June 10, 2015 Update: YouTube recently removed the "Old Embed Code" function. For my newest post regarding this issue, click here.
August 31, 2013 Update: I had written this blog in January 2013, and at the time everything worked. I was about to redo my presentation, but this time the video wouldn't embed. PowerPoint gave me an error message that it couldn't embed the video using THIS embed code (which worked fine seven months ago). Ah... Microsoft.
After lots of Googling (and no Binging) I found this answer on a Microsoft Answers site. Anyone can find it as long as keep reading and scrolling down and down and down.
Short answer: in the html embed code, make these changes twice.
And now back to my original blog about AutoPlay:
I am doing a beginning PowerPoint workshop at the University. I am going to show a group how to embed a YouTube video. Of course, the video only starts on a mouse click, even though you select Start Automatically in the Playback tab>Video Options>Start drop down. Now what? Google, of course.
August 31, 2013 Update: I had written this blog in January 2013, and at the time everything worked. I was about to redo my presentation, but this time the video wouldn't embed. PowerPoint gave me an error message that it couldn't embed the video using THIS embed code (which worked fine seven months ago). Ah... Microsoft.
After lots of Googling (and no Binging) I found this answer on a Microsoft Answers site. Anyone can find it as long as keep reading and scrolling down and down and down.
Short answer: in the html embed code, make these changes twice.
www.youtube.com becomes http://www.youtube.com
version=3 becomes version=2
And now back to my original blog about AutoPlay:
I am doing a beginning PowerPoint workshop at the University. I am going to show a group how to embed a YouTube video. Of course, the video only starts on a mouse click, even though you select Start Automatically in the Playback tab>Video Options>Start drop down. Now what? Google, of course.
The first thirty suggestions I found merely suggest using a
different product than PowerPoint (no, I’m not going to use your link and
download something unknown to my computer) or use a “free” download to hack
YouTube (also, not a great idea).
Then, ta da… a site that shows helpful html code for
YouTube. When you embed a video in
PowerPoint (another lesson for another day), you have to copy the html
code. I always “Use Old HTML Code,” by
the way. This site “YouTube
Embed Code: Everything You Ever Wanted
to Know” shows you the sneaky, and fairly easy codes to add.
For my situation, all you have to do is go to the end of the
link in the first line of code and add:
; autoplay=1
to the code.
Long story short, I found an ultra adorable video of a
little boy and his dad having fun with Oreos.
I want to embed it. I click
Share/Embed/Use Old Embed Code. I copy
the code. In PowerPoint, go to the Insert tab>Media section>Video>Video from Web Site window and paste the code into PowerPoint. Just before the first quote and right-angle-bracket, I’m
going to change the original code from this:
<object width="960"
height="720"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/Oe6lBGO6OSk?version=2&hl=en_US">
to this:
<object width="960"
height="720"><param name="movie"
value="http://www.youtube.com/v/Oe6lBGO6OSk?version=2&hl=en_US;autoplay=1">
Click Insert. It works. If only I’d known this
about ten PowerPoint shows previously.
And if you’re curious, click here to see the cute video. Does anyone
know the language?
A thousand "Thank You's" for finally ending several frustrating hours of "why won't the video automatically play???!!!" Once I figured out where to insert that magic little "autoplay=1" into the code, it worked! YES! A simple, easy to understand resolution! Whoo-hoo!!!
ReplyDeleteIt will work until they change it again! I'm glad I could help.
ReplyDelete