![]() ![]() ![]() If you do still have a need to create FLV or F4V files for some legacy workflows, then we recommend that you keep the previous versions-Adobe Media Encoder CC (7.2) and After Effects CC (12.2.1)–installed alongside the current versions. We are still committed to creating video files that play well in Flash Player, and that is why we are focusing our efforts on the H.264 (.mp4) exporter, which is what is currently recommended by the Adobe Flash team. We removed the exporters for FLV and F4V files from the Adobe video applications (Adobe Media Encoder, After Effects, and Premiere Pro) because maintaining these obsolete exporters was a large amount of work, and we could better spend that effort on developing new features and fixing bugs in areas that are used by more people. This has been the recommendation from the Adobe Flash team for quite some time already (as far back as Flash Player 9). If you want to create a video to play in Flash Player, then you should generally be using H.264 (.mp4), not the obsolete FLV or F4V formats. You can still import videos in the F4V format into Premiere Pro. You can still import videos in FLV and F4V formats into After Effects and Adobe Media Encoder. It was a big surprise to see that those codecs don't exist anymore.Īfter Effects CC 2014 (13.0), Premiere Pro CC 2014 (8.0), and Adobe Media Encoder CC 2014 (8.0) do not include exporters for creating FLV and F4V files. ![]() Yesterday, i tried to export some videos in. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |