[Hopperxx] Farewell Flash

Danny Kodicek dragon at well-spring.co.uk
Tue Feb 3 05:23:36 CST 2026


(Of course old offline versions of Flash from before the Creative Commons
days will still run, although you'll need a crack to get around the license
authentication if you want to install them on a new machine.)

On Tue, 3 Feb 2026 at 11:21, Danny Kodicek <dragon at well-spring.co.uk> wrote:

> Well, you don't have much longer! It's no longer supported as of this
> month and will be shuttered for good next year. They're basically saying
> you have a year to get all your work ported into other forms or you'll lose
> it.
>
> On Tue, 3 Feb 2026 at 11:10, Robert Gordon <rob at article19.com> wrote:
>
>> I actually still very much have Animate in my workflow. Like many of us,
>> my catalog went from Director to Flash to HTML5. In that last transition, I
>> kept all of my assets in Flash (later Animate) ‘cause most of them were
>> vector and the texture atlas exporting was decent enough. Illustrator and
>> Photoshop (to my knowledge) still don’t natively support texture atlase
>> export. Will probably keep Animate around a while longer…
>>
>>
>> r o b
>>
>> Robert Gordon
>> The Article 19 Group Inc.
>> 514.938.8512
>> rob at article19.com
>> www.article19.com
>>
>>
>> On Mon, Feb 2, 2026 at 9:52 PM Danny Kodicek <dragon at well-spring.co.uk>
>> wrote:
>>
>>> I'm guessing everyone here has seen the news that Animate (nee Flash) is
>>> being abruptly discontinued as Adobe "pivots to AI". Considering that it's
>>> still very much actively being used as an animation tool, despite the death
>>> of the SWF online, that really does seem like a very sudden and callous
>>> move, and one that I think they'll regret.
>>>
>>> I found myself thinking about how things might have played out if Adobe
>>> hadn't decided to kill off Director. Even at the time, Flash was already in
>>> trouble - it had been seven years since Steve Jobs put the first nail in
>>> its coffin. Shockwave had already been essentially rendered useless, but
>>> Director was still a viable tool for making apps. Maybe if Adobe had put
>>> its force behind Director instead, even melded the two tools into one, they
>>> could have salvaged the situation.
>>>
>>> And with Animate gone, what do Adobe really have left that's unique and
>>> justifies their exorbitant cost? Photoshop, Illustrator, InDesign are all
>>> still great, but there are so many cheaper rivals out there (Affinity is
>>> especially snapping at their heels). The PDF obviously isn't going anywhere
>>> any time soon, so Acrobat will still be around, but who really uses it now?
>>> Premiere is still my favourite video editor but obviously there are many
>>> more. AfterEffects is probably the only truly unique tool in the suite, but
>>> Adobe has never really known what to do with it and I'm frankly astonished
>>> it's still going.
>>>
>>> Anyway, it's 3am over here so I need to get to bed. But I felt the need
>>> to raise a glass to our old friend.
>>> _______________________________________________
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>>>
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>
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