Flash Player is one of the most important freeware software solutions in
the history of the internet. From the moment it appeared on the market
in distant 1996, Flash Player has enabled the tremendous rise of the use
of multimedia on the internet that could be reproduced directly inside
web browsers
without the need of any other plugins or user
customizations. This common platform for multimedia delivery enabled
countless developers of the world to target Flash as their development
platform and not some singular operating system or web browser. Once
crated app or Flash Player could be reproduced on wide variety of
operating systems (Windows, Mac OS X, Android, iOS and many others),
with all new Flash Player software version being backwards compatible
with the previous ones.
With both cross-platform and backward
compatibility present, Flash Player set its aim for many uses, which
include rendering of vector, raster graphics, 3D graphics, and support
for streaming of video and audio sources of all modern codecs. The
driving force of Flash Player are web browsers that run ActiveX-based
software, which includes all modern internet browsers excluding browser
that is accessible inside Windows 8 Metro. Other supported browsers are
Internet Explorer, Google Chrome, Mozilla Firefox, Safari, Opera and
many forks of WebKit browsers). Flash Player also reaches users on many
dedicated devices such as home consoles (PS3, PSP, Wii), and older
operating systems such as Pocket PC, Windows Mobile, BlackBerry Tablet
OS, Maemo and others.
Top new features in Flash Player:
Stage 3D accelerated graphics rendering
Explore
a new architecture for high-performance 2D/3D GPU hardware accelerated
graphics rendering by Adobe, which provides low-level Stage3D APIs for
advanced rendering in apps and gives framework developers classes of
interactive experiences.
Native 64-bit support
Flash
Player can now take advantage of native support for 64-bit operating
systems and 64-bit web browsers on Linux®, Mac OS, and Windows®.
H.264/AVC software encoding for cameras
Stream
beautiful video from your computer's camera with higher compression
efficiency and industry-wide support, enabling both high-quality
real-time communications (such as video chat and video conferencing) and
live video broadcasts.
Content protection support for mobile
Flash
Access content protection support is now available on Android devices.
Broadcasters can now reach and monetize an even broader range of
customers on their favorite mobile device.
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