Hi,
I worked a lot and I'm still working with Flash/Flex Air and I like it a lot. 
Nevertheless, last year I had to explore the HTML5 side, seeing that more and 
more possibilities were offered to get a rich user experience as Flash can. 
While my investigations in this foreign world, I kept my attention on 
AngularJS... I was very impressed to see that it was the same spirit than Flex. 
Mxml is Html, as3 is js. There is data binding etc... 
Now I feel confident with HTML5, while I learned also css3, html "components" 
properties etc...
The switch is a bit hard, but I think the Flex experience is quite important 
for this. 
I'm creating web apps working on all devices. In the Html 5 world I think it's 
not yet very common to think about apps, it's a more page by page  thnking 
which is totally different that maintaining an entire app live state. 
There is a market for that ! And you can package it as an app thanks to 
Cordova. 

Have a nice day,
Benoît

Envoyé de mon iPhone

> Le 27 juil. 2015 à 05:24, Joel Tan <joel.ta...@gmail.com> a écrit :
> 
> Hi,
> 
> No worries, Adobe is still very involve in Adobe AIR even Flash Player, there 
> are tons of games especially 3D games are still heavily rely on it, these 
> games are not easily can be replaced by HTML5, Flash Player will be there 
> always for it, Flex web apps can just ride on the same boat and sail together 
> with them (games).
> 
> We all know that Adobe has changed its focus to gaming for their Flash 
> Platform, and they are very committed to it (as we can see from the updates), 
> Adobe will definitely keep their AIR alive and in sync very closely to the 
> updates of iOS and Android platform, in order to enable the games developers 
> that using Adobe Flash to build games to be able to compile and distribute 
> their games across all platforms. Again Flex native apps can ride on the same 
> boat and sail together with them.
> 
> In fact Flex apps can still survive without FlexJS for long time to come, but 
> depending on what kind of apps you are creating, if it doesn’t required to be 
> viewed or run on mobile devices, or you don’t mind how the world look at your 
> apps (why it is still using Flash!) then you can still using it with a peace 
> of mind IMO.
> 
> So, keep calm and continue to build cool stuff with Flash/Flex.
> 
> 
> 
> Joel
> 
> 
> 
>> On Jul 25, 2015, at 10:14 PM, Udirley Otoni Pesse <udirleyot...@gmail.com> 
>> wrote:
>> 
>> Hello,
>> 
>> Sorry for asking these questions here.
>> 
>> I have several applications in flex which until then were being executed by
>> the browser, with the increasing bombing the flash player has been
>> suffering I find it very hard that it lasts for a long time, and for this
>> reason I'm switching to air adobe, so I no longer use the browser.
>> But me there arise some questions, which assures me that Adobe will
>> continue the AIR support?
>> There site for dounload can only download for Windows 32 and Mac. What
>> about Windows 64 and Linux. Am I following the right path?
>> I have many time s work and I can not lose them.
>> I have eagerly awaited by FlexJS, but I see that the project is still at a
>> very high level of development and has little documentation.
>> I'm being pressured to migrate to HTMH5 but I did not want to, I like the
>> Flex, but I am employee in a company do not know how long I'll be able to
>> hold.
>> 
>> I need to make a decision soon, and your opinions will count a lot in this
>> decision.
>> Adobe AIR will be kept? This is a sure future?
>> I migrate to AIR?
>> You can now use FlexJS?
>> 
>> In short ... I'm desperately trying to save years of work and my job.
>> 
>> -- 
>> UDIRLEY OTONI PESSE
>> Celular: (27) 9316-4909
>> E-mail 1: udirleyot...@gmail.com
>> E-mail 2: udirleyot...@hotmail.com
>> Msn: udirleyot...@hotmail.com
> 

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