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Embedded avi content – default playback on built-in flash player instead of quicktime?

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    • #55288
      boogyman
      Participant

      Hello, I am creating a pdf book with hundreds of audio clips embedded. Because Indesign can't import mp3, I actually had to convert all my mp3 files to avi files without video, then import those into the indesign document for export to pdf. I used avi because it uses an mp3 codec (??) and keeps each sound file at 300k compared to 4mb for the same file as an swf or wav. Size is important because the book has 800 clips in total. So that was my first question. Would anyone have done something different? Well now I have a second issue. When Indesign exports to pdf, the avi files (embedded) are set to automatically open with the built-in quicktime player. And I noticed that the embedded avi files are identified as “quicktime content.” This would be ok with me if the quicktime player played the files, but it doesn't; it just freezes when I click on the file. Now, of course, I can manually change each avi file in the pdf to open with the built-in flash player, and that works fine, and that's the player I'd like the files to open with, but this is impossible as a solution because if I have to edit this document in a month or so, I would then have to manually change the properties (rendition) of all the avi files again in the new pdf. As it is now, when I open the pdf and select the avi object then click properties, then edit rendition, I see that quicktime has been chosen as the default. Is there a way to export from indesign to pdf so that the preferred player of avi files is not set automatically to quicktime, and instead to flash player? I hope I've described the issues clearly. Any thoughts would be appreciated.

    • #55289
      Anonymous
      Inactive

      I would have converted the mp3 to aiff instead, which can be embedded

      Not that I'm in an expert in audio file formats or anything. I think AIFF are larger though than MP3s. So that probably doesn't help.

      As far as I know you have to set Quicktime manually to play back some audio formats.

    • #55290
      boogyman
      Participant

      hmmmm hmmm…. *scratches head* I tried that, but the result was 4mb aiff file compared to 300k avi (because it uses mp3 compression). avi was the only format I found (using soundforge) that kept the file size as low as mp3 with the same quality, and could be embedded. thanks for replying so fast xD :D

    • #55291
      Anonymous
      Inactive

      Sorry I posted too quickly I ammended my post after a brief research into Audio Formats.

    • #55292
      boogyman
      Participant

      no problem, just i'll have to deduct fifty points from your final score xD

      But yeah, I think you're on the right track. What I should do is forget about messing around with getting flash player to open the avi files in the pdf, and instead choose another format other than avi, even if in the end this means a pdf book ten times the size that has to be broken up into ten pdfs. In other words, I should accept my fate and embed wav files. nnoooo nooo i said it…. noo NOOOOOOOOO!!!! xD What's crazy is that each “chapter” of the pdf has 1 hour of audio = 280 mb of wav files. 280 mb for one pdf. that's pretty huge! had avi worked out it would have been about 30 mb.

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