![]() The most recommended tool in this roundup is PassFab for ZIP. The test does by Flotato aims to count all processes originating from both Safari and Chrome. This includes not only the main browser process, but also processes created for each tab, and the renderer processes. As per a developer from Chrome V8 JavaScript engine team on Hacker News: However, psrecord, the tool used to count the RAM usage, does not count all Safari processes.Īs there are no extensions in either browser, there is no concern about additional RAM usage by them. This post is unfortunately nonsense, because it’s making a fundamental measurement error: not including renderer processes for Safari, and only measuring the browser process (which should be expected to be roughly O(1) memory in the number of tabs). To the author’s credit, they are trying to include child processes – I’m not sure why, but psrecord seems to not (in local testing) include child processes for Safari even when the “–include-children” flag is passed. I’m somewhat disappointed that the author, or half the comments on the post, didn’t question these wildly different results though… I guess it does for Chrome, for whatever reason. ITunes organizes the podcast files in the Podcasts folder. That's a problem for podcasts that post individual MP3 music files, and not radio shows. iTunes recognizes these files as podcasts, even when you change the info on the file. By following the instructions below, you will convert an MP3 podcast to a regular MP3 file. This will keep it organized as a regular MP3 file in iTunes (artist/album/file), and not in the Podcasts folder. WARNING: User of these instructions will be responsible for any kind of damage that may occur to his/her iTunes library. Select the file from your Podcast folder.Change all data you need - "artist," "album" etc.Make a copy of the cover art for this file by dragging it to the desktop.Search for the file in the Library, and add the cover art again to the file.Drag the copy of the file you have on the Desktop back into iTunes.Drag the file to the desktop (this will make a copy of the MP3 on the desktop).Check ID3 tag version, and select "v1.0" from the drop-down menu.Select the Advanced -> Convert ID3 Tags menu item. Now the file is out of the Podcasts folder and works like a regular MP3 file inside iTunes. Stage 3D Accelerated Graphics Rendering (Player & AIR desktop + AIR for TV) Stage 3D is a new architecture for hardware accelerated graphics rendering developed that provides a set of low-level APIs that enable advanced 2D and 3D rendering capabilities across screens and devices (desktop, mobile, and TV). Using Stage 3D, app and framework developers can now access high performance GPU hardware acceleration, enabling the creation of new classes of rich, interactive experiences. Note: Stage 3D for mobile versions of Flash Player & AIR will be enabled in a future releaseEnter your state here.įlash Access Content Protection Support for Mobileįlash Access content protection support is now available on mobile devices including Android powered smartphones and tablets. Note: Flash Access for iOS is not supported at this time.įlash Access Content Protection Enhancements In addition, content protection is now supported on tablet devices powered by the BlackBerry® Tablet OS. ![]() New Flash Access content protection features include key rotation support, V3 license chaining, domain support and enhanced output protection and device filtering. Driver File For Mac OS (OS X Leopard, OS X Snow Leopard, OS X Lion, OS X Mountain Lion, OS X Mavericks, OS X Yosemite, OS X El Capitan, macOS Sierra, macOS High Sierra) – Download.ĭriver File For Windows 8, 7, Vista and XP (64-bit and 32-bit) – Download.Driver File For Windows 10, 8.1 (64-bit and 32-bit) – Download. ![]()
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