Unlike other Lion apps, full-screen in QuickTime Player can be activated both with the standard icon in the top right corner, or a zoom gesture on the main frame. Another obvious change in Lion is the possibility of entering full-screen mode, which will create a new space for QuickTime Player with the frame scaled accordingly to the file the app is playing. Lion’s QuickTime Player supposedly comes with the same set of codecs from the previous version, but Apple has introduced a new “Export audio only” feature that allows users to produce an AAC track compatible with the iPod, iPhone, iPad, Apple TV, Mac and PC to listen to audio files on the go or upload to the web. Seemingly unchanged from version 10 of QuickTime Player that shipped with Mac OS X Snow Leopard, the new QuickTime Player 10.1 contains a number of changes under the hood, new sharing features, as well as screen recording enhancements built specifically for OS X Lion. One of the built-in apps that received several interesting improvements in OS X Lion is QuickTime Player, Apple’s default video and music player based on the QuickTime framework that’s capable of handling a variety of audio, video, and picture codecs.
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