flash

User Expectations: Flash

This little gem popped up in my inbox not to long ago. VIP users of grooveshark are able to provide feedback and get to complain or file bug reports, which I randomly check (it would be a full-time job if I answered them). Most of the time it’s either feature requests, complaints that they spent about a cup of coffee’s worth of money, or in this case telling us how awesome we are.

Here’s the guts of the email (obviously removed some content for privacy):

mood: Impressed
feedback report:
Nothing too contributary to say to be honest.

Just that your product is AMAZING.

It’s literally changed my entire view that every flash application is buggy and unreliable, you guys have done an absolutely stunning job. It’s so bug-less it’s suspicious!

Keep up the great work!

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Monday, June 7th, 2010 projects No Comments

HTML Eats Babies and Spits Hot Fire

HTML5 is fast becoming the new hot thang that all the guys want to fuck.  But, like the hot girl:  she’s a raging bitch, requires a ton of maintenance, actually is just so-so  in bed, and you cannot protect your investment (because she’s open, but remember she has standards). And all the boys want to have their way with her:  Google is the new kid on the block, Microsoft the rich kid that wants to buy her, her best friend Mozilla has been holding her hands when time was tough, and now Apple the bad boy because he wants to prove to his gay lover that it’s really over.

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Saturday, June 5th, 2010 expo, interests No Comments

The Openness of Flash

Thanks to Steve Jobs’ Thoughts on Flash post, there’s been a whole new flurry of posts on the subject of flash vs html5, this time with some focus on the issue of openness, since Steve made such a point to bring that up.

Some people have already pointed out that Adobe has been moving Flash to be more and more open over time, including the open screen project, contributing tamarin to Mozilla, and Flex being completely open source. That’s all well and good, but people seem to be forgetting that historically, Flash had a very good reason for being closed. If one remembers back to the early days of the web, the wild west era as I do since it was such an exciting time for a young whippersnapper like me, one must only think back to what happened to Java to realize why making Flash closed was a very smart move.

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Tuesday, June 1st, 2010 interests No Comments