Take one ColdFusion veteran and mix in a healthy dose of prolific book writing, and chances are you will end up with Ben Forta.

In order to watch video content you need to enable javascript and install Flash player version 8 or above.

Starting out at Allaire, the birthplace of ColdFusion, and moving to Macromedia and Adobe as the ColdFusion language changed hands, Forta is now Adobe's director of platform evangelism.

In this extended interview with ZDNet.com.au, Forta discusses ColdFusion, the company's push into enterprise applications, and Adobe's waiting game with Apple to get Flash on the iPhone.

"Flash on the iPhone is not up to us — that is really an Apple decision," said Forta. "We'd love to get iPhone support for Flash on the iPhone native, that is an Apple decision, and when they're ready to do it, we'll be ready."

Forta took to the front foot on whether HTML 5 was a threat to Flash: "When you start looking at complete applications, which are for all intents and purposes are client/server applications [...] then HTML 5 just isn't there yet. There are probably small areas of what Flash does that HTML 5 will be a threat to and arguably those are probably things that should be done in HTML. But when you look at the bigger Flash story, there is no competition."

Do you need help with Flash? Gain advice from Builder AU forums

Related links

Leave a comment

You must read and type the 6 chars within 0..9 and A..F

* indicates mandatory fields.

Log in


Sign up | Forgot your password?

  • Staff Microsoft shows off IE9 preview

    This week, highlights from Microsoft's MIX10 conference and more in the Roundup. Read more »

    -- posted by Staff

  • Chris Duckett IE9's H.264 vote killed Ogg

    In a split decision by the judges, the winner of the W3C/WHATWG video codec consensus is H.264, taking home the future of video playback on the internet while loser Ogg goes home with nothing but thoughts of what might have been. Read more »

    -- posted by Chris Duckett

  • Staff Google launches Apps Marketplace

    Google launches and app store, while Mozilla plans to re-write its open-source license. More of this week's news in the Roundup. Read more »

    -- posted by Staff

What's on?

  • Optus Deal

    Broadband + home phone + PlayStation®3 in a single package price!