On Jan 6, 12:34 pm, .g IO° <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> to deliver quicktime content on your iphone you need to make 3 different
> versions (.mov, .m4v and 3gp) of the movie file, and use a reference file to
> point to the right format.
>
> You can find out more
> herehttp://developer.apple.com/documentation/QuickTime/Conceptual/QT7-2_U...
>
> I suggest using quicktime pro to make the relevant formats.
You don't *have* to. But it works much better when a single site is
shared between PC viewers, iPhone on WiFi viewers and iPhone on EDGE
viewers.
A slashed play symbol means that the video exceeds the iPhone's specs.
Not all QuickTime videos can be played by an iPhone. iTunes or
QuickTime Pro can convert videos to the correct format (in iTunes,
right-click and choose Convert for iPod/iPhone).
BONUS:
"m4v" is not a particular video format; it's just a nonstandard
extension that Apple uses to mark MPEG-4 containers with videos,
usually ones that are suitable for the iPod/iPhone (iTunes associates
itself with m4v files where QuickTime Player takes mov files, so
moving a m4v to an iPod takes less effort because iTunes opens and
imports it). That said, m4v files are .mp4 container files with their
extension changed and, as such, they may a) not contain video, b)
contain video in a codec or format unsupported by the iPod or iPhone.
So keep an eye on what you're doing.
- ∞
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