By Katherine Noyes MacNewsWorld Part of the ECT News Network
03/05/08 2:37 PM PT
"One thing you have to say about Apple is that they are trailblazers when it comes to graphics -- they always have been," said Laura DiDio, an analyst with Yankee Group. However, whether Apple would be willing to embrace Microsoft technology toward that end is highly debatable.
Adobe's (Nasdaq: ADBE) Flash Player doesn't have what it takes to be part of the iPhone, Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) CEO Steve Jobs reportedly told shareholders at a meeting on Tuesday.
The comments came just two days before Apple's much-anticipated unveiling of its iPhone software development kit, which is expected on Thursday and widely believed to include technologies that would bring Flash to the popular mobile devices.
The iPhone needs something better than Adobe's Flash Lite for cell phones, Jobs said, yet better optimized to run faster on mobile technology than the PC Flash Player for larger devices, Dow Jones reported.
Apple could not be reached for comment.
1 Billion by 2010
Adobe, for its part, responded only with a general defense of its market status.
"Flash and Flash Lite are a huge success," Stefan C. Offermann, a spokesperson for Adobe, told MacNewsWorld.
There are more than 450 million Flash-enabled mobile devices shipped worldwide and 150 percent growth year-over-year, Offermann said. The company expects to see 1 billion Flash-enabled devices by 2010.
"Consumers demand a rich Web experience on any device and platform, and Flash delivers just that," he added. "We look forward to our continued relationship with industry leaders to deliver engaging experiences to consumers worldwide."
Silverlight Advantage?
Nevertheless, Jobs' comments have opened up a fresh wave of speculation, including the possibility that Apple is developing its own Flash alternative or that Microsoft's (Nasdaq: MSFT) competing Silverlight product may be the winning contender.
News recently emerged, for example, that NBC has chosen to use Silverlight in its broadcasting of the Olympics in Beijing.
"One thing you have to say about Apple is that they are trailblazers when it comes to graphics -- they always have been," Laura DiDio, an analyst with Yankee Group, told MacNewsWorld.
Whether Apple would be willing to embrace Microsoft technology toward that end is highly debatable, DiDio said.
Setting the Standard
"Apple and Microsoft's relationship has been 'intriguing,' let's say, over the past 20 years, and I tend to think that Jobs won't go there unless he has to -- he'd have to have his back up against a wall, and the days where that has happened ended eight or nine years ago," she explained. "My speculation is that he's probably going to do both -- support Flash because of Adobe's place in the market, but also work on a better mousetrap."
Apple is doing "very, very well" in the market, and has demonstrated that it has a remarkable ability to reinvent and rejuvenate itself, DiDio noted.
"I would think Jobs has definitely got those engineers burning the midnight oil to come up with something better, and that's not casting aspersions on Adobe Flash, which is a very good product," DiDio concluded. "The issue is, he wants to outpace the market. Apple wants to set the standard, not follow it."
That's nice. But, when will the iPhone get voice-command Bluetooth-enabled dialing? ...
Next Article in iPhone
When Will the Wireless Price War Hit Home? March 03, 2008
Say all the major wireless carriers were to start trying to undercut each other on plans that more people find practical. A lot of customers of Carrier A -- the ones Carrier B wants to steal away so badly that it's willing to starve itself by cutting its rates -- are already locked into contracts.
Related Stories
Flash Memory Glut Eats at Intel Profits March 04, 2008
"It's been a very tough business to compete in," said John Greenagel, the Semiconductor Industry Association's director of communications. While demand for NAND flash is not the problem -- "there's lots of demand, unit shipments have been up and I suspect actual bits have been up very dramatically." It's a buyer's market with "plenty of supply."
Mac Bloggers Toast iTunes, Probe Penryn Processors, Sweat iPhone SDK February 29, 2008
Apple was quick to brag about the latest findings from the NPD Group this week. The research firm ranked Apple's iTunes as the No. 2 music retailer in the U.S., second only to retail giant Wal-Mart. Apple said it has more than 50 million iTunes store customers who have together purchased more than 4 billion songs. Plus, Apple bragged, iTunes sold 20 million songs on Christmas Day of 2007.
Related News Alerts
More by Katherine Noyes
Two-Wheel Linux, and Other Reasons to Be Thankful for FOSS November 23, 2009
Among the many reasons to be thankful for Linux and all that is FOSS are qualities like portability, flexibility, comprehensiveness, a cooperative nature, receptivity to innovation -- oh, and the fact that open source makes such things possible as an electric motorcycle that can tear up the highway at 130 mph.
FOSS and the Google Question November 19, 2009
How FOSSy is Google, really? "I find it kinda funny that folks tout that Google uses Linux when the most useful tool they have developed -- the Google FS -- they keep internally and therefore don't have to share the code!" observed Slashdot blogger hairyfeet. "So how exactly is Google different from MSFT and Apple, who have both in the past locked up free code for themselves?"
Can T-Mobile Get Its Groove Back? November 18, 2009
T-Mobile may have a hard time pulling itself out of a swamp of customer discontent if it doesn't reverse course soon. The wireless carrier has been having some bad luck that has only been compounded by some poor decisions. "It takes a long time and much effort to build customer confidence, but a very short time to lose it," remarked telecom analyst Jeff Kagan.