Je vais laisser quelques documents répondre à ma place:
Extrait du site web d'HeroineWarrior, qui font une lib quicktime4Linux:
Be aware of one thing: Quicktime for Linux won't read any of the movies you download from the internet. Quicktime is a wrapper for many different kinds of compression formats. What you know as "Quicktime 4" is really a distribution of many compression formats not found in previous versions of Quicktime
Extrait du faq de mplayer:
Q: Is there a hint on how to watch QuickTime and RealMedia movies in MPlayer?
A: There's no way to do it. Therefore these formats deserve to die in flames. Theoretically you can reverse engineer Real codecs built for Linux (they are available as .so files), but in practice that's really difficult, even if you know how the compiler used by Real is making assembler code. As for QuickTime, it's possible to play some old movies and this capability will be added to mplayer soon, but newer clips are all Sorenson encoded, and that codec is built-in deep in the QT executable, there's no way to use it.
Et enfin, le meilleur et le plus drole/triste pour la fin, extrait du faq Quicktime du site d'Apple:
Q: Which platforms are supported by QuickTime 5?
A: QuickTime is a truly cross-platform technology. It supports Mac OS 7.5.5 and later, Mac OS X, Windows 95, Windows 98, Windows ME, Windows 2000, and Windows NT 4.0.
Enfin voilà quoi.. le mieux c'est encore de boycotter..
[^] # Re: Je sais pas lire...
Posté par Anonyme . En réponse à la dépêche Quel avenir pour Netscape, QuickTime et Java ?. Évalué à 0.
Extrait du site web d'HeroineWarrior, qui font une lib quicktime4Linux:
Be aware of one thing: Quicktime for Linux won't read any of the movies you download from the internet. Quicktime is a wrapper for many different kinds of compression formats. What you know as "Quicktime 4" is really a distribution of many compression formats not found in previous versions of Quicktime
Extrait du faq de mplayer:
Q: Is there a hint on how to watch QuickTime and RealMedia movies in MPlayer?
A: There's no way to do it. Therefore these formats deserve to die in flames. Theoretically you can reverse engineer Real codecs built for Linux (they are available as .so files), but in practice that's really difficult, even if you know how the compiler used by Real is making assembler code. As for QuickTime, it's possible to play some old movies and this capability will be added to mplayer soon, but newer clips are all Sorenson encoded, and that codec is built-in deep in the QT executable, there's no way to use it.
Et enfin, le meilleur et le plus drole/triste pour la fin, extrait du faq Quicktime du site d'Apple:
Q: Which platforms are supported by QuickTime 5?
A: QuickTime is a truly cross-platform technology. It supports Mac OS 7.5.5 and later, Mac OS X, Windows 95, Windows 98, Windows ME, Windows 2000, and Windows NT 4.0.
Enfin voilà quoi.. le mieux c'est encore de boycotter..