
- #ADOBE PEPPER FLASH PLAYER 2017 MAC OS X#
- #ADOBE PEPPER FLASH PLAYER 2017 INSTALL#
- #ADOBE PEPPER FLASH PLAYER 2017 CODE#
And unlike a prototype which is used as a basis to start standardization discussion (including the option to make radical changes or discard the offer altogether) Google is already using Pepper in production systems so the opportunities for others to participate are rather narrow.


Pepper, like Dart, was also devised and developed at Google in secret and was presented to the public after they had a mostly working system. Apparently Google isn’t as interested in cooperative standards development anymore as they used to. *ring ring* 2011 called and would like to talk to you about Dart.
#ADOBE PEPPER FLASH PLAYER 2017 CODE#
Flash is still supported via NPAPI on important platforms like Windows and OS X which makes up the majority of their users.Īnd what other NPAPI plug-ins of note are currently required regularly apart from Flash and occasionally Java for the odd banking site?Īs for the implementation – why do they have to whole sale ‘copy and paste’ code form webkit? why didn’t they participate in the develop and implement themselves instead of relying on someone else’s work? they are the last non-supporting browser). Mozilla might rethink their position if market pressure demands it (i.e. None of the other browser vendors (including Apple) have signaled any interest in supporting Pepper currently. That’s why Mozilla is still supporting NPAPI. Plugins are going to be with us for at least the next 5 years minimum so it is time one just got used to that fact and moved on. Speaking of Windows, I wonder if Flash on that platform will end with the release of Windows 8? Especially given that Microsoft is targeting ARM as a second platform and Adobe has already discontinued Flash for ARM devices.
#ADOBE PEPPER FLASH PLAYER 2017 INSTALL#
I’m pretty sure the Mac version will be next, not only because of Apple’s stand on Flash (if they are indeed carrying Jobs’ attitude post mortem) but because it is still a smaller install base than Windows. Yet another reason to move away from a platform already plagued with security holes and bad performance. You just won’t get any more feature updates once this is in effect. It makes sense for them to stop updates for the major OS with the least number of installs (don’t forget that a lot of GNU/Linux users don’t want or care for Flash either because it’s closed source or because they prefer WebM/HTML5 to begin with).Īlso, your current installation of Flash won’t magically stop working. Specifically, the part where this is Adobe’s first step in doing away with Flash altogether. I find it funny though, that just as Flash on 64-bit GNU/Linux has become usable, the entire standalone Flash product is being phased out for that OS.Īnd to (hopefully) forestall any conspiracy theories about how Adobe is trying to force GNU/Linux into obsolescence, please pay attention to the entire article. With the arrival of HTML5 and Adobe’s inability to deliver acceptable performance on platforms other than Windows, Flash Player’s fate was sealed.Īll the more reason to move to WebM HTML5 video. The mobile versions had already been discontinued, and step by step, the other versions will be discontinued or de-emphasized as well. This is all part of Adobe’s effort to move away from the Flash Player.

#ADOBE PEPPER FLASH PLAYER 2017 MAC OS X#
“For Flash Player releases after 11.2, the Flash Player browser plugin for Linux will only be available via the ‘Pepper’ API as part of the Google Chrome browser distribution and will no longer be available as a direct download from Adobe,” Adobe’s Mike Chambers writes, “Adobe will continue to provide security updates to non-Pepper distributions of Flash Player 11.2 on Linux for five years from its release.”įlash Player for Windows and Mac OS X is not affected, since non-Pepper versions will still remain available for those two. The non-Pepper Linux version of the Flash Player will be discontinued. Chrome already supports Pepper, but Mozilla has no plans to do so, and as far as I can tell, neither does Opera (if someone can correct me on Opera, please do so). However, in cooperation with Google, Adobe has been working on moving the Flash Player to the Pepper API, a modified version of the NPAPI currently in use. Right now, Adobe provides a stand-alone version of the Flash Player Linux users can install.

On my mark… Get set… Start not caring! Adobe has announced it plans to discontinue the stand-alone Flash Player for Linux, instead focussing all its effort on the version available through the Pepper API – which, besides Chrome, no one else is going to support.
