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Comment Re:To sum it up: (Score 1) 750

Yea — I'm using a full-sized bluetooth keyboard on my iPad ... I just love it.

The funny thing is: I would never trade it in for a netbook.

Sounds like we both win.

Comment Re:CmdrTaco drags big brass ones along the ground (Score 1) 750

Let's identify success metrics on this: tell me what specific performance points you'd be examining, as well as the threshold they would have to exceed in order that you'd be satisfied iPad is not a "mistake" of a product. Is it sales volume? Is it sales in the first year? Is it a percentage comparison against another tablet device that preceded it in the market, or against netbook sales, or...?

If you propose some sane evaluation points, I'm kinda ready to make some loot off you, sir, if you're the gambling type ;-)

Comment Re:Opinion of a UI Game Developer who leverages Fl (Score 1) 521

I been saying this throughout the thread, so pardon my (re)redundancy, but I really think Adobe's wisest move at this juncture would be to create authoring tools as great as the Flash authoring environment and Flex IDE for HTML5 (SVG + Canvas, etc) production.

And hey - remember <blink> and ridiculously large paychecks?- good times... ;-)

Comment Re:The iPhone handles mouseovers already (Score 1) 521

They're (finally) meant to be working on this... except I don't see it as a useful technology any more, now that Canvas and the rest are available. My take is that if Adobe were smart, they'd spend their resources on creating a Flash-like authoring environment for producing HTML5 content.

Comment Re:Opinion of a UI Game Developer who leverages Fl (Score 1) 521

I'm a web professional of 13 years experience... and it's my professional opinion that websites ought to be built with open standards and web technologies ;)

On the UX tip, it's certainly possible to design and implement Flash content that doesn't rely on hover states, but the story's main point is that a great number of existing websites would have to be rewritten to do so... the thing is, while you're rewriting, you may as well just go standards.

I presently work at a major media company in NYC that has websites that use plenty of Flash (including a number of children's sites that are WAY flash heavy); my team produces both HTML and Flash-based sites. And, being that I'd get paid either way (forgive me for raising that point, but it does seem like your viewpoint is likely to suffer from no small amount bias, since your livelihood is presently tied to Flash development), I'd still always recommend going HTML.

That said, Flash does offer a great "fallback" solution for rendering SVG, Canvas content, and audio / video media in browsers that don't yet support HTML 5 :)

Comment Re:Wrong subject. (Score 1) 521

Or, just adopt progressive enhancement as a implementational methodology :) websites can certainly leverage hover state interactions to provide "additional awesome," but should be fully accessible in cases where hover is not possible... including, say, the Lynx browser or audio interfaces for the hearing-impaired.

Comment Re:Flash only? (Score 1) 521

There are plenty of reasons to keep Flash of those devices, but let's keep those aside for the moment; this particular point is simply more of a wake-up call to those who are lamenting its absence.

You're also talking to a fella that has Flashblock installed on all his browsers :)

But back to the particular point made in this post: ask yourself honestly... would the average consumer be more annoyed that Flash doesn't show up on the page at all, or that it does but that you can't interact with the bloody thing?

I dunno how much web work you've done, but I've been a (backend) web developer for thirteen years (yikes!) and this would be a huge issue for the majority of sites that I've worked on over those years.

And, frankly, if people have to reword their sites if they're interested in engaging the iP* audience, I'm beyond pleased that there's a whole swathe of folks that would be coerced into developing against open web standards, coz let's face it: unless you're a nerd like many of us on slashdot, you don't give a rat's ass about these concerns unless there's implications for your bottom line.

This finally provides a pragmatic reason for business owners and content publishers to get on the open standards bandwagon.

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