Believe it or not, Flash still has an ardent fan club. The once-ubiquitous media player for browsers has taken its lumps, thanks in large part to security issues. However, diehards remain in Flash’s ...
My take on Flash versus HTML 5: Yet another debate when one wants to have more control than the other by giving standards as the excuse. The debate is already won by Flash with its huge installed base ...
HTML5, the new web standard that has been adopted by Apple, Google and many others, lets web developers create advanced graphics, typography, animations and transitions without relying on third party ...
An app developer has sparked some debate with a blog post titled ‘Flash outperforms HTML5 on mobile devices,” which notes that an Android-powered Nexus One could achieve a 57 frames per second rate ...
Google has weighed in heavily in favor of HTML5, but engineers at Google-owned YouTube maintain Flash is still the best platform for video distribution In the ongoing ...
The battle lines have been drawn. It's one side or the other. Apple or Adobe. The iPhone or Flash. It's time for everyone to choose. Well, everyone but YouTube. That's one of the nice things about ...
Adobe Systems today released a preview version of an HTML5 development tool called Adobe Edge. The tool will allow Web developers to build those "little beautifully designed jewels on the Web ...
Macrumors reports that video provider corporation Brightcove has announced support for HTML5. For those not in the know, HTML5 is being touted as the death of Flash, as it allows multimedia content to ...
Flash versus HTML5 is a false dichotomy since they are not equal as tools or as mechanisms to deliver content and/or interactivity. Developers need to weigh the requirements of their project against ...
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 ...