Adding Video / Sound
Ho there Web Gurus!
As a noob in the ways I'm puzzled as to how to go about inserting video onto a new website I'm working on.
I know Flash can create something that moves about, but I have raw video footage that needs inserting somewhere on the site and I'm gumped on how to impliment this.
A friends website uses activeX.microsoft commands but I was wondering what other options there were to look into.
Sound too thats has turn-on / turn off commands would be a boon too.
Thanks for looking
DL
Megan posted this at 15:28 — 19th January 2007.
She has: 11,421 posts
Joined: Jun 1999
You know what, the easiest thing to do with video would be to put it in YouTube and then copy their code over to your sever. Then you don't have to worry about hosting the file and bandwidth costs and all that.
Otherwise you can plug your video into Flash yourself. I think it accepts some formats directly, but it's best to convert your video to Flash Video Format first. You can google to find a tool that will conver to .flv. I also think that flash has a player included in one of their templates... or you could probably find one on the web.
Megan
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technostick posted this at 16:27 — 19th January 2007.
They have: 27 posts
Joined: Sep 2005
In fact I have the same problem. I do not have any relevant bandwidth restrictions, but all the formats and their settings (.mov, .mpg) which I have tried lead to a "missing plug-in" alert. Could you please suggest a format?
Megan posted this at 17:10 — 19th January 2007.
She has: 11,421 posts
Joined: Jun 1999
The format and settings where? On your server or at YouTube? Or in Flash? If it's with Flash convert it to FLV video first. Do a google search for a converter that will do that. I know I had one last year that worked well, and I think it was free too.
Megan
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FrankR posted this at 22:17 — 21st January 2007.
He has: 45 posts
Joined: Oct 2006
Carefully pay attention to the YouTube terms of service before you do that.
I have been trying a product called Camtasia Studio from TechSmith. The $300 price tag is reasonable considering the features it has. I am currently working with the 30 day trial and will measure the results that videos make to my conversion ratios before committing to purchasing the product. It has been fun to work with so far.
I hope this helps.
Frank
Author of SQL Converter for Excel, which is an Excel add-in for converting data to MySQL.
Megan posted this at 14:07 — 22nd January 2007.
She has: 11,421 posts
Joined: Jun 1999
Frank - I have used Camtasia before but we used it for recording what was happening on the screen. It's great for doing online tutorials and things like that. Can you do other forms of audio and video processing in there too? I remember it published a nice final video in different formats with a nice player and everything.
That's a good point about the YouTube ToS.
Megan
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FrankR posted this at 14:23 — 22nd January 2007.
He has: 45 posts
Joined: Oct 2006
I have thus far only worked with the basics to create tutorials of what I am doing on the computer. I am not sure yet about all that Camtasia Studio can do. It's not Final Cut Pro or Pro Tools|HD by any means, but still very capable. I am using Audacity, a open source program, to do audio mixing.
Frank
Author of SQL Converter for Excel, which is an Excel add-in for converting data to MySQL.
Megan posted this at 16:43 — 22nd January 2007.
She has: 11,421 posts
Joined: Jun 1999
Ooh, thanks for mentioning Audacity! I used to do a lot of sound editing in my old job and we were using Adobe Audition (total overkill for what we were doing). I don't usually do any sound editing anymore but if I ever do it will be great to know that there is an open alternative
Megan
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technostick posted this at 20:47 — 22nd January 2007.
They have: 27 posts
Joined: Sep 2005
I meant the various settings in saving the movie. For example, iMovie, the program I use, can save in many formats, such as .mov, .mp4, etc.
Should I upload the video file directly to the website server as I have done?
LenBradshaw posted this at 17:48 — 26th January 2007.
He has: 36 posts
Joined: Nov 2006
I think Megan is on the right track here. I've used different video streaming formats and have had the best results when converting raw footage to FLV format. I use a program called SWISHVIDEO2. Do a search on it. Not only will it do the converstion for you, but you can scale the size down, crop it, etc. In addition, it will add the associated SWF (Flash file) controls that allow your users to pause, playback, etc. It isn't free but the price is well within the reach of most people.
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