Thanks everyone for the info.

On Mon, Dec 19, 2016 at 11:40 AM Josh Tynjala <[email protected]> wrote:

> Google has not announced that they will completely remove Flash Player from
> Chrome. They have a roadmap (https://www.chromium.org/flash-roadmap), and
> this is what it says:
>
> We will continue to ship Flash Player with Chrome, and if a site truly
> > requires Flash, a prompt will appear at the top of the page when the user
> > first visits that site, giving them the option of allowing it to run for
> > that site
> >
>
> Between now and October 2017, Chrome will increase the number of websites
> where they force HTML by default. When a website defaults to HTML, but it
> requires Flash Player, a prompt will ask the user if they want to allow
> Flash Player. Once they have allowed Flash Player on a website, they won't
> be asked again for the same website. After October 2017, all websites will
> be HTML by default in Chrome, but users will still be able to enable Flash
> Player.
>
> Here is a mockup of what the experience will be like when your site is
> forced to HTML by default:
>
>
> https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/106_KLNJfwb9L-1hVVa4i29aw1YXUy9qFX-Ye4kvJj-4/edit#slide=id.g1270f83468_0_12
>
> As you can see, if your site displays a fallback message when a user
> doesn't have Flash Player installed, that's what Chrome users will start to
> see. In my opinion, it might be smart to display a different message for
> Chrome users that tells them to "enable" or "allow" Flash Player instead of
> "install" it.
>
> - Josh
>
> On Mon, Dec 19, 2016 at 9:03 AM, mark goldin <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
> > I just got this from a customer:
> >
> > For your information, from February 2017, Chrome will suggest/redirect
> to a
> > html5 webpage if there are objects in a webpage in Flash (but still ok)
> >
> >
> >
> > From October 2017, Adobe Flash will not be supported anymore on Chrome
> >
> >
> > Are there any resources to support or not to out there?
> >
> >
> > Thanks
> >
>

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