266
5. Select a rendition from the
list and click Edit Rendition
(described in the sidebar
"Play It Again, Sam").
6. Add and edit as many
renditions as needed.
7. Use the arrow keys on
the right side of the
pop-up menu to arrange
the renditions in the
appropriate order.
Renditions are played in
the order listed.
8. When you finish adding
and editing renditions,
click Close.
Considering
Accessibility
One of the cornerstones of
designing accessible content
is including alternate versions
of visual content. For users
working with screen readers
or other assistive devices,
you have to provide the text
equivalent of your visual
content and captioning
(if required). The media
you're using determines your
ability to embed text, verbal
commentary, and captions,
and you can't control this
ability from within Acrobat.
C h a p t e r t h i r t e e n
To add legacy media files that you don't want to convert to FLV format,
follow steps 1–3 of the previous set of steps and then do the following:
1. Click the "Create legacy multimedia content" link in the lower-right
corner of the Insert Video dialog to open the Add Movie dialog.
2. Choose either Acrobat 6 (and Later) Compatible Media or Acrobat 5
(and Earlier) Compatible Media.
Selecting the Acrobat 6 version offers more configuration options;
selecting the Acrobat 5 version works only with media that plays in
QuickTime Player (Figure 97b).
Figure 97b
Configure a movie file to add to the document in various formats.
3. For Acrobat 6 (and Later) Compatible Media, choose further selections:
•
Specify a format from the Content Type pop-up menu.
•
Use or deselect the "Snap to content proportions" and "Embed
content in document" check boxes.
•
Choose a poster setting.
4. Click OK to close the dialog and insert the movie.
Using Flash Video and 3D Media
From the Library of Daniel Dadian
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