![]() Note: Wayne Rasband has implemented similar changes to the built-in QuickTime movie player in ImageJ. Works under OS X and JVM 1.4+ and QuickTime for Java 6.1+. Original code by Wayne Rasband updated by Jeff Hardin for newer implementations of QTJ. QuickTime plugins available on the ImageJ web siteÄescription: This plugin played a QuickTime movie in a window with a standard movie controller. (d) May 2014: New versioning of the JVM and QuickTime necessitated an update for newest Mavericks (Mac OS X 10.9) machines. This means that for QTJava calls to function after updating to QuickTime for Windows 7.2 or higher, you must manually replace the QTJava.zip file associated with each older JVM. Apple's automatic update software for QuickTime only updates the QTJava.zip file associated with the newest version of the Java Virtual Machine installed. 2007: The latest update to QuickTime (7.2) can result in non-functional QuickTime for Java when a Windows machine has more than one version of the Java Runtime Environment (JRE) or the Java Development Kit (JDK). Downloading the QuickTime 7.2 updater as a standalone application at and reinstalling the QuickTime 7.2 update seems to fix this problem on the occasional machine I have encountered that displays this behavior. The latter overwrites some newer QTJ files that are installed as part of the QuickTime 7.2 update. 2007: The latest update to QuickTime (7.2) can result in non-functional QuickTime for Java when a Mac was updated first using the QuickTime 7.2 updater and then the OS X 10.4.10 combined updater. In addition to the book, Chris is a really cool guy and incredibly helpful to the QuickTime for Java developer community. An invaluable resource is Chris Adamson's book, QuickTime for Java: A Developer's Notebook (O'Reilly). I have rewritten a ton of code to allow my plugins to work on newer Macs. (a) Changes to the underlying architecture of QuickTime for Java broke many pieces of code under Mac OS X when using JMV 1.4+ and QTJ 6.1+. Additional instructions can be found here on the ImageJ web site. Windows users must install QuickTime 7 and copy QTJava.zip to the Java extensions folder (ImageJ\jre\lib\ext). Requires both QuickTime and QuickTime for Java. (3) QuickTime plugins require that QuickTime for Java (QTJ) is installed on your computer. The 4d_Plugins.jar file has been updated. Try the most recent versions of the plugins on this site if you are having trouble. (3) July 2011: Recent Java updates required changes to the version checking code in these plugins. ![]() (2) OS X Yosemite and later no longer does an install of QuickTime for Java. Quicktime for Java does not work at all on Windows systems running in 64-bit mode. ![]() This means that you must be running ImageJ in 32-bit mode. It does not function on 64-bit installations of ImageJ. (1) Quicktime for Java has long been deprecated by Apple. Wayne is a tireless servant of the biomedical imaging community. Thanks to Wayne Rasband (NIH) for writing the base code for ImageJ, and for hosting and annotating plugins. Many Quicktime plugins for ImageJ can be found on the ImageJ plugins page at the ImageJ website.
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