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I have a handful of public-domain instructional videos (moving diagrams) that I'd like to upload, but they are in SWF format. Can someone contact me directly, off-list, to help me convert them to an acceptable format?
Thanks!
- -- Sean Barrett | Back off, man, I'm a scientist. sean@epoptic.com | --Dr. Peter Venkman
On 7/20/06, Sean Barrett sean@epoptic.com wrote:
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I have a handful of public-domain instructional videos (moving diagrams) that I'd like to upload, but they are in SWF format. Can someone contact me directly, off-list, to help me convert them to an acceptable format?
Thanks!
Why off-list? I'd be interested in finding out about an swf open format converter - I was looking around for something like that the other day, but couldn't find anything. Possibly Gnash: http://www.gnu.org/software/gnash/, but I'm not sure if it converts or simply plays Flash files.
Cormac
On 7/20/06, Cormac Lawler cormaggio@gmail.com wrote:
Why off-list? I'd be interested in finding out about an swf open format converter - I was looking around for something like that the other day, but couldn't find anything. Possibly Gnash: http://www.gnu.org/software/gnash/, but I'm not sure if it converts or simply plays Flash files.
I'd replied to him off list, but since there is interest:
In general flash files can't just be converted. SWF is, in most regards, a virtual machine.. Like Java except far more proprietary and less general. So SWF files are executable code that runs in a sandbox with an extensive standard library for building high-tech dancing baloney.
A SWF could contain actual video data, encapsulated with a player... this acts as a fancy form of DRM :), or it could be vector graphics (like [[SVG]]) with code that makes it move, or it could be just about anything else.
To convert a non-interactive SVG to video, I'd probably try rigging up something to capture screenshots of it at high speed, then assemble the results into a video file. I can't promise that the results will be good.
If the SWF is actual video, as opposed to an animated vector drawing, we should probably try to contact the author and get the content in a normal video format.
I know I found one somewhere. I know WinAVI might do the trick.
- Nathan
On Thu, 20 Jul 2006, Cormac Lawler wrote:
On 7/20/06, Sean Barrett sean@epoptic.com wrote:
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I have a handful of public-domain instructional videos (moving diagrams) that I'd like to upload, but they are in SWF format. Can someone contact me directly, off-list, to help me convert them to an acceptable format?
Thanks!
Why off-list? I'd be interested in finding out about an swf open format converter - I was looking around for something like that the other day, but couldn't find anything. Possibly Gnash: http://www.gnu.org/software/gnash/, but I'm not sure if it converts or simply plays Flash files.
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