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Microsoft echoes Apple view on Adobe's Flash

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Bill Gates (R), chairman and chief software architect of Microsoft, listens to Bruce Chizen, president and CEO of Adobe, as he explains new features of Adobe products at the Microsoft Windows XP partner pavilion October 24, 2001 in New York. REUTERS/Jeff Christensen

Bill Gates (R), chairman and chief software architect of Microsoft, listens to Bruce Chizen, president and CEO of Adobe, as he explains new features of Adobe products at the Microsoft Windows XP partner pavilion October 24, 2001 in New York.

Credit: Reuters/Jeff Christensen

BOSTON | Fri Apr 30, 2010 3:55pm EDT

BOSTON (Reuters) - Microsoft Corp joined archrival Apple Inc in criticizing Adobe Systems Inc's widely used Flash multimedia software, creating a rare bond among the two computing giants.

Apple Chief Executive Steve Jobs sharply criticized Flash, which is used to produce videos and games for many Internet sites on Thursday. Apple has banned Flash from its iPhone and iPad.

A Microsoft executive pitched in later that day, saying while the ubiquity of Flash makes it easy for consumers to access video on the web, the standard has flaws.

"Flash does have some issues, particularly around reliability, security and performance," said Dean Hachamovitch, general manager for the Internet Explorer browser.

He said that Microsoft is backing the same protocols for delivering multimedia content over the Web that Apple is promoting, a group of standards known as HTML5.

But Microsoft was more conciliatory toward Adobe than Apple, saying it works closely with Flash engineers to help fix bugs that it finds in the product.

Steve Jobs, by comparison, said in his open letter that it is time for the industry to move beyond Flash.

"Flash is a successful business for Adobe, and we can understand why they want to push it beyond PCs," he said. "But the mobile era is about low power devices, touch interfaces and open web standards -- all areas where Flash falls short."

Meanwhile Adobe dismissed the claims, saying that Apple was simply trying to promote its own products.

"Apple's moves to block Flash and other technologies are designed to protect a business model that locks developers and consumers into a single, proprietary stack," Adobe spokeswoman Holly Campbell said.

Some 75 percent of all video on the web are Flash-based. Popular Flash-based sites such as Hulu can't run on the iPhone or iPad, according to Adobe. But sites like YouTube have worked around this by specially designing non-Flash apps for those devices.

(Reporting by Jim Finkle, editing by Leslie Gevirtz)

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Comments (16)
kelliann wrote:
Microsoft and Apple are right. Flash is buggy. Maybe this will force Adobe to fix the most recent version, 10.0.45.2. It locks up on my HP PC Windows XP SP2 if there’s three flash items on a single page, and although I reported it to Adobe’s bug pages, they’ve totally ignored it. They could care less. So, forget using it on mobile devices – it shouldn’t even be used on PCs. Good for you Apple and Microsoft! Give them a swift kick in the business sense.

Apr 30, 2010 5:50pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
nickjacket wrote:
Microsoft: …”saying it works closely with Flash engineers to help fix bugs that it finds in the product.”
Exactly. Apple’s been away from Flash so long that they’ve gotten rusty.
Jobs seems so drunk with iPod/iPad success that he’s forgotten that a successful product complies with current consumer tastes, wants and needs. Not the other way around.
I do very well with Flash running on my XP/Firefox 363 thank you. And just because the two major manufacturers featured in this article want us to believe that the computing world revolves around them and their big ideas, that doesn’t mean I have to buy their line or product.
If I were king of the heap, I’d tell these two to get a working Flash compatible product into testing soon or maybe their resume’s need updating first.

Apr 30, 2010 8:40pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
puterbum wrote:
I was wondering about win 7. adobe has dropped the ball here. What has taken them so long?

Apr 30, 2010 9:55pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
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