I hear you, Dave. For now, consider that I've solved the video encoding obstacle; that I've Seek working as advertised. I'll next, elsewhere, turn attention to temporal triggers of media. Summary: I need a Timer/Interval/Stall/Idle capability such that –– three [f''rinstance] clips play, from a single Button Event, with start times following that event, by x interval, y interval, and z interval, respectively. I've tried various approaches, but am still tripping over my own scripting naiveté.
To emphasize, I do not require Flash. I do require precision. Both operational, and cognitive, because the two are inextricable.
As for the big picture, here is a generalized description [edited] that I recently sent to Bob Levine:
– – – – –
Subject: Seeking Best Practices for documents self-contained, stand-alone, and portable, with unrestricted content
I am aware of your many-fold contributions to the Adobe community. You will understand why my work has led me, more than once, to your remark in this post, "PDF is an awful format for multimedia," which led me to reviewing with interest your referenced article. You will see that I am hardly a Luddite in network operations, and precisely for that reason I offer my good-natured comeback that "network dependence is an awful compromise for multimedia." But that article of yours has pointed me in promising directions. In short, I require portable, compiled documents, with all components contained [or predictably connected and operated upon via a 'carry-along satchel' of some sort], independent of network reliance. It's looks like I should look at InDesign.
Context: I am an artist, also engaged in Arts and Humanities education. In this 11-min. screen recording of a PDF in action, you'll observe that the document supports millisecond-sync of 22-track audio, not to mention animation, video, etc. I find that though engineers and scientists routinely utilize, say, attachments traveling within a document, dancers, painters, and playwrights are taken by surprise.
Why I look to you: That document I composed last year, on a Late 2007 MacBook, OS X 10.7.5, with Acrobat Pro XI, and Flash-25.0.0.127 (I am now, in every respect, substantially upgraded). Everything you see was created via the built-in Properties Action dialog/editor/GUI-thingy. Would that I'd known of ActionScript methods to manipulate media in background/hidden fashion [e.g. rm.activated = !rm.activated], manipulating Booleans, managing an array of media, etc., which would allow a more refined/polished/graceful result. Now I better understand that potential, and have initiated evaluation of InDesign, and of Animate.
Summary objective: Above all, I require portability, and independence from network dependencies beyond the user's control. F'rinstance, the instructor distributes a document. The students turn in, each one of them potentially different, a marked-up/modified/enhanced/edited variant, e.g. "Look, Teach –– at the final eighth-note of 'bar 24', instead of that percussion, consider instead that I play this trill, on my flute." The student needn't edit the video/audio. The trill recording is simply an audio comment, pegged to one of the 30 comments/sec. [or cue-point, or other marker] supported in Acrobat.
Representative set of required document traits:
Representative set of unacceptable constraints (Current Practice for decades) to be avoided:
- Here is a recording of –
- one single choir, alone
- on a single stage
- at one time, only
- on one single Youtube channel
- oh, wait! - did that essential component of my presentation, somewhere, sometime, somehow, suddenly disappear?
- O, brother, Four O Four, where art thou?
What I do not require of the recipient/user/reader
- network-connection dependence/shackles
- mobile-device dependence
- compliance with merely a data transfer standard [e.g. ISO 15445], which specifies five traits for browsers of Web so-called 'pages' –– namely Back, Forward, Pause, Reload, Print. Absent are specifications for Dimensions, Top, Bottom, Left, Right, Header, Footer, Find, Magnification, Comments, Markups, Attachments, Copy/Duplicate/Forward, and an abundance more. Hence, this behavior is ever-changing, ever-unpredictable, varying from manufacturer to manufacturer, on device to device. This is why reading same is analogous to using books in the library, during an earthquake.
- social-media-platform dependence [you can imagine my morose dismay that the University of Maryland 'Student Course Registration' page trumpets, "See what courses your Facebook Friends are signing up for!"]
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Finally, with respect to "PDF is an awful format for multimedia," somebody better get the word out quick, to the United States Federal Courts, wherein:
- "All documents are required to be filed in the PDF format. Other file types may be encapsulated inside PDF files, e.g. audio files in MP3 format, or video files. CM/ECF plans to require PDF/A compliant files to meet the requirements of the National Archives and Records Administration. Each court will set its own deadline for requiring documents to be filed in the PDF/A format. No warning period is planned."
Let me not be misunderstood. If any manufacturer, presently, is in a position to "do it right," it is Adobe. And if there is any set of persons I turn to for guidance in meeting my above objectives, it is this community forum. I am not sowing rancor, or sour grapes, in the least.
I am not at all wedded to Flash. For all I care, my documents can be dependent upon a carry-along satchel [consider that Boeing manages a library of more than 10 million PDFs], that includes the likes of VLC Media Player [consider that the max. file size of a PDF = the storage capacity of the device]. For all I care, they can take as long to locally load as it takes to find Act II of Henry V in a compendium of dramatic works. But once the user starts using the document it, without fail, goes gangbusters, as reliably as a machine gun on a target, which re-aimed [cognitively speaking], continues firing clips in precisely the way its maker intended.
– BR