you also cannot modify the qt installer and if you have an installer for your own software it must also startup the qt installer. again pretty invasive. you must also submit a copy of your work to apple for verification of all this stuff...
I have just started putting 'requires quicktime' on cds instead of the installer since i hate to force someone to update their quicktime unless they want to. for folks that are using multimedia cdroms quicktime is pretty prevalent and its easy to download if its not there.
i found no work around for playing (and being able to pause and restart playing) audio files not imported into the stack w/o quicktime or wmp installed. documentation alludes to being able to play wav files w/o qt, but that doesn't work.
cheers,
jeff
Jeffrey Reynolds 6620 Michaels Dr Bethesda, MD 20817 301.469.8562 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Feb 7, 2005, at 3:25 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
QuickTime is not an application. It is a framework and a set of drivers which needs to run as part of the operating system in order to function properly.
A better approach would be to obtain the needed permission to bundle the QuickTime installer with your app. Perhaps that installer could be stored in the custom property? Depends on your license from Apple.
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