Hi everyone,

Through a bit of searching of other flashcoders emails I found this topic
had been discussed before and my problem was accurately targeting
milliseconds in the 44.1khz. I was using some MP3s encoded at 48khz.

Sorry to rehash a previous bug discussion.

On Tue, Jun 24, 2008 at 1:55 PM, Shant Parseghian <
[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> I should have been a little clearer. I made an MP# plater in AS3. I made a
> seekbar so the user can skip to the end of the mix. I've checked and
> rechecked my math, and everything looks good. I use the math to determine a
> new amount of milliseconds to tell the sound object to switch the position
> to like this:
>
> play(seekPosition);
>
> I am streaming in files of different bitrates. The files that are at
> 192kbps are giving me a strange problem where I can't reach the end and even
> if I'm providing the proper millisecond target, they are losing about 2
> minutes at the end of the stream.
>
> The file that was encoded at 128kbps doesn't have this same problem, I can
> skip all the way to the end of the file, in fact in some instances I was
> able to skip past the end of the file. This is what led me to believe that
> the problem was not my math, but how Flash was receiving these files in the
> stream.
>
> The part that confused me was I let one of the 192kbps files stream
> completely without touching the seekbar and it reached the correct end of
> the file, but I couldn't get it to do this after I had seeked.
>
> Can anyone clarify what is going on here?
>
>
> On Fri, Jun 20, 2008 at 3:00 PM, Kerry Thompson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> wrote:
>
>> Shant Parseghian wrote:
>>
>> > When streaming in a MP3 with 192kbps, I was having the last couple
>> minutes
>> > of my mp3 cut off in Flash. Basically the mix was acting as if it was 46
>> > minutes long instead of it's real duration of 44 minutes. I made the
>> bitrate
>> > 96kbps and tested it again and this time the file ended 20 minutes
>> early,
>> > which is very confusing. Is there a standard bitrate to use while
>> working
>> > with Flash? Is this a bug from Adobe?
>>
>> Are you working in AS2 or 3? (It does seem to make a difference).
>>
>> In my experience, converting to mp3 almost always changes the length of
>> the
>> file (though. I will admit, not that drastic).
>>
>> You have a lot of choices with Flash, in Publish Settings -> Audio Stream
>> and Audio Event. It could be that you're embedding .mp3 files in the
>> library, then further compressing them. You can play around with those
>> settings, but if you're bringing in audio that's already .mp3-compressed,
>> you shouldn't need to compress if further in Flash.
>>
>> Cordially,
>>
>> Kerry Thompson
>>
>> _______________________________________________
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>>
>
>
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