No. Hypercam is not compatible with the new Windows Live Movie Maker.
Easycap capture card files are not compatible with Windows Movie Maker.
No. Action Essentials 2 is not compatible with Windows Movie Maker.
You need to convert Quicktime videos to a format compatible with Windows Movie Maker.
Any USB sound card that works in Windows will work with Windows Movie Maker.
There are P2P (person to person) file sharing sites that have music compatible with Windows Movie Maker. Try Googling: free mp3 downloads.
That is not a file format. Undf stands for 'undefined file'. Files used in Windows Movie Maker have to be compatible with the program as well.
Pivot files are not compatible with Windows Live Movie Maker (or any other version of the program). You must convert the Pivot format into one compatible with Windows Movie Maker before it can be used in the program.
You can't play unsupported file extensions in Windows Movie Maker. You have to convert the file to a format compatible with the program.
Make sure the Mixcraft audio file is compatible with Windows Movie Maker:.aif, .aifc, .aiff, .asf, .au, .mp2, .mp3, .mpa, .snd, .wav, .wmaIf it is not a file compatible with the program, you will need to convert it before it can be imported/edited in Windows Movie Maker.
Nope. Apple uses Quicktime which is not compatible with Windows Movie Maker. The Quicktime video will need to be converted before it can be imported into the program.
Yes. They both use the same file name extensions. As a matter of fact, I believe Windows Live Movie Maker has included some newer extensions as well.
You can use iTunes to put movies from Windows Movie Maker onto your iPod. I believe Movie Maker files are compatible with Movie Maker, but if you find they are not for some reason, convert them to QT or .mp4 format beforehand.