Flash Ported To iOS and iPhone 4
An anonymous reader noted that there is a simple HOWTO explaining how to install flash on an iPhone4. Mad props for using Strong Bad as the demo. Of course, step one is to use the JailBreakMe. Once installed, Flash inside Safari loads in a stopped state so it won't even hurt performance unless you decide to actually execute the program.
sopssa = SquarePixel = odies. Three sockpuppets (possibly even more), one stupid troll. Remember it moderators!
Peace out!
Unfortunately goatse is still blocked on the iphone.
"Would everyone please rise for the presentation of our national colors"
Oh!
Oh I like that!
Oh yeah!
Come to the place where the tropical breezes blow
Come to the coolest place I know
The people are so great
But really there's only me
And that means I'm so great
And also there's The Cheat
Oh there's The Cheat!
The place where the tropical breezes blow
The Cheat!
In the coolest place I know
The one's are always cold
And parties last all night
And probably lots of chocolate
And population tire
POPULATION TIREEEE!!!
Living With a Nerd
How long until Apple "fixes" the exploit used by the JailbreakMe website?
"The Mind Has No Firewall"
Army article on psychotronic weapons
"The Mind Has No Firewall" by Timothy L. Thomas. Parameters, Spring 1998, pp. 84-92.
http://carlisle-www.army.mil/usawc/Parameters/
The human body, much like a computer, contains myriad data processors. They include, but are not limited to, the chemical-electrical activity of the brain, heart, and peripheral nervous system, the signals sent from the cortex region of the brain to other parts of our body, the tiny hair cells in the inner ear that process auditory signals, and the light-sensitive retina and cornea of the eye that process visual activity.[2] We are on the threshold of an era in which these data processors of the human body may be manipulated or debilitated. Examples of unplanned attacks on the body's data-processing capability are well-documented. Strobe lights have been known to cause epileptic seizures. Not long ago in Japan, children watching television cartoons were subjected to pulsating lights that caused seizures in some and made others very sick.
Defending friendly and targeting adversary data-processing capabilities of the body appears to be an area of weakness in the US approach to information warfare theory, a theory oriented heavily toward systems data-processing and designed to attain information dominance on the battlefield. Or so it would appear from information in the open, unclassified press. This US shortcoming may be a serious one, since the capabilities to alter the data- processing systems of the body already exist. A recent edition of U.S. News and World Report highlighted several of these "wonder weapons" (acoustics, microwaves, lasers) and noted that scientists are "searching the electromagnetic and sonic spectrums for wavelengths that can affect human behavior."[3] A recent Russian military article offered a slightly different slant to the problem, declaring that "humanity stands on the brink of a psychotronic war" with the mind and body as the focus. That article discussed Russian and international attempts to control the psycho-physical condition of man and his decisionmaking processes by the use of VHF-generators, "noiseless cassettes," and other technologies.
An entirely new arsenal of weapons, based on devices designed to introduce subliminal messages or to alter the body's psychological and data-processing capabilities, might be used to incapacitate individuals. These weapons aim to control or alter the psyche, or to attack the various sensory and data-processing systems of the human organism. In both cases, the goal is to confuse or destroy the signals that normally keep the body in equilibrium.
This article examines energy-based weapons, psychotronic weapons, and other developments designed to alter the ability of the human body to process stimuli. One consequence of this assessment is that the way we commonly use the term "information warfare" falls short when the individual soldier, not his equipment, becomes the target of attack.
Information Warfare Theory and the Data-Processing Element of Humans
In the United States the common conception of information warfare focuses primarily on the capabilities of hardware systems such as computers, satellites, and military equipment which process data in its various forms. According to Department of Defense Directive S-3600.1 of 9 December 1996, information warfare is defined as "an information operation conducted during time of crisis or conflict to achieve or promote specific objectives over a specific adversary or adversaries." An information operation is defined in the same directive as "actions taken to affect adversary information and information systems while defending one's own information and information systems." These "information systems" lie at the heart of the modernization effort of the US armed forces and other countries, and manifest themselves as hardware, software, communications capabilities, and highly trained individuals. Recently, the US
Based on the way Apple has talked about flash, I guess people's iPhones are just going to explode.
Living With a Nerd
...all the people who want to develop applications for sale through the App store, for whom Apple is still the gatekeeper who can enforce whatever rules any way they choose.
Hard to believe this behaviour in the wake of the Microsoft cases heard in Europe and elsewhere, but I suppose Apple can still argue that they don't control enough of the market with the iPhone to be considered a monopolist, and so can impose any conditions on developers that they choose.
Salocin.com
I'm not Apple fan, but putting Flash on an iPhone4 is like going to a nice dinner party, getting wasted, jumping up on the table, dropping trou, and depositing a huge steamer right in the salad bowl.
It's just NASTY.
...to see how long it takes before Apple "fixes" this and "saves" people from the "horror" that is flash - whether we want him to or not.
Kudos for the achievement, but I am not going to clap too hard.
[rant]
I am not a big fan of Flash at the best of times. I have seen more cases of sloppy web design, UI design and lack of CPU optimisations in Flash than in other things I have used. Some of this can be attributed to people developing the Flash applications and some of this can be attributed to Adobe, but in the end we all suffer. If some of these issues were addressed I might change my mind about Flash, but at this point I have Flash block on my PC and I am not really missing it on my hand-held devices. Also, the lack of evidence that Adobe is actually trying to address these concerns is not helping. As for web sites using it as their only UI: sorry I'll find out what you were trying to sell when you use web standards.
[/rant]
Jumpstart the tartan drive.
I'm sure this will only improve the iPhone's awesome battery life! (iphone owner)
I'm convinced that Apple has put out iOS4 with at least one bug that users find mildly annoying (like failing to send emails with photos). That way once an exploit is discovered in the new OS release they have reasons for users to upgrade.
is the iPhone's main feature for me. But if you like it, nice to have the choice.
how about doesn't load unless you ask it to, so that it doesn't hurt those other performance factors: load time and bandwidth.
Like anyone can even know that
I wonder how many people actually want Flash on their phones. I mean, Adobe have had more than a few years to optimise their player for the biggest sector of their market: the desktop, and they've failed completely. Even on my fairly beefy (Windows 7) desktop with gigs of ram and an abundance of free CPU cycles (read: 99% idle, only Chrome with flash running), the latest flash player chews up CPU like no man's business. (And yes, I've tried the betas and pre-releases, and they're just as bad...)
Perhaps I'm wrong in thinking that only a minority of people would want flash on their phones, or perhaps Adobe has stepped it up a gear and actually optimised flash player enough so that it won't drain down a handset's battery in a very short space of time. But considering that they often refuse to even comment on bug reports regarding performance (or a complete lack thereof), I'd be surprised if they have.
cat:
I have yet to find a single iPhone user who needs / wants flash, why are these people actually trying to make it work? Flash is a battery drain, awkward UI, etc etc. Why would anyone want to run it on an iPhone?
Ive had flash on my iPad for a while now. Frash lets you do it pretty easily.
Can you run a web cam on it or more for web page layout? ...
Web video calling
Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
I don't think anyone is singing flash's praises. You could certainly raise a of a lot of objections to HTTP, and the world wide web in general, but no one releasing a device that didn't support HTML would act like it was a good thing: the standard exists, and a hell of a lot of people use flash, for better or for worse. The issue is that Apple, once again, is making a user's decisions for them. Many things come without flash preinstalled: I had to install it on my eeepc, for example. But I COULD install it. It's not even a matter of open source principle: I just don't want to buy a product that I can't do with as I see fit. Granted, Apple needs to behave this way to play to their chosen market niche, but they're taking it a little far.
Android users have hyped Flash for months... everyone's been waiting for Froyo so that they could get their hands on that beautiful Flash support (I like Flash in that it enables me to view content that I otherwise wouldn't be able to view - usually it wass the videos embedded in Engadget posts that pissed me off when I couldn't view them due to not having Flash).
Now I've gone through the trouble of switching out my Milestone for a Desire so that I could get Froyo a week early (seriously... official Froyo came out like a week after I got my Desire with the intention of running a Froyo custom ROM on it), and what do the iPhoners do?
iPhoner 1: "Hey dude, we need Flash!"
iPhoner 2: "Uuuuhhhh... Steve Jobs hates it, but who cares - I'll port it!"
*3 minutes later*
iPhoner 2: "Here you go, Flash for your jailbroken iPhone!"
Now, while I applaud the devs in the iPhone community for getting this done, I'm a bit dismayed to realize that for some reason, Android devs weren't able to - and on the system that's supposedly more open.
What gives, Android fans? Nobody with decent skills using Android? Or just lazy? :P
PS: I don't know the first thing about programming (2-player Battleship in C++ in a DOS box is the extent of my programming ability), so I might just be overlooking some little fact that would make the same thing on Android much more difficult ;)
I know he's the reason everyone goes to the site, but, unfortunately, Strong Bad didn't appear in this Flash demo at all. They only showed the speech-impeded athlete, Homestar Runner.
How exactly do you install a binary that was never compiled for iPhone?
You compile it for iPhone...
And how the ef you compile a closed-source app?
I didn't know one could casually the sources to Flash, if not a corporation part of the Open Screen group.
It's really only a matter of time before developers jump ship for Android
Android devices without an integrated mobile phone don't have Android Market, and the one that was recommended for a while (Archos 5) is stuck on an ancient version of Android. So as I understand it, Android 2.x has no close counterpart to the iPod touch for someone who doesn't want yet another monthly phone bill.
now the Justice League is trying to rescue him.
What do you recommend that web animation series such as Homestar Runner and Weebl and Bob use instead of Flash? Authoring in Flash and rendering to H.264 or WebM would only make it ten times bigger.
Why is this tagged cisco?
Nexus One
In this page, Google wrote:
In this page, Google wrote:
So in order to buy an Android phone without a contract, you have to plan to develop software for sale on Android Market. Not everybody who wants a counterpart to iPod Touch that runs Android is interested in developing software for sale on Android Market.
Microsoft Access, exported to Oracle.
Flash succeeds where Java applets fail -- to provide a cross--platform way to distribute apps across the internet. Go Flash! You never hog MY cpu
Come on mods, this isn't off-topic - it's the Strongbadia national anthem, which is on-topic as Strong Bad was mentioned in the original post as the demo flash thing that they used.
I am TheRaven on Soylent News
Now you can advertise this new functionality:
"Did you vacuum brake? Then install Flash on your iPhone: it will suck like nothing you have seen before!"
or
"Like all those little security holes that pop up on the iPhone lately? Then install Flash on it and you'll get an entire trench!"
It requires the purchase of different rights if you want to stream content to a mobile device (at least that's what I read on the internet somewhere)
Overall the performance was pretty good. Its still in beta, but I am glad someone is porting it. I am going to donate some money to Comex for his hard work.
In Cydia, just go to manage=>Sources=>Edit=>add=>http://repo.benm.at
^^ this is the easiest way to give it a try
You're talking about Flash lite or simple standalone players. Not 9 or 10.
Nothing as big and complex at desktop flash. I had a flash player for a phone in 2002, but it was pretty basic and slow.
Just what I want, HTTP GET requests for crossdomain.xml popping out of my iPhone every time I click on something and my iPhone appearing to crash because of all of the related network connections. Not. Flash is dead end bloatware. Youtube and CNN just haven't realized it yet.
Dice Wars!
http://www.gamedesign.jp/flash/dice/dice.html
I'll never buy and iphone game again. Screw the App Store.
1. 2.
Its off-topic because everyone knows that Trogdor is so much better.
The people that does this and don't do anything about changing the password will be really owned, it is already enough bad that Apple after all this time didn't fix the severe remote execution hole in iOS and now this guys are posting without any warning that people install openSSH with default settings.
Mexico: 100% conservative's America now!
Flash doesn't have a UI per se. Developers can create any UI they want.
Please check http://www.scaleform.com/ for a few (600 games and counting) games that use flash for UI.
Now tell me its awkward...
Flash doesn't kill UI, designers do...
phones do sell out or cease being made or just stop being sold.
So if the Nexus One has been discontinued, please allow me to rephrase my original question:
Most well-known Android devices compete with iPhone. Can you recommend an Android counterpart to the iPod Touch, that is, a device with a recent version of Android OS that I can buy new throughout the United States without it being tied to a mobile phone service contract?
Trogdor!
Vote monkeys into Congress. They are cheaper and more trustworthy.
See this video at about 00:20 for what Steve Jobs thinks about Flash on iPhone 4: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=27zdtKbnv_c