Found a way to bypass Quicktime's built-in protection. My steps are specific to certain applications simply because I don't have the time to test what I did on other apps. If you can obtain the mentioned apps, more power to you.

1. Open movie in Quicktime 5 pro.

2. File / Export and select Sound to Wave.

3. Change the options to whatever you like. Personally, I like the highest quality audio so I went with no compressor, 44.1 kHz, 16 bit, stereo (basically CD quality)

3. Give the wav file a name.

4. save.

5. Next, select File / Export again and this time select Movie to AVI.

6. Under options, uncheck Sound. You may set the video to whatever quality you like. My personal perference is no compression, millions of colors+, and best quality.

7. You now have two seperate files. One AVI video and another WAV audio. The program I used to combine them into one is SoundForge. It has built-in support for AVI and WAVs and is really easy to use. So here's what you do.

8. First open the AVI file.

9. Next open the WAV file.

10. Select the entire WAV file (CTRL + A) and copy it (CTRL + C).

11. Switch to the loaded AVI file by selecting the menu Window and then the file.

12. You'll notice a small collections of images next to each other near the file menu. These represent the relative location of the video sequence to the audio track below. Select the audio grid below the video sequence. Make sure you are all the way left by clicking on the "left arrow with vertical line" button on the controls menu and paste (CTRL + V).

13. At this point play the presentation to make sure both audio and video sync up like you want. If you didn't make any modications to the AVI and WAV it should sync up when you paste. If everything is good, let's move on.

14. You'll probably notice a whole bunch of silence at the end of the WAV file. It's important that you remove all silence because it'll throw the video/audio sync all out of whack once you save the file. Select the very end of the file. Use your left and right arrow keys to move frame-by-frame while using the video sequence above to make sure you reach the exact ending frame. If the video sequence pictures are too small you can resize the images vertically. Pressing CTRL + SHIFT + END will select EVERYTHING from your where the cursor is and all the way right. Hit the Delete key. If you notice any left over silence just repeat the CTRL + SHIFT + END key command.

16. Select file / save as. Give the final AVI another filename in case you mess up and need to redo. For the audio format I would recommend PCM as it seems to be the cleanest. Click save.

17. Next, change the Resize video frame options to whatever television format you would like to use. For me I usually go with NTSC full 2 (720x486) since my television is large. Under the compression options choose whatever Codec you're comfortable with. I usually try the DivX or PicTools JPEG2000 codecs.

18. You should now have an unprotected, high quality (yeah right, AVI sucks! But you didn't hear that from me cause I ain't one to gossip) AVI version of the Movie file. This is a shitty system but it works. If you want to convert a bunch of MOVs into AVIs my advice to take your time with each.

Good luck.