Facebook Considering HTML5, Won’t Talk iPad App

 Facebook Considering HTML5, Won’t Talk iPad AppEarlier today, there was a lot of hubbub over Facebook supposedly enabling HTML5 video playback on their website. This would, of course, allow Facebook videos to be played natively within the browser on the iPad and iPhone. More significantly, it would be another big blow to Adobe’s Flash format. The only problem? These Facebook videos aren’t using HTML5 at all.

Yes, videos on Facebook do play when clicked on from the iPad or iPhone, but only ReadWriteWeb noted that this was through an h264 player (which both the iPhone and iPad have always supported), and not actually any sort of HTML5 implimentation. We’ve since confirmed this with Facebook which says, “You are correct, this is not html 5. All new videos are encoded in h264 format, so we’re playing videos natively in the iPad since it supports h264-encoded videos.”

Okay, but more importantly, are there plans for Facebook to support HTML5 just as Apple, Google, and many others have started to? “We’ll consider it for the future,” a Facebook representative tells us.

I also took the opportunity to ask about the status of a native Facebook iPad app. Facebook’s iPhone app is easily one of the best applications in the App Store, but since it’s not universal (meaning there are versions for both the iPhone and iPad), it, like all other iPhone apps, looks a bit junky when running scaled to twice its size on the iPad. “We don’t have anything to announce re: your iPad question,” is all I was told.

Facebook was one of the first applications ready to go alongside the initial launch of the App Store in 2008, but it has been missing in action in the iPad App Store. And it’s a problem because a lot of people are searching for it, only to find cheap imitations. You might recall that the creator of the Facebook iPhone app, Joe Hewitt, stopped development on it over his distaste for some of the App Store policies. Facebook brought in a team to replace him, but so far, nada.

 Facebook Considering HTML5, Won’t Talk iPad App  Facebook Considering HTML5, Won’t Talk iPad App  Facebook Considering HTML5, Won’t Talk iPad App  Facebook Considering HTML5, Won’t Talk iPad App  Facebook Considering HTML5, Won’t Talk iPad App  Facebook Considering HTML5, Won’t Talk iPad App

 Facebook Considering HTML5, Won’t Talk iPad App
 Facebook Considering HTML5, Won’t Talk iPad App

 Facebook Considering HTML5, Won’t Talk iPad App  Facebook Considering HTML5, Won’t Talk iPad App  Facebook Considering HTML5, Won’t Talk iPad App  Facebook Considering HTML5, Won’t Talk iPad App  Facebook Considering HTML5, Won’t Talk iPad App

 Facebook Considering HTML5, Won’t Talk iPad App

ipad device Adobe: Flash Apps Will Run On The iPad, Even Full Screen At Some PointWhile Apple is being lamented here and there for not supporting Flash on its shiny new iPad – boy does Cupertino have a strong dislike for the platform – Adobe has already responded to the news on the official Flash Platform blog.

The blog post, unambiguously titled “Building iPad Applications with Flash”, is mostly just to remind people of the company’s Packager for iPhone product, which will enable developers to make Flash apps function on the iPhone / iPod Touch through a work-around whereby Flash apps can be easily converted into iPhone apps using Creative Suite 5 (CS5).

We’ve written before that this could turn 2010 into the year when approximately 2 million Flash developers could potentially start cooking up stuff for the iPhone en masse. You can now add the iPad to that, it seems.

The company notes:

We announced the Packager for iPhone at MAX 2009 which will allow Flash developers to create native iPhone applications and will be available in the upcoming version of Flash Pro CS5. This technology enables developers to create applications for the iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad (though applications will not initially take direct advantage of iPad’s new screen resolution). It is our intent to make it possible for Flash developers to build applications that can take advantage of the increased screen size and resolution of the iPad.

For that latter part, Adobe points to this article by Christian Cantrell, Product Manager and Application Developer on the AIR team. The article goes in depth about how developers can build apps using Flash with authoring with multiple screen sizes and resolutions in mind.

You won’t be able to fire up, say, Hulu through your browser on the iPhone or iPad any time soon, but Adobe appears determined to show the world that Flash has its place on Apple’s products one way or the other.

And it’s also sending a message to Flash developers that they can and should stick to the platform rather than look at other ways to join the App Store goldrush.

 Adobe: Flash Apps Will Run On The iPad, Even Full Screen At Some Point
 Adobe: Flash Apps Will Run On The iPad, Even Full Screen At Some Point

 Adobe: Flash Apps Will Run On The iPad, Even Full Screen At Some Point  Adobe: Flash Apps Will Run On The iPad, Even Full Screen At Some Point  Adobe: Flash Apps Will Run On The iPad, Even Full Screen At Some Point  Adobe: Flash Apps Will Run On The iPad, Even Full Screen At Some Point  Adobe: Flash Apps Will Run On The iPad, Even Full Screen At Some Point

 Adobe: Flash Apps Will Run On The iPad, Even Full Screen At Some Point

sony reader hands Sony takes Reader openness one step further, will offer EPUB titles...

Slowly but surely, the mega-corp who has historically clung tight to its own formats while the world opts for others is finally seeing the light. Just over a year after Sony pushed out an update that enabled its Reader to use purchased books in the open EPUB format, the outfit is now promising to sell digital books only in that format by the year's end. Moreover, Sony is aiming to nix its "proprietary anti-copying software in favor of technology from the software maker Adobe that restricts how often e-books can be shared or copied." Once the switchover takes place, books purchased in Sony's online store will be readable on any device that supports EPUB, one of which will be Plastic Logic's forthcoming e-reader. And to think -- if only this change of heart would've happened prior to the introduction of ATRAC...

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Sony takes Reader openness one step further, will offer EPUB titles only originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 13 Aug 2009 07:18:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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