I think this is why I got confused.. > >In an FLV file seek will jump to the keyframe, which is the nearest to >the given time. In other words: you can seek only to keyframes. > >Attila
What I am trying to do. Simple. I have a video that is 10 seconds long and i need to use the seek method to land at 0.33, for some odd reason when I do that the video jumps to second 10. I have tried to force the video to jump to 0.33 using an interval as well as other methods but all seem to fail. That is why I started to investigate in a different approach to do this. One way to solve this was to use cue points. Of course the video has already been compressed and I can't add cue points but I figured that we can add cue points on the fly to the Media component. But unfortunately the video player I am using is a 3rd party and I cant add cue points. Does that makes more sense? TIA On 8/15/07, Peter B <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > I sent this info couple of days ago. But I guess it didnt make it to the > > list: > > > Yes, it made it to the list, it just didn't make your question any > clearer. FLVs are never treated by frame, they are treated by > timecode. If you describe what you are trying to *achieve*, it may > help others to help you. > _______________________________________________ > [email protected] > To change your subscription options or search the archive: > http://chattyfig.figleaf.com/mailman/listinfo/flashcoders > > Brought to you by Fig Leaf Software > Premier Authorized Adobe Consulting and Training > http://www.figleaf.com > http://training.figleaf.com > _______________________________________________ [email protected] To change your subscription options or search the archive: http://chattyfig.figleaf.com/mailman/listinfo/flashcoders Brought to you by Fig Leaf Software Premier Authorized Adobe Consulting and Training http://www.figleaf.com http://training.figleaf.com

