Adobe ceases development on mobile browser Flash, refocuses efforts on HTML5

Published: November 9, 2011

Less Flash, more HTML5. That’s the word from Adobe:

Over the past two years, we’ve delivered Flash Player for mobile browsers and brought the full expressiveness of the web to many mobile devices.

However, HTML5 is now universally supported on major mobile devices, in some cases exclusively. This makes HTML5 the best solution for creating and deploying content in the browser across mobile platforms. We are excited about this, and will continue our work with key players in the HTML community, including Google, Apple, Microsoft and RIM, to drive HTML5 innovation they can use to advance their mobile browsers.

We will no longer continue to develop Flash Player in the browser to work with new mobile device configurations (chipset, browser, OS version, etc.) following the upcoming release of Flash Player 11.1 for Android and BlackBerry PlayBook.

Danny Winokur, Vice President & General Manager, Interactive Development at Adobe

Via ZDNet.

Adobe Releases Flash to HTML 5 Converter

Published: March 9, 2011

Press release of interest to Flash developers:

Adobe has released its Flash to HTML 5 conversion tool, codenamed “Wallaby.”

Wallaby is an application to convert Adobe Flash Professional CS5 files (.FLA) to HTML5 and its primary design goals were to get the best quality and performance on browsers within iOS devices like iPhone and iPad.

Wallaby has a very simple user interface, which accepts as input a FLA file and exports HTML and support files to a user-selected folder. There is also an option to launch the default application assigned for the .html extension, Adobe said.

The focus for this initial version of Wallaby is to do the best job possible of converting typical banner ads to HTML5 and supported Webkit browsers include Chrome and Safari on OSX, Windows, and iOS.

International Business Times

Via Slashdot.

WSJ Warnings About Cookies Carry Cookies

Published: November 15, 2010

“The Wall Street Journal has ‘a pretty useful section tracking privacy issues, privacy protection tools and the threats thereof from online marketers, from the point of view and on the technical level of a relatively savvy consumer,’ says blogger Kevin Fogarty. The downside: He discovered that reading two stories from the WSJ’s privacy section left behind deletion-resistant Flash cookies.”

Slashdot

In the news

Published: October 6, 2009

Researchers Hijack Mebroot Botnet, Study Drive-By Downloads

The researchers managed to intercept Mebroot communications by reverse-engineering the algorithm used to select domains to connect to. Mebroot infects legitimate websites and uses them to redirect users to malicious sites that attempt to install malware on a victim’s machine.

SlashDot

Flash CS5 Will Export iPhone Apps

Adobe announced that the CS5 release of Flash Professional, due in beta later this year, will allow developers to write applications and compile the code to run on Apple devices. Getting these into the app store might be tricky, though.

SlashDot