December 21, 2009
Squiggly is a spell checking engine for Adobe® Flash® Player and Adobe AIR®. The Squiggly library allows you to easily add spell checking functionality in any Adobe Flex® 3 or Flex 4 based text control.
Squiggly prerelease 2 update includes support for the Flex 4 Spark components that are based on the Adobe Text Layout Framework (TLF). We have also added support for user dictionaries, which allow individual users to augment the spell checking dictionary with the words of their choice. Please see the release notes and updated ASDoc for more details.
December 17, 2009
Adobe Flash Player 10.1 beta 2 now available for PCs and netbooks and realizes the promise of a consistent, cross-platform runtime across desktop and mobile devices. With support for a broad range of mobile devices, including smartphones, netbooks, smartbooks and other Internet-connected devices, Flash Player 10.1 allows your content to reach your customers wherever they are.
The ColdFusion Builder development team is happy to announce an update to the ColdFusion Builder beta 3 that includes an Eclipse based IDE for ColdFusion development that is deeply integrated with ColdFusion 9. This release provides additional editing features, extension enhancements, fixes and performance improvements over ColdFusion Builder beta 2.
December 8, 2009
Furthering Adobe’s commitment to the Linux community and as part of ongoing efforts to ensure the cross-platform compatibility of Flash Player, an alpha refresh of 64-bit Adobe Flash Player 10 for Linux operating systems was released on December 8, 2009 and is available for download. This offers easier, native installation on 64-bit Linux distributions and removes the need for 32-bit emulation. Learn more by reading the 64-bit Flash Player 10 FAQ.
Release versions of Flash Player 10 for Windows, Macintosh, and Linux are now available from the Flash Player Download Center.
December 3, 2009
The Distributable Player Solution beta has ended and the program has been cancelled. The solution is no longer available and will not be brought into production.
If you are interested in continuing to develop mobile applications, we recommend taking a look at developing applications for the iPhone.
For mobile web app and content development, we recommend you participate in the Flash Player 10.1 beta program.