Saturday, February 21, 2026

Tuesday, February 03, 2026

Post 787 - Whiskey Tango Foxtrot?!?!?! ADOBE kills Flash AND Animate?!?

Well, good news and bad news time: the good news is that I have stuck with the versions of Flash for animation that I could actually BUY without an annual rental for the software, keeping me at the "CS5" iteration (the one just before it launched the near-identical rental-only version called "Animate"). 

The FIRST bad news was that, amid my tech crashes of overworked hard drives and shuffling software on and off machines, even with "unregistering," I am discovering that using the CS3 version as a backup no longer even permits *registering* any more. 

Ok... and today the SECOND bad news - Adobe has decided all animation should be "generational AI," so it's going to stop licensing any of the rental versions of Flash, now "Animate," effective March 1, 2026. And it also means they'll stop "support" in 2027. Adobe is notorious for its apathetic definition of "support," so in reality it means that if you're renting your software in their cloud, the cloud will go pfft! in 2027 for the software. 

And it also means that should I ever move my creaky CS5 version of Flash to a newer computer, even with unregistering it, it won't be allowed to run after 2027. 

Now before I get a deluge of options, understand that I use my Flash/Animate to create the sequential images, which I then slide into a video creator, frame by frame, to build a film. The only attraction Flash has had that kept me with it this long was the ability to make an "animated symbol," so I could build a collection of 12-24 frame "loops" that would keep animating while I worked on the rest of the scenes. I haven't found a software that mimics that capability at this time. 

I feel that those who are using Animate now, in commercial as well as educational venues, are REALLY going to be shafted by this decision by Adobe. I will be backing up all my flash-ish generated FLA files from my projects over the past dozen years into jpgs, pngs, and maybe even gifs (most of them have been in those formats already) and will be diving into Blender with greater enthusiasm, with Krita and OpenToonz as other options. 

I am also looking at Kinora and Mutoscope options...or even sequential stone carvings (Edmore has a history of that already!). 

Here's one of a bajillion comments online about this Adobe decision: https://www.techbuzz.ai/articles/adobe-kills-animate-in-major-ai-pivot-leaving-creators-stranded

 

(A brief follow-up note, based on the backlash to Adobe for their announcement, a meek squeak into the ether) - to paraphrase, "Oh gee, we didn't mean for everyone to dump the Adobe suite like everyone seems to be doing as a result of our announcement, oh gee, we're not dropping Animate, because after all while you donate your work to Our Cloud, you give US access to your work, specified in subparagraph 17, section 12, line 8 written in Sanscrit, and we can scrape the material for our focus on "generative AI" - oh gee, we didn't mean THAT, we're - ah, well, we're going to do that anyway, but we have to come up with a better way of phrasing it so we don't lose subscriptions, so please, don't leave, just keep sending us your licensing checks!" Again, I paraphrase, and the crystal ball may be a bit dusty, but it still makes me sneeze!