this post was submitted on 10 Mar 2024
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Nah that was a 2000s thing. It existed, under different names and owned by different companies in the 90s up until 2005 when it was bought by Adobe but you wouldn't likely have seen flash elements on webpages. I think it was more of a vector drawing tool around that time.
Internet Explorer had an API called ActiveX, which let you run native code in the browser. Flash was an ActiveX object, but there were others available too. Adobe Shockwave was already available for Internet Explorer 3 in 1996 (https://news.microsoft.com/1996/06/03/microsoft-and-macromedia-deliver-shockwave-and-activex-to-millions-of-web-customers-and-developers/), and in the 90s you'd usually see either Shockwave or Java.
A precursor to Flash (FutureSplash) was already available in the 90s too, but it wasn't quite as popular yet.
ah nuts. I could only remember seeing it post 2000s and then I thought, before saying it wasn't really a thing in the 90s I should double check that that's actually true so I did a very quick bit of research which seemed to indicate it wasn't really around or used in the manner it's most well known for on websites and assumed that cursory research would be enough. Goes to show you need more than lip service to fact checking.
Macromedia player. Used to play a lot of cartoon network games online back in the day with net zero and win 98 back in 1999