RealPlayer can play:
RM, RA, Ram, RT, RP, PNG, Gif, JPG, MP3, SWF, SMIL, SMI, WAV, AIFF, MPG, MPEG, AVI, ASF, MID, MIDI, RMI.
Quicktime can play all these plus many more. I would never recommend RealPlayer to anyone and never use it. I use Quicktime.
It's possible that the file is either audio only, or the file type is not a fully supported format in Quicktime. Try downloading the Flip4Mac plugin and install it on your Mac and see if the video will play afterwards. If not, do a Google search for ffmpegx and try that. If nothing else works, the file may be incompatible with Quicktime (for example, a DRM protected WMV file will not play in Quicktime). Some plug ins will cause problems for some file types. For example the Perian plug in can cause the video part of some file types not to play (usually showing a blank green screen) and just playing the audio part. This can be resolved by temporarily turning off the plug in from System Preferences.
QuickTime is available for Macs and other computers using the Windows operating system (See links below). QuickTime is widely used in multimedia projects/software and forms the basis of the internationally recognised MPEG 4 file format.
The only way i can think of doing that is downloading the video with Realplayer and moving the video file onto a usb flash drive or CD. You can download RealPlayer from it's website
You need to export the Quicktime video to audio only. If you are using Windows Movie Maker, you will first need to convert the video file to one compatible with Windows Movie Maker:.asf, .avi, dvr-ms, .m1v, .mp2, .mp2v, .mpe, .mpeg, .mpg, .mpv2, .wm, .wmvI believe the procedure to create 'audio only' is the same for both iMovie and Movie Maker. Instead of dragging the Quicktime file into the video track, drag it into the AUDIO track. This will remove the video portion and allow you to only export the audio.
not to be rude but its called quicktime PLAYER so it only plays files
Proprietary file types are files that do not have an open specification, and thus can only be created and edited by a certain program.
The new version of winzip allows people to uncompress more file types. These file types include rar, zip, zipx, tar. There are more files that winzip will unzip. It will not unzip all file types.
You need to convert the files to .flv or .swf files before inserting them. In audacity, if you just save a file, it saves as a .aup file. You can open these files only with Audacity. You can, however, export the file as a different format by going to the File menu and clicking Export. Next, you will have to find either an online conversion website or download a software, such as RealPlayer converter, and convert the file to a .flv or .swf file.
The AAC file format is all I know. Maybe the only one.
The JVC KD-R200 only supports wma and mp3 file types.
Quicktime does work in Google Chrome, but Real Player does not. You might want to reinstall Quicktime and make sure it's up-to-date. Real Player only works with certain browsers like IE.
http://www.apple.com/quicktime/tutorials/creatingvideo.html This Website tells you pretty good info. Also: Make sure you have updated your QuickTime software to version 7.0.3 or later. If you don't have QuickTime 7.0.3 installed, get it now. Open QuickTime 7 Pro. If you don't have it, get QuickTime 7 Pro today. === === Choose "Open File..." from the File menu. Select the movie you'd like to play on your iPod, then click the Open button. If you haven't yet recorded your movie, see our tutorial on Creating Movies (Mac only). Choose "Export..." from the File menu. Choose "Movie to iPod (320x240)" from the export drop down list and click the Save button. The Export progress bar shows you how much of the export process is completed. The longer your movie and the larger its frame size, the longer the export will take. Once the export is complete, QuickTime Pro will place on your Desktop a new version of your movie that will play on the iPod. Double-click the new file and play it to make sure it looks as you expect. Choose "Movie to iPod (320x240)" from the export drop down list and click the Save button. The Export progress bar shows you how much of the export process is completed. The longer your movie and the larger its frame size, the longer the export will take. Once the export is complete, QuickTime Pro will place on your Desktop a new version of your movie that will play on the iPod. Double-click the new file and play it to make sure it looks as you expect. Enjoy!!