Flash on iPhone Hopes Dashed
#2
Posted 02 February 2009 - 06:09 AM
The iPhone / iPod Touch is a nifty piece of hardware. But Apple is going to suffer with all the new media rich touch platforms arriving with Adobe Flash capabilities.
I don't buy the technical explanations. But regardless of the actual reason for this, it will effect Apple's bottom line.
IMHO they're also playing with fire by not providing a subscription based music service.
These are the only two reasons why I don't own one.
#3
Posted 02 February 2009 - 07:21 AM
If I want flash on the iPhone, Steve needs to deliver. This is part of the reason why I cannot fully adopt Apple in my daily use. I am the decider on what goes on my machine. Not Steve Jobs, not Timothy Cook, not Philip Schiller, or the board at Apple. To tell anyone that they are going to avoid a format on their opinion is wrong. Give the consumer the choice.
This is primarily the reason why I stay on the Windows side. Part of free market principles dictate the consumer decides. Apple acts contrary to free market principles. If not Flash, Silverlight is a perfectly acceptable alternative. Thankfully, Microsoft decided to make Silverlight available for Apple users. I just wish the Mac Community would stand up to Jobs more.
#4
Posted 02 February 2009 - 08:38 AM
The truth is Apple constantly makes claims more for MARKETING than for any other reason.
Full internet support ( well except for, ...). But this is NEVER really stated. It is admitted begrudgingly, and not in their packaging/advertising either.
More proof than the iphone issue? How about the fact that malware, and viruses are present for the Mac OS? They exist, and yet all advertising you see has the "VIRUS free" stance. Up to and including a reccomendation to have Mac spyware/antivirus present on your computer. Isn't it amazing that you would not find these items listed as a MUST have on their packaging? It isn't because it is the polar oposite from their marketing (word of mouth, packaging, and print/media advertising).
I know I am not the only person on Earth to notice this!
#6
Posted 02 February 2009 - 12:13 PM
Copy & Paste? Sure! Lousy camera? Sure! No To-Do's? Sure! But no Flash even though there's thousands of programs on the App Store to do anything Flash does on a web site?! Get outta here!!
Honestly...is THAT why you bought a Windows Mobile phone?! Have you seen the sites you can view using Flash Lite on a mobile phone?!
You can hate on the iPhone and/or Apple all you want, but you're sorely misguided if you think it's going to lose sales & market share over this irrelevant issue.
/
#7
Posted 02 February 2009 - 01:38 PM
If Apple allows Flash that would mean that Flash could be used to operate and/or install applications on the iPhone. This would compromise the very tight control that Apple likes to exercise (ie iTunes and App Store)
It is a business decision that has revenue ramification for Apple. That's why things are proceeding so slowly.
Adobe's challenge is to develop a version of Flash that allows the user experience for the content, BUT NOTHING MORE.
#8
Posted 02 February 2009 - 01:44 PM
#10
Posted 03 February 2009 - 07:42 AM
This has nothing to do with technology imho; sure it's a technical problem, but so was building the iPhone, and they solved that one.
#12
Posted 03 February 2009 - 09:02 AM
IMHO if Adobe is serious about keeping flash as a major standard now that smart phones are gaining so much popularity they really need to rethink / rewrite Flash. Come to think about it the PSP has flash support yet you still can't watch videos on youtube and have to download them in advance. Thanks but an implementation like that on the iPhone is definitely not what users want. Sure it works but it's retarded.
#13
Posted 05 February 2009 - 10:37 AM
A major reason for purchasing an iTouch or iPhone instead of a standard mp3 player or a regular phone is for its web related features.
Wifi and the ability to browse the web is a very alluring feature. Look at how the web has influenced the OS. Everyone is talking about "cloud based computing." Much of the value of "cloud computing" is it's ability to provides robust services to devices with limited hardware capabilities. And much of these web services are provided within the browser.
Look at how important the web browser (and it's capabillities) have become.
For the most part, the iPhone and the iTouch are entertainment devices. The average user wants to see the web including the pages with Flash. He / she doesn't care about the technical issues around different capabilities. They just want it to work. Regardless of all the negatives around flash, it's used on websites almost EVERYWHERE you go. IMHO this lack of support severly cripples the iTouch web experience.
Whether Flash is missing due to device lockdown, system overhead, bloated features, device security, or any other development / integration issues, products are driven by demand - measured in time through sales revenu.
As for the lack of Flash support not effecting Apple product sales.....
I'm only one example. Nevertheless I recently purchased one iTouch instead of two, (a gift for my girlfried) and i'm still using my old crippled Sansa Connect. We've only spent 99 cents in the Apple store because they don't offer a subscription service. All the other music for the iTouch was ripped from CD. (If they had a subscription service, I wouldn't have bothered to rip the music from CD. I would be paying Apple on a monthly basis instead. (I'm currently paying $15 / month to a subcription service that loaded up my crippled Sansa full of music.
I suspect there are thousands of other folks out there who see things similarly:
If Apple addressed a few shortcomings, they would have had me for about $870.00 in year one (two players and a subscription service), instead of $300. And I probably would be purchasing a Mac too ($2000) when I relplace this Lenovo. (Since it can also run Windows Vista Reloaded (Windows 7) in anticipation that the shortcomings in Vista have been addressed. (I almost got the Mac the last time around, but opted for the higher performance of the T61p instead back in 07.)
Only Apple I ever owned was an Appl II+ in high school. (Yeah, I'm getting older.)
Bottom Line: $300 spent on Apple products instead of $3000 (est.), and I still own a "PC."
#14
Posted 05 June 2009 - 05:36 PM
#17
Posted 05 June 2009 - 05:52 PM
Things that Apple and AT&T COLLECT MONEY FOR.
JAVA & Flash already run on 'lesser' platforms than the iPhone. So it's just hurdles and roadblocks that Apple is throwing at Sun and Adobe to prevent them from delivering content on the iPhone without Apple and AT&T collecting money for everything.
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