Copy link to clipboard
Copied
It depends on your timescale. You could grab the last version of the offline Flash Player, and that would work until it doesn't. (e.g. you get an operating system update that breaks it.)
The way that people frequently deal with legacy software long-term is to take a snapshot of a working set of all the software required to make something run (the OS, the content, the offline Flash Player), and make a virtual machine out of it. You're then depending on the underlying virtualization technolog
...Copy link to clipboard
Copied
It depends on your timescale. You could grab the last version of the offline Flash Player, and that would work until it doesn't. (e.g. you get an operating system update that breaks it.)
The way that people frequently deal with legacy software long-term is to take a snapshot of a working set of all the software required to make something run (the OS, the content, the offline Flash Player), and make a virtual machine out of it. You're then depending on the underlying virtualization technology to stay abreast of any changes in the OS or hardware that might prevent the legacy software from running.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Hey jeromiec83223024,
I am super interested in this from your reply above:
take a snapshot of a working set of all the software required to make something run (the OS, the content, the offline Flash Player), and make a virtual machine out of it.
I am trying to figure out the best way to go about this for our application. Does Above have any guidance or best practices for this type of setup?
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
wath moves