Apparently, that has been resolved with Camtasia v3 and v4. Addiitonally,
Camtasia supports export to QuickTime as well as Flash, so you could always
re-export them as Quicktime if you can't upgrade for whatever reason.
--
Tim Sullivan
Unlimited Intelligence Limited
http://www.uil.net
I'm thinking about this from the other angle: Mac users with
access to a PC who want to download Camtasia videos to watch
offline on their Mac or iPod.
I strongly doubt that many folks will bother to re-do all of
their existing Camtasia videos. And remember that LOTS of these
kinds of things were NOT generated with Camtasia, but with one
of the many freeware programs -- that have NOT been upgraded.
Can't you just install the flash player on the MAC? That will certainly
view any SWF file. Or does Camtasia have some sort of internal
handshake/lock implemented? (doubtful).
-d
I'm still quite new to the Mac world, so maybe there's some
kind of workaround that's I'm not aware of. I am able to play
SWF files on my iMac; just not through the typical embedded
links that Camtasia and other software create.
The problem is that these programs all insert an HTML <OBJECT>
or <EMBED> tag in the page that requires the browser to play
the file through an ActiveX plugin, which is meaningless in
Mac environments. I've tried to get Safari to play these in
lots of pages, and it just doesn't work.
As far as I can tell, they don't inject code to detect
environment settings. If they did, then a link to the SWF file
would be sufficient. The Flash Player is a windows browser
plugin that relies on ActiveX to implement it.
-David