It's possible to use flashplugin-nonfree for firefox and pepperflash-plugin-nonfree for chromium. You can simply install google chrome - it has flash plugin within the bundle.
On 27 July 2017 at 06:27, Rick Moen <r...@linuxmafia.com> wrote: > Quoting Joachim Fahrner (j...@fahrner.name): > > > You can try Google Chrome (not Chromium). AFAIK that's the only > > browser for Linux that still supports Flash. > > As mentioned separately, pepperflashplugin-nonfree (the PPAPI[1] > proprietary Google-written Flash player _for_ Google Chrome) works in > Chromium -- because after all, Google Chrome is just Chromium with a > bunch of dodgy proprietary bits tacked on. > > Debian Project's page about that: > https://wiki.debian.org/PepperFlashPlayer/Installing > > > [1] PPAPI is a similar but different Google rewrite of the old NPAPI > plug-in interface. (The latter has been standard in Mozilla-family Web > browsers, > but is being phased out starting 2013 as part of browser wrecking^W > improvement.) > https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Google_Native_Client#PPAPI > https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NPAPI#Browser_support > > -- > Cheers, If you're going to play the game > properly, > Rick Moen you'd better know every rule. > r...@linuxmafia.com -- Rep. Barbara Jordan > (D-Texas) > McQ! (4x80) > _______________________________________________ > Dng mailing list > Dng@lists.dyne.org > https://mailinglists.dyne.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/dng > -- Regards, Yevgeny
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