Back in ancient times (circa 2002), we all dreamed of web TV. No, not that stupid Microsoft set top box... but the capacity for "real" video on the web.
We pined for low bandwidth, glossy video âgoodnessâ delivered, on-demand, right to our PCs. Ladies and gentlemen, I'm not going to claim that golden time is now (that'd certainly be absurd)... but we're on the right track.
Back before their titanic âfusionâ into the super-mega-unstoppable-colossal-golem of creative software known as Sorenson and YouTube. That said, let's applaud the limits which have been stretched by innovators already utilizing video on the web. Macromedia didn't exactly make it easy for folks to utilize this format... built in methods include relying on the overpriced Flash Media Sever for streaming or simply offering a progressive download. Canned options impose such limits as creating swfs which hard link directly to flv and âskinâ files (which provide the GUI) for each and every video posted. Ouch.
We thirst for a little more flexibility in our interface design, we ache at the thought of revising hundreds of swf files for a site structure revision and we want scripting, damn it! Luckily, none of this was barred... it's just that the path wasn't exactly illuminated... or even navigable; most especially for those unfamiliar with Actionscript.
For now, unless you are an Actionscript developer, I see no way to efficiently embed flvs into your site's infrastructure (barring services like recent article at FlashNewz on how to embed an flv into a Flash application with Actionscript. This is the method employed by the likes of Google, YouTube, Yahoo and the lot. If it's good enough for them, it's good enough for me... until a better comes along, of course.
Maybe, some day, Adobe will buck up and make this a bit easier on the rest of us. One can hope. They did, after all, recently deliver on a longstanding promise to
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