When Google released Android 4.1 Jelly Bean in 2012, Flash support found itself on the cutting room floor, no longer downloadable in the Google Play Store and dropped from the mobile platform.
In the past, you could download Adobe Flash directly from the Google Play store on your Android device, but Adobe removed it from the store in 2012. Adobe stopped developing Flash for Android to ...
Support for Adobe Flash is one of the biggest selling points of Android 2.2 – or “Froyo” – and one reason so many people were looking forward to Google’s mobile operating system update. Flash makes it ...
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Adobe announced last year that it was winding down support for Flash on mobile devices. Now the end is in sight. The company won’t be offering a certified version of Flash Player for Google’s new ...
The latest version of Google's Android mobile operating system was announced at its IO 2010 event in San Francisco. Codenamed Froyo (continuing Android's dessert-themed naming scheme), Android 2.2 ...
Android users who want to keep running Flash as legacy software will need to download and install Flash before the August 15th deadline. Adobe also recommends that they stay on Android 4.0, as Flash ...
Adobe has announced that from 15 August it will no longer install Flash on Android mobile devices via the Google Play Store. This marks the end of Adobe Flash on Android mobile devices, and Adobe will ...