Linux users who want to view Flash content will soon have no choice but to do it through Google’s Chrome browser. That’s because Adobe is discontinuing its Flash Player for Linux as a standalone ...
Last March, Adobe and Google jointly announced that Flash Player would soon come built in to the latter’s Chrome browser, eliminating the need for users to download, install and update it separately.
Adobe’s Flash Player has come under fire from developers and companies who question its necessity, but the plug-in has just received a big vote of confidence from Google. This week, Google announced ...
Google’s Chrome has now integrated Adobe’s Flash directly into the browser. Chrome 5.0.376.86 was released over Google’s Stable channel and is now available to download for Windows, Mac, and Linux.
Google continues to stake out its territory online. The search-and-advertising giant announced Tuesday that it will bundle Adobe’s Flash player with downloads of the Chrome browser, putting Google in ...
Adobe Flash was one of the game-changing technology that was rolled out decades ago. It was so popular that Internet veterans would remember downloading it from time to time, especially that many ...
For all of Chrome’s benefits, it has one major drawback: It eats up your computer’s resources like an invasive species of fish commandeering a lake. Today, though, Google announced one change that’s ...
Google with its Chrome browser is making accommodations for the Adobe Flash Player, a move that did not sit well with some early commentators wondering why Google is now pushing Flash when it has ...
Adobe released the final Flash Player update on December 8 and urged users to uninstall the program as it ends its support for on yearend. According to Tech Radar, the update is called AIR 32, which ...
Adobe's Flash software is regularly updated to remove flaws that cyberthieves exploit Google is planning to phase out full support for Adobe's Flash software on its Chrome browser by the end of 2016.