You could now draw a cartoon in Flash, write some ActionScript, and compile it directly into a native iPhone app. Not a browser plugin. An actual, App Store-ready .ipa file.
In the pantheon of creative software, few tools have inspired as much love, frustration, and nostalgic reverence as Adobe Flash. And within that lineage, one version stands alone as the awkward, slightly-overqualified middle child: Flash Professional CS5.5 (the “thethingy” edition, as the elders call it). ADOBE FLASH PROFESSIONAL CS5.5 -thethingy-
Was it perfect? No. Performance was janky. Memory leaks were common. But for a bedroom coder in 2011, it felt like alchemy. You could draw a button, click "Test Movie," and suddenly it was vibrating on a Retina display. You could now draw a cartoon in Flash,
But its true legacy is in the mindset . CS5.5 was the last version of Flash that felt like a toy —a powerful, broken, beautiful toy. After CS6, Adobe handed the keys to Animate CC, which is technically superior but emotionally sterile. In the pantheon of creative software, few tools