Adobe has released a free beta
version of Adobe Integrated Runtime (AIR), marking a critical stage in its
project to bring rich web applications to the desktop.
Formerly known by the Apollo codename, AIR is an application runtime that
works across operating systems and lets developers use familiar tools such as
HTML, Ajax and Adobe’s Flash and Flex to write applications. A full release is
scheduled for the fourth quarter.
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New features in the beta include the SQLite embedded database, PDF support
and stronger capabilities for JavaScript developers, Adobe said. The beta
currently only works on Windows and Mac systems with support for Linux and other
options scheduled to be added at a later date. Adobe also said that the new beta
Flex 3 now supports AIR and that it has posted an add-in that for DreamWeaver
CS3 that supports AIR.
Ben Forsaith, Adobe business development manager, said AIR will join “the
best of the web and the best of the desktop”. A practical example could be a
contact database for the Salesforce.com platform that could be updated by a
field sales or service rep and synchronised online at a later time.
Forsaith added that unnamed companies are at work on word-processor and
presentations packages written for AIR so users could access productivity tools
in a manner most convenient to them. Such developments could calm concerns that
web-based apps could suffer from latency issues.
Adobe is not alone in seeing the virtue of an environment where applications
bridge the browser/desktop divide.
Ray Valdes of analyst Gartner said AIR should be seen in a broader context
alongside rich internet application platforms such as Microsoft Silverlight, IBM
Lotus Expeditor, Sun Java Webstart and, to a lesser extent, Google Gears.
”The goal of these RIA tools is to enable developers to build applications
that provide a richer, more responsive experience to users, compared to older
conventional approach of plain browser-based applications. Adobe AIR is an
outside-the-browser approach to RIA, using internet technologies outside the
boundary of a web browser to function more closely in the desktop operating
environment and appear to be more like desktop-based applications rather than
traditional web applications. The scenario over the next few years is for a
fragmented market with multiple RIA platform alternatives.”
However, Valdes added that successful rich internet applications will reside
in “principles of usability-centered design and with establishing a development
process that incorporates these principles, independent of technology.”
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