Until now, Apple has brought the support of Flash on the iPhone to a dead end, evoking various reasons: too large a consumption of energy, possibilities of a hack by through Flash… and these reasons are more or less valid.
Even if the owners of the iPhone can make do with this absence, Adobe can not.
They thus
announced that they have a version of their software functioning satisfactorily on the iPhone in their laboratories, seeking certainly more to tease Apple than anything else.
Indeed, Apple has been very clear here. Software developed via the SDK can only run in an independent way without being able to remain running as a background task. Thus, if Flash is run without support of Apple, it will be necessary to launch a specific reader for reading vidéos or microsoftwares with this format, prohibiting for example, the visualisation of a window directly in Safari.
But Adobe seems to want to oppose this, all at least for the moment, seeking a way to force open the door of the iPhone.