Hmm.... I guess I could have used application/x-shockwave-flash as the content type. I'll change that - it looks sexier.
An fyi though - Flash has supported progressive download via HTTP for some time. The browser is just the host/conduit - the wrapper is what hooks the stream up to the Flash Player. In fact, you really don't even need the headers in the php script (top three lines in the example). Rick Winscot On 3/13/09 7:18 PM, "Guy Morton" <[email protected]> wrote: > Rick, I'm surprised setting the content-type to application/octet- > stream worked...does it work in all browsers/OSes? Do you have to set > the content type in the wrapper if you use that approach? If you don't > it'd surprise me if all browsers were smart enough to do the right > thing with the content. > > > On 14/03/2009, at 10:01 AM, Rick Winscot wrote: > >> Christophe not sure if this helps... but I put together a sample >> of one approach that might work for you. >> >> http://www.quilix.com/node/31 >> >> Rick Winscot >> >> >> >> On 3/13/09 7:08 AM, "christophe_jacquelin" <[email protected] >>> wrote: >> >>> >>> >>> >>> Hello, >>> >>> How to hide swf files on a website, preventing their copy by a >>> software like httptrack? >>> >>> Thank you, >>> Christophe, >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >> >> > > > > ------------------------------------ > > -- > Flexcoders Mailing List > FAQ: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/flexcoders/files/flexcodersFAQ.txt > Alternative FAQ location: > https://share.acrobat.com/adc/document.do?docid=942dbdc8-e469-446f-b4cf-1e6207 > 9f6847 > Search Archives: > http://www.mail-archive.com/flexcoders%40yahoogroups.comYahoo! Groups Links > > >

