Of course the irony in all the hoopla about Apple lying about flash and saying it's a closed platform--so they won't support it is the way in which the QuickTime plugin for browsers works in 64-bit Windows environments. The control bar simply turns into a black bar where one cannot find the controls--they are there, you just cannot see them. There are plenty of postings about this and yet Apple does nothing.
Michael --- In [email protected], "Sam Cayze" <sam.ca...@...> wrote: > > Thanks for the input guys. > > > > I have seen some great things with HMTL 5, hopefully this is the wave of > the future. > > > > From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of > Romain Kang > Sent: Thursday, May 06, 2010 7:41 PM > To: [email protected] > Subject: [Treo] Re: [ NNSquad ] "Apple is lying about Flash" > > > > > > I happen to agree that Flash is a compromised vehicle. It does not > run on the FreeBSD and Palm devices I've used over the years. > Certain flavors of 64-bit Linux are now supported, but not the ones > I have. And Flash is indeed responsible for bad behavior I've seen > on Mac, so I enable it only selectively. Maybe it works well on > Windows machines, but that's not where I live. > > Were I to meet Steve Jobs, I might very well dislike him. But I'm > with him on this one. Flash is not a suitable foundation for an > open, connected world. > > Romain > > > > > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] >
