda like it that Apple is making pressure for people to move away from Flash and anything on top of the browser. They brought the focus towards OS applications again. I like that. It always feels funnny to me that one of the good aspects of Maemo is to support Flash, that I dislike so much. But it would be good if these applications were more platform-independent, of course... (The above comment is quite good. I would just like to point out that while I dislike Flash, it doesn't mean I think it's easy to substitute it for anything else! :) ) |
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Most of the major book publishers too have fallen all over themselves to sign deals with Apple. For the Kindle, Amazon demanded inflexible pricing well below where the publishers want to position their ebooks, and no one else has had a platform large enough to even give the publishers some leverage in negotiations. Additionally, textbook publishers are talking of including multimedia and timely updates to their books, an effort to keep them timely and useful as the Internet assails that industry as well. Plus, eliminating that pesky used textbook market would be...pleasant. Apple won't have to work to market the iPad. The big media companies have good reason to make sure the public is aware of Apple's new wonder device. The web browser is ending the traditional method of winning control of the operating system market--and the hardware underneath: have the apps. For the next round, Apple aims to wield content. |
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