Adobe Releases Last Linux Version of Flash Player
dartttt writes "Adobe has released Flash Player version 11.2 with many new features. This is the final Flash Player release for Linux platform and now onward there will be only security and bug fix updates. Last month Adobe announced that it is withdrawing Flash Player support for Linux platform. All the future newer Flash releases will be bundled with Google Chrome using its Pepper API and for everything else, 11.2 will be the last release."
I guess this means the end of Hulu Desktop for PCs and embedded devices? What a shame.... one of the few reasons I preferred Hulu to other content providers.
We don't need yout stinky Flash!
I'll return the favor, and dump you now, Adobe.
I expect Flash to be phased out in favor of non-proprietary alternatives in the near future(3-4 Years).
fuck flash
How close are we to an open source alternative that actually works for most flash tasks (in other words, that will let me reasonably use Kongregate and Youtube)?
...where I was when I heard the news. So long...
I guess people needing Flash whilst web browsing will need to use Chrome on machines that lack Flash.
Will Linux users get totally screwed over by this over time, or are there plenty of alternative, non-Adobe plugins to display Flash? How big of a deal is this really? I'm a 100% Linux user, but I can't live without Flash in today's world, unfortunately.
Flash won't be supported in Linux, and isn't supported on IOS. If anything this will be e good boost for HTML5
Adobe kills Flash for Linux. - "This is supposed to be a happy occasion. Let's not bicker and argue about who killed who."
make imaginary.friends COUNT=100 VISIBLE=false
How many versions of flash had Linux releases? Maybe 10, 11, and 12? That hardly even qualifies as a token gesture in my view.
Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
Then it's time for eminent domain over their imaginary property rights. Or at the very least, anonymously reversed engineered alternatives.
I'm not sure this is actually a loss. I think it's probably a bonus that they'll only be doing fixes and not adding more features. The new features are not likely to be used and generally only end up adding more potential exploits.
Now for them to stop releasing it on windows and everything else!
So flash can GO AWAY. Bloated ass useless ad serving slow pos infecting the web and our hardware!
I work for a small company that makes database visualization software. We looked at porting our package to Linux, and in the process we surveyed 75 randomly selected customers to get a picture of how much demand there would be for this product.
It turns out that non - ZERO - of them were using desktop Linux. Some had Linux servers, but there was not one single site we surveyed using Linux on the desktop. So, we dropped the plans for a Linux port like a hot potato.
It's no surprise to me that Adobe doesn't want to support a market that's no more than a rounding error. Ok, sure, there are 4 basement dwelling slashdot nerds using desktop Linux, but you don't matter. You four do not constitute a significant market.
Reading through the comments here I see a trend. Adobe is giving up on Linux for now. It was Steve Jobs personal vendetta that kicked them off of Apple products for now. He is gone. Apple is already going against his wishes in several regards
I agree, this looks like Flash is on its way out. That is likely a good thing. However, it is too soon cheer yet. This is just McDonalds pulling out its branch at a vegan colony.
Desktop Linux is not a large enough market to have any significant bearing on the importance of Flash.
One problem I've always had w/ Adobe Flash - regardless of platform - is that the storage that one can set aside for a downloading video is at the most 10MB, and after that, one's only choice is unlimited. There is no way I'm going to select unlimited, but in this age of TB of HDD and GB of RAM, it's really antiquated of Adobe to have nothing b/w 10MB and entire disk. Least I expect from this is to allow 1GB of HDD to be allowed, so that the downloads are faster.
I happen to use Safari/XP to watch YouTube, and the trouble w/ HTML5 is that if my DSL connection gets interrupted, which it frequently does, the video stops downloading, and only the portion that's been downloaded to that point keeps looping. This is a ridiculous behavior of the browser - for such things, it should either flush what's there and restart, or continue downloading from where it left off.
... a single f*** was given that day.
As a linux user hearing these news, I'm reluctantly joining hands with Apple in saying "Yeah? Well, screw you adobe. And screw you google. We can do better!"
I want useless flashy gadgets in HTML5 so they're even slower and harder to disable!
adobe always charges 50$ for support over the phone for any problem with flash player on windows , but has never supported linux over the phone i used to work for them
Can't other browsers just adopt the Pepper API?
According to statcounter:
February 2012:
"iOS",1.89
"Linux",0.83
February 2011:
"Linux",0.76
"iOS",0.46
If iOS gets to have an effect, I don't see why desktop linux can't. In this case however, it seems like it would mostly hurt Firefox on Linux. But then again this is in 5 years. 5 years ago, there were a lot more sites with Quicktime, Realplayer, and Windows Media streaming. I barely see them at all today.
One of the top causes for my netbook's fan to become noisy.
And nothing of value was lost.
'When the Going gets Weird, the Weird turn Pro.' - Hunter S. Thompson
That's the rise of Chrome. The downfall of Mozilla, good bye Netscape!
If that's true, then why did Adobe create Flash for Linux in the first place?
Don't let the door hit you in the ass on your way out, flash.
Herpes, you're out next!
---
By the way, 100% cotton white on black "Fcuk you Adobe" t-shirts are available in small, medium, large, tallboy and "geek sits on his fat ass in front of the computer all day surfing pr0n and reading /." sizes for a very reasonable price of just $11.99 each (minimum quantitty:1 Gross - fap! fap! fap! [he said titty!] fap! fap! fap!) at ThinkGeek all this week only!
Why not ask your mom to buy you one?
and thanks for all the 100%-CPU-use times?
For video, it would help a lot if someone wrote a solid HTML5 player with the simple YUV overlay playback, just like the stand-alone video players, which are fast. Works on every PC.
The news sound s a bit more dramatic than it is. Adobe is continuing to support Flash on Linux for the next five years. Plus any browser which implements the Pepper API will be able to run the newer versions of Flash (those that come after 11.2). This is really a big non-issue, at least for the next five years. By 2017 hopefully Firefox, Opera, etc will support Pepper.
Is there any reason the Gnash team cant step up and improve Gnash and make it as good as Flash? Or at least good enough that it can be a drop-in replacement for Flash?
Does Gnash support RTMPE streams? Maybe what is needed is a fork of Gnash (or a bolt-on for Gnash) hosted in a country without anti-circumvention laws that supports RTMPE and other flash DRM. (similar to how many projects have had and continue to have sites outside the US for the development and distribution of encryption software to avoid strong US export controls)
They think saving a few bucks from making a Linux version is a good idea? Developers use Linux. You piss off those people, and they make damn sure Flash gets replaced even sooner with HTML5 than expected.
Adobe will continue to make new versions of the Flash Player that use the new PEPPAPI (Pepper API). They will no longer make any new versions of the plugin that support the older NSAPI model. PEPPAPI was created by Mozilla and Google, but since PEPPAPI was introduced, Mozilla decided to not support it ("it is too hard").
I was about to say to stop the bad summaries, but this is /. , and this is what we have come to expect.
Perhaps they will GPL it and let the community maintain it?
You can replace flash for a couple of big sites right now with FlashVideoReplacer on mozillla. I have been using it for about a week or two now and it's not too bad. https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/flashvideoreplacer/
If that's true, then why did Adobe create Flash for Linux in the first place?
Sometimes people make thing for Linux without need for large profit. It's good PR and helps the community; However, for most people, when you do something for free and find the recipients to be largely rude and ungrateful, you stop doing it.
Adobe, your web programs (Flash and PDF Reader) have been a pox on computer users everywhere even if they are not aware of the risks. I hope you will entirely give up on the Internet and concentrate on software where they will do no harm. Better yet, just leave the business entirely.
Adobe needs to get hacked, or let someone infiltrate them and steal all their flash-work. Then we can improve upon it ourselves. Don't release something and make people depend upon it, just to dump it in the river. You're begging for some trouble.
Hmm, while we are at the subject, I have a quick Windows Flash question. I have recently experienced an issue where with Intel chips (GMA950, X3100) on various machines, the full-screen video looks blocky (it's not anti-aliased but scaled using the nearest-neighbor algorithm). Do you know how to fix this? Is the problem in the display driver or the Flash plugin? The "Enable hardware acceleration" is ticked in Flash and tinkering with the system tray Intel GPU settings tool does not help either. The sites I experience this with are YouTube and areena.yle.fi (but probably applies to all video).
According to Adobe:
http://blogs.adobe.com/conversations/2011/11/flash-focus.html
This move was not unexpected. We've been hearing things to this extent for a bit now.
This leaves a few questions. First of which is:
Are the open source alternatives ready for prime time? Correct me if I'm wrong but here is the list of the major alternatives:
I've included Swfdec, but as I understand it, this is for flash apps that you have created and know work with swfdec. It is not for random content from unknown sources. A use case for this is a kiosk where you control the content and the display.
Now, are the other two, Gnash and Lightspark, ready for primetime, i.e. can they replace Flash Player any time soon?
Personally, the last time I used either one was a few months ago when I toyed with the idea of trying to make my workstation fully open source. I found that many youtube videos made the plugin crash for both Gnash and Lightspark.
Since there is content right now that is made for Adobe's Flash Player, I feel that the way forward should be to stop creating new content for Flash. Let it die, and only create new content in HTML5. As for the existing content, the alternatives like the ones listed above need to be able to play need to be able to play it with no problems. I would even have no problem if there was new content developed with the alternative in mind rather than close source Flash Player.
all browsers except chrome on the Linux platform wont make me switch browsers, i will just do without, and say fuck you adobe and fuck you too google, i dont need either one of them
Politics is Treachery, Religion is Brainwashing
A combination of html5 and bittorrent will replace you crap quite satisfactorily.
Is there something stopping Firefox from implementing the PPAPI? Perhaps this could become a new standard API for browsers across the board?
I heard laughter, a loud "Hah Hah!", and then the line went dead.
Josh Aas (Mozilla Corporation) 2012-03-23 11:26:00 PDT
removed Whiteboard: Revisit decision in 2015
Xhamster.com and youjizz.com both use flash, anyone know of flash free ways to fap to streaming video?
Great news for Linux users. A pretty nasty piece of malware has now been eradicated.
"We live in a global world" - Harvey Pitt, former Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman
Sorry, Apple (crosses himself to ward of the evil one) has shown that Flash is overrated. Adobe itself already acknowledged defeat on that front and stopped development for mobile devices. Those lucky Android devices that got flash support have it crash or slow the device to a crawl. The mobile device on which regular web pages make sense, tablets, seem to give Android no advantage at all in sales.
Adobe is really shooting itself in the foot here again. Web development is my trade and I have noticed a very high adaptation of Linux in this industry. Not just the obvious servers but desktops as well. A few years ago, if you wanted one, it was a negotiation. Now, I have even seen it as a requirement. Flash is universally despised in the LAMP development area which also seems (but I admit to being prejudiced) to be the place where new things are attempted rather then the 1 millionth intra-net site.
Will this make a huge difference? Not at first but unless a customer absolutely demands flash, I code a requirement in HTML5 and show something that is smoother and better supported and Hey, works on the iPad. So much easier for the initial demo to just hand a tablet to show how nice the site works... especially if you noticed the customer has an iPhone or iPad themselves. And a lot do. I am not convinced the world is moving to the tablet for browsing but the customer does so demoing the product on the product of the future just seems smart to me.
When the iPad (or was it the iPhone itself) launched, a lot of people like the parent claimed that the lack of flash would kill it... I would like a product that gets killed like that. I would dry my tears with million dollar bills.
Adobe got lazy with flash, it is slow, buggy, a resource hog and crashes every two seconds all so that webpages can't be indexed and look like the creation of a 12 year old Japanese girl. It lost support of the people who are capable enough of working around it and now, thank to the evil one, customers are demanding that their site works without it to.
HTML5 is the new thing and with mobile devices becoming bigger and bigger (who would you rather please with your website, an iPad user or a user running IE6, I think I know the bigger sucker... eh, the customer with more disposable income) the finicky, slow websites must go. Have you tried YOUR websites menu with a touchscreen yet?
MMO Quests are like orgasms:
You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.
Oh so that's why they dropped it. Big Bad Linux was mean to poor little Adobe, so they took their ball home after having their fee-fees hurt.
http://blogs.adobe.com/conversations/2011/11/flash-focus.html
"However, HTML5 is now universally supported on major mobile devices, in some cases exclusively."
Desktop Linux is not a large enough market to have any significant bearing on the importance of Flash.
Ah but you see, next year it will be the year of the Linux Desktop and it will all change!
Really, is there any other kind of update for flash?
Flash is a complete POS, and the #1 attack vector for browsers (pdf & java close behind). On the other hand, too many websites rely on it, so banning it entirely from my company would likely lead to a revolt.
If Adobe cared, they could develop decent software with decent security. But they don't.
Nothing of value was lost.
It may be a consolidation thing. The Linux desktop has flopped in the general consumer market.... but Android has been amazingly successful.
Android OS is based on a Linux kernel.
Maybe it's time for an Linux-Based, Android-based desktop OS that can run the Android version of flash on a PC , using an ARMv7 emulator, or an additional coprocessor on the Desktop hardware that supports the ARM instruction set?
Time for Linux distributors to leverage the success of the Android mobile OS to make a successful desktop and cloud platform.
Adobe doesn't need Desktop Linux.
And the Desktop Linux bunch don't think they need flash:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=638477
If I were Adobe I'd only care about the Windows, Apple and Android platforms. That's it. Just based on the responses from the developers in that bug report (with the exception of Torvalds), you know that they're not interested in end user experience. And so they will remain irrelevant.
the result is better than what can be accomplished with HTML5+JS. Period. I'll switch to HTML once (and if) it ever actually becomes a worthy competitor.
Flash development is like desktop development.I wouldn't expect a game developer who is used to the conveniences of writing for the desktop to abandon them for JS + HTML + CSS. So don't be surprised when you see big companies decide to continue using Flash.
... I wasn't using that piece of crap called Flash, anyway. I'm glad it is finally going away and I will have an even better excuse to tell webmasters to start using Web Standards.
now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
It would be easy for Google to say 'no' to this. If you're on Linux, you are soon locked into a single browser to view 1/4 of the web. Welcome to the proprietary world, supported by Google.
If that's true, then why did Adobe create Flash for Linux in the first place?
Sometimes people make thing for Linux without need for large profit. It's good PR and helps the community; However, for most people, when you do something for free and find the recipients to be largely rude and ungrateful, you stop doing it.
Don't forget filthy and unhygienic!
You terminated yourself.
I never thought Apple would. I was right.
I never thought YOU would. Fucking morons.
Ah ha! Proof! ... that my statcounter blocker actually WORKS! BTW, it only works on Linux though I think someone is trying to port it to BSD.
now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
And as a parting shot at Linux users, Adobe introduces a major regression (hardware accelerated video tints everything blue, e.g. YouTube), claims it can't be reproduced, and closes all bug reports about it, leaving users to implement a nasty hack individually.
"Those who consume the bulk of goods are those who make them. We must never forget this secret of our prosperity."
Reverse engineer a work-alike with original code, call it Splash!
Whattya say?
I killed da wabbit -Elmer Fudd
This thread is a good example of the bubble in which Slashdot readers now seem to reside. Outside of the bubble millions of people use Flash every day to watch videos on thousands of web sites. Inside the bubble we have dozens of postings about how awful Flash is and why you don't use it.
Well, guess what? That's why the fringes of the open-source movement have become progressively less relevant over the years. I've been a Linux user since 1994 and will continue to use it in the future. That said, it's ridiculous to assume that people running Linux won't want to visit sites like Hulu. I turned off Flash, installed flashvideoreplacer, and had no success at sites like Hulu or Crunchyroll. I could get flashvideoreplacer to launch smplayer when I visited YouTube, but it failed miserably with Hulu.
Call me when the entire Internet has converted to HTML5. I'll check back then.
When you give somebody a broken, buggy mess after promising them the moon, they tend to get rude and ungrateful.
They didn't. MACROMEDIA did. And then Adobe swallowed Macromedia and turned flash into bloatware.
this signature has been removed due to a DMCA takedown notice
"I'm not bad, I'm just drawn that way" that's the problem with flash, visit www.transformice.com to find out the hard way
this post contain no useful information, no need to mod it down
Adobe Releases Last NPAPI Linux Version of Flash Player.
:)
It'll be usable on non-Chrome browsers once they get their heads out of the sand and implement Pepper.
Keep up or get left behind.
Good riddance.
[With HTML5 clients,] Adobe doesn't even have to pay the license fees for distributing the H.264 implementation
How so? I was under the impression that the whole reason for a "video server" was to support frame-accurate seeking and live streaming, both of which require encoding capability. I was also under the impression that HTML5 for Safari on iOS wouldn't take VP8.
Everything you mentioned *could* have been made in a Java applet
Since when can an applet running in the Java virtual machine (ask the user for permission to) turn on the computer's microphone and camera?
I suggest HTML5
In HTML5, how do I target Internet Explorer for Windows XP, which still has two years of extended support left? It may surprise geeks, but I'm under the impression that some administrators are still a lot more willing to authorize the installation of Adobe Flash Player than of Google Chrome Frame.
In existing HTML5 implementations, how do I make a barcode scanner application or a voice-controlled application? There's still no way to (ask the user's permission to) read the camera and microphone connected to the user's PC. I've read rumors of a "device API" but I haven't seen any proof of concept.
In HTML5, how do I make 2D vector animation? Say I wanted to make an animated series that was the next Homestar Runner, and I don't want the download size to be XBOX HUEG because the devices least likely to have Flash Player are the most likely to have a single-digit monthly download cap. How should I make and deliver it? I've done tests, and an SWF can bloat by a factor of ten when exported as a video.
Patents will stop only Free implementations. MPEG-LA has shown itself willing to offer a license to any non-free implementer under fair, reasonable, and nondiscriminatory terms. Otherwise, AVC wouldn't have taken off to nearly the extent that it did.
But will the "HTML5 authoring tools" allow converting existing SWF animations, which have gone unmaintained by their authors (hence no .FLA), to work in an HTML5 environment?
More people should switch to Vimeo
Except the last time I checked, Vimeo had an explicit prohibition on "commercial use" and on videos related to video games.
According to Wikimedia Traffic Analysis - Operating Systems:
February 2010 2011 2012
Linux 1.65% 2.47% 4.90%
Mac 7.08% 7.63% 8.48%
iPhone 1.37% 2.91% 5.34%
Windows 86.95% 81.96% 73.80%
Windows (all versions) has declined 13% over two years. The main reason is that users are accessing Internet through smart devices. Smartphones, pads and Internet devices in peoples homes are growing explosively, as the chart from Asymco indicates. It also implies that Windows will be reduced to ~50% market share in 3-4 years:
http://www.asymco.com/2012/01/17/the-rise-and-fall-of-personal-computing/
Nothing seems to stop this groundbreaking change where people prefer smart devices over PC's. Microsoft Windows are not able to keep up. Unfortunately for Adobe, they invested to little in smart Internet devices based on other OS'es than Windows 3-4 years ago. They treated Apple like a step child. They handled Linux badly. Similar to music CD's being disrupted and replaced by music sales online for the past 7-8 years, Flash is being disrupted by smart devices and HTML5 as we speak. It's not a question on if, but when Flash is used only by a small group of people -- as happened with locomotives with steam engines and CRT TV's.
I think our best alternative is to just do something else. Make our own TV shows
Some people tried that and got a cease-and-desist from the incumbent networks.
the linux desktop did not flop it had a good run with netbooks when the fad started and microsoft said they would not support them. they sold like crazy because they where cheap and then microsoft saw money and forced windows back on them. when windows 8 arm comes out don't be surprised if they don't strong-arm there way into tablets and a cuple years from now someone would call android tablets a failed product.
He did not mention anything that required a microphone or camera.
A barcode scanner application does, as does a voice-controlled application.
I do remember running Java applets from banks
I'll take a guess that any applet from a bank has been digitally signed with a commercial code signing certificate and is therefore allowed to use JNI as opposed to 100% Pure Java. Like ActiveX, JNI allows running native code, but like ActiveX, it requires a commercial code signing certificate that has not expired. This arrangement is fine for banks but not necessarily for student or hobbyist developers. I'm under the impression that a lot of hobbyists don't have enough income from their work to obtain and renew a separate commercial code signing certificate for each of several platforms.
Just to clarify the point you are making: Wikipedia lumps Android traffic under "Linux".
http://stats.wikimedia.org/wikimedia/squids/SquidReportOperatingSystems.htm
iPhone 7,909 M 5.34%
Linux Android 4,979 M 3.36%
Linux Other 1,131 M 0.76%
Linux Ubuntu 970 M 0.66%
(rest negligible)
Conclusion: desktop linux is way smaller than mobile.
...that linux users neither want nor need their proprietary flash player.
flash has been the web's unwanted runt bastard since its inception. anyone who uses flash over html5 nowadays should be shot, and then fired, and then shot again just to be sure.
According to statcounter:
February 2012:
"iOS",1.89
"Linux",0.83
February 2011:
"Linux",0.76
"iOS",0.46
If iOS gets to have an effect, I don't see why desktop linux can't. In this case however, it seems like it would mostly hurt Firefox on Linux. But then again this is in 5 years. 5 years ago, there were a lot more sites with Quicktime, Realplayer, and Windows Media streaming. I barely see them at all today.
Because iOS and Android devices will be a larger part of the market in the future, and desktop linux will not.
Which good non-proprietary codecs with a wide acceptance are out there? Don't say HTML5, because that's only a container, not a codec. The codecs currently supported in HTML5 are all proprietary as far as I know.
I was promised a flying car. Where is my flying car?
It's not just about content creators. I wonder where Adobe will think the money will come from once they kill flash. PDF is a dead format with all the proprietary e-books and alternative software for them. PostScript is more or less the same with every printer supporting PCL these days better than PostScript. The content editing suites is the only thing left I can think of. I really have my doubts there will be more money to be made with totally focusing on that?
I was promised a flying car. Where is my flying car?
Well W3c defines speech input here: http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-xg-htmlspeech/2011Feb/att-0020/api-draft.html and Webkit provides support. Voice controlled video players are already out there using HTML5. I have seen a facial recognition demo in HTML5 that uses a local computer webcam. I would much rather support Chrome or Firefox as a browser then Flash as a plugin. I wouldnt bother targeting IE anything, all the browsers microsoft makes are shit. Getting the boneheads who would use Microsoft at an enterprise level convinced of this is going to be hard, I agree. But if they are on XP and IE they dont give a rats ass about security anyway.
The site you linked to is a joke. It has zero functionality and is nothing more then a graphics designer wank. Sure, some people can make their living with it and a good living too. Perhaps I should have been clearer, when I talk about web development, I am talking applications. Things closer to google maps then a flash movie.
I simply won't ever get an assignment asking me for full screen animation, that is not what I do. And you are a flash developer. Doesn't it make sense that you would never be asked to make a website that works on the iPad since that is not within your skill set?
We work in the same industry but in completely different sections of it. I would use the link you provided NOT as a point for or against HTML5 vs flash but as a showcase of a REALLY bad design that violates every usability guideline out there.
For me, the removal of flash means the removal of flash forms and flash menu's. If you think those can't be done with HTML5 just as well, you need to talk to better developers. I am not giving advice on how to make games or such stuff as you linked because that is not my business.
MMO Quests are like orgasms:
You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.
Giving Wikimedia statistics, Linux muddles around 1,5% in 2010-2012. Linux minus Android: Feb 2010 -- 1,54%, Feb 2011 -- 1,48%, Feb 2012 -- 1,54%.
Apple has mind share, Linux not. That's a big difference. It's also why every new minor update release of the iPhone or iPad is frontpage news in papers all over the world, and Linux is basically never even mentioned.
Actually, Since Adobe is dropping flash support for Linux, the FOSS community will probably find quite a few developers that will introduce newer and better players. When one door closes, another opens.
Besides, would flash not continue to work with ndiswrapper? If not so, what is the concern?
I for one would like to see a fully free unencumbered flash replacement where, being universal, anyone from any operating system could make their own interactive displays.
The question to ask, is Adobe under pressure from the big 3 to stop Linux support?
.
Leslie Satenstein Montreal Quebec Canada
Adobe never had any interest in supporting GNU/Linux for the long run since they are mostly a Windows shop. With the rapid proliferation of HTML5/WebM there really is no need to worry about Adobe's woefully insecure and buggy flash technology. Flash is one of the biggest causes of heavy web browser resource usage and instability and I for one can't wait to see the end of this dreadful piece of software. It's been a boil on the surface of the web. As for Adobe's other products - they are all bloated, overpriced and user-hostile. Many alternatives exist which cost considerably less. One can do fine without Adobe.
Adobe was never really Linux-friendly to begin with, and now they can stop pretending to be.
i have transferred my hatred of adobe to google chrome
The CPU is mostly idle playing back video - the GPU handles all the h.264 decodes and doing that consumes very little power.
Nor do you want the client to have to spend a bunch of GPU time decoding ten seconds of preroll if it is seeking to a point that's one second before a keyframe.
Interesting thought about live streaming being a PLS file, but is this sort of PLS playback guaranteed to be gapless?
I look forward to all the articles that will be posted on Slashdot on how desktop Linux is now officially dead and will be completely replaced by other operating systems that do support Flash. Worked for Android, right ?
If all else fails, immortality can always be assured by spectacular error.
Now how can we convince Adobe to stop making software entirely?
I hate Adobe. While I do give them credit for developing Flash and Adobe Reader all of these years, finally ditching Linux is a shame. Dealing with their products on Windows is a constant battle in an enterprise environment not only updating their software every other week due to new security holes, but licensing is a joke and their installers are a nightmare to get the update popups to go away, etc. To top it off, their software is expensive and extremely bloated.