Trevor,
Thanks this was my fear of using MCI controls. apple seems to do a
good job of making sure it plays with most graphics and audio chip
sets so that these drivers issues are not too much of a problem. Hate
to get into having to do a lot of tech support with folks w/o
quicktime on PCs. When we require QT and they have it successfully
installed we have zero tech support (big thumbs up for Rev and QT!)
In the education market you dont make the big bucks to support tech
support like this, let alone the development time necessary for a
split development process like this so it may not be in the cards to
try this. May poke at it some to see how good/bad it works in general.
Thanks again for your experience with it!
cheers,
jeff
On Aug 13, 2007, at 1:00 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
We have an application that started out using QuickTime and MCI (QT
if available and it could open the file on Windows, MCI otherwise).
This worked well until some students started showing up with some
computers that would lock up when using MCI (any MCI, not just Rev).
I think it was Dell widescreen laptops but I don't remember exactly.
Unable to fix the issue with driver updates we ended up having to
create an external that used DirectShow for playback of files that QT
could not open on Windows.
This all happened earlier this year and there may be some new video
drivers that address the issue on those laptops and your target
audience may not even use them. Just something to keep in mind and
test for if you go the MCI route.
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