![]() In July 2017, Adobe officially announced it would stop working on Flash by 2020. In 2015, Google moved all its YouTube videos to HTML5. Amongst other things, this had a detrimental affect on SEO and accessibility. Browsers found it difficult to go into the SWF to read content. First, the browser didn’t natively support Flash, so you had to download the Flash plugin. By viewing the source of a website, you’d often see very little HTML and an embedded SWF file. Here are some of the groundbreaking things Flash could do back then, and how we can go about doing them today.īack in the 2000s, it was commonplace to see websites that were built using Flash. ![]() Flash was one of the reasons a lot of folks started building websites.
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