QuickTime
The settings in the QuickTime panel affect the way movies are played back on your Mac, including movies that stream to you from a Web page and movies that you watch using QuickTime Player (Chapter 14).
You don’t even have to touch most of these settings, but here are a few worth tweaking:
Plug-In. The settings in this pane control the way your Web browser’s QuickTime plug-in works with streaming video. The “Play movies automatically” option, for example, tells the plug-in to start playing streaming movies as soon as they begin downloading (rather than waiting for an entire movie to download before starting).
Connection. The only important setting here is Connection Speed. Set it to match the actual speed and type of your Internet connection. Some streaming Quick- Time Web sites are set up with multiple versions of the same movie, each saved at a different size and frame rate. Based on your connection speed setting here, the QuickTime plug-in can automatically request the appropriately sized version of a movie for the best possible playback.
Music. Nothing to see here, folks. You’re supposed to choose a music synthesizer for playing back MIDI music files—but you have only one choice.
Media Keys. Media keys are supposed to be special passwords supported by QuickTime that unlock movies so you can watch them. As it turns out, nobody uses them.
Update. These controls provide an easy way to download the latest QuickTime software from Apple.
(The Registration button at the bottom ...
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