Monthly ArchiveJanuary 2007
General 14 Jan 2007 08:18 pm
Top ten: Favorite Mac applications
I decided that it would be fun to do a “Top Ten” list for every day this week. Please post your favorites in the comments.
Top 10 favorite mac applications
10. NetNewsWire
9. Transmit
8. Adobe Fireworks
7. Apple Mail
6. Firefox
5. Adium
4. Adobe Photoshop Lightroom
3. Apple Keynote
2. Quicksilver
1. Parallels
Flash Video 14 Jan 2007 02:30 pm
Sorenson Squish 1.0
I don’t know how I missed this. Sorenson released a Java-based application, Sorenson Squish 1.0, that companies can embed in their web content to allow end-users to encode their videos on their local machine before uploading a Flash-based FLV file to their site.
Sorenson Squish(R) embeds the power of Sorenson’s award-winning Squeeze(R) Compression Suite into any Web page on your site, allowing you to easily accept user-submitted video. Encoding is done on the local machine, so you can add this functionality to your site without any additional infrastructure costs. Users can drag-and-drop video files onto the Squish applet or capture video streams from Webcams or camcorders, and have them be automatically encoded and uploaded to any network-accessible host. Sorenson Squish offers the industry’s highest-quality compression, combined with unparalleled ease-of-use.
Flash Mobile 14 Jan 2007 12:57 pm
Does Apple’s iPhone support Flash?
I’ve been getting a LOT of emails from Flash users asking me if I can confirm whether Apple’s new drool-worthy iPhone will be able to run Flash content. The answer? I can neither confirm nor deny this. It’s their product and it wouldn’t be my place. You have to ask Apple.
I will say that I attended Jobs’ keynote at Macworld Expo last week and this sexy little device is really, really cool. If anyone could change the entire consumer electronics industry with a single product release (Remember that little iPod gadget? I recall a lot of people saying when they announced it, “my MP3 player does all of that already. This isn’t innovative…” Heh. Yeah, right…), it’s Apple. And this thing just might do that.
But the Flash developer community wants to know whether they will be able to deliver rich experiences to this pocket-sized wonder. What are others saying?
Macrumors reader c-Row reports that German magazine MacWelt interviewed one of Apple’s executives in Europe who allegedly confirmed support for Flash in the iPhone’s Safari browser.
New York Times columnist David Pogue has posted an FAQ where he addresses Flash support directly by quoting an interview with Apple CEO Steve Jobs:
“Will the browser offer Flash and Java?”
In my previous blog post, I said “No” (you’ll see why in a moment). But several of you have pointed out an interview published in the German magazine MacWelt, in which the browser IS said to offer Flash and Java.So I’ve asked John Markoff, who audio-recorded our interview with Steve Jobs, to play back the relevant exchange for me. Here it is:
—
Markoff: “What about all those plugins that live within Safari now, like Flash or like Java or like JavaScript?”Jobs: “Well, JavaScript’s built into the Phone. Sure.”
Markoff: “And what are you thinking about Flash and Java?”
Jobs: “Java’s not worth building in. Nobody uses Java anymore. It’s this big heavyweight ball and chain.”
Markoff: “Flash?”
Jobs: “Well, you might see that.”
Markoff: “What about YouTube –”
Jobs: “Yeah, YouTube – of course. But you don’t need to have Flash to show YouTube. All you need to do is deal with YouTube. And plus, we could get ‘em to up their video resolution at the same time, by using h.264 instead of the old codec.”
Sidenote: Hehe. You’ve gotta love a CEO who takes every opportunity to push their company’s products. I’m sure Apple would love to see companies like YouTube support Quicktime and h.264. Whether that would allow YouTube to “up their video resolution” is a dig at h.263, the first video codec supported by both Flash and Quicktime. It’s worth pointing out that I’ve seen many examples of video using Flash Player’s On2 VP6 codec looking better than h.264. As our engineers put it – it’s all about the encoding. If you have a good encoder and you really know what you’re doing, you can make huge improvements to the quality of your video. However, when encoding is server-based and fully automated, you’ll end up with less perfection. Back to the iPhone…
I can comment on whether some of the speculation about Flash Player running on the highly-anticipated iPhone makes sense to me or not.
First of all, Danny Patterson suggests that it may automatically support the full Flash Player 9 browser plugin because the iPhone’s technical specifications list that it runs “OS X”. However, Slashdot reports that Apple may be using “OS X” a bit liberally. Slashdot also claim the device runs a Samsung-provided ARM processor, which would basically mean that any application that can run on your OSX-based Mac won’t necessarily automatically run on your iPhone. Now, that doesn’t mean Flash Player wouldn’t run on the iPhone – it just means that it wouldn’t necessarily work automatically.
Personally, I’d love to see Flash supported on the iPhone. And I’m sure Apple will be able to comment on this over time. Their heads are probably spinning after such a huge announcement and a level of press coverage that I can’t recall ever witnessing for any consumer electronics product release. Plus, it looks like it will be very easy for them to update software on the iPhone via iTunes so I’m sure they’ll be releasing software and applications incrementally over time. So even if Apple didn’t ship with Flash Player initially (and again – I’m neither confirming nor denying here – it’s their product), that doesn’t mean they couldn’t add it post-ship very quickly and easily. I’m sure requests from the massive Flash developer community could help accelerate that. :)
Flash Games 14 Jan 2007 12:44 pm
Cool Flash-based game: Curve Ball
This game, Curve Ball, is a lot of fun. I found it in a comment left on a Digg post about Apple’s iPhone potentially supporting Flash via Safari (I cannot confirm this, so don’t bother asking), which also mentioned that it works well with the Nintendo Wii.
Flash Player 08 Jan 2007 11:47 pm
Flash Player 9 fullscreen mode demos
Several people asked me for the link to one of the sites that I showed in our keynote in the Flashforward track at Macworld Expo this morning.
The site in question, a fullscreen panorama example, was found on the Adobe Labs wiki page for Flash Player 9 here.
The example that I showed, which is extremely cool, was the Papervision3D AS3 Panorama created by Carlos Ulloa.
General 08 Jan 2007 11:34 pm
Flashforward@Macworld, Adobe and Verisign, AS3 libraries open-sourced
Aral Balkan has a great, detailed write up of Adobe’s keynote at the “mini-Flashforward” conference in the Power Tools track at Macworld Expo this week. More…
Adobe and Verisign have announced a new relationship between the two companies aimed at integrating Verisign’s Kontiki peer-to-peer distribution technology with Adobe’s Flash video technology in the future. More…
Mike Chambers reports that he, Mike Potter, and Darron Schall have moved all of the open source ActionScript 3.0 libraries over to Google Code.
General 03 Jan 2007 10:40 pm
Adobe’s video and audio tools go back to the Mac
I’m so happy to finally be able to talk about this publicly. Adobe announced today that the next versions of it’s digital video and audio tools (Adobe Production Studio) including Premiere Pro, After Effects, Encore, and Soundbooth. After Effects is the only one of these tools that currently supports the Mac so this is big news for video pros who prefer the Mac platform.
Steve Kilisky, Sr. Product Manager in the Dynamic Media Organization (DMO) at Adobe has a good overview here.

Curve Ball


