Remember the 1983 hit movie, Flashdance? A story about a Pittsburgh woman with two jobs as a welder and an exotic dancer wants to get into ballet school.
Carlton Draught made a parody of this film.
(video in H.264, Streaming, 1 minute)
The video clip above was encoded with state-of-the-art video codec H.264, which delivers stunning quality at remarkably low data rates. QuickTime Player 7 (free) is required for watching the video.
We encourage users to watch the H.264 version of the video, which is available in the first post of this thread. H.264 version provides better picture quality as well as in smaller file size.
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You must tell your browser to enable External Protocol, if you see a window similar to below:
(I noted in previous version of Donzilla, accessing to external protocol was not possible. detail)
If you are unable to to access RTSP protocol from your browser, you can copy and paste the link to QuickTime player.
UserAgent: Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; U; PPC Mac OS X Mach-O; en-US; rv:1.8.0.7) Gecko/20060909 Firefox/1.5.0.7
Out of curiosity, why first embed a video, and then direct-link to an older one, instead of either embedding or direct-linking both?
"Older"?
Firstly, the second post links to a video clip which is in no way older at all. It is a great video codec, widely supported in QuickTime, and does not require intensive system resource to play.
Didn't you complain about "embedding" before and requested a direct link?
UserAgent: Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; U; PPC Mac OS X Mach-O; en-US; rv:1.8.0.7) Gecko/20060909 Firefox/1.5.0.7
Out of curiosity, why first embed a video, and then direct-link to an older one, instead of either embedding or direct-linking both?
"Older"?
Firstly, the second post links to a video clip which is in no way older at all. It is a great video codec, widely supported in QuickTime, and does not require intensive system resource to play.
Didn't you complain about "embedding" before and requested a direct link?
You missed the point of the question entirely. My question is, why embed the video and offer a direct link to a different one, instead of either embedding both or direct-linking both?
I'd agree with Pu7o that a non-streaming version would be nice, since I like to archive videos on my hard drive.
UserAgent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 5.2 x64; en-US; rv:1.8.0.7) Gecko/20060917 Firefox/1.5.0.7 (mmoy CE K8M-X19)
You missed the point of the question entirely. My question is, why embed the video and offer a direct link to a different one, instead of either embedding both or direct-linking both?
No, I did not. You said “then direct-link to an older one,” and I read it. Two video clips were of the same content.
Why two format? I wanted to embed both, however, you complained me embedding, so I also provided one not embedded... easy.
BTW, embedding can be downloadable as well.
UserAgent: Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; U; PPC Mac OS X Mach-O; en-US; rv:1.8.0.7) Gecko/20060909 Firefox/1.5.0.7
Or, that you refuse to let it work with other players. Both RTSP links fail to open in both WMP and mplayer, both of which are RTSP-, H.264-, and SV3-capable, and can read .mp4 and .mov containers, in effect, everything used by your videos. I don't know about other players like VLC, though it would be interesting to see if there's a similar effect in those.
UserAgent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 5.2 x64; en-US; rv:1.8.0.7) Gecko/20060917 Firefox/1.5.0.7 (mmoy CE K8M-X19)
Or, that you refuse to let it work with other players. Both RTSP links fail to open in both WMP and mplayer, both of which are RTSP-, H.264-, and SV3-capable, and can read .mp4 and .mov containers, in effect, everything used by your videos. I don't know about other players like VLC, though it would be interesting to see if there's a similar effect in those.
That's untrue. The direct link I provided is not limited to QuickTime Player users.
Someone's beloved Windows Media Player does not under the file format, not even playing back the file locally. I wonder why you keep claim it supports so.
I just tested the RTSP link with RealPlayer, and it plays fine. Someone's beloved Windows Media Player did a worse job than Real. Ha.
UserAgent: Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; U; PPC Mac OS X Mach-O; en-US; rv:1.8.0.7) Gecko/20060909 Firefox/1.5.0.7