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During a recent earnings call, Adobe CEO Shantanu Naraye revealed to investors that a beta version of Flash Player 10 for mobiles will be released in October ...
A few years ago one of the key things that helped set Android apart from iOS was support for Adobe Flash Player. But Adobe officially stopped supporting Flash for Android in mid-2012, a growing ...
Even before Adobe revealed its first full-fledged Flash Player for smartphones on Thursday, we got a chance to play online games and video from an Android phone.
No certified implementations of Adobe Systems' Flash Player will ship for Android 4.1, and on August 15 the player will no longer be available for download from Google Play.
As many of you know by now, Adobe Flash isn't supporting Android 4.1 Jelly Bean, but there is a solution and it's very easy. There are actually two solutions ...
Flash Player 10.1 will be available as a "final production release" for smart phones and tablets, once users are able to upgrade to Android 2.2, says Adobe.
Adobe has recently announced that Adobe Flash 10.2 Player for Android is now available through Android Market as a final release.
Adobe struggled for years to make the Flash player plugin viable on mobile devices. Though it was able to make Flash work reasonably well on Android phones, results were mixed on other systems ...
Look for the Adobe Flash Player and press on it to see the full version number. Alternatively, in an Android browser that supports Flash, you can visit either of these online testers from Adobe.
<p>Adobe said on Thursday that it will stop supporting Flash Player for Google’s Android mobile operating system, starting with version 4.1 of Android.
If you're an Android user, try not to hit your head on the ceiling fan as you jump for joy. Why? Well, Adobe last night announced the release of Flash Player 10.2 for Android 3.0 (Honeycomb ...
Adobe says that Flash Player support will indeed arrive for Android 4.0 and it will be coming before the end of 2011.