
Versions of the beta for Windows Mobile and Palm webOS should also be available within the same timeframe. According to a press release, Adobe says its goal with Flash Player 10.1 on a mobile device is to improve rendering and lower memory consumption, while also conserving battery life.įor those who have been waiting for Flash Lite for the Android, Adobe is saying it will make a test version of Flash Player 10.1 for Android and Symbian in early 2010, following the beta release of the desktop version in late 2009. What we do know is that Flash 10.1 is set to support mobile-centric features such as accelerometer awareness and multiple touch computing.

While we don't yet have confirmation, it appears that Flash Lite will be superseded by this newer version of Flash Player, with the idea that Flash Player can now scale from mobile to embedded devices (set-top boxes) to the desktop. There's been much discussion over the past year about the fate of Flash Lite, Adobe's mobile-only, trimmed-down version of the Flash Player. Pacific Time, Adobe will unveil a beta of Flash Player 10.1, will finalize some of the features of RTMFP, the real-time peer-to-peer protocol first demonstrated at last year's San Francisco and Milan MAX conferences, as well as the ability to receive HTTP content. Three major announcements, all of which will be released in 2010, deal with the ability to deliver content to Adobe's ubiquitous Flash Player.ĭuring the keynote, which takes place at 9:30 a.m.

In Los Angeles today, Adobe will make a series of announcements regarding the "umbrella" of the Flash delivery ecosystem. Adobe MAX Day 1: HTTP Delivery, Flash Player 10.1, Bit Encryption, and More
