Thanks you very much
gratefully appreciated
Kenny
"johndaigle" <john@johndaigle.com> wrote in message
news:f2ncae$sa5$1@forums.macromedia.com...
> Hi, Twocans
> Rick is right on. If I could expand a bit in case others
are lurking with
> similar questions. One of the great things about Adobe
Captivate is that
> the
> Flash player is so common in all web browsers these
days, most everyone
> can
> view them quite easily. More and more authors are using
camcorder video to
> illustrate real life situations to users and not just
talking heads.
>
> The Flash Video format (FLV) is now supported by Adobe
Captivate and Adobe
> RoboHelp. This is where the Flash Streaming Server Rick
referred to may be
> involved. Fortunately in most cases I've not found it
necessary. You can
> just
> include your Captivate movie (with or without FLV) into
your RoboHelp
> project
> and publish to your webserver. If you are using FLV, you
would want to add
> the
> file to the Baggage virtual folder.. If you have a bunch
of FLV video and
> this
> is a major part of your project, then it might be worth
the extra
> investment
> to host them on a Flash Streaming Server (your own, or a
hosted server).
> Meanwhile, if you'd like to read more about ways to
include movies into
> RoboHelp projects, check out my article on the Adobe
Developer Center.
>
>
http://www.adobe.com/devnet/captivate/articles/cp_rh_integration.html
>
> While, you're there, check out the many other articles
by Rick Stone,
> Peter
> Grainge, Craig Clarke and Matthew Ellison.
> The developer center is one of Adobe's best kept
secrets. I'm surprised
> many
> folks simply don't know about it.
> Thanx,
> john
>