Wednesday 27 January 2016

Flash is 'on life support,' could be gone in 2 years

Flash is 'on life support,' could be gone in 2 years

The end has been nigh for Adobe Flash for quite a while now, but the aging web format may finally see its final days in just two years.

According to data collected by Encoding.com's annual report of global media format use, the Flash video codec has been on the rapid decline, dropping from a 21 percent share among users to just 6 percent in 2015.

"While Flash is still being used for specific uses and edge cases such as banner ads and legacy browsers, it's days are numbered," the report diagnosed. "We expect to see the Flash video codec disappear completely from our report within 24 months."

H.264, a long-time standard for video editors, continues to snag a sizable portion of video codec use, encoding nearly three-quarters of videos published on the internet.

Since videos encoded in H.264 work on virtually every platform — a restriction Flash had since day one — the codec has gained the support from not just content creators, but also companies like Apple and Google.

Encoding's report also points out the rising popularity of WebM, which has been gaining on H.264 thanks to being royalty-free and compatible with contemporary web standards like HTML5.

Major sites like Facebook and YouTube, as well as Mozilla Firefox, and have long distanced themselves from Flash not just for video, but have barred the program from web design use in general, favoring more secure and mobile-friendly web formats.

Adobe themselves disavowed using Flash for web development back in December, re-branding its Flash creation tool as Animate CC and urging web developers to seek different web standards.










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