device or desktop
Best Free Website Software: Google Blogger vs WordPress.com
TopTen has a very informative table on the top ten blogs available in terms of ease of use and best design and writing features.WordPress is ranked number 1 and Google’s Blogger is ranked 4. This article is about why Blogger and the online version of WordPress are right now the best free website with free hosted services on the Web.
Google Blogger ![]() |
WordPress.com ![]() |
Common Features For Both WebsiteTools - Wizards with dozens of templates for design of a stylish website - Pages allow integrating and extending an existing website - Or creating a new website with its own look and feel - Posts allow interacting with your users and customers on blogs with polls and comments – Pages and Posts have identical HTML + WYSIWYG Editors – Widgets, sidebars, headers can be laid out and customized by users – Tools to support images and galleries – Multiple users can have different roles in administering a site – Multiple blogs can be supported free from the same account |
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Now many might take exception to this anointing first rank to Blogger and WordPress.com . First the Social Media camp can argue that Facebook Groups, Google+ Pages, and the whole Tumblr environamong others offer users great and easy to use Web presence tools- especially where users want it to be among their friends, acquaintances, and a wider span of “global” neighbors. What could be easier to get your event message out then a social media page?
There is a major difference between these two WordPress websites. WordPress.com is the website devoted to delivering the online WordPress which is hosted for free as a blog service being reviewed here. WordPress.org provides the free WordPress blog software that you can load on your machines or through a 3rd party hosting service on their publicly available servers. WordPress.com is like the Apple Store. It is a closed ecosystem – only there can you buy additional services for your free hosted blogs like CSS support or Premium Themes. In contrast you can buy Blogger templates from many 3rd parties. The result is that more templates, free tips and tutorial services have arisen up around Blogger than WordPress.com, However, WordPress.org does not have that problem because there are many 3rdParty Themes, Plugins and Widgets which can be used with your WordPress.org blogs and websites. So it does pay at some point to make the transition from a WordPress.com freely hosted blog to one you host yourself.
There is no argument social media can be perfect tools for publicizing local events, publishing albums of pictures+stories, and promoting/advertising activities or business. But problems start to occur when the web announcement takes more than one page or special design flair or requires specific forms to be filled out and interacted with or fees collected. And this says nothing about users wanting to customize and style their pages distinctly. Social media pages are often the first stage in discovering you need a website.
So then there is a second tier of website suppliers. Companies like SquareSpace, JimDo, Weebly, Wix, and Yola among others offer real website creation capabilities including hosting services, subdomain names, template based designs, menu-driven pages, and some sophisticated drag and drop tools for creating specific pages. As well many of the major hosting services like 1and1 and Icdsoft offer their own website development tools which speed up the wesite creation process. This is often a case of the Web development tools providers getting into the hosting service business or vice versa – a hosting service adding on a quick web development tool. But these “free” website development services vary widely in costs and features – some create pages but no blog posting services; some have free development costs; but charge for space and time on a quaterly or yearly basic; some have a basic development or operational feature set; but charge for extras.
An ideal situation would be the ability to create a starter website and operate it essentially for free – no developer cost, no hosting service nor unique sub-domain name cost. And our argument is that two blog services, Google Blogger and WordPress.com, do provide the both the cheapest and the best web presence opportunities. You can go farther in creating your website[and if you choose so, blog] in these two services and with the lowest out-of-pocket costs.
Our argument for Blogger and WordPress.com is threefold. First, that CMS and blog development systems offer some of the most effective website development tools. Second, among the many very good open source CMS/blog systems, three tools, WordPress, Drupal, and Joomla are standouts. And third, among the blog/web development tools offering nearly free hosting services, Google Blogger and WordPress.com lead that pack by providing not only freewebsite creation [and later customizing, if you want] tools but also susbstantially free hosting space and services.
But there is another fundamental reason to consider Google Blogger or WordPress.com. Both of these systems have made designing and customizing your own website very approachable and easy to master. Likewise the operation of the resulting website/blog is also simplified and familiar to anyone who use word processing or email regularly.Finally there is an army of 3rd party developers and practitioners able to assist you for fee or free in developing and operating your websites – see the resources section at the bottom of this post. The following slideshow provides the specific details and argues in favor of Google Blogger or WordPress.com as your first choice tool for website/blog development. Click on an the Gray Slide below to Advance to the next Slide:
As you can see from the slideshow there are a lot of shared features for each blog system. But also there is one key difference. WordPress.com has a step up to free, enterprise caliber blog software from WordPress.org[users include NYTimes, MarthaStewart, CNN amomg others]. Blogger does not. Thus, WordPress.com users have a path to user hosted blog software which is a)built on the WordPress.com base as modeli, b) is Open Source , c)available for free download at any time from WordPress.org and d)is constantly being improved . In fact many of the improvements are derived from features first developed on the WordPress.com site.
In contrast, Blogger does not have an open source version available for download.So in order to make Blogger truly enterprise caliber [Blogger is used by a number of vendors as official blog including Google itself] on par with WordPress, Google has chosen to open up Blogger to more sophisticated use of HTML, CSS, JavaScript, Iframes, Flash, and video among other web development features. This allows for some sophisticated refinements on Blogger sites.
In contrast some of these same enterprise features are sold by WordPress.com as Premium extras such as CSS customization or video support. But do not begrudge that because the revenues gained on WordPress.com are used to support all the development work done on WordPress.org as well as WordPress.com. But as a potential blog user you have to decide which of these different approaches and the resulting feature differences are critical to your success. Here is a table of the detailed differences between Google Blogger and WordPress.com.
| Category | Blogger | WordPress |
| Storage Cost | $5/year for 5GB – initial free = 2GB | $19.97/blog/year for 10GB – intitial free = 3GB |
| Templates | Hundreds of free+premium templates | about 170 free and premium themes |
| Post/Page Properties | tags | tags+categories +3 Formats +Backup all for all revisions |
| Post/Page Edits | HTML+WSYWIG editors same Post and Page editors +Fonts | HTML+WSYWIG editors same Post and Page editors +Proof Reading aid +More help +Copy other posts |
| Post/Page List | simple list of properties | rich list of properties |
| Post/Page elements | text – richest set of free tables – full set image – yes video – youtube + .mov audio – embed code flash – yes pdf – use iframes polls – no powerpoint – use iframe spreadsheet – use iframes | text – good toolset, proofreader and Facebook+Twitter auto-links tables – full set image – yes video – youtube or $extra audio – as part of video flash – cannot embed, standalone web page pdf – $extra polls – yes powerpoint – $extra spreadsheet – $extra |
| Post/Page HTML and CSS Support | forms – yes iframe – yes style inline – yes style tag – yes textarea – yes script inline – stripped out script tag – yes | forms – limited, wizard based iframe – stripped out style inline – stripped out style tag – $extra textarea – in form wizard script inline – stripped out script tag -stripped out |
| Media Library | Simple feature set | More types but also $extra for all |
| Templates/Themes | Dozens of templates Preview of templates +3rd party templates | Dozens of themes Preview of themes $extra 3rd party themes |
| Customize Themes or Templates | Background edits Header edits Layout edits +widths +CSS and fonts +easier layout changes Many options depend on provision by template builder | Background edits Header edits Layout edits -CSS and fonts $30/yr Many options depend on provision by theme builders |
As a user and developer, ye Editor employs and develops for clients both Blogger and WordPress.com sites. Some decisions are straight forward – use of videos and forms at lowest possible costs indicates Blogger. Also Blogger has the advanatge of the sheer number of design templates available. On the other hand the ability to transition at a later date to an enterprise system that supports a huge variety of plugins and themes changes the nod to WordPress.com. Many times the choice is not just where you client is now but where do they want to be in the future.
Summary
After 15 years, establishing a free Web presence has been finally been provided to end users in a set of very approachable options. First, there are simple event and activity notice boards + gallery albums available from Social Media like Facebook Groups,Flickr Image Albums and Google+ Pages. These are perfect for getting one page notices out to friends and community at no or very low cost.
Next, web hosting sites have improved their website design and customizg services greatly. Most provide design tools that simplify creating pages with drag and drop ease of use and the opportunity to change or customize those designs online. As well, sophisticated web development software makers now provide good Web hosting services. The net result is that getting your first or improving your existing Web presence has been dramatically improved in the competitive push between these two groups.
And at the top of the food chain are two services, Google Blogger and WordPress.com which provide the most bang for your $free buck. But don’t be fooled. Although the costs for both Blogger and WordPress.com are among the lowest in the blog and web development business, the costs of planning for, designing and operating a blo/website g are very real and can become substantial organizational costs As websites becomes ever more vital to businesses or organization, the time and effort to run a good website cannot be ignored.
Finally, going with a blog does not preclude using other Web development systems. Facebook Groups, and Goole Plus Pages still have a vital SEO and blog marketing role to play. Both Blogger and WordPress.com can be integrated with existing websites in a number of ways. Bottom line, Blogger and WordPress.com are attractive because they can be easily fit into a cost effective web presence.
Common Resources
Artiseer.com – Blogger templates creation tool; also Drupal, Joomla and WordPress for hosted blogs
Artweaver.de – Free photo editor in Photoshop style, great for getting images ready for blog use
BasicBlogTips - good general advisories on blogging
iPhoto – Apple’s free Mac program is the best that Apple has besides Gimp and Picasa
Paint.net – free Windows photo editor with neat effects and fast editing
PhotoPosPro – another excellent Windows photo editor with lots of image composition features
PhotoFiltre – Windows photo editor with nifty filters and effects as well as fast editing
SpiceupYourBlog – great ideas and tips for Blogger and WordPress.
Blogger Resources
Blogger Account Limits – some of the info n size posts, no. of pages, size of images,, etc
Blogger help – official support and help site
BloggerBuster – excellent templates, tips, and tutorials on Blogger
BloggerSentral – great set of practical and integration tipsm for Bloggers
Btemplates.com – a wide range of free Blogger templates in a variety of styles and formats
DeluxeTemplates – good selection of blogger templates
Tricks and Tips - Blogger coding and CSS tricks and tips
WordPress.com Resources
Develope for WordPress.com – how to develop tools and themes for WordpRess.com
WordPress.com Support – helps and support pages for WordPress.com blog usage
WordPress Themes – Free and Premium themes – the only source for WordPress.com blogs
Best Smartphone Comparison Data
There are two places that I go for phone comparison data:
PhoneArena

It is fairly simple to setup the comparison – and the review ratings are often bang on.
GSMArena goes tellingly further, offering just great camera comparisons like the following:

Note the camera comparison is truly robust – click on the Gray Chart tab on the bottom of the image and a new image is brought up for further side by side comparison. Ditto for the Color Poster tab. Note the green rectangle in the middle of the image. That is movable with the mouse – just click and drag for more comparative views of the image. Finally the drop down widgets allow users to change the selected smartphones very easily. Note that the site has video and camera spec comparison pages as well.
If you have a favorite place to do your smartphone comparison shopping, please add it to the comments below.
The Importance of the Windows 8 beta on Feb 29th
Here is framed the invite at Barcelona’s Mobile World Conference
Windows 8 beta is important for Microsoft. Judging by what Microsoft is doing under Steven Sinofsky, this is a bet the farm edition of Windows. And if you see some of the details at the Windows 8 blog, Redmond keep doubling down on its feature set with items like ReFS-Resilient File System, Picture Password , and Sensor enablement. Redmond is betting the farm that it can take desktop and mobile device features – and merge them into a compelling whole while preserving enough of the Windows 7 legacy to bring its billion of Windows users forward into the new Windows 8 world. And all this while trying to match the mystique of a departed demi-god of computing creativity.
And the stakes are growing higher by the day.
Gartner is reporting PC sales for Q4 2011 were down in Western Europe by 8% with England reporting a 20% drop and France 12%. Meanwhile Apple Mac sales were up in those two countries. iPad now represent 17% of the PC market if you consider an iPAD equivalent to a PC [or better]. And smartphone sales exceeded PC sales for the first time in Q4 2011 – and now you see why Microsoft is adamant about getting a breakthrough with Windows 8 on phones, tablets, and PCs.
Microsoft knows well from its competitive roots how relentless Moore’s law is – for at least the next ten years computing power for smartphones to PCs will be doubling every 18 months or less. This means that the next generation of smartphones and tablets will effectively be PC equivalents for a broad swath of users. Think connectivity to all that is the Internet, phone and messaging services, word processing and spreadsheets [especially for the popular "convertibles' or dockable smartphoes and tablets] plus a bounty of games and fun. Windows 8 is Redmonds ticket to the future of client side of computing.
Will the Risks in Windows 8 Payoff?
Everyone knows what happened on the last forced “innovation” march for Windows at Redmond – the Windows Vista disaster. Will the very ambitious Windows 8 have too many bugs, missing integration, and other foibles. About the time that Apple’s iPad 3 is announced – rumored to be early March – the ITWorld will know how well Microsoft is positioned to do battle with its new nemesis, as Cupertino now looks down on Redmond both financially and in the loyalty of hundreds of millions of consumers.
Mozilla and Opera: Signs of Open Source Problems
ZDNet is running a series of much too early obituary articles for Firefox and Mozilla – and by implication, Opera. Ed Bott sees the money supply running out because a search sharing deal with Google [80%+ of Mozilla's revenues] has run out and the negotiations have not produced a new accord. Steven Vaughn-Nichols picks up that idea, adds 3 more reasons and implies that Firefox is Toast :
1)Because the Google deal represents 80%++ of Firefox revenues and it is likely to decline or be completely gone. Counterpoint: Mozilla has struck up a Bing search deal with Microsoft worth unknown revenues.
2)Because Firefox is seeing a a small decline in Web browser usage while Google Chrome continues to grow rapidly. The Firefox change varies between 1% gain to 5% loss among the companies that measure browser usage during the period January to November 2011. Counterpoints: Note the wide variation among the measurements of browser usage - for example the range in Chrome browser gains in usage is 4 to 10%. Also consider that Opera continues to thrive and innovate with only 2% web browser market share over the past 10 years.
3)Because Firefox according to Steven is only mediocre in features. Counterpoint: All reviews of browser features are subject to varying opinion. For example, ye Editor puts more emphasis on extensions, debug support, JavaScript performance and HTML5 adoption where Firefox either leads or is a close second to the leader. This is hardly the stuff of mediocre features and performance.
4)Business has been offended by Firefox’s rapid update schedule. Counterpoint: The Firefox Enterperise Support team has come up with a very rational plan that schedules Firefox updates for Enterprise [and therefore changes the automatic updates for those users] to every 30 weeks and maintenace for 42 weeks more.
And the question is if Google cuts off Firefox, will Opera which survives on Google funding as well, will the Oslo firm be on the chopping block too?
Ye Editor keeps all five major browsers on hand for usage and testing with Firefox and Chrome in that order getting the bulk of day to day usage. I will continue to do this because of the devastation that Microsoft and Internet Explorer wreaked upon Web development and usage. First, there was the era late 1990s thru to the early 2000s of major bugs and virus attacks in Microsoft IE browser, IIS server, and other Web software. Second, after making overtures and promises to the Web community in 1998 to make complete implementation of W3C Web standards a priority of IE, Redmond not only reneged on this promise but halted all feature enhancements to IE. Microsoft took until the release of IE9 this year to meet that decade old commitment . But Redmond still did not eliminate/deprecate not deprecating manyof IE’s proprietary extensions. The freezing of browser features in IE f from 2000 until Firefox started to gain browser market share in 2004-2005 were tough times for Web users and developers. So twice bitten, I am not ready to chuck the Open Source browsers. And given the rate of change in computing today, even less inclined to do so.
Rapid Change in Basic Client-side Computing
The Web has changed client computing in three phases during past 20 years. First, there was the pioneering phase where the Web became an extended global LAN-like client – still inferior to the desktop PC cllient in features, speed and sometimes security. However, the Web provided cheap global reach and communication available only to a few, privileged non-Web clients. This phase saw the rapid development of presence, interacting, and selling on the Web by individuals and organizations. AOL followed by Yahoo, eBay and Amazon were major new Web delivery players. Open Source was a primary software delivery vehicle using HTML, PHP, MySQL, Apache, GIF and JPEG being key open technologies.
The second Web phase, known as Web 2, quickly followed in the early 2000s. Web 2 UIs and the emergence of JavaScript followed by AJAX with its targetted object or partial page refreshes enabled dynamic page refreshes with much faster response time then the traditional client-server model borrowed from LAN computing. The resulting performance instituted a second generation of Web applications despite no feature improvements to the dominant browser of the era, IE6. These technologies brought first a GUI interface as good if not better than that available on the PC desktop. Then Flash [now strangely being abandoned by Adobe] brought vector+bitmap images, audio + animations and the video and sophisticated interclient communication such that Web apps could now deliver unique Web games, media, and connected interactions just not available on standalone PCs.
The third Web phase was a hardware and OS revolution. Mobile apps pioneered first by Palm and then by Apple and Android provide 3 things not done by PCs:
1)Multi-touch and gesture simple operations such that operating a computing device does not require menu-madness r lessons in iconography;
2)light, mobile operation with battery life for at least a half days operation;
3)availability of unique sensors that define location, orientation, operating conditions. In short, the Web, HTML5, social media and now the Cloud are land rush territories such that I do not trust any of the major for-profit software vendors to do the right things when it comes to development – either treatment of Open Source or for-profit delivery of software and services.
As telling lesson, look what has happened with Apple. With Steve Jobs belief that he invented this new mobile space primarily at Apple, all the spoils belong to Apple. So Steve has created a closed ecosystem for development on îOS , rigid control of what Apps are allowed while taking 30% on all sales, and priviledged access to media through the iTunes store. More ominous has been Apples unleashing of a patent war against Android with global lawsuits against HTC, Samsung and other Android suppliers. Nortels patents recently sold for 5 times projections and Google bought Motorola for patent protection as much as having a reference implementation of Android smartphones.
These patent wars are happening precisely because so much is at risk in computing. Supremacy of client side computing is open for grabs as PCs fade while tablet and smartphones rise with new sensors, mobility, untethered battery-life plus mobile OS having huge app libraries with very cheap prices relative to PC software at their back. And search now has a strong social media+friend component as eyeballs transfer from browser pages to Facebook, Twitter, WordPress, Tumblr, Stumble On, LinkedIn, etc. Finally, the Cloud is becoming the back-up and sync up point of greater choice. But the Cloud development is highly proprietary with Major players like Amazon, Apple, Google, Microsoft and others having widely variant services and APIs.
Even for do-no-evil Google, the stakes are so high the past records and behavior are forfeit to the new super-competitive environ. So I ask Steven Vaughan Nicholls and Ed Bott what they will do when:
1)Chrome starts to reserve more browser real estate for ads right smack in the Chrome browser interface. Is this the predecessor to a Google App Service “feature” that removes the ads if you use the paid for Google App service?
2)IE is already balking on HTML5 standards and so what to do when Redmond does another IE6 and stays proprietary and outside significant portions of HTML5 standards. Worse, all the major vendors are splitting on key HTML5 standards particularly multi-touch and gestures, Web workers, Web offline operations, and Web database areas.
3)Apple no longer supports an up-to-date desktop versions of the Safari browser as it pushes toward migration to the iDevice framework[note Mac users still do not have touch screen operations and likely never will as Intel Macs are folded into ARM iDevices like Motorola and then Power PCs were succeeded by Intel Macs].
4)One or more commercial browser providers starts to charge for their “full featured browser” while keeping a less feature enabled browser free.
Ed and Steven, feel free to add to the comments below .
The Fundamental Problem: Open Source’s Great Innovations Produce Few, No Rewards
The broader question that Steven and Ed Bott might raise -”Is Open Source dying as well”. Major Open Source providers are being bought by proprietary vendors like MySQL and Java bought by Oracle, QT bought by Nokia,Novell Linux in the Attachmate camp, and others deals. Look also at the trend where Open Source components are tied together in new systems which are either semi Open[usually the free simple software versus paid-for full featured as in JasperSoft ]or effectively proprietary as in the case of Amazon EC2 cloud software.
Lets look at the legacy of Mozilla and Opera. Mozilla Firefox and Opera saved the Web from IE coercion. TheWeb 2 phenomenon either would not have occurred or would have been long delayed without Google and others having been able to deliver AJax powered apps into favorable browser environs. Consider the record of Mozilla Firefox and Opera over the past decade.
Mozilla came up with many innnovations that have been copied by the open and proprietary vendorsn alike:
1)XUL GUI interface markup echoed in Adobe MXML and Microsoft’s XAML;
2)Gecko GUI layout engine inspired Webkit from Apple and Google and influenced Microsoft Trident;
3)JavaScript engines SpiderMonkey in C and Rhino in Java were used or imitated by other major software vendors;
4)Debugging services and features like Venkman debugger, DOM Inspector, Bugzilla error reporting, and liaison with FireBug GUI debugger set standards other browser vendors had to borrow or match;
5)Extensions and add-ons in Firefox have been emulated by all the major browser vendors.
Likewise Opera has had many pioneering browser developments:
1)Pioneered cross OS platform delivery including for mobile devices like PDA and mobile phones;
2)Touch and gesture usage with mouse for interface operations;
3) Tabbed browsing and MDI pioneered among major browser vendors;
4) Zoom by proportional full scaling from 20 to 1000%;
5) Integrated search engine field and popup blocking pioneeered by Opera.
These are just to year 2000 in terms of pioneering Opera developments. See here for the complete list of Opera innovations.
Now neither Mozilla nor Opera patented these innovations because this would be contrary to their open delivery systems. Now this is unlike other major software vendors like Apple [ which has taken out thousands of patents like GUI touch and gesture patents despite prior art], IBM [ has one of the largest software patent troves and has lobbied worldwide for software patents] while flip flopping has been the patent state of the art at Microsoft [flip and flop or like bankers "if we are winning software patents are good, otherwise they are bad"] and Oracle [flip and flop] making Mitt Romney look like a “steady as she goes” politician.
So the broader question is how do open source vendors a)provide for a steady stream of revenues and b)defend themselves against the patent troves of proprietary vendors that can be quite hostile against open source vendors without Open Sourcers using patents themselves? This is the real issue percolating through the threats to the survival of Firefox and Opera. This broader question of patents and support would be much more worthy of the attention of Ed Bott and Steven Vaughan-Nicholls rather than the premature speculation on the demise of Firefox or Opera. Do we support Open Source only when the monopoly noose is nearly around our necks and much less so in comparative good times – Apple, Google, Microsoft, Nokia and RIM all contending for client OS leadership through their various desktop, smartphone and tablet offerings? Or when there appears to be a much broader and competitive choice of OS development frameworks? Open Source is also at a crossroads – whether and how it survives is at stake.
Adobe AIR Baby Flies Out with the Flash Bath Water?
If you had any doubts, Adobe is clearly abandoning Flash with the annoucments of the discontinuance of Flash development on Mobile OS plus the new declaration of the outsourcing of Flex, the Flash Enterprise Development tool, to the Apache Foundation. These actions should dispel any misconceptions. True, Apache is a major enterprise Open Source provider with dozens of important Open Source projects including Ant RSS feeds, Hadoop distributed filesystem, HTTP Server, Struts Java Web Application Framework, and Subversion centralized version control system. But the abruptness of the one-sided proclamation[Apache Foundation has yet to agree to take on Flex], indicates Adobe is in full Hasty Retreat Mode. Now the whole question is how many nifty Adobe babies [innovations] will be thrown out in the Flash-exit plumes?
Is this a Hasty Exit?

Ye Editor thinks so for the following reasons.
There are a few rationals in support of abandoning Flash on mobile OS and leaving Flex as an orphan to the Apache Foundation. First, Flash has and apparently will continue to be along with Java a Verboten development tool on Apple’ systems both Mac and iOS. Second, at anytime, Adobe’s AIR which provide a backdoor entry into iOS [but not yet Mac] for Flash SWF files, could be arbitrarily declared programma non grata and forbidden on iOS and/or Mac. Third, Flash is showing its 14 year age on the design and programming front as it does not provide good models for 3D movement and animation [the z-cordinate problem],clean synchronizations among key elements of time, scene, sound, stage plus the universal threading and multi-core processor mapping mechanisms. Fourth, Adobe and or some other 3rd party[Google Dart or some animation startup??] may have a better animator ready to hit the Web and prempt the older Flash code base. Fifth, Flash has been banned from use on Windows Phone 7.
But in favor of Flash and Flex are the following factors:
1)hardware improvements in processors [think NVidia's Tegra3 and other QuadCore mobile chips], memory [both processor and SSDisk], , displays and most importantly easily dockable smartphones and tablets will be the winning mobile form factor as seen in Asus Tranformer Prime for tablets and the many dockable smartphones . In short, dockable smartphones and tablets will have mobiles bending/curving back onto and replacing laptops and notebooks in the PC market for all but the most compute intensive tasks. This is a venue where the Flash player excels.
2)the Flash player has become ever faster and uniquely feature capable.
3)the Flash player has become more secure and reliable.
4)the Flash player was falsely indicted and disparaged by Apple’s Steve Jobs as Apple’s own Quicktime had similar performance and reliability problems even though it benefited from Apple APIs denied to Adobe’s Flash Player. Adobe was put in the unenviable position of having to sue for libel and/or anttitrust from a “partner” whose platforms make up as much as 75% of Adobe’s sales.
5)Adobe AIR is highly dependent on Flex and Flash developers and tools.
6)Adobe AIR is the last cross platform development tool that spans all the major and popular operating systems. HTML5 is emphatically not as cross platform nor as performant as AIR/Flash.
Here is another illustration of the precariousness of technology development. Excellence and continuing great innovation do not always win – cornering a market with no dependencies on other players is even more vital. Sometimes technology innovation succeeds beyond compare. And other times as in the case of Flash, it crashes ignominiously as external “competitive” market forces doom a technology before it reaches full fruition. Flash is a prototypical example along with Opera browser and the Palm PDA among others. Flash for fourteen years since 1997 has been the most innovative delivery container for media on the PC and Web:
1)First in allowing both vector and bitmap image files to be deployed with high fidelity and storage efficiency;
2)First in incorporating both audio and video with great efficiency;
3)First to allow for user programming with JavaScript-like ActionScript;
4)First to allow storing of Font Types and CSS with animations;
5)First to bring OO programming to Flash scripting;
6)Continuing lead in most efficient storage of all animation elements in a cross platform animation/multimedia container.
But Flash has been brought low by Steve Jobs spite and perceived need to not allow cross platform tools in on iOS.
Opera has a similar record in bring new innovations in Web browsing while Palm lead early with hardware integration of media consumables in a light, portable and programmable device which easily displacing Apples Newton. But none of these products has “lived long and prospered”. However, even a corner on the PC Market has not been enough to guarantee Microsoft’s animation tool- Silverlight’s survival in the media animation and delivery market. Are innovation markets becoming too disruptive?
So one could argue that if Adobe waited just a half year or so, the market for the Flash Player would turn in Adobe’s favor as Android and other mobile OS take over the tablet and smartphone markets. And for this reason Apple would have to contemplate removing its ban on Flash in both Adobe Mac App Store and on the iOS for its mobile devices. Yes, this would have a second big benefit for Adobe – it would reduce reduce Adobe’s dependence on Apple because a)other vendors would contribute to Adobe’s market share, particularly i
Consequences of Flash/Flex Demise
First and foremost, the Flash/Flex development community in its comments on the announcements feels betrayed by Adobe. See here for comments at the Flex announcement and see here for no more Flash on Mobile OS. The reaction is rangers from anger and disbelief to deep questionning of Adobe’s support for developers. Clearly Adobe has more than a PR problem. But also Adobe has a significant problem with one of it crown development jewels – Adobe AIR.
Now Adobe AIR is important because Adobe AIR is the only viable and performant cross platform development tool that works on the major PC, Mobile and Server operating systems. If you want to write once and deploy on the most popular OS and their associated devices plus customers, Adobe’s AIR is one of the best systems for doing so for the following reasons:
1)it runs on the major OS platforms: Mac and iOS[for now], Linux, Windows, Android, BlackberryX, Nokia MeeGo, etc.
2)it provides all the latest tablet/smartphone operations like touch screen and gestures ready to go on desktop platforms. In contrast HTML5 is in a mess on touch support cross platform.
3)AIR is the only tool that provides cross platform offline as well as online operations.
4)AIR provides robust database access and update mechanisms another area of conflict in HTML5.
5)AIR has a robust set of communication and video interfacing options.
6)AIR provides the key to Adobe’s own survival – presence on many platforms, less dependence on the Apple platform.
7)Businesses are desperate for getting out of the need to develop the same program for multiple platforms. They have hung back from embracing Apple because this means replacing the Windows monopoly with an Apple monopoly. And now Apple means only one set of development tools for the iOS platform – not a good prospect for internal let alone cross platform development. True, security is enhanced because the iOS apps have to go through an approval process; but the downside is how vigilant Apple is on updates. And finally, the great overhang for developers, corporates, and OEMs alike are the many arbitrary rules on Apple app development that can suddenly pop up like mushrooms.
Is there any chance of rescuing AIR ? Given that Flash will continue on as the desktop development tool for advanced graphics, 3D modeling , game, and highend “near cross platform” apps, there is at least a smaller market available. However, Adobe and 3rd party .swf software suppliers like Erain, Swishmax, Autodesk and others will have to contend with a declining base of Flash developers that will be moving to HTML5 and other animation software. Will there be enough remaining developers to sustain AIR? Perhaps, if the collapse of the Apple iOS to an equally specialized, premium priced niche as predicted by the first commenter on the fate of Flex proves true, then Apple will no longer be such a dominant player. With a super disruptive technology marketplace [see the sidebar on The Hazards of Innovation]plus the history of Macs versus PCs plus Steve Jobs own recognition that Androids success required a thermonuclear response from Apple, who know what will be the ultimate outcome for AIR and Flash? Only the Shadow knows…


