Macworld The late 1980s and early to mid-1990s were Apple’s weirdest and wildest era. Wedged between the triumph of the ...
December 2, 1991: Apple ships its first public version of the QuickTime player, bringing video to Mac users running System 7. Containing codecs for graphics, animation and video, QuickTime confirms ...
Do you have Apple QuickTime installed on your Windows PC? It’s time to remove it. There are known flaws that can be exploited relatively easily, and Apple has confirmed that it is no longer supporting ...
This past Thursday, The United States Department of Homeland Security issued an alert advising people running Apple’s QuickTime program on Windows computers to immediately uninstall the software.
Yet another program is joining Java 6 and Windows XP as big-name software you do not want running on your PC. Security firm Trend Micro and the U.S. Department of Homeland Security are advising all ...
Computer security experts are advising that Windows users should uninstall QuickTime from their computers immediately. That’s because Apple will no longer offer support for its QuickTime software on ...
The Department of Homeland Security's U.S. Computer Emergency Readiness Team today issued an alert recommending Windows users with QuickTime installed uninstall the software as new vulnerabilities ...
Removing problematic plug-ins to solve embedded media issues As we've been reporting for the past few days, problematic Internet plug-ins can cause problems when attempting to view embedded QuickTime ...
Fix for lack of sound after update We previously reported (earlier today) on an issue where sound does not play back in various video and audio files after updating to QuickTime 7.1. As described by ...
QuickTime was a breakthrough for Macs. Photo: Ste Smith/Cult of Mac July 8, 1991: The first QuickTime beta arrives, making it possible for people to play movies on their Macs for the first time, with ...