![]() If I can find time I will try maybe upload a youtube video or write a quick java program for you to run to do this for you but I am pressed tight for time at the moment with University. I will attempt to try walk you through a process in order to fix your file but questions will more than likely be raised. The problem with this is that it is really fidilly and complex if you dont know what you're doing but once you get the hang of it is actually really simple. ![]() I wasnt able to find any software to do the job for me so the solution I came up with was to manually edit the file using a hex editor (which involves directly editing the bytes which make up the file). As Phil has said unfortunately exiftool is unable to do this and after about a week of tinkering and reading through Apple's pages upon pages of quicktime documentation I finally worked out how to change these values. I saw your question a couple of days ago and I have been trying to figure out how to respond since as this is the very reason I started using exiftool, was to try and set the quicktime date and time values of videos taken on other cameras in order to have them appear in the correct order in my camera roll on my iPhone.
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