I\'m embedding a Flash video into an HTML and would like the user to have to click it to begin playing. According to the Adobe
Try replacing your movie param line with
<param name="movie" value="untitled_skin.swf&autoStart=false">
Try adding these after <Playlist>
<AutoLoad>false</AutoLoad>
<AutoPlay>false</AutoPlay>
I had the same problem and came across this post. Nothing worked. After randomly playing around, I found that <embed ........ play="false">
stopped it from playing automatically. I now have the problem that I can't get a controller to appear, so can't start the movie! :S
fenomas's answer was really good...it got me off of looking into the HTML code. I know that jb was looking for something that works in Captivate, but the question is broad enough to include people working out of Flash (I'm using CS5), so I thought I'd throw in the specific answer to my situation here.
If you're using the stock Adobe FLVPlayback component in Flash (you probably are if you used File > Import > Import Video...), there's an option in the Properties panel, under Component Parameters. Look for 'autoPlay' and uncheck it. That'll stop autoplay when the page loads!
A couple of wires are crossed here. The various autoplay
settings that you're working with only affect whether the SWF's root timeline starts out paused or not. So if your SWF had a timeline animation, or if it had an embedded video on the root timeline, then these settings would do what you're after.
However, the SWF you're working with almost certainly has only one frame on its timeline, so these settings won't affect playback at all. That one frame contains some flavor of video playback component, which contains ActionScript that controls how the video behaves. To get that player component to start of paused, you'll have to change the settings of the component itself.
Without knowing more about where the content came from it's hard to say more, but when one publishes from Flash, video player components normally include a parameter for whether to autoplay. If your SWF is being published by an application other than Flash (Captivate, I suppose, but I'm not up on that) then your best bet would be to check the settings for that app. Anyway it's not something you can control from the level of the HTML page. (Unless you were talking to the SWF from JavaScript, and for that to work the video component would have to be designed to allow it.)