

Supports image of 22 image formats including PSP, PCD, PSD, JPG, JPEG 2000, PNG, GIF,TIFF, PCX and more.
J2K CODEC FOR MAC PRO

Besides you can change the picture order.
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It may have seemed like that in Mac centric environments, because all those ProApps were all relying on the same QT components.
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What I'm trying to say is that it is not like you install one specific codec to an entire system. So i you install MC on a Mac, it features the ProRes codec (and XDCAM nand J2K and P2) for MC, but that is not a QT component. these codecs are installed on the system, in a way that services Squeeze, but these codecs are then not available to just any application on that system. Or if you install Squeeze, that comes with a stack of codecs, like MainConcept 264 and Dolby Digital Pro (optional), but that does not mean that codec is also installed as a QT component. There is also an XDCAM QT codec component, and QT-based apps like FCP and compressor would need that to work with XDCAM media. MC has a native XDCAM codec, but if you install MC, it's not like any other application on that Mac can now access the XDCAM codec.
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(This is the "Avid quicktime codec" that anyone can download on Compare it with something like XDCAM. But there's also somethinh called the "Avid DNxHD Quicktime codec", which is a QT component, which gives any QT-based application access to this codec. That resides somewhere in MC so it can work with it natively. Easy to tell because if you installed the ProRes QT codec on an older MC, it would not give you ProRes as a native codec in MC, only when doing a Custom QT expots (which is just using the QT encoder).Īlso, look at Avid's DNxHD codec. It does not mean that any non-QT-based application can access that codec. If you install the ProRes codec via FCP or Compressor / ProApps on a Mac, that installs a QT component with that codec and all those apps use that QT component to access the codec. You somehow seems to think that a codec is its own entity on a machine, but it is not. Robert, please play nicely, we're all trying to help each other out here. The most likely choices would be OS X itself or MC. So if a Media Composer equipped Mac does not have one of the Pro apps or QTPro, but has ProRes in some form, then something else installed it.

There is no immaculate conception for codecs. Or perhaps, "I don't know." That question is/was, "Are you saying MC installs ProRes on Macs?". I asked Job a simple question that can be answered with Yes or No. Hope this explains it.Īll of your latest answer is superfluous. In the end you generate a ProRes MOV without the QT ProRes encoder. Once you generate the ProRes MXF media in Avid, during Same As Source export it rewraps the media stream in to the QT/MOV container. This is because Avid uses MXF container instead of QT container internally. Avid does not need or install the QT Prores encoding portion of the codec that normally accompanies a paid version of the Pro Apps. You are looking at this via Quicktime Prores encoding point of view.
