Hi,
> This maybe something we can have Spoon can host. A convenience package
> that is not officially backed by Apache, but is available for end users...
An alternative would be a linux install package with the SDK and scripts to
complete the install process (asking to accept terms of licence an
Hi,
> Believe you need a distribution licence from Adobe in order to legally do so.
Form a quick search:
You need one for AIR and Flash Player:
https://www.adobe.com/licensing/
And they can't be on a public facing web site :-(
And more importantly the Flex SDK.
http://web.archive.org/web/20120
Hi,
> This maybe something we can have Spoon can host. A convenience package
> that is not officially backed by Apache, but is available for end users...
Believe you need a distribution licence from Adobe in order to legally do so.
Justin
Hi,
> Maybe this is just my ignorance of the nuances involved, but since Android
> is pretty much linux under the hood, what is the difficulty for Adobe in
> maintaining a linux distribution of AIR?
That's a question only Adobe can answer. The answer they have given in the past
is other OSs gre
Nick,
The big difference is the UI layer... There is no Flash Player
distribution any more. There is a bundled FP installation that can sit
inside Chrome, but it relies on Chrome to do its UI..
It became a big pain in the rear to continue to maintain compatibility with
all the different variant
This maybe something we can have Spoon can host. A convenience package
that is not officially backed by Apache, but is available for end users...
What are your thoughts?
-Nick
On Apr 29, 2013 12:59 AM, "Justin Mclean" wrote:
> Hi,
>
> > Hmm. Not quite sure Apache sees it that way. Check out
Its a question lots of folks including myself have asked for a long time.
We never got a decent answer
~a~
www.ayobinitie.com
http://mrbinitie.blogspot.com
On 29 April 2013 21:24, Nick Collins wrote:
> Maybe this is just my ignorance of the nuances involved, but since Android
> is pretty much
Its a question I have asked for a long time.
~a~
www.ayobinitie.com
http://mrbinitie.blogspot.com
On 29 April 2013 21:24, Nick Collins wrote:
> Maybe this is just my ignorance of the nuances involved, but since Android
> is pretty much linux under the hood, what is the difficulty for Adobe in
Maybe this is just my ignorance of the nuances involved, but since Android
is pretty much linux under the hood, what is the difficulty for Adobe in
maintaining a linux distribution of AIR? I understand it may necessitate
limiting it's support to certain distros, but that would be better than
nothin
Gracias Saleh :)
~a~
www.ayobinitie.com
http://mrbinitie.blogspot.com
On 29 April 2013 11:43, Saleh Abdulawal wrote:
> Yes it did, Thanks to "aYo ~", the same steps goes for IntelliJ Idea
> Ultimate 12
>
> here are the steps explained in this post with snap shots:
>
> http://saleh360.blogspot.
Yes it did, Thanks to "aYo ~", the same steps goes for IntelliJ Idea
Ultimate 12
here are the steps explained in this post with snap shots:
http://saleh360.blogspot.com/2013/04/up-and-running-with-apache-flex-on.html
On Mon, Apr 29, 2013 at 1:24 PM, aYo ~ wrote:
> this worked for me and it did
I don't see 'FDT' word in your original message, so, as you suggested to
install IntelliJ IDEA at step 4, reader thinks that step 7 is about
IntelliJ IDEA configuration. But step 7 should not be done in IntelliJ IDEA.
Alexander
On 29.04.2013 14:24, aYo ~ wrote:
this worked for me and it did n
this worked for me and it did not require setting up the SDK in /opt. This
was for FDT. I guess that's the beauty of Linux, flexibility
http://mrbinitie.blogspot.com/2013/02/using-apache-flex-49-sdk-with-fdt5-in.html
~a~
www.ayobinitie.com
http://mrbinitie.blogspot.com
On 29 April 2013 10:22, Al
On 26.04.2013 23:11, Saleh Abdulawal wrote:
Here is the Steps:
1- Download the Windows Binary and Copy to opt + chown
2- Download Flash Player Debuger 11 and place it inside the sdk folder
under "Player/11/"
3- in sdk/frameworks/ backup "flex-config.xml" and replace it with
attached file
4- D
Agreed
~a~
www.ayobinitie.com
http://mrbinitie.blogspot.com
On 29 April 2013 07:16, Justin Mclean wrote:
> Hi,
>
> > Justin, you have made the crucial point 'parity with the Win player and
> > AIR'. The issue is Adobe support or I guess the lack of it.
> Mostly likely depends if your doing AIR
Hi,
> Justin, you have made the crucial point 'parity with the Win player and
> AIR'. The issue is Adobe support or I guess the lack of it.
Mostly likely depends if your doing AIR mobile work or not, I know people who
use Linux now to develop browser and desktop apps and don't mind using the
old
Justin, you have made the crucial point 'parity with the Win player and
AIR'. The issue is Adobe support or I guess the lack of it. So long as
there is a freeze on Linux support player and run-time. Its really not
properly supported. I suppose it can be supported with a caveat. I have
unfortunately
Hi,
> Hmm. Not quite sure Apache sees it that way. Check out this quote from
> [1]:
> "Every ASF release must contain a source package, which must be sufficient
> for a user to build and test the release provided they have access to the
> appropriate platform and tools."
First step is make an c
On 4/28/13 9:27 PM, "Justin Mclean" wrote:
> Hi,
>
>> Also, I'm not sure it will be practical in the short term to make the
>> official release (the source package) support Linux as the build script of
>> the source package requires compiling PixelBender source files and there is
>> no PixelB
Hi,
> Also, I'm not sure it will be practical in the short term to make the
> official release (the source package) support Linux as the build script of
> the source package requires compiling PixelBender source files and there is
> no PixelBender compiler for Linux.
I see releasing the source cod
On 4/28/13 3:29 PM, "Justin Mclean" wrote:
> Hi,
>
>> I noticed the defrences now, installiing the sdk in windows automatically
>> adds the needed libraries that includes flash player debugger and air to
>> the sdk frameworks sub directory
> Just something to note - if you take an installed
Hi,
> I noticed the defrences now, installiing the sdk in windows automatically
> adds the needed libraries that includes flash player debugger and air to
> the sdk frameworks sub directory
Just something to note - if you take an installed windows or mac version of the
SDK and copy it (which I t
I noticed the defrences now, installiing the sdk in windows automatically
adds the needed libraries that includes flash player debugger and air to
the sdk frameworks sub directory, I just tried it and it works fine in
booth FDT and IntelliJ Idea Ultimate, but it has some issues in FDT, I
will po
for FDT on Linux follow these instructions
http://mrbinitie.blogspot.com/2013/02/using-apache-flex-49-sdk-with-fdt5-in.html
~a~
www.ayobinitie.com
http://mrbinitie.blogspot.com
On 27 April 2013 06:52, Justin Mclean wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I also updated the addAIRToSDK.sh script to work for Linux. On
Hi,
I also updated the addAIRToSDK.sh script to work for Linux. Only version 2.6 of
AIR is supported on Linux, Adobe didn't release it for Linux after that.
Thanks,
Justin
HI,
> 1- Download the Windows Binary and Copy to opt + chown
The Mac binary also works and may be preferable - don't recall having to
opt/chown anything.
I posted instructions back in Feb.
http://markmail.org/thread/y4jgtr73qthcnnr3
Thanks,
Justin
This should get a place on the Wiki, and some attention from "marketing".
Thank you!
EdB
On Friday, April 26, 2013, Saleh Abdulawal wrote:
> Here is the Steps:
>
> 1- Download the Windows Binary and Copy to opt + chown
> 2- Download Flash Player Debuger 11 and place it inside the sdk folder
>
Excellent! Thank you.
On 4/26/13 12:11 PM, "Saleh Abdulawal" wrote:
Here is the Steps:
1- Download the Windows Binary and Copy to opt + chown
2- Download Flash Player Debuger 11 and place it inside the sdk folder under
"Player/11/"
3- in sdk/frameworks/ backup "flex-config.xml" and replace i
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