Previously, I wrote that updates to the Flash Player on Android 2.x and 4.0 seemed to be missing in action. Although the October 8th Security Bulletin from Adobe said that “Users of Adobe Flash Player ...
It was way back during the heydays of Ice Cream Sandwich when Adobe had shocked the community by stating that they would no longer be supporting the Flash Player for Android mobile devices. Adobe went ...
A few years ago one of the key things that helped set Android apart from iOS was support for Adobe Flash Player. But Adobe officially stopped supporting Flash for Android in mid-2012, a growing number ...
Support for Adobe Flash is one of the biggest selling points of Android 2.2 – or “Froyo” – and one reason so many people were looking forward to Google’s mobile operating system update. Flash makes it ...
In the past, you could download Adobe Flash directly from the Google Play store on your Android device, but Adobe removed it from the store in 2012. Adobe stopped developing Flash for Android to ...
It was all over the news yesterday that Adobe updated their Flash Player with a large number of bug fixes. They did so on every platform that it supports, including Android. Or so everyone said. My ...
Wish you could still visit some of your favorite Flash-based Web sites on your Jelly Bean device? Check out these steps to get Flash back. Nicole Cozma has an affinity for all things tech, but also ...
If you were hoping to run a nice new version of Flash Player on your new Nexus 7 or future Jelly Bean device, Adobe has some bad news for you. Not only has said it won’t support Flash on Android 4.1 ...