ABDULLAH JANEM
05-04-2010, 03:55 PM
كنوع من الرد على بعض الأقاويل التي ترددت أخيراً عن أن مايكروسوفت بتدعيمها لصيغة H.264 في الفيديو تعني تخليها بأي شكل عن تدعيم إضافات المتصفحات.. أعلنت مايكروسوفت في المدونة الرسمية للإنترنت إكسبلورير.. أن مايكروسوفت ستستمر في دعم الفلاش والسيلفرلايت كإضافات لا غنى عنها في متصفحها القادم IE9 وأن اعتمادها لصيغة H.264 ليس له أي علاقة بالفلاش أو السيلفر لايت.. مؤكدة أنه لا غنى عن كليهما كجزء أساسي من الويب لما يقدمانه من إمكانيات وأساليب تفاعلية لا يمكن تحقيقها ببديل آخر.. وهذه هي الفقرة التي أكدت هذا في المقالة.. حيث أن المقالة طويلة جدا ولا تشجع الكثيرين على قراءته.
Several comments asked about Microsoft’s support for plug-ins (like Flash and Silverlight). Of course, IE9 will continue to support Flash and other plug-ins. Developers who want to use the same markup today across different browsers rely on plug-ins. Plug-ins are also important for delivering innovation and functionality ahead of the standards process; mainstream video on the *** today works primarily because of plug-ins. We’re committed to plug-in support because developer choice and opportunity in authoring *** pages are very important; ISVs on a platform are what make it great. We fully expect to support plug-ins (of all types, including video) along with HTML5. There were also some comments asking about our work with Adobe on Flash and this report (http://www.microsoft.com/security/about/sir.aspx) offers a recent discussion
Several comments asked about Microsoft’s support for plug-ins (like Flash and Silverlight). Of course, IE9 will continue to support Flash and other plug-ins. Developers who want to use the same markup today across different browsers rely on plug-ins. Plug-ins are also important for delivering innovation and functionality ahead of the standards process; mainstream video on the *** today works primarily because of plug-ins. We’re committed to plug-in support because developer choice and opportunity in authoring *** pages are very important; ISVs on a platform are what make it great. We fully expect to support plug-ins (of all types, including video) along with HTML5. There were also some comments asking about our work with Adobe on Flash and this report (http://www.microsoft.com/security/about/sir.aspx) offers a recent discussion