![]() Don't know if that would make a difference.There’s a complicated answer that I really don’t entirely understand myself. You can run an MP3 file on an MP4-supported media player, but you cannot run an MP4 file on only an audio media player. I’m a “video guy,” not a “server and HTML code” guy, but in a nutshell, I was told videos need to have an associated player due to some sort of preventing local saving and sharing with unauthorized viewers.Īpparently, there’s some sort of security layer happening where having the HTML player allows our internal archiving/sharing system to link to the player, not the video itself, which prevents the video from being saved locally and then shared… I really don’t understand how that works, and frankly the logic there seems pretty shaky, considering all the other ways to “save” videos without having the originating MP4 file… But I’m just following the rules as I’ve been told them. ![]() Generally, MP4 uses MPEG-4 for video compression and AAC for audio compression. ![]() A file with the MP4 file extension is an abbreviation for an MPEG-4 Video file, which is a compressed file format that can contain not only video and still images but also audio and subtitles. In essence, they want to control who has access to the videos, and having that player somehow allows the system to do that… I don’t pretend to understand it, so much as I know that they’re currently producing these renders in Camtasia, which is outputting the MP4, HTML player, and all that other junk (which… again… I’m not an HTML guy, but it would seem that the other junk is a byproduct of the render and totally unnecessary). MP4 files are usually seen when you download a video from the internet or use a DVD ripping program to save a DVD to your computer.
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