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The Rise and Fall of Adobe Flash

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jmyrlefuller:
https://getpocket.com/explore/item/the-rise-and-fall-of-adobe-flash

by Richard Moss
July 7, 2020

 Few technologies have yielded such divisive and widespread passion as Flash. Many gush over its versatility and ease of use as a creative platform or its critical role in the rise of web video. Others abhor Flash-based advertising and Web design, or they despise the resource-intensiveness of the Flash Player plugin in its later years.

Whichever side of the love-hate divide you land on, there’s no denying the fact that Flash changed how we consume, create, and interact with content on the Web. For better and worse, it helped shape the Internet of today.

But now, after a roughly 25-year run, Flash is dead. In December 2020, Adobe officially ended support and distribution of Flash Player, the browser plugin we all associate most strongly with the technology. And already, months ahead of the end-of-life switch, Flash was disabled in most Web browsers (often flagged as a security risk should you choose to override the default settings). Even Google Chrome, long the browser of choice for Flash content, removed Flash Player.

Technically speaking, the technology will live on. The Flash authoring tool is part of Adobe Animate, while the rendering engine is included in Adobe AIR—which will be handed over to enterprise electronics company Harman International for ongoing maintenance, as it’s still widely used in the enterprise arena. But it’s safe to say that, after a decade in decline, Flash as we know it is gone.

In recognition of its service to content creators and consumers of all stripes, of its contribution to the proliferation of online video and multimedia, and of that divisiveness that’s followed the platform around, the time has come to revisit the rise and fall of Flash—with a little help from its principal creator, Jonathan Gay; a raft of Web resources; and interviews with others who had a hand in its ultimate success.

(continued at link)

DefiantMassRINO:
Flash became a gaping browser security hole.  RIP

roamer_1:
Man! I haven't even thought of Flash for a decade, not to mention loading flashplayer into any machines.

catfish1957:

--- Quote from: roamer_1 on September 11, 2023, 10:54:55 pm ---Man! I haven't even thought of Flash for a decade, not to mention loading flashplayer into any machines.

--- End quote ---

Sure I kept a copy next to my 5 1/4' Lotus 1-2-3 Floppies.

corbe:
   Interesting pull @jmyrlefuller   

   When I go to MSN Weather and pull up their maps, I know it's some form of FLASH cause my Xeon CPU Fan turns on.

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