(http://i.imgur.com/kVOWH.jpg)
When Android 4.1 (Jelly Bean) was announced at Google I/O along with the Nexus 7, there were a ton of new improvements shown in Google's latest version of their mobile OS such as true tabbed browsing and syncing of bookmarks and passwords with your desktop browser. One omission however was Flash capability...Chrome is HTML5 only. Now granted this is a strategic decision since Adobe no longer is supporting flash for mobile devices in future versions and the entire web is moving quickly to a HTML5 world...but in the meantime until all your favorite sites are converted what's a Flash dependent Nexus 7 owner to do?
Well good news folks because XDA member Stempox has devised a solution to put Flash onto your Nexus 7 tablet. Now it's not that complex a procedure but it does require you to have root access. The main actions require you to sideload the flash APK as well as the old 'Browser.APK' onto your device as well as modify a few files to get things running smoothly. Another XDA member found that sideloading Firefox works just as well for your Flash browsing needs. While we wouldn't recommend this procedure for the complete newbie, those that are confident in their hacking skills can head on over to XDA-Developers (http://www.xda-developers.com/android/adobe-flash-on-the-nexus-7-and-other-jelly-bean-devices/) and get all the juicy details of how to do it. Anyone here in the forums plan to give this a try? Let us know how it turns out.
Source: XDA-Developers (http://www.xda-developers.com/android/adobe-flash-on-the-nexus-7-and-other-jelly-bean-devices/)
via Liliputing (http://liliputing.com/2012/07/how-to-install-adobe-flash-on-the-nexus-7-or-other-jelly-bean-devices.html)