| 07 Jul 2008 08:39 am |
Arealoser Guest | anonymous wrote:
qoute:
Hey there.
Just so happens I have the same camera and the same problem. In fact, I stumbled on your query after doing a Google search on this very issue. (I’m looking for a conversion tool myself.)
My preliminary findings suggest you need Quicktime Pro to handle the conversion. (You may know that the .mov format is QuickTime’s native format.) The good news is that QuickTime Pro costs only $29.99, so even though it’s not freeware it isn’t a budget buster, either.
Here’s a link that explains how to do the conversion under QuickTime Pro. Looks like it might be a little hairy:
http://www.2dreamers.com/tutorials/export_mov.shtml
Good luck!
lol ad spammers are getting good
heyyy... i downloaded that radtools and it’s not working for me. what do i do? it’s showing this error. and what quicktime app is that one guy talking about? | |
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| 19 Jul 2008 11:15 pm |
abc7 news Guest | This mov to avi converter is much smaller than this one
http://www.download.com/Pazera-Free-MOV-to-AVI-Converter/3000-2194_4-10798308.html?tag=lst-1&cdlPid=10798309 | |
| 20 Jul 2008 11:16 am |
Felicia Guest | The converter file from radgametools works awesome! | |
| 22 Jul 2008 10:46 am |
hamdish332 Guest | Thanks seg5 that is helpful  | |
| 02 Aug 2008 10:07 am |
biggerboo Guest | after conversion usin i get this message
Windows Media Player cannot play the file. The Player might not support the file type or might not support the codec that was used to compress the file.
what do i need to do ? | |
| 05 Aug 2008 03:48 am |
Wannabe Rep: 0  Joined: 23 Jul 2008 Posts: 84 OFFLINE | i found a good tool can convert MOV to SWF — Moyea Flash Video MX Pro ,if need ,u can google it. | |
| 06 Aug 2008 02:18 am |
Reshmi Guest | hii i want to run .mov file in flex3 without converting the file into .flv and without using netstream..
please help me....
reshmi | |
| 06 Aug 2008 02:19 am |
Reshmi Guest | hii i want to run .mov file in flex3 without converting the file into .flv and without using netstream..
please help me....
reshmi | |
| 13 Aug 2008 02:22 pm |
JEZ Guest | I’m new to moving making, however good with computers. I converted my .mov files with the RAD Tools program, however when they finished, they were in slow motion. What adjustments do I need to make when converting to make them look normal? Thanks. | |
| 14 Aug 2008 02:28 am |
Wannabe Rep: 0  Joined: 23 Jul 2008 Posts: 84 OFFLINE | a computer only need install a player, by of installing some plug-ins (codec can play a variety of formats of video files, without having to install so many players)
From here to download a plug-in, you can solve the problem.
QuickTime Player 6 | |
| 14 Aug 2008 02:31 am |
Wannabe Rep: 0  Joined: 23 Jul 2008 Posts: 84 OFFLINE | a computer only need install a player, by of installing some plug-ins (codec can play a variety of formats of video files, without having to install so many players)
From here to download a plug-in, you can solve the problem.
[url=http://www.video-to-flash.com/video_to_flash/welcometo_mxpro.php?pc=Flash+Video+MX+Pro+5&affid=]QuickTime | |
| 14 Aug 2008 07:33 am |
cool man Guest | Hey there.
Just so happens I have the same camera and the same problem. In fact, I stumbled on your query after doing a Google search on this very issue. (I’m looking for a conversion tool myself.)
My preliminary findings suggest you need Quicktime Pro to handle the conversion. (You may know that the .mov format is QuickTime’s native format.) The good news is that QuickTime Pro costs only $29.99, so even though it’s not freeware it isn’t a budget buster, either.
Here’s a link that explains how to do the conversion under QuickTime Pro. Looks like it might be a little hairy:
http://www.2dreamers.com/tutorials/export_mov.shtml
Good luck!
rofl thi is fun | |
| 21 Aug 2008 02:40 pm |
G.M.C. Guest | I haven’t tried the software mentioned above. I’m just coming across this page today when trying to convert .mov files from my new Kodak Easyshare camera for the first time.
I’ve used RealPlayer and Media Player Classic to view my short digital camera files before this, both free. Now I’m trying longer videos on a memory card for the first time. (Both of these are free, and M.P. Classic is very good for a free D.V.D. viewer - you don’t have to pay for upgrades to RealPlayer or WMV if you play videos on M.P.C.)
But the best actually is the latest QuickTime player. You can update if you have an old version. The quality is substantially better than with the other two media players I’ve tried. Many people post video on The Web, telling viewers to play it on QuickTime, because it is better, at least for .move files as they are the QuickTime’s own files, but some others are better on QuickTime I think.
I found 'Kate’s Video Cutter' and installed it, it’s free. I’ve tried one conversion, to W.M.V., for Windows Media Player, but the result is too bad - the quality is poor when the quality from a cheap digital camera is not great anyway.
I don’t know what the Kodak Easyshare model mentioned above is like for video capture. My Easyshare camera (C813) has the typical V.G.A. resolution for video capture which is probably the lowest acceptable resolution for most people. I guess the other model is the same if it’s a normal digital camera first, rather than a camcorder design, though the video capture might be improved if it has a CMOS sensor.
I’m also trying Movavi video converter version 6.3 It has very good options for conversion, though the free operation is only in a trail version, and then one would have to pay. I’m just trying my first conversion in my trial, from .mov to .wmv dvd quality, to see if it’s much better than the 'Kate’s' version.
I don’t think there are any .wmv dvd quality converter programs which are free after a trial.
OH DEAR. I’ve just viewed the file conversion which took over 30 minutes to convert a 58 second video. It came out as a Jpeg file, though I still can see I had selected from the 'convert to' list: WMV for Windows Media Player DVD quality (2 mbps).
How’s the Windows Media conversion quality with Movavi?
FirstlyMy digital camera produces really bright results in its video capture when there is a big difference in lighting - it chooses to show the darker parts well and the bright parts are strobes of light nearly. The whole frame cannot adjust, only part of it. Really bright light is well adjusted to, eg. outdoors in daytime, when it takes up the whole frame, but not otherwise.
The movavi conversion is much worse. The .mov file and original L.E.D. camera display are O.K. when the big variation in light comes - it’s not good but not too bad. Movavi has made it unwatchable.
But, aside from that, the quality is slightly improved from the .mov file where the lighting is uniform in the frames. And the movement is much improved, and some reproduction of lit objects are well improved. The lighting problem does make the whole video I’ve converted unwatchable though, and it’s in normal, indoor, daytime light. Just don’t capture near a window or open door!
Also, the trial is only a trial - movavi stamp “ Movavi trial version” in big writing which covers much of the frame during most of the video conversion. It can’t be removed.
I wouldn’t buy it, because it chooses not to convert the not too bad quality video pictures I have taken with a cheap camera. I’m not going to choose to limit myself to indoor videos which have me standing in front of and away from the light source only. | |
| 23 Aug 2008 09:27 am |
rsabri Guest | I WANT CONVERT MOV TO AVI FILE | |
| 24 Aug 2008 12:14 pm |
hohohogreengiant Guest | hi there,all you need to do is make ur quicktime the pro version and here is how peeps,open quicktime,then click on Edit, go to preferenes and then register, use the following information to register the product.Register To: Dawn M FredetteOrganization: Amin ComputersRegistration Code: 4UJ2-5NLF-HFFA-9JW3-X2KVdone | |
| 28 Aug 2008 11:37 am |
lici Guest | !!ATTENTION SEG 5!!
Thanks a bunch! I tried the RADTOOLS program to covert my .mov file downloaded from a kodak digcam and it works now.....thanks!! | |
| 05 Sep 2008 01:44 pm |
Stardust Guest | Martin11 wrote:
btw My camera is a Nikon Coolpic 7900, and the cheap basterds over at Nikon didn’t provide any video edition software, instead they advised me to purchase my own software.
hi - I’ve got exactly the same, it stitches every other Audio Visual file I have, and keeps the sound tracks - apart from the ones I produce on my own Nikon Cool Pix - where it looses the original sound. Any idea how to fix it ? How did you get on ? thanks. Colin | |
| 09 Sep 2008 02:15 pm |
Minutz Guest | can i use winzip to convert .mov into AVI? I think i heard someone say once thats what they use??
Thanks all... | |
| 10 Sep 2008 07:18 am |
metric Guest | ¿someone?
no, man, dont work. | |
| 13 Sep 2008 04:02 pm |
G.M.C. Guest | I haven’t tried the software mentioned above. I’m just coming across this page today when trying to convert .mov files from my new Kodak Easyshare camera for the first time.
I’ve used RealPlayer and Media Player Classic to view my short digital camera files before this, both free. Now I’m trying longer videos on a memory card for the first time. (Both of these are free, and M.P. Classic is very good for a free D.V.D. viewer - you don’t have to pay for upgrades to RealPlayer or WMV if you play videos on M.P.C.
But the best actually for many data movie files from The Web or hardware etc. is the latest QuickTime player. You can update if you have an old version. The quality is substantially better than with the other two media players I’ve tried. Many people post video on The Web, telling viewers to play it on QuickTime, because it is better, at least for .move files as they are the QuickTime’s own files, but some others are better on QuickTime I think.
I found 'Kate’s Video Cutter' and installed it, it’s free. I’ve tried one conversion, to W.M.V., for Windows Media Player, but the result is too bad - the quality is poor when the quality from a cheap digital camera is not great anyway.
I don’t know what the Kodak Easyshare model mentioned above is like for video capture. My Easyshare camera (C813) has the typical V.G.A. resolution for video capture which is probably the lowest acceptable resolution for most people. I guess the other model is the same if it’s a normal digital camera first, rather than a camcorder design, though the video capture might be improved if it has a CMOS sensor.
I’m also trying Movavi video converter version 6.3 It has very good options for conversion, though the free operation is only in a trial version, and then one would have to pay. I’m just trying my first conversion in my trial, from .mov to .wmv dvd quality, to see if it’s much better than the 'Kate’s' version.
I don’t think there are any .wmv dvd quality converter programs which are free after a trial. | |
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