A powerful multimedia technology with a built-in media player, QuickTime Player for Mac lets you view Internet video, HD movie trailers, and personal media in a wide range of file formats. And it lets you enjoy them in remarkably high quality. What is QuickTime Player? It’s a multimedia platform. Video from your digital camera or mobile phone. A movie on your Mac or PC. A media clip on a website.
No matter what you're watching or where you're watching it, QuickTime technology makes it all possible. It’s a sophisticated media player.
QuikTime player converts certain files before playing them – QuickTime Player version 10 should convert the video to a format it can play. If QuickTime player lacks the ability to convert MP4 video or you fail to play MP4 video with How to Install and Run QuickTime 7 Pro on Mac OS X El Capitan? QuickTime is an extensible multimedia framework developed by Apple Inc., capable of handling various formats of digital video, picture, sound, panoramic images, and interactivity. First made in 1991, the latest Mac version, QuickTime X, is currently available on Mac OS X Snow.
With its simple design and easy-to-use controls, QuickTime Player makes everything you watch even more enjoyable. Its clean, uncluttered interface never gets in the way of what you’re watching. Want to speed through a movie or slow things down? A handy slider lets you set playback from 1/2x to 3x the normal speed. And you can search through individual movie frames quickly. It’s advanced video technology.
QuickTime features advanced video compression technology called H.264 to deliver brilliant, crisp HD video using less bandwidth and storage. So you’ll experience pristine video quality wherever you watch your movies or videos. It’s a flexible file format. QuickTime lets you do more with your digital media.
With QuickTime 7 Pro, you can convert your files to different formats and record and edit your work. Third-party plug-ins extend QuickTime technology in many different directions. And QuickTime streaming solutions let you stream your media across the Internet.
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Stacks A really neat way to manage files. Stacks keeps your desktop free of clutter by automatically organizing your files into related groups.
Arrange by kind to see images, documents, spreadsheets, PDFs, and more sort themselves. You can also group your work by date. And if you tag files with project-specific metadata, like client names, sorting by stacks becomes a powerful way to manage multiple jobs. To scrub through a stack, use two fingers on a trackpad or one finger on a Multi-Touch mouse. To access a file, click to expand the stack, then open what you need.
Screenshots Screenshots are now a snap. With macOS Mojave, all the controls you need to grab any type of screenshot are one simple shortcut away. Just launch the new Screenshot utility or press Shift-Command-5. An easy-to-use menu includes new screen-recording tools and options for setting a start timer, showing the cursor, and even choosing where you’d like to save your screenshots. Take a screenshot and a thumbnail of it animates to the corner of the screen.
![For For](http://cdn.osxdaily.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/relaunch-finder-mac-os-x.jpg)
Leave it there to automatically save it to the destination you’ve chosen. You can drag it directly into a document or click it to mark it up and share it right away — without having to save a copy.
It’s more than easy; it’s clutter-free. Continuity Camera Take a photo right to your Mac.
![Player Player](http://cdn.osxdaily.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/quicktime-player-7-mac-os-x.jpg)
Now you can use your iPhone to shoot or scan a nearby object or document and have it automatically appear on your Mac. Just choose Insert a Photo from the File menu. You can take a photo of something on your desk and instantly see it in your Pages document. Or scan a receipt, and a straightened version is immediately available in the Finder as a PDF. Continuity Camera works in the Finder, Mail, Messages, Notes, Pages, Keynote, and Numbers. It’s another way iPhone and Mac just click.