Trevor Boulton wrote:
Bring it on and you will see Opus take back the crown of leader in the industry.
Or bring about an untimely death? If Opus' current technology was used to produce interactive HTML5 aka Canvas elements aka Javascript then surely this involves taking all those marvelous routines and generating plain text script. Regardless of whether some is protected by server side use, the initial output will be on the developer's machine and viewable.
For example, I create a simple publication that displays some fancy animated text and picture transitions. I publish for HTML5 and in the accompanying .js file is the source needed for anyone to simply load into notepad and build their own 'publications' without Opus. Maybe, the code could be obfuscated but this punishes the genuine developers that benefit from the openness of the language.
Perhaps it doesn't matter. Perhaps there is a big enough niche of people who have no wish to ever see a single line of code and want all their layout, triggers and actions built in a completely visual IDE. Perhaps this niche contains a large enough sample of people who are happy to publish to an open format because their projects don't require security on the big bad internet. Perhaps Flash will dies a quicker death and Native Client will have no impact and HTML5 and Apple will rule the world regardless of the wishes of designers and developers. Just perhaps.
Don't get me wrong. Canvas is built on Javascript which is a very underestimated language with a huge potential. HTML5 is a brilliant idea and offers a potential solution to whole motley assortment of things that currently make the internet interactive and I'd take an IDE over text editor any day. But there is nothing magical about HTML5. Fire up notepad and create some. Fire up Dreamweaver or other such editor and it's even easier - what is Opus going to bring to the mix that is realistic and would allow users to start using before some other product takes the lead?