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Welcome to the primary Gnash website. Gnash is the GNU Flash movie player, which can be run standalone on the desktop or an embedded device, as well as as a plugin for several browsers.
News Stallman anticipates Gnash video supportIn an interview with Groklaw, Richard Stallman mentions Gnash: "The popularity of Flash has been a big problem for our community, and we've been urging people not to use Flash for anything. However, we've just about solved that problem and we're soon going to release a version of Gnash which can even handle YouTube." And we're inching closer to solving this problem every day. By bjacques at 2007-04-04 13:34 | bjacques's blog
Spanish article on new technologyRob was recently interviewed about Gnash for an article in the 'new technologies' section of a Spanish consumer news site. The article discusses how flash has become commonplace, and why an open alternative to the Adobe flash player is needed. There is a brief history of Gnash and a mention of its portability. Finally, the author discusses the future of flash on mobile phones. By ann at 2007-02-08 05:34 | ann's blog
Gnash on OLPCThanks to Rob's efforts at CCC, Gnash was ported to OLPC (one laptop per child). They blogged about us at OLPC News. It's also mentioned here. Update: There is also this photo of Gnash running as a plugin to the web browser on an OLPC. By ann at 2007-01-03 15:10 | ann's blog
Gnash for BeOS (Take 2)Here's an article with several nice screen shots of a Gnash port to the Haiku OS. By rob at 2006-11-27 22:04 | rob's blog
Second Alpha Release of GnashThe second alpha release of Gnash has just been made at version 0.7.2. Gnash is a GPL'd Flash movie player and browser plugin for Firefox, Mozilla, Konqueror, and Opera. Gnash supports many SWF v7 features and ActionScript2 classes. Gnash also runs on many GNU/Linux distributions, embedded GNU/Linux, FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD, non x86 processors, and 64 bit architectures. Ports to Darwin and Windows are in progress for a future release. The plugin works best with Firefox 1.0.4 or newer, and should work in any Mozilla based browser. There is also a standalone player for GNOME or KDE based desktops. By rob at 2006-11-17 14:31 | read more | rob's blog
Interview with Rob Savoye of Gnash, the GPL Flash projectWith Sun's recent announcement that they are planning on freeing Java under the GPL and Adobe's decision to open source the Actionscript Virtual Machine, I thought it would be good to take a look at other open source Rich Internet Application solutions. One of the most famous is Gnash, a GNU Flash movie player. I talked with Rob Savoye, the lead developer on the project, about what Gnash is and what the goals for this implementation for open source Flash are. If you are interested in trying it out, you can download Gnash here, and Rob said a new release is expected very soon. By rob at 2006-11-16 19:23 | read more | rob's blog
O'Reilly EuroOSCON: Rob Savoye of GnashFabienne: One and a half weeks ago I spent two days at the second annual O'Reilly EuroOSCON conference in Brussels, Belgium. EuroOSCON topics on Open Source programming range from political to technological. For more of my coverage check out the EuroOSCON tag here on Netscape. By rob at 2006-11-16 19:21 | read more | rob's blog
Rob Savoye on Gnash - The GNU/Flash Player Rob Savoye on Gnash - The GNU/Flash Player By rob at 2006-11-02 14:36 | read more | rob's blog
An Enhanced Flash Player?An Enhanced Flash Player? I just caught this over on MacNN: SWF Movie Player is being billed as a “smart” Flash Player for MacOS. When I first saw the post, I assumed it was something like Gnash, which is an entirely separate Flash Player built from the ground up. But it looks like it is simply an enhancement for Flash Movies. I don’t know if it runs as a SWF, or if it somehow interacts with the browser to enable the functionality. By rob at 2006-10-24 19:43 | read more | rob's blog
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