Adobe Flash Player 10.3.181.26


Recommended Posts

Adobe Flash Player 10.3.181.26

Adobe Flash Player is the high-performance, lightweight, highly expressive client runtime that delivers powerful and consistent user experiences across major operating systems, browsers, mobile phones, and devices. Adobe (formerly Macromedia) Flash Player - the universal rich client for delivering effective Adobe Flash experiences across desktops and devices. Lets you view the best animation and entertainment on the Web. It displays Web application front-ends, high-impact Web site user interfaces, interactive online advertising, and short-form to long-form animation.

Adobe's Flash Player allows you to view interactive web content like games, business presentations, advertisements. The package includes only the Flash Player and is a stand alone installation. Technically, this is a Flash Player ActiveX Control. It will only play the file through your Web browser.

Links

Homepage

About

What's New

Download Adobe Flash Player 10.3.181.26 for (Internet Explorer & AOL)

Download Adobe Flash Player 10.3.181.26 for (Firefox, Netscape, Safari & Opera)

Download Adobe Flash Player 10.3.181.26 for Linux

Download Adobe Flash Player 10.3.181.26 for MacOS

Link to comment
https://www.neowin.net/forum/topic/1005040-adobe-flash-player-10318126/
Share on other sites

There are so many bugs in Adobe's Flash that upon new updates I always wish they'd fix them all, but they're ALWAYS there.

Piece of garbage. :angry:

So true!

Honestly tired of Flash. It runs like ****. Has so many bugs. They update the thing several times a week.

Really?? Not so sure about that! Also wtf are they doing about 64 bit flash for Linux and windows? Nothing at all in 8 months, what the hell?

....and yes I am also tired of flash, it's really not so flash!

yeah I remember back when I had dial up and entry level DSL I used to still be able to watch videos and sites would load acceptable.... now even a 2meg DSL connection chokes on most sites, let alone youtube, hulu, netflix, etc..... I think devs have gotten way too lazy at optimizing code. they forgot how to do it they think everyone's got the best systems and 100Mbps+ unmetered internet access.

and not to mention to use flash you gotta pay huge adobe licensing fees and some of that stuff is harder on the servers as well.

Do they release a new version every week now or something? This is getting ridiculous. Especially for those of us who have to package it and roll it out to the enterprise.

yeah I remember back when I had dial up and entry level DSL I used to still be able to watch videos and sites would load acceptable.... now even a 2meg DSL connection chokes on most sites, let alone youtube, hulu, netflix, etc..... I think devs have gotten way too lazy at optimizing code. they forgot how to do it they think everyone's got the best systems and 100Mbps+ unmetered internet access.

and not to mention to use flash you gotta pay huge adobe licensing fees and some of that stuff is harder on the servers as well.

+10000

The same thing is happening with Programs, is there a reason why firefox needs to consume 200mb of memory?

Do they release a new version every week now or something? This is getting ridiculous. Especially for those of us who have to package it and roll it out to the enterprise.

+10000

The same thing is happening with Programs, is there a reason why firefox needs to consume 200mb of memory?

and at 27 tabs my ff usage is at 650MB commit charge 550MB RAM usage and 1230 P/F Delta Current time open: 4.5 hours fresh open with approx 25 "browser actions"

and those same 27 tabs + 85 "browser actions" in 12-24 hours: 980MB commit charge 850MB RAM usage 2450 P/F Delta

system specs:phenom x4 9550 and 4GB RAM windows server 2008 x64

back before the bloat:

my FF 1.5 usage was for 22 tabs 175MB Commit charge and 89MB ram usage and 600 P/F Delta for fresh session (less then 6 hours) with 15 "browser actions"

and same 22 tabs and 55 "browser actions" 280MB commit charge and 192MB RAM usage and 1200 P/F delta

system specs: amd athlon 3200 with 1GB RAM windows server 2003

yeah I remember back when I had dial up and entry level DSL I used to still be able to watch videos and sites would load acceptable.... now even a 2meg DSL connection chokes on most sites, let alone youtube, hulu, netflix, etc..... I think devs have gotten way too lazy at optimizing code. they forgot how to do it they think everyone's got the best systems and 100Mbps+ unmetered internet access.

I remember videos back whenever, but I remember them being crap quality from a tiny picture to a really low frame rate just so people could even download without a 5 minute video taking a few days just to download.

IMO YouTube video quality is great now, and bandwidth is better than ever, but I completely agree a 2meg connection now just doesn't cut the mustard.

computers need to be designed to handle ultra high bandwidth, and ultra high bandwidth needs to be available to everyone at a reasonable price without metering or device limitations. I bet in 20 years bandwidth won't be an issue, but if it is then nuke the planet.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Qmmp 2.3.3 by Razvan Serea Qmmp (Qt-based MultiMedia Player) is a free, open-source audio player that delivers a classic music listening experience with a modern foundation. Inspired by the legendary Winamp, Qmmp features a familiar, customizable interface that supports both Winamp and XMMS skins, making it instantly recognizable to long-time users. It handles a wide variety of audio formats including MP3, OGG Vorbis, FLAC, WAV, AAC, and many others, ensuring smooth playback across diverse music libraries. In addition to basic playback, Qmmp offers advanced features such as a 10-band equalizer, crossfading, gapless playback, and audio visualization plugins. Users can manage playlists efficiently, create and save multiple lists, and even enable streaming from online sources. Plugin support extends the player’s capabilities, allowing integration of features like lyrics display, ReplayGain, and more. Built with the Qt framework, Qmmp runs smoothly and efficiently, making it ideal even for older systems. 10 great QMMP features you might not know: Global Hotkeys Support – Control playback using customizable system-wide keyboard shortcuts. CUE Sheet Support – Automatically detects and plays tracks from CUE files for full album playback. Last.fm Scrobbling – Integrated support for sending playback data to Last.fm. Audio CD Playback – Play music directly from audio CDs. Command Line Interface – Control Qmmp via command-line options for scripting or automation. System Tray Integration – Minimize to and control playback from the system tray. MPRIS Support – Integration with desktop media player controls via the MPRIS (Media Player Remote Interfacing Specification) interface. Spectrum Analyzer and Oscilloscope – Built-in visualizations for real-time audio feedback. Configurable Notifications – Custom pop-ups for track changes and playback status. Multiple Output Backends – Support for ALSA, PulseAudio, JACK, and more, offering flexible audio routing. Qmmp 2.3.3 changelog: fixed build with PipeWire versions less than 0.3.50; fixed settings dialog layout; fixed default CUE encoding; fixed possible null pointer dereference; fixed tracks order when added using drag and drop (2.3.3 only); fixed uninitialized structure usage; improved sid plugin: added libsidplayfp 3.0 support; added feature to build without residfp engine; fixed memory leak; fixed displaying audio information; updated Japanese translation (2.3.3 only). Download: Qmmp 64-bit | 24.0 MB (Open Source) Download: Qmmp 32-bit | 24.1 MB View: Qmmp Homepage | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • BATorrent 3.0.3 is out.
    • The current Statcoungter desktop numbers has Google Chrome increasing it's market share this past year and currently commanding 75% share. Everybody else is just making up the numbers with even MS Edge losing 3% this past year and has dipped just below 10% share which is staggering considering it's default on every Windows deviced purchased. If these numbers are correct that terrible Edge number is both devastating and embarrassing for MS especially when you add in the terribly low Bing market share. This leads me to ask a couple of questions as the default browser holding just less than 10% market share seems really weird. It used to be that all Chromium browsers were being counted as Google Chrome in some cases.  Is this still happening? Do these high Google Chrome numbers contains some Edge user numbers?
    • Yeah, all web browsers seem to have some junk in them these days. The regular Brave browser has a lot of unnecessary stuff in it, similar to Microsoft Edge, so I don't see any benefits of using Brave over Microsoft Edge if you already have Microsoft Edge fully set up with adblockers and that. The cleanest or best free browser outside of 'Microsoft Edge' I’ve tried so far is 'Opera Air'. It still has some bloat, but nowhere near as much as Brave browser, for example. I also really like the web browser called 'Floorp' that is based on Firefox. I have a system wide Adblocking program for Windows 11 that doesn't just blocks ads in the the web browser, but over the whole thing. I don't really need a web browser with an inbuilt adblocker because of that.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Rookie
      moog19 went up a rank
      Rookie
    • Mentor
      grik went up a rank
      Mentor
    • Dedicated
      JKR earned a badge
      Dedicated
    • One Year In
      CHUNWEI earned a badge
      One Year In
    • Conversation Starter
      FBSPL earned a badge
      Conversation Starter
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      491
    2. 2
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      270
    3. 3
      Skyfrog
      75
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      68
    5. 5
      FloatingFatMan
      63
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!