Why I Don’t Like Adobe Flash
Right now, Apple and Adobe are waging a war over something that's had a dramatic impact on the internet for well over a decade. And that is an online technology called Adobe Flash, which presently has an uncertain future.
This started when the iPhone was released without Flash support. To the ire of a vocal minority who didn't have access to streaming video sites (until they upgraded their sites to make them iPhone compatible), this was tantamount to preventing the device from accessing all that the internet has to offer. Now that the iPad has been released, the same concerns carry over to this new device which similarly does not support Flash. As an iPod Touch (and soon to be iPad) user isn't a problem for me at all, and I'll tell you why. It's because Flash detracts more than it adds.
4 Reasons Why Flash Needs to Go:
- It's difficult to use properly, and conversely very easy for everything to go wrong. And that proper use is? Always in service of the content, and never detracting from it. Here's an example of a horrendous site that abuses Flash. It's boisterous and unsightly, auto-plays annoying music, and is all-around terrible. There are millions of sites like it.
- It loads slowly, doesn't scale, and is cumbersome. It might seem like a great idea to add a 2-minute long introduction video to your site to demonstrate to your audience how tech-savvy you are. Don't do that. 80% of your visitors will close the browser tab before your intro finishes because they don't care. Seconds count.
- Google can't crawl any information that you put into Flash and it won't work on mobile devices. You can have your entire site in Flash but none of that information will be accessible to Google and thus, the larger internet. Mobile devices like Blackberries and iPhones won't display your website at all.
- It's an old technology that eats up CPU cycles and battery power, and there are modern technologies like HTML 5 which are superior. In short, aside from Adobe's interest in selling Flash-producing applications, it has no reason to exist going forward. Apple knows this and is accelerating the process, thankfully.

Blocking Flash in Your Browser
I personally (like many others) have a Flash-blocking extension installed in Firefox. This means that any and all Flash on the internet won't appear in my browser unless I specifically enable it to. By and large, the only site that I allow to display flash is Youtube. This trend (of Flash-blocking browser plugins) has gained so much popularity that Ars Technica authored a recent article on the topic, begging users to not block their ads because it funds the production of their website. Sorry Ars: as much as I enjoy your content, Flash adds nothing to your site unless you're an advertiser. Switch to non-Flash adds and people won't block them. Here's a great editorial on TechDirt that discusses the issue further.
May 19th, 2010 - 23:57
liked this so much, i had to repost on Facebook… hope you’re doing well in China… we miss you in DC
May 20th, 2010 - 01:25
Great, good to hear from you Jenn
Thanks for reposting the article. One day we’ll catch up again!
June 1st, 2010 - 10:34
Thank you for your article. I use IE 8 on my laptop at home, and it crashes at least 25-30 times a day. When I click on the link to research why,I keep getting the link to uninstall Flash and reinstall it. Well, I have done so dozens of time and Flash still crashes! I have uninstalled Flash from my compute and will no longer use it. If I miss out on something on the net? So be it. If the site designers want me to see it, they will have to abandon Flash…I WILL NEVER USE IT AGAIN. As you can tell, I’m more than a little peeved. I abandoned Adobe Acrobat in favor of Foxit a long time ago because the Acrobat program was too bloated and loaded slowly…now Flash is gone. Adobe has seriously mistepped.
June 1st, 2010 - 15:02
I really didn’t expect such a thoughtful reply. Thanks Juanita.
PS – You should stop using IE if you want to avoid problems.
http://www.google.com/chrome
June 2nd, 2010 - 07:56
LoL, don’t know much about thoughtful, but thank you. BTW, I lied…I redownloaded Flash. I found a possible solution on a Flash discussion board and thought I would give it one more try. The suggestion was to right-click on a Flash video, click on the settings button and disable the Video Acceleration. This seems to have worked, I haven’t had any more problems with Flash crashing IE. Yet, anyway…
I appreciate your advice on ditching IE, I have tried Chrome, but it just didn’t have the functionality that I like in IE (no menu bar…I use it all the time for printing directly to pdf in Foxit, and I don’t like how it handles my favorites. IE lets me sort them in a much better manner-and groups all of my folders at the top…a must have for me, I’m afraid).
It is faster, I will give it that. But, sadly, all browsers are buggy and bad at security…even Chrome. So, for now, better the devil than you know than…well, you get the picture.