Smil. Panorama/Software/Quicktime. Jobs Says Flash Video Not Suitable for iPhone. Integrating QuickTime with Cocoa. Integrating QuickTime with Cocoa Pages: 1, 2, 3 Step Four: Completing the Project Setup Returning to Project Builder, the project setup is completed by organizing the source code and resource files. In addition to the template files that are provided when NSMovie_Example was created, I have already added files for the button images (Play.tiff and Pause.tiff) and the controller object (NSMovie_Example_Controller.m and NSMovie_Example_controller.h). To complete the project, I added three more files: QuickTime.Framework is a Cocoa framework that contains all of the headers and libraries needed to build, link, and execute a QuickTime-enabled application.
Time_Display_String.m is a C routine, borrowed from an existing application, that converts a number of seconds into an NSString that represents the movie's time in minutes and seconds. einsteins_legacy.mov is the movie that NSMovie_Example will play. Step Five: Completing the Source Code for NSMovie_Example_Controllers - (void) awakeFromNib. QuickTime Kit Programming Guide: Introduction to QuickTime Kit P. /trunk/Samples/SequenceGrabber/ (non-XSLT) Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger : Page 16. Back in early November of 2003, I introduced my Mac OS X 10.3 Panther review with some concerns about Apple's OS release cycle. It's strange to have gone from years of uncertainty and vaporware to a steady annual supply of major new operating system releases from Apple.
But do I really want to pay US$129 every year for the next version of Mac OS X? Worse, do I really want to deal with the inevitable upgrade hassles and 10.x.0 release bugs every single year? Is it worth it, or is a major OS upgrade every year simply too much, too often? In the end, I concluded that I was okay with yearly releases, but that some sort of adjustment for "normal" customers would be nice. If there's going to be any consumer backlash, it's not going to start with me.
So convinced was I of the inevitability of the Mac OS X yearly release juggernaut that I never even considered the possibility that relief from the $129-per-year Mac OS X tax might come in the form of an extra six-month wait for version 10.4.