Adobe CTO Kevin Lynch said Microsoft has not impacted Adobe with its Silverlight or Expression design tool set and Google Chrome does not make Adobe AIR obsolete.CAMBRIDGE, Mass. -- In an interview with eWEEK, Kevin Lynch, chief technology officer at
Adobe Systems,
said Adobe is looking beyond competition from Microsoft and others and
focusing on providing innovation for its base of designers, developers
and end users of its technologies.
For instance, when asked whether the new Google Chrome browser with
its nascent ability to run Web applications as desktop applications
might present competition to Adobe's AIR technology, which enables
users to run Web applications across operating systems and work on the
Web as well as the desktop, Lynch said: "Chrome is a Web browser and
I’m excited to see more innovation in the Web browser space."
However, "the ability to run an application in Chrome and save a
shortcut to the desktop, right now what that means is basically it's an
icon that launches you to a Web page and then you're interacting with
that application again," Lynch said. "That's not the same approach that
we're taking with AIR, where you can actually install a Web application
on your computer and it runs whether you're online or offline and you
can access information you couldn't with a Web application -- so being
able to access your local documents and edit them in a word processing
application or a rich editing application. That's not possible inside
the Web model with the sandbox. Doing things like notification on the
screen and being able to drag and drop information between
applications, these are things that AIR is enabling you to do on the
computer that the Web browser doesn't do."
Moreover, Lynch, who spoke with eWEEK at the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology Emerging Technology conference here, asked why should a
user have to switch from a preferred browser to Chrome anyway. "If you
like using Firefox or you like using Opera or Internet Explorer and you
want to install a Web app on your computer, you have to change
browsers," he said. "And my view is you shouldn't have to change
browsers, you should be able to do that without having to make that
switch."
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