Ok then there lies the problem. You need flash video for them to work and iphone's and iPads don't use them. You need a regular computer or laptop w/ Adobe Flash installed. If you have one of those then I can help otherwise a big no,sorry.
From Wikipedia:
Mobile operating systems
Adobe Flash Player exists for a variety of mobile operating systems, including
Android (since version 2.2[sup]
[38][/sup]),
Pocket PC/
Windows CE,
QNX (e.g. on
BlackBerry PlayBook),
Symbian,
Palm OS, and
webOS (since version 2.0[sup]
[39][/sup]).
There is no Adobe Flash Player for iOS devices (iPhone, iPad and iPod Touch). The iPhone accounts for more than 60% of global smartphone web traffic and the iPod touch makes up more than 95% of "mobile Internet device" traffic[sup][
citation needed][/sup]. This hurts Adobe's ability to market Flash as a ubiquitous mobile platform. However, Flash content can be made to run on iOS devices in a variety of ways:
- Flash content can be bundled inside an Adobe AIR app, which will then run on iOS devices. (Apple didn't allow this for a while, but they relaxed those restrictions in September 2010.[sup][40][/sup])
- On March 8, 2011, Techradar reported that Adobe provides an experimental server side tool (Wallaby) to convert Flash programs (as far as possible) to HTML5 code, thus allowing iOS devices to display the content.[sup][41][/sup]
- If the content is Flash video being served by Adobe Flash Media Server 4.5, the server will translate and send the video as HTTP Dynamic Streaming or HTTP Live Streaming, both of which can be played by iOS devices.[sup][42][/sup]
The mobile version of
Internet Explorer 8 for
Windows Phone does not support Flash.[sup]
[43][/sup] The IE9 web browser on Microsoft Windows Phone 7.5 ('Mango') does not support Flash either.[sup]
[44][/sup]
On November 9, 2011, Adobe announced[sup]
[45][/sup] that it will no longer develop Flash for Mobile Platforms and is planning on developing new products with more open technologies and standards like HTML5.