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I made a training website that has video clips on it along with text in Muse. I exported the HTML files, viewed them locally, send a ZIP of the files where others downloaded them and viewed them in their browser and all works great.
They then uploaded the files to test. Keep in mind this is for employees in a closed invironment. There's a wide variety of savvy and not savvy users. One person didn't even know how to press the play button to start the video.
Anyway, here is a link to the same page without all of the content and with a test video:
http://designerandpublisher.com/_forum-images/muse/video-test
In a test of 100 users looking at the pages on their computer, 99 of them reported the videos play (similar to above). Only one person cannot get any of the videos to play on their computer. I do not know what kind of browser they were using so I don't know what their browser's settings are. I also do not know if they viewed it with Apple's browser or a Windows based browser.
To clarify, the HTML files made by Muse are now on a web server where these 100 people are viewing them. One reported the videos not playing.
But the point is, out of 100 users, 1 reported the videos not playing at all. I'm guessing this may be a firewall or browser issue but am not sure. Has anyone reported something like this? Does anyone have a guess as to what the problem is?
Thanks.
You basically answered your own question: Without actually knowing what that one person is using, nobody can tell you much. If you have access to the server logs you might be able to figure it out by checkking failed requests and all that, but it would really be much easier to track that person down and talk her through on the phone to figure out what is going wrong. In a corporate network, anything is possible.
Mylenium
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You basically answered your own question: Without actually knowing what that one person is using, nobody can tell you much. If you have access to the server logs you might be able to figure it out by checkking failed requests and all that, but it would really be much easier to track that person down and talk her through on the phone to figure out what is going wrong. In a corporate network, anything is possible.
Mylenium
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You're right and I agree. I was just hoping something stood out for someone here and would know the problem.
Thanks.