[moving to gnash-dev@ ml] On 06/14/2012 03:31 AM, Aniyan Rajan wrote: > > Use lightspark. > > http://wiki.gnashdev.org/FAQ#What_should_gnash_play.3F > > I know about lightspark and I tried also. But it seems to be buggy, no > proper user interface and doesn't play videos properly. So I'm trying to > find something in gnash itself. > > I found the following. > bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=555044 > <http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=555044> > > If I use --enable-avm2, will it play ?
It won't. Gnash project abandoned AVM2 implementation time ago. Lightspark does that. Status of implementations is: AVM1 - Gnash 80-90% [hard being more precise] AVM2 - Lightspark ~22% http://deb.li/lsstats To play all flash stuff around, you need both, they are complementary. Lightspark is younger but actively developed, whereas Gnash is in maintenance mode, no new features except IPv6 support introduced few weeks ago and OpenGLES2 renderer implementation in progress as GSoC project. If you can't support these projects by writing code, file bugs about broken sites and help fixing them. -- Gabriele _______________________________________________ Gnash-dev mailing list Gnash-dev@gnu.org https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/gnash-dev