Amplitube 3 does, however, play back project files with previously imported MP3s.
Software tested for minimal functionality, generally opening the UI, opening and playing or using user files, and saving files, includes Win Media Player (plays MP3s ok), Global Mapper, Punch Design, TurboCAD 17, Nero Smart Start, Printmaster 2.0 Platinum, MyBookLive Dashboard, Print Creations, GRLevel 3, GRLevel 2, GR Level 2 Analyst, My DMX 1.0, Man圜am, Debut Video Capture, Lenovo WinDVD8, CueMix, Sonar X2P, Vyzex MPD-32, Sample Tank 2.5, I-Tunes, Melodyne Editor 2, Rapture, Dimension Pro, all yhreeof the Real Guitar series, and IE, all of which showed no obvious problems.Īmplitube 3 loaded, but refused to import MP3 files, citing the lack of QT. On my oldest, least critical machine, running Vista, it took some extra time to find the Sys Restore routine, but that ran clean, as did the QT un-install, and minimal re-install. Just a bit of clarification on this detail would be helpful. Muziksculp doing what you are doing means you don't need the browser plugin either so remove it as I've stated above, you'll only need the essentials and QT player, not the Web/Java/Photo addons (these are the problem parts and nobody should need them at all).Hi Neil H,Īny instructions as to where the QT browser Plugin is usually located, so I can uninstall/remove it ? I use Chrome for a browsing, so you mean remove it from the Chrome Plug-Ins ?. While connected to the internet nothing is going to come along out of nowhere and find that you have quicktime installed and infiltrate your system, thats not really how viruses, malware and other exploits get on your machine. Muziksculp doing what you are doing means you don't need the browser plugin either so remove it as I've stated above, you'll only need the essentials and QT player, not the Web/Java/Photo addons (these are the problem parts and nobody should need them at all). In this day and age nobody needs a QuickTime browser plugin, any website still serving up content that requires a QT plugin is not worth visiting. Uninstalling the web, Java and photo plugins as i have said above should make things safe and still allow you to use QuickTime desktop and any app that has QT dependencies. It's the web browser plugin portion of QuickTime that is the problem here. Just sitting connected to the internet and using QuickTime player (desktop version not the web browser plugin) should not cause you any problems at all.
You have to actually click on something that contains malicious code that kickstarts the QuickTime web browser player and then gets its way in.
I think they have been working at it for quite a while now, this is not a last minute fix they just decided to work on.While connected to the internet nothing is going to come along out of nowhere and find that you have quicktime installed and infiltrate your system, thats not really how viruses, malware and other exploits get on your machine. Hopefully Steinberg will offer a solution to this issue very soon. These are videos they I produce, not something I downloaded from the internet, or was emailed to me.Īnyways.
in a Cubase Project, Since it is not online ? Wouldn't just unplugging the Internet cable from my DAW-PC, make it safe when working with QT-Video.