![]() 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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