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 Posted by sbt on 10/18/05 22:35 
In article <dj3srf$hii$3@mughi.cs.ubc.ca>, Dave Martindale 
<davem@cs.ubc.ca> wrote: 
 
> Helpful Harry <helpful_harry@nom.de.plume.com> writes: 
>  
> >It's one of the limitations that Apple have decided to put into the 
> >free version of QuickTime. If you pay to upgrade it to the Pro version 
> >you get full-screen playback (among a few other things). This is no 
> >different to many other companies that have a limited "free" version 
> >and a pay-for "pro" version. 
>  
> It's also apparently a recent change.  I can remember when Quicktime 
> player would do full-screen with CNTL-3.  It was an obvious extension 
> to CNTL-0 for half size, CNTL-1 for normal size, and CNTL-2 for double 
> size - which still work. 
>  
>  Dave 
 
Not that recent -- I believe it was at the move from QT3 to QT4 
(predating OS X). 
 
Again, it is not a limitation of QuickTime, but of the "free" QuickTime 
Player application -- you can write any number of applications that 
call the QuickTime APIs and present movies full-screen without 
upgrading to Pro. Why they put this limitation on the player app is 
something only the honchos at Apple could tell you. 
 
--  
Spenser
 
  
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