![]() ![]() However, Adobe is making its second preview release of 'Gala' H.264 hardware decoding available for download for users who want to try it out. The new Flash Player 10.1 release doesn't yet include official support for hardware video acceleration, a new feature Apple just enabled Adobe to provide with new Mac OS X APIs. Preview support for hardware accelerated video However, that feature is only enforced on Windows. However, Adobe says this feature is not supported for Opera or Safari, meaning that Flash content won't respect users' private browsing preferences.Īnother feature of Flash 10.1 is new DRM content protection that limits playback of video content over analog or digital outputs. The latest Safari 5 ships with Flash Player 10.0 Mac users wanting to upgrade to the latest version of Flash can do so at Adobe's download site.Īmong the new features of Flash 10.1 is support for browser privacy features, which prevent Flash local data and browsing activity from persisting locally if the user has turned on the private browsing feature. The 10.1 release is also being offered for Windows, Linux and Solaris users, along with a beta version that works with Android 2.2. Chrome is notably absent from Adobe's list of supported browsers on the Mac. The new Universal Binary Flash 10.1 works with Firefox, Opera and Safari and fixes a variety of outstanding problems. Thursday, June 10, 2010, 06:50 pm PT (09:50 pm ET) Adobe has declared its 10.1 release of Flash Player a Golden Master and is now serving it as the default Flash Player download after more than six months of beta testing. ![]()
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