On Wed, Feb 25, 2015 at 10:07 AM,  <f...@dfguy.us> wrote:
> Keep in mind though that Adobe is still investing in flash and air. They are 
> just focused on gaming.

I agree, this is one of the strategic moves I applauded Adobe for.
There are very specific strategic interest in this focus on gaming:

1/ it keeps the development team focused, Adobe is drastically
invested in India based human resources and I have exposed both my
concerns and the result of my research about that. Based on the
education system in India, it seems that you simply cannot maintain a
developing team performant for product based development. Services,
yes. Cisco, yes. VMware, definitely. DirectTV, HBO, Adobe, Disney,
Apple... forget it! I bet you most highly performing professional you
know from those companies are second generation. By having a highly
creative team in SF, California, or even Eastern Europe and a highly
efficient technical team in India focused on clearly defined features,
it seems they have been able to deliver.

2/ simply put, if it is good enough for games, it is good enough for
anything! you can't scam the world about Flash performance when built
for gaming, it was so easy to do so when it was built for banner ads.,

3/ games and desktop video are more viral and spread faster and
quicker than anything else, Adobe focused on those two, here is our
guarantee to keep above 95%browser penetration and near ubiquity
across platform and OS. You can tell anything b*tching about Flash
"have you watched the Olympics? Not the last? What about the before
the last? Ok, either way it does not matter what your device was, it
is was Flash, Flex, AIR, AS3 and zero HTML5". Same with Angry Bird,
how long did it take Google and Rivo? LOL still last week I could not
play without Flash outside of Chrome.

> There probably would be a mobile version if not for the fragmentation in the 
> market from iOS, causing them to drop off of it.

I do not think so, out f the top 10 multinationals in the mobile
industry, 9 committed to dedicate resources and have their engineers
work hand in hand with Adobe's engineer to "optimize and accelerate
Flash Player and AIR for mobile platforms and chipsets", and bring
that ecosystem to their mobile devices "because you simply cannot have
the full web experience on mobile devices, without Flash". I am not
saying it, the CEOs of Google, ARM, Motorola, HTC, Intel, NVIDIA,
Palm, QUALCOMM, RIM, Broadcom, DoCoMo, and STMicroelectronics are. On
cam. Google HTML5 evangelists should remember those words from their
CEO Eric Schmidt: "We need Flash in order to show off the best of
applications available on the web. The Open Screen Project is the next
step in the evolution of Flash".

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kt3hTGpfrSE

So, Adobe did not drop Flash on Android because of browser
fragmentation, it killed it because the Open Screen Project was about
to put Apple to shame and have its sale plummet if Jobs persisted in
not supporting Flash. So, I believe and hope to be able to prove soon
that Jobs coerced Adobe to kill Flash Player, in exchange of what
Apple made AIR the rockstar of the iOS. My problem with that is 1/
pure plain conspiracy, 2/ hijack free open business to walled taxed
proprietary fascist system, 3/ it is racketeering.


> I think that it's correct to think that maintaining an open source VM would 
> be a lot of work, and keep in mind that just because it's open source doesn't 
> > mean it will be runnable on iOS, unless it's based on javascript somehow. I 
> think flexjs is set up to compile down as to JavaScript in a basic fashion.

How many billion and decades is it going to take for a consensus about
the fact that JS will never be capable of competing with app stores?
It cannot be entirely, fully open source. It cannot have its
implementation left freely to the browsers or OS. It has to have a
proprietary component that allows us to keep some level of control.

Remember Eric Schmidt "Open Screen Project is the next step in the
evolution of Flash", not "HTML5 open source standard in the next step
in the evolution of Flash". Well, as I said before Adobe abandoned the
Open Screen Project trademarks with USPTO, so I snatched them with the
intend to take it where Adobe left it, and all the way this time.

-Stephane

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