content created today will still run in the future, independent of where
air itself is going.

Unless you're using the HTML component to load external (http) content which 
you have no control  over.
Webkit (the browser engine AIR uses) currently doesn't support HTML 5 very well.

For instance, I was trying to load a web IRC client (https://kiwiirc.com/), which simply doesn't work because it uses HTML 5 features.
Another app I had just finished - and worked perfectly - suddenly broke, 
because an html page I was loading upgraded to HTML 5.

If you have full control over the things you're creating, you're good to go, just be careful when relying on things you have no control over.
Moving forward, we'll see more and more HTML 5 content out there. AIR (webkit) 
needs to catch up, fast.. like.. yesterday.

regards
Peter


On 19 May 2013 15:08, Hans Wichman <hans.wich...@gmail.com> wrote:

Hi John,

content created today will still run in the future, independent of where
air itself is going. I wouldnt worry too much bout it, but that might be
just me :)

best
h

Sent from my iPad

On 19 mei 2013, at 14:39, John McCormack <j...@easypeasy.co.uk> wrote:

> Hi there.
>
> I would like to produce some educational material using AIR but am
feeling very insecure about its future.
>
> Could you possibly let me know how active you are in producing content
deliverable through AIR.
>
> Thanks
>
> John

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