To be fair, SkyFire mobile browser transcodes Flash into HTML5 in real time and hence theoretically at-least, must stand a chance to come through the app store filters. The developers are fairly confident that Apple will accept their submission soon enough and we definitely hope they do. The company maintains that the app has been developed with significant oversight and feedback from Apple and that it adheres to every guideline put forth by Apple regarding HTML5 video playback for iOS. The process of transcoding Flash to HTML5 will allow Apple users to play millions of Flash videos on Apple devices without the technical problems for which Jobs banned flash. Skyfire is pretty similar to Opera mini for iPhone in the way it operates, basing its Web-browsing capabilities off of a Webkit browser core shared with Safari and using cloud-computing to transcode Flash into HTML5 in real time. It will be interesting to see if Apple approves SkyFire in one go, or come up with new restrictions and reasons to reject it. [via]RWW

SkyFire Flash Enabled Browser for iPhone   iPad Submitted to App Store - 78