Each browser renders it a little differently, but they are all a nice little minimized audio player. There’s actually a really good thorough write-up over at html5 doctor. You can use mp3, wav and ogg, (varies slightly by browser version) supported by these minimum browser versions per w3schools: In IE11 for example this is what would render: Whether you knew it or not, all the major web browsers from the time they added HTML5 support have a minimized audio player baked in, and is rendered when you insert an HTML5 tag. The problem however is that you can’t add web parts to blog posts in SharePoint. It looks a little dated but it could work, and not bad for $75. A Better Wayįirst, there are web parts out there that could potentially help like this one from Amrein. Sure you could specify a thumbnail image, but sometimes you don’t. It uses the same video player for an audio file, and leaves this blank thumbnail image. When you click Insert –> Video or Audio –> From SharePoint, then choose an audio file on a SharePoint page, this is what you get: In today’s post I’ll show you something maybe you didn’t know about your web browser, and how to use it to make this experience better. They found the default SharePoint audio player less than appealing and wanted something better. When things go great, they wanted to highlight these cases of awesome customer support in audio clips in blog posts. I was working with a client recently and they use a lot of audio files, like when they record customer service calls for quality assurance.
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