Does Android support adobe air player ? I am new to these mobile technologies. I know, Adobe not going to give support for flash player for android platform. Is it also true for Air Player ?
Thanks,
http://blogs.adobe.com/flashplayer/2011/02/adobe-air-2-6-for-android-is-now-available.html
Yes, according to the adobe website, the AIR player can be downloaded from the Android Market.
Related
I have developed some mini games with adobe flash, I want to port this games for mobile (Android and IOS) but after a few search I figued out none of them support flash programs. I choosed flash platform for portability but it seems it is not portable at all.
I searched for other adobe flash versions that support this feature and found this product:
http://huhirbsbwsntyudp.appstorelux.com/product/adobe-creative-suite-6-master-collection-64-bit/
In feature list of this version, below feature mentioned:
• Mobile platform and device support in Flash Professional
• Create content in Flash Professional for delivery across a wide variety of devices with support for the Flash Player 11.2 and Adobe AIR® 3.2 runtimes; and for platforms including iOS, Android™, and Adobe Digital Home.
But iOS and Android said they won’t support flash files! Which one is correct? Has anybody tested it before, I mean develop game with flash and publish it for iOS or Android? Currently, SWF files of my project doesn’t work on any mobile device.
Sorry for poor language,
thanks
Recently I heared that Android's latest Jelly Bean release does not allow the flash player plugin(ie all plugins).But Adobe says that AIR is still Alive and they are saying to consider AIR instead of flash.
After this news, there are so many questions that have been popping into my mind.
As far i know even Air is running on the flash player plugin, please correct me if I am wrong.
If Air application can run on both Andriod and IOS, then obviously the flash player plugin should run on Android.
I am curious about the technology, so please explain what it is.
Flash player and Adobe Air are two completely different things.
Flash player is a plugin just for the native browser.
Whereas Adobe Air is used to develop Native applications
Adobe air provides a framework to write Android apps which you can publish through Google play.
Adobe has stopped support only for flash player plugin not the Adobe Air. This should be a problem only to website developers
According to the latest announcement,
http://www.redmondpie.com/its-finally-over-adobe-pulls-flash-support-in-android-4.1-jelly-bean-plans-to-withdraw-app-from-play-store/
http://www.zdnet.com/adobe-wont-support-flash-on-jelly-bean-1339340588/
they say no more Flash or Adobe AIR on Android.
I have developed a game in flash now i want to run that flash file in android os.
i have followed several questions here but unable to get the solution please help me
App developed in AS3 can be run in Adobe AIR environment. You need Adobe AIR on your device and I suppose that an app needs to be optimized for AIR.
Of course you can also run it in browser if you have flash player, but it will have really bad user experience.
I'm working on an Adobe AIR application for Android. Is it possible to set an MP3 file (or any music file) as a ringtone on the device using AIR? If so, how can I do this?
Not with built-in AIR APIs. However, now that AIR 3 is out, you can access almost all Android features by creating a native extension.
Froyo and Flash Player are coming to our phones.
In the Adobe PreRelease programs we can find AIR beta for Froyo and Eclair. With that, I can develop a Flash app and export it to my phone.
So, is AIR player the Flash player? o_O
I can't understand what differences are between AIR and Flash on Android.
Can you help me? Thank you!
Flash and AIR work just the same on Android as they do on the PC - similar technologies, but Flash plays in a browser and AIR apps are used like native applications. In other words, to use an AIR app, you'll typically install it from the Google Market, and put a shortcut to it on your homescreen, then launch it and use it like any other application. Whereas for flash content, you'll follow a link or a bookmark, and see the content embedded within a web page.
Anyway the capabilities of the two engines are similar (AIR does basically all that Flash does, and adds on some extra features suitable for applications), but the difference is in the way you access and use the content.