iSpring Pro
Knowledge Base
Popular Questions
Search results in Popular Questions
- Where should I enter the License Key I got after purchase?
- How to turn on the support of Oriental characters in the Advanced player?
- Is it possible to create looped Flash presentations with iSpring?
- I need to define titles for the presentation and slides. Is it possible?
- Is it possible to create Flash clips with international content using iSpring?
- An error occurred and I don’t see the iSpring toolbar in PowerPoint 2003 anymore. What can I do?
- Can I customize sidebar background color for a Flash presentation?
- How to turn on the support of Oriental characters in the Streamline player?
- Why can't I import my audio files?
- Do I need a 64-bit or 32-bit version of iSpring Pro?
Frequently Asked Questions
Search results in FAQs
General
Installation
Registration
Flash Output
- Can I customize sidebar background color for a Flash presentation?
- Once converted to Flash, slide transition effects are not as smooth as in PowerPoint and are moving slower than they should be. How can I fix that?
- I inserted a Flash file to a presentation but it doesn't work or appear incorrectly after conversion.
- How to change Flash presentation size and scale?
- What Adobe Flash Player version do I have to have to play iSpring-created presentations?
- If I publish my presentation to the web, will the users have to wait until the entire Flash file is loaded to start viewing it?
- Is it possible to create looped Flash presentations with iSpring?
- Is it possible to create Flash clips with international content using iSpring?
- Can iSpring publish presentation compatible with Flash Player 7/8/9/10/11?
- Is it possible to have a button in a slide that can launch another file?
Multimedia
- Can I synchronize a single video narration with several slides?
- Can I sync a single audio file (narration) with a whole presentation?
- How can I insert a Flash movie into the presentation?
- Does iSpring support video embedded into a presentation?
- Why can't I import my audio files?
- What audio file formats does iSpring support?
- The video file in my Flash presentation doesn't play. Why?
Size and Compression
Purchase and Discounts
Publishing
- How can I publish my presentation on web?
- How to bring the iSpring Add-in Back to PowerPoint?
- Why would I not want to use All in one Flash file output mode?
- I see an error message when publishing. What should I do?
- How can I create an animated Flash banner with iSpring Pro?
- I need to define titles for the presentation and slides. Is it possible?
- Is there any limitation on the number of slides in a PowerPoint presentation that can be published by iSpring?
- An error occurred and I don’t see the iSpring toolbar in PowerPoint 2003 anymore. What can I do?
- An error occurred and I don't see the iSpring Pro toolbar in PowerPoint 2007 anymore. What can I do?
Help Docs
Search results in Help Docs
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First Steps
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Managing Presentations
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Publish Presentations
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Enhancing Your Presenations
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Articles
Search results in Articles
- The user's view on iSpring Pro
- 5 Practical suggestions on how to choose a PowerPoint to Flash converter
- iSpring AccuPoint™ Technology
- Building Flip Custom Animation effect in PowerPoint
- Can I Play Flash on iPad? Yes!
- Compressing PowerPoint presentations
- Creating a Flash banner with iSpring
- eLearning Authoring Made Easy
- Embedding iSpring Courses into DITA Learning Content
- Create single Flash files with iSpring
- How to Add a Raptivity® Interaction into iSpring eLearning Course
- How to embed a PowerPoint in another PowerPoint presentation
- How to insert Flash into PowerPoint 2010
- How to Insert a YouTube Video into My Online Presentation?
- Inserting Flash into HTML with iSpring
- How to insert Flash into PowerPoint
- How to insert Flash into PowerPoint 2003/XP
- How to insert Flash into PowerPoint 2007
- Installing VBA component
- How to view a PowerPoint presentation on an iPad
- Best Engineered eLearning Development Tool
- LMS Support
- Why is it so difficult to convert PowerPoint to Flash manually?
- New in PowerPoint 2010
- Output Flash file options
- Creating Flashcards in PowerPoint using Trigger Animations
- iSpring Introduces PowerPoint to HTML5 Technology
- Protect your PowerPoint slides
- Publishing Content Directly to a SharePoint Library
- Publishing Flash content to an LMS with iSpring Pro
- Publishing your course to BlackBoard
- Uploading your course or quiz to Moodle
- Uploading your course or quiz to OLAT
How to insert Flash into PowerPoint 2010 Permalink
In this tutorial we will talk about how to insert a Flash movie into presentation using PowerPoint 2010. If you use PowerPoint 2007, PowerPoint 2003 or earlier, check out corresponding articles, available via the links below:
- How to manually insert Flash into PowerPoint 2007
- How to manually insert Flash into PowerPoint 2003 or earlier
First, you have to make sure that your computer has Adobe Flash Player installed and ActiveX control is registered. Both are important to have in order to be able to play Flash movies in a PowerPoint presentation. To insert a Flash file, you have to create a link to your Flash file in the presentation.
Are there easier alternatives?
Before getting down to actually following the instructions, you have to be aware that there is a much easier alternative. You can always choose to use iSpring Pro, a handy PowerPoint add-in that allows you to insert Flash movies with a single click. To make sure it does the work that you want it to, you can download it, install it on your computer and see for yourself.
Besides from inserting Flash, iSpring Pro allows you to convert PowerPoint presentations into Flash movies, packaging all the multimedia resources into a single .SWF file. In the Flash format, it is much more compact and it makes your presentation ready to be uploaded to any website or blog, emailed or viewed from any computer.
Step-by-step instructions
- Create a new or open an existing PowerPoint presentation
and select a slide you wish to insert a Flash file onto. - Click the File tab and go to Options:
- In the PowerPoint Options window, go to Quick Access Toolbar and double-click Developer Tab in the drop-down list called "Choose commands from".

- Now double-click More Controls in the options given for Developer Tab as shown below and click OK.

- The More Controls icon will appear in the main menu, and that’s where we want to go next.

- Select Shockwave Flash Object from the list and click OK. Use the mouse to draw the control on a slide. You can resize the control to adjust the size of Flash animation.

- Right click on the control you added and click Properties in the context menu.

- In the opened Properties window, click the Movie property and specify a full path to your Flash file. You can add a Flash file located on your computer (e.g. C:\My movie.swf) or web resource (e.g. http://www.ispringsolutions/tour.swf).

- You can tune your Flash movie playback by setting it to play automatically and/or looped.
- To start playing Flash movie automatically when the PowerPoint slide is displayed, set Playing property to True. You can add custom controls for Flash movie and set this property to False.
- To loop Flash movie playback while the slide is displayed, set Loop property to True.
- Now you can save your presentation or view it as a slideshow: click SlideShow icon in the View tab or press F5. Press Esc to return to normal view.
Insert vs Embed
There are two ways of integrating a Flash movie into a PowerPoint slide: embed and insert. When you embed Flash into a presentation, it gets stored as an external presentation resource and can be viewed on any computer that has Adobe Flash Player. (Most computers already have it installed). When you insert a Flash movie, PowerPoint creates a link to a .swf file's location on your computer. PowerPoint 2010 only allows you to link external Flash files; it doesn't allow you to embed Flash movies into your presentation due to security restrictions. You can embed Flash movies into your presentation by saving it as a PowerPoint 97-2003 compatible copy.
It's a good idea to store all external resources like Flash movies and a PowerPoint presentation in one folder. The trick is to link a Flash movie's file name instead of a full path to a file. Even if you play your slideshow on another computer, your presentation will run just as smoothly, including all of the Flash animations.
iSpring PowerPoint add-in allows you to create a solid Flash (.SWF) file from your PowerPoint presentation with all external multimedia resources embedded. This makes presentation viewing and delivery easy and hassle-free.
iSpring Pro Video Tutorials
These tutorials don't yet reflect some new functionality introduced in the new iSpring Pro 6.1,
while all the information they cover is valid. The tutorials describing new features will follow shortly.
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Getting Started
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Publish Presentation
- Publishing Destinations (1:43)
- Publishing for the Web (2:01)
- Publishing to iSpring Online (1:30)
- Publishing for CD/DVD (1:35)
- Publishing to LMS (2:08)
- General Options (2:50)
- Playback & Navigation Options (2:46)
- Compression Options (1:38)
- Advanced Options (3:24)
- Protection Options (2:20)
- Customize Players (3:12)
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Add Media Elements
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Audio/Video Narration
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Presentation Management