Comments on: Microsoft to take Silverlight offline eventually, says exec
There are a number of initiatives to make Web apps run offline, such as Adobe AIR. Until now, Redmond has been quiet on the idea of bringing offline access to Silverlight.
There are a number of initiatives to make Web apps run offline, such as Adobe AIR. Until now, Redmond has been quiet on the idea of bringing offline access to Silverlight.
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And while yes, there are advantages to updating os's and hardware, it also is a hard thing to justify for people who either only use their computers for basic web/email purposes, or whose systems will not support a newer OS, especially considering the not insignificant system requirements of Vista. This whole planned obsoletion that Microsoft has been pushing is one of the things that Macromedia avoided to the advantage of the Flash player.
Unfortunately Adobe seems to be taking the obsoletion tactic with their authoring software, but hopefully they will not follow suit with the player, or they may give Silverlight a considerably greater chance to supplant it.
http://www.microsoft.com/silverlight/resources/InstallationFiles.aspx?mode=sysreq
(http://www.microsoft.com/silverlight/resources/InstallationFiles.aspx?mode=sysreq)
And Linux:
(http://www.mono-project.com/Moonlight)
The list of supported browsers is also quite impressive. From the amount of assistance the Moonlight project received from the Silverlight team, Opera and others too would easily be able to create plugins if Silverlight adoption is good.
Not sure what your point is about planned obsolesence. Win2k is a fringe case, and support for it is in the pipeline. You don't see Win95 support as an unreasonable request on your part?
if MS doesn't quickly improve things i predict their browser market share will drop below 50% within 5 years. they would probably start hemorrhaging money around then too. probably another 5 years of stagnation and they would have to cut out all the fat to stay alive.
contract and will require silverlight be installed to view video.
By the end of the games hundreds of thousands of computers will
likely be infected with silverlight which means:
1. They will have a good base for competing with flash, and
2. I won't be viewing any Olympic videos online
1) Get distribution for the player
2) Provide easy to use dev and design tools that entice developers and designers to switch from Flash.
3) Support *all* major OS platforms so (1) above can really succeed.
I would expect MS to deliver on (2) and (3) easily, if they are a priority for the company. However, (1) is where they will really be challenged, IMHO. If they can get widespread distribution, Silverlight will be credible faster than most can imagine.
- Adobe AIR is better
- by tekwiz4u March 3, 2008 3:44 PM PST
- Silverlight is a nice product, but its too interwoven into its own OS platform. Also, as a developer, you'll need a Windows LIVE account to utilize video streaming functions? Don't like the idea into subscribing in order to use a product. User privacy comes into play, and giving it out is harder to do these days.
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(11 Comments)Adobe AIR is a better product and its more flexible to implement. I still believe hard drive based applications work much better on machines then Web Apps. But since Flash came out, I believe the concept will gain momemtum in coming months.