Learn a quick and simple way to rotate videos you have taken vertically using Apple's iMovie, or Quicktime Pro. Joe Aimonetti MacFixIt Editor Joe is a seasoned Mac veteran with years of experience on ...
Video playback problems -- more solutions An inability to properly playback videos continues to be the biggest problem facing users who upgrade to QuickTime 7.4. As previously reported, some movies ...
If you are a Mac user and iMovie, or any other fancy video editing app, confuses you, there is a simpler option for editing videos: QuickTime Player. Developed by Apple and included by default on ...
While allowing videos to run on a computer seems par for the course these days, that first QuickTime beta represented an enormous leap forward in 1991 — and cemented Apple’s position as a ...
QuickTime is one of those great little pack-in apps that does more than you expect. For example, it plays video, but it can also record your screen. Our friends over at How-To Geek also remind us that ...
When Apple released QuickTime X with Mac OS X Snow Leopard, it seemed like little more than another version of QuickTime with a new User Interface. In reality though, there are quite a few features ...
Jake Peterson is Lifehacker’s Tech Editor, and has been covering tech news and how-tos for nearly a decade. His team covers all things technology, including AI, smartphones, computers, game consoles, ...
Say what you will about the QuickTime X framework and player introduced in Mac OS X 10.6 — it's crazy speedy on multicore machines, it provides the foundation for next-generation features, it lets you ...
At some point, most Mac users have probably whiled away a few company minutes watching Apple’s QuickTime movie trailers. But QuickTime can do much more than just bring you the latest Spider-Man 3 ...
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 ...
So I am in the middle of a project that I need to scour my archive videos and use a number of clips from them. Unfortunately, these files are pretty large so I'd rather just segment out some rough ...
Of course, this is the same movie file. Quicktime X removes the black bars (I don't mind), but some usable content gets cropped. That doesn't seem to happen on all videos. Only when there are blacks ...