I had no trouble is slowing the video down. Even having two separate videos at different frame rates. However, as you might guess, as soon as the frame frate is meddled with it screws up the embedded audio, as in you get mostly silence.
I then extracting the mp3, re-encoded it as an swf changing the frame rate, then attempted to sync it with the original video. That sort of works, but it is quite tricky to get not spot on. I can post the scraps of swfc code I came up with, but, I'm not exactly sure where that leaves us. Could you redefine your problem? Why exactly did you wish to have two videos at different frame rates. Is this with or without audio? Regards, Chris. >On Mon, 13 Sep 2010 18:26:04 +0200 >Pablo Rodríguez <oi...@web.de> wrote: > On 09/13/2010 05:53 PM, Chris wrote: > >> [...] > >> > >> Sorry, I don't get how this could work. > > > > I was simply posing an idea. No tried it. Let me think on > > it and try a couple of experiments, ok? Did you consider > > also Jean Sebastien's idea of syncing to the soundtrack? > > That is if it has one? > > > >> I have the following code: > >> > >> .flash filename="this-land.swf" bbox=637x510 version=7 fps=12 > >> .swf movie "thisland.swf" > >> How should I rewrite the code above to play correctly the movie which > >> fps is 30.023438? > > > > Err.. 'this-land.swf' has a frame rate of 30.023438??? > > Last time I checked it, it had that frame rate. (Actually, it could have > a frame rate of 25.) > > But right now on Fedora 13, it seems that swftools aren't packaged for > this distribution. > > > Able to provide a link to the swf file in question? > > http://www.ousia.tk/thisland.swf (tell me when you have it, to remove > the file). > > Thanks again, > > > Pablo > > -- Chris <list_s...@mavdns.net>