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The release of QuickTime 3.0 for Mac OS on March 30, 1998, introduced the now-standard revenue model of releasing the software for free, but with additional features of the Apple-provided MoviePlayer application that end-users could only unlock by buying a QuickTime Pro license code. Since the "Pro" features were the same as the existing ...
Flip4Mac from Telestream, Inc. was a digital media software for the macOS operating system. It was known for being the only QuickTime component for macOS to support Windows Media Video, and was distributed by Microsoft as a substitute after they discontinued their media player for Macintosh computers.
Windows Media Components for QuickTime, also known as Flip4Mac WMV Player by Telestream, Inc. was one of the few commercial products that allow playback of Microsoft's proprietary audio and video codecs inside QuickTime for macOS. It allowed playback of: Windows Media Video 7, 8, 9, SD and HD; Windows Media Audio 7, 8, 9, Professional and Lossless
DVD Studio Pro, a tool for DVD authoring; Final Cut Studio, a suite of professional video editing applications, which included Final Cut Pro; LiveType, a title animation utility; QuickTime Pro, an enhanced version of QuickTime featuring more advanced tools and some export tools; Shake, a digital compositing package used in the movie post ...
The following is a list of Mac software – notable computer applications for current macOS operating ... QuickTime – including its Player and QuickTime Pro ...
MacX – A display server implementation of the X11 windowing system for Macs [73] using the A/UX, [74] System 7, and Mac OS 8 and 9 operating systems. [73] Discontinued in 1998 following the transition to Mac OS X which had native support for X11. [citation needed] QuickTime – A multimedia architecture for streaming, encoding and transcoding ...
Apple released ProRes bundled with other pro codecs as a download for users with "qualifying copies of Final Cut Pro, Motion, or Compressor" installed, for OS X with QuickTime 7.6 and newer. [ 15 ] At the April 2010 NAB Show , Digital Video Systems launched the first Windows 7 platform with the ability to encode to all the varieties of Apple ...
Perian was a open-source QuickTime component that enabled Apple Inc.’s QuickTime to play several popular video formats not supported natively by QuickTime on macOS. [1] It was a joint development of several earlier open source components based on the multiplatform FFmpeg project's libavcodec and libavformat, as well as liba52 and libmatroska.