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Elgato Turbo.264 hardware encoder for Mac OS X connects via USB 2.0 and presents itself as three QuickTime components. Although intended for Elgato's EyeTV software, it will work with any software on Mac OS X using the QuickTime framework, such as Final Cut. The maximum resolution supported is 800x600.
The team released early versions of the port, called OSXBMC, [5] intended for eventual full integration into Mac OS X. [2] The developers continued collaborating with the Linux-based XBMC project until May 21, 2008. Due to different goals from the XBMC team, they forked the code that became Plex, and published it on GitHub.
Compressor (Mac OS X) MPEG Video Wizard DVD (Windows) ProCoder (Windows) QuickTime Pro (Mac OS X, Windows) Roxio Creator (Windows) Sorenson Squeeze; Telestream Episode (Mac OS X, Windows) TMPGEnc (Windows) Wowza Streaming Engine with included Wowza Transcoder feature (Linux, Mac OS X, Windows) Zamzar - Premium service (Web application) Zencoder ...
Quick Sync was added in November 2014 with version 0.10.0, while NVENC and the VCE became supported in version 1.2.0, released in December 2018. [8] (HandBrake supports both the VCE and the newer VCN, but its interface only mentions the VCE by name, even if VCN hardware is present or a codec is being used that is too new to have VCE support.)
Boxee, made by startup company Boxee Inc., is a freeware and partly open source software cross-platform media center and entertainment hub with social networking features that is a commercial fork of XBMC software. [8] [9] [10] Boxee supported Windows, Linux, and OS X, with the first Alpha made available on 16 June 2008. Boxee as a company was ...
QuickTime 7.6.6 is available for OS X, 10.6.3 Snow Leopard until 10.14 Mojave, as 10.15 Catalina will only support 64-bit applications. [78] There is a 7.7 release of QuickTime 7 for OS X, but it is only for Leopard 10.5. [79] QuickTime 7.7.6 is the last release for Windows XP Service Pack 2 or 3.
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Mac OS X 10.0 (code named Cheetah) is the first major release of macOS, Apple's desktop and server operating system. It was released on March 24, 2001, for a price of $129 after a public beta. Mac OS X was Apple's successor to the classic Mac OS.