The version of Firefox bundled with Adobe Flash Player is too old to support newer versions of Adobe Flash Player. The last version that will work with it is version 7. You can use it by downloading the .tar.gz file, extracting it (tar xvvf nameoffile.tar.gz), and copying the plugin (a .so file) to /usr/lib/mozilla/plugins.
Adobe does not support PowerPC distros, so there is no version of Adobe Flash Player that will run on Yellow Dog Linux. However, you should be able to install Gnash, an open-source alternative, from the Yellow Dog repositories. The command you would use is yum install gnash.
Adobe does make a few programs available for Linux, namely Adobe Flash Player and Adobe Acrobat Reader. Adobe does not make programs like Adobe Flash or Photoshop available for Linux, and recent versions of these programs do not work in Wine.
No, Adobe Flash player is proprietary (private property) and Sony doesn't have the same deal with them that Microsoft does. PS3 won't have it until they buy the rights and distribute it via firmware update. I should mention that if you install Linux (I suggest Fedora 7) that you CAN install it, but getting anything to run smoothly in (ps3) Linux takes work.
No. Club Penguin is an Adobe Flash application. It can be run from any operating system with a compatible version of Adobe Flash Player, such as Windows, Mac OS X, or Linux.
Adobe Flash Media Player is available to download direct from Adobe, it is available in thirty two bit and sixty four bit versions. Adobe Flash Media Player is available on PC, Mac and Linux.
11.7.700.202 (Win), 11.7.700.203 (Mac) and 11.2.202.285 (Linux)
There is no alternative to Adobe Flash Player that incorporates all of the features that the newest one does. The best substitute is "gnash", which currently implements most of the features of Adobe Flash Player 7 and 8. It is usable for watching YouTube videos and playing older Flash games, but is still very limited by comparison.
I guess you just installed it, then: type "sudo apt-get install restricted-extras" in terminal or just install Linux Mint, which is based on Ubuntu, but already has Java, Flash Player, video codecs, etc.
no
You could use a usb flash drive.
You can install Puppy linux by typing "install" when it asks how it should be booted. from there you have options from installing it to LiveUSB, HDD, and many more options. Note: if you choose to install Puppy linux on Compact Flash, make sure a Partition has been created.
Adobe has not set a release date for version 11 yet, and it will not be specifically packaged for Linux Mint when it is released.
Download the ISO images from Linux Mint's website, and burn it to a DVD or a flash drive and boot from it. Once it boots in a live session, on the desktop there is a icon named "Install Linux Mint" and click on it. Then follow the instructions and you'll be on your way to install Linux Mint.