It's hard to explain how much it does because it's really a Swiss army knife and it's features are extensive. Videoloupe hasn't covered ALL the things QT7 did so your mileage may vary depending on what you need, but it covers enough low hanging fruit to warrant taking a close look if you work with video clips.
#Videoloupe pro#
For me, Videoloupe started to fill the void that Apple left behind when they let Quicktime 7 Pro die. It's a super handy & lightweight tool to do a TON of tasks with video clips without having to go into a heavy app like Fina Cut or a mess like QuickTime X.
#Videoloupe mac#
It's been a critical tool to my daily workflow both as a Pro video editor & also just as a Mac user that needs to view/scan/mark/export portions of videos or stills from videos (but to be clear it does WAY more than just those, that's just what my workflow most often requires). I've been using VideoLoupe almost daily for over a year (I bought it from developers site when it wasn't on the Mac App store).
Files downloaded with Videoloupe can be used in any other application.