![]() ![]() ![]() You can also do it via hardware (less than $30) which will also give you a high quality USB audio interface that you can use for other purposes (I personally use this method for my iMac interface to my Bose Wave Radio). The kicker here is your are going to need another app to "grab" the audio. You could also open that folder in Finder and create an alias to put on your Desktop/Applications folder. I was able to launch the player by using Terminal and typing: $ open ~/Library/Application Support/WebEx Folder/500/Network\ Recording\ Player.app It's located in the user's library folder under: ~/Library/Application Support/WebEx Folder/500 I personally don't have any WebEx recordings I can use to test, but you can launch the player manually. Ciscos WebEx Network Recording Player can play an ARF file on Windows and Mac. These include Area Resource File, Architecture Register File, and Automated Response Format. The software will install, but (IMO) it doesn't create an application link in Finder or in Launch Pad. ARF is an acronym for some other technical terms, too, but none of them have anything to do with the WebEx Advanced Recording file format. Webex has a Mac version of their player on their player website available for download:
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