

And if it doesn't move with some alacrity, it risks inflicting broken Web sites on computer users who do make the 64-bit shift with their browsers. However, Adobe isn't committing itself publicly to a delivery schedule. Moving its widely used browser plug-in beyond the 32-bit era is a "top priority," said Tom Nguyen, Adobe's Flash Player product manager, on Saturday. So it may seem a bit backward that Adobe withdrew its only 64-bit version of Flash Player.īut don't take the disappearance of Adobe Labs' experimental 64-bit Flash Player for Linux as a sign of things to come. 64-bit versions of Windows, Mac OS X, and Linux now are in widespread use, and software for the operating systems is following suit.
