that is good news. i wonder how they define "famous" ... ;) On 30.01.21 16:17, Graziano Milano via NetBehaviour wrote: > Dear all, > > Last week I found out by reading the Independent's article by Andrew > Griffin, that the Internet Archive announced two months ago that *“it > would be cataloguing famous Flash content so that they could be > preserved even after the technology is discontinued. Users will be > able to use a Flash emulator to play animations and games.”* > > The Internet Archive, which has already saved over thousands playable > DOS games, books and a copy of the entire internet, said that it would > be using a Flash emulator called Ruffle to let animations play in the > browser. > > Viewers do not need to have a Flash plugin themselves installed, and > the system works on Firefox, Chrome, Edge, and Safari. Here are more > info about that published at the Internet Archive’s blog: > > – Flash Animations Live Forever at the Internet Archive: > http://blog.archive.org/2020/11/19/flash-animations-live-forever-at-the-internet-archive/ > > – Flash Back! Further Thoughts on Flash at the Internet Archive: > http://blog.archive.org/2020/11/22/flash-back-further-thoughts-on-flash-at-the-internet-archive/ > > And here is *Ruffle* – https://ruffle.rs – the Flash Player emulator > built in the Rust programming language that can be installed on a > website we own, as a browser extension and using it as a desktop > application. > > Graziano > > _______________________________________________ > NetBehaviour mailing list > [email protected] > https://lists.netbehaviour.org/mailman/listinfo/netbehaviour --
helen varley jamieson [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> http://www.creative-catalyst.com http://www.upstage.org.nz https://mobilise-demobilise.eu <https://mobilise-demobilise.eu/>
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