Very kind of you Esther to supply all this information - I'm just simply trying 
to find the simplest way to play DAISY files on this Mac, rather than buying 
yet another piece of hardware; interesting though to understand a bit more 
about Quick Time -

Andy
On 22 May 2014, at 21:56, Esther <[email protected]> wrote:

> Hi Andy, Travis, and Others,
> 
> I'm pretty sure that smil files were only supported under QuickTime 7 (the 
> version of QuickTime that came with Mac installations up through Snow 
> Leopard, and which is replaced by QuickTime X on all current Mac operating 
> systems).  They aren't supported under QuickTime X.  And in the latest 
> versions of QuickTime 7 that you can separately download, I believe you 
> couldn't get web browser plug-in support for smil files unless you also 
> installed a third party program called Perian.  Only locally played smil 
> files with proper configuration  and no encryption would work with QuickTime 
> 7, and if you wanted to stream smil files through a web browser plug-in you 
> had to install Perian for the latest version of QuickTime 7. 
> 
> Mountain Lion comes with QuickTime X. QuickTime 7 can be separately 
> downloaded and installed, following Apple's Knowledge Base article:
> http://support.apple.com/kb/ht3678
> 
> There is an old post in the archives about using AppleScripts to speed up 
> playback of podcasts on the Mac using QuickTime 7.  I'll just paste in the 
> information about the QuickTime 7 slider controls:
> 
> iTunes can't change the speed of playback, but VLC and QuickTime Player can.  
> The version of QuickTime Player that was used by default before Snow Leopard, 
> and which is now called QuickTime Player 7, has an A/V (audio/visual) control 
> window.  You show or hide it with the shortcut Command-K, and there are 
> sliders that let you adjust playback speed, along with volume, balance, 
> treble, bass, pitch, along with video brightness, color, and tint.  This is 
> AppleScriptable, so what I do is use a pair of AppleScripts to switch between 
> playing a track in iTunes and Quick Time Player 7.  
> 
> I haven't been using QuickTime 7 with smil files, so someone would have to 
> check this.
> 
> HTH.  Cheers,
> 
> Esther
> 
> 
> On May 22, 2014, at 6:33 AM, Andy Collins wrote:
> 
>> I just tried to open a smil file on this Mac, but it reported that it didn't 
>> recognise the file type; this is under Mountain Lion -
>> 
>> Andy
>> On 22 May 2014, at 13:27, Travis Siegel wrote:
>> 
>>> I don't know about newer versions of osx, but it used to be, that with 
>>> quicktime (I don't think it was a pro only option) you could simply open 
>>> the smil file for the daisy book in question, and quicktime would handle 
>>> the book just fine.  This assumes of course, there's no encryption to deal 
>>> with, and the smil file was properly configured.  I discovered this by 
>>> accident way back in thtiger days when reading the hunt for red october 
>>> which I had purchased on cd from brilliance audio.  Since I'd purchased the 
>>> mp3 cd, I copied it all to the computer, and went to see what was in the 
>>> folder.  I found the smil file, clicked, (more out of interest than 
>>> anything else) and quicktime opened it right up, and gave me the list of 
>>> chapters, all in their proper order.
>>> I don't use daisy format much, so I don't know if either quicktime or osx 
>>> has changed this behavior, but just something for those who may be able to 
>>> use this solution.
>>> 
>> 
> 
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