Whatever youre talking about with flash is something ive never seen outside of those who try to build their websites in it. Ive gone through thousands and thousands of swf files since I first learned of them and ive not seen a single thing worth flipping the table and abandoning it all.
But yeah fuck javascript.
There is little use for it outside of really shitty web design paradigms and maybe a few shitty games.
If you make a shitty game, you might as well use a non-proprietary language, like C or Python.
If you want to use it for web design, well, it's the wrong direction, the same wrong direction JavaScript points to.
The way web design SHOULD work is that the backend (controller / model) provides a datastructure and nothing else. And the frontend (view) determines how that datastructure is displayed without regard to any other input from the host.
In this way the user is respected because the user is in control of the user experience. Flash is antithetical to this philosophy. It couples backend and frontend together.
My concern isnt the preservation of Adobes Flash Player. Its concern for preserving the past creations. I could care less about the nuance provided the media is properly preserved and avaliable to the public. So far ive not seen a proper preservation method beyond keeping the flash files and giving them a more secure and modern way to be played.
If you want to preserve Flash Media. Just seal them in Carbonite and be done with it. I mean, I probably have some 8-tracks in my attic somewhere. They are fine where they are.
Anything that is worth preserving has already been converted. I'm pretty sure Homestar Runner has been converted to a video format.
If you really want to preserve Flash apps the correct way though, you should probably brush up on Linux Containers. This is the Carbonite you need.
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