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Adobe Shows Off Flash-to-HTML5 Converter

Adobe's John Nack points to a demo of a new tool from the company that would allow developers to easily convert their Flash projects to a combination of HTML5 and related non-Flash technologies. The tool, demoed at Adobe's MAX 2010 conference earlier this week, is not yet promised for a public release, but it is clear that the company is looking at ways to help developers offer their content in multiple formats.

Are you surprised? Don't be. As I've written many times, Adobe lives or dies by its ability to help customers solve real problems. That means putting pragmatism ahead of ideology.

Flash is great for a lot of things, and this week's demos showed it's only improving. It's not the only game in town, however, and Adobe makes its money selling tools, not giving away players. Let's help people target whatever media they need, as efficiently as possible.

Apple has of course been pushing HTML5 and other standards as an alternative to Adobe's Flash technology, and developers are increasingly getting on board as they seek to keep their content compatible with Apple's popular Flash-less iOS devices. One recent study concluded that more than half of the H.264-encoded video on the Internet is now available in HTML5 format, but with Flash used in many other capacities besides video presentation, Adobe's new tools could help developers of some of these other implementations more easily move their content to HTML5.

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17 months ago
the end of Flash is on the horizon.
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17 months ago

the end of Flash is on the horizon.


They are trying very hard to save it.
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17 months ago
Maybe Flash Player would be faster than JavaScript. Don't complain later.
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17 months ago
Adobe is in denial.

This is the first stage of acceptance.
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17 months ago
It's funny that everyone pushes HTML5 and calls Flash crap, yet the only company making good tools to make Canvas apps is the company responsible for Flash itself.

Maybe Apple should use some of its billions to make an HTML5 authoring app before calling other vendors lazy.:rolleyes:
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17 months ago
This looked like more of an attempt to show how inferior HTML 5 is compared to Flash content. I do bet that flash animation would kill the CPU on most machines.
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17 months ago
Pushing this form is what can save flash in my mind. The reason flash is liked is due to it's ease of creating content. Killing the plug-in is what I desire.
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17 months ago
I said ~6 months ago during all this Apple/Adobe confrontational mess that Adobe needed to either release a good HTML5 authoring tool, or simply make a converter. I do agree that Apple, in all their push for HTML5, should introduce a good canvas application for HTML5. God knows with their iLife Suite, iWeb NEEDS a good solid update/reason to still exist. :rolleyes: Glad to see the wheels finally moving.
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17 months ago

Pushing this form is what can save flash in my mind. The reason flash is liked is due to it's ease of creating content. Killing the plug-in is what I desire.


I agree with you. The problem with flash is the browser plug in itself.
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17 months ago
Question: if not for iOS, would Adobe have bothered with this?
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