Graphics Tools - Publish.com
Publish.com Ziff-Davis Enterprise  
SEARCH · ONLINE MEDIA · MOBILE · WEB DESIGN · GRAPHICS TOOLS · PRINTING · PHOTO · TIPS · OPINIONS
Home arrow Graphics Tools arrow Talk of Flash's Demise Is Premature
Talk of Flash's Demise Is Premature
By Jim Rapoza

Rate This Article:
Add This Article To:
Opinion: Flash will die someday, but not at the hands of Microsoft's "Sparkle."

You can call me Jim Rapoza, the Peter Coffee Killer.

Well, not literally, but I'm a killer of his Epicenters columns. Surely, now that you're reading my columns, you'll soon find that you no longer need to read his columns—or the columns of any other tech writer, for that matter. Soon our own Eric Lundquist and David Coursey—heck, all the tech columnists of the world (bwa ha ha!)—will fall to me.

Or not. Actually, all signs seem to indicate that people like reading multiple technology columns by multiple technology writers. So, I guess I can forget about being a killer.

There are other, higher-profile and much-hyped killers out there who are even less likely to make a killing than I am. One recent example is more Mike "Austin Powers" Myers than Michael "Halloween" Myers: "Sparkle" technology from Microsoft. (Come to think of it, Sparkle is either a really good or a really bad name for a serial killer—of anything.)

Pretty much anywhere you turn, you'll see someone touting Sparkle as a Flash killer, implying that Adobe is shaking in its boots and that its acquisition of Macromedia will prove pointless as Microsoft once again buries another victim. But if I were Adobe, I don't think I'd be too worried.

Admittedly, there is some pretty cool stuff in Sparkle, and I expect to see some impressively rich GUIs built with it. But there's one problem: As things stand now, these Sparkle-based GUIs will work only on systems running Windows Vista or Windows XP Service Pack 2 systems with WinFX components (and, most likely, a Windows Presentation Foundation-compatible video card).

Let's look ahead to, say, mid-2007, approximately six months after Vista's expected release. If Sparkle is massively successful, with heavy adoption by everyone who could use it, what would that be? Five percent of the market?

Sparkle proponents list all the great things it will do that Flash can't. Of course, they are comparing some future, sure-to-be-buggy-in-first-release product against a currently shipping product. Who knows what Flash will be capable of in a year?

And Flash has become pretty experienced at handling so-called killers. Over the years, it has faced Java, ActiveX and DHTML, as well as alternative Rich Internet Application technologies such as Curl and, of course, Captain Cold. (Oh, wait, he was the killer of The Flash.)

Recently, AJAX has been touted as a Flash killer, and while it is a much more legitimate threat than Sparkle, I tend to think of Flash and AJAX as complementary technologies.

Click here to read about the growing support for AJAX development.

In general, this whole idea of "new product x is a killer of established product y" that we in the tech industry have is pretty misguided. Sure, Excel killed Lotus 1-2-3, and Internet Explorer killed Netscape. But, in recent years, it's become a lot harder to find examples of a product really killing another product.

More likely is a new technology killing an older one, such as the Web killing Gopher and BBSes or XML killing EDI. Really, the main way that one product kills another product nowadays is when one vendor acquires a competitor, sort of like the way that Illustrator will eventually "kill" FreeHand.

So, if you're looking forward to Flash and Sparkle going at it like Muhammad Ali and Joe Frazier, forget about it. They aren't even in the same ring. Flash runs on everything, from Linux to Mac OS X to Windows to handhelds. Sparkle won't even run on Windows 2000. And, graphics developers who still favor the Mac can develop in Flash but not in Sparkle.

Someday Flash will die, but it will probably be because of a big technological shift and not just because Microsoft has decided to do something similar. In fact, whenever you see some new forthcoming product being touted as a killer, take it with a big grain of salt. The only thing that is likely to die is the hype and FUD surrounding this new product.

And as far as that Peter Coffee Killer thing goes, you can forget about that. I hope he links to my columns from his so I can get some of that great online traffic he gets.

Labs Director Jim Rapoza can be reached at jim_rapoza@ziffdavis.com.

Check out eWEEK.com's for the latest news, reviews and analysis on image editing and Web publishing tools.


Discuss Talk of Flash's Demise Is Premature
 
>>> Be the FIRST to comment on this article!
 

 
 
>>> More Graphics Tools Articles          >>> More By Jim Rapoza
 


Buyer's Guide
Explore hundreds of products in our Publish.com Buyer's Guide.
Web design
Content management
Graphics Software
Streaming Media
Video
Digital photography
Stock photography
Web development
View all >

ADVERTISEMENT


FREE ZIFF DAVIS ENTERPRISE ESEMINARS AT ESEMINARSLIVE.COM
  • Dec 10, 4 p.m. ET
    Eliminate the Drawbacks of Traditional Backup/Replication for Linux
    with Michael Krieger. Sponsored by InMage
  • Dec 11, 1 p.m. ET
    Data Modeling and Metadata Management with PowerDesigner
    with Joel Shore. Sponsored by Sybase
  • Dec 12, 12 p.m. ET
    Closing the IT Business Gap: Monitoring the End-User Experience
    with Michael Krieger. Sponsored by Compuware
  • Dec 12, 2 p.m. ET
    Enabling IT Consolidation
    with Michael Krieger. Sponsored by Riverbed & VMWare
  • VTS
    Join us on Dec. 19 for Discovering Value in Stored Data & Reducing Business Risk. Join this interactive day-long event to learn how your enterprise can cost-effectively manage stored data while keeping it secure, compliant and accessible. Disorganized storage can prevent your enterprise from extracting the maximum value from information assets. Learn how to organize enterprise data so vital information assets can help your business thrive. Explore policies, strategies and tactics from creation through deletion. Attend live or on-demand with complimentary registration!
    FEATURED CONTENT
    IT LINK DISCUSSION - MIGRATION
    A Windows Vista® migration introduces new and unique challenges to any IT organization. It's important to understand early on whether your systems, hardware, applications and end users are ready for the transition.
    Join the discussion today!



    .NAME Charging For Whois
    Whois has always been a free service, but the .NAME registry is trying to change that.
    Read More >>

    Sponsored by Ziff Davis Enterprise Group

    NEW FROM ZIFF DAVIS ENTERPRISE


    Delivering the latest technology news & reviews straight to your handheld device

    Now you can get the latest technology news & reviews from the trusted editors of eWEEK.com on your handheld device
    mobile.eWEEK.com

     


    RSS 2.0 Feed


    internet
    rss graphic Publish.com
    rss graphic Google Watch

    Video Interviews


    streaming video
    Designing Apps for Usability
    DevSource interviews usability pundit Dr. Jakob Nielsen on everything from the proper attitude for programmers to the importance of prototyping in design to the reasons why PDF, Flash and local search engines can hurt more than they help.
    ADVERTISEMENT