Installing Adobe Flash 10.1 the Adobe way is all kinds of broken

How to Install Adobe Flash V10.1 with VoiceOver– The Mac-cessibility Net­work – News [Lioncourt.com]




Last week, Adobe released ver­sion 10.1 of their Flash player plu­gin for both the Mac and Win­dows oper­at­ing sys­tems, which included a large num­ber of secu­rity fixes. Much to the frus­tra­tion of visu­ally impaired users, the installer appli­ca­tion, which had pre­vi­ously been acces­si­ble, was ren­dered inac­ces­si­ble with screen read­ers on both oper­at­ing sys­tems. This, of course, means that many visu­ally impaired users are stuck using an older ver­sion of the plu­gin, along with all its known vulnerabilities.



I can’t pre­tend to know what’s going on with Adobe that they’re so tied to this installer mon­key busi­ness. The acces­si­bil­ity issue above is just one symp­tom of larger trou­ble that serves to con­fuse those of us who — admit­tedly — think maybe-too-deeply about this stuff. Nonethe­less, this is puzzling.



When you down­load an installer from Adobe, you get this fancy, flashy wrap­per that comes up, and then calls the real installer which is buried in the thing you just down­loaded. That hid­den, real installer is every­thing you need to install the soft­ware on your Mac. Every­thing else is just cruft.



Think of it this way. The buried installer is the bar of soap you will use to wash your­self. The pri­mary Adobe installer is the sock in which you will place the bar of soap so that you may more effec­tively beat your­self with it.