Adobe CEO Shantanu Narayen said his company is developing a version of Flash to work with the iPhone, adding that "we will work with Apple."
The comments, which were made on Adobe's earnings conference call late Tuesday, were the first directly addressing the iPhone Flash issue. Apple CEO Steve Jobs has said that Flash Lite wasn't up to iPhone standards. Adobe's move, which is likely to be big news in iPhone circles, illustrates the clout that the iPhone has. Adobe's Flash Lite is installed on 500 million devices and the company is still creating a iPhone friendly version.
Well, you really believe that Flash is synonymous with the internet and frankly, anybody who wants to browse the web and experience the web's glory really needs Flash support. We were very excited about the announcement from Windows Mobile, adoption of Flash on their devices and the fact that we've shipped 0.5 billion devices now, non-PC devices. So we are also committed to bringing the Flash experience to the iPhone and we will work with Apple. We've evaluated the SDK, we can now start to develop the Flash player ourselves and we think it benefits our joint customers. So we want to work with Apple to bring that capability to the device.
The comments defused what was becoming a tense situation between Apple and Adobe, which recently licensed Flash Lite to Microsoft.
Adobe's iPhone news comes amid a busy 24 hours for the company. Among the notable items: