Adobe touts early customer adoption of AIR
By Elizabeth Montalbano
,
IDG News Service
, 02/25/2008
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Adobe on Monday is making available the first full release of its Adobe Integrated Runtime (AIR), and will reveal early adopter
customers who are building both business and consumer applications using the technology.
AIR 1.0 is now available as a free and open-source technology, said Adobe CTO Kevin Lynch. He said hundreds of thousands of
developers have downloaded the software development kit (SDK) for AIR during the beta process, which began in June. Some of
the first applications built using AIR also will be available Monday, and Adobe plans to highlight these releases with customers
at an event in San Francisco.
AIR is Adobe's technology aimed at bringing the same functionality of rich Internet applications (RIA) built using technologies
such as Adobe Flash and Flex Builder to the desktop. AIR acts as a wrapper for RIAs, allowing those applications to run locally
in the Flash Player.
Adobe also is releasing the latest version of its developer framework for RIAs, Flex 3, on Monday, along with a new technology,
Adobe BlazeDS. The latter is a data-services layer that helps send information between back-end IT infrastructure-like application
servers and front-end applications more quickly and efficiently. Like AIR, Flex 3 and BlazeDS are open source and available
for free.
Adobe hopes AIR will expand its reach beyond the Internet into business and desktop applications, where competitor Microsoft
plays prominently. Meanwhile, Microsoft is gunning for Adobe's position as the leading provider of RIA tools with its browser-based
technology Silverlight and its Expression graphic- and Web-design toolset.
In fact, if Microsoft's bid to purchase Yahoo is successful, it would likely displace the use of Flash on many of Yahoo's Web sites and services, helping Microsoft proliferate
the use of Silverlight more quickly.
Lynch, who just last month was promoted to his CTO position at Adobe, said that it's taken 10 years for Flash to reach 99%
adoption among Web users, so he is not overly concerned with what might happen to Flash if the Microsoft-Yahoo deal goes through.
"It's not an easy task to get that kind of distribution," he said, adding that Adobe would even welcome more competition in
the RIA market. "It keeps all of our teams on their toes," Lynch said.
Indeed, Adobe, particularly with the acquisition of Macromedia in 2005, has been successful at building a comprehensive set
of tools that developers use primarily to deliver multimedia and high-impact, customer-facing Web sites and Web-based applications.
Barring Microsoft, the company really has no major rival in this space.
But with AIR and related free offerings, the company also is hoping to drive adoption of its for-fee developer, design and
server software in the business and enterprise market.
Some of the customers announced Monday show some momentum toward that goal. For example, BusinessObjects, the business-intelligence
software provider recently acquired by SAP, is using AIR for a new product called BI Widgets. The technology allows users to search, organize and access BI content
in back-end systems and databases from the desktop.
The IDG News Service is a Network World affiliate.
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