I think it was something like this issue, looks like they are still having problems with their damn Web UI. What was wrong with the old client we used to install, you know like a real program. Not this browser based junk. And I swear that Web UI is so slow. Sorry
Internet explorer appears to be the best browser for the web client at least right now. Try a reinstall of Adobe flash directly from Adobe and o the IE browser.
Also please show the error and advise if you are trying to get to an individual host or the vCenter. Also provide VMware version.
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If you see the " To view this page ensure that Adobe Flash Player version 11.5.0 or greater is installed. " tag line click on the [Get Adobe Flash Player] icon and look at the far right of your address bar, you will see AddOn Blocked. Click the notification and allow Flash Player.
Since the update 29.0.0.140 installed on my macOS and on my Windows 10, I cannot access anymore the web interface of vmWare vSphere. This is a major regression for tech people using these enterprise vmWare products. On macOS, upon login the browser generally end up unresponsive and declares the Flash plugin has failed to answer or did crash. On Windows 10, the login screen to vSphere does not even appear, but I get a top header saying "To view this page ensure that Adobe Flash Player version 11.5.0 or greater is installed." Which is kind of funny since 29.0.0.140 is installed.
Thanks. This is not simply an enabling matter (triple checked). On macOS, already did uninstall completely (using the uninstaller), tested re-installing the latest beta (dated April 21 but which appear to behave exactly in the same way as the release from April 10). Uninstalled again, re-installed the latest release. Same thing.
Depending on how VMWare wrote their ActionScript, it's possible that the client gets in a pathological state when a particular response is slow or something. I'm guessing it just continues to poll aggressively for a network response that the developers assumed was always going to come back quickly.
My recommendation would be to reach out to VMWare. They're really in the best position to debug this. If they need to escalate an issue to Adobe as a result, we have direct engineering channels with them.
I did observe that newer versions of vCenter 6 no longer rely on Flash Player for the client UI. Given that the browsers are making it harder and harder to run Flash Player anyway, it might be a good impetus for making the upgrade (I know... easier said that done).
You might take a look at the network tab in the browser's developer tools, and/or with a web debugging proxy (Charles, etc.) to see if maybe you can identify requests that are taking a really long time to respond.
Going to step 2 and following the instructions. I am not being asked to close the browser. Step 3 for FF says you need to click to activate. In all cases I do not see any request to click anything. I just get this:
Essentially I can not use Abdobe Flash with any browser on this system. They all think it is not installed. I do not know how or when it stopped working but no amount of re-installing the latest version is helping to resolve this, and so I hope someone can clue me in on this forum.
Now, when you go to your site, you'll see the "missing" area asking you to install Flash, but if you CLICK IT ONCE, you'll get a Chrome notification that asks if you want to allow it to run, and you can click the ALLOW button.
All browsers block Flash by default and browser vendor changes in recent browser versions are making it more difficult for the browser to detect the Flash content and prompt the user to allow Flash in the browser.
Essentially, if Flash Player installed successfully (meaning no errors and install time), and Flash content isn't display, the issue is going to lie with the browser (blocking Flash), and/or with the content not confirming to the various Flash detection changes implemented by the browser vendor.
So I got away around it, i realised flash was not enabled for the website i was trying to access. I was actually running a bigbluebutton installation and encountered this when i tried accessing mydomain/check from the brower.
Since you have stated that this is the first time you have ever used ubuntu. i would suggest that you install the package ubuntu-restricted-extras, this includes lots of useful stuff like adobe flash and codecs and MS fonts etc.
Open your Firefox and go to Youtube. Click on any video. Definitely it won't play because you don't have any flash player installed. But Firefox will promote you to install missing plug-in at the top. Simply click on it and follow the procedure. After that your video will start to play. Make sure you have latest Firefox browser installed.
Get my Flash-Aid extension for Firefox. It will take care of downloading and installing the appropriate version for your system architecture and will also remove conflicting plugins. If you are on 64bit, it also allows to install the 64bit preview version, which renders better results than the 32bit with nspluginwrapper.
Use the Ubuntu Software Center (in the Applications menu). In the text entry field (of the search box), you can search for "flash", and the results will populate one Adobe Flash plugin (note the Adobe logo). Choose that, and follow the directions to use the source.
Double check which "plugin" directory is being used. Had to spend a good hour one time just plowing through all the plugin directories till I found which ones my firefox was actually reading, and then ln -sed them all to point to a common one.
Also start firefox from the command line, you might see errors. Example is running a x86 flash player in an x64 browser(not os) and vice versa. From the command line (%> firefox) you should see the plugin initialization log lines. (maybe try this one first :P)
Note: most of this can be done in a terminal as well, in that case you don't need to install Synaptic. Furthermore, it could be that just executing steps 5, 6 and 8 is enough, but I have not tested this yet.
Now you will have full 64 bit Flash without any wrappers and other garbage in both Firefox and Chromium. A restart of your browser(s) is required though. If it's still not working, try a reboot (there might be some bogus reference to the old plugins somewhere).
The way you enable other stuff (like Flash, Java, and support for recording or playing MP3s, which is NOT open source) is to go in your Software Center, go in the menus (unfortunately I'm not currently on Ubuntu and can't tell you which menu) and search for Software Sources.
Click it, and you'll be brought to a window which tells Ubuntu what it's allowed to install for you. In front of you should be a list of five different "universes". What you need to do is enable the two that aren't currently enabled.
and let it finish. Then you should be able to find flash in either the Software Center or in the command line. You could alternatively install the ubuntu-restricted-extras package, which will give you all of the three things I mentioned above.
They detail adding the repository, updating apt, installing Pepper, and modifying the chrome config. The thing that I did differently from their instructions was to change to the /etc/chromium-browser directory and issue the command
PROBLEM:
When I searched in the Ubuntu Software Center the keyword flash, none of the options posted here appeared except ONE for a flash plugin for Mozilla. When attempting to install it, I got a dependency error.
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I know Chrome has been deprecating Flash for a long time. The message appearing over the player is coming from flowplayer.js when it doesn't recognize the plugin been installed in Chrome although it is. Is there any workaround for this?
Flash is still supported in Chrome but the user needs to manually enable flash for each site. Why a site requires to manually activated or not is based on something called site engagement. Basically, the more you visit a site the higher the this index is, you can check your values if you input this url : chrome://site-engagement .But please note that the plan from Google is that in few months (by Oct 2017) everybody will require to activate flash for each site even in the sites with highest indexes.
Your option here (in addition to manually enable flash for the site, or use other browser :-) ) is to use Flowplayer 7 (or any other HTML5 player). The lastest versions of Flowplayer offers an html5 video player with flash fallback support.
Hi, I got in touch with Microsoft and the technician said that two years ago, Adobe announced the end of Flash to give developers time to switch to other technologies like HTML5. He also said the Flash player had now been removed from all Windows, Apple Mac, iOS, and Android devices and cannot be installed again. He said that if HP relied on the Flash Player, then it will no long work and that I should contact HP and ask them if they have produced a new version of their software that is compatible with Windows.
Hi, a few days ago I downloaded the UNINSTALL Adobe Flash Player program, then I ran the program & after it finished running it said it was DONE. Next I did a restart on my computer as was advised and my computer booted back up perfectly. Then I checked every one of my Settings on my computer and Adobe Flash Player wasn't showing anywhere.
I may have found out what's going on. When I log into HP Support there's an INFORMATION notice at the top right. It says, Fix and resolve Windows 10 update issues on HP computer or printer and there's a link to click.
We can see the Flash support by Adobe has ended today which has caused a few problems on our ISE dashboard. Is there a way we can utilise any other 3rd party flash players on our browsers to view ISE GUI?
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