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I thought this was an interesting read this morning. Seems Virgin America has decided Flash is useless on their website because it works differently on customers systems, and they don’t use it to it’s full extent anyway (and I look over to Qantas using it to display pricing graphs).
It’s interesting to note that while their new site is touted as Flash-free, certain areas like route maps still rely on Flash, and an upgrade to their check-in kiosks will see them using a touch-input-based flash system. But for the most part, you can use their site on your iPhone/iPad and not worry about problems booking flights and such.
Also, The Register article.
Virgin America late Tuesday said it has dropped Flash altogether from its website. The change, which quietly took effect Monday, instead just uses newer web technologies like CSS. The airline explained the move as a deliberate gesture towards the iPhone and other handhelds, as the previous dependence on Flash kept most mobile hardware from checking into flights and favored certain devices over others. [Link]
It’s interesting to note that while their new site is touted as Flash-free, certain areas like route maps still rely on Flash, and an upgrade to their check-in kiosks will see them using a touch-input-based flash system. But for the most part, you can use their site on your iPhone/iPad and not worry about problems booking flights and such.
Also, The Register article.