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The company is working on a project code-named Apollo, which will let applications written for Adobe's Flash presentation software run without a Web browser, Kevin Lynch, chief software architect and senior vice president of Adobe's platform business unit, told CNET News.com.
The goal of Apollo, which will be available as a free download early next year, is to overcome some of the limitations in today's Web applications, Lynch said. Right now, Flash programs run within a Web browser. Apollo is client-based software that will run Flash applications separately from a browser, whether online or offline, he said.
Competition is heating up among companies seeking to be the preferred supplier of tools and software to run a new generation of Web applications, which feature an interactive user interface and take advantage of broadband networks.
Microsoft and Java specialists are also building slicker Web development tools. But Adobe remains the incumbent when it comes to front-end design, said Peter O'Kelly, an analyst at the Burton Group.
"Everyone is rushing in the same direction, which is to reduce the barriers between a Web page, an application and multimedia content," O'Kelly said. "(But) for a lot of people, the de facto most widely deployed Internet client is from Adobe."
Apollo is designed to give developers a way to create applications that can render Flash animations as well as HTML and Acrobat files (PDF). That approach preserves the benefits of the Web but allows room for programs that can't be included now, Lynch said.
Web-native applications, such as Web e-mail, can run on different operating systems but generally don't work when the user is disconnected from the Internet. Apollo will seek to bridge that gap, he said.
"As people start using Web applications more, and they become part of your daily life, they should be first-class citizens on your computer," Lynch said.
Apollo programs will function when a person is offline and automatically update data when the user gets back online. For example, a person could book an airline ticket from a handheld or laptop offline; when the person reconnects to a network, the software will complete the transaction.
In addition, Apollo applications will behave like other desktop programs: They will have a separate icon for launching the program and appear in operating system utilities, like the "Add or Remove Programs" feature in Microsoft Windows, Lynch said.
An early version of the Apollo software is expected to be made available to developers on the Adobe Labs site later this year. Programmers can write applications to run in Apollo using Adobe's current line of tools.
Front-end incursions
Apollo is part of Adobe's strategy to expand its network of third-party programmers, particularly Web developers, who build applications around its Flash and Acrobat technologies.
But developers are being offered a plethora of options, including more robust tools for scripting languages and AJAX-style development for the Web, analysts said.
Lynch said Adobe is seeking to tap into the growing interest in scripting languages. The forthcoming Flash Player 9, the software that runs Flash applications, has been rewritten to run scripts at least 10 times faster, he said. On Tuesday, Adobe joined Open Ajax, an Eclipse-based project for AJAX development.
Microsoft, meanwhile, has its sights set squarely on Adobe's traditional products for designers and illustrators. And it is working on development software, called Windows Presentation Foundation/Everywhere, which promises to render Windows applications on different operating systems and browsers, as Flash does.
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- Reserve airline tickets....offline?
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by JEG2006
May 11, 2006 12:53 PM PDT
- I don't understand the airline ticket reservation example in the article. The data required to reserve an airline ticket is obviously somewhat timely. One minute you have a seat...the next you don't. Or the flight might get completely booked. I suppose you would receive some kind of notification (via the Apollo application) the next time you connect to the Internet, but if you have to go back and fix your reservation anyway, you might as well have waited until you could connect to the Internet to make your reservation in the first place!
I'm sure there are lots of other applications for this technology but something tells me Flash and Apollo aren't necessary to do it. In fact, I bet the required technology is already a part of Windows Vista and XP, or easily added. Thanks for sharing your innovative idea with Microsoft...!
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