Smashing Magazine 39 Creative Flash Designs
Smashing Magazine folks have collected a great list of 39 creative Flash websites . There are lots of great sites there, I believe some of those are already known from most of you, but it’s always nice see good works.
The sites are separated by the following categories:
- Advertising and Games
- Art & Experiments
- (Web)-Designers & Design Agencies
- Something Completely Different
In an Absolut World
Ultrashock 2.0
First was Adobe, now Ultrashock. Ultrashock.com was redesigned, it has some new and nice features now.
The coolest change I see is that now you may buy images, vectors, audio and Flash files, or change them by credits.
Another big change is the fact that this version is done using Flex.
Take a look.
CNET 10 most addictive online flash games ever
Deezer free music player
Today I was pointed to this Flash site somehow similar to Pandora, Finetune, or Last.fm publish at your blog the player
The great advantage of this is that you can actually play all the music files from an artist, you are not limited to three or two songs. Play full albums, create your own play lists, and publish a player with your songs at your blog or website.
Flashforward – Boston Winners
The Boston Flashforward event finalists were announced. Get to know the winners at FF website.
s85 – The coolest intro i’ve seen
I had to share this to you. Take a look at the Samsung s85 intro. No doubt one of the best animations i’ve seen.
Jooce – A web based OS
Jooce has introduced a new web system based on flash. They are promising to plug-in a whole new generation of mobile internet users. Its very simple just sign-up and start using this, however this is currently in beta phase. Its very much like Goowy, another flash based OS, but the review says Jooce is much better.
Scrapblog
Create online scrapbooks with a powerful flash editing tool and tons of templates.
Via lifehacker.com
Bubble Guru

Bubble Guru puts your talking head into a bubble that appears when someone visits your site.
Just record your message (you’ll need a webcam, of course), then paste the HTML onto a web page. The next time someone visits that page, your bubble pops up and starts playing. It even stays visible as users scroll up and down the page.
Via Lifehacker














