How to Make a Quicktime Skin
Skinning your Quicktime files is a great way to make them jump off the screen. Especially now that video has become commonplace on web sites all over the Internet. The screencast will show you how to...
View ArticleQuicktime Broadcaster
Murphy’s going to demonstrate how to broadcast live video from your Mac. Quicktime Broadcaster is easy to set up, yet you can use it to serve large numbers of clients simultaneously. You can keep...
View ArticleQuicktime Title Page
Note: This requires Quicktime Pro. Admittedly, it’s frustrating that Apple doesn’t include Quicktime Pro with OS X. To be fair, you get iMovie with a Mac purchase, and that more than evens you out with...
View ArticleQuicktime Auto-Play and Auto-Close
If you distribute Quicktime content without embedding it in a web page you might want to apply a skin to your video. Murphy’s covered that before. The downside of the skin is that the controls don’t...
View ArticleBorderless Quicktime Playback
Making your movie play back without borders is a little simpler than creating a skin. All you need is a solid black image file, at least as large as your movie. And a text file. And your movie. Why...
View ArticleAdd Chapters Using Quicktime Pro
With Quicktime Pro you can add chapter markers to your movie and help viewers jump from one part to another with ease. The steps aren’t as friendly as iMovie – but you won’t have to import your video...
View ArticleQuicktime – Always on Top
You don’t need third party tools to keep your Quicktime movie always on top. Select your movie in Finder, hit Shift-Command-Y, and your movie opens in a Sticky. (The keyboard shortcut invokes an item...
View ArticleAirFoil Adds Features
Murphy uses AirFoil to send audio from a web browser to an Airport Express or an Apple TV. It’s great for listening to Pandora throughout the house, with various speakers all in sync. There’s an...
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