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Adobe's Ichabod and The Headless Search of Flash, AJAX - ReadWriteWeb

While Adobe Flash has remained popular with Web developers who want to deliver fluid user interfaces, database-driven content, and nonstandard typography on the Web, it has suffered from one glaring shortcoming: search engines have been unable to effectively index the content held within the Flash file.

RIA: del.icio.us/tag/RIA

Google changes the way it indexes SWF content - InsideRIA

Search engine optimization has always been a thorn into Flash’s side. But on July 1st Adobe issued a press release stating that they had developed, in collaboration with Google and Yahoo!, a new Flash player intended to help search engines index flash content in a better way.

RIA: del.icio.us/tag/RIA

GMDesk - Google Code

Run Google's cloud applications in an Adobe Air application designed specifically for them.

opensource: del.icio.us tag/opensource

AdSense for Games: Could RIAs be next? | The Universal Desktop | ZDNet.com

Google today announced a public beta for AdSense for Games. What’s unique about it is that it’s primarily targeted at Flash games with partners like Mochi Media, Konami, Heavy Games and others.

RIA: del.icio.us/tag/RIA

Web Standards 2008: Three Circles of Hell | A List Apart: Articles

Web Standards 2008: W3C x Independent working groups (WHATWG, WCAG, WaSP, WSG) x Proprietary technologies (Adobe, Microsoft, Apple, Google)

W3C: Del.icio.us W3C Tags

Adobe Talks Open Source, Innovation and the Future of Flash

Kevin Lynch, CTO of Adobe talks with eWEEK about open-sourcing Flash, the new Adobe Creative Suite 4 (CS4), mobile technology and more. Lynch also talks of competing with Microsoft Silverlight and Expression and possibly with Google Chrome.

RIA: del.icio.us/tag/RIA

World Wide Web - Flash Faces Competition for Rich Internet Applications

It's not just HTML and Adobe Flash any more as new Rich Internet Applications gain ground among Web developers. While Adobe adds to its popular Flash, other techniques like Microsoft's Silverlight and AJAX offer new possibilities for Web pages. Developers are also combining the techniques, including Google, which uses HTML, AJAX and Flash.

RIA: del.icio.us/tag/RIA

The Weekly RIA Round-Up for July 12 - InsideRIA

As for the news this week, we have several things to talk about.

RIA: del.icio.us/tag/RIA

Google Indicizza anche i File Flash

Il grande limite dei siti in Flash è sempre stata l’indicizzazione. Ottimo impatto visivo, libero sfogo alla creatività, ma i siti in flash sono sempre stai penalizzati dai risultati sui motori di ricerca. Per ovviare a questo non banale inconveniente negli anni si è progressivamente passato dall’imprementazione di siti in flash al 100%, a siti in html, php, asp, ecc con inserti in flash, magari nell’header o per i vari banner d adv.

La novità annunciata congiuntamente da Adobe e da Google è di quelle che scombinano le carte in tavola e ri-cambiano il modo di progettare e di scegliere la piattaforma di proggettazione dei siti web:

Google has been developing a new algorithm for indexing textual content in Flash files of all kinds, from Flash menus, buttons and banners, to self-contained Flash websites. Recently, we’ve improved the performance of this Flash indexing algorithm by integrating.
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User:spai: spai lab blog marketing e comunicazione

Search-ability in Flash

More on the custom Flash player provided to Google and Yahoo! for searching Flash/Flex stuff.

RIA: del.icio.us/tag/RIA

[from bushwald] Search-ability in Flash

More on the custom Flash player provided to Google and Yahoo! for searching Flash/Flex stuff.

User:jeyrb: jey's network's del.icio.us bookmarks

Google and Yahoo to Search Inside Flash Files - NYTimes.com

Adobe announced Tuesday that Google and Yahoo are adding search capabilities that will enable users to look inside the content of files encoded in Adobe's Flash file format SWF.

RIA: del.icio.us/tag/RIA

Adobe Improves SEO with Special Version of Flash Player

Adobe announced today that it has made a special version of Flash Player available to Google and Yahoo that drastically improves search engine indexing of the Flash file format (SWF). This new version will uncover information that search engines could not

RIA: del.icio.us/tag/RIA

[from bushwald] Adobe, Google, Yahoo enabling Flash searches | InfoWorld | News | 2008-06-30 | By Paul Krill

Flash player to expose more if itself for search engines. Is this an open standard anyone can use, or do partners need to apply to have access?

User:jeyrb: jey's network's del.icio.us bookmarks

SEO and RIA get closer together with Flash indexing news

Google and Adobe have been working on improving the indexing of Flash applications. In the past we could simply look at the SWF files and try to grab strings out of them, but there was zero context.

To go further Google uses the SWF Searchable work from Adobe to be more of a 'human' actor on the application.

This is what it doesn't do:

  1. Googlebot does not execute some types of JavaScript. So if your web page loads a Flash file via JavaScript, Google may not be aware of that Flash file, in which case it will not be indexed.
  2. We currently do not attach content from external resources that are loaded by your Flash files. If your Flash file loads an HTML file, an XML file, another SWF file, etc., Google will separately index that resource, but it will not yet be considered to be part of the content in your Flash file.
  3. While we are able to index Flash in almost all of the languages found on the web, currently there are difficulties with Flash content written in bidirectional languages. Until this is fixed, we will be unable to index Hebrew language or Arabic language content from Flash files.

This is good news for all rich applications. One of the common worries when it comes to richer application development is "what do search engines see" and we sometimes see people go back to the simpler world just to make that happier. With the search engines stepping up themselves, we can go back to writing applications that make sense for our human users, and hope that the computers catch up. Of course, we always have to do so in a practical way.

Ajax: Ajaxian

Adobe, Google, Yahoo Team for Flash Search

Adobe, Google and Yahoo join to make Flash content searchable. Adobe, Google, Yahoo immediately makes flash and other dynamic content that run in Adobe Flash Player on thousands of Web sites visible to search from thousands of Web sites.

RIA: del.icio.us/tag/RIA

Official Google Blog: Google learns to crawl Flash

This is pretty big news... Google can now index text contained in Flash-only or Flash-heavy sites.

RIA: del.icio.us/tag/RIA

Once Nearly Invisible To Search Engines, Flash Files Can Now Be Found And Indexed

For most people on the Web, if Google or Yahoo cannot find something, it doesn’t exist. That has been one of the biggest drawbacks to creating a Website or application that displays itself as a Flash (SWF) file. Search engines could see the file, but they could not see what was in it. Until now.

Adobe has come up with a way for the search engines to read SWF files and index all of the information they contain. That means any text or links in a Flash application can now be indexed. This is a huge step forward for Adobe and anyone who develops in Flash/Flex. Michele Turner, Adobe’s VP of marketing for its platform business, explains:

We are releasing technology to Google and Yahoo that enables them to crawl and index SWF files. They are now searchable. This will open up millions of Flash files to search.

Adobe has created a special Flash player for the search engines that acts like a virtual user going through each application. It actually goes through the runtime of each Flash application and translates it into something the search engines can understand. So all of those fancy interactive Flash Websites and other rich Internet applications that have been invisible to search engines, can now be seen by them.

Turner acknowledges that this invisibility so far “has been a big problem for those developing rich applications.” After all, it doesn’t matter how pretty your Website is if nobody can find it. Flash applications and Websites (many ironically created by ad agencies) have not been able to take advantage of any of the search-engine juice that so many online ad campaigns depend upon. This should be seen as part of Adobe’s larger efforts to remove any remaining restrictions associated with Flash (in April, for instance, it opened up the Flash runtime as part of its the Open Screen Project).

Google is already rolling out the SWF-indexing technology, while Yahoo still “has some work to do,” says Turner. Even so, this won’t solve all the problems with Flash content showing up on search engines.

Becoming visible is one thing, actually ranking highly is another. Google currently can find about 73 million Flash files on the Web. But until Adobe makes it easy for the average Webmaster or blogger to link deeply into those Flash files, they are not likely to appear at the top of many search results.

Update: More info from Adobe here and Google here.

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