Flash Support Confirmed For Android 2.2 282
farble1670 writes "In an interview with the New York Times, Google's Andy Rubin confirmed that Android 2.2 will have support for Flash 10.1. Quoting: '[Rubin] promised that full support for Adobe’s Flash standard was coming in the next version of Android, code-named Froyo, for frozen yogurt (previous Android releases were called Cupcake, Donut, and Eclair, and are represented outside Building 44 on the Google campus with giant sculptures of the desserts). Sometimes being open "means not being militant about the things consumers are actually enjoying," he said.'"
Re:thats nice but (Score:5, Informative)
This isn't the iPhone. There are other [cyanogenmod.com] options [openeclair.org] available.
Re:Maybe good... maybe bad (Score:3, Informative)
I for one... (Score:2, Informative)
Android 1 iPhone 0 (Score:0, Informative)
I'm looking to buy a new phone this summer to replace my old and slow iPhone 3G. This is one point in Android's favor. Slow, buggy and insecure it may be but at least the consumer has a choice where as Apple is giving us none.
Re:My Thoughts (Score:3, Informative)
Not only has Flash been available on other smartphones (Windows Mobile, N900, etc.) but it's also been available on Android phones with the HTC Sense UI. Now it'll be in every stock 2.2 phone, which will cover hopefully all newer Android-running phones (aka ones running 2.1 now)
Re:thats nice but (Score:5, Informative)
But can you install them on any Android phone? Which I think is what he was after.
If you can flash the device, then yes, you can install them on any phone. It's a replacement of the OS.
There are websites that tell you how to get in to the various rom-flash modes for each phone.
A lot of the stuff they are doing, though, can be done with apps (including tethering for almost all devices and carriers), so I'm not sure what the point is, really. They do have kernel tweaks, but I'm not sure they're worth it.
Re:Some of you keep forgetting something... (Score:3, Informative)
I'm pretty sure that Silverlight is the Web standard of .NET.
Re:Verizon (Score:3, Informative)
You can already disable Flash on Android 1.5.... (Score:5, Informative)
I'm thrilled that I'm able to use whatever software I want on Android. The problem is, I don't actually want Flash - I just wanted the ability to decide for myself.
So, that's great that you will be supporting it, but please let me turn it off or uninstall it from my phone.
Thanks.
I'm not sure why this keeps coming up, since nobody that ever replies clearly has ever owned an Android phone. My HTC Hero, which supports Flash 7 out-of-the-box, has an option in its browser to disable plugins.
You have the option to disable Flash on your Android phone right now, and it's FUD to keep suggesting that you won't be able to disable it again in the future.