Adobe Edge preview is an upcoming tool for creating smooth motion and transitions for screens of all sizes, utilizing the latest web standards like HTML/HTML5, JavaScript and CSS. Highlights include:
- Visually create motion content in an easy to use, timeline-based interface
- Create new compositions from scratch, import and energize web graphics, or add motion to existing CSS-based HTML layouts.
- Trust that your content works reliably on desktops as well as devices.

This is a great piece from Adobe Labs. CSS regions and exclusions propose to help developers display web pages like traditional print media (among other things) and Adobe is doing some great things to push HTML5 to the forefront.
I’ve downloaded the prototype so I can play with it so I’ll most likely be posting whatever I come up with soon.
This is a really good read. It’s a good move on Adobe part to embrace the new technologies. If you could export Flash movies to HTML5/CSS3 that would be sick but I don’t know if that’s the way Adobe is going.
Mashable:
Adobe, understandably, has a different position. It believes that Flash and HTML5 can exist side-by-side and that each has its own set of strengths and weaknesses. I had a chance to talk to Paul Gubbay, Adobe’s VP of design and web engineering, about HTML5, Flash, the emerging mobile landscape and how Adobe fits into this new world.