Ever wanted to save that video or flash animation that you found on the web to your hard drive? Well, if you’re using Mozilla Firefox, it’s actually pretty easy.
This tutorial will not work with anything streamed or encapsulated (e.g., streaming videos and quicktime trailers like on trailers.apple.com). Capturing those is beyond the scope of this howto
Also, remember to respect other’s intellectual property: Saving a copy to your hard drive is fair use; taking that and publishing it on your own website is probably not.
get on with the tutorial:
- Open the page that contains what you want to saveHere we have a movie on NewGrounds that Andrew Kepple made. It’s a flash movie, so it’s embedded on the webpage. There’s no link to the file that I would normally be able to right-click and save from.
- Right-click the page anywhere except the video and choose View Page InfoThis will open the Page Info window. Tools > Page Info will do the same thing.
- From the Page Info window, go to the Media TabOn this tab is a list of all the embedded resources on the page, including images, ads, and convienently, Flash animations and other video files.
- From the Media list, find your resource and click itIf you know what you’re after is a video, try looking at filename extensions for AVI, WMV, MOV, DIVX, and such. Flash animations end in SWF, and music files are usually MP3.Chances are that what you’re after is quite large, so you could just go through each item in the list looking at the Size field below, and when you find one that’s bigger than the rest, that’ll probably be your file.You could also check the resource’s MIME type, which might have the word flash, video, movie, sound or the like in it, tipping you off.
- Click the Save As... buttonThen save your resource like any other file. Remember where it is.
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