Hi Friends,

              I ve heared that cts stopped using flex and they move on to
html 5...

-- 
With Regards
G.Thiyagarajan
   Mob - 9750003737


On Tue, Mar 27, 2012 at 1:00 AM, Saurabh Narula <
[email protected]> wrote:

> Agree to most of your views Nishtant, specifically the fact that we need
> to be good programmers at the end of the day. Being stubborn (oh yes
> stubborn!) & disciplined to extensbility, scalability of the app
> architecture, good code writing practices is something that will stand you
> apart in the crowd. Strict usability practices/guidelines is another area
> (if you are serious about UI) that you should focus on. But I still dont
> buy in the whole propaganda of 'fire in the mountain .. run run run', but
> then its not all hunky dory as well.
>
> Adobe's priorities have changed, they are a company and its their own
> right to invest in what they think would be most valuable and good
> investment for them. People still do not realize that when flash for mobile
> devices (and thus flex in a way) was not dumped, there were still
> alternatives, and you could still develop apps without using flex, weighing
> the odds of the options available (at that time or today) is still very
> subjective and depends on use cases. Flex is still a choice, but the future
> of technology/platform is uncertain. I would (and everyone should) see this
> as an opportunity to apply all that you have learnt with flex in other
> frameworks. extJS do makes sense. Think about working with SVG, canvas
> directly in the browser. HTML5 capabilities are not there yet,
> and undoubtedly flex is ahead, but flex clearly is not the future, HTML5
> is.
>
>
> Thanks
> Saurabh
>
>
>
> On Mon, Mar 19, 2012 at 12:41 PM, nishantkyal <[email protected]>wrote:
>
>> Hi,
>>
>> I agree with the original post that Flex developers should be on their
>> toes looking at other technologies, the most obvious choice being UI
>> technologies like HTML5, JQuery etc.
>>
>> Couple of reasons:
>>
>>    - Flex is winding down and even though it'll wind down even faster
>>    with upcoming Windows 8 which will not support browser plugins and
>>    increasing dominance of iOS. Even Adobe is pulling out of mobile browser
>>    space and will have to do so when major OS stop supporting third-party
>>    browser plugins. Sad but true.
>>    - Flex wouldn't die tomorrow, but you'll see less and less money put
>>    into it which means lesser exciting work and more maintenance on projects
>>    which are waiting to be converted into other technologies. Obviously these
>>    will not be a hell lot and will also not pay as much.
>>    - Being moved over to Apache doesn't mean it's gonna perform as good
>>    as other projects. If anything that went to apache became a rockstar, 
>> every
>>    project will start on apache. Apache is just an opensource foundation, it
>>    doesn't drive adoption and success.
>>
>> My advice to everybody (including me) is to start looking at other
>> technologies and trying to be better programmers with more emphasis on
>> algorithms, UI models, code structuring and just being better programmers.
>> That's your insurance against the any tech you're working on fading out.
>>
>> Nishant
>>
>> On Sunday, February 19, 2012 12:22:24 PM UTC+5:30, flexdev wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>> Hi  All,
>>>
>>> Adobe’s view of Flex and its commitments to Flex in the future
>>> http://www.adobe.com/devnet/**flex/whitepapers/roadmap.html<http://www.adobe.com/devnet/flex/whitepapers/roadmap.html>
>>>
>>>
>>> Shyam
>>>
>>> On Wed, Feb 15, 2012 at 2:16 PM, naresh s <[email protected]>wrote:
>>>
>>>> Hi Guys,
>>>>
>>>> I'm a flex developer. I've been working for past 1 year on this
>>>> platform. I've observered (you may also) a sharp declining of Flex Job
>>>> oppurtunities after HTML5 has succesfully emerged. Not only this, even
>>>> Adobe has also decided to move working with HTML5 in a official
>>>> statement.
>>>>
>>>> Further more, Flex can't be powerful in Tab arena where IOS and
>>>> Android OS work well with HTML5 and other mobile frameworks like
>>>> Sencha and ExtJS etc.,
>>>>
>>>> So, should we take our turn towards HTML5, ExtJS, Sencha, JQuery and
>>>> any mobile and web frameworks etc...?
>>>> Hope your experiences and views will help me and also frehers who want
>>>> to see the career in Flex platform.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Regargs,
>>>> Naresh
>>>>
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>>>>
>>>>
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