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 ...
You've probably used the QuickTime Player app to play back a video, but under the hood, it's a surprisingly sophisticated tool. Here's how it started, and how to get the most out of it. If you've ever ...
Apple's QuickTime is a 30-year-old technology but is still supported by Apple. Here's how to use the QuickTime Player included with macOS. Before the internet, and long before streaming, there was ...
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, ...
Want to quickly edit a movie file but can’t be bothered battling with the complexity of iMovie or Final Cut Pro? Here’s how to use QuickTime Player, included with every Mac, to trim movie files and ...
As a newish Mac user, you may wonder what allows your computer to display pictures and play music and movies. Wonder no longer. This bit of media magic is performed by something called QuickTime.
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 ...
QuickTime Player X, the version of the application that shipped With Snow Leopard, stripped out the many editing features found in its predecessor (QuickTime Player Pro 7). With the version of ...