The project executive for Adobe Flash stated that his corporation is not going to develop apps for iPhones and will be concentrating its efforts on Android.
Mike Chambers stated that the corporation will still distribute its iPhone packager with Creative Suite 5, which permits developers to build iPhone apps in Flash and convert them for the iPhone.
However he stated that after Apple changed the lingo of its developer license contract to ban the use of outside development tools, Adobe will not be making anymore investment in that software.
Apple's ban on cross-platform tools, if forced, may possibly affect many apps built with Unity, Titanium, MonoTouch and Flash CS5. But Chambers doubt that Apple will be targeting Flash-built apps and is preparing the makers of no less than 100 iPhone apps built with iPhone Packager to have their apps pulled.
Apple is no more looking forward to lend support to technologies, which permit apps to be easily built across multiple platforms.
He stated that while CS5 met the terms with Apple's license agreement until the changes were announced on April 8, the new iPhone packager would have facilitated the kind of cross-platform developing that Apple desires to avoid.












