back to article Microsoft Mobile presses Flash

Microsoft has signed a deal with Adobe allowing it to bundle both Flash Lite and Adobe Reader LE with Windows Mobile devices, if the manufacturers want to do so. Flash Lite is a cut-down version of Flash suited to mobile devices and already comes pre-installed on a range of handsets, though notably not those using the various …

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  1. Nick Palmer
    Happy

    Errrrr....

    This would be the same Adobe Reader LE and Flash Lite that my HTC Touch Dual arrived with weeks ago, yes...?

  2. Bill

    Re: Errrrr....

    Yes.

    Companies, such as HTC, are at liberty to licence any software they like, from anyone. The difference with this deal is the ability to licence that software from Microsoft, as part of the Windows Mobile bundle.

    Sorry if that wasn't clear from the piece.

    Bill.

  3. amanfromMars Silver badge
    Alien

    There is AI Beta Way ...... Magical Mystery Turing on Bonded Journeys/Enigmatic Trips

    "Companies, such as HTC, are at liberty to licence any software they like, from anyone. The difference with this deal is the ability to licence that software from Microsoft, as part of the Windows Mobile bundle."

    Ye Olde SteamRoller/Hoover Approach to Innovation and Novelty. In CyberSpace Trades, IT is IP Portfolio Licensing Transfers which Realise Creation with Assets...... with FutureVU Builds.

  4. Pheron Munroe
    Linux

    Java on Windows Mobile?

    Isn't there already a Java ME runtime on Windows Mobile? The world doesn't need any more proprietary software on phones...

  5. David Arno
    Flame

    Flawed logic

    "The world doesn't need any more proprietary software on phones..."

    Java is used on phones for games, and precious little else. It isn't a PDF reader and it failed as an RIA platform. The future of apps on phones is web-based Flash and Silverlight solutions, not Java. Thus whether Java is available on phones or not is of little consequence.

  6. David Arno

    What actually does it mean?

    So if this deal "doesn't mean that every Windows Mobile device will suddenly become Flash-capable", what does it mean? Will I be able to bundle flash lite on my proprietary hardware running windows CE wia a license bundled with Windows CE, or is this purely for phones?

  7. tim
    Gates Horns

    Re. Flawed Logic

    "Java is used on phones for games, and precious little else"

    That's not really true. Google and Yahoo do some good Java apps.

    I had a HTC Wizard then a HTC TyTn for a while. A found windows mobile an awful phone OS. The lack of Java was a real pain. And the browser is awful. Putting Opera on it improved things a bit, but you can't quickly zoom in and out, or get a page overview. I could have used the excellent opera mini, *if* it had java.

    I now have a Nokia 6120 symbian phone. It's *very* usable, has an excellent browser, is stable and has a good java implementation. it's much smaller than any of the windows phones. i don't miss the touch screen at all. it's great not needing a stylus, particularly when you're on the move. bluetooth works better. the battery life is longer.

    some of the models due to come out look great too (e.g. n96, n68, 6220).

    htc hardware: cool

    windows mobile: sucks monkey balls

  8. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Flash lite RIP

    Just so you know, from the next version of flash (10/cs4) there will no longer be flash lite.

  9. Matt Thornton
    Stop

    hmm

    Shame Flash Lite 3 doesn't support Flash 9 and only barely supports Flash 8, which means most websites that you'd actually want to use this for such as YouTube or largely scuppered.

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