Like the title says I need a vcam for as3 a vcam that works in a similar way like jazza from draw with jazza does.. Thank you And another piece of advice I would like to get cleared up is with key frame caddy, I tried to download it but it' says I need a flash version of 12 - 13.99 Any idea what that means? Thank you
However with flash my current solution is to put everything into one movie clip and then move that clip around the scene which doesnt seem like the most elegant solution Since my level is rather large.
I am creating an animation in adobe flash cs5 and have the v cam ready to use. However when I put the v cam over something I wont to show a close up of and test movie, i can't see the close up instead I just see the animation with the v cam box infront of it which looks silly. I don't understand why it isn't working. I have a v cam file I have opened in another tab which shows a demonstration of it moving and when I test movie in that it zooms in, shows close ups etc. But when I copy it over to the animation I'm working on it will not work. We have several different v cam's that we have tried and everytime we test movie you can still see it. HELP!!
When you choose 'New...' pick an Actionscript 2.0 file instead of an Actionscript 3.0 file. The latest version of flash has a revised version of Actionscript which means that Actionscript 2.0 code will not function (properly). If you pick an Actionscript 2.0 file (you don't really need AS3 if you only want to animate) the code should work.
Ok everyone quit trying to make this difficult for him! Just copy the vcam from that fla's library and paste it into your library! Walla! Now put it in your movie, click Match Height and Width and you're done! It works!
I'm trying to figure out how to work Sham Bhangal's Vcam for macromedia flash. Sham details how his camera works but I can't figure out how to set it up. So far I've made a rectangle, turned it into a Movie Symbol, and opened the Actions bar. Where do I insert the script? Any help would be appreciated.
hey! I also had the same problem on my macromedia flash pro 8.......it says everytime i open flashvcam "unexpected file format"!!!!!!!but i found a solution try 2 download it here at
don't forget 2 comment if it work
Uninstalling the security update results in a flash downgrade and is at your own risk. It is not a recommended action, but it is currently the only temporary solution we could find to get flash moving again.
Windows Update in Win 7 does not update Internet Explorer Flash (the Flash Active X component), but your central Adobe Flash update settings might be set to auto update or you may have manually installed the latest version of flash..
Virtual cameras enable you to add all sorts of cool effects to your animations by making it seem like they were filmed with a camera that could move and focus. This video will show you where to acquire and how to use the vcam software plugin for Flash CS4 to create all of the aforementioned effects and more! This can also be useful for video games.
So, I am working on this interactive map that needs the ability to pan/zoom. I thought I'd try using a vcam for the panning/zooming action, since for some reason resizing the actual map messes up the text and such. So I'm using TweenLite to tween the vcam. I want the buttons/user interface to stay in one place (or rather, move with the vcam) while the user moves or zooms in on the map. Both the vcam and the user interface (named "menu") are the same size (811 x 549) and have the same x and y coordinates (405.50, 274.50). But when applying the same tween to them, they don't stay perfectly aligned while moving. Any suggestions? I am kind of a newbie with this stuff and I'm not even sure I'm approaching this the right way at all. I'm guessing there's a better way to do this.
Here's a selection of random colourful things, photographed with my Olympus C-2500L digital camera (reviewed here). The 2500L now wears an expensiveFL-40 flash, which I can point at the white ceiling when I want to take minimal-shadow pictures like this one.
A hair-searing external flash like the FL-40 gives you an easy way to use a low-sensitivity digital image sensor for night-time photography. Webcams don't have a flash, though, and are often used in a room with a normal indoor lighting level - say, one hundred watt incandescent globe in a ceiling fitting.
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