BEIJING, April 17 -- Microsoft Corp plans to
introduce software that puts videos on Websites in a bid to win users from
market leader, Adobe Systems Inc's Flash.
The program, called Silverlight, will be used by
companies such as NetFlix Inc and Universal Music Group, said Forest Key, a
director of product management at Microsoft. The technology will help them
create video-intensive Web pages that will appear the same to users on almost
any operating system they're running, Bloomberg News said.
Microsoft is touting the program as cheaper and
easier for Web developers to use than Flash, which is on 98 percent of the
world's personal computers. The company, the world's largest software maker,
expects the program to encourage designers to use more Microsoft tools when they
work on sites, Key said.
"Flash is so ubiquitous, and it's to be determined
how this stacks up," said Chris Howard, an analyst at market research firm the
Burton Group, based in Midvale, Utah. The program should succeed at attracting
Website developers and designers accustomed to Microsoft's tools, and probably
won't displace Flash, he said.
Silverlight helps firms create video-intensive Web
pages that show up the same way on Windows, Apple Inc's Macintosh operating
system, Microsoft's Internet Explorer Web browser, Apple's Safari browser and
Mozilla's Firefox.
Useful program
Microsoft was due to show the software at the
National Association of Broadcasters conference in Las Vegas Monday. The company
will release a test version at its Mix conference for Web developers this month.
This week Adobe plans to introduce some new
technologies to render encoding Flash videos cheaper, Michele Turner, vice
president of Adobe's platform business unit, said in an interview. The San Jose,
California-based company obtained Flash in 2005 in its 3.4 billion U.S. dollars
purchase of Macromedia Inc.
"The explosion of media on the Web is not happening
as fast as it could because Flash isn't as good as it should be," Key said.
There aren't enough Website designers familiar with
Flash, which is complex to learn, said Key, who worked for Macromedia before
joining Microsoft three years ago. Encoding video and distributing it for play
with Silverlight will save companies money, he said without elaborating.
(Source: China Daily)