Flash Comes To the iPhone Via App 182
An anonymous reader writes "While the HTML5 and Flash standard debate rages, Apple, a major promoter of HTML5, has allowed its iOS devices to run Flash videos. Apple has given approval to an app developed by Skyfire that translates Flash code into HTML5. According to CNN, when a user clicks on a Flash video the Skyfire app downloads the Flash video on Skyfire's server where the video is decoded and then encoded in HTML5 and is delivered to an iOS device. The app is embedded in the Safari browser."
Steve Jobs Warned Us About This Horror! (Score:5, Funny)
Mr. Timmerman: Yes, speaking.
High School Principle: This is the principle at Luther High School and I am calling about your son Frederick.
Mr. Timmerman: Why what has Fred done?
High School Principle: Are you aware your son owns and operates an iPhone on school grounds?
Mr. Timmerman: Yes but he is not to use it during class hours, it's just for security. I'll have a talk with him when I get home
High School Principle: Are you aware that sometime today an app called 'Skyfire' allowed iPhone users to access Flash video.
Mr. Timmerman: Oh. My. God. Where is Fred, is he okay? You confiscated the iPhone, right? Please just hold him in a locked room and I will leave work right now and come pick him up.
High School Principle: I'm afraid we don't know where he is, Mr. Timmerman. It was not discovered he had access to Flash materials until he sat down during first period, continually grinning at his phone. The instructor noticed and asked him to put it away and at that point your son snarled and knocked the teacher out of the way exhibiting some super human strength -- possibly hepped up on caffeine pills [youtube.com].
Mr. Timmerman: No you don't understand, we're good Christians, my son hasn't been taught any sex education yet, if he's exposed to porn he
High School Principle: Again, I'm so very sorry Mr. Timmerman, according to our counselor's estimates it's now noon and your son escaped at the beginning of the day so he is probably in Tijuana right now so strung out on heroin that he has to mainline it under his eye. If you don't get to him soon, he will certainly be dead before the weekend.
Mr. Timmerman: *gasps*
High School Principle: Also, there's one more thing. A few of the other kids heard your son extolling Skyfire
Mr. Timmerman: My God. All this
High School Principle: I'm sorry Mr. Timmerman, our thoughts and prayers are with you and your family but especially your son. The poor poor victim of FLASH VIDEO.
Re:Steve Jobs Warned Us About This Horror! (Score:4, Informative)
Oh dear.
The word you are looking for is principal.
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Re:Steve Jobs Warned Us About This Horror! (Score:5, Funny)
The word you are looking for is principal.
You've never talked to a principle before? They're very set in their ways.
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PrinciPAL (he's your pal, well she/he should be :P) is how you remember it. Yeah, I learn its differences back in elementary school this way. :)
Re:Steve Jobs Warned Us About This Horror! (Score:4, Funny)
A talking principle? In my day, they were just conceptual. My how things have advanced.
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I say we nuke the school from space.
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Seems like a good idea.. well in principal anyway
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It's the only way to be sure!
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has anyone tested it? (Score:2)
do all the porn tube sites work with this?
Re:has anyone tested it? (Score:5, Funny)
My guess is that the answer is "yes". Everyone who tried it hasn't reported back yet because they're, um, busy.
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Sorry, the following video could not be displayed. Reason: Porn on the iPhone is illegal, you have violated the app store user agreement. Apple black ops will be descending on your house shortly to exercise Apple's right under page 26994 of your contract, and confiscate all your iPhones.
P.S. No. This does not allow you to cancel your ATT iPhone wireless agreement or data plan without an early termination charge.
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ALL of them?
yes.
--Frederick.
Flash *video* comes to iPhone (Score:5, Informative)
Why do so many articles ignore the fact that there is more to Flash than video? Granted, most games aren't going to play well on a mobile device but there are lots of Flash based sites that work just fine. Being able to access those sites or not is a pretty big deal if your out and about and need to look up information on a nearby business.
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Name one (Score:3, Insightful)
Odd that you should say that, because the only flash site I ever use is youtube. So, what flash do I absolutly need yet that I am not aware off?
Here is a hint, promo-sites for games/movies etc I do NOT need.
What amazes me is that so many people claim that Apple has made a mistake and that people NEED flash, they MUST have flash, yet the iPhone and iPad sell like... well like an iPhone/iPad... they sold MILLIONS. Apple with 1 phone is among the biggest phone makers. Yet apparently all these people are buyi
Re:Name one (Score:4, Insightful)
I can't agree more. I haven't found a single instance in 3 years for requiring flash. It is only now gaining support on Android, which is funny in itself. Folks slamming Apple when it wasn't even out of beta for Android.
There is simply no need, as any site worthy of a mobile device, offers a mobile version, which never uses flash.
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I much prefer to browse the full versions of sites even on my Android device. None of the sites I browse really need Flash though. There's the occasional YouTube video on Facebook, but I can open those videos in the YouTube app..
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There is simply no need, as any site worthy of a mobile device, offers a mobile version, which never uses flash.
Worthy of a mobile device? What does that even mean?
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And what would you use for all of those sites and web apps that have interactive vector-based animation? This is only coming about in HTML5. And what about vector animation with synced sound? This is something SVG doesn't yet support.
And how would you do sites such as these [ebizmba.com]? HTML5 should eventually get to being able to do all these but it isn't there for production use yet and the content creation tools certainly aren't up to scratch yet.
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Well you did say name one so here [navypier.com] is one. And yeah, when I was on vacation in Chicago, without easy access to a computer, it was quite handy to be able to pull it up on my droid.
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You seem to have completely missed the point of the complaints - it's not that Apple won't allow Flash on, it's the Apple picks and chooses third party apps that are blessed with being allowed to run on their device.
I can kinda see that making sense for a phone, but iOS now covers iPads and iPods, where it makes absolutely no sense. Except for Apple's bottom line.
So, here's the question you should be answering: If I want Flash on my phone, why doesn't Apple allow me to install it?
Keeping in mind that you ca
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That's okay, you've missed the point too. And it isn't that Apple gets to pick and choose what runs on the iPhone, it's that they did in a very smart and profitable way. Every single software or hardware maker does what Apple does. Apple's just better at it, apparently.
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And, generally, people complain about that too.
Or have you never heard of "home brew?"
Every single software or hardware maker does what Apple does.
Oh, that explain why you can't run Linux on a PC or compile your own apps for Mac OS X.
No, wait, something seems off here...
Geeks know. The public doesn't. (Score:3, Informative)
And, generally, people complain about that too.
Or have you never heard of "home brew?"
Geeks have. The majority have not. The majority don't even know that one can hook a slim PC up to an HDTV with a VGA, DVI, or HDMI cable, and then use it as an Internet video player, as a DVR, or as the fourth game console, all in one box.
Every single software or hardware maker does what Apple does.
Oh, that explain why you can't run Linux on a PC or compile your own apps for Mac OS X.
No, wait, something seems off here...
Please allow me to rephrase: Most hardware makers making products for sale in the United States in form factors not traditionally associated with personal computers (e.g. handheld, set-top) sell goods that have been damaged [wikipedia.org] with lockdown.
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Did people actually say that? I remember the iPhone selling spectacularly well back when it was 2G, lacked copy & paste, MMS and multitasking, had a piss poor camera, and the only "application support" was fucking javascript and HTML. Apple doesn't need anything to sell: it will sell no matter what.
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It may have sold well in the USA but it was a complete flop in Europe and the Far East. Later releases have been much more popular.
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Correction: hardcore Apple fans in Europe had already bought their iPhones in the U.S. before it launched here. Of course, later iPhones were also much, much better, making it a reasonable option in its own right and getting all the early adopters to upgrade at first opportunity.
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The iPhone would be dead by now if Apple hadn't actually started competing half-heartedly on specs as well. It would also have been worse off today if it didn't somewhat suck initially, as users then wouldn't buy the next generation as well. It's just good planning: make a product that sucks but fixes a few niggling problems, and then make an upgrade that doesn't suck quite so much. Make people pay twice as much, twice in a year. It's a good way to make money.
The iPhone4 camera is still fairly poor, with gr
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Actually, they still have a flash animation on their frontpage, showcasing their products, but at least, now you can navigate on their website without having to use flash.
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Apple has made a mistake. They are replaying the Mac/PC battle all over again on cell phones, and they
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Vector animation (Score:2)
the only flash site I ever use is youtube. So, what flash do I absolutly need yet that I am not aware off?
Homestar Runner. Weebl's Stuff. Albino Blacksheep. Newgrounds. Very little of this is video in the sense of compressed sequences of bitmap images; most of it is Flash vector animation with synchronized audio.
Re:Flash *video* comes to iPhone (Score:5, Insightful)
Being able to access those sites or not is a pretty big deal if your out and about and need to look up information on a nearby business.
If your business site requires Flash to view (specifically, the "no Flash==blank page" type), you're not getting my business whether I'm "out and about" with my iPhone or sitting in front of my quad-core desktop. It's not 2002, go back to web design school.
Games and video; any other uses of Flash I've seen have been pathetic attempts at custom UI that suffer from usability problems and general annoyance.
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If your business site requires Flash to view (specifically, the "no Flash==blank page" type), you're not getting my business whether I'm "out and about" with my iPhone or sitting in front of my quad-core desktop. It's not 2002, go back to web design school.
I've tried to tell this to my manager and the company who are redesigning our website, but they won't listen. Even with the popularity of the iPhone/iPad and 1% of our website visits actually being from iPhones, they still insist on having a flash banner on each page. *sigh*
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Do you also want all your page layout done with pointless blank images that increase download time rather than using the relevant HTML and CSS code..?
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YES! I likes my web pages to load in five minutes, like the good old days of my 14.4, dagnabbit!
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If your business site requires Flash to view (specifically, the "no Flash==blank page" type), you're not getting my business whether I'm "out and about" with my iPhone or sitting in front of my quad-core desktop. It's not 2002, go back to web design school.
If you want business leaders going back to web design school as a good use of their time, then please tell me where you shop so I can avoid those places.
I'd personally rather see web designers going to web design school and business leaders running successful businesses. But maybe that's just me.
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If your business site requires Flash to view (specifically, the "no Flash==blank page" type), you're not getting my business
Really? People are actually discriminating based on their choice of web technologies now?
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They would suddenly sympathize. As a quad-core Mac user, I'm well aware that any Flash at all on a page in Firefox can drive a single core to 100% for no real reason.
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I'm not sure if people are just lying about the 100% CPU usage, whether they are wrong but believe it, or whether everyone in my family is just supernaturally lucky to n
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First question - are you on a Mac?
I have been using Flashblock for well over 2 years now for my own sanity's sake. Because of that, I can't give a recent example that's certain to still exist.
It doesn't appear to be 100% consistent, nor does it seem to matter WHAT the flash content is. Often, it was just a flash banner ad in a tab that's been open for a few days.
Not that I can say for sure which tab caused the problem. I would usually restart the whole browser and restore the tabs than to close
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I do think that making claims that a program uses 100% CPU when the last time you used it was over 2 years ago puts you in the "wrong but believe it" category. It makes about as much sense as me bagging on the Mac for being in Black and white.
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I still unblock flash when I need to use it. And occasionally that tab will sit unattended and still cause this problem - it's just a much rarer occurrence now. I believe this problem is specific to the Mac version of flash, but I couldn't say for sure.
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I still want someone to point out a site that pegs the CPU. As far as I can tell the 100% CPU utilization is an urban legend with about as much evidence as ghosts and alien visitors.
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Not sure what's unfair. I said that this was my experience, and that it seems to be mac only. I never made a complaint - only filled you in on the details of my experience that you had asked about.
I never said that there was a site that consistently and reliably causes the Flash player to run the CPU at 100%. I said that I've experienced it many times over, and that I've isolated it to Flash. Just because I haven't isolated a specific memory leak doesn't make it urban legend. I have never seen this on
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They would suddenly sympathize. As a quad-core Mac user, I'm well aware that any Flash at all on a page in Firefox can drive a single core to 100% for no real reason.
Implies that it is a consistent reproducible problem.
The fact that YOU cannot point to a reproducible example of this mythical phenomena doesn't make it urban legend. The fact that NO ONE can makes it urban legend.
The general idea that keeps being thrown around is that Flash pegs CPUs at 100%, and brings systems to their knees as sure as Windows Me is to crash. You are just one voice in this extraordinary claim that has less than mediocre evidence.
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Wait...now you're saying Windows ME is reliable? What alternate universe do you come from?
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I have been using Flashblock for well over 2 years now for my own sanity's sake. Because of that, I can't give a recent example that's certain to still exist.
Is it really necessary to continue spreading FUD then? If you can't cite an example and haven't been using it in the last 2 years then how do you know it's an issue? I never had any random issues like that with flash on my imac, sure i've seen badly coded flash sites that chew up more CPU than they probably should, just as with sub-optimal desktop applications and im not sure what you expect will stop the same thing from happening with HTML5.
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I still use Flash. I just use Flashblock in all cases where I don't want the Flash to load. That doesn't mean I don't still encounter problems now and then - it's just reached a sane level that is a little further below the radar.
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Re:Flash *video* comes to iPhone (Score:5, Informative)
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Kinda.
I guess this might solve the chicken/egg problem of improving HTML5 adoption. Unfortunately, it means that we're now relying on a proprietary service (with potential legal issues) instead of open standards or proprietary plugins. This will not likely reduce Flash usage by developers much, since they can produce flash videos and still get everyone to see them. And if the service goes down, or Hulu sues the pants off of Skyfire, we're stuck without those videos.
It would be better for Flash to just co
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Why do so many articles ignore the fact that there is more to Flash than video?
Probably because, for most users, the deal-breaker is not being able to access video content on news and, er, other types of site. There are plenty of casual games and other apps in the App Store - but not many non-Flash sources of video.
Being able to access those sites or not is a pretty big deal if your out and about and need to look up information on a nearby business.
Perhaps the pundits who write these articles would avoid those sites on principle anyway. Plus, what are the chances of those sites working with a touch interface?
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Re:Flash *video* comes to iPhone (Score:4, Insightful)
Sound Manager also works with HTML5.
sounds that represent interactions with the UI can do wonders for the user experience and intuitiveness.
Really? I tend to just find them hella annoying these days. Back when I was 8 I loved playing through the silly sound effects in the Mac OS control panel, but in OSes since then I enjoy listening to my media collection rather than all the beeps, clicks and whooshes.
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Have you not seen the really annoying spate of web sites that use Flash for site navigation?
Fuck, I hate flash -- mostly it's a cue that the site is a piece of shit that I don't want to use. I've yet to encounter a single Flash-based website I cared enough to use.
And don't whine to me about your damned badgers ... we don' need no steenkin' badgers.
Re:Flash *video* comes to iPhone (Score:4, Interesting)
There are millions of sites authored in Flash (ActionScript) that have nothing to do with video. In many cases, sites that really would work just dandy in normal HTML/CSS. But that doesn't make it a non-problem for end-users who simply want the full web on their smartphone. Before I had Flash on my Droid, I had to go to a PC browser to see Mini-Circuit's web site (they make RF components) or check-out on J.C. Penney's e-commerce site. Nothing whatsoever to do with video. And no more a battery drain or other issue than JavaScript.
The reason is simple: Adobe's authoring tools are very nice. They allow a content person to author the kind of site you'd need real programmers for in JavaScript.
This is how you know Apple wasn't serious about killing off Flash. If you wanted to get rid of Flash effectively, you don't target end users, you find out why people use it, and make them want to change. An authoring tool that does what Flash does, as well as Flash, in HTML4/5 + CSS + JavaScript, given away free, would solve this problem. And in fact, Adobe's tools are moving toward this anyway... they are going to support authoring in HTML5, some day (given HTML5 isn't quite really real until 2012 or so, there's time).
Re:Flash *video* comes to iPhone (Score:5, Informative)
My industry (rapid e-learning and software simulation training) is nearly 100% Flash. There really is no other option. Even the rapid e-learning powerpoint plug ins are all Flash based.
And this isn't even a bad thing, because it's a great tool for this use.
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Only video?
Depends on your field of work. There are many web-based monitoring applications which use Flash to display graphs (moves the burden of transforming values into graphics to the client, freeing up server resources in the process).
Lot of trouble (Score:2)
That's an awful lot of trouble go to through to keep flash off the iPhone. Jobs must REALLY not want flash on the phone.
Re:Lot of trouble (Score:5, Informative)
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I wish it was just a matter of wanting to get rid of flash but the codec issue really bothers me as it's a clear conflict of interest on Apples part and I feel it rather weakens Apple's position in terms of who holds the high ground.
Jobs is shouting about how flash is proprietary and non-open and how he's all about HTML5 which is a standard and open.
Which makes people think he's really great and all about the standards and open-ness but actually he's been trying to push H.264 which is patent encumbered with
This came in to be from one of 2 ways: (Score:4, Insightful)
OR
Steve Jobs now likes flash, or finally realized that most of the internet does indeed use flash, and has succumbed to the reality of reality.
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Nothing changes for apple - BUT it will put this company in an interesting spot for copyright violations - as they are inherently making derivative works on the fly and distributing them, all without permission.
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Steve Jobs now likes flash, or finally realized that most of the internet does indeed use flash, and has succumbed to the reality of reality.
Most of the Internet? Really? I have a plugin installed that means that flash things need clicking on before they load, and it's quite rare for me to actually find something that I want to click on. Aside from YouTube, iPlayer, and Flash games, I've not seen much flash. Some big high-profile sites use it, but 'most of the Internet' definitely does not.
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Option 3:
Enough websites have started offering their video content in other ways that the Flash "monopoly" over video content is pretty much broken, and that having been accomplished, Steve Jobs/Apple doesn't really care about flash anymore.
No flash on the iPhone (Score:2, Funny)
So, contrary to what the title and the summary say, this has nothing to do with 'flash on the iPhone' and everything to do with 'some company is transcoding flash video to h264 and sending it off to the iPhone.
Apple hasn't 'allowed' iOS devices to run anything new, someone is transcoding.
There is no 'app embedded in Safari browser'
Did I miss the memo that said slashdot was going to start accepting submissions from people who have no clue what they are talking about, and clearly have no idea what the fuck th
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It's a Taco Apple story so it's got to be either a troll or plain wrong (or both).
Apple did approve it... (Score:2)
Pretty harsh dude. Apple did allow the app, and even though it is a translator (which probably runs slower than snot), the fact that flash might work at all on the iPhone is newsworthy.
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So, contrary to what the title and the summary say, this has nothing to do with 'flash on the iPhone' and everything to do with 'some company is transcoding flash video to h264 and sending it off to the iPhone.
Considering most "Flash videos" are H.264 encoded - what transcoding? More like "filtering out the skin for the video player build into the Flash Player".
Yes Virginia, Flash Player contains the evil H.264.
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/. was below its weekly quota of Apple stories, so the editors just accepted the first story they saw involving Apple.
Lost in the Hyperbole (Score:2)
Meanwhile buried in all the media hyperbole about anything iPhone, Adobe has released an updated Adobe Air packager for iOS4 that not only allows you to play Flash content on an iPhone/iPad, but is also sanctioned by Apple.
Granted, it's not a Flash video plug in player, but the myth that Flash content is not available on iOS is just that. Also granted that you have to attach the compiler to your content AND run it through the App Store goat-rope-circus...
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is also sanctioned by Apple
Minor correction: nothing is ever sanctioned by Apple. They will block anything they feel like blocking for whatever reasons they feel like. Your apps enter their controlled and locked down ecosystem at the whim and pleasure of Apple's fancy.
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Well, that's what I meant. This is done with Apple's blessing. I heard it directly from an Air Packager Developers mouth. For whatever PR/marketing reason, Jobs is hell bent on not allowing Flash Player browser plugin, but doesn't mind flash content via AIR.
HTML5 is a video format now? (Score:2, Informative)
"the video is decoded and then encoded in HTML5"
I'm glad to see the standard of technical journalism around here is as high as ever, Slashdot. Please point me at the part of the HTML5 which describes its capabilities as a video container format and/or codec. Hint: the presence of a tag doesn't cover it.
...And yet I still knew what they meant. (Score:5, Insightful)
The standard of any kind of journalism is explaining things in a manner in which your audience will understand it. Laypeople--and in the technical community that is Slashdot, I am referring to geeks who don't necessarily know or care about all of the technical intricacies of video codecs--see the headline and think, "Oh, a way for me to watch video I couldn't before on my iPhone!" Bingo.
Most people like myself probably thought, "technically, that's not what it's doing; it's probably transcoding something written in Adobe's proprietary Flash format into something that only uses standards in the provisional specification of HTML 5, likely by extracting the H.264 video and re-wrapping it into HTML 5 standard-compliant tags." Most of those people probably also thought, "...but I know what they mean. It's a way for people to watch video they couldn't before on their iPhones." Again, bingo.
Now, I'm really sorry if you were so confused, thinking that the line was being literal and expecting there to be some kind of, I don't know, web alchemy at work, but I assure you that you were in an extreme sliver of a minority. Most people "got it," and as such, I think it passes muster as far as technical journalism goes. If it really bothers you that much, how about considering reading the f****** article, looking for technical details and/or references that you can research yourself?
Incidentally, the submitter pulled that description directly from the article, which appears in International Business Times, not exactly a bastion of "technical journalism." If you want to whine about technicalia, how about writing to the editor there instead of here? Let me guess, is it because you're too busy explaining somewhere else that since there's no modulation/demodulation over digital channels, everyone should stop calling those boxes you plug the coax into "cable modems?" Or are you too bothered by people calling 2010 the start of a new decade instead of the end of an old one? Or how about those idiots who talk about the "dark side of the moon," the side that receives just as much light as the other side? Do you make such a fuss when someone comments on how hot the "middle of summer" is, when in reality, average temperatures are highest around the solstice, which is the beginning of summer?
Oh, right, I know why. Because here, you get modded +5 Informative, whereas in normal society, you'd just get called out as the tool you are. Now if you'll excuse me, I have to go to the bank to get some money out of the ATM machine using my PIN number.
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And presumably meta http-equiv="refresh" tags? :)
I'll believe it when (Score:3, Interesting)
the idea gets implemented as a PC browser plugin perfectly enabling the latest Youtube and flash games.
Who needs smartphones to just hate Adobe Flash's slowness?
Stated goals (Score:2)
I'm glad this reaches Apple's stated goals of user experience speed, and universal availability. I'm sure the system will be completely stable, and the multi-server communications will be totally secure.
Now can we be treated like adults and just be told the real damned reason out loud?
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Everything Apple has said about FlashPlayer has been totally practical and totally true. If you're not adult enough to see that FlashPlayer is impractical for about 100 reasons on a phone that has a consumer user, no I-T support, limited CPU and battery life, built-in hardware ISO video decoder, HTML5, and signed applications that can't run plug-ins, then that is your problem, not Apple's.
When Apple talks about the FlashPlayer user experience, they're not just talking about the fact that a lot of existing F
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If you're not adult enough to see that FlashPlayer is impractical for about 100 reasons on a phone that has a consumer user, no I-T support, limited CPU and battery life, built-in hardware ISO video decoder, HTML5, and signed applications that can't run plug-ins, then that is your problem, not Apple's.
If Apple were treating their consumers like adults, they would let their consumers make that decision. Also, there is no way that a native flash player is slower or less secure than sending flash content bac
Does this work for video with ads? (Score:2)
Many TV shows are now distributed through Flash player programs which load the video and play ads. The CW and CBS do this. These players are designed to prevent the viewer from viewing the show without ads. Will those work through this conversion mechanism? If not, there's not going to be consumer acceptance of this.
(Those players do not play well with high security settings. Some won't run if they can't store cookies. Others will show the same ad over and over. With Flashblock, about half the CBS ads
So very, very WRONG (Score:5, Informative)
"Apple has given approval to an app developed by Skyfire that translates Flash code into HTML5."
NO IT DOES NOT. As others are pointing out, all this does is use a server to transcode Flash VIDEO and serve it to you. This will not do ANYTHING ELSE with Flash--it certainly DOES NOT "translate Flash code into HTML5 [code]". Better description here. [tuaw.com]
Also worth noting: "Hulu has also blocked Skyfire to guarantee that users who want to watch the streaming TV service on the iPad have to continue to pay $10 per month for Hulu Plus."
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!rages !embedded in Safari (Score:3, Informative)
The HTML5/Flash debate is no longer raging, it's very much winding down. Java and Silverlight in the browser have also been supplanted by HTML5 already.
The Skyfire app is not embedded in Safari, it has its own WebKit view, same as Safari and many other OS X apps.
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Flash videos could not and still cannot be played on iOS devices.
This is not true. You can run Flash videos on all iOS devices, just not in a browser:
We do want to point out that Apple’s restriction on Flash content running in the browser on iOS devices remains in place.
However, you can run Flash on the iPhone with the Air packager using any Flash project written with Action Script 3.0:
http://labs.adobe.com/technologies/packagerforiphone/ [adobe.com]
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Well, let me rephrase. You can play any of your Flash content on iOS, even if it isn't being played as "Flash", yet the common belief is that no Flash can be played on any iOS device. This is important to those of us in the e-learning business with thousands of hours of existing Flash training courseware that can now run on an iPad without doing anything other than republishing our .fla source file. This was previously considered unpossible.
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I hate to break it to you but Flash video nowadays (and for a while now) is H.264 in MP4.
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Older flash videos, yes it used the FLV container, but Adobe switched to using MP4 for better H.264 support probably since late 2007 or early 2008.
Or... (Score:2)
Or, this method of playing Flash video doesn't breach Apple's App Store rules.
Apple doesn't care about letting people watch videos on iOS (which, despite the frothings of the iTunes conspiracy theorists, happily plays non-DRMd videos in several standard formats, somewhat restricted because the CPU doesn't have the horsepower to handle software-only codecs and relies on the available hardware decoders).
What Apple does care about is limiting the potential number of security holes in Safari by not having thi
Re: (Score:2)
You didn't understand his point then. This is not playing Flash videos on the iPhone. This is converting the flash to another format on an external server which then is sent to the iPhone. No actual Flash is being run on the iPhone.
Re: (Score:2)
Read the summary, you say? Okaaay:
The device does not 'run' Flash videos - it renders HTML5 video served up over the web just like a bajillion other apps.
That would make the app an interpreter, which would be (a) highly impractical, (b) grounds for rejection by Apple and (c) irrelevant
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
More correctly, they're reformatting a Flash/AVC "wrapper" and HTML tag (or at least those they can detect, since flash players usually involve other code) into the very same video in an MP4 wrapper with a tag. Conceptually trivial, if all you're after is playing flash video. A far cry from supporting all of flash, particularly since the video sites are the first to offer HTML5 alternatives (YouTube, for example).
Re: (Score:2)
Flash apps are ok, Flash video in a browser plug-in is the only thing Apple won't allow. I have several Flash apps that I've developed and sold to customers. We used Air packager to turn our existing training content into an app that you can run on the iPad. (The design is too big to run on a phone, but we're reworking that now).
http://labs.adobe.com/technologie/packagerforiphone/ [adobe.com]
Re: (Score:2)
Sometimes AC posts provide little anonymity.
How many OTHER camgirls from your *one site* are actually married... and to one *slashdot* geek... and read slashdot too?
She'll know the second your post comes up browsing at -1 or 0. THAT is the only thing keeping you from sleeping on the couch tonite :)