Adobe Software has let slip that it plans to abandon its Flash Player for mobile web browsers. Instead, the company will refocus its mobile efforts on web standards like HTML5, along with tools like ...
In what appears to be a dramatic turnaround, Adobe seems to have scrapped a high-profile effort to bring Flash Player browser plug-in to mobile devices. Stephen Shankland Former Principal Writer ...
After more than four years of tit-for-tat sniping and surprising vehemence, Adobe has finally thrown in the towel: Adobe is abandoning Flash on mobile devices, choosing instead to focus on HTML5 tools ...
Back in May, I wrote an article called "One year after iPad, is Adobe Flash Still Relevant?" The post attracted a great deal of comments from both sides of the argument and even a very reasoned Op-Ed ...
Research in Motion will continue to use Adobe Flash Player, at least for the BlackBerry Playbook tablet, even after Adobe announced it will discontinue Flash for the mobile Web. RIM also said in a ...
UPDATE 8:39 A.M. PST: Adobe confirmed it will cease Flash development on mobile devices. In an abrupt about-face in its mobile software strategy, Adobe will soon cease developing its Flash Player plug ...
ZDNet is reporting that Adobe has announced to its partners that the company has discontinued development on Flash Player for mobile browsers. The news comes roughly a year and a half after the ...
After mounting an intense attack on Apple for not supporting Flash on its iPhone OS mobile devices, Adobe has admitted that it will not be able to ship its promised Flash Player 10.1 for mobile ...
We heard the talk and now here's the confirmation: Flash Player for mobile devices is officially dead. Adobe is reaffirming its commitment to "aggressively contribute" to HTML5, a platform with ...