You can sign up for Adobe AIR prerelease access at http://prerelease.adobe.com. 
The AIR sandbox is more relaxed than Flash's.

Clayne


-----Original Message-----
From: Spencer, Bob 
Sent: Wednesday, March 26, 2008 12:06 PM
To: Lucas Rocha; ext Andrew Opala; Robison, Clayne B; 
[email protected]
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; Lynch, Rusty; Li, Horace
Subject: RE: Adobe Flash on MID Linux

Andrew,
Thanks for your interest.  It is possible to run a flash application on either 
Red Flag's MIDINUX or Ubuntu's Mobile and Embedded distribution, both of which 
are targeted toward Intel MID hardware.

For ongoing help I recommend you join us at one of the following:
        IRC:  
                irc.freenode.org, channel #moblin
                irc.freenode.org, channel #ubuntu-mobile
        Mail:
                [EMAIL PROTECTED]
                [email protected]

I added a few answers to the things I know below.

Lucas Rocha wrote:
> Hi Andrew,
> 
> I suggest you to contact Leonid Zolotarev
> ([EMAIL PROTECTED]), from the browser team at Nokia, to know
> more information about Flash here.  
> 
> Br,
> 
> --lucasr
> 
> 
> Em Ter, 2008-03-25 às 17:42 -0400, ext Andrew Opala escreveu:
>> Hi guys,
>> 
>> Sorry for the unsolicited email, but I found your email addresses on
>> some source code I was reviewing for answers.  I would like to
>> port(transfer) a Flash-based (Flash 9) application to the MID Linux
>> platform that runs on Intel devices, but I realized there are lots of
>> questions that I can't find answers to.  I currently have no device
>> in mind just the platform. 
>> 
>> - under Linux/MIDINUX what version of Flash is supported?
>> - is the flash integration only through the Mozilla browser or can
>> the 
>> application run stand alone?

I would recommend a simple stand-alone GTK app that uses a GtkMozEmbed plugin 
to render the Flash content.  I've written this for demos if you are 
interested.  Alternatively you could put together a similar application using 
something like WebKit.  I've not done this to date.

Adobe has announced AIR which would allow you to run Flash outside the browser 
environment, but it is not available for Linux yet.

Bob

>> - is there an extended API to reach device capabilities such as the
>> hard disk or link local application?
I think if you put the correct Flash security file on the system during install 
of your application that you'll be able to access local resources.

>> - what other relevant Linux/MIDINUX mobile platform issues are there
>> such as design guidelines
>> 
>> I will not send you any further emails nor will I include everyone on
>> my responses.  If you do not respond to this email I will not be
>> sending any more.
>> 
>> Any other help in finding the answers like online forums that have
>> some substance to them or books, pdfs, YouTube videos of available
>> devices, etc. 
>> or people to contact would be greatly appreciated.  I am looking at
>> the North American market first - then maybe Asia.
>> 
>> Thanks a lot for your help.
>> 
>> -Andrew


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