Featured Twitter Products

Coming Soon: Bring Your LinkedIn Network to TweetDeckComing Soon: Bring Your LinkedIn Network to TweetDeck With the addition of Facebook and MySpace, TweetDeck has gradually gone from being just a great Twitter client to now being a true browser for the real-time web. With the addition of each...

Read more

Discover The Dynamic New TweetDeck DirectoryDiscover The Dynamic New TweetDeck Directory Today we are delighted to announce a very exciting new version of the TweetDeck Directory. Back in September we introduced the TweetDeck Directory to make it easier to find and follow your...

Read more

Great Scott! TweetDeck engages the Twitter Flux CapacitorGreat Scott! TweetDeck engages the Twitter Flux Capacitor Marty: Wait a minute. Wait a minute Doc, uh, are you telling me you built a time machine... out of a DeLorean? Doc Brown: The way I see it, if you're going to build a time machine into a...

Read more

TweetDeck for iPadTweetDeck for iPad Apart from, how do I get one of these, my first thought as I watched the iPad being revealed was that TweetDeck was MADE for this device (or should that be this device was made for TweetDeck...unlikely).  TweetDeck's...

Read more

Flash – Chrome for Android Beta - Story From: Adobe AIR and Adobe Flash Player Team Blog

Posted by TweetExpert | Posted in Adobe Air | Posted on 06-02-2012

Tags: , , ,

0

Today Google introduced Chrome for Android Beta. As we announced last November, Adobe is no longer developing Flash Player for mobile browsers, and thus Chrome for Android Beta does not support Flash content. Flash Player continues to be supported within the current Android browser.

Adobe is committed to innovating with Flash. We’ll continue enabling content developers to produce rich and immersive applications on mobile devices and PCs via Adobe AIR, and through PC browsers via Flash Player. Flash is uniquely positioned for creating and publishing advanced gaming and premium video content, and that is where we’re focusing our future investment. We recently released hardware accelerated support for 2D and 3D graphics for Flash Player on the desktop and will soon bring these same capabilities to mobile apps via AIR. Together with recent advancements in hardware accelerated video decoding, compositing and content protection, these capabilities provide the richest platform for game developers and video publishers to reach over a billion users across PCs and major mobile app stores, including the iTunes App Store and Android Market.

At the same time, we’re actively working to move HTML5 forward via our ongoing collaboration with Google and other members of the Web community. Adobe’s proposal for CSS Regions, which allows sophisticated, magazine-like page layouts on the web, is now shipping in the Chrome browser. We’re collaborating with Google and other members of the Web community on a proposal for CSS Shaders to enable cinematic, visual effects via HTML5 and we’re exploring the potential of its Shadow DOM proposal, which would enable the integration of rich user interface components in web pages.

We continue to work on ways to make the Web more expressive, drawing on our experience with Flash. Adobe has always been about enabling content developers to produce the richest content possible and we remain committed to that end across platforms and technologies.

Bill Howard, Flash Platform, Product Management