Flash 10.1 debuts amid debates about its future |
Flash 10.1 debuts amid debates about its future Posted: 10 Jun 2010 02:09 PM PDT While Apple continues its aggressive campaign to call the future of Flash into doubt, Adobe has released its latest version of the content platform. Adobe Flash 10.1 is now available for Windows, Mac, and Linux. By some estimates, Flash powers more than three-quarters of the Internet's video and games. Adobe has had release candidates out for months, going through six previous release candidate versions, not to mention multiple beta releases. The most important improvement for Windows users is that the new version offers hardware acceleration, but the feature isn't supported yet on Macs. There's also cross-platform support for private browsing modes, which means that Flash will no longer keep cookies and other browsing tracks when used during track-free browsing sessions. The other new features are also cross-platform, including more stable streaming video, peer-to-peer broadcasting, accelerometer and multitouch support, content protection for Windows-based businesses with streaming content, better out-of-memory management to prevent Flash-related browser crashes, and fewer buffer lags when streaming. The full list of changes can be read here. |
Box.net finally gets desktop file sync Posted: 10 Jun 2010 06:00 AM PDT Online storage and collaboration service Box.net is finally getting around to offering its users a feature that was long-overdue: desktop synchronization. The feature, which rolls out to business users Thursday morning, takes whatever files you've added to your online storage account and ferries them over to a local machine. It also does the same thing going the other way. In order to use it, users must be subscribers of Box's business and enterprise tiers, leaving those with the free and individual plans out in the cold. It's also Windows only to start with, though Box's CEO Aaron Levie, whom CNET spoke with on Tuesday, said that a Mac version will be ready in a few months time. Like any other file or folder you have stored on Box, the local instances of these items can be shared with other people in your Box workgroups. Levie compared this to being on a network share on a company's local Intranet, but one that lives in the cloud. "The vision is enabling a simple sync case that's collaborative. So even if I have 1 terabyte of data stored on my desktop, I only need to be syncing a couple GB of the most active stuff to my Box account," he said. Along with synchronizing files, the desktop software can keep track of any changes, then send them to Box's news feed. This lets you see if a file has been changed or commented on through Box's Web interface. This is, in fact, the only place to see this information, besides your e-mail in-box--where Box can send notifications on when other people in your workgroup download, delete, or make any changes to files or folders. For those who are curious, Levie says the file size limits for what can be synced up to Box's cloud storage through the sync app are the same as the Web version. This means you're unable to use the software to get around the rather arbitrary 2GB per file cap, which is a bit of a shame. The new feature goes out to business and enterprise users Thursday morning. Storage alternatives with a similar desktop sync component include Dropbox, SugarSync, SpiderOak, Windows Live Mesh, and MobileMe to name a few. Originally posted at Web Crawler |
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