One side note since it's not always clear. There are two library folders on the Mac, a global one and one that belongs to your account. If you put stuff in the top level global one it will be available to all users on your system. If you put it in the Library folder in /Users/YourName then it will only be available when YourName is logged in. This is handy if more than one person will be using the computer. You can make an account for each one and all the preferences and settings will be specific to whomever is logged in.

CB

Steven M. Sawczyn wrote:
It's not actually an application, it's a component. You simply copy it to the /library/components folder and you're all set. There's another possible folder into which this component can be copied, within the user's home/library folder, but I'm not finding it on my account.

Hope this helps,

Steve

On Oct 15, 2007, at 8:21 PM, VaShaun Jones wrote:

I downloaded what I think was the right stuff, but I can't find the application. What do I need to have and what do I do with it once I get it?
On Oct 14, 2007, at 11:16 PM, Darcy Burnard wrote:

You can find the ogg quicktime components here.
http://www.xiph.org/quicktime/
Darcy

On 14-Oct-07, at 10:35 PM, Steven M. Sawczyn wrote:

Now that I'm finally getting used to iTunes, I find that it can't play .ogg files. Unfortunately for me, much of my music library was encoded in .ogg. Is there a way to play ogg files in iTunes? It doesn't look like iTunes supports plugins, or anything of that nature. Assuming it's not possible, is there a way to easily convert the ogg files to something iTunes will accept? Worst case, is there another player I can use -- I'd prefer to use one player, but if that's not doable, I'll do whatever's best.

Thanks,

Steve









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