How Apple’s killing Adobe’s Flash

New Arrivals Catalog Cover“In 1998, Apple killed the floppy drive. It took a few years for the rest of the industry to catch up, but the handwriting was clearly on the wall,” Gene Steinberg writes for The Tech Night Owl. “Of course, anyone who actually lost data on a worn or defective floppy would only cheer the end of that flawed storage scheme.”

“Segue to 2007. Apple introduces the iPhone without support for Flash. People complain, but iPhones sell at ever-increasing rates. Today, with some 40 million of them around the world, and the iPad on the immediate horizon, Steve Jobs has made it quite clear that Flash is the floppy drive of the 21st century,” Steinberg writes. “It’s time for it to go.”

“As tens of millions of additional customers acquire Apple’s mobile products, the number of visitors to Flash-based sites will also decline, which pretty much forces the issue. Web developers must either build two versions of their sites to accommodate the different requirements of their potential visitors, or just set Flash aside and try to work within open Web standards,” Steinberg writes. “That may be happening. Google is beta testing an alternative to YouTube without Flash, and just this week Virgin America, a small airline, decided to drop Flash from its site. In the Macworld article reporting on the change, writer Dan Moren concludes, ‘Because, as we know, all it really takes in the corporate world is one executive with an iPhone to ask why she can’t use the company’s site on her device.'”

Steinberg writes, “As has already been mentioned, even if Flash runs with decent performance, and even if it doesn’t hog system resources or compromise stability, that doesn’t mean that you’ll be able to magically access all or most Flash sites on your smartphone. Flash is designed to work with regular personal computers that have conventional input devices [not] multitouch… As a result, Web developers might begin to look for the free, open source alternatives to Flash that don’t require paying fees for Adobe’s products.”

Full article here.

MacDailyNews Take: As we wrote just this past Tuesday, “Smart companies don’t exclude potential customers who have the most disposable income. You want to cater to the type of people who buy Windows PCs based on lowest possible sticker price and who are much more likely to steal software, music, and movies? Or do you want customers who have been proven to spend money for quality, who understand true value, and who are much more likely to pay for software, music and movies? Your choice.”

Please see:
Apple Mac owns 90% market share for ‘premium’ PCs costing over $1,000 with $499 iPad coming soon – February 01, 2010
iPhone owners more likely to pay for digital content – November 26, 2009
Apple iPhone users buy many more apps, surf the Web much more than other ‘smartphone’ users – March 27, 2009
NPD: Mac users significantly more likely to pay for music than Windows PC owners [updated] – December 19, 2007
Study shows iPod owners significantly less likely to steal music than the average person – January 13, 2006

MacDailyNews Note: Help kill Adobe’s Flash:
• Contact Hulu and ask them to offer HTML5 video via email:
• Ask ESPN360 to offer HTML5 video instead Flash via their feedback page here.
• Join YouTube’s HTML5 beta here.
• On Vimeo, click the “Switch to HTML5 player” link below any video.

57 Comments

  1. I would bet my life that Apple has, deep down in it’s skunkworks, competitive products to Illustrator and Photoshop armed and ready to go should Adobe ever threaten to pull those products from the Mac market. Bundle them with iLife/iWork and watch the Adobe empire crumble.

  2. @Maeric
    Thank you so much for cluing me into freefreehand.org.
    I’m glad to see there are others who feel the same as myself!

    Just the fact that FreeHand let you make multiple page sizes in the same document – 5+ years ago, still puts it head & shoulders above Illustrator in my book.

    Man, I miss Macromedia!

  3. The flip side of this is that I surf more on Firefox as Safari will crash on some sites repeatedly. And that gets tiring.
    I blame both parties equally. Apple is not without fault here.

  4. I’m guessing a lot of you consume media but don’t create any. If I want to make a little cartoon, what programs out there work like flash? This cartoon has no complex codes or scripts, just frame after frame animation. What software if flash is no good should i use?

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