Skip to main content
Participant
June 14, 2017
Question

How to embed mpeg-1 video that should be playable on both mac and windows (without need of flash player)

  • June 14, 2017
  • 1 reply
  • 1846 views

I have a requirement of embedding a mpeg-1 video that should be playable without additional player or flash player on target machine. By means of programming, I was able to get it done, on windows, video plays fine (guess it is using windows media player internally). On mac, video plays fine (it is using quicktime internally) but some times video freezes if i forward or rewind.

And also I'm not able to embed a mpeg-1 video using Adobe Acrobat Pro Desktop software.

Could someone help me achieving this?

This topic has been closed for replies.

1 reply

Joel Geraci
Community Expert
Community Expert
June 14, 2017

The only reliable method is to add the video as an attachment. This would allow the native video player to play the movie but because the player is extracting the movie as it's being played, you're not going to get the smoothest performance. I suggest you rethink your solution.

Participant
June 14, 2017

Thanks for the response. Are you suggesting instead of adding as media, we should be adding as an attachment? If yes, can you suggest how I can get it done using Acrobat Pro?

And when you say rethink solution, are you suggesting its not good idea embed video as media or as an attachment?

Joel Geraci
Community Expert
Community Expert
June 14, 2017

Yes - If you want to rely on the OS default player, add the media as an attachment. Just open the attachments panel and drag the file into it.

If you can possibly avoid embedding the video in the PDF, I suggest you do so. A link to the video, either as a local file or on a media hosting service will work better than embedding it in the PDF itself. If you embed the video, the player can only play what's provided and Acrobat must spool out the file before it can get played. There's no way for Acrobat to compensate for the speed of the hard drive or degree of fragmentation, memory etc. As a local file, those issues go away. Likewise, if you link to a media hosting service, the player will be able to stream in the video compensating for bandwidth issues, player size and resolution, etc.