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Speaking at the D9 CEO of Adobe, Shantanu Narayen, said the dispute between Apple and Adobe about the lack of Adobe Flash on IOS is over. The two companies are far from reaching an agreement on flash players, but Adobe believes in forecasting sales of Android, designed to overcome IOS, then decided that it is more worthwhile to spend time with Apple.
Narayen told her during an interview with The Wall Street Journal, during which he explained that the disagreement with Adobe Flash technology is not related to, but is an issue of business model and will have control total platform. So when the reporter asked if Apple and Adobe were back on the topic flash, Narayen said a resounding no, definitely not.
Steve Jobs, Narayen and last year they faced a public question and answer about Flash. Jobs accused of Adobe Flash does not work well on mobile devices. Narayen had responded by laying the blame for failures, the operating system from Apple (Adobe makes a mockery of the history of consumption of Flash).
The CEO of Adobe said that his company does not need Apple to distribute their own products, since by the end of the year over 130 million mobile devices using Flash.
Narayen has specified further that all the companies that produce tablets, except Apple, Adobe wants Flash, so now he feels-like a kid in a candy store -. I mean, who cares if Apple wants to go against the tide, all the others have decided to focus on Flash.
According to the manager for Adobe, also the validity of the tablet is more than a few media entertainment applications. Narayen says, in fact, that "the tablet PCs are more powerful than several years ago when we produced Photo-shop. That's why Adobe is betting on new products for mobility, "not just as consumer devices, as well as systems for business productivity. "
Narayen has finally provided that Flash on the tablet will follow the same path of smart-phones, and Android and products with Adobe Flash, along with Touch-pad HP and RIM playbook, will soon surpass the Apple iPad in both the consumer and the company.
By way of comparison, Tim Cook, Apple's chief operating officer, believes that the tablet as the iPad are spreading so fast that it can become the most popular PC in a few years. The statement was referring to Goldman Sachs analyst Bill Shope, who met recently with the Cook Chief Financial Officer Peter Oppenheimer and Ron Johnson.
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