No clue. The browser is there to help facilitate research into solving system crashes, it's not intended for full web consumption. I don't see why you'd need flash in a recovery CD's web browser.
I know why the browser is there , and thats my point of the install of flash . People like me that are completly new to this could watch a video and research and learn faster about how this all works . And the flash plugin command in the Sakura terminal is where you install and run it like this :
How-To install Adobe Flash Player
Open a terminal. Become super-user:
$ su -
The default password for the root account is root .
Type the following as one command:
# tazpkg get-install get-flash-plugin && get-flash-plugin
The package installs a get-flash-plugin command which creates a pseudo-package that downloads the source code from Adobe. It packages the build source code and pulls in any necessary dependencies.
Run browser(Midori) as Firefox in preferences /extensions check box status statusbar features.
Anyone else that has paid for the program like me should be able to use it at its full potential . And Youtube is full of videos on running g-parted , disk management , dos and donts , you just have to look . Thats why you would need Flash running in the internet browser Midori running from Windows Recovery Essentials .
Your welcome, class dismissed .