A Farewell To Flash 202
An anonymous reader writes: The decline of Flash is well and truly underway. Media publishers now have no choice but to start changing the way they bring content to the web. Many of them are not thrilled about the proposition (change is scary), but it will almost certainly be better for all of us in the long run. "By switching their platform to HTML5, companies can improve supportability, development time will decrease and the duplicative efforts of supporting two code bases will be eliminated. It will also result in lower operating costs and a consistent user experience between desktop and mobile web." This is on top of the speed, efficiency, and security benefits for consumers. "A major concern for publishers today is the amount of media consumption that's occurring in mobile environments. They need to prioritize providing the best possible experience on mobile, and the decline of Flash and movement to HTML5 will do just that, as Flash has never worked well on mobile."
Again? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Again? (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Again? (Score:5, Funny)
I'll believe it when NetCraft confirms it.
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.
At some point, however, the number who bother to load Flash into their browsers will be a small percentage of web users. That means if you have content that requires Flash, you've just reduced your audience very significantly.
Re:Again? (Score:5, Insightful)
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Porn websites use Flash if you have the plugin installed, otherwise most of them fall back to standard HTML .
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it ain't going anywhere anytime soon. there is way too much content in flash already that exists on the internet. much of it cant be converted or would be too costly to convert to another technology.
flash ain't the evil monster it's made out to be either. it's only real problem is adobe being only slightly better than oracle/sun at producing clean bug-free code for their browser plugins. adobe is the monster here, not flash. face it. if there wasn't a new 'flash exploit of the week' every week, flash wouldn
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Re:Again? (Score:5, Insightful)
If you can watch it on a screen you can rip it... even if it means you point a videocamera at the screen you can rip it.
Your comment is flawed for the same reason DRM is flawed. The only way to NEVER be able to copy digital content is to not allow anyone to see it.
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The only way to NEVER be able to copy digital content is to not allow anyone to see it.
And the only way to have every studio in Hollywood pull all their content from Netflix, Hulu, etc. is to tell them they can't put any DRM on it.
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You forgot to add that legacy corporate apps will require flash for years to come. A lot of corporate training is still flash based.
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I don't want it to die. I just want most people to stop using it.
Enough with the battle calls to kill Flash. I still want all those cartoons and games I downloaded to work.
Inverse of Linux on desktop? (Score:2)
Flash is the inverse Linux on desktop.
Looking at you, BBC... (Score:5, Interesting)
Now why on earth is that? That's actually more effort to maintain than just doing it right in the first place. OK so you have older version browser support, but there are better ways to identify those than just "are you a desktop OS trying to access me?".
Re:Looking at you, BBC... (Score:5, Insightful)
Yes, there are better ways to use browser agent id. But keeping Flash on the desktop means their HTML5 code does not need to be validated on lots of browsers. If the BBC implementation of HTML5 turned out to be buggy, the damage would be limited to platforms that couldn't run Flash anyway.
If I were in charge at BBC, I would use mobile/portable devices as a beta test for implementing HTML5. Sooner or later, they have to bring HTML5 to the desktop, but it can wait until more of the obsolescent browsers are gone. Maybe the next project is to implement adaptive style sheets to get one code base that suits all browsers on all devices. At that point, Flash can finally take its rightful place in the Recycle Bin.
When you have a huge user base and many of them are technologically illiterate, you end up doing things that are far from elegant. In a large organization, it takes longer than you would expect to get anything done.
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iOS computers all run the same browser and all have a h264 hardware decoder.
All flash users run the flash plugin, which is (almost) the same regardless of browser, OS or hardware (though here the h264 decoder may be software or hardware).
So in both cases, you have a single platform effect that makes it easy to run.
With HMTL 5 on random computers, you do get a lot of variation between software, browser versions. For one thing you will have to support IE 9 till Vista end-of-line in 2017 in the least, which ha
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For one thing you will have to support IE 9 till Vista end-of-line in 2017 in the least,
by "support" you mean put up a dialog box stating "please upgrade to a modern browser"
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I think he actually meant 'get the intranet developers off their lazy asses'.
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IE 9 is the most recent version of Internet Explorer that will run on Windows Vista.
IE is deprecated. Any time you spend on it is wasted. There are lots of browsers for Windows.
which would likely cost a user his bookmarks, saved sessions, and saved passwords.
no, browsers import those things from each other
Technical users such as Slashdot's reader base tend to forget how hard it would be for a non-technical user to restore that information.
It is REALLY hard to check off that box during the installation, isn't it?
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It is REALLY hard to check off that box [to import bookmarks, saved passwords, and cookies] during the installation, isn't it?
But can a site guarantee, for all modern browsers to which a user of Internet Explorer 9 would consider switching, that the browser's installer won't fail to import at least one bookmark, saved password, or saved cookie? Otherwise, it'll incur support costs.
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But can a site guarantee, for all modern browsers to which a user of Internet Explorer 9 would consider switching, that the browser's installer won't fail to import at least one bookmark, saved password, or saved cookie? Otherwise, it'll incur support costs.
You have to pay extra for your new car because we can't insure that we will remove all of the crumbs and stains from your old car and apply them to exactly the same places in your new car.
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Bookmarks, saved passwords, and cookies are tools for visiting and authenticating to a web site. I don't see the analogy to crumbs and stains.
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Nice then that a 'deprecated' browser receives security support until year 2023 (IE 11 on Windows 8.x) or even later, depending on what it gets in Windows 10.
If there's a deprecated Android phone that gets updates for the next 8 years, let me know!
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Nice then that a 'deprecated' browser receives security support until year 2023 (IE 11 on Windows 8.x) or even later, depending on what it gets in Windows 10.
COBOL is still supported on many platforms, but you will tell me that it isn't deprecated
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You assume they're not writing it in Flash and exporting it as HTML5 for mobile. And some people still cannot use HTML5. Heck, I'm doing some work now in Flash for a client that still mandates IE7 on their machines (change is slow).
But also, Flash is good in many ways. It isolates stuff in a plug-in, and not every site assumes you have it. Unlike JavaScript, which people have started to require to load static pages. F
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They're using a tuned automatic translator to translate working flash into "maybe it works" HTML5.
Tell uncle if he gets a tuned automatic translator, be sure it speaks bocce.
Any HTML5 blockers? (Score:4, Insightful)
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Yes here's one [browser.org]. Good luck.
Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)
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What the guy is saying is that Flash will not die due that fucking fire!
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It can if everybody says they refuse to use it ... if people in data centers are stuck with it, that's their damned problem.
Getting Flash of the human facing internet is important. Because that's where it's the biggest for being malware.
A jump server keeping it restricted to the data center will at least mean malicious ads and crap can't exploit the vulnerabilities in this pile of crap.
Flash has been a gaping security hole for as long as it has existed. Removing it from the desktop will be a good start.
Wh
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And Flash can die in fucking fire!!!
I certainly hope it does. I hate Flash!
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"and most important: Flash is still required to view a substantial amount of internet pornography."
Correct. Flash will die when YouPorn and XHamster switch to HTML5.
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We're looking as some loooong path to walk.
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I'm afraid to ask WTF XHamster is ... and rule #34 says I'm sure as hell not googling it ... so, "la la la" ... not sure I want to know.
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They work fine on iOS, so no flash requirements.
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Nobody cares about all that crap.
What about Desktop Tower Defense, N Game, Bubble Tanks, and all that?
Maybe Nintendo will make us a little handheld flash player. And then you can manage your VMs and take it to the bathroom with you...
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What about Desktop Tower Defense, N Game, Bubble Tanks, and all that?
Yeah, what about them? Why aren't they ported to HTML5?
One out of five games worked (Score:2)
DHTML Lemmings
Of the five games you listed, this is the only one that worked as advertised. Yet no sound in Firefox 40.
Just play some Tappy Chicken
How do I get past "Please expand your window to play!"? I've already put Firefox into full screen with F11 but it's still there.
or World's Biggest Pac-man
After I clicked it, it warned me that only Facebook.com members are allowed to create mazes. Not being a Facebook.com member (I graduated before it even started), I clicked "Just play for fun" to continue. The play screen appeared, and "Loading" appeared and disappeared, leaving
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Read the comments from VMware here:
http://blogs.vmware.com/vspher... [vmware.com]
especially comments from Dennis Lu.
Essentially, it was either deliver HTML5 code (leaving webUI in v5.1 state) or progress web UI until it was 'good', then move to HTML5. They chose the latter.
I'm not sure why they didn't do a parallel development. Maybe they have & it's not releasable yet, but that's the state we're in now.
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flash is an inextricable touchstone of practically every KVM in the datacenter that doesnt show up on a rickety cart.
Flash is the mandatory model of how VMWare has decided (infuriatingly and incorrectly i might stress) we shall all interact with their products.
Flash still powers billboards and advertisement hardware for countless products.
and most important: Flash is still required to view a substantial amount of internet pornography.
Ironically, I can only find fault with the last point. Internet pornographers are actually surprisingly ahead of the curve here as compared to the likes of VMWare and other IT vendors.
RIP Flash . . . (Score:2)
Rust in pieces.
You helped to delay the arrival of a reasonably free and open Web for longer than many Slashdotters have been alive.
May every proprietary, insecure, single-vendor piece of battery-eating nonsense suffer the same fate or worse.
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Except the AS engine was opensourced, Adobe offered to merge with JavaScript, and there are (or was, I dunno anymore) an active fork for FireFox.
Heck, JS irks me a hell of a lot more, because Flash at least didn't try to pretend it was a web site when it was trying to run a ton of code.
Browsers should have EnableVideo code (Score:5, Interesting)
All HTML5 browsers should have an EnableVideo code setting.
So that I can turn it off.
I don't need your video. I don't want your video. I don't want it to autoplay.
If you have an ad, you can show it in text, and stop sucking up bandwidth.
Now, if you want to give me a box that I can right click on to "play video", great.
But as Leelu would say "Not without my permission!"
Slashdot ads (Score:4, Informative)
Here's why I disable ads on Slashdot: VIDEO!
If all their ads were static, I would be happy to uncheck Disable Ads...
Re:Slashdot ads (Score:5, Insightful)
Here's why I disable ads on Slashdot: VIDEO!
If all their ads were static, I would be happy to uncheck Disable Ads...
Agreed. Same here. Back in the days of flat banner ads - which could be "click to follow link that will play video" - I let the ads display. But sound and giant honking autoplay downloads mean I disable advertising on Slashdot.
If advertising behaved, I'd turn it on again.
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But as Leelu would say "Not without my permission!"
Leelu would say "seddan akta gamat": never without my permission.
I've always been amused that scene, mostly because he asks the priest "what does akta gamat mean" and gets a translation of the whole line - as if Bruce couldn't remember his line and just fudged it. (Much as early Doctor Who gave us "reverse the polarity of the neutron flow", since it has meter and so the actor could easily remember it - though I can't remember whether that was Hartnell or Pertwee).
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Firefox has a config option to force HTML5 video not to autoplay, and the flashblocker I use also has options to block them in the same manner.
GIF animations are Flash, right? :p (Score:2)
from TFA:
>But make no mistake, there are still many Flash-powered multimedia items on the web, including graphics, videos, games and animations, like GIFs, a preferred method of expression for millennials and adults alike.
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YTMND uses a Flash preloader to load the audio and then start the GIF and audio at the same time.
Flash home page (Score:2)
.
The owners of those websites were probably sold a bill of goods for a "cool website" by the same designers who proffered flaming logos 20 years ago....
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What I find very curious are the web sites whose home pages are fully and completely written in Flash. If you do not enable flash, you see nothing but a blank page.
.
The owners of those websites were probably sold a bill of goods for a "cool website" by the same designers who proffered flaming logos 20 years ago....
I can name one of the world's largest and best-known automobile manufacturers who did a Flash-only site at a time when I didn't have any Flash-capable computers.
I bought my new car from one of their competitors who had a site I could actually use.
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What I find very curious are the web sites whose home pages are fully and completely written in Flash. If you do not enable flash, you see nothing but a blank page.
The owners of those websites were probably sold a bill of goods for a "cool website" by the same designers who proffered flaming logos 20 years ago....
Or, the web developer thought it was not a good idea, but the client insisted on Flash. She wouldn't listen to me, and now her site is invisible on mobile....
Think of the children... (Score:4, Interesting)
For all that I've hated Flash for years (for idiosyncratic reasons), and loathe Flash now (for all the usual reasons), there is a great deal of (old) content dependent on Flash. Will that content (like a Flash version of Portal) become inaccessible?
Archivists are probably dreading dealing with this.
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Orphan works (Score:2)
From the upload page [google.com]:
In other words, the author has to perform the conversion; viewers are forbidden to do so. And for most of the vector animations in SWF format on Newgrounds or Dagobah or Albino Blacksheep, I imagine the author has left the scene and can
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It has nothing to do with how hard it is or is not to convert Flash content. Like usual, it's about money. Who's going to do that conversion? How much will it cost? What else will have to change (because there's ALWAYS something else)?
When the total cost of converting is exceeded by the money lost by not converting, you will see Flash die. I don't expect that day to come any time soon for most Flash content providers.
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Change is Scary (Score:5, Insightful)
Many of them are not thrilled about the proposition (change is scary),
More like change is expensive. It has nothing to do with scary.
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I would include "expensive" quite definitively as a subset of "scary". Imagine someone told you "you are required to do this thing which will cost several million dollars". Wouldn't you be scared? I would be...
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When people say "change is scary," they usually mean that the change itself is scary, not the rational assessment of expenses involved.
Before Videos, there was Vector Animations (Score:3)
I was a big fan and user of flash LONG before it did anything video related. Flash for videos? Let it die, it's awful for that purpose. Flash for anything else? I don't think it's going away any time soon.
People have been making vector animations in Flash long before anyone thought of ruining web video by using Flash to play it, and Flash excels at that purpose better than anything else.
Go ahead and bloat them by 10x (Score:3)
People have been making vector animations in Flash long before anyone thought of ruining web video by using Flash to play it
Agreed. But a lot of Slashdot users have recommended rendering vector animations to video and serving them to viewers as video, viewer's monthly caps be damned. That's how modern Flash cartoons such as My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic are produced [wikia.com]. Apparently bloating the data size by a factor of ten (in my tests) is worth not having to worry about the speed of the viewer's computer.
and Flash excels at that purpose better than anything else.
Do you mean Adobe Flash is better for making them than Adobe Edge Animate, or Flash Player is better for playing them than
Amount of motion (Score:2)
"Flash Is Dead" is also a far lower motion clip than the clip I tried, which is "We Drink Ritalin".
Real Life (Score:2)
I did an OS reinstall about a month ago. I just installed flash 2 days ago. I wasn't trying to avoid Flash, its just Saturday was the first day I discovered I needed it for a website I wanted to visit and didn't already have it installed. This is from someone who visits a lot of streaming and game websites. (NPR.org's streams for Wait Wait Don't Tell Me were the culprit, in case you were curious).
Now the fact that I had to do it tells you flash isn't exactly history. However, in the past I don't believe I'
When Flash was awesome (Score:2)
Those where the days when the web was just getting exciting and java applets and gif were exiting. Man did I spend a LOT of time on Macromedia Flash 4 making animations. Still have them on floppies tucked away,not sure if they still work.
http://www.thevoid.co.uk/ [thevoid.co.uk]
http://www.nrg.be/archived/ [www.nrg.be]
http://janit.iki.fi/shit/megac... [janit.iki.fi]
https://www.adobe.com/showcase... [adobe.com]
Am I the only one that sort of liked Flash? (Score:5, Interesting)
By having the majority of undesirable web content stuck in easy-to-flag Flash buckets, it was inherently simple to block that content. I could simply whitelist a handful of sites whose flash content I wanted to see (e.g. Youtube) and block it pretty much everywhere else.
Now with everything moving to HTML5, I fear the necessary blocking ruleset will gets many times more complicated and with more false positives and negatives to boot. Am I wrong?
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By having the majority of undesirable web content stuck in easy-to-flag Flash buckets, it was inherently simple to block that content. I could simply whitelist a handful of sites whose flash content I wanted to see (e.g. Youtube) and block it pretty much everywhere else.
Now with everything moving to HTML5, I fear the necessary blocking ruleset will gets many times more complicated and with more false positives and negatives to boot. Am I wrong?
Well, I disagree. You can still block the ad serving URL. Simply have a block list of the most common ad servers and block them.
Ethical plausible deniability (Score:2)
You can still block the ad serving URL. Simply have a block list of the most common ad servers and block them.
But then you're specifically blocking ads, which loses the ethical plausible deniability of blocking something that just happens, wink wink nudge nudge, to be correlated with ads.
Re:Am I the only one that sort of liked Flash? (Score:4, Informative)
You can thank Google for that. They tricked the majority of web masters into using third party domains for essential parts of the web site, so blocking all third party content is no longer feasible. There is no good technical reason for doing it, but Google's recommendations made sure that unwanted content is now mixed into a sea of necessary assets loaded from separate domains.
I don't know what recommendations you're speaking of, but there are actually very good security reasons for using separate domains wherever possible. The Same Origin policy implemented by all modern browsers enables the use of domains as client-side content sandboxes of a sort. You can safely load content, including scripts, from one domain with good reason to believe it cannot access or manipulate content from another domain.
http://security.stackexchange.com/questions/8264/why-is-the-same-origin-policy-so-important
And, yes, Google does this extensively with its own web properties, using different domains to carefully separate components unless the components have specific and valid reasons to interact. Not because Google thinks that one of its components might be malicious, but because subtle and unanticipated interactions can cause unexpected problems and leaks.
Old standards die hard (Score:2)
I like Flash (Score:2)
I like Flash because it's easy to disable. Everything that's awful about Flash (i.e. all of it) is now being integrated into HTML, which makes annoying flashy crap much harder to avoid.
Can we get an EverythingThatUsedToBeInFlashButIsNowInHTML_Block add-on for our browsers?
I wish the corporate applications would move too (Score:2)
Doesn't the VMware web console still require flash?
Uninstalled in 2009 (Score:5, Informative)
I uninstalled Flash in 2009 and for some reason I'm still alive! :-O
youtube-dl [github.io] downloads and streams video and audio from about 500 legacy sites [github.com] in the quality of your choice.
livestreamer [livestreamer.io] streams live video from about 70 legacy sites [github.com] such as the popular "Twitch".
VLC and mpv also can play video from some sites directly, e.g. YouTube.
liberation is on the way for users (Score:2)
This, and content blocking [thenextweb.com] are going to crater intrusive overbearing advertising. Of course it will take decent ads along for the ride, but hey, the industry refused to even marginally police itself, and abused our goodwill terribly, so here goes...
I agree except on the development time will decrea (Score:3)
I am all for HTML5 improved support and standard but our experence with various HTML5 implementation is that developpers actually spend a LOT of time accomodating the differences between browsers and browser versions.
Not only between mobile and desktop but between different browsers and different version of the SAME browser.
Different implementations of the same standards are almost always breaking the code.
So on the contrary using HTML5 increases the development time and maintenance cost as web sites or web apps have to be "corrected" to follow browser support or interpretation of HTML5.
In comparison, such maintenance for flash applications is close to nil even flash was upgraded from version 5 to version 11.
However, I agree that flash beiing proprietary, it is not the way to go now.
Apple example (Score:2)
I remember when apple rolled out iOS 8 and our web app broke (it was a simple form with buttons !)
Also when you are using advanced feature such as webrtc, then you have to block users for loading the page with Safari or Internet Explorer. I am sorry but while on paper HTML5 is the best approach, it does not yet offer the uniform API an behavior that web developper need to save time and money.
Re:Now we need a NoHTML5Media plugin (Score:5, Insightful)
You realize its only a matter of time until companies splice ads into the content itself so filtering will be impossible.
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Nope. That is ALREADY done on broadcast TV and devices can filter out those ad's. my MythTV box strips out every single TV commercial that is spliced into the content.
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In the US, at least, that happens only because the FCC mandates a 1-frame black burst before and after commercial breaks, and none in the middle of commercial breaks. Obviously, anyone can pick up on this and snip everything between them. Of course, networks now like to introduce them into the middle of programming to throw the count off and hopefully trick some DVR's into ruining a recording to teach the dirty rotten content thieves a lesson (or something). Most DVR's have a few other tricks up their sleev
Re:Now we need a NoHTML5Media plugin (Score:4, Interesting)
the FCC mandates a 1-frame black burst before and after commercial breaks
Tell that to at least one of my local TV stations that does a multi-frame fade between one of their self-advertisements and the program being returned to. Yes, prime-time on a major US broadcast network. I don't have cable (antenna-only), and it's not the only channel that does a quick fade in and out of programs. The good news is that more often than not, there's usually at least one black key frame between commercials and program.
I don't trust my MythTV box's ability to detect commercials, but I've got pretty good at manually snipping them from the shows that I want to keep around. But I still let it run so that the little flag icon is there to remind me to remove them myself. (yes, it's shameful)
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And what about product placement in the show itself? Watching your favorite characters drinking Brand drinks while using Brand computer, and wearing Brand clothing, while discussing how much they like Brand OtherProducts. In the background there's a couple billboards and posters that they can digitally replace ads on so even if you watch re-runs 10 years later there's current ad campaigns in it. That's spliced in. Good luck getting your automatic filter to pull that out.
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real easy to filter that out. Stop watching that crap.
It's why shows like that get cancelled in the first season.
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You realize its only a matter of time until companies splice ads into the content itself so filtering will be impossible.
It would hardly be new idea. And that's why I like Lucky Strike cigarettes, so round, so firm, so fully packed, so smooth and easy on the draw.(anyone else ever listen to old radio broadcasts?)
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Some podcasts actually have ads that remind me of those old radio spots.
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You realize its only a matter of time until companies splice ads into the content itself so filtering will be impossible.
Integrated adds and protect placement are older than the silent films of 1915. The single most important thing that differentiates modern American radio and television from that of the 1940s and 1950s is the separation of sponsorship and production --- which Is why I am no great fan of add blocking.
Typo. (Score:2)
Integrated adds and product placement are older than the silent films of 1915
There was a long-standing joke about the 50s television series based on Cary Grant's "Topper" that you couldn't see the actors through the clouds of tobaccco smoke.
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We almost lost "99" in "Get Smart" because the actress (Barbara Feldon) had done an advertisement for a company the sponsor considered a rival.
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As long as the ad companies insist on having the ads hosted on [i]their[/i] servers, this won't happen. Nobody trusts ad companies, but ad companies don't trust their partners to display ads and collect statistics accurately. As long as the splices and scripts come from 3rd-party servers, it should always be possible to block them.
What concerns me more is the increasing trend of blocking content if the ad servers don't return a confirmation. More and more often, I'm seeing pleas from web sites for me to
Re:Now we need a NoHTML5Media plugin (Score:5, Insightful)
Failing that I will wget it and do it myself.
If you are manually editing content just to eliminate something you could have easily spent 30 seconds ignoring, then you are in serious need fo some therapy.
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Always wondered how the piracy sites were getting content that is "supposedly protected"
Guess we'll just have to force DRM on all video streams so that potential blockers can't tell ads from content.
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Try punching a midget in the cock and he'll bleed for an hour... from his nose.
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Then ask him to kiss you and he will give you a blow job!
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Flash is a hand in the wallet of that software & content.
No Flash Player on recent Android (Score:2)
[Flash Player] works pretty well on my android device that I managed to load flash onto.
Adobe Flash Player breaks in recent versions of Android. What version of Android does your device run?