The decision of adobe and google to
allow Flash player only on google chrome browser via the “Pepper”
API flash plugin, pose a real problem to users of Firefox, opera and
other small browsers.
Hopefully, there are a good alternative to
adobe flash player plugin that works like a charm, one of those is
Lightspark, an LGPLv3 licensed Flash player and browser plugin
written in C++/C that runs on Linux. Lightspark support Adobe’s
newer Flash formats and AVM2 virtual machine. - See more at:
For OpenSuse users, Lightspark is available in official on openSUSE Oss repository and can be installed by yast.
If there is any problem to find it, please see this site:
or
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A decisão da adobe e google de liberar o flash player somente para o navegador google chrome via API flash plugin "Pepper", criou um sério problema para usuários do Firefox, Opera e outros navegadores.
Felizmente, há uma boa alternativa ao adobe flash player que funciona muito bem. É o Lightspark, um flash player licenciado com base no LGPLv3, foi desenvolvido em C++/C e roda em Linux. Lightspark suporta recentes formatos para flash e também máquinas virtuais AVM2. Veja mais em
Para usuários OpenSuse, Lightspark está disponível no site oficial OpenSuse Oss repositório e pode ser instalado pelo yast.
Se tiver qualquer problema para encontrá-lo, veja esses sites:
According to a recent blog post from adobe,
google and adobe are working on a single modern API for hosting plugins
within the browser, the new plugin code-named “PEPPER” “aims to
provide a layer between the plugin and browser that abstracts away
differences between browser and operating system implementations.”
By the end of this year, Google will start distributing the new Pepper-based Flash player as a part of chrome on all platforms including Linux.
Now comes the bad new for Linux users, always according to adobe:
“For Flash Player releases after 11.2, the Flash Player browser plugin for Linux will only be available via the “Pepper” API as part of the Google Chrome browser distribution and will no longer be available as a direct download from Adobe. Adobe will continue to provide security updates to non-Pepper distributions of Flash Player 11.2 on Linux for five years from its release.
Flash Player will continue to support browsers using non-”Pepper” plugin APIs on platforms other than Linux.”
Until now the only browser that seems will support the new PEPPER plugin API is Google chrome. For Firefox according to Mozilla wiki “Mozilla is not interested in or working on Pepper at this time“, for Opera and other browsers still not known how they will do to integrate the new features.
The
decision of adobe and google to allow Flash player only on google
chrome browser via the “Pepper” API flash plugin, pose a real problem to
users of Firefox, opera and other small browsers. Hopefully, there are a
good alternative to adobe flash player plugin that works like a charm,
one of those is
Lightspark, an LGPLv3 licensed Flash player and browser plugin written
in C++/C that runs on Linux. Lightspark support Adobe’s newer Flash
formats and AVM2 virtual machine. - See more at:
http://www.unixmen.com/lightspark-a-good-alternative-to-adobe-flash-player-ppa-ubuntu-fedora-rpm/#sthash.0Ef34d8y.dpuf