
This sentence raises 2 questions immediately:On Linux Mint LMDE system using 11.64 Opera browser i have installed the latest Adobe Flash Player.
This sentence raises 2 questions immediately:Interestingly, on Adobe's test page an earlier version will be displayed.

karlchen wrote:Hello, zoli62.This sentence raises 2 questions immediately:On Linux Mint LMDE system using 11.64 Opera browser i have installed the latest Adobe Flash Player.
- Which version of the Flash plugin have you installed? I.e. what is the exact version number?
- How did you install? Did you use the official Debian repositories or did you download a .tgz file from the Adobe webpage and install this manually?
This sentence raises 2 questions immediately:Interestingly, on Adobe's test page an earlier version will be displayed.
- Which version of the Flash plugin does the Adobe test page detect on your machine?
- Which version of the Flash plugin should be present according to the Adobe test page?
On my Linux systems the relevant version details are these, no matter whether Firefox 12.0 is used or Opera 11.64:All current Flash plugins on my Linux systems have been updated using the official Ubuntu or Linux Mint repositories. This suggests that v11.2.202.236 has not made it to the official repositories, yet.
- Installed Flash plugin version is 11.2.202.235
- Adobe webpage displays that 11.2.202.236 were available for Linux
Trying to update my Windows systems to v11.3.300.255 which according to the Adobe webpage is the current Flash plugin version available for Windows did not install v11.3.300.255, but re-installed v11.2.202.235.
This might suggest that the Adobe webpage is ahead of the download servers perhaps?
Anyway, whatever it is, Opera 11.64 is not the culprit.
Kind regards,
Karl




apt-get install flashplugin-nonfreeupdate-flashplugin-nonfree --install
craigevil wrote:Remove anything Flash related.
FlashPlayer - Debian Wiki - http://wiki.debian.org/FlashPlayer
Install flashplugin-nonfree
- Code: Select all
apt-get install flashplugin-nonfree
to update it as root run:
- Code: Select all
update-flashplugin-nonfree --install


Shockwave Flash
File: /usr/lib/flashplayer-mozilla/libflashplayer.so
Version:
Shockwave Flash 11.2 r202
karlchen wrote:Hello, zoli62.
Though you marked your thread as [Solved], I would still be interested in the current version number which proved to be current. Is it still 11.2.202.235? - I am asking because I have got the vague feeling that the Adobe Flash webpage temporarily listed newer version numbers though those versions, 11.3.300.255 for Windows and 11.2.202.236 for Linux, have not been released, yet. At minimum, this seemed to be the case last night, i.e. May 15th, 2012. - Visiting the Adobe Flash webpage tonight, I only see v11.2.202.235 for all OSes, except Solaris where the version string reads v11.2.202.223. I guess this answers my question.
Cheers,
Karl

craigevil wrote:From the Adobe page: You have version 11,2,202,235 installed
which is what is listed on the page.
The Debian package flashplugin-nonfree is a script that downloads and install Adobe Flash when you first install the package. It does not get upgraded when Adobe releases a new version , in order to upgrade to a newer version of Flash you need to run as root: update-flashplugin-nonfree --install
Personally I use the flashplayer-mozilla package from the deb-multimedia.org repo. It actually installs flash when it is installed and when the package is upgraded.
$ apt-cache policy flashplayer-mozilla
flashplayer-mozilla:
Installed: 3:11.2.202.235-dmo1
Candidate: 3:11.2.202.235-dmo1
Version table:
*** 3:11.2.202.235-dmo1 0
500 http://www.deb-multimedia.org/ sid/non-free i386 Packages
100 /var/lib/dpkg/status
Firefox about:plugins
- Code: Select all
Shockwave Flash
File: /usr/lib/flashplayer-mozilla/libflashplayer.so
Version:
Shockwave Flash 11.2 r202




zerozero wrote:zoli62,
deb-multimedia (or debian-multimedia) is part of the standard lmde repos.




zerozero wrote:latest/multimedia is a snapshot of debian-multimedia to ensure compatibility within the system (as are all the other mirrored repos).
so unless i'm missing something in your question, you already have debian-multimedia (through latest/multimedia).

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