Newer QuickTime releases require Apple Application Support to work properly. To find the correct classID for unknown QuickTime versions, try running strings QuickTimeInstaller.exe | egrep '\. With each QuickTime release, the classID for the registry check and uninstall command changes. Note that because Apple Application Support is shared between iTunes and QuickTime, this package expects its MSI in %SOFTWARE%\Apple\AppleApplicationSupport-%PKG_VERSION%.msi.
![quicktime download 7.3.1 quicktime download 7.3.1](https://climateever.weebly.com/uploads/1/2/4/9/124901565/737435532.png)
If you're not bothering with iTunes, this untested modification of a current Apple Application Support package might work with 2.3.6 as shipped in QuickTime 7.7.8. Right-click each MSI and check the Details tab to find the internal version, then update %QT_INTERNAL_VER% and your Apple Application Support package, as appropriate. To deploy a new QuickTime release, start by updating %PKG_VERSION%, then create a new directory %SOFTWARE\Apple\QuickTime-%PKG_VERSION% and extract the new installer there. This means it's a good idea to keep the old MSIs around. To avoid the tedious process of looking up new ClassIDs / GUIDs each time you deploy a new QuickTime, this package is written to remove by referencing the original MSI. If you also distribute iTunes, then you only care about QuickTime.msi if you don't distribute iTunes, you also need AppleApplicationSupport.msi. You'll end up with three MSIs and one EXE. In that directory, run QuickTimeInstaller.exe /extract (or unpack it with an appropriate file archiver). To use this definition, download QuickTime and place it into %SOFTWARE%\Apple\QuickTime-7.7.8. You should generally use the one provided in the iTunes article, but if you're not deploying iTunes, a package for 2.3.6 is also included here for your convenience.
#Quicktime download 7.3.1 install#
If you're going to install both, they should depend on a separate package instead of both trying to install & remove it therefore, this definition requires a separate Apple Application Support package. QuickTime requires Apple Application Support.
#Quicktime download 7.3.1 mp4#
I don't see why the MP4 option doesn't just have the same encoder options that the quicktime container uses.This is a silent installer for QuickTime.Ĭurrent iTunes releases don't seem to install correctly from the fortunately, unpacking it to get MSIs a'la iTunes is simple.
![quicktime download 7.3.1 quicktime download 7.3.1](https://www.windowsdigitals.com/wp-content/uploads/QuickTime-Player-Free-Download-for-Windows-10-64-bit-Latest-Version.png)
What I end up having to do is encode to Quicktime H264, then I open it again and export as MP4 but with a video passthrough - it's such a pain to do this on a lot of clips. It seems to me that it's because of the Quicktime with H264 slider, which looks like it does some sort of variable bitrate. Sometimes I actually encode to mpeg-1 instead and that's not right, I shouldn't have to resort to using an older codec to get rid of blockiness but I actually get better results.
#Quicktime download 7.3.1 movie#
Also if I use Quicktime's movie to mp4 with H264 instead of movie to quicktime with H264, the movie turns out worse (very blocky at points). I find a lot of movies come out desaturated.
![quicktime download 7.3.1 quicktime download 7.3.1](https://i.pinimg.com/originals/51/ff/52/51ff523776b4fb64d9b1fc97420092f8.png)
I wonder if the H264 update improves encoding performance. Let Windows users pay for Quicktime Pro but give us Mac users it for nothing.
![quicktime download 7.3.1 quicktime download 7.3.1](https://4.bp.blogspot.com/-QUhF91w339c/Uw2QpP7HgaI/AAAAAAAABas/OxjCUroiv-E/s1600/QuickTime+Pro.png)
You'd think that Apple would do these things so that it's more beneficial to be on the Mac side. Now the wait until all the Pro features just come free with Quicktime.