Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Tablets
  3. Mobile
  4. Legacy Archives

Skyfire will bring Flash to Apple users

Add as a preferred source on Google

The wait is finally over, and come Thursday morning, CNN Money is reporting that iOS devices will be able to run Flash. Up until now, there’s been nothing but bad news on the Flash for iPhone and iPad front. Two years ago, Adobe’s CEO determined it outright impossible without compromise on Apple’s part. And just this spring, Adobe completely scrapped all development, citing Apple’s unwillingness to relinquish any control over its platform. Apple CEO Steve Jobs open letter criticizing Flash technology and describing it as “for PCs and mice” was nearly the final blow in closing this chapter.

But Skyfire 2.0 is stepping in and will be able to display Flash content for the price of $2.99 in the App Store. The web browser has already proven effective – it’s been working with Android 2.2 devices for months. And now that Apple has eased its previously stringent application restrictions and approved Skyfire, its’ ability to convert Flash to HTML 5 made it an obvious choice to solving this dilemma.

Recommended Videos

If you’ve had any experience with Skyfire 1.0 and are worried about the bugs it had, CEO Jeffrey Glueck wants to ease your fears. Glueck claims that all the preliminary kinks of the first version of Skyfire have been worked out, and Skyfire 2.0’s strong debut backs up his promise. Critics report Skyfire 2.0 runs faster, smoother, and as Glueck puts it “goes beyond the norms” when it comes to securing personal information.

Before iPhone and iPad users get too excited though, you should note that Flash-based games and non-video objects will remain unavailable. And of course, Hulu has banned Skyfire, so that’s still out too. Still, the trade off is more than worth it, and a lot more of the web just became available to Apple users.

Molly McHugh
Former Social Media/Web Editor
Before coming to Digital Trends, Molly worked as a freelance writer, occasional photographer, and general technical lackey…
Perplexity Comet Browser finally learns how to multitask on iPad
Perplexity’s AI browser is now much better suited for the iPad
Comet browser logo

Perplexity’s Comet browser is starting to make a lot more sense on the iPad. After bringing Comet to iOS users last month, the company is now adding proper iPadOS support, including multiple windows and Split View. The update is available now on the App Store, and it fixes one of the biggest gaps from the browser’s tablet launch.

Is Comet now practical enough for everyday iPad use?

Read more
Apple’s foldable iPad could meet the same fate as Microsoft’s doomed Surface Neo
The foldable iPad could stay an experiment, not a product
iPads with iPadOS 16.

Apple is exploring a massive foldable iPad, but this could be one of those projects that looks better on a roadmap than in a retail box.

According to a new report from Bloomberg, Apple has been working on a roughly 20-inch foldable iPad, a project that has reportedly been a priority for incoming CEO John Ternus. While it sounds like one of the company's most ambitious hardware bets in years on paper, it may never really hit the store shelves.

Read more
Next iPad could ditch traditional naming as Apple rethinks its lineup
Apple could make choosing an iPad less confusing for you
Home screen of iPad running iPadOS 26.

A subtle but potentially significant shift may be coming to the iPad lineup, and it has less to do with hardware and more to do with identity. In a recent interview with John Ternus and Greg Joswiak from Tom’s Guide, the company could rethink how it names future iPads - moving away from the familiar generation-based system.

A Naming Reset That Signals A Bigger Strategy Shift

Read more