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Convert Flash to HTML5

113 points| chrislo | 14 years ago |swiffy.googlelabs.com | reply

20 comments

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[+] benologist|14 years ago|reply
"Swiffy currently supports a subset of SWF 8 and ActionScript 2.0,"

These are years out of date. It would be a lot more interesting if it could support modern versions (ActionScript 3 / FlashPlayer 9/10/10.1/10.2).

[+] john2x|14 years ago|reply
It's a start. Besides, it's cool (and so much easier) to animate stuff using Flash and then convert them to HTML5.
[+] Dove|14 years ago|reply
Working with "a subset of Actionscript 2.0" is pretty dang miserable if you're used the cutting edge stuff.
[+] joejohnson|14 years ago|reply
Can anyone report on how long this converter takes to run?

How feasible would it be for a Chrome extension where Flash elements in wegpages are seamlessly converted and displayed as HTML5 objects?

[+] whatever_dude|14 years ago|reply
It'd just be a pipe dream. There's so much involved. This SWF->whatever converters won't work with anything more than extremely simple animation SWFs.

If the idea is proving an HTML equivalent, it's better to just develop something in HTML5 from the ground up.

[+] yuxt|14 years ago|reply
You probably want Safari extension
[+] jvandenbroeck|14 years ago|reply
I don't know if that's a smart move from Google.

It would be a good thing for Google to have users frustrated with Flash websites that don't work in iOS. Now they are helping Apple giving users a great experience on iOS?

[+] skarayan|14 years ago|reply
I don't think that this is about Apple. It is about web standards and pushing for a uniform web.
[+] Matthew_Fabb|14 years ago|reply
As the above comment points out, this mainly works for Flash 5 content, so we are looking at mainly simple animations. The way I see it is that this is all about Flash-like banner ads onto iOS, which is an area that Google makes a huge amount of money from.
[+] nl|14 years ago|reply
Anything that makes the web better is a win for Google.

This isn't a zero-sum game. Apple doesn't need to lose for Google to win.

[+] jbwyme|14 years ago|reply
It'll be interesting to see how well the various Flash->HTML 5 convertors will complete the job. I'm a little skeptical that it'll be much more like scaffolding than a full-on conversion but I haven't personally tried it yet. I have, however, been working with Flex for the past couple of years and I have come to the conclusion that web applications shouldn't be developed using it given the evolution of standardized HTML and Javascript.
[+] johnhenry|14 years ago|reply
At this point, I still think Adobe's Wallaby project has more potential.
[+] quacker|14 years ago|reply
Wallaby isn't the same thing, is it? I just looked it up (and I don't know Flash, so correct me if I'm wrong) but from Adobe's website[1], Wallaby works on FLA files and Swiffy works on SWF files, the key difference being FLA is the working, editable animation file format and SWF is intended to be a non-editable 'production' format. Thus, Wallaby is useless if I'm looking at somebody else's website with an SWF file on it (I figure going from SWF to FLA is probably analogous to decompiling binaries to source code?).

1. http://labs.adobe.com/technologies/wallaby/