Now its time to have some fun. Hook that baby up to the net, open a port
or two, and let us poke n prod at it - we'll see how long it lives. :-P
There's nothing more honorable than showing off a senior bsd machine
(when it comes to uptime).
-Ben
I don't recommend to try this at home, but thinki
Hah! looks like that second link didn't copy over right :-P
http://thebackbutton.com/blog/73/64-bit-linux-freebsd-flash-player-exists/
nawcom wrote:
Some references to it from inside the company:
http://blogs.adobe.com/penguin.swf/2008/08/random_blog_post.html
which gives the link to a
Some references to it from inside the company:
http://blogs.adobe.com/penguin.swf/2008/08/random_blog_post.html
which gives the link to a flash developer for Sony:
http://blogs.adobe.com/penguin.swf/2008/08/random_blog_post.html
"I just watched Tinic from the Flash Player team demo two 64bit ver
I checked out the flash at the University of Utah site, and I must say
it is impressive for gnash. Looks like that swf was made with Flash 7,
or at least that's its minimum requirement. Unfortunately, gnash has a
while to go, as it will never be in a satisfactory state until - it
loads YouTube