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Adobe, Microsoft discuss biting Apple

For a while, it seemed like Adobe and Microsoft were destined to be pure rivals. Microsoft seemed to be going after Adobe at every front, from Silverlight taking on Flash to Redmond's planned rival format to PDF.
Written by Ina Fried, Contributor

For a while, it seemed like Adobe and Microsoft were destined to be pure rivals. Microsoft seemed to be going after Adobe at every front, from Silverlight taking on Flash to Redmond's planned rival format to PDF.

These days, though, it seems like the two may be drawn to each other, thanks to the common enemy known as Apple.

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(Twitter 365 Project - Day 45 image by Richard Giles, CC BY-SA 2.0)

Apparently the two companies think so too, at least according to a report today in The New York Times, which says that Microsoft chief executive Steve Ballmer met for an hour recently with Adobe CEO Shantanu Narayen, with Apple a big part of the agenda.

Adobe and Apple have been locked in a particularly nasty battle, with Apple keeping Flash off its popular iPhone and iPad devices and the two sides trading shots over who is to blame. Adobe has said that, in response to Apple, it is "shifting its focus" away from Cupertino.

The Times report also hints at the possibility that Microsoft might buy Adobe, something the two companies reportedly have talked about in the past but apparently dropped due to fears a deal would not survive antitrust concerns. Today that might not be as large an issue, with the resurgence of Apple and the rise of Google. At roughly $14.5 billion in market capitalisation, though, Adobe would be a pretty large fish to swallow.

However, there is probably room for the two to become tighter, even short of an acquisition. A good first step might be to get Flash running on Windows Phone 7 — something that won't happen in time for the product's initial release. Microsoft plans to show off those first Windows Phone 7 devices at an event in New York on Monday.

Via CNET

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