Skip to main content

Adobe Aggressively Bringing Flash to Smartphones…But Not iPhone

At its Adobe Max 2009 conference, software giant Adobe formally announced Adobe Flash Player 10.1, including full flash support for smartphones and other Internet-connected devices. Flash Player 10.1 will be the first version of Flash that enables a consistent range of capabilities across a broad range of devices, ranging from tricked out gamer and developer PCs all the way down to smartphones. And mobile devices are a major focus of Adobe’s efforts: the company plans to have a developer beta ready to go for Windows Mobile, webOS, and desktop operating systems by the end of 2009, with public betas for Android and Symbian due in early 2010.

Of course, there’s one major smartphone platform that’s not part of Adobe’s equation for Flash Player 10.1: the Apple iPhone.

Adobe Flash logo
Image used with permission by copyright holder

“With Flash Player moving to new mobile platforms, users will be able to experience virtually all Flash technology based Web content and applications wherever they are,” said Adobe’s platform business VP and general manager David Wadhwani, in a statement. “We are excited about the broad collaboration of close to 50 industry leaders in the Open Screen Project and the ongoing collaboration with 19 out of the top 20 handset manufacturers worldwide. It will be great to see first devices ship with full Flash Player in the first half of next year.”

Recommended Videos

BlackBerry maker Research in Motion is also on board with the Open Screen Project, although neither RIM nor Adobe offered any concrete information on when Flash Player 10.1 for BlackBerry devices might be available.

Apple has historically shown some reticence towards including Flash support in the iPhone: although it made some deals with Google to bring things like YouTube and Google Maps to the iPhone without Flash, the iPhone’s Safari browser deliberately doesn’t support plug-ins, and Apple has indicated in the past that Flash performance on the iPhone would be sub-par. However, Apple has since released the iPhone 3GS (and revised iPod touch) with significantly improved performance and graphics capabilities; industry watchers are looking to Apple to get behind Flash on the iPhone sooner than later…although few were surprised the company declined to do it at an Adobe-centric event.

Geoff Duncan
Geoff Duncan writes, programs, edits, plays music, and delights in making software misbehave. He's probably the only member…
I finally have RCS on my iPhone, and it’s one of my favorite iOS 18 features
An iPhone 16 Pro showing RCS messaging.

Apple’s Messages app has certainly come a long way. When the first iPhone launched in 2007, it could only send SMS -- there weren't even picture messages. Then it got MMS protocol support in iPhone OS 3.0 with the iPhone 3GS. With iPhone OS 5.0, Apple implemented its own iMessage chat protocol, making it easy for Apple users to communicate with other Apple device users.

However, when it came to messaging Android users, Apple dragged its feet for the longest time, sticking with SMS and MMS, which aren’t encrypted and don't offer full-quality photo and video sending. It also sparked the whole blue bubble versus green bubble war.

Read more
If your iPhone can handle iOS 18.2, it can probably handle iOS 19
An iPhone 15 Pro Max running iOS 18, showing its home screen.

The last few iPhone updates have brought a lot of changes with them. Just take a look at iOS 18.2: It introduced a ton of AI-powered features that had never before been available. If you have an older phone, it's easy to worry that its hardware won't be up to snuff for the next round of updates. For now, you can breathe easy: If your iPhone can handle iOS 18, then it should also work with iOS 19, according to a new leak.

The news comes from the French site iPhoneSoft. Although Apple guarantees five years of support for its devices, some devices get supported for longer periods of time, but this tip suggests that any phone currently capable of downloading and installing iOS 18 will also work with iOS 19, although some features could be limited.

Read more
OnePlus 13 vs. iPhone 16 Pro: Can the flagship killer take another head?
OnePlus 13 in Midnight Ocean beside iPhone 16 Pro in Natural Titanium.

OnePlus looks like it's hit another one out of the park with this year's OnePlus 13. The enthusiast brand's latest flagship launched in China in late October, and now it's officially landed in North America. As one of the first mainstream phones to be powered by Qualcomm's bleeding-edge Snapdragon 8 Elite chip, it brings significant improvements in the OnePlus 13's performance, battery life, and photographic prowess compared to its predecessor.

This also puts the OnePlus 13 first in line to challenge Apple's 2024 flagship. Last year, the iPhone 16 Pro raised the bar with Apple's A18 Pro chip to power new Apple Intelligence features and turn the smartphone into a gaming powerhouse. There's also a clever new Camera Control and studio-quality cinematography features. Does Qualcomm's latest silicon give the OnePlus 13 enough of an edge, and has the smartphone maker put it to good use? Let's dig in and find out how these two measure up to each other.
OnePlus 13 vs. iPhone 16 Pro: specs

Read more