On Friday 03 Jun 2011 21:07:36 Alan McKinnon wrote: > Apparently, though unproven, at 18:22 on Friday 03 June 2011, Indi did > opine > > thusly: > > > > Neither. Adobe is utterly incompetent and apathetic, google is evil > > > > and wants to sell ad space for h3rb41 v14gr4 in your brain. > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Flash is a necessary evil for a lot of us, chrome(ium) is not. > > > > > > I think of it more a case of there being no viable alternative to > > > Flash[1] whereas Chrom{e,ium} is just one more browser amongst many. > > > > > > > > > > > > I use Flash myself even though I hate the way it performs. > > > > > > > > > > > > [1] There are flash alternatives, but by and large only support out of > > > date features, so they are not really "viable". > > > > Agreed. I do wish we'd get something open and reasonably well coded to > > replace flash,
I do hope that html5 will do away with it altogether. > > but I think perhaps the biggest reason for the success of > > flash is its sneakiness in tracking users and ability to enforce DRM. Big > > Business just loves that sort of thing. Thankfully, rtmpdump and friends do away with such issues. > Compare skype. Someone just reverse-engineered critical bits of v1.4, I'll > bet money that Skype's (now MS) response will be to tweak the app so that > any open-source implementation gets no response from Skype infrastructure > when used. Same possibility of sneaky shit going on under the surface. I'm looking forward to using it - especially if it will allow me to stop Skype using my machine (and bandwidth) as a proxy node. -- Regards, Mick
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