Saturday, 28 November 2009

Full Flash Support for Mobile and PC Announced by Adobe Flash Player 10.1 for BlackBerry, Android, Windows Mobile, Palm, Symbian Phones Included

Adobe has big plans in mind for all our mobile smartphones and
computers. The company announced today its Flash Player 10.1 which is
going to be available soon to most smartphones, smartbooks, netbooks and
PCs out there. In other words, as long as your mobile gadget has access
to Adobe Flash content, Flash Player 10.1 will let you view it. There
will be support for most mobile operating systems: BlackBerry, Android,
Windows Mobile, Palm and Symbian phones. Naturally Adobe will offer
support for computers too whether they are running Windows, Mac OS or Linux.

Don t start jumping up and down with joy as not everything is available
at once! In fact, the public developer beta will be available to
BlackBerry Windows Mobile and webOS handsets and to Windows, Macintosh
and Linux computers by the end of the year. If you happen to own an
Android or Symbian device then you have to wait some more until early
2010 to enjoy Flash content on your favorite smartphone.

Is this Flash good for me? Do I really want it? Won t it use even more
resources and especially battery life when it comes to viewing Flash
content on smartphones? Yes folks, you definitely have to give it a try
since almost everyone is using it. You might be using Flash right now
without really noticing. And Adobe has produced another fine software
solution. Or at least, so they say! The new Flash player is supposed to
conserve both battery life and system resources so it looks like you don
t have any good reasons to miss out on Flash experience at all. The
player will support any kind of interface you wish to utilize to control
your device. There is support for multitouch, gestures, mobile input
models, accelerometer and screen orientation.

Adobe will bring more video games, interactive web content and
high-quality media to your computers and especially your phones. That s
why at this point, Flash support for mobile phones is definitely a lot
more interesting. After all we don t carry our computers everywhere we
go, but we certainly happen to take our smartphones with us at all
times. We ll be keeping tabs on Adobe to see what they can come up with
next as they are working apparently with 50 industry leaders in the Open
Screen Project and with 19 out of the top 20 handset manufacturers in
the world. These are impressive numbers and we definitely hope Flash
Player 10.1 is going to be at least as impressive!

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