![]() Their live 24/7 Rick and Morty stream did work correctly though with Flash disabled. Here’s Adam’s review of the great Logitech C920 webcam:Īdult Swim’s publicly available, on demand, Rick and Morty episodes also default to Flash:ĭisabling Flash Player brought up their HTML player but it refused to play any episodes. No such version is available for Pingtest though.īut viewing them with Flash Player disabled did not prove difficult as they do have an HTML fallback. South Park Studios’ full episodes library is are also powered by Huluīoth Ookla’s & make heavy use of Flash:īut I was able to test my speed because an HTML only beta version is available for Speedtest. No HTML version either, with the site asking me to download Flash Player when it was disabled. ![]() Hulu is another service that’s making heavy use of Flash For now The HTML version is used mostly for paid Twitch Turbo subscribers. Some rare DRM protected videos also refused to playĪnd disabling Flash Player entirely produced no HTML alternative for themĮven though they do have an HTML version still prefers to use Flash for their live streams because the HTML version doesn’t yet support ads. YouTube Video Editor‘s Enhancements, Audio & Annotations sections refused to work without Flash and there is no HTML version. Some of the (big) websites I’ve identified that use Flash content had HTML5 alternatives (Twitch, Speedtest, Yahoo, Amazon, etc.) but some did not (Namely Hulu, Pandora, Napster, Spotify, NBC, CBS and YouTube’s video editor) and some only offered limited functionality (Google Finance’s stock charts). ![]() In a second run I’ve disabled Flash entirely from chrome://plugins/ to see if the website offers any – HTML based – fallback experience.ĭisabling Flash Player showed me just how much Flash content there is out there. This made it easy to identify Flash content on pages since with this change Chrome overlays Flash content with a big grey puzzle icon. I’ve configured Chrome to ask me before running any Flash content (Preferences… > Content Settings… > Plug-ins). In light of recent announcements from both Safari and Chrome that they’ll stop advertising Flash Player’s presence I’ve decided to see how ready the Internet is to move past Flash’s legacy and into an HTML only era.
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