January 6th, 2012 | James Taylor | Categories: Design, Development, Education, Inspiration, Interactive, Reference, Technology, Tool | Tags: adobe, css3, design, development, HTML5, Inspiration, Interactive, Technology, web | No Comments »
Adobe’s The Expressive Web demos the emerging capabilities that html5 and css3 deliver.

November 1st, 2010 | James Taylor | Categories: Art, Inspiration, Sculpture | Tags: adobe, design, digital, Inspiration, physical, Sculpture | No Comments »
The digital application, Photoshop, recreated in physical space.

via flavorwire
May 12th, 2010 | Stella Wong | Categories: Online, Technology, Video | Tags: adobe, flash, lee brimelow, multitouch | No Comments »
Great video by Lee Brimelow from Adobe, showing Flash working on touch based devices.
I highly recommend you check it out!
Several people have been making assertions that most Flash sites will not work properly on touch-based devices because these sites use rollovers or hovers for things like effects and navigation. Well I put together this little video together showing that Flash sites do indeed work the way you would expect since the Flash Player dispatches rollover events even on a touch screen.
This video is aimed at clearing up the misinformation surrounding Flash rollover events and touch devices. The assertion that most Flash sites need to be rewritten is absolutely false. But please grab a tablet and see for yourself. I tried every FWA Site of the Month and they all worked fine. — Lee

February 16th, 2010 | Stella Wong | Categories: Inspiration | Tags: adobe, air app, apple, digital, flash, ipad, magazine | No Comments »
Here’s a demo of WIRED magazine running as an Air App on the iPad. You can read more about it on Adobe’s blog here.
The concept enables — in digital form — the immersive content experience magazines are known for, and allows new interactive features to stimulate reader engagement, including:
- content designed specifically for the touch screen experience
- easy navigation methods, including an innovative zoomed-out “Browse Mode”
- the ability to browse image slideshows
- embedded 360 degree object viewers
- support for video and audio content
- the ability to rotate content using device accelerometer functionality

September 28th, 2009 | Stella Wong | Categories: HCI (Human Computer Interaction), Online, Technology | Tags: adobe, development, multi-touch, platform | No Comments »
Interesting insight into how developments will integrate with its platform, using your laptop touch pad for multi-touch functionality for example.
