>[Adobe] >I want to know why they should {want} to screw us out of the internet.... I doubt very much Adobe wants to limit our access to the Internet. Adobe wants to apply its development resources in the way that maximizes its profit. Adobe may feel 64-bit Flash for Linux would be profitable (in some abstract, indirect sense: Adobe does not sell Flash Player for Linux as a product.) One problem is Adobe thinks other investments will produce greater profit than development for Linux of its Creative Suite, Flash Builder, and other products that generate its income. Another problem is Adobe may believe different opportunities are more attractive than any additional income it could receive from more sales of current products on supported platforms (Windows, MacOS) due to the availability of 64-bit Flash for Linux. We may be victims of Free and Open Source success here. If there were a simple, demonstrated model for a company to profit from application development for the Linux platform, more companies would be likely to do this. Red Hat and IBM make a profit from Linux activity, but their business models are greatly more complex than simple application sales. Adobe's investment choices are subject to change due to competetive experience and new opportunities. There is even precedent (Postscript, PDF) for Adobe to publish its designs for wide use. Maybe HTML5 will induce such publication for Flash, or even displace Flash from the Web environment. It is also possible Adobe is busily at work on 64-bit Flash for Linux for the best of reasons - it's customers want this because they feel they cannot reach an increasingly important part of the Web user community without this capability - but chooses not to publish its plans or schedules. Withdrawal of the alpha code may not indicate lack of interest, simply recognition of significant defects that Adobe has not yet fixed. -- test mailing list test@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/test