| Prezi Feature | Status in FLV Output | | :--- | :--- | | Zooming navigation (user-controlled) | (becomes a linear camera pan) | | Embedded hyperlinks | Lost | | Clickable objects / pop-ups | Lost | | Overlapping content layers | Preserved (as rendered in the capture) | | Audio narration | Preserved | | Playback speed control | Preserved (via video player) |
Prezi’s non-linear, zoomable canvas offers a distinct alternative to traditional slide-based presentation software. However, its reliance on Adobe Flash (historically) and modern web-based players creates compatibility and portability issues. This paper examines the methodologies, advantages, and limitations of converting Prezi presentations into Flash Video (FLV) format. It addresses the technical workflow—from export or screen capture to transcoding—and discusses use cases where FLV output remains relevant, particularly in legacy systems, offline archives, and standardized LMS platforms. convert prezi to flash video
ffmpeg -i prezi_export.mp4 -c:v flv -q:v 4 -c:a libmp3lame -q:a 2 -ar 44100 final_prezi.flv Note: -q:v 4 ensures variable bitrate for quality retention during zoom movements. | Prezi Feature | Status in FLV Output
The non-linear, zoomable “canvas” becomes a linear movie. The viewer becomes a spectator, not a participant. It addresses the technical workflow—from export or screen