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Leopard Technical Notes
QuickTime applications can run on Mac OS X and Microsoft Windows. QuickTime content plays on Mac and Windows computers and on many handheld devices. Content can be served by progressive download from any web server or as real-time streams from streaming servers on all major operating systems. QuickTime supports dozens of file and compression formats for images, video, and audio.

A guided introduction and learning path for developers new to QuickTime.   Essential information for developers using QuickTime.   API references organized by framework.
QuickTime Topics
A multiplatform technology for creating, processing, and playing sound content.   C APIs for creating, delivering, and playing multimedia in Carbon applications.   Classes for creating and playing multimedia in Cocoa applications.

Resources for compressing and decompressing various media.   Guidance in creating reliable and intuitively usable multimedia programs.   The structure of QuickTime movies and movie files.

QuickTime technologies for high-level graphics support.   Techniques for importing and exporting images and multimedia formats.   QuickTime browser plug-in support for delivering multimedia from servers.

Components that interpret and manipulate media types such as audio and video.   Fundamental movie operations.   Resources for creating movie, track, and media structures.

Support for creating QuickTime components such as codecs and reassemblers.   Guidance for Windows programmers using QuickTime.   Real-time effects, filters, and transitions for images, movies, and applications.

The creation and viewing of photographically captured panoramas.    

View legacy documents, including technologies, features, products, APIs, and programming techniques that are no longer supported or have been superseded.