$bbtitle
Apple Stock: 222.2499 ( -2.4001 )
RSS RSS Twitter Twitter
Search:
AppleInsider.com Archives News Bytes Reviews Anonymous Mailer Submit Story AppleInsider Forums Mac Prices Polls Advertise on AppleInsider Contact AppleInsider
Save over $300 on MacBook Pros and $150 on iMacs with special coupons: Mac Pricing Guide updated March 19th (Find the best prices on Macs).
Share
Tuesday, October 6, 2009

HTML5 assault on Adobe Flash heats up with ClickToFlash [Page 2]

By Daniel Eran Dilger

Published: 04:35 PM EST

Adobe's mobile strategy for Flash

While ClickToFlash works to kill Flash on the desktop, the existing battle between Adobe's Flash and HTML5 has been waged squarely in the mobile realm. Apple introduced the iPhone without support for either the desktop version of Flash or Flash Lite, a subset of Flash aimed at smartphone devices. As Apple became increasingly adamant in opposing Flash on the iPhone, Adobe reported that it had a Flash Player for the iPhone under wraps and nearing completion, and suggested that Apple was even involved in working on the project.

That changed with the announcement this week that Adobe would be releasing a new version of Flash Player 10 for other mobile platforms over the next year, with an initial public beta for Windows Mobile and Palm's WebOS by the end of the year, followed by betas for Android, Symbian, and RIM's BlackBerry OS sometime in 2010. Missing from those announcements was the hottest mobile device on the market: the iPhone/iPod touch.

(Updated since original publication to note that RIM is working with the Open Screen Project; Adobe says "The collaboration is expected to bring the full Flash Player browser runtime to BlackBerry smartphones.")

Adobe addressed iPhone development with the announcement that its upcoming CS5 Flash development tools would enable the production of native iPhone apps. The resulting applications are not Flash, and this does nothing to enable Flash playback on the iPhone, either within standalone apps or embedded in web pages.

Creating iPhone apps using Flash CS5

Flash "applications" replace open and standard web content created using HTML, CSS, and JavaScript with Adobe's proprietary .swf, a closed binary file that wraps up web content files (such as graphics and movies) with the company's own variant of ECMAScript (JavaScript), called ActionScript. In CS5, the Flash development tools will allow new Flash projects to be exported as standard iPhone apps rather than .swf files.

Adobe is doing this using LLVM (Low Level Virtual Machine), an open source compiler technology supported by Apple and used in its Xcode Mac and iPhone development tools. The next version of Adobe's Flash development app will simply compile Flash ActionScript into native iPhone code, much as existing tools already allow iPhone developers to write their code using Java, Scheme, or other languages, and then compile the code into C or Objective-C as a native iPhone app.

The iPhone is designed not to support any alternative languages via any sort of virtual machine, which prevents it from running "raw" Java, Flash, .Net, Silverlight, or anything else apart from its native C/Objective-C compiled to the ARM processor. This is enforced in the terms of Apple's SDK agreement. There is however no restriction against compiling any existing code into native C/Objective-C and creating an iPhone app from it.

Making iPhone apps with Flash CS5


On page 3 of 3: Porting the many faces of Flash to mobiles.

Filed under : Software, iPhone 100 Comments ] 
Story topics: Flash, Adobe, HTML5   Print ] [ Story Link ] 



Mac Poker players can play Full Tilt Poker for Mac and get 100% to $600 free with bonus code MP600, courtesy of Online Poker Mac
AppleInsider Features
Hot Forum Topics

Recent Articles
Steve Jobs teams with Calif. governor to push organ donor registry
Apple begins accepting iPad apps on the App Store
Briefly: Intel short on supply of MacBook Pro-bound processors
China Mobile knocks on Apple's door, seeks preferential treatment
Apple tables push for TV subscriptions on iPad, seeks 99 cent episodes
Apple's iPad secrecy leaves many developers handicapped
Release of Apple's Mac OS X 10.6.3 Update appears imminent
Apple has pre-sold "hundreds of thousands" of iPads
Apple preps 27-inch LED Cinema Display, dodeca-core Mac Pro
Apple director Jerome York passes away
Fascinating motion magazine demo highlights iPad's potential
Confident HTC says no plans to back down from Apple lawsuit
Amazon releases free beta of Kindle for Mac eBook reading software
Apple exploring iPhone audio text message, walkie-talkie feature
Apple director Jerry York in critical condition following collapse
iPhone devs can now automate app release dates, price changes
Apple to ban film-based screen protectors from company stores
Apple adds sharing features, iPad interface tweaks to iWork.com beta
Apple's iMac to account for 25% of global desktop growth in 2010
iPad prompts changes to way magazines count circulation
Apple asks developers to test fonts in latest Mac OS X 10.6.3 beta
NPR, WSJ plan Flash-free Web sites for Apple iPad
'Fake Steve Jobs,' 'Seinfeld' scribe team for Silicon Valley comedy
Apple delays iPad keyboard dock, power adapter until May
First-gen iPhone, Droid sold 8 times better than Nexus One debut
39% of BlackBerry owners say they'd switch to an iPhone
High prices make Apple reluctant to strike longterm NAND flash deals
Apple-Google battle heats up with key hires on both sides
February Mac sales up 43%, Apple on track for 2.9M in quarter
Apple's Steve Jobs gets OK to raze dilapidated mansion
Startup developers represent one in five on Apple's App Store
Microsoft exec says Apple's HTC suit 'is not necessarily a bad thing'
Preorders for Apple iPad slow after 120K first-day rush
NYT: Steve Jobs feels Google betrayed Apple by mimicking iPhone
Apple to replace iPads in need of new battery for $99
Former P.A. Semi chief leaves Apple for chip startup - report
Roughly 10% of Microsoft employees said to be iPhone owners
Apple COO Tim Cook awarded $22 million bonus
iPad: 50,000 sales in 2 hours, Apple TV bumped, mysterious app icon
Tight iPad supply has Apple turning down volume orders for businesses

 
Advertisements








AppleInsider RSS Feed
AppleInsider © 1997-2008
Please review our Privacy Policy.
Written/Edited/Compiled by the AppleInsider Staff.