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XP Tutorial 8New Perspectives on HTML and XHTML, Comprehensive 1 Using Multimedia on the Web Enhancing a Web Site with Sound, Video, and Applets Tutorial.

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Presentation on theme: "XP Tutorial 8New Perspectives on HTML and XHTML, Comprehensive 1 Using Multimedia on the Web Enhancing a Web Site with Sound, Video, and Applets Tutorial."— Presentation transcript:

1 XP Tutorial 8New Perspectives on HTML and XHTML, Comprehensive 1 Using Multimedia on the Web Enhancing a Web Site with Sound, Video, and Applets Tutorial 8

2 XP Tutorial 8New Perspectives on HTML and XHTML, Comprehensive 2 Objectives Working with Multimedia Working with Audio Linking to an Audio Clip Embedding an Audio Clip

3 XP Tutorial 8New Perspectives on HTML and XHTML, Comprehensive 3 Objectives Working with Video Linking to a Video Clip Embedding a Video Clip Using a Dynamic Source Supporting Non-Embedded elements

4 XP Tutorial 8New Perspectives on HTML and XHTML, Comprehensive 4 Objectives Introducing Java Working with Applets Creating a Marquee with Internet Explorer Working with the Object Element

5 XP Tutorial 8New Perspectives on HTML and XHTML, Comprehensive 5 Working with Multimedia Bandwidth is a measure of the amount of data that can be sent through a communication pipeline each second. –Consider bandwidth when working with multimedia on a Web site

6 XP Tutorial 8New Perspectives on HTML and XHTML, Comprehensive 6 Working with Multimedia Multimedia can be added to a Web page two different ways: –External media is a sound of video file that’s accessed through a link. Useful for a low bandwidth –Inline media is placed within a Web page as an embedded object

7 XP Tutorial 8New Perspectives on HTML and XHTML, Comprehensive 7 Working with Multimedia Inline media External media

8 XP Tutorial 8New Perspectives on HTML and XHTML, Comprehensive 8 Working with Audio Every sound wave is composed of two components: –Amplitude- the height of the wave. Amplitude relates to the sound’s volume (the higher the amplitude, the louder the sound). –Frequency- the speed at which the sound wave moves. Frequency relates to sound pitch (high frequencies have high pitches).

9 XP Tutorial 8New Perspectives on HTML and XHTML, Comprehensive 9 Working with Audio

10 XP Tutorial 8New Perspectives on HTML and XHTML, Comprehensive 10 Sampling Rate, Sample Resolution, and Channels Sound waves are analog functions (represent a continuously varying signal). –To store the information, however, it must be converted to pieces of information. Digital recording measures the sound’s amplitude at discrete moments in time. –Each measurement is called a sample. Samples per second taken is called the sampling rate

11 XP Tutorial 8New Perspectives on HTML and XHTML, Comprehensive 11 Sampling Rate Low sampling rate Medium sampling rate High sampling rate

12 XP Tutorial 8New Perspectives on HTML and XHTML, Comprehensive 12 Sampling Rate, Sample Resolution, and Channels Sampling resolution indicates the precision in measuring the sound within each sample. –8-bit –16-bit –32-bit

13 XP Tutorial 8New Perspectives on HTML and XHTML, Comprehensive 13 Sample Resolution Low sample resolution High sample resolution

14 XP Tutorial 8New Perspectives on HTML and XHTML, Comprehensive 14 Sound File Formats There are different sound file formats used for different operating systems. Different file formats provide varying levels of sound quality and sound compression.

15 XP Tutorial 8New Perspectives on HTML and XHTML, Comprehensive 15 Sound File Formats WAV Nonstreaming media Streaming media MIDI

16 XP Tutorial 8New Perspectives on HTML and XHTML, Comprehensive 16 Linking to an Audio Clip Inserting links to the sound clips

17 XP Tutorial 8New Perspectives on HTML and XHTML, Comprehensive 17 Embedding an Audio Clip An embedded object is any media clip, file, program, or other object that can be run or viewed from within a Web page. –Browsers need the appropriate plug-ins to run embedded objects

18 XP Tutorial 8New Perspectives on HTML and XHTML, Comprehensive 18 Playing Background Sounds Internet Explorer (with Version 3.0) introduced an element to play background sounds: <bgsound src=“url” balance=“value” loop=“value” volume=“value” /> Where url is the URL of the sound file, the balance attribute defines how the sound should be balanced between left and right speakers, loop defines how many times the sound clip is played, and the volume attribute indicates the background sound volume.

19 XP Tutorial 8New Perspectives on HTML and XHTML, Comprehensive 19 Working with Video Video files add a visual element to a Web page as well as provide information. Video files are composed of a series of single images called frames. The number of frames shown in a period of time is the frame rate.

20 XP Tutorial 8New Perspectives on HTML and XHTML, Comprehensive 20 Frame Rates and Codecs Reducing the frame rate reduces the size of your file. –This is one way to control file size of video files. Using a Codec (compression/decompression) is another way to control the file size.

21 XP Tutorial 8New Perspectives on HTML and XHTML, Comprehensive 21 Video File Formats

22 XP Tutorial 8New Perspectives on HTML and XHTML, Comprehensive 22 Linking to a Video Clip Follow the same procedure to link a video clip as you would to link a sound clip.

23 XP Tutorial 8New Perspectives on HTML and XHTML, Comprehensive 23 Embedding a Video Clip Use the same embed element to embed a video file as you did to embed a sound clip.

24 XP Tutorial 8New Perspectives on HTML and XHTML, Comprehensive 24 Using a Dynamic Source To turn inline images into dynamic video clips, use the following syntax: <img src=“url” dynsrc=“url” start=“type” loop=“value” control=“control” /> Where the dynsrc attribute specifies the URL of a dynamic (video) version of the inline image. The start attribute tells the browser when to start the clip, the loop attribute specifies the number of times the video will play, and the control attribute specifies whether IE should display player controls below the inline image to start and stop the video clip.

25 XP Tutorial 8New Perspectives on HTML and XHTML, Comprehensive 25 Supporting Non-Embedded Elements To provide alternate content for browsers that don’t support embedded objects, use the code alternate content where alternate content is the content displayed by browsers that don’t support embedded objects.

26 XP Tutorial 8New Perspectives on HTML and XHTML, Comprehensive 26 Introducing Java Oak was developed by Sun Microsystems as an operating system intended to be used by common appliances and devices. Oak was renamed Java in 1995. HotJava runs programs written in the Java language. –HotJava is a Java interpreter (it understands and runs Java languages)

27 XP Tutorial 8New Perspectives on HTML and XHTML, Comprehensive 27 Applets and Java Interpreters

28 XP Tutorial 8New Perspectives on HTML and XHTML, Comprehensive 28 Applets Applets are displayed as embedded objects on a Web page in an applet window. Use a Java Developer’s Kit (JDK) to write your own Java applet. Compiling changes the file into an executable file that can run by itself without the JDK. –The executable file is called a class file.

29 XP Tutorial 8New Perspectives on HTML and XHTML, Comprehensive 29 Working with Applets Attributes of the applet element

30 XP Tutorial 8New Perspectives on HTML and XHTML, Comprehensive 30 Creating a Marquee with Internet Explorer An alternative to using an applet to create a box with scrolling text is to create a marquee element. content Where attributes is one or more of the marquee elements, and content is the page content that appears in the marquee box.

31 XP Tutorial 8New Perspectives on HTML and XHTML, Comprehensive 31 Working with the Object Element The object element is the generic element for any object whose content is stored in a file separate from the current Web page. –Inline images –Sound clips –Video clips –Program applets –Other HTML documents

32 XP Tutorial 8New Perspectives on HTML and XHTML, Comprehensive 32 Working with the Object Element Specific and generic elements

33 XP Tutorial 8New Perspectives on HTML and XHTML, Comprehensive 33 Working with the Object Element MIME (Multipurpose Internet Mail Extension) names are used to indicate the type of data using the type attribute in an object element.

34 XP Tutorial 8New Perspectives on HTML and XHTML, Comprehensive 34 ActiveX ActiveX attaches desktop applications to Web pages. ActiveX objects are referred to as ActiveX controls.


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