May 1st, 2008
Adobe opens up Flash, but leaves out Google and Apple
In a well timed move today Adobe announced the Open Screen Project and lifted restrictions on the use of Flash related specifications. The initiative is supported by several industry leaders including ARM, Intel, LG, Motorola, Nokia, NTT DoCoMo, Qualcomm, Samsung, Sony Ericsson, Toshiba, and Verizon. Notably absent from the list were Google and Apple, creators of the Android and iPhone platforms respectively.
While Flash players have always been free of charge and some Flash tools are open source, until now Adobe has kept tight reins on the format that the player consumes. “Previously, in order to look at the SWF specification you had to sign a licensing agreement not to use it to create competing players,” writes Adobe’s Ryan Stewart, “but in the interest of expanding the reach of the Flash Player we’re removing all of those restrictions.”
Adobe is also publishing the device porting layer APIs for their Flash player, and removing all licensing fees. With this change, any handset manufacturer (*cough* Apple *cough*) who wants Flash to run on their device can do so without paying Adobe a dime. That’s assuming, of course, a version of Flash player has been compiled for the specific processor used by the device. With ARM and Intel on board, the two major mobile architectures are covered.
The reason I say the announcement was well timed is that it came two days after comments from Mozilla warning developers not to rely on proprietary technology like Flash, and a week before the opening of Sun’s JavaOne conference in San Francisco. Java powers many of today’s mobile programs, and Java and Linux form the foundation for Google’s upcoming Android platform.
“You’re producing content for your users and there’s someone in the middle deciding whether users should see your content,” said Mozilla Europe founder Tristan Nitot at a conference Tuesday. “If Adobe or Microsoft decides to compete with you and you’re using their technology, you cannot compete.” Nitot says that HTML5-compliant browsers from a variety of vendors will provide much of what people use Flash for today such as audio and video. This is true, though people use Flash for much more than that. Increasingly, it’s being used for entire rich internet applications.
The source code for the Flash player is still closed source and proprietary, but removing restrictions on licensing and even looking at the format specifications goes a long, long way towards alleviating fears of vendor lock-in. This will give a boost to open source players like Gnash and swfdec. While it’s unlikely that the open source players will ever catch up to the performance and features in the official Adobe player, it’s nice to have the option to get the technology from multiple places in case something happens to Adobe such as, say, getting acquired by Microsoft.
Ed Burnette is a professional developer and author of several articles and books about computing including Hello, Android: Introducing Google's Mobile Development Platform. For disclosure of Ed's industry affiliations, click here.

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Does this mean we will see SWFs and FLVs on the iPhone very soon? May be time to switch providers! Let's talk about what this means for us. http://blogs.zdnet.com/Burnette/?p=571 http://www.adobe.com/openscreenproject/developers/ ...
Trackback by LA Flash — May 1, 2008 @ 3:35 pm
Adobe lifts restrictions of flash specificationsA few day ago, I reported how to work around a nasty bug in Ubuntu Hardy Heron related to Adobes Flash player. Adobe today removed some license restrictions on it's flash related specification, which were formerly present to stop ...
Trackback by Markus Thielmann — May 1, 2008 @ 9:05 pm
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Trackback by TeleRead: Bring the E-Books Home — May 2, 2008 @ 5:11 pm
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Daily del.icio.us for April 28th through May 2ndUse XQuery from a Java environment - XML data format can be hard to search, but with the fairly recent introduction of the XQuery API, XML searches are now flexible and easy to perform. For Java programmers who work with XML documents ...
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Flash vs. iPhone — VHS vs. Beta — HD-DVD vs. BluRayThere’s a bunch of excellent commentary and backstory around the web about Adobe’s push for mobile dominance (relevance?) with today’s Open Screen Project announcement. Ed Burnette at ZDNet points out that pretty much every mobile handset player (Nokia, Motorola, Siemens, Samsung, Intel, ARM) has lined up behind Adobe. Who’s left out? Apple and Google. Hmm… Amol Sharma in the Wall Street Journal writes that the battle is over (1) the mobile web, and (2) online video: Making video from Web sites work on cellphones is widely seen as a crucial component of the
Trackback by Anonymous — June 24, 2008 @ 3:20 am
TeleRead: Bring the E-Books HomeGood thing for the most part but… For the most part, then, this is a Good Thing. Still, from an e-book perspective, Adobe bears closer watching than ever. A few questions: 1. How open is “open� ZDNet blogger Ed Burnett notes that “source code for the Flash player is still closed source and proprietary.†Adobe acted not out of charity but to be protective of its sales of authoring tools for e-books and other media. The positive side, of course, as Burnett says, is less
Trackback by Anonymous — June 28, 2008 @ 3:15 am
TeleRead: Bring the E-Books HomeGood thing for the most part but… For the most part, then, this is a Good Thing. Still, from an e-book perspective, Adobe bears closer watching than ever. A few questions: 1. How open is “open� ZDNet blogger Ed Burnett notes that “source code for the Flash player is still closed source and proprietary.†Adobe acted not out of charity but to be protective of its sales of authoring tools for e-books and other media. The positive side, of course, as Burnett says, is less
Trackback by Anonymous — June 30, 2008 @ 3:14 am
Adobe opens more dev access to FlashAdobe has just announced an initiative to open up the Flash spec again, with no license fees for porting their player (using a pre-compiled secret
Trackback by Anonymous — July 2, 2008 @ 3:16 am