Once the dominant player in the mobile and web content delivery space, Adobe’s Flash has seen quite a backlash against it in recent years. In truth, tt was always kind of a pain, at least for me, made websites look pretty ugly and often hogged system resources on my Macs to the point of crashing the entire system.
But the beginning of the end was probably Apple and then CEO Steve Jobs’ staunch refusal to include Flash on any of its iOS devices, including the iPhone and iPad. At the time some commented that Apple was making a big mistake in not including Flash on its devices. Now it looks like those people may have to reconsider their opinions.
According to reports, Adobe says it will “no longer adapt” the once-dominant program for handling multimedia and animation on computers and mobile devices. In an email to developers Adobe added that it will “continue to support the current Android and PlayBook configurations with critical bug fixes and security updates.”
Previously, former Apple CEO Steve Jobs led the opposition to the program, which he said in 2010 was “unreliable, vulnerable to hacking, a battery hog, and gave Adobe too much power over the services that could be offered on mobile devices.” Besides, power over mobile devices was his job, not Adobe’s. I kid, I kid. Much love to Steve.
At the time, Apple, Google, and Microsoft said they preferred an open system: the pretty cool and easy to use HTML5. However, in spite of this, Flash survived and was incorporated on Google Android and BlackBerry smartphones — until now. Although, having used a few Android phones with Flash enabled, it was still pretty much a POS.
However, now it looks like even Adobe has seen the proverbial writing on the wall and has decided to end mobile Flash and concentrate on HTML 5. Smart move. A bit late, but smart nonetheless. Now let’s hope they end up killing Flash altogether and we never, ever have to see it again.
Adobe abandons Flash Player for mobile phones – Salt Lake Tribune
November 10, 2011 at 5:36 am[…] Adobe abandons Flash Player for mobile phonesSalt Lake TribuneThe news is not surprising for Web and mobile application developers because the Apple iPhone and iPad, the world's biggest-selling portable devices, have never supported Flash. And that Adobe will stop development for Flash should not affect what …Adobe Flushes Flash From The Mobile WebAdobe Pulls The Plug on Flash Mobile […]
Adobe abandons Flash Player for mobile phones – Salt Lake Tribune
November 9, 2011 at 4:34 pm[…] Adobe abandons Flash Player for mobile phonesSalt Lake TribuneThe news is not surprising for local Web and mobile application developers because the Apple iPhone and iPad, the world's biggest-selling portable devices, have never supported Flash. And the fact Adobe will stop development for Flash should not affect …Adobe Flushes Flash From The Mobile WebAdobe Pulls The Plug on Flash Mobile […]