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Deleted member 13524
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...yes, I'm sure that must have been it.
Oh, you don't know.. Maybe a little clarification here:
Yes, Nokia isn't selling almost any smartphones at all. Yes, sales numbers are down the toilet for the past couple of quarters and so is revenue. It's like a M61 Vulcan with no ammo, as no operators are really interested in the Symbian models since it's been EOL'd and the WP7.5 models have just come out.
However, it still is a M61 Vulcan minigun compared to the 9mm pistols that are the other manufacturers. Nokia's factory output for cellphones is monstrous, its distribution channels and supply chains are unmatched by a very large margin, there are Nokia stores pretty much everywhere (except for US but who cares, that's like trying to make the xbox successfull in Japan anyways..) and they have something like 130k employees, with over 30k of them doing R&D throughout some 15 countries.
These are the assets that have been built over the ~15 years of mobile phone hegemony and can't be discarded just because they lost (or rather gave up) the OS race over the last year and a half.
So make no mistake, as soon as there's a full lineup made of Windows-Nokia devices (Q3 2012?), they will sell hundreds of millions per quarter. Windows Phone may suck (as I think it does, btw), profits per unit may stay low, revenues may still keep low and they might even lose money over a couple of years more.
But with that deal, Microsoft has pretty much made a near-absolute certainty that Windows Phone will get a substantial share of the smartphone market.
And since iphone users are a somewhat constant and loyal audience for apple, these Windows Phone devices will eat into Android's market share, as there's little else to eat from.
Now, going back to Adobe & Flash for mobile devices, let's do a roundup of the smartphone OSes whose integrated browser supports Flash or Lite:
- Android
- Symbian S60, Symbian^1, Symbian^3, Anne, Belle
- BlackBerry
- MeeGo
The ones that don't and won't support Flash:
- iOS
- Windows Phone (at least until desktop + mobile windows unify into a single OS)
BTW: Yes, I know Adobe had announced that a Flash plugin would be released for WP7 back in 2010, but a year has passed, Mango was released and no one talked about it so it was probably scraped along the way, either by Microsoft or by Adobe.
So until recently, just between Android and Symbian, Flash was supported by over 80% (maybe more?) of the mobile browsers. If Symbian+MeeGo hadn't been EOL'd through the Nokia-Microsoft deal, this percentage would've probably remained the same, even with the downward spiral of Blackberry's marketshare.
After the Nokia-Microsoft deal, Adobe is left with only Android supporting Flash, with less than half (and even lesser as WP's marketshare rises) of the mobile devices supporting the platform...
Yes, there's a whole bunch of technical reasons why Flash should be replaced HTML5's native code (although as we've seen in this thread, there's also a couple of reasons why it shouldn't anytime soon).
But as far as I've been aware, that hasn't really changed Flash's monopoly over media content in web pages... which is what really matters in the end.
For example, over a year after people saying Flash was dead because Youtube was starting to support HTML5 in beta, Flash is still used as the default media player.
Anyways, the real reasons for Adobe dropping Flash development (and not support) in mobile devices is probably going to be revealed by Myke Chambers in the near future.
Y'all are forgetting the massive amount of flash animation and games on sites like Kongregate and Newgrounds. Flash is always going to be around, there's too much content that uses it.
Always is a strong word, but I'd say that even if Adobe stopped Flash development and support overall right now, we'd still be a good 4+ years before Flash's absence wouldn't make a noticeable difference in a web browser.