

- ADOBE PLAYER FOR EMBEDDING 3.1 MAC MOVIE
- ADOBE PLAYER FOR EMBEDDING 3.1 MAC MANUAL
- ADOBE PLAYER FOR EMBEDDING 3.1 MAC CODE
It begs the question: should the filter (which produces W3C compliant code) invoke the browser player whenever possible for Quicktime objects, and not the class object supplied by Apple for embedding movie?īTW: I know what you mean about the WYSIWIG, but that you can just click the button when code editing. mov with no class object! We are seriously onto something here! However, what you do show is that using this tag allows the clicks to pass through (absolutely essential) when using the filter method fails! So why is this? Your response, and a careful comparison of the source code it generates shows that whereas the 'filter' method pushes a class object into the page as the player, the 'embed tag' method does not, so it must invoke the player already installed in the browser (exactly analogous with what happens when you click the word 'Quicktime' in the filter method, and get a page all of its own for the. Firstly that the tag is deprecated, that is it is not W3C according to this article: So there would be no guarentee that this method would work in all browsers, or would continue to work! Your response certainly helps towards ansering the question 'Can the embedded version receive the clicks?' which plainly then IT CAN! THIS IS EXCELLENT!īut it raises other issues. If this is the case is there any way round the problem? Is the reason for the difference in behaviour between the embedded version and the moodle resource page that the embedded version is using the clsid:02BF25D5-8C17-4B23-BC80-D3488ABDDC6B object as its player, but the resource page uses some embedded Quicktime player already in your local browser? Which notably works fabulously in Firefox but I haven't tried this on IE.ģ. Is it possible to tell the embedded Quicktime object to receive mouse clicks so as to advance the presentation?Ģ. So I have some questions, and maybe one of you true gurus out there can helpġ. Lovely, but not as lovely as getting the presentation to play whilst embedded in the topic label. Of course, what you do get is a 'Quicktime' link which opens a new resource page in Moodle (without downloading the content to some external player) and in here the mouse clicks work and all the animations run.
ADOBE PLAYER FOR EMBEDDING 3.1 MAC MOVIE
Excellent! Except that this doesn't make the Quicktime movie clickable, so whilst its sitting live in the topic section of a course you can't advance the slides / animations / transitions which is rather useless! mov file in a label and the filter does the rest.
ADOBE PLAYER FOR EMBEDDING 3.1 MAC MANUAL
Animated transitions are all the better in Keynote (although I haven't tried Powerpoint 2011 yet), but I have now started to import all my presentations into Keynote (which does an excellent job of conversion) and then I find I can do so much more in Keynote.īut none of this sorts the embedding problem!Įxcept that Keynote lets you export as a Quicktime movie with all the manual click transistions and timed animations and of course Moodle lets you embed Quicktime movies using just the filter method, i.e. I spend a lot of time creating wonderful animations in presentations, but none of these will show in the embedded version.

And of course you do not necessarilty wish to put your content into the public domain.
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Its far from satisfactory as the slides click forward, but by its own admission, Slideshare doesn't yet support 'transitions', that is animations. The fact that Microsoft doesn't provide a 'player' for embedding Powerpoint presentations, and Apple doesn't appear to provide one for Keynote presentations either, remains an irritation! At the University college I work for many embed their Powerpoint presentations by pushing them up to and embedding the output from that. This query concerns version 1.9.12, but I know it applies throughout 1.9 at least.
