Some thoughts on Adobe Acrobat Connect Pro Mobile

Adobe Acro­bat Con­nect Pro Mobile is a piece of soft­ware recently released for iPhone/iPod touch that is rather inter­est­ing for a num­ber of rea­sons. I noticed it because it largely over­laps with a prod­uct that we’ve been can­vass­ing sup­port for to release on the iPad (and likely still will), but there seems to be a lot more going on here!

Firstly, it’s worth not­ing that this free soft­ware is pub­lished by Adobe, devel­oped using Flash, and is fea­tured in the App Store.

For those who keep their head off the Internet/are apa­thetic towards Apple’s mobile plat­form pow­er­plays, let me just briefly note that Apple and Adobe are hardly best of friends. Accord­ingly, while the approval of a Flash-based appli­ca­tion is a lit­tle cheeky, the ele­va­tion of one to fea­tured app store sta­tus is straight up devious.

We can only spec­u­late as to whether prag­matic or polit­i­cal rea­sons moti­vated Adobe’s devel­op­ment in this way. Self-evidently, they have a lot of in-house com­pe­ten­cies around Flash devel­op­ment, but they would also love to get a prod­uct approved inso­far as it dri­ves adop­tion of their Con­nect plat­form (which, unlike the App Store app, is any­thing but free).

There are many less sneaky ways of build­ing a com­pelling tech demo. If I had to guess, I’d attribute the use of Flash to a sub­stan­tial exist­ing soft­ware invest­ment for web-based clients that was largely portable to the mobile con­text. The impact this has on user expe­ri­ence is likely to be min­i­mal, as they likely redesigned the fron­tend entirely — though obvi­ously other per­for­mance con­cerns may apply.

At any rate, this is the first I’ve noticed of approvals of overtly Flash-based appli­ca­tions. If pos­si­ble, this may open the App Store flood­gates even fur­ther, while pro­vid­ing hope to many for whom the bar­rier to entry in terms of rewrit­ing code was sim­ply too high.

We’re excited about this as cer­tain com­po­nent parts of soft­ware we’ve devel­oped depends strongly on Flash for data visu­al­iza­tion and report­ing. The prospect of being able to deploy this on the iPhone (and yes, the iPad) is a com­pelling oppor­tu­nity that is, plainly, freak­ing exciting.

# by Josh on March 13th, 2010 Tags: , , , , , ,
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Akismet a few days in

It is like rain after many hours of sti­fling humid­ity: it is like falling onto bed and being asleep in moments, paus­ing only to realise the sat­is­fac­tion of being still after a long day.

I can check my email again and be excited to see a new mes­sage, because chances are it’s from a real per­son. (Com­ment noti­fi­ca­tions are now worth hav­ing turned on and gen­er­ally sen­si­ble). At first it was sim­ply too strange to com­pre­hend, but now I am rev­el­ling in the bril­liant relief it pro­vides. Per­haps, now, using web pub­lish­ing soft­ware will be enjoy­able again.

I’ve been think­ing a fair bit of late about the psy­chol­ogy of brand con­trol (be that per­sonal or cor­po­rate brand­ing), per­plexed from a few months back when bands first started putting their myspace URL next to (or in place of) their expensive-developed-by-Sony/BMG/Universal/…-records-Flash-powered-yuppie web­site. In doing so I nearly went (nearly being quite a few times), “you know, the Live­Jour­nal crew never expe­ri­ence the kind of crap I’m putting up with” and switched. Of course, WordPress.com users exist behind a mag­i­cal wall, too, but that’s beside the point — If I was going to switch, it would be (at least in part) for social rea­sons, and there’s no-one cool using WordPress.com. (“Cool” is in the eye of the beholder — for me, Robert Scoble is not cool, or, at very least, not some­one to be emu­lated)
So, any­way, I’m not spend­ing an hour a day mod­er­at­ing com­ments. That fig­ure is truly obscene given that on an aver­age week I might only get ten to fif­teen gen­uine com­ments, if that. A lot for very lit­tle in return. I nearly switched off the com­ments alto­gether a cou­ple of times, but I’m too much of an ego­cen­tric prick to deal with that very well. So now things are better.

I’m now free to do more of… some­thing. I’ll prob­a­bly find out exactly what that is about the same time as every­one else. Besides, all the cool kids use Myspace or Face­book nowa­days, any­way, so the audi­ence isn’t a big deal much — only Face­book is smart enough to import my RSS feed as “Notes”, whilst Myspace is still gush­ing generic Cold­Fu­sion error pages. It is the biggest piece of crap hack­job high pro­file web­site I’ve ever seen. It’s a good thing their only rev­enue comes from adver­tis­ing part­ners whose ads are hosted on other servers, oth­er­wise I would so be expect­ing a mas­sively expen­sive class action law­suit when they get their crappy web­site pwned by some script kid­die who’s mess­ing around with a spot of SQL injec­tion for the first time.

Not that I’m even a pro­gram­mer. But I nearly found one today. Please be pray­ing that I get geeks bet­ter than the ones at Myspace for the cur­rent thing that’s qui­etly bak­ing away. I’m hop­ing to present it to nearly a thou­sand peo­ple over the next two weeks and haul in some unemployed/looking-for-more-exciting-work pro­gram­mers in that process.

Ran­dom obser­va­tion — It’s funny how I talk about that project on here with a com­pletely dif­fer­ent voice to the one I use on the other blog. I haven’t got any issues with com­plete strangers read­ing what I write here, so long as it’s taken in con­text (i.e. I’ve ranted about spam before, I’ve ranted about cool/uncool Soc­Nets before, I’ve ranted about how hor­ri­ble I find Myspace from a usability/technical per­spec­tive before, so my hold­ing them up as Thebes to my Athens is entirely accept­able). The prob­lem with writ­ing for a blog read once off by com­plete strangers is that every arti­cle has to stand alone. It actu­ally ceases to fit within the “blog” genre, because chronol­ogy is pretty much left for dead. Which is kind of a shame, but whatever.

In sum­mary: Akismet saves san­ity. Los­ing con­trol is some­times a good thing. Myspace is hor­ri­ble. Josh/CYIADA nearly might pos­si­bly maybe have a pro­gram­mer so please pray for “us”. Myspace is hor­ri­ble. Corporate/project blog­ging nec­es­sar­ily takes a dif­fer­ent form (mode, style, what­ever) to indi­vid­ual blog­ging. Myspace is horrible.