Play Windows media files on your Mac Saint Charles MO

Recently moved to the Mac and find your media files won't play? Here are a couple of solutions.

Local Companies

Allied Electronics Inc
(636) 925-8700
112 Point West Blvd Ste 500
Saint Charles, MO
Circuit City
(573) 446-6779
1901 Bernadette Dr
Columbia, MO
Central Electric Manufacturing
(573) 642-6811
7900 Old US Highway 54
Fulton, MO
Tana Wire Markers
(573) 796-3812
502 S Randolph St
California, MO
Unistrut Service Company of St Louis
(314) 994-0034
11680 Lackland Rd
Saint Louis, MO
Western Extralite Company
(816) 421-8404
1470 Liberty St
Kansas City, MO
A M T Electricial Accessories
(816) 781-4250
1550 E Old 210 Hwy
Liberty, MO
Universal Connector Co Inc
(314) 423-9968
10224 Bach Blvd
Saint Louis, MO
Westinghouse Electric Supply Co
(314) 533-4250
2820 Market St
Saint Louis, MO
Ba Supply
(660) 438-5141
31980 Highway 83
Warsaw, MO

provided by: 


If you've had your ear to the ground you know that increasing numbers of Windows users are switching to the Mac. And with that switch comes a measure of confusion (and yes, I mean in areas other than "What do you mean my new computer isn't subject to adware and spyware!?"). For the purposes of this Playlist entry, I'd like to focus specifically on media file compatibility-making files you had on your PC play on your Mac.

Sure as shootin', when a friend or relative hops the fence to the greener grass that is the Mac, I get a message along these lines:

Help! I've managed to move my beloved movie files from my PC to the new Mac you talked me into, but none of the movies will play. Or they'll play but show only a white screen. I'm switching back to a PC if you don't help me right now!

And my reply is this:

You're almost certainly trying to play Windows media files. Those files aren't natively supported by QuickTime, but you can force QuickTime (and any Mac media applications that use QuickTime's technology, which is just about all of them) to play them by downloading and installing the free Windows Media Components for QuickTime. Do this and you should be good to go.

If the files still won't play, beetle across the Web and grab a copy of the just-as-free Perian. With Perian installed QuickTime (and its related applications) can play AVI, DIVX, FLV, MKV, GVI, VP6, and VFW files. Specific video types include MS-MPEG4 v1 & v2, DivX, 3ivx, H.264, Sorenson H.263, FLV/Sorenson Spark, FSV1, VP6, H263i, VP3, HuffYUV, FFVHuff, MPEG1 & MPEG2 Video, Fraps, Snow, NuppelVideo, Techsmith Screen Capture, and DosBox Capture. Specific supported audio types include Windows Media Audio v1 & v2, Flash ADPCM, Xiph Vorbis (in Matroska), and MPEG Layer I & II Audio, True Audio, DTS Coherent Acoustics, and Nellymoser ASAO.

And that should do it.

Ah, but what about the obscure audio file types such as FLAC, Ogg Vorbis, or .ape (Monkey Audio)? Call on Max. Yet another freebie (though contributions are welcome), Max can read and write over 20 compressed and uncompressed audio formats.


Read article at Macworld.com

Rss   Delicious   Digg   Add To My Yahoo   Add To My Google   Bookmark   Search Plugin

Topics:
Advertising Family Home Services Real Estate Resources
Business Services Fashion Industrial Goods & Services Retail & Consumer Services
Career Financial Services Insurance Software
Cars Food & Beverage Internet Technology
Computer Hardware Franchise Legal Telecommunications
Construction Health Miscellaneous Trade Shows
Education Holidays Nightlife Travel
Entertainment Home Appliances Online Database Weddings
Environmental Home Electronics Pets World History