Third party apps are not Apple's products. I'm also not sure why you need an iTunes card to buy something that is developed, maintained and sold by a third party. They belong to the third party. Chrome browser is a Google product. And the PC version of Chrome will not run on an iPad. You should probably download the iOS version, which is free, from the App Store.
As for what third party browsers may work with Flash, you will want to do some research in the App Store and the hundreds of App Store websites that cover the millions of apps in the App Store and read up on some of their reviews. Those are much more updated than this thread that is about as old as the iPad itself.
And remember, the fact that a third party has kludged a way into their own product to view certain flash items does not make Flash compatible with iOS. Or Android, for that matter, as there is no Flash player for that OS either. Many developers use other third party tools like AIR or Swiffy which allows Flash content to be viewed in their own apps or website.
Those browsers do not run Flash content directly on your device. Flash content gets decoded on the server (or computer) side and streamed into your device. There is no "FlashPlayer" built into the browser. So no, FlashPlayer IS NOT compatible with iOS.
Were you really responding to johndaily, or did java mess you up by "pretending" to go to the last page, but really stayed on the 1st page, so you though johndaily just posted (instead of in 2012 when he did post)?
No, it will not, as this is strictly a flash based page. But I would have expected a web and multimedia company to be able to create a modern web page instead of relying on Flash. You may want to re-think the company you work for if they strictly rely on Flash for web page design.
Browser apps such as Skyfire, iSwifter, Puffin and Photon 'work' on some sites, but judging by their reviews not all sites. Also some websites, especially news sites, have their own apps in the App Store.
Which sites do you exactly want to visit? I can quickly test them out for Flash compliance with the Flash emulators listed above so that you don't end up having to pay for AppStore apps just to be able to test them.
Thanks for the link! I wish the article had some kind of benchmarks or at least some real-world compatibility info like the one at -you-will-want-watch-flash-only-videos-and- use-dynamic-flash-content (see the latest updates at the bottom). Unfortunately, it doesn't even mention Skyfire is no longer compatible with a lot of online videos and isn't in any way recommended when there're much better choices (iSwifter and Puffin being the two best.)
Until the recent Mac iOS upgrade, I was running an Adobe Flash Player video in my iPad's Safari Browser. Since the upgrade, the video does not display and no error messages are displayed. Can anyone tell me why this has happened, and what, if anything, I can do about it?
Thanks for your response Maria. Yes, I have always been aware that Flash has never been supported by IOS. What we were running was an eLearning module created using Articulate Storyline and saved in SCORM format. It was then upladed to a SharePoint website using SCORM Player 365 to run it. SCORM uses Flash to display the module. It ran fine on Safari (and Chrome) on both an iPad and iPhone. After upgrading the IOS, it stopped working. Both the Safari and Chrome were basic installs with no plugins.I think the question is here is not "why is it now not working?" But rather "How did it run in the first place?!!?" Thanks again Maria.
"How did it run in the first place" is a good question, since Flash Player has never been supported on iOS (the OS used by both iPad and iPhone). I would start by contacting the content developer and the makers of SCORM Player 365. It seems they may have done something for this to work on iOS.
Yeah, it sounds like iOS broke the tool that you were using to play Flash content on iOS. AFAIK, we have no engineering relationship with that third-party vendor, so I have no idea how they were getting it to work, nor do we support the use-case.
Apple changes APIs and underlying OS architecture pretty aggressively, so the technique they were using is probably no longer viable. You'll either need to wait for the vendor to update, or find a different mechanism for delivering your eLearning content. I'm pretty sure that there are numerous options for true cross-platform courseware delivery available commercially, including products from Adobe.
I use Safari to access my employers network. Since the the update tp iPad IOS when I log onto the network i get an error stating that my version of Safari is out of date. When I fly Delta Airlines, I like to watch movies on my iPad. After the last iPad IOS was installed I can no longer watch movies on my iPad. The delta app tell me that have to enable Adobe Flash in the preference settings of Safari. It thinks I am running from a Mac.
Flash Player has never been supported on iOS devices (iPhone, iPad). The only way I'm aware of viewing Flash content on these devices is to use a browser, such as Puffin, that renders Flash in the cloud.
If this is the iPad mentioned previously, not sure how you were able to view Flash content. If this is a different machine (e.g. Mac Book running macOS, not iOS), then see -player.html for links to enable Flash in the browser you are using.
iPadOS will load the "desktop" version of a website by default. If the server thinks you're on a "desktop" computer rather than a mobile device, it will want you to use Flash. Older versions of iOS running on iPads loaded the "mobile" versions of websites by default and so used non-flash video players.
All you should need to do to get your Delta videos to play is to force iPadOS's Safari to load the "mobile" version of the website instead of the "desktop" version. The easy way to do this so you won't have this problem with any site in the future is to change the default loading preference:
If you don't want to change the default, you can make the decision on a per-site basis, either just for the current session or whenever you load that site, by tapping on the icon to the far left of the address bar.
Flash player isn't supported on iOS devices. Does the site that you studying on have a non-flash version of it, or do they have their own app in your country's App Store ? Or does the site have info about using their site on an iOS device ?
You can find browsers in the app store that support Flash, but they do it by using a distant server as a proxy. It receives the Flash stream and relays it to you in video form. This is not very reliable, and completely insecure, since you don't know who is sharing your data.
Note that in order to be able to edit and use MS Office apps on an iPad Pro, you will need a paid Office 365 subscription (MS offers a free alternative for non-Pro iPads, but requires a regular Office 365 subscription for the Pro models).
Hi. Photon does not have built-in Flash. It uses the method I described, with a server somewhere (China, Russia, Brazil, Fort Meade, somewhere?) acting as a proxy. I use it, but wouldn't trust it with an actual login.
As we all know that Adobe Flash Player is one of the most widely used tools for delivering audio and videos. But unfortunately, Adobe Flash Player can't support iOS devices. Although more and more sites using other ways to play videos instead of Adobe Flash Player, there are still some websites, games, and web apps still using Flash. In that case, what things we can do to play flash on iPhone? Or is there any flash player for iPhone we can try?
Puffin Browser is a mobile Flash browser for iPhone or Android phone/tablet. With the latest adobe flash support, Puffin offers incredible loading speed and full web page display. Puffin flash browser features its cloud computing technology. It can also download files cloud-to-cloud without consuming any network bandwidth. With Puffin like an Adobe Flash Player for Android/iOS, you can play any Flash movies or games online smoothly.
As a powerful and versatile Safari alternative, Photon Flash Player is a new browser with Flash capability designed to enhance your browsing experience on iPhone and Android. You can feel free to browse Flash websites on your Android phone or tablets, iOS devices. Photon provides a "lightning bolt button" for you to enter the Flash browsing mode easily.
Dolphin Video Flash Player is the perfect solution for you to access online video that utilizes Flash. That means that you'll be able to watch Flash videos on iPhone or Android, that are being live streamed or embedded within websites. The browser supports most video formats, while its main attraction is support for SWF and FLV Flash video. When you install it, it will also list any videos you have saved on your device so you can easily find them and watch them.
Skyfire is another Flash video-enabled web browser for iPhone/Androi. It aims at watching Flash video. Flash animation, Flash-based apps, Facebook & Zynga games, etc. are excluded. You can watch a wide range of Flash videos online such as live news, sporting events and TV shows on your device. Apart from that, Skyfire Web Browser allows you to customize browser tools including shopping, newsfeed, etc and gives you direct social media links.
iSwifter Flash Browser unlocks your favorite Flash content on iPhone/iPad, letting you enjoy video, Flash websites, and as the name indicates, iSwifter is the perfect Flash games player, it enables you to play many interactive Flash applications such as Facebook Social Games, popular MMORPGs, and causal games.
When playing flash videos, you can use a iPhone flash player browser. Besides flash player browser for iPhone, you can also choose to download and convert flash videos to iPhone supported formats. In order to do this, here I recommend you a perfect Flash Video Downloader, which could download Flash video smoothly on computer and convert the video to Android or iPhone supported formats.
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