Cinematics is an innovative new media player that allows you to build and manage playlists of digital movies on your Macintosh. Cinematics can be used for a wide variety of applications, both in the office and at home. Whether you are a business owner who needs to showcase your products or a home video enthusiast who needs help organizing and presenting your digital video collection, Cinematics is an excellent tool to help you with your needs.
- The User Interface
Cinematics intuitive user interface makes building, modifying and playing movies easy. Your playlist and movie information is always visible, along with a current movie preview and your movie controls. Most tasks can be initiated with a single mouse click or by a simple drag’n’drop. For example, to add an entire directory of movies to a playlist simply drag the folder from the Finder onto the Cinematics Playlist or Movie tables. - QuickTime Technology
Using QuickTime’s movie importers, Cinematics can play a wide variety of movie formats including native QuickTime Moov, MPEG, and Microsoft’s AVI formatted media. - Expert Mode
Cinematics provides a variety of shortcuts that enable advanced users to perform most tasks without needing to navigate through any menus. Almost all the things you do to play back a movie, manage a movie playlist, or adjust the viewing environment can be accomplished with a few keystrokes. - Detailed Movie Controls
Cinematics’ movie controls give you a great deal of freedom in how you play back your movie playlists. You can control attributes such as frame-level playback, movie playback speed, and random access to movie information. - Additional Features
Cinematics has a number of other great features designed to enhance your user experience. These include full screen playback, context sensitive playback menus, fixed and adaptive movie playback sizes. Cinematics ease of use is facilitated by interactive tool tips throughout the user interface, Mac OS X help viewer integration, and high quality, comprehensive printable documentation.




