|      It's been    nearly three years since Steve Jobs wrote his famous takedown of Adobe's    Flash platform as a battery-draining, Mac-crashing, insecure mess. Since    that time, Jobs has largely been proven right since the mobile industry has    moved on from Flash as a video platform in favor of HTML5, the open-source    alternative that Jobs predicted would "win on mobile devices" going forward.    All of this makes it somewhat surprising that Apple (AAPL) has decided to    hire former Adobe CTO Kevin Lynch as a    vice president of technology, especially because Lynch was one of Flash's    most prominent public defenders during Adobe's    spat with Jobs. Daring    Fireball's    John Gruber, for one, called Lynch a "bozo" and a "bad hire" and said that he    didn't understand Apple's thinking behind the    decision. In particular, Gruber noted that all of the companies that had    publicly embraced Flash had either gone out of business, had significantly    lost market share or had ditched Flash all together.  "I have a bad feeling    about this," he concluded. AppleInsider, while also skeptical of Lynch's    past defense of Flash, was overall much less hostile to the decision and    noted that "Flash isn't the only project Lynch has worked on" and that Lynch    has also done prominent work designing "Frame's FrameMaker publication layout    software (later acquired by Adobe) as well as Macromedia's Dreamweaver, one    of the original graphical desktop web development tools." AppleInsider concluded    that there's "lots of potential for Lynch at Apple" despite his past feuds    with the company  |    
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