What is ruffle
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Ruffle is a Flash Player emulator written in Rust. Ruffle runs natively on all modern operating systems as a standalone application, and on all modern browsers through the use of WebAssembly. Leveraging the safety of the modern browser sandbox and the memory safety guarantees of Rust, we can confidently avoid all the security pitfalls that Flash had a reputation for. Ruffle puts Flash back on the web, where it belongs - including iOS and Android!
Designed to be easy to use and install, users or website owners may install the web version of Ruffle and existing flash content will 'just work', with no extra configuration required. Ruffle will detect all existing Flash content on a website and automatically 'polyfill' it into a Ruffle player, allowing seamless and transparent upgrading of websites that still rely on Flash content.
Ruffle is an entirely open source project maintained by volunteers. We're all passionate about the preservation of internet history, and we were drawn to working on this project to help preserve the many websites and plethora of content that will no longer be accessible when users can no longer run the official Flash Player. If you would like to help support this project, we welcome all contributions of any kind - even if it's just playing some old games and seeing how well they run.
- For most of the time I’ve used a Mac, I have avoided using Apple’s own browser, Safari. On my first Mac – a 2006 black MacBook – I preferred Firefox, and when Google’s Chrome was finally.
- Google Chrome for Mac has a laundry list of features, earning its spot as the top web browser of choice for both Mac and PC users. It offers thousands of extensions, available through the Chrome web store, providing Mac owners with even more functionality. Adobe Flash is also available when you install Chrome on your Mac.
Browser Emulators. The easiest way to test and interact remotely with a suite of official desktop, mobile and tablet browsers. Instant access to test your website or app on 2,000+ real devices & browsers anytime, anywhere.
- Browser Comparison
- iPhone Browser
- Palm Pre Browser
- Opera Mini Emulator
- Konqueror
- Mac OSX Safari
The largest share in browser usage, as of July 2009, is possessed by Internet Explorer with Mozilla Firefox reaching the second position for most used web browsers. Apple’s Safari browser’s beta form was released in June 2007 for Windows. Then, in March 2008, Safari 3.1 was released by Apple and it was included as a pre-selected update in Apple’s Software update program. This move tripled the market share of Safari on Windows and it is now competing for the third position along with the Google Chrome and Opera web browsers. Google Chrome, Google’s own web browser got released on September 2, 2008 after adopting the technologies from both Mozilla’s open-source Firefox and Apple’s Safari along with others which include user interface very much like the latest Internet Explorer and some components of Safari.
Other notable browsers:
SeaMonkey
Konqueror - Linux and UNIX
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Mac OS X Safari
Embedded Devices - Opera Mini
Webkit-based browser was also released by Nokia in 2005, which was given with each and every Symbian S60 platform-based smartphone.
Windows Mobile by default comes with Internet Explorer Mobile and
competes with Netfront, Iris, Opera Mobile, and Mozilla's Minimo.
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Apple's browser, Safari based on WebKit or KHTML, comes with iPod Touch and iPhone.
Google's open-source OS, Android for mobile devices, uses WebKit based browser.
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iPhone Web Browser
Safari’s iPhone OS-specific features include:
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Palm Pre WebKit-based webOS web browser