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Adobe has released Flash Player 10.1 for Windows, Mac, and Linux. The company has been pushing out release candidates for the last few months, but now the Flash plugin is officially ready for ...
Microsoft is preparing to issue two more Windows 10 updates in June and July that will eliminate unsupported Adobe Flash Player from Windows PCs for good.
Microsoft ended support for Flash Player in December. Upcoming Windows 10 updates will fully take the software off your device.
Adobe's Flash Player will be gone forever on Windows 10 after this update is installed.
Microsoft quietly revealed its plans to remove the Adobe Flash plugin from Windows 10, with mandatory removal starting in July 2021.
Once the update is applied, Adobe Flash will be removed from the Control Panel and Windows 10 users will not be able to roll back the update. Users can also uninstall Flash via Adobe’s website.
Microsoft has announced that Adobe Flash Player will be eliminated from Windows 10 devices come the Patch Tuesday security update in July.
Microsoft will start fully removing Adobe Flash from Windows 10 this summer. The update permanently removes Flash as a component of the operating system and will become mandatory starting in July.
Microsoft is force installing a Windows 10 update that removes the embedded 32-bit version of Adobe Flash Player from the operating system.
Microsoft will make the update to remove Adobe Flash Player from Windows more readily available in the near future. The update will soon be available through Windows Server Update Service.
Microsoft has released an optional Catalog update that removes Adobe Flash from Windows 10 and prevents it from being reinstalled, paving the way for the eventual death of the app in 2021.