Let's just hope your client is not on this list as well ;)

At 02:24 PM 11/25/2005, you wrote:
Thanks to everyone who replied,
The problem seems to have been solved - at least for now...

I had asked the client yesterday to try and reburn the cd-rom from her mac,
to see if maybe something had gone wrong with the burning process. As I
mentioned, the last cd-rom I sent her was working fine. She hadn't come back
to me about that, and even sent me an annoyed email that had no mention of
it. So I was fairly sure that failed.

So Just now I called her to get some more info and talk her through a test
that would see if Robin's theory about the swfs was the cause of the problem
(although I do check for initialization, something might have slipped
through on a slower system)... And she says "Oh yeah, I reburnt the cd-rom
on the mac and it's working just fine on the pc".
Grrr... Clients!

Thanks!
Karina




> -----Original Message-----
> From: Robin Burrer [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: 24 November 2005 23:39
> To: Flashcoders mailing list
> Subject: RE: [Flashcoders] Flvs fail to stream on an older pc
>
> Hi Karina
>
> Yes there's always will be a system which will cause problems.
> (It's just a bit annoying though when it happens on your
> client's commuter)
>
> The CD-ROM should however run even on very slow system.
>
> >> application loads various swfs into a base swf file, and
> the flvs are
> >> >>loaded
>
> If you use multiple swf in your CD-ROM make sure that all
> swfs are initialized before you use them. For example I once
> was working on a CD where loaded a swf with a nested swf/flv
> player in my root swf.
>
> After loading the swf file I sent the video url to the loaded
> swf file so that the nested component in the swf could play it.
>
> This all worked fine when I tested it on my computer and on
> another computer. However it didn't work on some computers
> even if they had fast processors.
>
> Eventually I found out that it was the CD-ROM drive. Some
> drives were just  a bit too slow. So the swf file which
> contained the video player component was not loaded fast enough.
>
> As a result the url send from the main movie did never reach
> the player in the loaded swf. The solution is quite easy
> though. Whenever you use multiple swf files in your CD-ROM
> project and you want them to communicate between each other
> make sure that loaded swf file is initialized properly before
> you send anything.
>
> A bulletproof way to do this is to have interval function in
> your main movie which checks the value of a variable in your
> loaded swf.
>
> e.g:
>
>
> // load the swf
> swfHolderMc.loadMovie("someSwf.swf");
>
> intervalId = setInterval(this, "executeCallback", 200);
>
> function executeCallback()
> {
>       If (swfHolderMc.getInicialized())// obviously you need
> a                     //getInicialized function in the swf
> file which is loaded
>
>       {
>               // do something in the loaded swf
>               clearInterval(intervalId);
>       }
>
> }
>
>
>
> Hope this helps
>
>
> Robin
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> However
>
>
>
> Most of the times it is a faulty driver or some wired configuration.
>
> I think these days it is not really necessary
>
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
> Of Søren Christensen
> Sent: Friday, 25 November 2005 9:54 AM
> To: Flashcoders mailing list
> Subject: Re: [Flashcoders] Flvs fail to stream on an older pc
>
>
> Hi Karina
>
> I have had similar problems like you.
>
> My cd-rom in question had 2 videos (both external flvs to
> profit f7's smaller memory footprint advantage over f6
> regarding videos) Both videos was rather big in pixel size
> and approx 3 mins length (about 30 megabytes each). So i knew
> they would demand a bit of 'juice'.
>
> When testing with a 'raw' video test both a mac g4 500mhz
> (os9 and osx) and a p3 600mhz (both win2k + win 98) worked
> fine with no performance  problems playing from a cd.
>
> But my version with the final design was demanding quite alot
> more cpu to perform well.
> What i found out was that the pure presence of bitmap
> graphics with alpha information was decreasing the
> performance (demanding more cpu) - even though the bitmap
> wasn't moving or something was moving over or under it.
>
> I still couldn't optimize it fully to fit my 'raw' tests -
> but it put down the performance needs to a acceptable level.
> My minimum specs ended up at mac: g4 800mhz pc: p3 800mhz
> (both 64mb ram)
>
> I had other strange problems like sound issues with some pcs
> - some dell configurations with sound blaster live soundcards
> and a certain motherboards and cd-rom drive for some reason
> distorted the sound. (similar to the sound issues with flash
> 5 and soundblaster pci 64 and 128) but thing like this is out
> of your hands.
> But well with cd-rom productions there always are some odd hw
> configurations that just give problems (although in theory it
> shouldn't).
> Using director would just giver other issues (and make the
> production a lot more expensive due to the lack of cross
> platform projector exporting back then). Flash gave us the
> unique feature to distribute video cross platform without
> being dependent of 3rd party media players.
> All in all the cd-rom was a success and went into its 2
> edition with a total of 70.000 units.
>
> Cheers,
> >B) Søren
>
>
>
>
> DESIGN // INTERACTIVITY // MOTION // VISUALS
> +34 667 812 329 (ES) //  +45 3694 8614 (DK)
> www.RGBAZ.com // www.DESILENCE.net
>
>
>
>
>
> On 24/11/05 17:26, "Karina Steffens" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > Hi List,
> >
> > I'm on the last stages of development of an educational CD-Rom in
> > FlashMX 2004. The application uses a v2 media component
> loads flvs from the CD-Rom.
> > It's been developed on a pc (XP) and then zipped over and burned on
> > the Mac
> > (OSX) and set to the client.
> >
> > The client has an old mac and an even older PC (which still uses
> > windows 98...). The CD-Rom loads on both, but the flvs seem
> to work on
> > her mac but not on the pc (except for one or two). She also
> says that
> > an earlier version of the CD-Rom that I sent her does work,
> which is
> > puzzling. Also, there is a little test utility just for the Flvs on
> > the CD-Rom, and that also works. My application loads various swfs
> > into a base swf file, and the flvs are loaded to that, so
> it could be a memory thing.
> >
> > I can't run any of the tests myself, because I'm based in
> Dublin and
> > she is in London, so I don't know what to do. I tried to
> tell her that
> > her PC is just too old for the software, and I still
> haven't got any
> > data from her about how much memory it has. She's not very
> technical.
> >
> > Does anyone have any ideas, solutions or minimum specs for
> this problem?
> >
> > Thanks,
> > Karina
> >
> >
> >
> > Karina Steffens  |  Neo-Archaic
> > creative & technical new media design
> >  <http://www.neo-archaic.net/> www.neo-archaic.net
> >
> > _______________________________________________
> > Flashcoders mailing list
> > [email protected]
> > http://chattyfig.figleaf.com/mailman/listinfo/flashcoders
>
>
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