Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. Adobe will no longer update its Flash plugin for mobile browsers, though it will continue to issue security ...
Flash's days on the web are numbered. That's been evident for the past couple of years as the anti-Flash movement has gained steam. Little by little, software developers and online services have been ...
As of yesterday, Adobe’s Flash player browser plugin for Android is no longer available to new users in the Google Play Store. Adobe is limiting access to the plugin as the company works to deprecate ...
Starting in Firefox 69, Mozilla will be disabling support for the Adobe Flash plugin by default. This is being done as part of the roadmap set forth by Mozilla on how they will be ultimately disable ...
Mozilla will stop supporting most browser plugins in Firefox by the end of 2016 . But for Linux users, that won’t make a major difference for one of the biggest ...
Last week, Adobe abandoned development of the mobile version of the company's Flash browser plugin. Now, a group calling itself "Occupy Flash" has launched a campaign to get Adobe to abandon Flash ...
To help protect users from outdated, compromised third-party plugins like Adobe Flash, Microsoft Silverlight and Java, Firefox will stop automatically loading third-party plugins. The only exception ...
Shortly after Apple introduced its revamped lineup of MacBook Airs, it was discovered that the svelte devices do not ship with Adobe's Flash plugin. Naturally, everyone's first reaction was to assume ...
Adobe will no longer update its Flash plugin for mobile browsers, though it will continue to issue security updates and bug fixes. The company issued a statement to developers conceding that “HTML5 is ...
Whilst this "How To" is aimed at the Adobe Flash plugin, there is no reason why it cannot be extended to any application. As I have previously mentioned, using the Package Manager is the easiest way ...