- APPLE QUICKTIME PLAYER DOWNLOAD FOR WINDOWS XP PRO
- APPLE QUICKTIME PLAYER DOWNLOAD FOR WINDOWS XP SOFTWARE
Commercial converters may offer many other options.
APPLE QUICKTIME PLAYER DOWNLOAD FOR WINDOWS XP PRO
QT 7 Pro or MPEG Streamclip can create AVI files using DV, DVCPRO, Motion JPEG, or Cinepak compression. For instance, VisualHub (or MPEG Streamclip with a DivX component installed) can create a DivX/MP3 AVI file. In many cases, the target format will likely limit your choice application.
APPLE QUICKTIME PLAYER DOWNLOAD FOR WINDOWS XP SOFTWARE
If you want to create an AVI file containg a specific compression format, you will have to use additional software to convert the content. With regard to your "recognition" problem, what player were you using and did you also test the files with the extension manually changed to MP4?ĪVI is a file container-not a compression format. Also, you must have skipped testing all of the device targeted/iTunes managed formats which end up in M4V file containers. With the exception of the "Movie" option which, if the original video and/or audio compression format are already QT compatible, can perform a "Save as." action which merely copies the original audio and/or video data to an MOV file container, unlike all other options that convert the video to H.264 (MPEG-4/AVC). mov, and when I check that file format in my Windows XP install, it's not recognised. But on experimenting they all seem to export to.
The options in the export confuse me a little: "Movie", "480p", "720p", "iPod Touch & iPhone 3GS", "iPad, iPhone 4 & Apple TV".
(I personally am quite satisfied with MPEG-4/AVC since it is also used as a basis for Blu-ray and AVCHD content as well.) Good luck! Unfortunately, you will always find a number users who have differing ideas regarding what constitutes the "best" compression format for this "cross platform" compatibility. So actually all I want to do is be able to export a format that is the most comptaible across all platforms. Since H.264 (MPEG-4/AVC) is the default video codec used by Apple (and most third-party) screen recording apps, if you want the finished content in a different compression format and/or file container, you will have to convert the screen recording yourself after capture. MPEG-4/AVC (H.264) video is most commonly wrapped in an MP4, M4V, or MOV file container. The files should play "natively" in any Windows media player that "natively" supports standard MPEG-4/AVC video such as VLC. But can someone please explain how I can save or export the resulting video in a format that will be playable on Windows natively? By natively I mean with no QuickTime, and no extra codecs etc.
I really like that QuickTime can easily and quickly record screencasts.