This is of interest to those of us running old versions of Flash,
especially on 64-bit installs without 32-bit support (looks in
mirror<g>).

  Download site is http://labs.adobe.com/downloads/flashplayer10.html
To find out where to install, go to "about:plugins" in Firefox, and see
where your current version of libflashplayer.so is installed.  In my
case it's /opt/Adobe/flash-player/libflashplayer.so

  To install...

* for 64-bit version download the file 
http://download.macromedia.com/pub/labs/flashplayer10/flashplayer_square_p1_64bit_linux_091510.tar.gz

* for 32-bit version download the file 
http://download.macromedia.com/pub/labs/flashplayer10/flashplayer_square_p1_32bit_linux_091510.tar.gz

* exit Firefox

* mv your current copy of libflashplayer.so to another directory as a
backup, in case the new one doesn't work for you

* extract libflashplayer.so from the downloaded tar.gz into the
directory which you removed libflashplayer.so from.

* fire up Firefox, and away you go

* note that when the release version comes out, you'll need to manually
remove the Preview Release libflashplayer.so

Good news
=========
  It works for me, so far.  I've tried live365.com, both via my paid
account and via the free (with commercials) option.  It works.  So does
Youtube.

Bad news
========
  It's more painfull building up a collection of flv videos.  The old
version used to copy Youtube videos/songs/whatever into /tmp with a
filename beginning with "Flash".  It would get wiped each time you
played a new video/whatever.  But you could always move it out to
another place before playing the next video.  Rename the file to
<something>.flv and mplayer plays it beautifully.  Nice way to build up
a collection.

The new version dumps it in the "Cache" directory of whatever Firefox
profile I'm using.  You have to cd to the "Cache" subdirectory, and
execute...

file * | grep Macro

and you'll get a list of all "Macromedia Flash" files in the directory.
One of them is the most recent Flash file you played on Youtube.  You
have to do some digging.  Again, copy it to another file elsewhere to
keep a copy.

-- 
Walter Dnes <waltd...@waltdnes.org>

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