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by Ardrich

Hackney Community College Digital Media 10 Week Evening Courses

December 18, 2010 in Events

Date: 24 January 2011 at 6:00pm
Venue: Hackney Community College
Falkirk St London, Shoreditch Campus
London, N1 6HQ, UK
Cost: £300
Event Website

The Hackney Community College Digital Media 10 Week Evening Courses include:

Digital Radio Production Using Garage Band
Digital Video Editing with Adobe Premiere
Digital Video Editing with Final Cut
Digital Video Motion Design with Adobe After Effects
Graphic Design with Adobe Illustrator
Print Design with Photoshop
Print Layout Design with InDesign
Web Design with Adobe Dreamweaver
Web Interactive Design with Adobe Flash

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Adobe Creative Suite 5: What's New and Good?

August 18, 2010 in Events

Date: 9 September 2010
Venue: The Hive, 51 Lever Street, Manchester M1 1FN

Event website

Another exciting event is coming up hosted by Academy Class and Adobe on 9th September, highlighting the new features of Photoshop, Indesign, Illustrator, Acrobat, Flash, Dreamweaver and Flash Catalyst.

With the right tools, your creative horizon changes. A tree is still timber, but suddenly in a whole new way. Old ideas germinate again, and new ideas branch into unexpected opportunities. Welcome to Adobe® Creative Suite® 5 – software that will allow you to reach more people, more effectively, in more places, with whatever masterpiece you can imagine.

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by Ardrich

Is HTML5 ready to take over multimedia content on the web?

July 22, 2010 in Features

html5_feature

The debate is starting to get confusing. It’s like schoolyard bickering all over again. Apple doesn’t like Adobe, Google doesn’t like Apple, Adobe and Google are buddying up, YouTube is stuck in the middle. And Steve Jobs rants at everyone.

The latest development in the HTML5 vs. Flash debate was YouTube rewriting its mobile site entirely in HTML5 – after criticising it in their official blog. This was happy news for iPhone and iPad users, but the rest of us are confused. Who’s in the right and what’s the future of these web technologies?

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Steve Jobs' Flash rant – happened so far

May 13, 2010 in Features

After months of sniping and grumbling at Adobe, Apple boss Steve Jobs didn’t leave anything to interpretation in his open letter on the company’s site.

noflashoniphones

It has to be admitted, the controversial letter, in which he argues against the use of Flash, is extremely persuasive, if a little long. It’s clear in its point and comes across very professional.

Jobs’ take on the subject at a question & answer session for Apple employees was not so diplomatically phrased.

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Condé Nast and Adobe collaborate on digital magazine app

November 24, 2009 in News Roundup

12.02CV.cover.LO.r2Publisher Condé Nast and Adobe Systems are developing a digital-magazine application to be compatible with laptops, netbooks, smart phones, and upcoming electronic slate devices.

Wired magazine, which covers tech news and information, will be the first to adapt the app, which will produce full-color, high-resolution images to replicate the experience of reading a print publication with the convenience of the internet.

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Flash moves on to smart phones

October 12, 2009 in News Roundup

phonesOne of the most common technologies for watching video on a computer will soon be available for most smartphones.

Flash software is used to deliver around 75% of online video and is the key technology that underpins websites such as YouTube and Google Video.

Until now, many smartphones and netbooks have used a “light” version of the program, because of the limited processing power of the devices.

The new software is intended to work as well on a smartphone as a desktop PC.

Adobe, the maker of Flash, said it should be available on most higher-end handsets by 2010, although Apple’s iPhone would continue not to use the software.

“The sort of rich apps we now see being delivered on PCs will now be coming to the phone,” Ben Wood, director of mobile research at analyst firm CCS Insight, told BBC News.

“You’ll be able to access a lot of the cool stuff that web designers are coming up with.”

Web boom

-Flash is one of the most common pieces of software installed on computers.

-It is found on about 98% of PCs and almost 75% of all online video is delivered using the software, according to Adobe.

-It powers services such as the BBC iPlayer and around 70% of web-based video games.

-However, until now, the full version of the software has not been available on smartphones.

-Instead, users have had to use Flash Lite, a stripped down version of the media software that does not make the same demands of the device’s memory or processor.

-Flash Lite is currently installed in around 40% of all new mobile phones and will continue to be offered on lower-end handsets, Adobe said.

-Flash 10.1, as the new software is known, had been developed because the mobile web was “booming”, said Mr Wood.

In addition, he said, developers and users demanded a consistent web experience from desktop PC to smartphone.
“We’re addressing that need,” said Anup Muraka of Adobe.

“Years ago, browsing on smart phones was almost non-existent – nobody was worried about desktop experiences on phones,” he added.

“But a tremendous level of capability has been added to these devices in recent years and as a result that has changed.”

A recent report by CCS Insight predicted that by the end of 2009 44% of mobile users will access data via their handsets, whilst smart phones are expected to account for around 17% of the more than one billion handsets shipped during 2009, according to forecasts.

“[Mobile phones] have gone from being a voice device to a very visual device that you hold in front of you,” said Mr Wood.

Apple anomaly

The new software supports high-definition video and can also be used with touchscreen devices.

It is the first major product of an initiative known as the Open Screen Project, which aims to create a flexible media platform for films and games that can run on any device – from set top boxes to mobile phones.

The intention of the project is to develop flexible software that will mean developers will only have to write code once, rather than tweaking it for different platforms.

The Open Screen Project is backed by nearly 50 companies including Google and Nokia.

The new software will be available for Windows Mobile, Palm webOS and desktop operating systems including Windows, Macintosh and Linux later this year.

Trial software for Google Android and the popular Symbian operating systems are expected to be available in early 2010.
However, it will not be available for the Apple iPhone, according to Mr Muraka.

“We’re going to need Apple’s cooperation,” he told BBC News. “At the moment Safari (Apple’s web browser) doesn’t support any kind of plug-in [on the iPhone].”

“But we’d love to see it on there.”

Mr Wood said he thought that time would come soon.

“As momentum builds, I think Apple will have little choice but to embrace it [Flash],” he said. “Watch this space.”

Apple did not respond to requests for comment.

Source – BBC