Hi!
I've just been glancing casually at the idea of streaming a 7 min video on a web site. I looked initially at the Real notion at successfully created a .RM file. However, I then find that to put it on the web site, I need some special software costing hundreds of $.
I then tried a .ASF file, being conned into thinking that it stood for a streaming format. This did not stream. If viewed in MSIE, the ASF file downloaded (2 -3 minutes) and then played correctly, but this is not streaming, by my definition. If viewed in Netscape, it showed as a "broken picture". Right-clicking and downloading it produced a slightly larger, corrupt file, which could not be viewed.
Trying a search for 'streaming' or 'asf' in the MS KB gives zero results. I suggest that ASF is another MS "innovation" whereby they use their corrupting MPEG4 v. 2 codec to keep it within the MS family.
Does anyone know of a method whereby one can have a true streaming video on a web page, viewable in any browser with the right plug-in (widely distributed), without having to spend a small fortune (ie anything over a few tens of bucks)? If so, would they be so kind as to explain how it's done, preferably in words of one syllable that my poor intellect can seize?
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Brian (the terrible)
I've just been glancing casually at the idea of streaming a 7 min video on a web site. I looked initially at the Real notion at successfully created a .RM file. However, I then find that to put it on the web site, I need some special software costing hundreds of $.
I then tried a .ASF file, being conned into thinking that it stood for a streaming format. This did not stream. If viewed in MSIE, the ASF file downloaded (2 -3 minutes) and then played correctly, but this is not streaming, by my definition. If viewed in Netscape, it showed as a "broken picture". Right-clicking and downloading it produced a slightly larger, corrupt file, which could not be viewed.
Trying a search for 'streaming' or 'asf' in the MS KB gives zero results. I suggest that ASF is another MS "innovation" whereby they use their corrupting MPEG4 v. 2 codec to keep it within the MS family.
Does anyone know of a method whereby one can have a true streaming video on a web page, viewable in any browser with the right plug-in (widely distributed), without having to spend a small fortune (ie anything over a few tens of bucks)? If so, would they be so kind as to explain how it's done, preferably in words of one syllable that my poor intellect can seize?
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Brian (the terrible)
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