Jump to content

Adobe Flash: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
No edit summary
South Park uses/used corel draw, and poweranimator/maya to animate.
Line 16: Line 16:
}}
}}


'''Adobe Flash''' (previously called '''Shockwave Flash''' and '''Macromedia Flash''') is a set of [[multimedia]] software created by [[Macromedia]] and currently developed and distributed by [[Adobe Systems]]. Since its introduction in 1996, Flash has become a popular method for adding [[animation]] and [[interactivity]] to web pages; Flash is commonly used to create animation, [[advertisement]]s, and various web page components, to integrate video into web pages, and more recently, to develop [[rich Internet application]]s. More recently, Flash users have greatly expanded its applications, including [[cartoon|animated entertainment programming]] (such as ''[[South Park (TV series)|South Park]]'' and various programs on [[Adult Swim]]) and as a [[software engine]] for [[side-scrolling]] [[two-dimensional]] [[computer games]].
'''Adobe Flash''' (previously called '''Shockwave Flash''' and '''Macromedia Flash''') is a set of [[multimedia]] software created by [[Macromedia]] and currently developed and distributed by [[Adobe Systems]]. Since its introduction in 1996, Flash has become a popular method for adding [[animation]] and [[interactivity]] to web pages; Flash is commonly used to create animation, [[advertisement]]s, and various web page components, to integrate video into web pages, and more recently, to develop [[rich Internet application]]s. More recently, Flash users have greatly expanded its applications, including [[cartoon|animated entertainment programming]] (such as various programs on [[Adult Swim]]) and as a [[software engine]] for [[side-scrolling]] [[two-dimensional]] [[computer games]].


Flash can manipulate [[vector graphics|vector]] and [[raster graphics]] and supports bi-directional [[streaming]] of audio and video. It contains a [[scripting language]] called [[ActionScript]]. Several software products, systems, and [[information appliance|device]]s are able to create or display Flash content, including [[Adobe Flash Player]], which is available for most common [[web browser]]s, some [[mobile phone]]s and other [[electronic device]]s (using [[Flash Lite]]). The Adobe Flash Professional multimedia authoring program is used to create content for the [[Adobe Engagement Platform]], such as web applications, games and movies, and content for mobile phones and other embedded devices.
Flash can manipulate [[vector graphics|vector]] and [[raster graphics]] and supports bi-directional [[streaming]] of audio and video. It contains a [[scripting language]] called [[ActionScript]]. Several software products, systems, and [[information appliance|device]]s are able to create or display Flash content, including [[Adobe Flash Player]], which is available for most common [[web browser]]s, some [[mobile phone]]s and other [[electronic device]]s (using [[Flash Lite]]). The Adobe Flash Professional multimedia authoring program is used to create content for the [[Adobe Engagement Platform]], such as web applications, games and movies, and content for mobile phones and other embedded devices.

Revision as of 20:37, 29 October 2008

Adobe Flash
Developer(s)Adobe Systems (formerly by Macromedia)
Stable release
CS4 (10.0.0.544) / October 15, 2008; 16 years ago (2008-10-15)
Written inC++
Operating systemCross-platform[1]
TypeMultimedia
LicenseProprietary EULA
WebsiteAdobe Flash Professional Homepage

Adobe Flash (previously called Shockwave Flash and Macromedia Flash) is a set of multimedia software created by Macromedia and currently developed and distributed by Adobe Systems. Since its introduction in 1996, Flash has become a popular method for adding animation and interactivity to web pages; Flash is commonly used to create animation, advertisements, and various web page components, to integrate video into web pages, and more recently, to develop rich Internet applications. More recently, Flash users have greatly expanded its applications, including animated entertainment programming (such as various programs on Adult Swim) and as a software engine for side-scrolling two-dimensional computer games.

Flash can manipulate vector and raster graphics and supports bi-directional streaming of audio and video. It contains a scripting language called ActionScript. Several software products, systems, and devices are able to create or display Flash content, including Adobe Flash Player, which is available for most common web browsers, some mobile phones and other electronic devices (using Flash Lite). The Adobe Flash Professional multimedia authoring program is used to create content for the Adobe Engagement Platform, such as web applications, games and movies, and content for mobile phones and other embedded devices.

Files in the SWF format, traditionally called "ShockWave Flash" movies, "Flash movies" or "Flash games", usually have a .swf file extension and may be an object of a web page, strictly "played" in a standalone Flash Player, or incorporated into a Projector, a self-executing Flash movie (with the .exe extension in Microsoft Windows). Flash Video (FLV) files have a .flv file extension and are either used from within .swf files or played through a flv aware player, such as VLC, or QuickTime and Windows Media Player with external codecs added.

History

The program Flash was the brainchild of Jonathan Gay, who developed the idea while in college and extended it while working for Silicon Beach Software and its successors.[2][3]

In January 1993, Jonathan Gay, Charlie Jackson, and Michelle Welsh started a small software company called FutureWave Software and created their first product, SmartSketch. A drawing application, SmartSketch was designed to make creating computer graphics as simple as drawing on paper. At first, it did not gain enough of a foothold in its market. As the Internet began to thrive, however, FutureWave began to realize the potential for a vector-based web animation tool that might easily challenge Macromedia's Shockwave technology. In 1995, FutureWave modified SmartSketch by adding frame-by-frame animation features and re-released it as FutureSplash Animator on Macintosh and PC. By that time, the company had added a second programmer Robert Tatsumi, artist Adam Grofcsik, and PR specialist Ralph Mittman. The product was offered to Adobe and used by Microsoft in its early work with the Internet (MSN). In December 1996, Macromedia acquired the vector-based animation software and later released it as Flash, contracting "Future" and "Splash" of the FutureWave name.

  • FutureSplash Animator (April 10, 1996): initial version of Flash with basic editing tools and a timeline
  • Macromedia Flash 1 (November 1996): a Macromedia re-branded version of the FutureSplash Animator
  • Macromedia Flash 2 (June 1997): Released with Flash Player 2, new features included: the object library
  • Macromedia Flash 3 (May 31, 1998): Released with Flash Player 3, new features included: the movieclip element, JavaScript plug-in integration, transparency and an external stand alone player
  • Macromedia Flash 4 (June 15, 1999): Released with Flash Player 4, new features included: internal variables, an input field, advanced ActionScript, and streaming MP3
  • Macromedia Flash 5 (August 24, 2000): Released with Flash Player 5, new features included: ActionScript 1.0 (based on ECMAScript, making it very similar to JavaScript in syntax), XML support, Smartclips (the precursor to components in Flash), HTML text formatting added for dynamic text
  • Macromedia Flash MX (ver 6) (March 15, 2002): Released with Flash Player 6, new features included: a video codec (Sorenson Spark), Unicode, v1 UI Components, compression, ActionScript vector drawing API
  • Macromedia Flash MX 2004 (ver 7) (September 9, 2003): Released with Flash Player 7, new features included: Actionscript 2.0 (which enabled an object-oriented programming model for Flash)(although it lacked the Script assist function of other versions, meaning Actionscript could only be typed out manually), behaviors, extensibility layer (JSAPI), alias text support, timeline effects
  • Macromedia Flash MX Professional 2004 (ver 7) (September 9, 2003): Released with Flash Player 7, new features included all Flash MX 2004 features plus: Screens (forms for non-linear state-based development and slides for organizing content in a linear slide format like PowerPoint), web services integration, video import wizard, Media Playback components (which encapsulate a complete MP3 and/or FLV player in a component that may be placed in an SWF), Data components (DataSet, XMLConnector, WebServicesConnector, XUpdateResolver, etc) and data binding APIs, the Project Panel, v2 UI components, and Transition class libraries.
  • Macromedia Flash 8:
    • Macromedia Flash Basic 8 (released on September 13, 2005): A less feature-rich version of the Flash authoring tool targeted at new users who only want to do basic drawing, animation and interactivity. Released with Flash Player 8, this version of the product has limited support for video and advanced graphical and animation effects.
    • Macromedia Flash Professional 8 (released on September 13, 2005): Released with the Flash Player 8, Flash Professional 8 added features focused on expressiveness, quality, video, and mobile authoring. New features included Filters and blend modes, easing control for animation, enhanced stroke properties (caps and joins), object-based drawing mode, run-time bitmap caching, FlashType advanced anti-aliasing for text, On2 VP6 advanced video codec, support for alpha transparency in video, a stand-alone encoder and advanced video importer, cue point support in FLV files, an advanced video playback component, and an interactive mobile device emulator.
  • Adobe Flash CS3 Professional (as version 9, released on April 16, 2007): Flash CS3 is the first version of Flash released under the Adobe name. CS3 features full support for ActionScript 3.0, allows things to be converted into ActionScript, adds better integration with other Adobe products such as Adobe Photoshop, and also provides better Vector drawing behavior, becoming more like Adobe Illustrator and Adobe Fireworks.
  • Adobe Flash CS4 Professional - the new version of flash, codenamed, "Diesel" — not to be confused with the latest public prerelease of the Flash 10 Player, code named "Astro" — contains inverse kinematics (bones), basic 3D object manipulation, object-based animation, an enhanced text engine, and further expansion on AS 3.0..

Future developments

Adobe Labs (previously Macromedia Labs), is a source for early looks at emerging products and technologies from Adobe-Macromedia, including downloads of the latest software and plugins. Flash 9, Flex 3, and ActionScript 3.0 are discussed on the labs.adobe.com website.

An important new development in Flash (as of 2007) is its increasing use in providing the presentation layer in handheld devices. Adobe is courting cell phone and PDA vendors, and partnering to deploy Flash Lite as the user interface.

As of November 2007 Adobe Labs is developing the Adobe AIR Project[4] which is a cross-OS runtime that allows developers to reuse their existing web development skills (Flash, Flex, HTML, Ajax) to build and deploy desktop Rich Internet Applications (RIAs).

The next version of Flash will have two additional components designed for large scale implementation. Adobe is adding in the option to require an ad to be played in full before the main video piece is played. This would be most useful for large scale video sites. Also, Adobe has announced plans to add DRM into the new version of Flash. This way Adobe can give companies the option to link an advertisement with content and make sure that both are played and that they not be changed.[5]

Open Screen Project

On May 1, 2008 Adobe announced Open Screen Project,[6] which wants to drive rich Internet experiences and create a consistent application interface across all devices like personal computers, mobile devices or consumer electronics.[7][8] It is perceived that the main goal of the project is to bring Adobe Flash to mobile phones.[9] The project brings advantages to device makers - it abolishes licencing fees for Adobe Flash Player and Adobe Integrated Runtime, removes restrictions on the use of the Shockwave Flash (SWF) and Flash Video (FLV) file formats and publishes Application Programming Interfaces for porting Flash to new devices. It also publishes Flash Cast protocol and Action Message Format (AMF), which let Flash applications receive information from remote databases.[10]

Programming language

Initially focused on animation, early versions of Flash content offered few interactivity features and thus had very limited scripting capability.

More recent versions include ActionScript, an implementation of the ECMAScript standard which therefore has the same syntax as JavaScript, but in a different programming framework with a different associated set of class libraries. ActionScript is used to create almost all of the interactivity (buttons, text entry fields, drop down menus) seen in many Flash applications.

Flash MX 2004 introduced ActionScript 2.0, a scripting programming language more suited to the development of Flash applications. It is often possible to save time by scripting something rather than animating it, which usually also enables a higher level of editability.

Since the arrival of the Flash Player 9 alpha a newer version of ActionScript has been released, ActionScript 3.0. ActionScript 3.0 is an object oriented programming language allowing for more control and code reusability when building complex Flash applications. ActionScript 3.0 has also allowed for formal software engineering methods to be implemented when working with Flash, because of the object oriented programming approach.

Of late, the Flash libraries are being used with the XML capabilities of the browser to render rich content in the browser. This technology is known as Asynchronous Flash and XML, much like AJAX. This technology of Asynchronous Flash and XML has pushed for a more formal approach of this technology called Adobe Flex, which uses the Flash runtime to build Rich Internet Applications.

This technology can be used in players like those on MySpace and YouTube, to provide protection for the content that the Flash calls, like MP3s and videos. The content called is streamed - or passes - through the Flash files, making downloading for storage a difficult task for most people. Programs such as Real Player Downloader and browser extensions like Firebug can trace the XML files.

Content protection

Often, Flash authors will decide that while they desire the advantages that Flash affords them in the areas of animation and interactivity, they do not wish to expose their images and/or code to the world. However, once an .swf file is saved locally, one may then attempt to decompile it into its source code and assets. Some decompilers are capable of nearly full reconstruction of the original source file, down to the actual code that was used during creation, even if result varies on a case-by-case basis.[11][12][13][14]

In opposition to the decompilers, SWF obfuscators have been introduced to provide a modicum of security, some produced by decompiler authors themselves. The higher-quality obfuscators use traps for the decompilers, making some fail, but none have definitively been shown to protect all content.

Competition

Format and plug-in

Compared to other plug-ins such as Java, Acrobat Reader, QuickTime, or Windows Media Player, the Flash Player has a small install size, quick download time, and fast initialization time. However, care must be taken to detect and embed the Flash Player in (X)HTML in a W3C compliant way.[citation needed] A simple and widely used workaround is provided below:

 
<object data="movie.swf" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="500" height="500">
    <param name="movie" value="movie.swf" />
</object>

More Information on how to detect and embed Flash Objects in a W3C compliant way is provided in the xSWF description.

The use of vector graphics combined with program code allows Flash files to be smaller, or streams to use less bandwidth, than the corresponding bitmaps or video clips. For content in a single format (such as just text, video or audio) other alternatives may provide better performance and consume less CPU power than the corresponding Flash movie, for example when using transparency or making large screen updates such as photographic or text fades.

In addition to a vector-rendering engine, the Flash Player includes a virtual machine called the ActionScript Virtual Machine (AVM) for scripting interactivity at run-time, support for video, MP3-based audio, and bitmap graphics. As of Flash Player 8, it offers two video codecs: On2 Technologies VP6 and Sorenson Spark, and run-time support for JPEG, Progressive JPEG, PNG, and GIF. In the next version, Flash is slated to use a just-in-time compiler for the ActionScript engine.

Installed user base

Flash as a format has become very widespread on the desktop market and created a market dominance. Adobe claims that 98 percent of US Web users and 99.3 percent of all Internet desktop users have the Flash Player installed,[15][16] with 45%–56%[17] (depending on region) having the latest version. Numbers vary depending on the detection scheme and research demographics.

The Adobe Flash Player exists for a variety of systems and devices: Windows, Mac OS 9/X, Linux (only 32 bit x86), Solaris, HP-UX, Pocket PC, OS/2, QNX, Symbian, Palm OS, BeOS, and IRIX). A notable exception is support for 64-bit operating systems (see criticism). For compatibility with devices (embedded systems), see Macromedia Flash Lite.

Open standard alternatives

The W3C's SVG and SMIL standards are seen as the closest competitors of Flash.[18] Adobe used to develop and distribute the 'Adobe SVG Viewer' client plug-in for MS Internet Explorer, but has recently announced its discontinuation.[19] It has been noted by industry commentators that this was probably no coincidence at a time when Adobe moved from competing with Macromedia's Flash, to owning the technology itself.[20] Meanwhile, Opera has supported SVG since version 8 and Safari has since version 3,[21] and Firefox's built-in support for SVG continues to grow.[22][23]

UIRA was a free software project that intended to become a complete replacement for Adobe Flash. The project collapsed in mid 2007, though people are now discussing reviving or continuing it.[24]

Third-party implementation

Specifications

In October 1998, Macromedia disclosed the Flash Version 3 Specification to the world on its website. It did this in response to many new and often semi-open formats competing with SWF, such as Xara's Flare and Sharp's Extended Vector Animation formats. Several developers quickly created a C library for producing SWF. In February 1999, the company introduced MorphInk 99, the first third party program to create SWF files. Macromedia also hired Middlesoft to create a freely available developers' kit for the SWF file format versions 3 to 5.

Macromedia made the Flash Files specifications for versions 6 and later available only under a non-disclosure agreement, but it is widely available from various sites.

In April 2006, the Flash SWF file format specification was released with details on the then newest version format (Flash 8). Although still lacking specific information on the incorporated video compression formats (On2, Sorenson Spark, etc.), this new documentation covered all the new features offered in Flash v8 including new ActionScript commands, expressive filter controls, and so on. The file format specification document is offered only to developers who agree to a license agreement that permits them to use the specifications only to develop programs that can export to the Flash file format. The license forbids the use of the specifications to create programs that can be used for playback of Flash files. The Flash 9 specification was made available under similar restrictions.[25]

In May 2008, Adobe launched the Open Screen Project (Adobe link), which made the SWF specification available without restrictions.

Playback

Since Flash files do not depend on an open standard such as SVG, this reduces the incentive for non-commercial software to support the format,[citation needed] although there are several third party tools which use and generate the SWF file format. IrfanView is capable of playing SWF files. There is a large and vibrant open source community. Flash Player cannot ship as part of a pure open source, or completely free operating system, as its distribution is bound to the Macromedia Licensing Program and subject to approval.

There is, as of late 2007, no complete free software replacement which offers all the functionality of the latest version of Adobe Flash Player.

Gnash is an active project that aims to create a free player and browser plugin for the Adobe Flash file format and so provide a free alternative to the Adobe Flash Player under the GNU General Public License. Despite potential patent worries because of the proprietary nature of the files involved,[26] Gnash supports most SWF v7 features and some SWF v8 and v9.[27][28] Gnash runs on Windows, Linux and other operating systems on 32-bit, 64-bit and other architectures.

Swfdec is another open-source flash player available for Linux and FreeBSD. See also SWFOpener.

Authoring

Open Source projects like Ajax Animator, and (the now defunct) UIRA aim to create a flash development environment, complete with a graphical user environment. Alternatively, programs such as swfmill, SWFTools, and MTASC provide tools to create SWF files, but do so by compiling text, actionscript or XML files into Flash animations. It is also possible to create SWF files programmatically using the Ming library, which has interfaces for C, PHP, C++, Perl, Python, and Ruby. haXe is an open source, high-level object-oriented programming language geared towards web-content creation that can compile Flash files.

Many shareware developers produced Flash creation tools and sold them for under US$50 between 2000 and 2002. In 2003 competition and the emergence of free Flash creation tools had driven many third-party Flash-creation tool-makers out of the market, allowing the remaining developers to raise their prices, although many of the products still cost less than US$100 and support ActionScript. As for open source tools, KToon can edit vectors and generate SWF, but its interface is very different from Macromedia's. Another, more recent example of a Flash creation tool is SWiSH Max made by an ex-employee of Macromedia. Toon Boom Technologies also sells traditional animation tool, based on Flash - Toon-Army.

Other tools are focused on creating specific types of Flash content. Anime Studio is a 2D animation software specialized for character animation which creates SWF files. Express Animator is similarly aimed specifically at animators. Question Writer publishes its quizzes to Flash file format.

Users that are not programmers or web designers will also find on-line tools that allow them to build full Flash-based web sites. One of the oldest services available (1998) is FlashToGo. Such companies provide a wide variety of pre-built models (templates) associated to a Content Management System that empowers users to easily build, edit and publish their web sites.

Adobe wrote a software package called Adobe LiveMotion, designed to create interactive animation content and export it to a variety of formats, including SWF. LiveMotion went through two major releases, but failed to gain any notable user base.

In February 2003, Macromedia purchased Presedia, which had developed a Flash authoring tool that automatically converted PowerPoint Files into Flash. Macromedia subsequently released the new product as Breeze, which included many new enhancements. In addition, (as of version 2) Apple's Keynote presentation software also allows users to create interactive presentations and export to SWF.

Ext. Explanation
.swf .swf files are completed, compiled and published files that cannot be edited with Adobe Flash. However, many '.swf decompilers' do exist. Attempting to import .swf files using Flash allows it to retrieve some assets from the .swf, but not all.
.fla .fla files contain source material for the Flash application. Flash authoring software can edit FLA files and compile them into .swf files.
.xfl .xfl files are XML-based project files that are equivalent to the binary .fla format. Flash authoring software will use XFL as an exchange format in Flash CS4. It will import XFL files that are exported from InDesign and AfterEffects.
.as .as files contain ActionScript source code in simple source files. FLA files can also contain Actionscript code directly, but separate external .as files often emerge for structural reasons, or to expose the code to versioning applications. They sometimes use the extension .actionscript
.swd .swd files are temporary debugging files used during Flash development. Once finished developing a Flash project these files are not needed and can be removed.
.asc .asc files contain Server-Side ActionScript, which is used to develop efficient and flexible client-server Macromedia Flash Communication Server MX applications.
.flv .flv files are Flash video files, as created by Adobe Flash, ffmpeg, Sorenson Squeeze, or On2 Flix.
.f4v .f4v files are standard mp4 files that can be played back by Flash Player 9 Update 3 and above.[29]
.f4p .f4p files are mp4 files with digital rights management.[29]
.f4a .f4a files are mp4 files that contain only audio streams.[29]
.f4b .f4b files are mp4 audio book files.[29]
.swc .swc files are used for distributing components; they contain a compiled clip, the component's ActionScript class file, and other files that describe the component.
.jsfl .jsfl files are used to add functionality in the Flash Authoring environment; they contain Javascript code and access the Flash Javascript API.
.swt .swt files are 'templatized' forms of .swf files, used by Macromedia Generator
.flp .flp files are XML files used to reference all the document files contained in a Flash Project. Flash Projects allow the user to group multiple, related files together to assist in Flash project organization, compilation and build.
.spl .spl files are FutureSplash documents.
.aso .aso files are cache files used during Flash development, containing compiled ActionScript byte code. An ASO file is recreated when a change in its corresponding class files is detected. Occasionally the Flash IDE does not recognize that a recompile is necessary, and these cache files must be deleted manually. They are located in %USERPROFILE%\Local Settings\Application Data\Macromedia\Flash8\en\Configuration\Classes\aso on Win32 / Flash8.
.lmv These files are created by the freeware program called liveswif.They are used to save the animation in an editable file , but can also be converted into an .swf file to produce online content for the web. This file has nothing to do with adobe flash Fla file , with the only similarity being that they both hold editable data that can be converted into a swf file.

Video in web pages

Flash can be used to embed video in web pages, a feature available since Flash Player version 6. The technique is to create a flash file (.swf) that acts as a player for the video file. This is the basis for many popular video sites, including YouTube and Google Video. The actual video file is either an FLV or H.264 file, both can easily be played by generic videoplayer software. However, getting browsers to display video is still a platform specific issue due to lack of a common video format, and the subject of a web standard for video is a heated debate (see HTML 5). Using Flash partly solves the problem because of the wide distribution of Flash Player, but as this is proprietary technology for which there is no real alternative, it makes the media notoriously difficult to access for non-users of the Flash Player (particularly if the location of the video is moved out of the HTML source). Another drawback of displaying video through Flash, is that a flash player has to be able to animate on top of the video rendering, which makes hardware accelerated video rendering at least not as straightforward as with a purpose built multimedia player.[1] Indeed, Adobe Flash Player has not always had good performance on all platforms (see criticism), and it is still not uncommon for other multimedia players to play fine where Flash Player drops frames and skips audio.[2]

Flash Video

Flash Video (.flv files) is a container format, meaning that it is not a video format in itself, but can contain other formats. The video in Flash is encoded in H.263, and starting with Flash player 8, it may alternatively be encoded in VP6. The audio is in MP3. The use of VP6 is common in many companies, because of the large adoption rates of Flash Player 8 and Flash Player 9.[17]

On August 20, 2007, Adobe announced on its blog that with Update 3 of the Flash Player, Flash Video will also support the MPEG-4 international standard.[30] Specifically, Flash Player will have support for video compressed in H.264 (MPEG-4 Part 10), audio compressed using AAC (MPEG-4 Part 3), the MP4, M4V, M4A, 3GP and MOV multimedia container formats (MPEG-4 Part 14), 3GPP Timed Text specification (MPEG-4 Part 17) which is a standardized subtitle format and partial parsing support for the 'ilst' atom which is the ID3 equivalent iTunes uses to store metadata. Adobe also announced that they will be gradually moving away from the proprietary FLV format to the standard MP4 format owing to functional limits with the FLV structure when streaming H.264. The final release of the Flash Player supporting MPEG-4 had become available in Fall 2007.[31]

Criticisms

Criticisms of Adobe Flash have included questions of its usability, the problems Flash-laden pages cause for those with disabilities, security issues, limited platform compatibility, performance and compatibility issues on non-Windows platforms, the inability for search engines to index data contained in Flash binary data, and its use as a means to restrict access to content and the implementation of Digital Rights Management.

There are as well privacy concerns in connection with Local Shared Object (LSO), also known as flash cookies.

Most web browsers now have popular extensions that prevent immediate Flash playback, and allow the user to either ignore the Flash on a web page, or to play it by clicking on it. Firefox has both NoScript and Flashblock while a separate extension for Opera called Flashblock is available. One similar extension for Internet Explorer is Foxie, and contains a number of IE features, one of which is also named Flashblock. K-Meleon has built-in flashblock.

See also

References

  1. ^ Adobe Labs - Downloads: Flash Player 9 Update
  2. ^ Waldron, Rick (2006-08-27). "The Flash History". Flashmagazine. Retrieved 2007-06-18. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  3. ^ Gay, Jonathan. "The History of Flash". Adobe. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  4. ^ AIR:Developer FAQ - Adobe Labs
  5. ^ "Adobe unveils Flash video control". BBC News. BBC. 2007-04-16. Retrieved 2007-06-18. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  6. ^ Open Screen Project
  7. ^ Adobe and Industry Leaders Establish Open Screen Project
  8. ^ Adobe Establishes Open Screen Project for Flash, AIR
  9. ^ ARM welcomes Adobe's mobile Flash move
  10. ^ Adobe frees Flash for devices
  11. ^ Comparison of Flash decompilers, by authors of one such decompiler
  12. ^ Third party review of another decompiler
  13. ^ Customer comments on one Flash decompiler
  14. ^ Customer comments on another Flash product
  15. ^ 98%: NPD study
  16. ^ 99.3%: Millward Brown survey, conducted June 2007. "Flash Player Statistics". Adobe Systems. Retrieved 2007-06-18. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |month= (help)
  17. ^ a b "Adobe Flash Player Version Penetration". Adobe Systems. Retrieved 2007-06-18. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |month= (help)
  18. ^ XML.com: Picture Perfect
  19. ^ "Adobe to Discontinue Adobe SVG Viewer". Adobe Systems. Retrieved 2007-06-18. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |month= (help)
  20. ^ "Adobe, 'Rich Internet Applications' and Standards". Webstandards.org. 2006-12-27. Retrieved 2008-03-03. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  21. ^ "Opera". Svg wiki. Svg.org. 2006-12-27. Retrieved 2007-06-18. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  22. ^ Quint, Antoine (2006-07-13). "First Firefox 2.0 Beta Released". Svg.org. Retrieved 2007-06-18.
  23. ^ "SVG improvements in Firefox 3". Mozilla Developer Center - Documentation. mozilla.org. 2008-06-17. Retrieved 2008-07-20.
  24. ^ "UIRA, Unifreeze". unfreeze.net. 2008-04-20. Retrieved 2008-04-21. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  25. ^ "Adobe File Format Specification FAQ". Adobe Systems. Retrieved 2007-11-15.
  26. ^ Hudson, Paul (2008). "Quick as a Gnash". Linux Format (107): 48–49. What happened is this little thing called "software patents". When you use MP3 or FLV, they're proprietary. And although we use FFMPEG and Gstreamer - we actually support all these codecs - we can't distribute Gnash that way. ...of course the OLPC project cannot legally redistribute the codecs. ...Gnash fully supports patent-free codecs such as Ogg Vorbis and Theora and Direc and stuff — Rob Savoye. {{cite journal}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help); Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  27. ^ "Gnash Introduction". Free Software Foundation, Inc. 2008-06-26. Retrieved 2008-07-20.
  28. ^ Rob Savoye, Ann Barcomb (2007). "Gnash Manual version 0.4.0". Free Software Foundation. Retrieved 2007-08-15. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  29. ^ a b c d New File Extensions and MIME Types
  30. ^ "What just happened to video on the web". Adobe.
  31. ^ Adobe Press release on MPEG-4 support in Flash Player 9