Never even thought of doing this before, but I'm trying to keep myself occupied while I'm still without heat, power and gas (though I'm able to charge my battery and access WiFi at a local bakery).
Never even thought of doing this before, but I'm trying to keep myself occupied while I'm still without heat, power and gas (though I'm able to charge my battery and access WiFi at a local bakery).
Not really. Besides that's illegal
If you have the Pro-license of Quicktime, there is an option to save the streamed files. Well Apple offers it, though it is illegal
If you have uploaded a home-movie if your own and can't find the original and now want to get it back you can use the following:
People say it is possible to capture your screen with VLC, but I did never get it to work.
No freeware: SnapZProX (screencapture)
Firefox add-on named "FastVideoDownload" or go to "show source code" in Firefox and search the code, were the video is played, copy that link into the download manager of FF.
Or put the temporary files out of the Quicktime-folder, if they are shown there. It's only for divx, which is less used. My OS once showed such files in movies->divx movies->temporarily downloaded files
If you have the Pro-license of Quicktime, there is an option to save the streamed files. Well Apple offers it, though it is illegal
If you have uploaded a home-movie if your own and can't find the original and now want to get it back you can use the following:
People say it is possible to capture your screen with VLC, but I did never get it to work.
No freeware: SnapZProX (screencapture)
Firefox add-on named "FastVideoDownload" or go to "show source code" in Firefox and search the code, were the video is played, copy that link into the download manager of FF.
Or put the temporary files out of the Quicktime-folder, if they are shown there. It's only for divx, which is less used. My OS once showed such files in movies->divx movies->temporarily downloaded files