Flash fans can breathe a collective sigh of relief — Adobe has confirmed that the next version of Windows will, in truth, support work built on its once ubiquitous web publishing platform. Windows 8 PCs and tablets with x86 or ARM processors will support the platform — inside the more traditional desktop mode, that’s. The version of Internet Explorer 10 built for that interface will play nicely with Flash. Those users who decide upon the brand new Metro UI , nevertheless, would be out of luck at the Flash front, due to a scarcity of plug-in support. Between Adobe’s work within the HTML5 world and the power to construct Flash-like apps using Air for the Metro interface, however, the corporate seems to have most of its bases covered in Windows 8 land. Look at evidence of Flash running in Windows 8 after the break, courtesy of Qualcomm.
Robot navigates, reassembles truss structures
Apple patent application points to DJ-like beat matching, pairs iTunes with fist pumps



