

But if I try to get it to record as well, it insists that "there is no video and audio" playing. Potplayer does successfully play the SWF. Obviously there is no point in trying to capture something that isn't even consistently a solid framerate.Ģ: Use Potplayer to record the video as it plays. My CPU doesn't max out - far from it - but all eight cores are fairly heavily utilized, and whatever the SWF playback wants from it, it's not getting. These are the results I see no matter what player I use: Firefox, Swiff Player, Potplayer, two different decompilers. At 1080p, it struggles along at around 30fps.
#Swivel swf to video converter 1080p
A SWF of appreciable complexity can never be played in realtime with a guaranteed framerate, and as it happens, on a 5GHz PC, anything exceeding about half of 1080p starts dropping frames everywhere. These SWFs are not video elements or animated GIFs they are complicated animations using the Flash framework, and they're meant to play back at 60fps. This works for the average person who is uninterested in, say, maintaining the intended framerate, and/or using a higher resolution. I'll list the ones I know about, and the stumbling blocks I've encountered with each.ġ: Play it in (whatever) and capture the video as it plays. There are also a number of ways one might hypothetically go about achieving this. There are a few SWF files I wish to convert to raw video (to then be converted, at leisure, to a lossless codec, or whatever I can get away with that maintains chroma). That also suggests that the process for getting this done is reasonably straightforward and I simply haven't discovered it yet. I know this is possible to do because there are a lot of Youtube videos showcasing that it was done.
