Computerworld is running a story by JR Raphael entitled Why the Apple crowd's completely wrong about Flash about his experience with Android and Flash Player 10.1. I love this quote:
After installing Adobe's Flash Player onto my Android phone, the first thing I noticed was that I could suddenly access the entire Web.
Enough said!
"Say what you want about how Flash is dead, how better technologies exist, whatever -- the fact remains that a lot of Web sites utilize it, and not having access to it restricts what you can do."
That brings us to the most important point about Flash support on a smartphone: It's an option. If I don't want to use it, I don't have to. I could opt to never activate the Flash content on the pages I'm browsing, or I could opt to uninstall Adobe's Flash Player altogether if I so desired. But I have that choice. It's my phone, and it's my decision.
Also, the author clearly states that you have to go "Configure" your Flash to do that "On-Demand" Flash loading -- it is not the default option. If that is also true, I think Adobe should consider making it the default (mainly because most people never look at their settings, nor would they assume that was even an option).
I still think this whole thing is just Jobs getting back at Adobe for all the crap that went down when OSX came out and Adobe dithered about porting photoshop to it.