Monday, May 16, 2016

Google Making It Happen and block Flash in Chrome – this autumn – IDG.se

Adobe Flash Player is slowly but surely going out of the wastewater. Now Google is aiming to make HTML5 to the default Chrome browser, instead of Flash, and the transition is supposed to be completed sometime during the end of the year. With the exception of the ten selected sites that still may run the old faithful, writes IDG News.

The project is called Html5 by default, but despite the name, the browser will have continued support for Flash Player. However, they will not flag with that support. If a website offers HTML5, it will run as usual. Flash is necessary for the site, users will be notified about it.

The user may select whether to run the program or not. At the next visit, Chrome will remember the user’s choice and the message pops up probably not. But Google is working on with various options and it may change.

Read also: Here are programs you can earn a hefty hack to hack

not long ago, the Flash one of the Web’s most necessary programs. But recently, HTML5 run on Adobe, especially since Google as leaving Flash behind. According to Google HTML5 gives users a better experience most faster loading time and consumes less power. Sökjätten recently announced that they will begin to block ads that run Flash on their services Adwords and Doublecklick digital marketing.

Perhaps Adobe wants to downhill for Flash alone was due to new technology caught up with them. But it is not, as users sometimes bitter experience gained. Merit list is black reading for Adobe. A list that has far too many vulnerabilities and reports of various threats. Last year, the average cooked a security flaw a day.

Adobe has begun to offer tools for developing content for HTML5, while continuing to support Flash content. They have recognized that open standards like HTML5 now offers features that they do not have and that they have matured. But they also say that Flash will continue to be used in online gaming and premium video, where the new players are not caught up yet.

In the beginning, Chrome will have a list of exceptions in which ten sites are sorted out based on the combined use a domain. It is about including Youtube, Facebook, Amazon and Mail.ru. The list will be in a year and updated periodically to remove sites that no longer need special treatment. Businesses will also have the option to always run Flash content.

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