Make sure you’re very confident of your video’s URL, and be sure and check that the link works. So long as your reader has working internet when they’re reading your pdf, and you’ve got your video online, this will work beautifully. In option one, embedding a video in a pdf requires including an image that’s linked to an online video. It’s a really spectacular touch for a stand-out grant proposal or client presentation. And when you take advantage of embedding a video, you make them a lot less simple. You can even open them on a Kindle e-reader (though we’re not sure how embedded video will look, especially on more basic Kindles) or an iPad. They don’t have the gee-whiz factors of a prezi, or even a PowerPoint, but they’re immensely useful because, with the free downloadable Adobe Reader, anyone can open them on any computer, and unlike word processing documents, they’ll look just the same. PDFs are deceptively simple little files. ![]() The box below is a YouTube video, but it shows a pdf we created in action, with videos embedded. ![]() Two weeks ago we wrote about video in PowerPoint one week ago we wrote about video in Prezi this week we’ll conclude our embedding a video series with Adobe Acrobat.
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