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Richard Davies wrote: The UK has a good crop of technology pioneers in cloud computing - for example ElasticHosts, FlexiScale, Flexiant, OnApp - and also some strong government initiatives such as G-Cloud. We will have to see whether this kind of technical leadership converts into swift mass-market adoption or not.
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Flash Player 9 on Linux and Adobe marketing
Flash Player 9 enters is in pre-Alpha on Linux

From Yakov Fain's blog

This morning I've read the blog of Adobe's technical Flex evangelist James Ward, who had a chance to try pre-Alpha Flash Player 9 on his Linux machine. James was pretty impressed, and his Flex 2 applications work and look the same as in Windows or Mac as expected.

Flash Player 9 on Linux is big  milestone for Adobe.  Some of my Java peers are loosing one of their strongest arguments against accepting the fact that Flex 2 does your mind and body good. Knowing Adobe's alpha-beta numbering scheme, I can guess that later this month at MAX conference they will announce Flash Player 9 Alpha on Linux, and one standing ovation and three months later, we'll see  theshe shiny eye-candy applications running on Linux. The technical crowd (myself included) will write about a thousand of exciting blogs on the subject and will start casually using the product. But where? In the basements where many geeks spend their evenings? The end users won't notice anything, because they are sitting by  Wintel machines. But how about enterprises? 

Adobe (credit to  Macromedia engineers) was able to build a strong and vibrant community of people who enjoy working with Flex. Adobe's  technical evangelists deliver impressive presentations at conferences. So the-boat-shaking is working fine.  But unless Adobe wants to share the fate of Ruby, which generates loud noise on the streets, but can't pass security officers and sneak into corporate buildings,  they should invest some serious dough into marketing.  Java is huge not only because it's a great programming language, but mainly because Sun Microsystems, IBM, and other big guys heavily invested into promoting Java. 

In the past, Adobe was not a well known name in the enterprise IT departments. Yes, everyone uses Acrobat Reader, but this is pretty much it. It's not an easy job to change the perception of being a designer's vendor. Some serious investments into marketing of Flex 2 for enterprises are required. Need to jump a lot higher to get noticed from the Wall Street high-rises. The sooner the better.

About Yakov Fain
Yakov Fain is a Managing Director of Farata Systems, consulting, training and product company. He has authored several Java books, dozens of technical articles. SYS-CON Books released his latest co-authored book , Rich Internet Applications with Adobe Flex and Java: Secrets of the Masters in Spring 2007. Sun Microsystems has nominated and awarded Yakov with the title Java Champion. He leads the Princeton Java Users Group. He is an Adobe Certified Flex Instructor. Yakov co-athored the O'Reilly book "Enterprise Application Development with Flex". He twits at twitter.com/yfain.

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