Categories: Mobile

Microsoft and Apple agree on Adobe Flash issue

New Windows 8 tablet-friendly "Metro" mode

Following a controversial precedent set by Apple exactly five years ago with the release of the iPod Touch, Microsoft has announced that the next iteration of Internet Explorer, IE10, will no longer support Adobe Flash in Windows 8’s new tablet-friendly mode.

Earlier this week Microsoft demoed their forthcoming operating system Windows 8, which seamlessly switches between the familiar desktop interface and one that is optimised for tablet or touch screen devices. Now, while using IE10 in tablet-friendly “Metro” mode, browser plug-ins, like Adobe Flash, are disabled to preserve battery-life and reduce the amount of processing power required.

Dean Hachamovitch, Internet Explorer team leader, explains Microsoft’s rationale behind their decision,

“Running Metro-style IE plug-in free improves battery life as well as security, reliability, and privacy for consumers. Plug-ins were important early on in the Web’s history. But the Web has come a long way since then with HTML5. Providing compatibility with legacy plug-in technologies would detract from, rather than improve, the consumer experience of browsing in the Metro-style UI.”

Hachamovitch describes how his team analysed almost 100,000 websites and determined that 62% of these functioned as they should in the absence of a Flash plug-in by falling-back to HTML5.

Adobe Flash isn’t quite dead though. Not yet. Last week Adobe announced a new Flash Media Server product that will enable Flash content to play on Apple’s iOS devices, even without the need for additional plug-ins. With another big player like Microsoft turning its back on Flash in favour of HTML5, it’s hard to see a future where Flash exists significantly in five years time.

Albizu Garcia

Albizu Garcia is the Co-Founder and CEO of Gain -- a marketing technology company that automates the social media and content publishing workflow for agencies and social media managers, their clients and anyone working in teams.

Recent Posts

Competing in the post-gatekeeper era: How the DMA is rewiring platforms, security, and market access

The Digital Markets Act (DMA) has joined the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) as one…

1 day ago

Horasis India Meeting to Spotlight India’s Global Ascent At Singapore Summit This Month

Amid several years of shifting global dynamics, it’s become increasingly clear that we are entering…

3 days ago

AI scams targeting businesses are surging: Here are the top 3 threats your team is likely to face in 2026 (Brains Byte Back Podcast)

Imagine a company interviewing a candidate for a senior IT role. The résumé checks out,…

3 days ago

AI Won’t Scale in Advertising Until Trust Does: How to Identify AI Tools That Deliver Quality Security and Expertise

At the start of the year, data suggested that only about a third of agencies,…

3 days ago

What It Means When Algorithms Say “I”: Toward a Theory of Digital Subjectivity

Picture an AI assistant you have worked with for the past five years. It knows…

3 days ago

Why One of the Oldest Coding Languages Still Outsmarts Modern AI

They tried to kill it. To bury it for good. But every time, it clawed back — stronger,…

3 days ago