As a newish Mac user, you may wonder what allows your computer to display pictures and play music and movies. Wonder no longer. This bit of media magic is performed by something called QuickTime.
Apple's QuickTime is a 30-year-old technology but is still supported by Apple. Here's how to use the QuickTime Player included with macOS. Before the internet, and long before streaming, there was ...
I’ve taken the past few months to research some new technologies and work on implementations with the goal of sharing what I’ve learned. This month’s topic is QuickTime. I’ve chosen it because a new ...
The latest version, QuickTime 7.6.9, is available for Mac OS X, and an array of Windows platforms, including Windows 7, Vista and XP. Overall, Apple labeled the entire QuickTime update with the ...
In addition to the new searching, browsing and back up features for office documents (Finder, Dock, Quick Look, Cover Flow, Spotlight, Time Machine) and new support for collaborative information ...
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While Apple's QuickTime focus has shifted to the new QuickTime X technologies, Apple still provides QuickTime 7 as an optional install so people can use features such as authenticated streaming video, ...
Want to quickly edit a movie file but can’t be bothered battling with the complexity of iMovie or Final Cut Pro? Here’s how to use QuickTime Player, included with every Mac, to trim movie files and ...
If you want to watch full screen movies, save many Web-based videos, create video projects using H.264 compression, and more, then you might find Apple’s $29.95 QuickTime Pro to be quite the bargain.