Item added to cart
Flash is one of the most popular ways in recent years to create interactive video content for the Web. With the new release, Flash CS3, it is set to increase in popularity even more, with more exciting features for developers to use in their applications. This book is an update to the critically-acclaimed Foundation Flash 8 Video, with many new examples added, and code updated to ActionScript 3.0. It provides developers with an essential, accessible guide to getting the most out of their Flash CS3 video applications.
This book is an update to the critically-acclaimed Foundation Flash 8 Video, with many new examples added, and code updated to ActionScript 3.0. It provides developers with an essential, accessible guide to getting the most out of their Flash CS3 video applications.
In 2003, I was in Seattle getting ready to do a presentation on Flash video at Digital Design World. Jim Heid, the conference organizer, saw the title slide of the presentation and mentioned that I might be facing a rather tough crowd. I looked out over audience members, sized them up, and told Jim I had his back covered. He said he wasnt too sure about that and pointed to the title on my screen: QuickTime is dead. Looking out into the darkened room, I watched about 200 people in the audience open their PowerBooks; hundreds of bright white Apple logos stared back at me. It was indeed going to be a tough crowd. Nobody really expected the stranglehold that Apple, Microsoft , and Real had on the web streaming market in 2003 to be broken. Y et by spring 2005, just 18 months after that present- tion, that is exactly what happened. Those three web video delivery technologies practically v- ished and were replaced almost entirely by Flash video. This is not to say QuickTime and Windows Media are dead technologies. They arent by a long shot, but when it comes to putting video on the Web, the Flash Player has rapidly become the only game in town. Before I get gl³'Copyright © 2018 - 2024 ShopSpell