Read/WriteWeb’s Web 2.0 Summit coverage sponsored by Yahoo!
Adobe CEO Bruce Chizen is talking to Tim O’Reilly on stage now. Bruce says that before the Macromedia acquisition, Adobe was a peripheral player on the Web – so the acquisition brought them back into the heart and soul of the Web. He talks about the importance of Flash on mobile (Flash lite), which is key going forward.
Tim asked him about Ajax and how it is taking over the use of Flash in some things. Bruce replied that they don’t view Ajax as a competitor to Flash. He also says they’ve believed in open standards from day 1.
On the challenge from Microsoft, Bruce said he’s pleased Google is “a heat shield”. He says “the good news is that Microsoft has lots of enemies”. He notes that Microsoft has been competing with Adobe almost as long as they’ve been in business – e.g. Microsoft’s PhotoDrop product in the mid-90’s. He says Adobe will focus on what they’re really good at – “making things local”.
Tim mentions the electronic reading apps that both Microsoft (via NYTimes) and Adobe have come out with recently. Bruce says the NYTimes Reader is similar to what Adobe has been trying to do with PDF. Adobe are extending that themselves with their Digital Reader. He says over the last 7 years they’ve been talking about ebooks, but he thinks “we’re almost there” in regards to ebook devices – he points to Sony Reader as an example.
Finally he talks a little about Apollo, which renders Flex and HTML etc both within and outside the browser – “think iTunes on steriods”. Tim asks whether that makes Adobe the “dark horse” of Internet platform players, a question which is left hanging….
Originally published on ReadWriteWeb (archived copy)