BBC Keeps Android Flash Alive In the UK
judgecorp writes "Although Adobe wants to can mobile Flash, the Android Flash app has returned to the Google Play store in the UK after disappearing earlier this month. It has come back because of pressure from large organisations, in particular the BBC, whose popular iPlayer video on demand service uses Flash. The Android app is back, apparently for as long as it takes the BBC to move to HTML5."
.. And that's why we need the BBC and thats why I'm happy to pay the license fee.
It's obvious the BBC crapped their pants over this but that is what they get for using a proprietary solution. They need to focus on not being cheap and rewriting it in something else.
The web is full of flash and adobe should continue to release flash for mobile devices because of it. Just because they don't run on Apple tablets, doesn't mean there isn't a demand from Android tablet users.
If you can build a pure HTML5/Javascript application that can all the things that the BBC iPlayer can currently do, I'm sure the BBC (and quite possibly, the W3C) would be fascinated to hear from you.
This seems to be the better option to keeping the corpse of an abandoned program on life support. The best solution would be to redo the whole site using HTML5 or other open web technologies, but a dedicated app is probably the only solution, besides Flash, where some form of light DRM is needed to "protect" online shows from unauthorized uses.
Only officially, I'm running flash on 4.1 here. Though I don't trust it, as a such I use a non flash capable browser unless I actually need flash.
Such as what? The BBC seemed well aware HTML5 was the way forward 4 years ago.
iPlayer works just fine on my iPhone & iPad and the recent Olympics app streamed up to 24 channels of video live. Seems to me the BBC could do just fine without Flash so why the big problem?
Seems to be a lot of crapping on iPlayer in here.
Surprised at this, because I find iPlayer is a hundred times better than the other services I've used: 4OD, 5Player, ITV and LoveFilm. (I'm not counting YouTube due to the content.) To be fair, a large part of this is probably that iPlayer downloads at about 9Mb/s for me.
Incidentally my opinions on the services are roughly the opposite from what should reasonably be expected. YouTube can be the best, even the advertising is trivial. Admittedly "can be" is a bit of a caveat, not many videos are high quality, I'm not supposed to be able to download them, and it does require letting the videos buffer (probably their major advantage is they do actually let you, however).
iPlayer is second-best, even though they have no means of generating revenue from my viewing. 4OD, 5Player and ITV are utterly shit in every way, even though they're the ones making money from my viewing. LoveFilm (the UK's closest equivalent to Netflix, other than Netflix which doesn't have rights to much here) is the worst of the bunch even though it's a premium service.
It's a pain but you can get around it. You need to use the xscope browser and the flash apk. Works a treat on BBC and Channel 4 OD . Video I made about how to do it on a Nexus here. Should work with other 4.1 devices.
Personally this really sucks. The internet is playing catch-up to a forced move away from a technology. It's not that the device cannot run flash, just made it slightly annoying. Google's decision not to put it into Chrome is annoying at most :(
There was an unofficial iplayer app for android which did not require flash, unfortunately it got banned. From what I heard flash is used because of DRM.
If the BBC needs DRM, then implement or use an appropriate library accessible by the HTML5 website. Alternatively, embed a digital signature, such as the IP address of the requester, within the media unique to each viewing via the BBC website. That said, DRM is a tool of evil corporations including publicly-funded corporations, of which the British Broadcasting Corporation is a member.
why is the internet even continuing to use flash if those greedy good for nothing fucks at Adobe is not going to contunie to develop & support it, they screwed Linux, and now they are screwing Android, but they suck up to google chrome browser and ms-win, flash should have died 10 years ago and/or went fully open source GPLv3 sheesh either let it live free or put it out of our misery and quit yanking people around with it you sorry cocksuckers at Adobe
Politics is Treachery, Religion is Brainwashing
Uhhh.. My android phone can play everything I need it to.. Browser wise or not, with only a few video formats requiring a player from the market (for example for http:// streaming)
Now my iPad... It plays most, needs help with http:// streaming just like the android... But flash? Forget about it. That's a no go which my android can play because you an actually download a flash player (adobes). Some things I use/access require flash and the DRM it supports to access the site/video.
Just wanted to correct you a bit
BBC iPlayer is the only reason I still tolerate the steaming pile of crap that is flash on machines. Flash is unreliable prone to crashes, a security nightmare of exploits and super cookies used to deliver crap adverts I don't want.
Roll on HTML 5 iPlayer. Then I can uninstal flash for good.
Giving users the choice to install flash on their mobile devices is good thing. It should be the people not installing flash player that should dictate that flash dies on the platform, not pressure from tech elitists.
Before it was removed from Google Play, the flash player was one of the top 5 things installed from the marketplace. That tells me that people wanted flash player. Adobe shouldn't have caved. They should have waited until people didn't want to install the flash player anymore. They should have waited until HTML5 was more popular than flash. They should have waited until HTML5 could do everything that flash could do.
But alas, I imagine the tech elitists here will say that choice is not a good thing, which I think is a shame.
The BBC originally based their iPlayer software around windows media player and were heavily criticised at the time for using a solution that blocked non-windows platforms, including Apple, mobile and Linux. This was principally because they wanted to DRM all of the downloaded files in the interests of 'rights holders', i.e. BBC worldwide (their commercial arm). This includes automatically deleting files after a certain time from your computer amongst other things. They were ordered by the BBC commission (basically their governors) to come up with a cross-platform solution pronto and chose Flash as it covered a wide enough range of devices to get them off the hook in a hurry- bear in mind that iPlayer apps are also available for Windows Mobile; Symbian; Nintendo Wii; xBox 360; Sony PS3 etc. which can all use Flash. There have been third party solutions that made content accessible beautifully and they have all been removed due to pressure from the BBC due to 'concerns from rightsholders', i.e. sidestepping DRM. The issue is not with finding a cross-platform codec or software, the problem is the BBC wanting a cross-platform DRM in a diverse technology environment. This is why they are having to build and support all these different apps and are crapping it about Flash going away.
About the only thing Flash can do and HTML5 cannot do is DRM.
If Pandora's box is destined to be opened, *I* want to be the one to open it.
Their job is to make the content available to me. If that means using a closed standard that is easily accessible to all, so be it. Sure I would rather they use open standards but first and foremost they must make it available to me, so this is a good (hopefully temporary) move.
Who said it had to be html5/JS? Just do what the BBC already do on iOS – write a native android app, that downloads the raw h264.
Apparently, you haven't looked at it in depth enough to know that javascript is in fact client side...
Isn't that a little like complaining how steak takes up so much room on your plate? If that is a problem, perhaps you should stick to carrots instead.
The CPU is there to be used. Get a bigger battery or rejoin reality and adjust your expectations.
Or perhaps hit the STOP button so your poor CPU has a break while you go back to /. to look at something less demanding.
Honestly, it's always something.
deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
Fags have style. You have an N90.
Props where due.
deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
...And that's why it's not going to be used in commercial video streaming services (Netflix and similars) until it can.
Then you are not paying attention to the HTML5 development. We're into the third generation of webcam API's, the first being over three years old now. http://www.html5rocks.com/en/tutorials/getusermedia/intro/
We need the BBC because they cling onto a dying standard and force the maker of the closed software do play that standard to keep distributing it, even when they already have open, standards formats that they distribute for other platforms?
I'm wondering how you can see the BBC in anything but a negative light here.
It's really pretty simple. Most sites on the web use interactive flash content. Adobe decided to make the flash player unavailable. BBC convinced them to change their minds (in the UK). There's really no good reason not to have it, in my opinion. It's like an optical drive. I have one, don't use it very often... but when I need it, I'm glad I have one.
If you have such a problem with it, nobody is forcing you to install it; you can make that decision for yourself!
Isn't that what the iOS app does? http://itunes.apple.com/gb/app/bbc-iplayer/id416580485?mt=8