Flash is the only exception. All other plugins are being dropped.The new Release 52.0 of FireFox is dropping support for plug-ins (except for Flash. Silverlight, Java, Acrobat).
There will be an alternative to the VLC plugin in the next months.How will the loss of the VLC FF plug-in affect my use of VLC? What will I no longer be able to do?
I don't quite understand which ESR release is supposed to be used to continue support VLC. The table, which I can't figure out how to copy here, shows multiple ESR releases on two rows. Even using the bottom row, are you saying that the ESR Releases 52.x will support VLC plug-in even though the regular Releases 52.x won't?Lotesdelere wrote:
There will be an alternative to the VLC plugin in the next months.
Meanwhile you can use the ESR version of Firefox which will still support plugins until spring 2018:
https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/o ... tions/faq/
Yes, exactly.are you saying that the ESR Releases 52.x will support VLC plug-in even though the regular Releases 52.x won't?
So somebody is actually had donation for developing this for Chrome (PPAPI Plugin)? And somebody is actually developing this right now? This feature is important.On Chrome, there might soon be a VLC PPAPI plugin. I guess that nobody would fund the VLC port to PPAPI it until recently - which is to say until it was way too late for a smooth transition. In theory, that could support multicast.
On Firefox, there are no possible alternatives. Maybe there will be WebAssembly some day - again if and when somebody funds it.
Meanwhile the alternative is HTML5. Obviously, that won't include multicast streaming.
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