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Google Chrome has replaced Adobe Flash with HTML5 in its latest version, according to an Engadget report by Billy Steele. “Google proposed making HTML5 the default over Flash in its Chrome ...
Chrome will make Flash player a last resort as soon as fall An 'HTML5 by Default' proposal would kick Adobe's often-maligned plugin to the curb.
By December, Chrome 55 defaulted to HTML5 except for pages only supported by Flash. For developers, if their content was not made with the HTML5 content player, their content would not ...
Google has announced that hacker-favorite Adobe Flash Player will no longer, as of Q4, be the default in Chrome. Instead, Chrome will default to HTML5.
Google has outlined a plan to push HTML5 by default in Chrome, instead of Flash. In Q4 2016, the company plans to only serve Flash by default for the top 10 domains that still depend on the plugin ...
Google has previously allowed Chrome, Safari, and Internet-Explorer-using-Chrome-Frame browsers to try out a few HTML5 video demos at its site, but now Google's given you the option to always play ...
Some observers pan the move, noting Google's support for Flash rival HTML5 Google with its Chrome browser is making accommodations for the Adobe Flash Player, a move that did not sit well with ...
Google aims to make HTML5 the primary experience in Chrome by the fourth quarter of this year, except for a white-list of 10 sites that will run Adobe’s Flash Player.
Flash Player will still be installed as part of Chrome, but it will be invisible to websites. Google has built-in measures to address sites that direct users to install Flash from Adobe.
Google's Chrome browser will stop supporting Adobe's Flash Player on nearly all websites by the end of the year. Posting to Google groups, staff member Anthony LaForge outlined the company's plan ...
Starting this September, Google's Chrome will begin to block Flash in favour of HTML5 for behind the scenes analytics.