PDA Street

Home | News | Reviews | Features | FREE Downloads | Forums | Compare PDA Prices | Compare SmartPhone Prices


  Other PDAs > News > Flash Support for iPhone Still a Ways Off, Official Apps Not Until Summer

Flash Support for iPhone Still a Ways Off, Official Apps Not Until Summer

By James Alan Miller
March 5, 2008

During a shareholders meeting yesterday, Apple CEO Steve Jobs strongly implied support for Adobe's Flash format in the iPhone and iPod touch is still, unfortunately, a ways off. Flash is the most widely used way for delivering animations and videos on the Web.

Apple's mobile devices don't have enough juice to run the full version of Adobe's ubiquitous multimedia system for the Web effectively, according to Jobs. And, in his opinion, Adobe's Flash Lite player, the version for cell phones and smartphones, simply isn't up to Apple's standards.

The full version of the Flash player "performs too slow to be useful," Jobs said, and Flash Lite "is not capable of being used with the Web." He added, "There's this missing product in the middle," but "it just doesn't exist."

So instead of giving iPhone users Apple at least partial Flash support, it appears Apple would rather wait and not give them anything it all - at least for the time being. Jobs and company asserts the iPhone and iPod touch deliver the real Web to users. While this is true in many respects, when it comes to streaming video and animations, this assertion will remain far from accurate for the foreseeable future.

When it comes to Internet video, they'll have to continue to rely on Apple's special YouTube application, which streams specially-formatted video from the mega-video site, but only a fraction of the number users would get through YouTube directly.

In other iPhone news, Jobs also promised shareholders, "You'll see a lot of apps out there this summer." On the surface this is an extremely positive development.

However, it also seems to indicate the software development kit (SDK) to deliver "official" native applications—programs that run directly on the devices themselves and not through the Safari Web browser—to the iPhone and iPod touch won't be released tomorrow, at an event Apple is holding to reveal details about the SDK, as hoped.

Meanwhile, those who want to greatly expand the capabilities of there iPhone and iPod touch will have to continue to rely on tenuous hacks, called jailbreaks, that Apple often disables when it releases a firmware upgrade for the devices.

Rumor has it all official software for these devices will have to be sold directly through iTunes, which would give Apple maximum control over what software folks install on their devices.



Related Links:

  • Skyfire Extends Invites to Download Windows Mobile Web Browser
  • Apple's Tug of War Over iPhone Software
  • The iPhone Has A Lot, But Not It All

     
     Printable Version
     Email this Story to a Friend  Add Your Opinion



    User Opinions:

       

    Be the first to add your opinion about this product
    Click HERE Now!


     Add Your Opinion  



  • PDA/Smartphone Newsletters
    text html text html
    X WindowsMobileToday X PDAStreet
    X Palm Boulevard X SmartPhoneToday
    X BlackBerryToday X Pocket PC Wire
    X iPhoneGuide      

    Other Personal Technology Newsletters
    X Sharky Extreme X WiFi Planet


    JupiterOnlineMedia

    internet.comearthweb.comDevx.commediabistro.comGraphics.com

    Search:

    Jupitermedia Corporation has two divisions: Jupiterimages and JupiterOnlineMedia

    Jupitermedia Corporate Info


    Legal Notices, Licensing, Reprints, & Permissions, Privacy Policy.

    Advertise | Newsletters | Tech Jobs | Shopping | E-mail Offers

    Solutions
    Whitepapers and eBooks
    Intel PDF: Virtualization Delivers Data Center Efficiency
    Intel eBook: Managing the Evolving Data Center
    Microsoft Article: BitLocker Brings Encryption to Windows Server 2008
    Symantec eBook: The Guide to E-Mail Archiving and Management
    Microsoft Article: RODCs Transform Branch Office Security
    Go Parallel Article: James Reinders on the Intel Parallel Studio Beta Program
    Avaya Article: Advancing the State of the Art in Customer Service
    Adobe Acrobat Connect Pro: Web Conferencing and eLearning Whitepapers
    Avaya Article: Avaya AE Services Provide Rapid Telephony Integration with Facebook
    Go Parallel Article: Getting Started with TBB on Windows
    HP eBook: Storage Networking , Part 1
    MORE WHITEPAPERS, EBOOKS, AND ARTICLES
    Webcasts
    Intel Seminar: Efficiencies in Hardware/Software Virtualization
    HP Webcast: Disaster Recovery Planning
    Go Parallel Video: Performance and Threading Tools for Game Developers
    HP Video: StorageWorks EVA4400 and Oracle
    HP Webcast: Storage Is Changing Fast - Be Ready or Be Left Behind
    MORE WEBCASTS, PODCASTS, AND VIDEOS
    Downloads and eKits
    IBM TCO eKIT: Your IT Budget is Under Attack, Get in Control
    IBM Energy Efficiency eKIT: Learn How to Reduce Costs
    30-Day Trial: SPAMfighter Exchange Module
    Red Gate Download: SQL Toolbelt and free High-Performance SQL Code eBook
    Iron Speed Designer Application Generator
    MORE DOWNLOADS, EKITS, AND FREE TRIALS
    Tutorials and Demos
    Microsoft Article: Silverlight Streaming--Free Video Hosting for All
    Featured Algorithm: Intel Threading Building Blocks - parallel_reduce
    HP Demo: StorageWorks EVA4400
    MORE TUTORIALS, DEMOS AND STEP-BY-STEP GUIDES