Archive for the ‘technology’ Category

CS5 Flash doesn’t exist – But could it be true? – iPhone Apps with flash design

Saturday, November 14th, 2009

For the 3rd time this month I have heard someone mention CS5… and I thought, am I missing something ? I haven’t heard a thing about it from ADOBE… except some rumers that doubted that ADOBE would ever come out with a full upgrade just 18 months after CS4. SO I did a little research…

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In my research I came up with another rumor, which is very interesting… Stymied in its effors to bring Flash Player to the iPhone, Adobe has come up with a workaround that one observer has called an “end-around:”  the new Flash Professional CS5 allows Flash applications to be compiled as stand-alone iPhone apps.

A man named John Loiacono, head of Adobe’s Creative Solutions unit, announced at the AdobeMax conference earlier this week. said

“We are ecstatic to announce that we’re enabling you to use your Flash development tools to build applications and compile them to run natively on the iPhone.”

A lot of people thought different about it and the Apple CEO Steve Jobs disparaged Flash at last year’s Apple shareholder meeting, saying that the multimedia platform “performs too slow to be useful” on the iPhone. “There’s this missing product in the middle. It just doesn’t exist,” he told the shareholders.

The beta release for Flash Professional CS5 is said to be coming at the end of this year, so lets see if all this mess is true and will it actually be here finally.

Could it be… Flash and iPhone Apps ? or Flash in general on the iPhone? and what about Flash CS5 Design or Master Suite ?

The kind of experience you’d experience from flash and the kind of experience you’d expect from the iPhone… It’s true! And there are already some Apps in the store to prove it. check this link direct from ADOBE Labs: http://labs.adobe.com/technologies/flashcs5/appsfor_iphone/#demo and check out the video.

So… if your still asking When will Adobe Flash Platform tooling support building applications for iPhone? A public beta of Flash Professional CS5 including support for building applications for iPhone is planned for later this year. Sign up to be notified when the beta is available.

And… here’s the Skinny “…Flash Professional CS5 will enable developers to build applications for iPhone that are installed as native applications. Users will be able to access the apps after downloading them from Apple’s App Store and installing them on iPhone or iPod touch.” and… “Flash Player uses a just-in-time compiler and virtual machine within a browser plug-in to play back content on websites. Those technologies are not allowed on the iPhone at this time, so a Flash Player for iPhone is not being made available today.”


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Droid Does – have the Flash Player

Friday, November 13th, 2009

The Flash Player Plugin is not included in the design of “android” and more specifically the DROID by Verizon Wireless—But Wait…

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One important feature that Verizon forgot to include in their Droid Does commercial is that the Droid phone does support Flash while the iPhone doesn’t! Earlier this year, Adobe announced that they will be releasing a mobile version of their Flash Player for Android, Windows Mobile, and the Palm webOS. The iPhone OS was not included in this list.
The design of Droid will be running Android 2.0 operating system. Flash player is expected to be released for the Android OS and other mobile operating systems some time in early 2010. With multi-tasking, Flash, and the most popular carrier, the Droid does stand a pretty good chance at competing with the iPhone. Will it be an iPhone killer? We’ll find out soon enough!

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LBS (Location-Based Services) and Google Latitude

Wednesday, November 11th, 2009

Google is not lagging too far behind on anything these days. We like the design of Android and it’s reaching far ahead into the cloud, which could be a new cornerstone of computing… but for now—something gaining a lot of attention is location-based services (LBS), which helps friends network and find each other based on their location—Foursquare and Loopt are prime examples of these growing networks.

Google has it’s own called Latitude which now tracks location history, and alerts you to nearby friends. Today, the search giant announced some major additions to Latitude that bring it in line with its fast-rising competitors (Loopt and Foursquare).

Location history is fairly straightforward: Google will store all of your past locations and will use that information to create visual histories of your trips and adventures via Google Maps. If you take a bike ride across Indiana for example, you can track the route you took along with the times in which you arrived.

The other feature is Google Location Alerts, which sends you notifications when your friends are nearby via email or SMS. To make sure you don’t get a text every time you go to work and see your Google Latitude-using co-workers, Latitude utilizes your location history to eliminate notifications when you’re in a location you regularly visit. It even incorporates time, so if you’re at work but at 3 AM, you’ll get notifications once again.

So—Latitude has an Android app, but it doesn’t have an iPhone equivalent, just a mobile site. This leaves Latitude without the ability to send push notifications, a major reason why Foursquare has been a red-hot product. For Latitude to make deeper inpact, it needs an iPhone app. There is a big difference to the user when they download an app versus opening it up in the mobile web. It could even automatically send your location utilizing the same method that Loopt is testing. Google could turn into an even stronger competitor in the LBS space.
Whether Apple would cave into Google pressure is, of course, another matter, and they’ve told Google that they didn’t want a Latitude app, however things have changed in the relationship between the two companies—and it could be possible that Google and Apple could work together on this one.

www.google.com/mobile/products/latitude.html

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Google maps navigation Live Maps Good Design!

Monday, November 9th, 2009

The new Droid phone’s design looks good! With this new inbuilt GPS app! Google Maps streetview GPS in beta, which should ship with the new Droid phone on the opensource Android 2.0 platform. The video above is a demonstration from the Google product team running the navigation project and includes some of the tech on exactly how it works along with a pretty good visual demo of what to expect!

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