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block Flash on Apple devices was the turning point to a Flash free Web... Too bad today we still have the same annoying, heavy to load and play, loud and obnoxious, malware packing popups of yore.
Not only that but today we can not longer block / whitelist the annoying, heavy, obnoxious, and popup producing replacement, HTML5. For years before Apple blocked flash until it became a feature of my browser I ran the FlashBlock plugin. Now that flash is dead, I have no way to block its successor.
So to all those short-sighted people who pushed for and cheered the death of Flash, you won. A standard that just as bloated, just as much a CPU hog, that's actually harder to HW accelerate is now built-in to my browser. I fail to see how this is progress.
I usually had Chrome installed because of its built-in Flash support. I spent years without a computer and recently set up a system (Fedora 30) and installed Chrome out of habit (I've been using Firefox, mainly). Then I learned about chromium-vaapi in Fedora and I've been using it for Youtube.
So, besides Chrome updating earlier from Google's repo, some eventual Flash content (and that translate issue another poster mentioned), are there any other reasons to keep it?
Answering partially myself, I see that Chrome has Google Docs extensions that might be useful, and it may be useful to have different video acceleration defaults.
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