LWN.net Logo

Advertisement

E-Commerce & credit card processing - the Open Source way!

Advertise here

That's old news

That's old news

Posted May 16, 2008 1:28 UTC (Fri) by pr1268 (subscriber, #24648)
In reply to: Avoid Flash 10 Beta for Linux - it crashes FIrefox by dowdle
Parent article: Adobe releases Flash Player 10 beta

When I said that Flash 9 works "fine", I was speaking in relative terms. Version 9 gives me grief every so often as well. But at least it didn't crash the very first time I tried using it.

I use a little shell script and symlink trickery to run Firefox with the flash plugin disabled by default, and enable it only when needed (i.e., to get my YouTube or Google Video "fix"). Accordingly, I have very few Flash crashes, not to mention Web browsing is generally less annoying without flash-based ads.


(Log in to post comments)

That's old news

Posted May 16, 2008 2:04 UTC (Fri) by mikachu (guest, #5333) [Link]

I can recommend flashblock http://flashblock.mozdev.org/, it replaces all flash movies with a
button you can press to show them. I also agree that the new beta is very bad on linux, I
didn't get through a single youtube video without crashing, however, the fullscreen mode was
less choppy during the brief period it worked :).

That's old news

Posted May 16, 2008 13:13 UTC (Fri) by afalko (subscriber, #37028) [Link]

I just tried flashblock. I can't be happier :). I used to see heavy CPU usage  when using
flash, now its pretty much gone. I don't need multi core anymore :). Thanks for the tip. 

That's old news

Posted May 16, 2008 16:58 UTC (Fri) by iabervon (subscriber, #722) [Link]

I can't imagine trying to use flash-based things without flashblock. There are far too many
flash things that start immediately. So I'd click a link, switch tabs, read some email, write
a bit of code, work on a puzzle a little, and come back to the first tab to find that I've
missed the whole thing, whatever it was.

That's old news

Posted May 16, 2008 2:07 UTC (Fri) by Mithrandir (subscriber, #3031) [Link]

Perhaps you should try these Firefox extensions:

NoScript: https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/722

You can turn Java and JavaScript on and off with a single click, on the fly.

FlashBlock: https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/433

Each flash item in the page is replaced by a button you can click to allow that particular
item to load and display.

While you're at it, you could try another of my favourite extensions:

Nuke Anything Enhanced: https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/951

I particularly like the new feature: "remove everything else" which allows you to select the
text on a page that you actually want to read, then right click and remove all the other
annoying junk from the page.

That's old news

Posted May 22, 2008 16:05 UTC (Thu) by lysse (subscriber, #3190) [Link]

Nor did it me (also Slackware, 11.0 and 12.0). Unfortunately, it didn't take very long before
Flash crashed every time a Flash ad arrived, and I've had cases of it preventing Firefox from
even *starting up*.

Therefore Flash of any kind is persona non grata on my systems.

Copyright © 2008, Eklektix, Inc.
Comments and public postings are copyrighted by their creators.
Linux is a registered trademark of Linus Torvalds