Heads up, Windows users: If you have Apple's QuickTime media player on your machine, you should probably take a minute to uninstall it. We will provide more information on this as we progress." "We intend to increase our efforts to remove these incompatibilities, and provide our customers with a complete native pipeline. "We know how common this format is in many worfklows, and we continue to work hard to improve this situation, but have no estimated timeframe for native decode currently," Adobe's Madison Murphy wrote in a blog post (Opens in a new window). ![]() The software giant said it has "worked extensively" to remove dependencies on QuickTime in its professional video, but some codecs still rely on the software being installed on Windows, most notably including Apple ProRes. Update: Adobe over the weekend addressed the issue, warning users that uninstalling QuickTime on Windows could affect Creative Cloud. ![]()
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