HTML in Hindi | Lesson 9 | form tag in html in hindi | html radio button

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HTML in Hindi | Lesson 9 | form tag in html in hindi | html radio button
Faux Video: A Fallback for Video in Email
There’s absolutely no denying the power of video marketing. Video content has the power to tell stories more quickly than static images ever could. It’s more emotional. It lets you communicate within seconds what would have taken paragraphs to describe in writing. So it’s no...
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I just found out something awesome about HTML video.
Right click and then click Loop. Now you can enjoy that video for as long as you like. :)
A last note for now on html audio/video
The one thing I’ve noticed about the audio and video tags in html is that they don’t always load correctly. And, some browsers will only play certain file types. Oh wait, that is two things. Sorry.
Anyway, you’re almost better off with the embed code given by each specific site, rather than using the audio or video tag - except in the case of Archive.org, it is a bit harder to embed a single item that is part of a playlist of items, so you might be stuck with the audio tag.
Hopefully, this will improve, as we are told html audio/video is the way it will be done soon, without flash - although I keep running into sites all over that want to use flash and do it the old way still. Strange how they can make it work perfectly for a tablet app, but can’t seem to do it on the rest of the internet....
Anyway, that was my mild rant for the evening....over and out.
This didn't work on two other sites for some reason. I thought iframe (even more so than embed) was rather fool proof. I guess not. Or, the web is broken. Which, once you start to learn even a little about it, you know that it is like being held together by scotch tape.
Ok, so it must be site specific to my Google site that it won’t work in an iframe. Strange that is. So, I guess I’ll see how this works here. Update: Since I can no longer remember what html I placed there, and it is missing.....anyway
Anyway, I eventually found a much simpler way of doing the same thing. But first, let me try it this way: Anyway, probably the easiest, and the way that makes the most sense to me, is this: start movie
Here is another test of html video using an old TV production of Robin Hood from the 1950s. I am doing this to see if tumblr acts the same as blogger when it comes to CSS style. In Blogger, if one video is given background color and border color, all the videos in all the posts take on that specific videos style. Will it happen here too? Stay tuned. And hopefully enjoy the Robin Hood.Oh, it only works on the blog, not in the tumblr dashboard stream. (If it works) Chrome and firefox are best to view this type of video. Tablets and phones may or may not be able to read my code. Update: It appears to be the same with tumblr. Must be something I'm not getting, but at least all the video players will be uniform in color and borders, if not size. Why? That's the real mystery.Update: solved. it is something called "inline css."
your browser can't read video code
HTML5 Features In The Limelight:
1.Video Elements. 2.Application Cache. 3.Canvas For Images. 4.Geolocation. 5.Web Workers.
HTML5 Features In The Limelight:
1.Video Elements. 2.Application Cache. 3.Canvas For Images. 4.Geolocation. 5.Web Workers.