Hi,
Maybe some of you have heard the news : adobe decided to stop the flash technology because of the HTML5 standard growin.
This news makes me think about the future of Scratch.
The choice of the flash technology by the scratch mit crew was for me a big mistake : but anyway it seems that this decision was not really community driven, the media lab having its own agenda in this matter, and decided to go with a proprietary technology.
I hope that we will all learn about this path : a lot of energy was put to port scratch into a proprietary platform, which is dying right now. It would be more wiseful to choose the html5 technology from the beginning. Or to make scratch a real open-source community driven software. Right now, there are forks, divisions, and wrong vision. Really sad and disappointing, for an educational tool.
Cheers,
Samir
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tournesol wrote:
Cheers,
Samir
I find that a little ironic, even though I don't think it was intended that way. Certainly, this isn't very cheery news.
I would like to hear what the ST has to say about this.

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How true.

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Harakou wrote:
Flash isn't dead. Adobe only killed mobile Flash, not the entire platform.
Well, that certainly makes mobile Scratch even more difficult. >_>
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Where did you find this info?
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Harakou wrote:
Flash isn't dead. Adobe only killed mobile Flash, not the entire platform.
The way I heard it was different.
But, HTML is sometimes better, because not everyone has flash. There's also Silverlight(please don't do Silverlight though, my browser doesn't have a working plugin for it), Java, and, Javascript.


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The news is a disappointment, certainly. However, my understanding is that HTML5 does not currently have the feature set that Scratch requires - so Flash was chosen. Hopefully by the time that support for Flash becomes problematic, HTML5 will have matured a bit more and a port to that platform can be made.
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Paddle2See wrote:
The news is a disappointment, certainly. However, my understanding is that HTML5 does not currently have the feature set that Scratch requires - so Flash was chosen. Hopefully by the time that support for Flash becomes problematic, HTML5 will have matured a bit more and a port to that platform can be made.
Well, just saying, some people *hint* BYOB thread *hint* are making one in javascript, that is already semi-functional.
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Flash is dead. Lion doesn't support flash

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Flash isn't dead, at least not on computers (I don't use any mobile at all). HTML 5
- Is in development
- Is far less supported
- Has much less of a programmer base
- Isn't in place in the same way as Flash.
Macs didn't kill Windows! HTML 5 may be able to challenge Flash's monopoly, but that sure as heck doesn't mean Flash is gone; too many people use it for that to happen any time soon. Remember, no Flash means no YouTube, no Kongregate, etc. All HTML 5 will probably mean is that there will be two vectors for people to deliver multimedia content in, Flash and HTML 5. Also, Flash is almost certainly profitable enough that Adobe will probably invest more in Flash if HTML 5 seems like it might actually kill Flash.
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Paddle2See wrote:
The news is a disappointment, certainly. However, my understanding is that HTML5 does not currently have the feature set that Scratch requires - so Flash was chosen. Hopefully by the time that support for Flash becomes problematic, HTML5 will have matured a bit more and a port to that platform can be made.
if a port scratch port to HTML is made that means it will be easier to mod!
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There is an enormous amount of confusion going on here!
First of all, Adobe will continue to happily support Flash on computers, but discontinuing development on handheld hardware. Computers will still support Flash, and Flash will also be still available on older handhelds but without updates or support (and won't be installed on newer devices).
Second, Lion does support Flash! There is a big difference between not supporting something and not having a feature pre-installed. Flash on Mac will now have to be downloaded from Adobe instead of it being pre-installed. This really isn't a big deal: Windows has been doing this since Flash was born.
Third, Flash is currently the only language fully supported by web standards. Java applets are already falling short, and HTML5 is in its beginnings.
Last, as someone else already said, Flash makes Adobe a tremendous amount of money. To develop proper Flash applications, developers will need to buy hundred-dollar software. For Adobe, this means $$$.
These are four points that certainly prove that Flash is not dead, and has a long life to live before it is overtaken by any other web application.
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LS97 wrote:
There is an enormous amount of confusion going on here!
First of all, Adobe will continue to happily support Flash on computers, but discontinuing development on handheld hardware. Computers will still support Flash, and Flash will also be still available on older handhelds but without updates or support (and won't be installed on newer devices).
Second, Lion does support Flash! There is a big difference between not supporting something and not having a feature pre-installed. Flash on Mac will now have to be downloaded from Adobe instead of it being pre-installed. This really isn't a big deal: Windows has been doing this since Flash was born.
Third, Flash is currently the only language fully supported by web standards. Java applets are already falling short, and HTML5 is in its beginnings.
Last, as someone else already said, Flash makes Adobe a tremendous amount of money. To develop proper Flash applications, developers will need to buy hundred-dollar software. For Adobe, this means $$$.
These are four points that certainly prove that Flash is not dead, and has a long life to live before it is overtaken by any other web application.
I'm glad LS97 is here to clear everything up!
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LS97 wrote:
There is an enormous amount of confusion going on here!
First of all, Adobe will continue to happily support Flash on computers, but discontinuing development on handheld hardware. Computers will still support Flash, and Flash will also be still available on older handhelds but without updates or support (and won't be installed on newer devices).
Second, Lion does support Flash! There is a big difference between not supporting something and not having a feature pre-installed. Flash on Mac will now have to be downloaded from Adobe instead of it being pre-installed. This really isn't a big deal: Windows has been doing this since Flash was born.
Third, Flash is currently the only language fully supported by web standards. Java applets are already falling short, and HTML5 is in its beginnings.
Last, as someone else already said, Flash makes Adobe a tremendous amount of money. To develop proper Flash applications, developers will need to buy hundred-dollar software. For Adobe, this means $$$.
These are four points that certainly prove that Flash is not dead, and has a long life to live before it is overtaken by any other web application.
Thanks for clearing that up LS97; you said it much better than I could have.
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Harakou wrote:
LS97 wrote:
There is an enormous amount of confusion going on here!
First of all, Adobe will continue to happily support Flash on computers, but discontinuing development on handheld hardware. Computers will still support Flash, and Flash will also be still available on older handhelds but without updates or support (and won't be installed on newer devices).
Second, Lion does support Flash! There is a big difference between not supporting something and not having a feature pre-installed. Flash on Mac will now have to be downloaded from Adobe instead of it being pre-installed. This really isn't a big deal: Windows has been doing this since Flash was born.
Third, Flash is currently the only language fully supported by web standards. Java applets are already falling short, and HTML5 is in its beginnings.
Last, as someone else already said, Flash makes Adobe a tremendous amount of money. To develop proper Flash applications, developers will need to buy hundred-dollar software. For Adobe, this means $$$.
These are four points that certainly prove that Flash is not dead, and has a long life to live before it is overtaken by any other web application.Thanks for clearing that up LS97; you said it much better than I could have.
Yes, thanks a lot for clarifying, LS97.

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A link. I want a link.
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LS97 wrote:
There is an enormous amount of confusion going on here!
First of all, Adobe will continue to happily support Flash on computers, but discontinuing development on handheld hardware. Computers will still support Flash, and Flash will also be still available on older handhelds but without updates or support (and won't be installed on newer devices).
Second, Lion does support Flash! There is a big difference between not supporting something and not having a feature pre-installed. Flash on Mac will now have to be downloaded from Adobe instead of it being pre-installed. This really isn't a big deal: Windows has been doing this since Flash was born.
Third, Flash is currently the only language fully supported by web standards. Java applets are already falling short, and HTML5 is in its beginnings.
Last, as someone else already said, Flash makes Adobe a tremendous amount of money. To develop proper Flash applications, developers will need to buy hundred-dollar software. For Adobe, this means $$$.
These are four points that certainly prove that Flash is not dead, and has a long life to live before it is overtaken by any other web application.
Good, because I bought it recently.
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LS97 wrote:
Third, Flash is currently the only language fully supported by web standards. Java applets are already falling short, and HTML5 is in its beginnings.
Flash does not have web standards, and is not supported by them in any way; it is proprietary Adobe software. HTML5 and related technologies have a living specification, but have good support across many platforms.
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**FLASH IS AN ABOMINATION**
Where do I begin???
It is slow
It lags
It makes developers pay an $800 fine to a private company
It's losing support
HTML5 with Canvas is the future. It doesn't lag, it's open source and it's free as anything.
There is one problem with Canvas though, collision detection is nearly impossible with image sprites. Besides that,
Flash was a mistake
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Two year ago, Mayer had this talk: http://tubeencore.com/watch/?v=kjqhlajkSOE
The topic is more and more interesting and I also think that Flash will die in around 4 years.
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midnightleopard wrote:
**FLASH IS AN ABOMINATION**
Where do I begin???
It is slow
It lags
It makes developers pay an $800 fine to a private company
It's losing support
HTML5 with Canvas is the future. It doesn't lag, it's open source and it's free as anything.
There is one problem with Canvas though, collision detection is nearly impossible with image sprites. Besides that,
Flash was a mistake
I don't really feel that it's a mistake. Flash can be a lot easier for children to use because it's less glitchy and more supported through plugins than HTML5 is, especially with the oh-so-common Internet Explorer.
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veggieman001 wrote:
midnightleopard wrote:
**FLASH IS AN ABOMINATION**
Where do I begin???
It is slow
It lags
It makes developers pay an $800 fine to a private company
It's losing support
HTML5 with Canvas is the future. It doesn't lag, it's open source and it's free as anything.
There is one problem with Canvas though, collision detection is nearly impossible with image sprites. Besides that,
Flash was a mistakeI don't really feel that it's a mistake. Flash can be a lot easier for children to use because it's less glitchy and more supported through plugins than HTML5 is, especially with the oh-so-common Internet Explorer.
Flash is much more glitchy. Internet Explorer also falls under the category of Abomination, so people should leave internet explorer out of the question. Compatibility with IE isn't important, if anything, purposely make websites that don't work with IE. That will get more people to delete it.
Last edited by midnightleopard (2011-11-15 17:14:43)
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