Linux users who want to view Flash content will soon have no choice but to do it through Google’s Chrome browser. That’s because Adobe is discontinuing its Flash Player for Linux as a standalone ...
Adobe Systems on Tuesday made good on a promise to release a Linux version of the latest Flash Player, software that lets Web browsers view multimedia information such as YouTube videos or animated ...
The company's lead Flash for Linux engineer, Mike Melanson , reported this week in his blog that Adobe won't release any alpha versions of its Flash port, holding out instead for a full-featured beta ...
Adobe Systems has released a beta of a Flash Player 9 for Linux and said that it is working on 64-bit editions of Flash. The final Flash Player 9 on Linux is due early next year. According to an FAQ ...
Adobe released the final Flash Player update on December 8 and urged users to uninstall the program as it ends its support for on yearend. According to Tech Radar, the update is called AIR 32, which ...
Talk about a change in priorities! When Adobe decided it was time to start work on a 64-bit Flash Player, they didn’t release the first test version on Windows or Mac OS X. No, they released it on ...
Not surprised at all. Flash is crap. Thankfully the NoScript extension blocks that trash. Unfortunately there are a growing number of sites that I like to visit that keep implementing Flash. Flash in ...
Martin LaMonica is a senior writer covering green tech and cutting-edge technologies. He joined CNET in 2002 to cover enterprise IT and Web development and was previously executive editor of IT ...
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