I think the basic question is: Is there a setting to record a quicktime screencast that saves as an MP4? I typically do the screencast and have to then convert in Mpeg Streamclip. This takes a lot of time than just taking the screencast!
I've "heard" that we can convert Audio Recording to Mp3 but opening in iTunes but I don't understand exactly the steps. I am wondering if this is something similar with the screencasts and IF the options in quicktime to export to iPad, iPod etc or Audio only do something like this for us so one doesn't have to take the time of converting in Mpeg Streamclip.
I am wondering if this is something similar with the screencasts and IF the options in quicktime to export to iPad, iPod etc or Audio only do something like this for us so one doesn't have to take the time of converting in Mpeg Streamclip.
So before it's brought up, let me start by saying I do have to have quicktime installed on the system. It's a necessary requirement to run Avid Media Composer which is what the system has been built to do.
The machine is not mine, however I'll be operating it for some time and can fix issues for myself where they appear. I've begun encountering a problem with Avid which I have some reason to believe may be related to an incompatible quicktime version number with the Avid version being run.
I updated quicktime, but one thing I found odd was that by default the new quikctime version installed using an installer downloaded from the apple website, by default installed to C:\Program Files (x86)\QuickTime Alternative.
As near as I can tell no one has installed QuickTime Alternative on the system and what I've downloaded very much appears to be quicktime, not Quicktime Alternative. But the existence of the folder and the fact that it by default installed there suggests to me maybe it once did reside on this system.
A quicktime logo does appear on the Control Panel, but when I click on it, the driver window (I don't know the technical term for it) comes up, but it says it's not installed. When I go to the Drivers control panel and click on [MCI] Quicktime for Windows, I get an error that says "Cannot load the [MCI] QuickTime for Windows Driver. The driver file may be missing." Trying to reinstall Quicktime doesn't help.
The video driver won't install. I'm trying to follow the steps I found here for getting 3.1 to work with Dosbox, but for some reason, when I type "setup" under the windows directory after 3.1 has already been installed, I get the installation setup instead of the one being displayed.
I still haven't gotten quicktime to work. Even when I reinstall 3.1 and the drivers in the order that was recommended, quicktime still refuses to fully install, I still have the same problems that I mentioned before. Either I'm not installing the drivers correctly, or perhaps my DOSBox configuration is the culprit? If so, I have no idea where I'd change it.
There's Quicktime SDK for Windows, but any application that uses it needs quicktime runtime libraries to be installed on the system (SDK itself just has headers and library stubs, and not the actual DLLs).
If my application uses Quicktime, I'd like to install the necessary libraries with it's installer, thus not requiring user to install Quicktime separately. What I'm looking for is some sort of "quicktime redistributable".
As of now (quicktime 7.x), I can't find a way to do that. I could bundle whole quicktime installer (about 20 MiB), and launch it with MSI's silent/unattended flag. However, that way it has several side effects:
If you want editing features like Trim you need to buy QuickTime Pro for windows. The same was true on the Mac prior to QuickTime X. Unfortunately on the Mac there is no QuickTimeX pro so the ONLY editing feature you get is Trim. When it is installed on the Mac the older version gets moved into the Utilities folder and can be used from there. QuickTime Pro has a lot of features (although sometimes hard to discover) but you can (or maybe I should say could), cut, copy, paste video snippets. Add multiple sound tracks, adjust sound track volumes, trim, throw in additional video overlay tracks etc. Very recently though I've started noticing extreme problems with QT Pro on Windows and most of the editing features are no longer working properly. (Oh yeah QT Pro also supports exporting to a variety of pre-defined and customizable formats).
Hi, I work in social media and I recently started my own business. After knocking a lot of doors I finally got my first contract that needs to be brought out on Wednesday. And when I open my AE to start this gig guess what. I got a "Quicktime not installed...." thing. Just to let you know, I've read plenty of cyclical threads here troubleshooting QuickTime errors with After Effects CS5, CS5.5, CS6, and CC Creative Cloud blog by... So I started the first solution on installing the last version of quicktime tha'ts clearly not the problem since it didn't work. So following the second solution which is to remove the DVCPROHDVideoOut QuickTime component I simply just can't find it unless I am looking in the wrong folder. c:\Program Files (x86)\Quicktime\ and when I get there I got this:
sorry to hear you are having so many issues, but I honestly have not encountered anything like this. the biggest problem i ever had with windows over my 20 year history with it was it once kept dropping my connection to a USB wifi stick i had to use for a while in an apartment, but that has since been fixed. the color calibration may be a hard ware issue. most stuff is backwards compatible from previous versions of windows. its not like mac where if you are not running the most current version of the OS it simply wont run. check out Color Management in the Control Panel. see if what you are looking for is in there.
Well, actually Id advise to just keep on using mov, I dont see any reason to stop. Ok, it isnt getting updated anymore, but the QT libs will only get called when something wants them like c4d, I mean lets just keep things in perspective, if youre happy putting a usb stick in your machine then that completely overshadows any threat from a quicktime installation. Hell, even just browsing this website is a bigger danger.
The Hap codec will not be affected by uninstalling quicktime. Support for prores and qt animation will not be affected either. In most cases you will not notice any difference, as long as you are not using any codec that is only available in quicktime. However, as mentioned earlier, the export function will not (yet) work without quicktime.
Maybe people are running around like headless chickens but the fact is that yes people have been using the current version of quick time for windows for a while and maybe they haven't been attacked as no one was aware of the vulnerabilities until now. Now they are out there the bad guys will specifically exploit those vulnerabilities previously unknown. With no patches from Apple to remove those vulnerabilities then the risk of an attack rises.
QuickTime is the media player from Apple Inc. which plays a variety of different formats of digital video, pictures and audio. QuickTime has moved on from being a simple video clip player to include more advanced features such us the ability to create HD videos, convert media into other formats and watch streamed videos via the player or browser. QuickTime is available for both Mac and Windows.
Apple released QuickTime in 1991 and it was a technological breakthrough at the time, delivering a program that could play videos on a personal computer. QuickTime 1.0 was originally released with just three codecs; they were suited to live action video, cartoon-type graphics and 8-bit images. Later on in 1992 QuickTime was contracted to allow for compatibility with the Windows OS but with limited features. QuickTime 2.0 was released in 1994 and was the only version during its history to not be freeware; it included support to play music tracks and with the later release of 2.1 Apple made the software free again. QuickTime 4.0 available for Mac and Windows was the first to support streaming videos from the web and mp3 playback. QuickTime 6.0 supported MPEG-4 playback and iTunes.
QuickTime 7.0 included the H.264/MPEG-4 AVC codec which supported HD videos, Core Audio for high resolution sound and updated the UI.
QuickTime 1 Other Internet Software
Background
Two security issues have emerged related to QuickTime on Windows, as a result Apple is recommending removal of QuickTime 7 for Windows: -us/HT201175
Adobe issued a blog post to outline status on this issue on April 16, 2016:
-on-windows/?segment=dva
You can measure the strength of the illusion in this movie. Within each window, grating moves at 25%, 50%, 75%, 100% of the window speed (from top to bottom). Since on a flickering background (right), it makes the gratings move much faster than their windows, they look quite different from their corresponding windows on the left (control conditions). For most observers, the gratings appear locked to the windows labelled 25% or 50%.
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