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I am trying to get a movie uploaded from a mobile device to play in a browser. It works fine in Chrome and FF and IE9(compatibility mode) but I cannot get it to play in IE9 not in compatibility mode.

My embed code is:

<video id='vid' class='video' width='274' height='169' controls='controls' preload='load' autoplay='autoplay'>
  <source src='/videos/vid1.mov'  />
  <object classid="clsid:02BF25D5-8C17-4B23-BC80-D3488ABDDC6B" width="320" height="256" >
    <param name="src" value='/videos/vid1.mov'>
    <param name="autoplay" value="true">
    <param name="loop" value="false">
    <param name="controller" value="true">
    <embed src='/videos/vid1.mov'  width="274" height="169" autoplay="true" loop="false" controller="true" pluginspage="http://www.apple.com/quicktime/"></embed>
  </object>
</video>

At first I was just trying the Html5 embed code, but that didn't work, so switched it out for object and embed which didn't work either. I found that I can combine both here: http://www.w3schools.com/html/html_videos.asp but still it doesn't work anyway.

After spending 2 hours googling and trying different variations of this I need help!

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  • Do you have ActiveX Filtering enabled? Is your document in Standards Mode?
    – Sampson
    Apr 13, 2012 at 8:21
  • Sorry but I have no idea about activeX filtering and what's standards mode?
    – Bex
    Apr 13, 2012 at 8:45
  • Press Alt + V to open your toolbar. Then view Tools > ActiveX Filtering. If it's checked, uncheck it. For Standards Mode, press F12 to load up your Developer Tools, and look for "Document Mode" within the top right of those tools.
    – Sampson
    Apr 13, 2012 at 8:47
  • 1
    Oh actually in IE? I have checked these and they are OK but this problem is occurring in IE9 in general, so I would not be able to make all my users update their IE settings.
    – Bex
    Apr 13, 2012 at 8:54
  • What were the results of those two checks? Only one of those can be controlled by you ultimately. If a user chooses to disable ActiveX Objects, you cannot control that. You can, however, control whether or not <video> is available to the user by being in Doc Mode IE9 Standards+.
    – Sampson
    Apr 13, 2012 at 8:59

2 Answers 2

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IE9's HTML5 specs only support H.264 video encoding, so it's worth checking if the .mov was encoded properly http://blogs.msdn.com/b/ie/archive/2010/04/29/html5-video.aspx

It could also help to supply at least 2 formats of your video, as not all browsers support one particular format. Perhaps .mp4 and .mov? If you're really ambitious swap .mov with .ogv, add a flash-based fallback as your object tag and you should be pretty well set.

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change the mime type (as the server delivers it to the browser) from video/quicktime to video/mp4. Simplest way to do this, would be to add this to your .htaccess file:

AddType video/mp4 .mov

Everything should be good once you have this in place. The only other thing you'll likely see is videos coming from an iPhone being rotated 90 degrees to the left. This is the raw format stored by iOS. You'll have to take care of that on the iPhone or the server

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