8. If you??™re broadcasting live video, click the Live Video Feed option.
9. If you??™d like the movie to begin as soon as possible when the page loads, select the Auto Play
option.
10. If you??™d like the movie to rewind to the beginning after it has played, enable the Auto Rewind
option.
11. Enter the number of seconds of video you??™d like to buffer before it begins playing. The default
buffer value is 0, which means the video will be available for playing immediately after the page
loads. Extend the buffer value if your video is encoded at a higher bit rate than the site visitor??™s
connection speed or if connectivity problems persist.
12. If desired, change the alert text displayed to viewers without the proper version of the Flash
Player in the Message area.
13. Click OK when you??™re done.
You??™ll need to publish your files to the server, as described in the next section, before you can view the
streaming video in your Web page.
Publishing Flash video files
A Flash Video object actually requires three files to be viewed on the HTML page. In addition to the encoded
video file with the .flv extension, it requires a container file either called FLVPlayer_Progressive.swf
or FLVPlayer_Streaming.swf, depending on your choice of delivery method; this container file is the
actual Flash movie called by the Flash Player.
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