Atleast that is how we did it for the Bank of America jumbotrons.

Karl

Sent from losPhone

On Oct 21, 2009, at 4:07 PM, jonathan howe <[email protected]> wrote:

My experience with SWF to Video is that it's using a pretty low-tech
solution - essentially it stepped through your movie one frame at a time and captured & encoded that frame. So, it tended to not work well on MovieClips, scripted animation, etc. A great tool for, say, converting a popular cartoon
website into DVD, but lousy for anything with modern/script-based
techniques.

-jonathan


On Wed, Oct 21, 2009 at 2:38 PM, Ashim D'Silva <[email protected] >wrote:

Pretty sure CS4 handles it fine. Including actionscripted animation.
Haven't pushed it hard, but worth a shot.

Cheers,

Ashim

The Random Lines
My online portfolio
www.therandomlines.com



2009/10/21 Joel Stransky <[email protected]>:
Ok, I'm well aware of the limitation in exporting an .fla to quicktime.
You
only get the main timeline, no sub clips or scripted animation. What I'm asking is if there's some new product on the market that has tackled this issue successfully. So far is looks like a screen reader is the way to
go,
I'd just like to get some alpha (key) control over the output that
doesn't
require me recording it over a green background.

Thanks for any direction.

--
--Joel Stransky
stranskydesign.com
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--
-jonathan howe
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