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Adobe’s Flash multimedia platform has, of course, delivered animations, interactivity and rich graphics to Web browsers for the past 15 years or so, via a plug-in now installed on as many as 98% ...
Google Chrome has replaced Adobe Flash with HTML5 in its latest version, according to an Engadget report by Billy Steele. “Google proposed making HTML5 the default over Flash in its Chrome ...
Adobe Systems (NASDAQ:ADBE) seems to be taking the next step to replace Flash, by releasing a free preview of its new open-standards animation designer. Known as Adobe Edge, the tool uses HTML5 ...
Adobe's position is that, at least for now, the two technologies can coexist: Flash remains stronger at producing games, handling streaming media, and producing data-driven visualizations; HTML5 ...
Adobe’s Wallaby project, meanwhile, is about converting artwork contained in Flash Professional files to HTML. One developer praises Adobe’s embrace of HTML5.
Finally, after years of external pressure, Adobe announced a timeline for the decommissioning of its Flash platform. The company has been working with the web browser teams at Google, Microsoft ...
“Today, Adobe Flash provides the best platform for YouTube’s video distribution requirements.” In short, HTML5 still lacks many of the features needed for video presentation.
Adobe sees its primary applications as being to help designers of Flash ads create HTML5 versions for use on Apple’s iOS devices.
Google's announcement that it will start to blacklist Flash in its Chrome browser is just the latest step in the long decline of the multimedia software.
A developer using Sencha Touch reports that translating large existing websites built with Adobe Flash to HTML5 mobile sites accessible to iOS users can now be performed by 1 or 2 people in just ...
Adobe is ending development of its Flash Player on mobile devices to focus on HTML5 - a year and a half after Apple's Steve Jobs penned an open letter urging it to switch its mobile efforts to HTML5.
HTML5, a still-developing revision to the Web page standard, is a key part of the threat to Flash, but Adobe is indicating it's willing to embrace the alternative.