I am not looking for 100% assurances :) , I've been around too long to fantasize like that. I just know that when I talk to my clients and now propose Flex that I am armed with enough arguments to convince them that its a good move given all the bad press Adobe's move seems to have generated.
thanks On Tue, Feb 21, 2012 at 3:37 PM, Arturo Alvarado <art...@centraldcom.com>wrote: > > From: "Charles Monteiro" <char...@monteirosfusion.com> > > thanks for the input, let me put it another way. Adobe can change the > > runtime anytime they want. They have not made the runtime code accessible > > to the Apache Flex project. Its within the realm of possibility that they > > can change something in the runtime that breaks for example current Flex > > 4.6 apps. Since you don't have the runtime code accessible how will you > go > > about fixing the issue. > > Yes, and so can Intel decide to make a new processor line that breaks all > versions of Windows and MacOS. > > Even if you had access to the runtime code, browser vendors could choose > to block it. > > Many thing CAN happen, however, what you are suggesting is unlikely. > > If you are looking for an 100% guarantee solution, nothing is guaranteed. > It's almost as likely as Apple deciding at any point to make Objective C > apps no longer compatible with IOS devices, and "force" developers to use, > ILang (I'll copyright that one). > > Arturo Alvarado > -- Charles A. Monteiro www.monteirosfusion.com sent from the road