No, there is not way to extract the video from a PDF file once you embed it.
I am a long-time Acrobat user, an employee of Adobe Systems, and Maine native. I have created training videos for Total Training, consulted with people to help them better use Acrobat, and developed new business for Adobe as a Business Development Manager
Hi,No, there is not way to extract the video from a PDF file once you embed it.
You are absolutely incorrect. Follow these steps:
- Open pdf - Play video by clicking on it. Might take a little bit and ask if you “trust” the PDF file. - Once the video starts playing right click on it and choose properties - Look for the file location which should be in your Documents and Settings\User\Local Settings\Temp folder - Go find the temporary file, pause video if necessary as it will be deleted once playback is finished, and copy it somewhere else on your computer.
Perhaps this is new to Acrobat 9 Pro, but it certainly works.
here is link to Joel Geraci's flex chart which is interesting http://blogs.adobe.com/pdfdevjunkie/FlexChartInPDF.pdf If one can save the swf as file then it could be reverse engineer, is it true?
Freelancer
According to most IT HelpDesk people, the most common reason for user error (regardless of Operating System) is ID 10T.
You can extract the video file from a PDF as a 'Movie Clipping' by clicking the video to begin playback and, while it is playing, click and drag the video to a folder or your desktop. This worked on a Mac OS X (I couldn't locate a temp directory with this file during playback as suggested above).
No, there is not way to extract the video from a PDF file once you embed it.
I am a long-time Acrobat user, an employee of Adobe Systems, and Maine native. I have created training videos for Total Training, consulted with people to help them better use Acrobat, and developed new business for Adobe as a Business Development Manager