Adobe to support Flash for 5 to 10 years

Even as the company redirects its efforts to HTML5 and narrows the scope of Flash, Adobe is still promising investments in Flash for the next five to 10 years.

Last year, Adobe Systems narrowed Flash Player’s scope. It cancelled the browser plug-in for mobile devices, and it shifted development resources towards competing web standards.

But it’s not giving up on Flash.

In an attempt to patch up communications with Flash programmers, Adobe yesterday published a Flash Player road map that promises many improvements this year, with new versions code named Cyril and Dolores. The document adds, “We are also modernising the Flash Player code base in order to ensure that the Flash runtimes meet the needs of developers over the next five to 10 years.”

“Runtime” refers to the software foundation that executes programs written in Flash’s ActionScript language. Flash Player is a browser plug-in that runs those programs on web pages, but the same foundation built in to Adobe’s AIR software accommodates standalone programs, too.

This runtime has had a long run. In its heyday, Flash had a lot to offer. It eased cross-platform programming, spanning many browsers so that programmers didn’t have to worry about their differences. It also popularised features that were immature or missing from browsers, such as streaming video, vector graphics, webcam and microphone support.

Now, though, two of its core markets — gaming and premium video — are the only areas where Adobe is pushing Flash hard now. That narrowed scope arrived last year when Adobe redirected Flash work towards competing web standards, such as HyperText Markup Language (HTML), Cascading Style Sheets and JavaScript programming.

Balancing act

As Adobe expands beyond Flash, it has become active in standards development, has begun adding products, such as Edge and Muse, that cater to web programmers and designers and has acquired PhoneGap and TypeKit for a better collection of in-house technology.

It’s a tough balancing act for Adobe. The more territory the company cedes to other programming methods, the less cross-platform leverage Flash programmers get.

Mobile apps for iOS and Android can be packaged with AIR, and web apps often can’t match the abilities of Flash apps and native apps. But Flash has already overstayed its welcome for many developers, and scaling back its future scope could well accelerate programmer defections.

Here’s Adobe’s current view of the balance between Flash and web standards, according to the road map:

Increasingly, rich motion graphics will be deployed directly via the browser, using HTML5, CSS3, JavaScript and other modern web technologies. While the primary role of Flash Player on the web remains the same, what it is used for will change.

Adobe believes that the Flash runtimes are particularly and uniquely suited for two primary use cases: creating and deploying rich, expressive games with console-quality graphics, and deploying premium video.

A big part of the future Flash investments will come with an overhaul of its programming language, ActionScript, which is based on the ECMAScript standard that also underlies the web’s JavaScript.

Language changes

Big changes coming with ActionScript “Next” govern how it will handle variables — specifically, a shift towards the more formal “typing” direction that requires programmers to declare whether a variable is an integer, a floating-point number or another specific type of data. Typed variables are more of a hassle for programmers, but they enable programming tools to produce faster software.

It’s not clear just how far Adobe will go, especially since it’s evidently weighing the merits of strict typing requirements versus type inference, in which Flash would have the job of making its best guess and optimising software from there. Either way, it’s potentially a big change for programmers, although Adobe promises that it shouldn’t be as disruptive as past ActionScript changes.

Adobe also announced in the road map that it’s scrapping Flash Player for Linux when using the Netscape Plugin Application Programming Interface (NPAPI) mechanism. Flash will still be available through Chrome for Linux, which uses the Pepper API that Google developed.

Adobe’s change means, for example, that Firefox on Linux, which supports only NPAPI, won’t be able to use the Flash Player plug-in. Adobe dropped AIR for Linux last year. Flash Player using NPAPI will be available on Windows and Mac OS X.

Adobe released the road map in part because the company wanted to do a better job of handling developers who have been whiplashed by the recent Flash changes.

“We understand that we have damaged our trust and credibility with the community over how we have communicated some of the recent changes around the Flash platform, and that trying to regain that trust is a long-term process,” said Mike Chambers in a blog post yesterday. “We have to be clear and open around our plans around the Flash runtimes, and then demonstrate that we can follow up those plans with actions.”

New Flash versions

Adobe has a long list of features for Flash Player 11.2, due this quarter; for Cyril, due in the second quarter; and for Dolores, due in the second half of 2012.

Here’s the list of features for Flash Player 11.2:

  • Mouse-lock support
  • Right and middle mouse-click support
  • Context menu disabling
  • Hardware-accelerated graphics/Stage 3D support for Apple iOS and Android via Adobe AIR
  • Support for more hardware-accelerated video cards (from January 2008), in order to expand availability of hardware-accelerated content.
  • New Throttle event API (dispatches event when Flash Player throttles, pauses or resumes content)
  • Multi-threaded video-decoding pipeline on the desktop, which improves overall performance of video on all desktop platforms.

Here’s the plan for Cyril:

  • Keyboard input support in full-screen mode
  • Improved audio support for working with low-latency audio
  • Ability to progressively stream textures for Stage 3D content
  • LZMA compression support for ByteArray
  • Frame label events.

And here’s the plan for Dolores:

  • ActionScript workers (enables concurrent ActionScript execution on separate threads)
  • Support for advanced profiling
  • Support for more hardware-accelerated video cards (from 2005-06) in order to expand availability of hardware-accelerated content
  • Improved ActionScript performance when targeting Apple iOS
  • Performance index API to inform about performance capabilities of current environment
  • Release outside mouse event API.

After that, things get vague, but Adobe promises performance increases, better hardware utilisation (a long-standing gripe from Apple users) and better code-handling features for those who must reckon with complex programming projects and requirements for long-term support.

Adobe also released whitepapers on Flash and AIR security and its open-source Flex tool for developing Flash apps.

Via CNET

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