Brightcove's partnerships with The New York Times and Time magazine will allow HTML5 to seamlessly replace Adobe Flash video content on the publications' Web sites for compatibility with Apple's iPad.
Most sites today are built with Flash. Most sites are thusly archaic. Adobe, the developer behind the still-ubiquitous multimedia platform, is tempering the impending takeover by rival HTML5 with the ...
Believe it or not, Flash still has an ardent fan club. The once-ubiquitous media player for browsers has taken its lumps, thanks in large part to security issues. However, diehards remain in Flash’s ...
Google released a feature Wednesday that automatically converts Flash into HTML5 markup language when uploaded to AdWords. It will help mobile devices that cannot read Flash render advertisements on ...
Adobe has shipped a pre-release version of Wallaby, its Flash-to-HTML5 conversion tool, going some way to opening up advertising on the iPhone to Flash designers. Well look what happens when Apple ...
Adobe's Flash platform is coming under increased scrutiny as the iPad gets ready to ship. As a number of big players start thinking about their HTML5 strategy, it's clear that the “Flash issue” is on ...
Steve Jobs has been vindicated yet again. His April 2010 letter explaining Apple’s decision to forbid Flash on its mobile devices has proved to be a death knell for Adobe as almost 18 months later, ...
Google has weighed in heavily in favor of HTML5, but engineers at Google-owned YouTube maintain Flash is still the best platform for video distribution In the ongoing ...
Flash versus HTML5 is a false dichotomy since they are not equal as tools or as mechanisms to deliver content and/or interactivity. Developers need to weigh the requirements of their project against ...
The defunct Atlanta-based ad tech company Inform, which provided video services to outside publishers, can proceed with claims that Google violated antitrust laws by ...