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Hello!
I have read several articles on this but can't find a way to solve this:
I am creating an interactive PDF using InDesign CC and would like to embed vimeo and youtube videos to play directly from the file. When I insert the URL it does not work because it starts with https:// (not http://) . Obviously erasing the "s" doe not solve the problem because it says it is not compatible with Flash Player.
Is there anyway I can solve this??
I decided to create an interactive PDF only because I wanted to be able to embed online videos!
You can't. Many years ago YouTube had a Flash-based API which allowed direct playback of an embedded video inside a parent SWF file (the only way to do it in a PDF), but it also allowed people to bypass the advertising, so they closed it down. The current API only supports HTML embedding for web pages.
The 'embed' URL for sites like YouTube and Vimeo is a link to their web page, not to the video file itself (legally you cannot link directly to the video stream so we're not going to explain how it
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You can't. Many years ago YouTube had a Flash-based API which allowed direct playback of an embedded video inside a parent SWF file (the only way to do it in a PDF), but it also allowed people to bypass the advertising, so they closed it down. The current API only supports HTML embedding for web pages.
The 'embed' URL for sites like YouTube and Vimeo is a link to their web page, not to the video file itself (legally you cannot link directly to the video stream so we're not going to explain how it might be done). Acrobat's video player will only accept a URL that points to the video file or to an RTMP stream connector, which is why the URL must end in a valid extension such as ".mp4"
The only options are:
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Argh!
Thank you very much for your detailed response!
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Dave, as usual, is correct on all counts, however I might add, if you own the rights to the video you can post it on your own site in a directory that blocks search engines from finding it. When a user attempts to play it, the hosting domain will be visible in the permissions dialog but not the full path to the video. Additionally, the full path doesn't show up in the edit window of the Video annotation so the path is fairly obfuscated.
The user will really want to download the video to discover it's path.
J-
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Is this still the case now? Has anyone found a work-around solution? I've tried the copy and paste option recommended by Lynda.com and that doesn't work for us either. The goal is for our developer to take my interactive PDF with YouTube videos and create flip books using flippingbook.com. If anyone can help, we'd greatly appreciate it. Thanks!
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You're going to need to do this in two stages, create the flip book from PDF with placeholders for the videos. Then add the videos back in.
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Nothing has changed. Indeed, it's got worse. For an app like Adobe Reader to show Youtube videos, the maker or user of the app has to pay a per-user license fee. Adobe won't pay one for their free Reader and neither will your viewers... use a media host instead.
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And please read the many discussions on why Flipbooks are a terrible, terrible way to present PDF files.