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April 17, 2007 12:00 AM

Microsoft Shines its Silverlight on Adobe

Windows IT Pro
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Microsoft on Monday announced a prerelease version of a new cross-platfrom browser plug-in called Silverlight that will provide Web designers with a way to add high-quality video and animations to their sites. The technology competes directly with Adobe Flash and, to a lesser extent, with Apple QuickTime. But this isn't the first time Microsoft and Adobe have found themselves at odds with each other. The release of Silverlight suggests that, at last, the gloves are off.

Adobe's Flash has been available for about a decade and, despite some technical issues, it's become a de facto standard of sorts for delivering animated content online. (In much the same way, Adobe PDF has become an online standard for delivering documents.) In recent years, Flash has been enhanced to deliver small, low-quality videos. The success of this format can be seen on sites like YouTube, which has become so popular it was recently purchased by online goliath Google.

Silverlight seeks to eliminate various Flash deficiencies by offering much higher quality video and better in-player controls. Microsoft says that Silverlight supports up to 720p video--1280 x 720 resolution--at much higher quality than is possible with Flash. And unlike Flash, Silverlight won't require any expensive back-end servers for companies wishing to rollout the technology. And surprisingly, for a Microsoft product, Silverlight supports all major Web browsers, including Internet Explorer, Firefox, and even Apple Safari, which runs only on the Mac.

Silverlight uses vector graphics for higher quality, Microsoft says, and can be used to display text, graphics, video, and video with text and graphic overlays. It will work with existing Web technologies such as Apache, PHP, JavaScript, and XHTML. Microsoft is also creating various Expression tools for creating and deploying Silverlight content, though these will be Windows-only.

Adobe says content creators can't trust the software giant. "Microsoft has never demonstrated a commitment to maintaining a cross-platform solution," Adobe CEO Bruce Chizen said, suggesting that Microsoft may eventually halt development of Mac-oriented versions of the software as it did with Mac versions of Windows Media Player and IE. Not coincidentally, Adobe has responded to recent interest in using Flash as a delivery vehicle for video with a new desktop player called Flash Video. It's due later this year, and is cross-platform.

Partners in some respects, Adobe and Microsoft increasingly find themselves competing in the same markets. Adobe complained to antitrust regulators last year that Microsoft's bundling of its XML Paper Specification (XPS) format in Windows Vista and Office 2007 was unfair, as it closely resembles Adobe's PDF technologies. And Microsoft's new Expression Design tool competes directly with Adobe Photoshop. Now, with Silverlight, Microsoft is again going after a key Adobe market, and this time, Microsoft is offering a cross-platform solution that actually offers some obvious benefits over the entrenched Adobe entry. Should be an interesting fight.

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Comments
  • Will
    5 years ago
    Apr 19, 2007

    "you look at me with a straight face and tell me that Word and PowerPoint are more complex (and thus more difficult to offer at true cross-platform feature parity) than, say, Photoshop."

    You make a quote like that, then you actually think it is harder to make a port of a single application like Photoshop than this...

    "MapPoint, Microsoft Visio ,Microsoft Office Picture Manager, Microsoft Project , Microsoft Publisher, Microsoft OneNote, Microsoft Office Communicator, Microsoft SharePoint Designer, Microsoft Office Groove and Microsoft Office Accounting."

    I said that Word and Powerpoint offer full feature parity, and they do. Then you want to change the rules and add in the niche stuff that doesn't come with any standard Office bundle.

    If you are going to change the rules mid-swing, don't expect that people are going to give them any creedence.

    And yes, I will look at you with a straight face and say it is harder to port the entire (20+ application) Microsoft Office productivity line than 'Photoshop'.

  • Joe
    5 years ago
    Apr 19, 2007

    "an astonishing number of people use Publisher, even though it's a total POS"

    beats InDesign anyday! phew what a stinker that one is. plus, Publisher costs less than 1/2 the price. can Adobe even make an intuitive UI? the old has-been UI's of Photoshop, InDesign, and even Dreamweaver just don't cut it nowadays.

    XP

  • Lotsa
    5 years ago
    Apr 19, 2007

    "Yes it is. Yes it does."

    No it doesn't. No it doesn't.

    One word: Access.

    Oh, and then there's MapPoint, Microsoft Visio ,Microsoft Office Picture Manager, Microsoft Project , Microsoft Publisher, Microsoft OneNote, Microsoft Office Communicator, Microsoft SharePoint Designer, Microsoft Office Groove and Microsoft Office Accounting.

    None of those are offered in the Mac Office package.

    Granted, a lot of them are bloatware, but an astonishing number of people use Publisher, even though it's a total POS.

  • Joe
    5 years ago
    Apr 18, 2007

    "While I appreciate that they offer a product called "Office" for OSX, it's hardly as transparent a cross-platform solution as is offered by the folks at Adobe."

    that's alright. Apple has nothing even close anyway, and Microsoft is happy to take all you Mac user's money even though you made the wrong choice in computing platforms. maybe when people see the inferior Office 2008 product on OSX, they'll buy Windows Vista to install in Boot Camp to run the superior Office 2007....or better yet, they'll see that they don't need to spend hundreds of dollars more on a shiny white plastic system to run Windows and Office. either way, Microsoft is still a software company at heart, and they'll still rake in the moolah!

    XP

  • Will
    5 years ago
    Apr 18, 2007

    "Office for the Mac is nowhere near as feature-rich as its Microsoft Windows cousin, nor does it offer full feature parity."

    Yes it is. Yes it does.

    "enjoy virtually flawless compatibility with Microsoft Office for Windows" --Apple Corporation

    "if your organization uses an Exchange Server, no problem: support is already built into Entourage 2004" --Apple Corporation

    It doesn't 'look' the same b/c Mac BU didn't want it to. Apparently there's this stigma at Apple that Microsoft is 'evil' and they don't even want their Microsoft apps to look... Microsoft-y.

    The featureset is all there. Adobe didn't even take the time to make Photoshop more oriented to a "Windows" UI environment. I still have all these little miniwindows flying around all over the place.

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