![]() I guess the bottom line is that you need to check with the recepient what their needs really are, and if they are flexible on format. I actually do most of my broadcast delivery with the QuickTime H.264 option, and I'm on a PC. One clear option in this regard would be to use H.264 as the codec this is either available by selecting H.264 as the Format (which creates an MP4 and has quite a few configurable options) or by selecting QuickTime as the Format (this creates an MOV, but isn't quite as configurable). Top 6 QuickTime Alternatives for the Computer VLC Media Player If you want a QuickTime alternative for Windows, VLC comes as the first recommendation. That said, if they don't need to edit the file, or archive it, or are going to be recompressing the file for broadcasting (through some sort of play-out server), then there are other high-quality options you might potential use that are already available in Pr, don't require a codec download and installation, and will create much smaller delivery files. Top 10 QuickTime Alternatives VLC Media Player PotPlayer Aiseesoft Blu-ray Player SMPlayer RealPlayer MiniTool MovieMaker MX Player PlayerXtreme Media Player GPlayer KM Player Part 1. They both provide a large, high-quality, able-to-be-edited, suitable-for-broadcast, ready-for-archive video file. I suggested DNxHD, because doughnuts-to-doughnuts, it's pretty similar in quality and function to ProRes the compression type they both use is the same. ![]() Well, there are lots of codec choices and format options in Pr that would potential satisfy any delivery requirement-but we really don't know what your delivery requirement is.
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