A couple of days ago, I used Quick Time to watch a movie trailer. I have never used it in the 5 years that I have had this computer. Now, every time I try to watch a video, it automatically plays on the Quick Time viewer. How do I get back to having Windows Media Player as the default instead of Quick Time?
Call up the QuickTime player, then Edit > Preferences > QuickTime Preferences. In the dialog box that then comes up, select “File Type Associations” from the drop-down box, then click on the “File Types” button, and un-select whatever video types you don’t want QucikTime to play. (This sequence is for TT6; earlier verions may differ.)
Call up Windows’s Control Panel, select “Folder Options,” then click on the “File Types” tab. Scroll down to the file type you want to change (e.g., MPEG), click on the “Change” button, then select the player application you’d prefer to use.
Bill H. and Earthling, thanks for the quick replies. I did the Windows Media/Tool/Options/File types. The ones I wanted were checked as they should have been, so I unchecked and then rechecked them and all is fine. Thanks again, I owe you guys a beer.
Whenever I access a Quicktime file (like a movie trailer), I find that Quicktime has turned itself back on it the startup menu. How do you stop it from doing that?
Actually, it’ll be a wonderful day when we can all use open standards like MPEG-4 (which is based on QuickTime), and grind proprietary systems like Windows Media and RealAudio into the ground, but sadly it will be a while… especially if Bill Gates has anything to do with it.
I’m confused about the question – is the QuickTime icon popping back into the Windows start menu? Does it re-insert itself into the Startup folder? Or does it re-associate itself with certain file formats?
In QT Player 6.5 go to Edit|Preferences|QuickTime Preferences and uncheck the box for QuickTime system tray icon. You may then have to manually delete entries out of the Startup folder and the registry key HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Run.
If that doesn’t work then install Media Player Classic and never run the QuickTime Player.
Quick Time Player is in my Start Up Folder. I use msconfig to de-activate it. Whenever I click on a QT file and play and reboot the computer, QT re-activates itself and is in my systray.
I have to make web downloadable videos all the time. Currently we’re in the midst of a discussion on what filetypes I should offer.
For every MPEG-4 call, there’s a Quicktime call. For every anti-WMV there’s a pro-WMV. For every anti-MPEG1 there’s a pro MPEG1.
The problem is there are so many “standards” that none are set up to deal with every situation (e.g. stream or download, broadband or dialup, image quality or dimensions)
Aha. Basically, follow what Number said to do. The registry entry that you’ll want to delete is called QuickTime Task, which starts the app. qttask.exe on bootup (and obnoxiously runs it in the background whether the tray icon is active or not). Remove it, and your problem should go away. If you want to be really thorough, you can also find where that executable is stored on your hard drive and remove it (I’ve renamed mine qttask_DONOTRUN.exe instead of removing it).
For the longest time I was in denial like most of you, but I am finally starting to open my eyes to the fact that in some cases, MAC does it better than Windows. I once told myself, “I will NEVER, NEVER EVER own a MAC computer!” and yet just two days ago I found myself downloading a Windows version of iTunes and the new QuickTime that came with it. I encourage the rest of you to maybe admit that MAC and MAC applications really aren’t that bad…