1% of all desktop installations might just as well be 10% of all desktop installations by professionals that use their computer for creating things, though. Assuming it were so: Wouldn't that be reason enough for Adobe to target Ubuntu & Co.?
> So, with Desktop Linux, we see a basically flat growth
> curve hovering around 1%. And since the release of AIR,
> we’ve seen only a 0.5% download share for desktop Linux.
AIR is horrible under Linux. The last time I checked it, hardly any application was working, functionality like sound and transparency did not work (even though a compositing manager was active) and it required your root password if you wanted to install an app.
Speaking of Mockups: we now require Air 2.5, and we don't have short or mid-term plans to switch to requiring 2.7. So I'd say we're good for a while...by the time we'll make the switch there will probably be a new 3rd party distro of Air for Linux that we can leverage.
I've never had an issue with Pandora's AIR client on Ubuntu.
Hulu Desktop is kind of a pain, but it's better than using a browser with Flash. (And I first recall using it passably several years ago, so I'm curious what applications you're having issues with.)
As for requiring a root password, gksudo worked great for me. (Or are you taking issue with the fact that you can't install AIR apps in userspace?)
This doesn't make any sense. Android IS linux, but only at the lowest level. Given their logic, I'm surprised they're not launching FreeBSD support, cause, you know, iOS runs darwin, which has a bsd subsystem.
That being said, re-focusing on js & css output seems like a winning combo.
They're making a snarky point about how silly Linux users are to use an operating system that doesn't have a large market share, and using that to justify dropping Linux support.
The real problem here is not about the people using Air on linux, its about the big companies that use linux as their continuous integration platform. Those companies will not be able to use Air in the development strategy, even though they might have deployed the app to thousands of windows and mac users.
If you believe AIR is the right place to deploy your application, I can't believe too many shops are going to say "I can't run my build on Linux so rewrite the app (or choose a different technology for the new app)."
More likely, there will be some grumbling from current Linux users as they are forced to migrate to a Mac or Windows (probably more likely, even though the Mac is closer to the previous solution) server, then nothing else will be said and nothing will change.
An Adobe partnership with Canonical to help make Ubuntu a viable mobile OS competitor to Android would have been far more innovative, intelligent, and superior long term business strategy.
Because virtual platforms like Flash and AIR are doomed when they are subject to the iron fist of Apple, Microsoft, and Google. Only a true open platform (not quasi-Google open) is a safe home for them.
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[ 5.8 ms ] story [ 22.8 ms ] thread> curve hovering around 1%. And since the release of AIR,
> we’ve seen only a 0.5% download share for desktop Linux.
AIR is horrible under Linux. The last time I checked it, hardly any application was working, functionality like sound and transparency did not work (even though a compositing manager was active) and it required your root password if you wanted to install an app.
Peldi
Hulu Desktop is kind of a pain, but it's better than using a browser with Flash. (And I first recall using it passably several years ago, so I'm curious what applications you're having issues with.)
As for requiring a root password, gksudo worked great for me. (Or are you taking issue with the fact that you can't install AIR apps in userspace?)
But, in case you didn't know:
AIR is horrible everywhere.
That being said, re-focusing on js & css output seems like a winning combo.
So, nothing new here.
All that extra work to support an additional 0.5% to 1% of the market does not seem worth it.
http://www.simb.net/2011/06/15/adobe-abandons-air-for-linux/
More likely, there will be some grumbling from current Linux users as they are forced to migrate to a Mac or Windows (probably more likely, even though the Mac is closer to the previous solution) server, then nothing else will be said and nothing will change.
Because virtual platforms like Flash and AIR are doomed when they are subject to the iron fist of Apple, Microsoft, and Google. Only a true open platform (not quasi-Google open) is a safe home for them.