|
|
# 21 | ||
|
Member
|
Quote:
I was using MP3s and read the link you sent above, so I'll try that and see if that works. |
||
|
|
|
|
# 22 | ||
|
Member
|
Hello again -
I tried to record using wav files but that didn't help. The videos play wonderfully when produced, just lose significant audio quality when put into Articulate (as part of the camtasia produced flash video). Any more suggestions? I would really appreciate it! |
||
|
|
|
|
# 23 | ||
|
Moderator
![]() Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: France
Posts: 1,523
|
Hi paypar,
I am not sure. Can you post a link to your Camtasia video so that we download it and test it ourselves or else submit a case to Articulate Support ? Articulate should not be touching an inserted Flash movie other than possibly changing the frame rate. Are you still testing with a Camtasia movie at 20 fps? If so, you should definitely try publishing your Camtasia to 30 fps and then inserting that into Presenter. Presenter works best at 30 fps and that might be impacting on your audio. Regards
__________________
Dave Moxon ********************************* Product Specialist Articulate - The Global Leader in Rapid E-Learning www.articulate.com Blogs: Daveperso's eLearning Blog - Tips and tricks on using Articulate software - daveperso.com Daveperso - Le Blog Articulate En Français ! - daveperso.fr |
||
|
|
|
|
# 24 | ||
|
Member
|
Um...so this is silly but I think I discovered the source of my error.
I was not choosing the correct 'audio' properties when producing the Camtasia module. Once I did that, the sound was much better. Thanks for your quick response! It is comforting to know there is someone that can help! |
||
|
|