TD Video Viewer for Windows enables you to view a TD Video project on a Microsoft Windows based computer. You can watch video, enter play data, and view and print scouting reports. This product lets you view your video and do your scouting on a Windows based PC instead of using a VCR.
You still have to create the project, and capture the video using TD Video for Macintosh.

TD Video Viewer for Windows is currently free.
TD Video Viewer for Windows was created in 2005 and there was very little interest in it. We're providing it as is for free. If you use TD Video Viewer for Windows, please let us know and we'll spend more time working on it.
TD Video Viewer for Windows supports video from a miniDV camcorder. It does not play back video from MPEG2 camcorders or Apple's Intermediate Codec video. It uses Apple's QuickTime for Windows software which currently does not support those formats.
Click here to download the installer. You'll be prompted to Run or Save a file named "SETUP.EXE". Click on Save, download the file, then quit out of your browser and run SETUP.EXE.
TD Video Viewer for Windows 1.6 is the latest version and was posted Thursday August 27, 2009. It should be able to display projects from TD Video 4.6.
In version 1.5, all reports were updated to reflect the current reports in TD Video for Macintosh.
Version 1.6 supports an updated file format used by TD Video 4.6
You can copy a game folder from a Mac to a PC using:
- external hard drives, or
- a fast (100 megabit or gigabit) ethernet network.
Some external hard drives support FireWire and USB2 interfaces. If you have an external hard drive that supports both, you can attach it to the Windows based PC using USB2. If your external hard drive only supports FireWire, you'll need to have a FireWire interface on your PC.
The hard drive will have to be formatted as an MS-DOS drive so the Windows based PC will recognize it.
You can determine the format of an external hard drive by clicking once on it to select it, then use the Get Info command from the Macintosh Finder.
You can reformat a hard drive in the MS-DOS format using the "Disk Utility" program in your Mac OS X Utilities folder (its in the Applications folder).