G
grannash
How does one figure out which .wav files are embedded and which aren't? Is
the appearance of the file in the folder, after saving the presentation as a
web page, proof that the file is embedded? i.e. a linked file would not show
up in this folder?
The reason I ask is that I have a presentation where I'm 99% sure I embedded
the .wav file, about a year ago. The fact that I lost the individual file in
a crash and the music still plays in my presentation should be proof of that,
right? But when I saved the presentation as a web page, in order to extract
this .wav file, the file is 60 Mb (it's a 6 minute song), and I've been told
I can only embed files up to 50 Mb. Does the file become larger during the
extraction process, or is the 50 Mb limit not true? Or is this file in fact
not embedded?
the appearance of the file in the folder, after saving the presentation as a
web page, proof that the file is embedded? i.e. a linked file would not show
up in this folder?
The reason I ask is that I have a presentation where I'm 99% sure I embedded
the .wav file, about a year ago. The fact that I lost the individual file in
a crash and the music still plays in my presentation should be proof of that,
right? But when I saved the presentation as a web page, in order to extract
this .wav file, the file is 60 Mb (it's a 6 minute song), and I've been told
I can only embed files up to 50 Mb. Does the file become larger during the
extraction process, or is the 50 Mb limit not true? Or is this file in fact
not embedded?