mrnabo Posted September 18, 2009 Share Posted September 18, 2009 This is a little grumble, but also a question about where i can find a replacement for Quicktime Pro. When cutting tracks I've mastered in Soundtrack Pro to videos, I used to use Quicktime Pro by stripping the audio from the original video, lining up my audio and then exporting the video in the correct format. I can't find a way to do that in Quicktime X. True you can trim, but pasting in audio from another file? Seems like there's no way. Because I went from Tiger to Snow Leopard (clean install), I've lost my old Quicktime Pro application - normally when you upgrade to SL, Quicktime Pro is stored in the utilities folder so you can continue using it. But it isn't there, so I need to find another quick way of cutting together my audio with video and exporting it as a web-ready version. Any ideas? I strongly dislike iMovie and it's new cumbersome way of editing, it's too slow for my needs, so I need something speedy... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RichardSX90 Posted September 18, 2009 Share Posted September 18, 2009 You can install Quicktime 7 in Snow Leopard. Insert your Snow Leopard DVD. Choose "Optional Installs". Install Quicktime 7. You'll then need to enter your original "Pro" serial number to access all the features. I agree with you about Quicktime X - definitely lacking in functions - maybe in the next update? Richard Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mrnabo Posted September 18, 2009 Author Share Posted September 18, 2009 That's great, thanks Richard, much appreciated. Yes, I hope they sort it out, Apple are going far too consumer-friendly for my liking, but I guess that's where the real money is and is definitely a market they need to crack. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RichardSX90 Posted September 18, 2009 Share Posted September 18, 2009 Thanks - Glad you got it working. Richard Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bscenefilms Posted September 18, 2009 Share Posted September 18, 2009 If you did an upgrade to 10.5, you should still have QT 7.x installed on your machine. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
cali316 Posted September 18, 2009 Share Posted September 18, 2009 I found myself in a similar situation a few days ago. Talk about a buzz kill... And as Richard pointed out, at least Apple gave us the option to install QT 7 if needed. After scouring the web as to why QT X was missing so many features, I came across this article. Interesting read about QT X and where it's heading. There is hope. http://arstechnica.com/apple/reviews/2009/08/mac-os-x-10-6.ars/6 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RichardSX90 Posted September 18, 2009 Share Posted September 18, 2009 Good news! Though it looks like we could be in for a long wait. Thanks for the info. Richard Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bmdaugherty Posted September 19, 2009 Share Posted September 19, 2009 I think the point of X is to begin a new. The features will come, but the quicktime framework is getting old. It's very powerful, but old. I think X is all new codebase, built for modern codecs. Give it time, and install QT7 Pro for the time being. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Kent Sandvik Posted September 19, 2009 Share Posted September 19, 2009 I think the point of X is to begin a new. The features will come, but the quicktime framework is getting old. It's very powerful, but old. I think X is all new codebase, built for modern codecs. Give it time, and install QT7 Pro for the time being. SnowLeopard has QT 10 and falls back to 7 for old codecs. Anyway, I think the issue here is not a framework with missing functionality, rather that the new QT Player does not have all the features that QT Player Pro had -- that's why the old one is shipping. iMovie could be used for more complex editing, too. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bmdaugherty Posted September 22, 2009 Share Posted September 22, 2009 Including QTP 7 is simply a transitional step. Once the new player is fully developed, we will see 7 disappear. It doesn't even come preinstalled unless you upgrade and had QTP on the computer prior to the update. Quicktime X is designed to support apple's new core technologies and should boost performance on every machine. Remember that QT was never really designed for the intel architecture. It was made to take advantage of the PPC architecture. Now, with the PPC-intel transition all but complete, starting a fresh code base with code that plays better with modern hardware and performs better in Snow Leopard is a no brainer. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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