Habt Ihr die Anleitung nicht gelesen? Das geht ganz einfach mit Quicktime, funzt wunderbar (ach ich sehe gerade, geht nur mit QT Pro - das geht aber wie eine 1):
10.
Your sequence is now a very large number of individual BMP files, each showing one frame of video. This is not the best format to work with, so let’s turn it into a single, reasonably small QuickTime file which can be imported into any movie-editing package and converted into whatever your movie’s final format needs to be.
Click the QuickTime logo in the dock, and (after it finally lets you close its advertising window), choose
File > Open Numbered Sequence, then select the first frame (frame number zero) from your destination folder. You will also be prompted for a frame rate — be sure to choose the
exact same frame rate that you chose in the SWTSG app. After what might be a
long pause with no progress bar (be patient!), your sequence will now open in a QuickTime video player window.
At this point, you might be able to actually play back your BMP files in real time, if the images are small enough and the Mac is fast enough, but don’t bother with that yet — instead, choose
File > Export to save your sequence as a single, QuickTime movie file (i.e. an .mov file).
Warning: Do not use File > Save As! That works too, but makes an enormous file. Using Export allows you to use a good codec and choose a compression rate and other settings.
The compression settings will probably be defaulted to the
H.264 codec with high image quality. That’s what we want; just go ahead and render it with those settings.
(Note: If you’re doing this at home, and you don’t have QT Pro, you will need to use another app, such as iMovie, to render your sequence as an .mov file. That can be done as described
here by Karl Petersen.)