![]() "We will attack those pesky blue Flash error messages," Skyfire CEO Jeffrey Glueck told CNN this week. Once the conversion is complete, a small thumbnail pops up on your touchscreen, and v oilà – you can view that formerly-forbidden Flash content until the cows come home. The Skyfire software grinds to life, and translates the Flash coding into HTML5, a format accepted by Apple's iOS. Here's how it works: You click on a piece of Flash content (which is pretty prevalent around the Web these days). on Thursday morning – mark your calendars – the Apple Store will reportedly begin selling a $2.99 app called Skyfire, which effectively lets iPhone and iPad users perform an end-run around the Flash ban. ![]() So does that mean you can't view Flash content on your iPhone or iPad? Well, not exactly. Adobe Flash is officially banned from Apple iOS software. ![]()
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