Right, I'm just saying their decision should be based on business or
technical merits and not simply because some people just don't like flash.

-- 
Katrina


-----Original Message-----
From: M. Edward (Ed) Borasky [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Monday, March 15, 2010 3:56 PM
To: Katrina Niolet
Cc: 'Bernd Stramm'; 'Wichmann, Mats D'; [email protected]
Subject: Re: [MeeGo-dev] Adobe Flash 10.1 on Meego

This is a strategic *business* decision, not a purely technical one.  
Steve Jobs has made the strategic business decision that his platform  
will not support Flash. What is Intel/Nokia's decision?

Do they think Steve Jobs is wrong? Are they willing to finance open  
source Flash libraries that actually work? Are there patents that  
would prevent that? Are they willing to license Adobe technology if  
that's required to "support Flash?"

I use openSUSE 11.2 as my principal desktop. I've tried all the  
available open source Flash plug-ins and there are sites that I visit  
that won't play with any of them. Novell has made some kind of deal  
with Adobe to allow me to run Adobe's plug-in on my desktop, and the  
Adobe plug-in plays these sites.
-- 
M. Edward (Ed) Borasky
borasky-research.net/m-edward-ed-borasky/

"A mathematician is a device for turning coffee into theorems." ~ Paul Erdos

Quoting Katrina Niolet <[email protected]>:

> Simply not supporting flash does put pressure on those sites which could
> work just as well without it, but not all sites using flash fall into that
> category currently. The biggest reason flash has proliferated is that
there
> is a void that they were able to fill, so while everyone hates it,
everyone
> puts up with it until something better comes along.
>
> Keep in mind that flash is not used only for pointless youtube videos and
> bad programming, there are sites like hulu.com which rely on flash because
> there is no widely available alternative currently for delivering the kind
> of media experience they want to give. While long term some of the
features
> of HTML5 are designed to fix these problems, it's still way off and
content
> providers won't be shifting overnight either. Users may incorrectly blame
> the device manufacturer for their memory filling up or slow connections
but
> they would not be incorrect to blame a manufacturer who sells devices they
> can't access their favorite websites on simply because of political
reasons.
>
> I like the idea of not downloading and playing flash files unless they are
> specifically requested, though. I believe Opera supports this, so it seems
> to be something that can be fixed at the browser (or at least rendering
> engine) level bypassing the designers and content providers.
>
> --
> Katrina

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