오픈 스크린 프로젝트로서 어도비가 플래쉬로 석권하겠다고 발표했다.
Write One, Java Everywhere 짝퉁같은 표어지만, 의미심장한 발언이 아닌가 싶다.
최근 햅틱폰에 플래쉬가 들어간 이슈를 생각해보면, 결국은 UI는 플래쉬로 가지 않으면 안될 것 같은 느낌이 오고 있다..ㅡ.ㅡ;;
2년전만 해도 아직 모바일 쪽으로는 무거운 플래쉬를 탑재하지 못할 것이라는 기대가 있었지만, 모바일의 하드웨어 성능이 좋아지면서 달라질 것으로 보인다...
출처 :
http://www.techcrunch.com/2008/04/30/adobes-open-screen-project-write-once-flash-everywhere/
Adobe’s Open Screen Project: Write Once, Flash EverywhereErick Schonfeld34 comments »Adobe is making a big play to make Flash the de facto viewing environment not only for Web apps on your PC, but also on your mobile phone, your TV, and any other screen you can think of. It is announcing the Open Screen Project to make it easier to develop applications across devices—using Flash, of course. David Wadhwani, general manager of Adobe’s platform business (which includes Flash/Flex, AIR, and Cold Fusion), says:
We believe it is time for an industry-wide movement for a consistent way to develop across the Web for PCs, mobile devices, and TVs. To help the project along, Adobe is:
On the application creation side, Adobe increasingly will be adopting a widget approach. There is not much difference between a widget that runs as a module on a Web page and a mobile app that runs on a small screen. Wadhwani explains:
The same approach can be used for apps on other devices as well, such as set-top boxes. The promise of the Open Screen Project to developers is the age-old dream of being able to write an application once and deploy it anywhere across any device. Adobe and its slew of partners in the Open Screen Project (Nokia, Sony Ericsson, Qualcomm, Samsung, Motorola, LG, Toshiba, NTT Docomo, Chungwa Telecom, ARM, Intel, Marvell, Cisco, NBC Universal, MTV Networks, and the BBC) are not alone in this desire. Notably absent from Adobe’s list of partners is Apple, Google, and Microsoft. Each has its own ideas on how this cross-device compatibility will work. Apple thinks you should just buy Apple products that work seamlessly together (Mac, iPhone, Apple TV). Steve Jobs also notably snubbed Adobe by refusing to put Flash on the iPhone. Maybe his engineers can now make their own version that satisfies their exacting standards. Google has never been a big fan of Flash, preferring the speed of Ajax in its Webtop apps. On the mobile front, it is betting on Android, its own open operating system. And it also develops mobile apps the traditional way—one device at a time. But the company with the most overarching and different approach to Adobe’s in this regard is Microsoft. It is pushing its own alternative to Flash: Silverlight. (Although it has licensed Flash Lite for Windows Mobile as a stopgap measure until Silverlight works on mobile devices). More radically, Microsoft differs on how to make apps work across devices. It’s answer ultimately will be Live Mesh. As I wrote last week when Microsoft officially unveiled Live Mesh.:
The more competition we get for ways to bridge applications across devices and screens, the more likely that we’ll actually start to see some of our favorite Web apps on something other than our laptops. (Photo by AMagill). |
'Trend' 카테고리의 다른 글
Google Oceans (0) | 2008.05.07 |
---|---|
심리치료에 활용되는 가상현실 기술 (0) | 2008.05.03 |
린 싱킹의 이해 (0) | 2008.04.29 |
서울 실시간 교통 정보 (0) | 2008.04.28 |
you tube (0) | 2008.04.27 |