Rob wrote:
On Thursday 19 October 2006 21:01, Cesare Marilungo
wrote:
Regarding flash content creation on linux
there's also this:
http://ming.sourceforge.net/
Yeah, there are a number of flash creation options under Linux
(ming, OpenLaszlo, swfc, and a bunch of early-alpha IDE's like
Flame Project and UIRA.... not to mention OpenOffice, if you
don't need to do anything fancy).
Hmmm, now those are interesting!
But until recently, there's
been no viable way to play Flash unless you downloaded Adobe's
pretty lame Flash 7 plugin. Now Gnash is almost usable
A friend of mine describes the current version of Gnash as a "crash the
gui, crash the X server" application and says "Give it another year."
and
Flash 9 is in beta, available as a standalone player, and less
sucky than Flash 7.
I'm pretty sure we have the pressure of Gnash to thank for the
availability of that Flash 9 beta.
And the increased press that Linux is getting, combined with the fact
that Flash gives creators of Flash files the ability to get back
detailed usage stats. So the more times they see the Linux version of
the Flash player in use, the more likely THEY (paying Adobe customers)
to encourage Adobe to support Linux users. Another factor may be that
they may be able to piggyback on development for the Mac OS X to help
build the Linux version. And the graphic-arts-heavy Mac community has
thoroughly fallen in love with Flash ...
--
David
gnome(a)hawaii.rr.com
authenticity, honesty, community