This does work just fine with CS4, scripted animation and all. A couple
of tips:
- Export the movie at 100% size. I've found the exporter does a lousy
job of scaling. If you need to scale the output, use minimal QT
compression, then use a tool like MPEG Streamclip or ffmpeg to scale and
compress the final QT files.
- Remember: Unless you've told it to stop at a particular timecode, the
exporter will play the movie until it reaches the end of the timeline.
Therefore, if there's a loop or stop action in the timeline, the
exporter will *never* reach the end of the timeline, and the export
process will hang.
-Jim
Ashim D'Silva wrote:
Pretty sure CS4 handles it fine. Including actionscripted animation.
Haven't pushed it hard, but worth a shot.
2009/10/21 Joel Stransky <j...@stranskydesign.com>:
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.
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