On 2015-07-15 10:36 JanW  wrote:

> It looks like Adobe has been working on this sandbox for awhile now, starting 
> with IE.

Interesting...  Does that mean Adobe have given up on fixing all the bugs in 
Windows Flash, or perhaps there are architectural problems which make security 
problems inevitable?

I believe Adobe announced the end of Flash for mobiles some time ago and Flash 
for Linux was stopped at 11.2 except for security updates.  A Flash roadmap 
dated February 2012 sets out Adobe's strategic direction - see
https://www.adobe.com/devnet/flashplatform/whitepapers/roadmap.html

QUOTE
Strategic focus of the Flash runtimes

With the growth of competition in the browser market, browser vendors are 
increasingly innovating and providing functionality that makes it possible to 
deploy rich motion graphics directly via browser technologies, a role once 
served primarily by Flash Player.  Increasingly, rich motion graphics are being 
deployed directly via the browser using HTML5, CSS3, JavaScript and other 
modern web technologies.  Adobe expects that this trend will continue and 
accelerate, and Adobe will continue to play an active role in this space.

Adobe believes that the Flash runtimes are particularly and uniquely suited for 
two primary use cases: creating and deploying rich, expressive games with 
console-quality graphics and deploying premium video.

This focus does not mean that existing content will no longer run, or that 
Flash cannot be used for content other than gaming and premium video.  However, 
it does mean that when prioritizing work, gaming and premium video use cases 
will take priority.
UNQUOTE


So where they want to be is clear, but now Flash is being so widely deprecated 
one wonders whether that's realistic.

It seems some big industry players are working hard on Flash-to-HTML5 
conversion.  The basic PDF format is actually a published standard (ISO/IEC 
32000-1:2008), but I was a little surprised to see the SWF format produced by 
ActionScript3 is also publicly available at http://adobe.com/go/flashspecs/

A review of current conversion work dated May 2015 is available at
http://www.statsilk.com/blog/flash-versus-html5-wallaby-and-swiffy-conversion-tools-review

This company has some very interesting interactive statistical maps, but they 
rely on Flash so you can see why they have an interest in HTML5!

David L.
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