Posts Tagged ‘Adobe’

Adobe promises Reader zero-day patch on Friday

December 16th, 2011

Adobe today said it will release a patch Friday for an older version of the Reader PDF viewer to stymie attacks like those aimed at major defense contractors earlier this month.

Nine days ago, the company confirmed a critical bug in Reader and promised to fix the flaw in Reader and Acrobat 9.x this week.

The exploits uncovered by security researchers were aimed specifically at Reader 9.x using malformed PDF documents attached to bogus emails.

A day after Adobe acknowledged the vulnerability, researchers at Symantec confirmed that attacks had targeted defense contractors, as well as individuals working in the telecommunications, manufacturing, computer hardware and chemical sectors. The attacks spiked Dec. 1, Symantec said.

The attackers may have been hoping to steal confidential information from the targeted firms.

If opened by the recipient, the malicious PDF hijacked the Windows PC, then infected those machines with “Sykipot,” a general-purpose backdoor Trojan that was first spotted being used in March 2010 as the payload in attacks exploiting a then-unpatched bug in Microsoft’s IE6 and IE7.

Later research by Symantec and others found hints of Chinese involvement: Code remnants were in the Simplified Chinese character set, and the malware’s command-and-control (C&C,) server was traced to a Chinese IP address.

But unlike Symantec, independent security researcher Brandon Dixon didn’t think a national government or other well-funded organization was behind the Sykipot attacks that exploited the Reader flaw.

“The tool used to create this [malicious PDF] document has little modularity or sophistication…. For this reason alone I have a hard time believing this attack was created by a nation-state government,” Dixon said in a blog post last weekend, one of three in which he analyzed the threat. “Instead, I think this was done by a small group of people whose motivation would be to support their government and send data back to them. This sort of behavior fits the Chinese hacker model and gives a bit more value to the Chinese traits identified within the document and dropper.”

Adobe today again told users — as it did last week — that it will not deliver patches for Reader and Acrobat 10 on Windows, or for any version of those applications on Mac OS X and Unix, until Jan. 10, 2012.

It has justified the delay by pointing out that Reader 10 includes an anti-exploit “sandbox” which blocks the in-circulation exploit, and that it has seen no sign of attacks targeting Mac or Linux machines.

The patched versions of Reader and Acrobat 9.x will be available tomorrow from Adobe’s website. Alternately, users will be able to run the programs’ integrated update tool or wait for the software to prompt them that a new version is available.

Adobe has not disclosed what time it will issue the Reader and Acrobat 9.x updates.

Source:http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9222712/Adobe_promises_Reader_zero_day_patch_on_Friday

Adobe rolls out Flash 11 and Air 3.0

October 5th, 2011

Currently available to download and install, Abode announced the launch of version 11 of Flash and version 3.0 of Air. With these new versions of the software, Adobe has tied hardware acceleration into the programming allowing for more robust applications. With this upgrade, Adobe now supports 3D gaming as well as Dolby Digital and DTS surround sound. Adobe claims that Flash 11 is capable of up to 1,000 times faster rendering over previous versions and developers should be able to use this power to develop games that rival console counterparts. The Stage 3D technology should allow developers to design applications that animate millions of objects as well as run at extremely fast framerates.

While this upgraded technology is available on connected HDTVs as well as PCs and Macs, Adobe plans to release support for mobile support for the Apple iOS, Android and BlackBerry Tablet OS platforms. Adobe representatives showed off a connected HDTV application based on the new software on a Samsung panel. The trivia game in the presentation allowed for communication between an Android phone when inputting the answer to the trivia question, much like any standard controller for a video game console. Beyond high definition support for computer monitors and televisions, Adobe is also promising support for 64-bit platforms if the architecture is available to the user.

Beyond the upgrades to Flash and Air, Adobe also announced Adobe Digital Publishing Suite, a program that creates iPad applications for a fee of $395 per app. Other announcements included Adobe Creative Cloud, 20GB of cloud storage for files created with Adobe Creative Suite, and six touch-screen apps for Android and iOS platforms. These six apps include Photoshop Touch, Proto, Debut, Kuler, Collage and Ideas. While Flash and Air are currently available for computers running Windows, Linux, and OS X, the new versions of the software require OS X 10.6 on an Intel platform to work correctly.

Source:http://www.digitaltrends.com/web/adobe-rolls-out-flash-11-and-air-3-0/

Adobe’s Flash Player 11, AIR 3 To Support Hardware Accelerated Graphics In October

September 22nd, 2011

Adobe has announced that the October launch of its Flash Player 11 and AIR 3 platforms will include support for new features including hardware accelerated graphics on computers and mobile devices.

Adobe claims the hardware acceleration available in the updates will allow for “console quality games on Mac OS, Windows and connected televisions” with “1,000 times faster rendering performance over Flash Player 10 and AIR 2,” and “millions of [animated] objects with smooth 60 frames per second rendering.”

A new video demonstration shows the extent of these improvements, which the company says will allow for “a rich experience that’s unparalleled on devices across the web.”

“With this milestone release Adobe pushes the envelope of what is possible on the web with a typical PC and opens up a new world of immersive, high-performance gaming experiences,” said Danny Winokur, vice president and general manager of platform for Adobe, in a statement.

While the new versions will be available on PC and Mac platforms next month, mobile platforms including Android, Blackberry and iOS (through AIR) will only see a pre-release version at that time, ahead of a full release promised “in the near future.”

Flash 11 and AIR 3 also add support for 64-bit computer operating systems, easier social network integration in apps, and native use of external capabilities like in-app payments, device data, vibration control, light sensors and more.

The new environment will also allow developers to package AIR 3 with applications, eliminating the need for a separate download to run extensions or standalone programs on computers and mobile platforms.

Source:http://www.gamasutra.com/view/news/37382/Adobes_Flash_Player_11_AIR_3_To_Support_Hardware_Accelerated_Graphics_In_October.php

Adobe, Oracle earnings hint at business recovery

September 22nd, 2011

That’s the takeaway after strong earnings reports this week from Oracle (ORCL) and Adobe (ADBE). The companies specialize in business software, and both said sales and profit are doing better than analysts expected.

Investors cheered the news, sending shares of both companies up Wednesday. Oracle’s share price spiked nearly 8% to $30.52, and Adobe saw shares rise more than 3% to $25.49.

Still, the results weren’t enough to confirm a bona fide tech recovery. What we’re starting to see is an environment in which software sales are creeping up but hardware sales remain weak.

The PC market is still struggling in the U.S. and Western Europe, mainly because consumers have embraced Apple’s (AAPL) iPad instead of traditional computers. Forecasting firm Gartner says it expects spending by businesses and especially consumers to tighten as the economic outlook remains dark.

Expectations have been extremely low, and that may be why Oracle and Adobe were able to beat them. “There were concerns that the environment was difficult and demand trends were starting to deteriorate,” a Pacific Crest Securities analyst that covers Adobe told Bloomberg. “The guidance looks pretty strong.”

Adobe makes Photoshop and other graphic design programs. It also sells customer management and online marketing systems for businesses.

It gave a sales forecast of $1.08 billion to $1.13 billion for the fourth quarter. Analysts were expecting $1.07 billion. The company estimated profit at 57 cents to 64 cents a share, while analysts were expecting 58 cents.

For the quarter ended Sept. 2, sales rose 2.3% to $1.01 billion. That was a little lower than the $1.03 billion analysts were looking for. But profit topped estimates at $195.1 million, or 39 cents a share, from $230.1 million, or 44 cents, a year ago. After excluding certain costs, earnings were 55 cents, higher than the 54 cents analysts expected.

Oracle also beat analysts’ projections after seeing new software license sales rise 16%. It makes powerful computer systems that help companies manage databases, customers, the supply chain and other operations.

Profit rose 36% to $1.84 billion, or 36 cents a share, from $1.35 billion, or 27 cents a share, a year earlier. Analysts were looking for 35 cents a share. Sales rose 12% to $8.37 billion, which is about what analysts thought would happen.

Source:http://money.msn.com/stock-broker-guided/article.aspx?post=c0771a93-0009-4a75-9747-46c3abb20838

Adobe Systems launches Flash Player 11 and Air 3

September 21st, 2011

Adobe Systems announced Flash Player 11 and Adobe Air 3 software Wednesday to help developers build more sophisticated applications with dozens of new features across smartphones and tablets as well as desktop computers.

The releases are Adobe’s biggest in two years, and will be available free of charge in early October, said Anup Murarka, Adobe’s director of product marketing. The related tools, Flash Builder and Flex, will support new features in Flash Player 11 and Adobe Air 3 by the end of the year.

The releases will enable delivery of 2D and 3D games over the Internet to various devices, Murarka said. Developers of enterprise applications will also find the 3D capabilities popular for data-centric apps. Enterprises, for example, will be able to build application dashboards to “visualize complex data sets” with 3D images, he said.

Developers will also be able to use the tools to more deeply integrate business software like Excel and Outlook in devices and to accesshardware programming interfaces for functions such as Near-Field Communication being used more widely in smartphones, Murarka said.

The new versions will also help developers build more secure applications with the ability to leverage cryptographically secure random number generation, he said.

For 3D support, Abode said faster video rendering on desktops is provided through hardware acceleration. A pre-release version of those same 2D and 3D features for mobile platforms, such as Android, Apple iOS, and BlackBerry Tablet OS, is also now available, with a full production release coming “in the near future,” Adobe said in a statement.

Other features give developers the ability to package Air 3 within an application to simplify installation of apps on Android, Windows and Mac OS, much the same as Adobe has done for Apple iOS recently.

Adobe also said developers will be able to extend capabilities already built in to the device, such as the accelerometer or near-field communications technology, through HTML5 as well as Flash.

Even so, Adobe notes that 130 different models of smartphones and 85 tablets will run Flash-based apps by the end of the year, totaling about 200 million units. That number is expected to reach more than 1 billion units by the end of 2015.

Source:http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9220140/Adobe_Systems_launches_Flash_Player_11_and_Air_3?taxonomyId=11

Adobe Flash Player 10.2 Beta released and up for grabs

December 5th, 2010

Adobe, the famous American software company has just released the newest version (albeit beta, at the moment) of its Flash Player, 10.2. This new version is available for download on Windows, Mac and Linux computers at Adobe Labs.

One of the main features of Adobe Flash Player 10.2 is Stage Video, a new API (application programming interface) which sports one of the best video playback performance across platforms. It allows websites to show good quality videos on various devices. The beta flash player has also got support for hardware acceleration in Internet Explorer 9, native custom mouse cursors and full screen playback with multiple monitors. Text rendering has been much improved.

One other thing which may impress you is Adobe’s availability to listen to its customers, as with the new Flash Player 10.2 beta, users with multiple monitors can watch their favorite videos in true full screen on one of them, while multi-tasking on another.

Adobe also credits the hardware vendors with which the company worked for them managing to make the GPU (graphical processing unity) to offload both H.264 hardware decoding (which first came in Adobe Flash Player 10.1), as well as the rest of the video rendering pipeline – color conversion, scaling and blitting included. To give us an idea of the efficiency of the hardware acceleration in the 10.2 beta, Adobe states that by using Stage Video, laptops can play 1080p HD videos with only very little more than 0% CPU usage.

It seems that YouTube has already begun to add support for the API. By using IE 9, Adobe says that some of the evaluations have revealed an improvement of up to 35% in rendering performance.

As with all beta releases, you might encounter small glitches, although this version is pretty stable, according to its developer. Anyway, Adobe is willing to listen to any complaints or suggestions, so feel free to send them your feedback. The full version of Adobe Flash Player 10.02 will land next year. For more details, you might want to visit the Adobe Blog.

The Adobe Flash Player is probably one of the most used programs for viewing animations and movies, using other computer programs, such as a web browser. Initially created by Macromedia, the flash player is now developed by Adobe, after the latter bought it. The player is used by over 750 million desktop computers and mobile devices

Source:http://free-pc-guides.com/news/software-news/adobe-flash-player-10-2-beta-released-and-up-for-grabs-07199

Adobe Releases Flash Player 10.2 Beta

December 2nd, 2010

Apple and Adobe have exchanged plenty of salvos in their skirmish over the future of rich content on the Web, but now Adobe’s attempting to match actions to words. On Tuesday, the company announced the beta release of the next version of Flash Player, which it says will bring vastly improved video performance on Mac, Windows, and Linux.

The aptly-named marquee feature of Flash Player 10.2 is Stage Video, which Adobe describes as a new API allowing for high performance video playback with a lower resource footprint. According to the company, Stage Video can leverage a computer’s graphics processor to do the heavy lifting for several parts of the streaming video process, resulting in very low CPU usage.

All developers need to do to reap the benefits is switch to the new API in their existing Flash video player code–videos don’t need to be reencoded. Also built into Stage Video are DVR-inspired playback controls and content protection. YouTube is listed among those that are already building in support for the new software.

There are a couple of other improvements in the new version, including full-screen video support on multiple monitors, meaning you’ll now be able to play a full-screen video on one of your monitors while still working on another. Adobe’s also added support for native custom mouse cursors and enhancements to text rendering that should increase readability.

But it’s Stage Video which will undoubtedly get the most attention. Flash has become a touchy issue for some developers and users, especially on the Mac, where the software has never performed to the same standards as its Windows counterpart. The promise of low-CPU usage has been trotted out before, including with the hardware decoding support first added in Flash Player 10.1, but that update didn’t stop Apple from removing Flash Player as part of the included software on new Macs. And having taken such a decisive step, it seems unlikely that Cupertino will reverse that decision, no matter what Flash Player 10.2 brings.

If you’re a hardy soul, you can install the beta version of Flash Player 10.2 right now–Adobe says it’s fairly stable, though as they point out, it’s intended primarily for developers. The final version of Flash Player 10.2–the one for end users–won’t be released until next year.

Source:http://www.pcworld.com/businesscenter/article/212140/adobe_releases_flash_player_102_beta.html

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