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> TECHNOLOGY > COMMUNICATIONS
RIM and
Adobe expand partnership
ConvergenceAsia staff
11/11/2009
At the 2009 BlackBerry
Developer Conference in San Francisco, Research In Motion (RIM) and Adobe
Systems expanded their collaboration and announced that creative
professionals and application developers will be able to use the Adobe Flash
Platform technology and Adobe Creative Suite content development and
authoring tools to easily create rich content and application experiences
for BlackBerry smartphones.
“There is tremendous opportunity for RIM and Adobe to align our platforms to
help developers create BlackBerry applications that are highly engaging and
deeply integrated in order to deliver the best user experience in the
market,” said Jim Balsillie, Co-CEO, Research In Motion.
“We are working closely with Adobe to enable our developer communities to
build rich content services and BlackBerry Widgets that leverage the latest
runtime environments, APIs and network services through Adobe’s industry
leading design and development tools.”
Future versions of Adobe Creative Suite starting with Adobe Creative Suite 5
will provide the ability for designers to create optimised graphic assets,
such as image and video content, from tools such as Adobe Photoshop, Adobe
Illustrator and Adobe After Effects, for the BlackBerry platform.
Shantanu Narayen, president and CEO of Adobe said the expanded partnership
between both companies will open up great new opportunities by making it
even easier for content designers and mobile application developers to
create rich and compelling content for the BlackBerry platform.
The collaboration aims to accelerate the mobile application and content
development workflow between BlackBerry application and web content
developers and creative professionals that use Adobe tools. It will also
reduce the re-creation of graphic assets and iterations that designers and
developers have to go through to generate rich application user interfaces,
animations, images and video content when supporting multiple platforms.
Today's news builds upon the recent announcement that the two companies are
working together as part of the Open Screen Project to bring the Adobe Flash
Player browser runtime to BlackBerry smartphones. The two companies will
also be collaborating to adapt other key components of the Flash Platform
including Adobe AIR.
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