implementation of Adobe Flash, both a standalone player and a browser
plugin. Gnash implement support for the AVM1 format (and not the
newer AVM2 format - see
-<ahref="http://lightspark.github.io/">lightspark</a> for that one),
+<a href="http://lightspark.github.io/">Lightspark</a> for that one),
allowing several flash based sites to work. Thanks to the friendly
developers at Youtube, it also work with Youtube videos, because the
Javascript code at Youtube detect Gnash and serve a AVM1 player to
those users. :) Would be great if someone found time to implement AVM2
-support, but it has not happened yet.</p>
+support, but it has not happened yet. If you install both Lightspark
+and Gnash, Lightspark will invoke Gnash if it find a AVM1 flash file,
+so you can get both handled as free software. Unfortunately,
+Lightspark so far only implement a small subset of AVM2, and many
+sites do not work yet.</p>
<p>A few months ago, I started looking at
-<ahref="http://scan.coverity.com/">Coverity</a>, the static source
+<a href="http://scan.coverity.com/">Coverity</a>, the static source
checker used to find heaps and heaps of bugs in free software (thanks
to the donation of a scanning service to free software projects by the
company developing this non-free code checker), and Gnash was one of
test suite, but it also found a few in the rest of the code.</p>
<p>If you want to help out, you find us on
-<ahref="https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/gnash-dev">the
+<a href="https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/gnash-dev">the
gnash-dev mailing list</a> and on
-<ahref="irc://irc.freenode.net/#gnash"the #gnash channel on
+<a href="irc://irc.freenode.net/#gnash">the #gnash channel on
irc.freenode.net IRC server</a>.</p>