They are announcing support on a number of mobile platforms, including
Blackberry.
[Adobe Announces Full Flash Player for BlackBerry Devices & 35 Funded
Flash Apps](http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/full_flash_player_coming_to_blackberry_devices.php
)
As long as the #1 smart phone in the world does _not_ support Flash,
it would seem that OL is in the same interesting position on phones
that it is on the web!
On 2009-10-05, at 09:54, Raju Bitter wrote:
Adobe will demo Flash Player 10.1 on Palm Pre and Windows Mobile
today. Found these videos on the Adobe website:
http://labs.adobe.com/technologies/flashplayer10/videos/ (although
it looks like the Adobe servers are collapsing under intense traffic
right now)
On Oct 5, 2009, at 3:00 PM, Raju Bitter wrote:
There were 2 interesting announcements:
1) Availibility of the Google NativeCode SDK
http://code.google.com/events/io/sessions/NativeClientUsingNativeCode.html
Native Client is an open-source technology for running x86 native
code in web applications, with the goal of maintaining the browser
neutrality, OS portability, and safety that people expect from web
apps.
2) Google joins the Adobe OpenScreensProject
http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2009/10/teaming-up-with-adobe-and-open-screen.html
At Google, we've been working closely with the folks at Adobe for
years. Some of our most exciting projects such as YouTube,
Android, Google Site Search, Google Chrome and evenGoogle web
search require close integration with Adobe's technologies. Our
engineering teams regularly exchange ideas, tips and bugs as we
build upon each others' efforts.
2) definitely is good news for OL and a future SWF10 runtime, I'm
not sure how 1) would be interesting right now, unless we manage to
convert the LFC/JS2 into native code.