Personally I find searching google almost always gives me what I want as long as I use quotation marks around a key phrase, and I must agree that Google's results are not Adobe's fault.

To talk about the state of Adobe documentation, I must say that I do find it lacking substance in many key areas; however, it is far better than what I have seen from many other companies.

If I had to gripe, I would gripe about the stupid community help interface that, more often than not, gives double scroll bar screw-ups, and even though you select local only, searches the web, unless you go into the settings. Buggy to say the least, and it is quite the memory hog too.

Air apps can be done well; yet, I find that anything done with Flex SWCs, or has a super ultra fantastic design, is too slow to work well as a Help window or some other app you could be keeping open for several hours at a time.

On 4/21/2011 7:24 PM, Ross Sclafani wrote:
I agree with this. Also, any professional worth their salt is going to have 
direct links to any documentation required to do their job.

Ross P. Sclafani
Design / Technology / Creative
347.204.5714
http://ross.sclafani.net
http://www.twitter.com/rosssclafani

On Apr 21, 2011, at 6:47 PM, Dave Watts<[email protected]>  wrote:

I think you're making a big leap from one thing to the other here.
Flash detractors don't care about the state of Adobe's documentation
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