Flash Player 9 for Windows and Macintosh, available as a free download, has been rewritten to improve the performance and "expressiveness," or interactivity, of Flash applications, said Sydney Sloan, group product marketing manager of Adobe's enterprise and developer business.
Sloan said Adobe will release a Linux version of Flash Player 9 but didn't specify a date.
In tandem with the Flash Player 9 release, Adobe is making its Flex 2 product line available, including a free, entry-level Flex 2 Software Development Kit meant to encourage development of more Flash applications.
The company's goal is to expand the audience of Flex developers from a few thousand to one million developers in the next three to five years, Sloan said.
Flex Builder 2, a commercial tool based on the Eclipse open-source framework, is designed to speed up development with pre-built components and take advantage of ActionScript 3.0, the latest version of Adobe's scripting language.
Adobe also has changed the licensing for Flex Data Services 2, server software for connecting to back-end applications.







