The AIR runtime does not allow more than one instance of a given AIR app to run on a single machine. Instead, a second invocation of the same app sends an event to the running app instead of starting a new instance.
To resolve this limitation, you create multiple debug configurations for the AIR project, and in each one you set the [b]Publisher ID[/b] to a different value, then you can launch them all at the same time, and the AIR runtime will think of them as different apps.
To resolve this limitation, you create multiple debug configurations for the AIR project, and in each one you set the [b]Publisher ID[/b] to a different value, then you can launch them all at the same time, and the AIR runtime will think of them as different apps.