On 7/19/07, <b class="gmail_sendername">Dotan Cohen</b> <<a href="mailto:dotancohen@gmail.com">dotancohen@gmail.com</a>> wrote:<div><span class="gmail_quote"></span><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="border-left: 1px solid rgb(204, 204, 204); margin: 0pt 0pt 0pt 0.8ex; padding-left: 1ex;">
On 19/07/07, Lee Tambiah <<a href="mailto:leetambiah@ossgeeks.co.uk">leetambiah@ossgeeks.co.uk</a>> wrote:<br>> On 7/18/07, Dotan Cohen <<a href="mailto:dotancohen@gmail.com">dotancohen@gmail.com</a>> wrote:
<br>> ><br>> > Flash video cannot jump to position of parts that have not yet<br>> > downloaded. So to see the last five minutes of a lecture, one must<br>> > download the whole lecture.<br>> >
<br>> > Dotan Cohen<br>><br>> I think it can if it is streamed with a macromedia streaming server, its<br>> just sites such as you-tube use progressive downloads. There is nothing<br>> flash video cant do that your windows media streaming can do. Also flash
<br>> movies are so much smaller in size. Also if they had a real streaming server<br>> it would be the same too.<br><br>On this system (Ubuntu 7.04 with Firfox <a href="http://2.0.0.4">2.0.0.4</a>) I cannot skip to the
<br>end of a YouTube video until it finishes downloading. In the video's<br>position bar, one can see until what point in a video one can skip to<br>as the bar changes colour from left to right. Thus, the whole video<br>
must download in order to view the end. In MMS technology, one can<br>skip right to the end, instantly, much as if the file were local.</blockquote><div><br>Dotan, you don't seem to have read the message carefully. Lee mentioned that YouTube uses "progressive downloads" and that this is a choice YouTube has made in implementing their server technology. Lee also says that Flash supports jumping to a location in a streamed video if the server stream supports it. It isn't a limitation in Flash, per se. Understand?
<br><br>I can't verify Lee's statements, as I am no Flash expert.<br><br> Miles<br></div><br></div>