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Adobe's Reader on the Move
Adobe Moving Towards the World of SaaS
Michael Hickins

Bruce Chizen, CEO of Adobe (Quote), reports the Web development software company will sign a deal with a major U.S. wireless carrier to allow customers to view video on their handsets.

"One of either Verizon (Quote) or Cingular (Quote) will launch a service by the end of the year that will make video consumable on phones," Chizen said during a Q&A session at the American Association of Publishers conference here yesterday

The forces of Web 2.0 and "The YouTube experience" are conditioning consumers to expect free content, says Chizen, which means that content producers and software vendors alike are going to have to adapt their business models accordingly. "Most consumers believe they're entitled to the content for free, and we need to recognize that."

Chizen said that Adobe is starting to experiment with new revenue streams in order to stave off agile online competitors in general and Google (Quote) in particular.

"Desktop software is going to go away, and we're going to have to figure out how to make money by selling subscriptions online or over the Web with advertising, and we don't want Google to get there first and engage the loyalty of our customers," he said.

Adobe began offering a free, scaled-down version of its Premiere Elements video editing technology last month, and hopes to monetize it through online advertising. Chizen said "hopefully some of those users will want the full product and pay through subscription." The premium edition of the software is priced at $700.

Chizen also said that Adobe will soon release a free development platform, code-named Apollo, that will allow content publishers to create Internet applications that will work on any connected device.

"We're changing the experience of Acrobat Reader," he said, to take into account the fact that "more people will access the Web through non-PC devices than PC devices in the next five years."

Adobe will also release Adobe Creative Suite 3 at the CTIA conference on March 27, he said. The application, which is currently in public beta, will feature tight integration with Macromedia products. Adobe acquired rival Web development software vendor Macromedia in the spring of 2005.

Chizen added that the application will allow developers to preview how content will look on all platforms, including handheld devices, before publishing it.

"It's truly the incarnation of network publishing," he said.

Mike Mankowski, senior vice president at Tier 1 Research, a division of research firm the 451 Group, said that Adobe's approach is well-suited to changes in the workplace.

"We're getting to a more collaborative world where folks are working out of their homes or they're geographically dispersed, and they need to communicate and collaborate online," he told internetnews.com.

He added that the company's video pitch to wireless carriers is emblematic of its multifaceted approach: wireless carriers will have to pay Adobe for a server copy of the FlashLite software, but will be able to charge more for their service and reduce churn because of the extra value they provide consumers. Application developers will also have to pay Adobe to license software to create the content they can sell to the carriers.

News courtesy of internetnews.com

March 8, 2007

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Contents:
1. Adobe Moving Towards the World of SaaS


Additional Articles:

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  • Adobe Patches Acrobat, Reader for Zero-Day Flaw
  • Adobe PDF at Risk from Another Zero-Day
  • Adobe Patches 29 Flaws
  • Critical Patch and New Update Process Debut for Adobe Reader, Acrobat



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