
11-06-2012, 04:11 PM
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'ZZ9 Plural Z Alpha'
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Join Date: Dec 2011
Location: Brisbane
Posts: 1,017
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Thanks to one and all for your assistance. The slow reply is due to being out all day. Apologies if the amount of information that I provided isn't specific enough. Computers are not my area...I am still using Vista (I can hear the laughter all over the forum).
Quote:
Originally Posted by Omaroo
Stu - give us a hand here. What format are your video files in? Macs are, uhmmm, rather good at reading and playing video and graphics - but there are proprietary video codecs you may need to install on a Mac first depending on what you used to create them on your Windows machine.
As far as MS Word-based docs, Macs need either MS Office or Apple Pages (works with Word documents beautifully and is way cheaper and in my mind far nicer to use) loaded too. Do schools load these applications? I'm guessing they do.
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Video files are created using Windows Movie Maker (more laughter) and end up as *.wmv files.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Poita
If I am giving people video files on a disc, I always include a copy of VLC for windows, OSX and linux on the disc, so they can install that if their videos don't play.
It pretty much plays anything without requiring codec downloads etc.
http://www.videolan.org/vlc/#download
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Omaroo
Yup 
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Thanks for the heads up. I will get familiar with what you have both suggested. Sounds like it will solve some compatability issues.
Quote:
Originally Posted by naskies
If they have Office for Mac OS X, then it's very likely they can open the MS Word docs
However, fine formatting in Word docs almost always gets messed up when transferring between Windows and Macs. Providing PDF documents is a safer option because how it looks on your computer will be the same as how it looks on another. Macs have a PDF viewer built-in - no need to download Acrobat Reader.
Videos in H264/MPEG4 format usually open up fine on recent Macs without any further software needed.
Having your videos in a format that can be directly loaded onto an iPad without transcoding would be handy too 
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My boy is in Prep and is already using an iPad. I have become a dinosaur. I will look into the file format needed so my vidoes will suit that product.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Colin_Fraser
OSX does not support *doc files. It can open some but does not handle some of the formatting options of Word.
I have Open Office on the mac but it does not convert perfectly all the time.
Best bet is to have Cutepdf on the Windows machine and print the files in .pdf format.
I have a Windows laptop and an iMac and found that is the easiest way of doing it.
I have had no trouble viewing video's on my iMac that I had created on my Windows machine. As Peter suggested, use VLC
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Cheers. *.pdf sounds like the easiest fix.
Again, thanks for your help. These suggestions will save people a lot of frustration when they can 'see' and use the files that will be provided.
Regards,
Stu.
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