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April 16, 2007 | Comments: (0)
The looming Microsoft battle with Adobe (It's not just a web thing)
Longtime friends and business partners, Adobe and Microsoft are set to fall out of love, as the WSJ reports today. The WSJ focuses on a likely clash between the two companies over digital media (Adobe Media Player, duking it out with Microsoft's Windows Media Player) and web publishing (Microsoft's new Silverlight, which will compete with Adobe's near ubiquitous Flash technology).
The future of the web and what we see on it, carved up between the industry's top desktop software companies.
"The future battle lines are going to be drawn between Microsoft and Adobe in this space," says Chris Swenson, an analyst at NPD Group, a research firm....This point is apparently lost on Novell, which believes that Microsoft earnestly wants to sell SUSE Linux. Baffling, but....Adobe's new software gives the company a chance to bring in new revenue. While computer users can download Adobe's Flash Player free of charge, Adobe sells the software used to build the online services and software that are based on Flash.
Microsoft's move is a new chapter in a history of defending the crown jewels: the operating systems that have been the foundations for other programs to run on. Windows has long been Microsoft's largest source of revenue and profit and the cornerstone of most of its other software. Over the years, when any company challenged Microsoft's operating system, the software giant threw its full weight into fending off the interloper.
Both Adobe and Microsoft have an uphill slog going into new territory, but I think in these two respective battles Microsoft has the tougher slog, as InformationWeek reports:
Microsoft has a long way to go in convincing developers and users of the need for an alternative to Flash, which has a place on 98% of browsers. Microsoft promises eventual support for managed code, including C# and Visual Basic .Net, but that capability is lacking in the beta version. Nor does Silverlight support 3-D graphics, despite the fact that the related Windows Presentation Foundation is the graphical component of Microsoft's .Net 3.0 development framework.In all this, it's strange to me that the WSJ and others are fixating on the web battle between Adobe and Microsoft but have completely failed to see an equally serious battle: file formats, i.e., PDF versus XLS, DOC, and PPT.Lee Brimelow, senior design technologist at consulting firm Frog Design, says his initial reaction is that "Flash is way more powerful" than Silverlight. The one thing that could set Silverlight apart, Brimelow says, is its ability to play video. Silverlight comes with a standard video codec that's also faster than Flash; both of those factors will make for cheaper streaming than Flash, Microsoft claims.
In this latter fight, Sharepoint is Adobe's biggest threat, because it extends the file format lock-in to the network. It's not just tied to file formats, either. The more content Microsoft can get into Sharepoint, the less Adobe (or anyone else) can do with it. At that point, it just doesn't matter how much of a standard PDF becomes, if Microsoft can succeed in holing the content up in a proprietary repository. Game over. For Adobe and for anyone else that hopes to compete.
At any rate, it will be fascinating to see how this battle plays out. Adobe has done exceptionally well blending the desktop with the 'Net, and has shown real intelligence in figuring out ways to proliferate/standardize its technology through open source-esque distribution strategies. Indeed, with this in mind, there are some key areas that a little open source could help Adobe to solidify its position against Microsoft and make it, not Microsoft, king of the "Net-top," this innovative blend of desktop software and Internet-based services.
Posted by Matt Asay on April 16, 2007 12:48 AM
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Unsurprisignly, while Adobe plays relatively 'nice' with GNU/Linux, Microsoft snubs it [1]. It's no accident. Web developers would be wise to choose the Adobe route if they must deviate from Web standards (including wonderful stuff like Ajax and CSS3).
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[1] Microsoft's 'Everywhere' excludes Linux
,----[ Quote ]
| This browser add-on enables rendering of WPF content, but
| "Everywhere" doesn't include Linux.
`----
http://www.itwire.com.au/content/view/7794/53/
Posted by: Roy Schestowitz at April 16, 2007 04:28 AMNice recap, Matt.
XPS is another Vista-embedded strategy for killing Acrobat/PDF -- perhaps you chose not to mention it.
Posted by: Sam Hiser at April 16, 2007 07:32 AMI'm not sure Adobe and Microsoft have been friends ever since the advent of TrueType forced Adobe into releasing the Type 1 font specs, but that's another story!
A long time ago, in the days of Display PostScript, people used to talk about how Adobe wanted to "own" the UI experience. Of course, once the FUD about Display PostScript being "too slow" took hold, that dream died.
It seems to me that the story about anything Flash-related is that Adobe are now setting their sights on the mobile world. All the fashion-victim phones except for iPhone apparently have Flash based UI's and today's announcement of Flash Player also plays up the mobile side of things.
Of course, MS also have a mobile offering, but this article seems to ignore the mobile world completely. I'm pretty sure Adobe aren't....
Posted by: Ian Kemmish at April 16, 2007 10:17 AMI had read that Adobe is using ON2 (ONT)On2's TrueMotion codec allows services to deliver streaming video with unmatched image quality. I'm no tech guru, but when names such as Adobe (Nasdaq: ADBE), Electronic Arts, Skype, and even XM Satellite Radio are wholeheartedly adopting a company's technology, the stock is definitely worth a second (or even fifth) look.
Posted by: Frank at April 16, 2007 10:46 PM
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