Flash, specifcally mobile Flash, was effectively sentenced to death a while back. The first inklings came when Abode put out their own non-Flash media tool “Edge,” and then was confirmed when the company dropped 750 employees and halted all development of mobile versions of Flash, ostensibly forever. It’s not until now, however, that we’re seeing Flash really start to crumble. Android, once open to the protocol, will no longer be supporting Adobe Flash with its newest version, Jelly Bean. Flash Not Coming To Android Jelly Bean, Slowly Bleeding Out |...
Occupy Flash Urging Users to Uninstall Adobe Flash | Geekosystem...
posted by KaNisa
Occupy Flash, a weirdly misnamed movement presumably riding on the coattails of the much more appropriately named Occupy Wall Street movement, is encouraging users to unequivocallyuninstall Adobe’s Flash player. It all comes back to the fact that Adobe has recently ended mobile Flash development in order to head in a more HTML5 direction. That being the case, Occupy Flash supporters are uninstalling Flash in hopes of forcing Adobe in a more HTML5 direction. Because it’s certainly not headed that way already. No, not at all. Occupy Flash Urging Users to Uninstall Adobe Flash |...
Link : Flash to make its way to iPhone and iPad…kind of...
posted by KaNisa
During the IBC trade show in Amsterdam on Friday, Adobe officially took the wraps off of its new Adobe Flash Media Server 4.5 and Adobe Flash Access 3.0 products, which will allow iPhone, iPad and iPod touch users to access Adobe Flash content. Apple, which has long rejected Adobe’s Flash technology, doesn’t need to approve the tech for it to work, either. Adobe finally brings Flash to iPhone and iPad. Don’t get too excited yet. iPhone and iPad users will only be able so see Flash content served by Flash Media server…a $4500 product that content providers must use to develop said Flash content. Will the mobile iFamily ever see the type of Flash integration the Android families have? That remains to be...
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