cccp A codec pack thats been around for ages. "The Combined Community Codec Pack is a simple playback pack for Windows with the goal of supporting the majority of video formats in use today." No muss, no fuss.
> A similar situation arose during an interview I had with Microsoft, about Media Player. I said it was slow to start up, felt bloaty and that in comparison to VLC it was sub-standard.
Actually, and believe me I hate to say this, I've found from a few side-by-side comparisons that windows media player has superior video quality to VLC and if you use CCCP, it can play just as many formats. Sure it's a little slower to start up, but it has better contrast and color quality than VLC on the same monitor.
If you are using windows I'd recommend MPC-HC. To get it bundled with all the codecs you'd want and everything else use CCCP.
I've generally had a better experience with this and everyone who I talked to that used it has also had a great experience with it.
I used CCCP before but it seems the project was dropped. I started using K-Lite over the last months but I still didn't stumbled upon any malware yet.
While VLC opens all the videos, I really like Media Player Classic. It downloads subtitles very easily, the interface is clean and easy to use, you press space to pause, lightweight as fuck… It's hard to use something else.
This pack doesn't make you put up with all that bullshit and is one of the best ones out there.~~ Fuck K-Lite.~~ Edit: I just downloaded K-lite's current installer and it is clean( i seem to remember them having bloatware in their installer a few years back) Maybe OP (and previously myself) got it from one of the sites that wrap installers in another installer that installs the bloatware first.
About VLC... I'm gonna add a tidbit.
"If VLC can't play it, you may also need the CCCP and Media Player Classic. After that, it's definitely broke."
Well, not everything. I had problems with a few high quality encodes of some anime I downloaded with VLC. If not klite, CCCP is a very good alternative, bundled with Media Player Classic.
And in their beta folder you can find updated 64bit version, wich I do not know why isn't set as not beta. It is really the best. MPC >>> VLC
>They don't automatically loop like gifs
There's an extension that does that
>You can't get an extension that prevents them from playing immediately like Gif Delayer
Navigate to about:config
Search for the property "media.autoplay.enabled"
Set it to false
Now unless the player is scripted (in the case of Gfycat), and set up to autoplay, it will not. If you are looking at the raw file, it will not autoplay.
>Some of the charm of gifs was that they had to be short, but people are making super long gifs that might as well just be movie clips
Not sure how this is a problem with WebM or HTML5 video...
>There aren't any slideshow programs that can view both gifs and webm
You can use practically any media player to automatically play through all video files in a folder, for example Media Player Classic Home Cinema (recommended you download the CCCP release that contains this rather than it on its own)
>You can use Quick Look on Mac to preview gifs without opening them, but you cannot use it to preview webms
That would be a limitation of your OS, not WebM.
To be fair, if you get the CCCP nowadays then you can play almost everything anyway. VLC has improved a lot this year but up until recently it was slow and buggy when compared to software like Media Player Classic (which is still a lot more zippier and smooth than VLC).
Instead of VLC, I recommend Media Player Classic using the Combined Community Codec Pack (MPC-HC + CCCP) as it will play pretty much everything with no hiccups. One bug I ran into happens if you use an nvidia gpu and have upgraded to windows 10. All you have to do is disable P10 in the LAV settings of cccp
I use a codec pack CCCP, and WMP plays any crazy file type I can imagine. I don't like VLC player because It always gives me some annoying little errors, like AV sync problems or skipping on HD movies. WMP may not have all your fancy options, but if it ain't broke, don't fix it.
The CCCP FAQ Addresses this issue.
>This happens when MPC-HC is set to use Overlay Mixer as the video renderer, but it fails to load for some reason. In this case, the video seems to end up flipped with the 2010-10-10 pack when VSFilter is used to render subtitles. With the previous release the flipping didn't occur, though video performance will be very likely suboptimal regardless.
>See the Troubleshooting Guide for hints how you could fix your overlay, and you can try working around it by changing the video renderer if that fails.
View menu, Options... -> Playback / Output -> DirectShow Video section
XP: the default Overlay Mixer.
Vista or 7 with Aero enabled: MPC-HC's EVR-Custom Presenter, madVR, Haali's Renderer.
Vista or 7 with Aero disabled: Overlay, madVR.
No. No, you don't.
Use the x86 version. It has much better compatibility because of some ffdshow codecs.
Congrats. You should now be able to decode errrrything. Including the new Hi10P h264 profile that's just started appearing. This new profile doesn't work with DXVA (decoding using the graphics card), so CoreAVC is your weapon of choice. Step 6 involves tweaking subtitle options to increase the resolution. This is compulsary if you watch anime fansubs, otherwise you will end up with a artifacty, upscaled mess.
If anyone's struggling, let me know. This is complicated stuff XD
install this: http://www.cccp-project.net/
never need a codec again.
EDIT: nvm it isn't being updated anymore
see k-lite instead or see below comments: https://codecguide.com/download_kl.htm
Are you using VLC or Windows Media Player? If so, then it's time to move on to Media Player Classic Home Cinema (MPC-HC). It's light weight and it plays virtually all formats.
If the file is still giving you trouble for some reason, then go ahead and download this codec pack: http://www.cccp-project.net/
Media Player Classic with either Combined Community Codec Pack or Kawaii Codec Pack. The player is included with the codec pack, btw.
edit: Added links.
A quick look seems to suggest that this version of it has Danish, Norwegian, Swedish & English subtitles:
http://thepiratebay.se/torrent/6580714/Matador_1978-2006_(Danish_TV-serie.)
If you use uTorrent or similar then you can choose to only download the .7z file with the Subtitles inside. I can probably mirror the Danish subtitles by themselves for you in a little while. :)
Edit: Yep, there's Danish subs in that release. They're in idx/sub format, do you know how that works?
Media Player Classic Home Cinema + DirectVobSub = easy peasy. Pretty sure they are both included in the CCCP codec pack: http://www.cccp-project.net/
In addition to other comments I'd like to add that color is handled differently, giving you 'more' color without a film on top of the video. You can google some vlc vs mpc screenshots but generally it's most apparent in animation videos - especially with a lot of color or darkness.
Also another thing most people wouldn't care about is subtitle support. It handles pretty much everything. This is sometimes necessary for stylized subtitles on some anime series and films. (some special usage of subtitles include replacing signs that are in japanese, chinese, russian etc.).
This assumes you are using at least decent filters. Like LAV splitter, haali, madVR..
There are projects that include mpc 'preconfigured' with these kinds of filters. You can check out CCCP and KCP http://www.cccp-project.net http://haruhichan.com/forum/showthread.php?7545-KCP-Kawaii-Codec-Pack
Try downloading this codec pack, I have yet to find something that this can't play http://www.cccp-project.net/ If you try that and it still doesn't work then you have another problem besides software.
Sounds like you might be missing some codecs. I recommend using VLC Media player (as it will play nearly any kind of media file) http://www.videolan.org/vlc/index.html and if you still can't get any video, install the CCCP codec pack, http://www.cccp-project.net/
Ty man!
I'm a brazilian teen, so while I'm young I had my fair share of piracy. Never cracked them myself, instead just bought already pirated copies lol
download the combined community codec pack. http://www.cccp-project.net/
also download AC3Filter. Setup AC3filter as your audio decoder (in media player classic / CCCP config). When a movie plays, you'll get the AC3Filter tray icon.
you'll have all the sound options you can ever dream of. Multi-band equalizer, level adjusting, dynamic range compression, and on-the-fly conversion of the audio stream to a format of your choice.
for most movies, you just have to set the dynamic range compression to max. this conjoins the explosions and voices to about the same volume level.
since you may be going the media player classic way, i suggest if you have an NVIDIA card, that you also eventually setup MADVR for the best quality experience.
once you get everything setup, you will never go back to VLC.
also, what you are experiencing is not a result of poor speakers. You are most likely playing 5 channel audio on a 2 channel source. you are only getting the front left and front right channels of audio on your stereo speakers/headphones. Most dialog occurs in the center channel, so what you hear in stereo is just the ambiance of the voices that are focused in the center channel.
The one I found in the pirate location had comments complaining about the audio but it was fine for me. Probably just have a wrong/outdated audio codecs 'cause mine was fine. I use the Kawaii Codec Pack but CCCP is fine too.
Yep, it crashed. I had VLC running when I opened BC2 and instantly VLC crashed. Uninstall VLC! Use MPC-HC.
Tried the same thing and media player didn't crash when I opened BC2
I've been a computer tech for 22 years, been messing with codecs for like 10... I haven't heard of this until today... and not sure why I'd even need to use it if basic mp4 codecs work fine and you can get them for free through DIVX support and my personal favorite: CCCP - Combined Community Codec Pack
[edit] thanks for the replies, I'm less clueless on this matter now
[](/hmmm) Do you have any codec pack installed? I'm going to gather that it does that because it's trying to render the thumbnails for the video and fails. You can try desinstalling any codec pack you have and installing this one, maybe that will work.
If you know your stuff: Set it up like [this](imouto.my/watching-h264-videos-using-compute-unified-device-architecture-cuda/)
If you're not a computer expert: Just install this
I also recommend using the BE Mod version of MPC-HC available at XvidVideo.ru
>I also notice that there isn't a subtitle file in the folder, which I've never seen happen before, but I thought
That's the main reason people use mkv - it's a container that can hold any number of styles (.ass) softsubs. You don't need to load them, as they should be set to default (so they display automatically).
One of the many problems with VLC is its issues with softsubs - though the newer version seems to have fixed your problem.
You should upgrade to CCCP/MPC-HC.
Other benefits:
etc
I like Media Player Classic. You may also need CCCP depending on the files you're trying to play. I'm not a huge fan of VLC but I'm honestly shocked you prefer WMP over it.
alternatively
http://haruhichan.com/forum/showthread.php?7545-KCP-Kawaii-Codec-Pack
Read up on both and make your choice, they're the two best MPC-HC codedc packs. You can also look into how to modify madVR/LAV settings too to get the most out of them.
Yes. Once you've installed CCCP, It's pretty much VLC with a bunch more customizability. You can install madVR, for example, which improves the video rendering massively. You can also install things like SVP, which lets you watch stuff in 60fps (a good PC is recommended, though, for obvious reasons). The only thing I miss is VLC's recording feature, but I'm sure there is a mod for that somewhere out there.
I now watch on TV but when I couldn't and .mkv wouldn't work for me I downloaded CCCP on my old computer. This made it work perfectly fine but this was some time ago. On my new laptop, VLC opens .mkv files perfectly fine.
You could still try though - http://www.cccp-project.net/
CCCP - Combined Community Codec Pack is a windows codec pack that'll play 99.99% of the videos found on the internet and doesn't contain any necessary BS programs that will mess with your computers. As a mac user it isn't going to work for you, wish I could help. For all pc users I highly recommend you all delete whatever you are using now and just use CCCP and the Media Player Classic that comes with it.
Media Player Classic is what I use. The only time I need to bother with VLC's half-baked interface is when I need to watch amateur pornography from a Taiwanese cell phone.
The interface is slick, the options are intuitively placed in an Options menu, things like subtitles and such are easily selectable, its basically a perfect player. VLC is meant to be powerful, and ends up being clunky because of it.
Grab the CCCP-project pack. It should have everything you need, if you don't have it already.
I had a crash right after completing a mission, and the game publisher's Help Desk recommended the following:
>It looks like you have an access violation crash, could you try downloading the CCCP codec and installing it: http://www.cccp-project.net/download.php?type=cccp64
>If that doesn't work can you please ensure the following:
>Add steam.exe and battletech's .exe to the Exceptions list of your antivirus app. (Especially if you have Bitdefender)
>Ensure Steam.exe and battletech's .exe have admin rights in their properties -> compatibility tab (Right click exe to go to properties)
>Go into Windows Defender Security Center -> Virus & Threat Protection -> Virus & Threat Protection settings. Allow the steam and game.exe files through via "Allow an app through controlled folder access"
I haven't had any other crashes since.
Also, a post launch opt-in beta is available. In Steam, go to the game's Properties, click Beta tab, and select the Public Beta. Not sure what the steps are on GOG.
It's probably a codec issue, since you're on XP (Why are you still on XP!?) due to the fact that gifv is basically just a package for an MP4 or WebM video, that is set to autoloop and hide controls.
You may be able to have it play by installing a codec pack, such as the CCCP
It's actually a pretty common acronym for techies.
CCCP = Combined Community Codec Pack
"The Combined Community Codec Pack is a simple playback pack for Windows with the goal of supporting the majority of video formats in use today."
For example if you have a video that won't play, or you have some other sort of playback problem, the simplest (but arguably maybe not the best) solution is to just get the CCCP, which will install a whole pack of the latest codecs that support any video you might be trying to play. The usually better recommendation though is to just get the latest version of a decent player like MPC-HC, VLC, or KMPlayer.
edit: I realize the soviet union joke now as well.
Step 1: Get a torrent program, like uTorrent.
Step 2: Download the links from the release announcements, or from the old archive. Open the links in your torrent program, and let them download automatically.
Step 3: Download the necessary codec.
Step 4: Download Media Player Classic.
Step 5: Open the downloaded media files in Media Player Classic.
Step 6: ???
Step 7: Enjoy fansubs.
I recommend using the CCCP Project to install MPC. It's a pack that has MPC-HC along with a lot of extras.
Then I would follow this guide. However you may not wanna enable MadVR since that basically just makes it use your GPU instead of your CPU (and you're on integrated so).
It definitely looks better than VLC for me. Especially with cartoons and anime.
CCCP. (Combined Community Codec Pack). Comes with media player classic and a great set of video codecs.
Side-by-side with VLC, its much, much better.
When installing it might look like a bombardment of options, but the defaults are all fine. Just click next. :D
Standard format. Videos use the .MOV container and are encoded using H.264. VLC works well. If you don't have that then the CCCP Codec Pack will power whatever you normally use.
MPC-HC by itself isn't anything remarkable, but if you use it as part of the Combined Community Codec Pack (included in CCCP's installer) you get access to better and more efficient codecs and such.
tbh though it's only really relevant for fansubbed anime, where the amount of effort that gets put into typesetting signs in the subtitle track itself means that VLC has historically been unable to accurately decode and render stuff (that and the majority of fansubbers target their releases to the current version of CCCP - it's what's guaranteed to work, and this usually entails requiring cutting edge technologies. Seriously.). It's also been known to do stuff in non-standard ways, leading to bugs and glitches in the decoding.
VLC's a lot better than it used to be now, and for the average Joe it literally does not fucking matter.
I use MPC (media player classic) that comes with the CCCP package.
But as someone else said, it probably is a problem bigger than VLC itself. Probably you've installed conflicting codecs or something.
Or the files you got are corrupted by a bad download.
As I said on another post in this very same thread, I'd argue that the Combined Community Codec Pack (Windows only, sadly) is a better option than the K-Lite codec and already comes with MPC Home Cinema, a slightly more streamlined version of MPC.
if you have MPCHC, go to File -> Save Thumbnails...
other than that, sometimes i just cap random points in my video with VLC since it caps in the correct aspect ratio (per single cap). but you'd have to put those together manually.
If you are using Windows: CCCP
If you are using OS X : Hermi's MPlayer
This is important as some groups will go as far as not making their realises playable via VLC because of the hate it has in the community.
You're right on the BD translation. In Madoka, they added extra scenes in the BD, and everything looks much, much nicer.
Don't get VLC. Get CCCP.
It's a codec pack that comes with all the codecs you'll need, and a media player called Media Player Classic-Home Cinema. That will play basically any file you'll ever come across, and it plays it much smoother.
http://www.reddit.com/r/technology/comments/pos2m/vlc_20_arriving_this_week/
Look through some of these comments to see why.
I recommend this codec-pack that bundles MPC:
Nope. Which is why I'd choose IE, which isn't even that bad anymore. Also, if you haven't heard of it, I personally prefer Media Player Classic (you'll need CCCP though) over VLC.
I'm biased against VLC because I tried to use it a few years ago when I was into anime. The subtitle support was AWFUL (that's been fixed though). There's also still a bit of a problem with skipping to different times by dragging the seek bar. Sometimes VLC will completely bug out and put weird green/purple blocks all over the screen. It did it years ago and it still does it today.
Personally, I use CCCP + Media Player Classic HC (included) and I'll never look back. I've found that it uses less resources than VLC and is just all around a bit less buggy. ffdshow makes it very easy to adjust anything I want too. Plus, I like the look of it when you toggle off everything but the seek bar so it's just the movie.
That said though, I have VLC installed. It's really excellent for online streams and playing broken files. I like that it's portable too.
http://www.cccp-project.net/ use CCCP & MPC, watch anime without glitches = win if you have a nvidia or amd graphics card tick DXVA H264 in CCCP settings for hardware decoding (better less glitchy shit).
Download CCCP, which comes with Media Player Classic Home Cinema. Link is here. Not only does it play it better, it's actually a couple notches clearer and brighter than default settings on VLC.
I never use VLC with anime (or anything really) anymore. CCCP handles everything perfectly with regards to anime watching. It's great.
I've used the Combined Community Codec Pack (or CCCP) for years now. It works very, very well. If you're inclined, it even comes with a better media player that looks & works like the Windows 95/98 one (so it's fast & simple) that just plays what you throw at it without complaining. :-)
You want the "Insurgent" version, it's the last version that works on XP. (Btw, it's completely unrelated to current political events in the USA; it's been named the Insurgent release since 2007. :-) )
>most people use vlc, but my personal favorite is media player classic. it comes with the combined comunity codec pack
quoting myself here.
i should also mention that it isn't a feature that every anime you download will have as it takes extra effort to specifically set chapters up like that for the videos. it is in enough of the ones i have downloaded though.
Try installing these packs. (Edit: The yellow ones)
An codec is like an instruction manual for your computer to read the images and sound stored in a video file.
As there are 1000s of ways one could create a video file.
mp4 file, rather than a stream in a more deliberately-everyone-has-it format. You likely lack whatever audio codec is in the mp4.
Install this if you want, it may fix the issue for you:
I had some issues of the same caliber a while back, and they might be fixed but they might not. The video codecs for VLC would always have trouble playing 1080p videos(should at least downsize properly) so I switched to CCCP. Yes it looks very communist but the combination of those codecs + media player classic converted me. I also watch a lot of anime/foreign films and subtitle/audio management with this is pretty damn good.
This is actually controlled in video playback software, in this case VLC. For video playback I actually recommend MPC-HC with LAV codecs, it is much more efficient / optimized and allow for various levels of hardware acceleration.
There is a nice pack that has MPC-HC and all required filters bundled available here:
You probably don't have the video codec for that video format installed (vlc bundles its own).
If you're using the desktop version of VLC you can check the video codec by pressing Ctrl+J while playing (or pausing) the video.
No clue if it's still advisable or if there's a better pack, but I used to install http://www.cccp-project.net/ on my PCs so that all media players that used the installed codecs could play pretty much anything. (I just use VLC nowadays)
That might actually be good news. Could you have inadvertently removed a codec that was handling the mkvs?
It might be worth installing a codec pack like cccp to see if that helps.
I agree with step one. A very simple, but not 100% conclusive step would be to store it on a secure location on the Internet and verify it's integrity by the original uploader, redownloading the file and checking for sound. This is the lament way of checking the file. Not my first option but relatively effective in most cases.
Codecs can also be a huge factor here. I suggest both parties install an identical codec pack to make sure things match up. This isn't usually a huge deal but something is quirky here. I recommend the CCCP (Combined community codec pack) (it does poke fun at its acronym being the same as Soviet Russias, but it is legitimate and one of the best codec packs on the Internet)
A bit more advanced, but also the best thing you could do, in my opinion, is to run a checksum on the file before it was sent and have the recipient do the same once it's received. If the checksum comes back the same, the data is there and is not being processed correctly. (Likely a codec issue)
If they're running windows 7, this is built in with a command called CertUtil.
Example:
CertUtil -hashfile pathToFileToCheck [HashAlgorithm] HashAlgorithm choices: MD2 MD4 MD5 SHA1 SHA256 SHA384 SHA512
So for example, the following generates an MD5 checksum for the file C:\Downloads\MyVideo.mp4:
CertUtil -hashfile C:\Downloads\MyVideo.mp4 MD5
This will display the unique hash for the file. If the hash does not match for both parties, then the two parties do not have an identical file.
I hope this helps! Let us know what you find!
If I was trying to avoid VLC, I'd just install CCCP which comes with Media Player Classic.
CCCP also has a list of alternatives: http://www.cccp-project.net/wiki/index.php?title=Media_Players
7zip for extracting everything
Speedfan for manual control of your fans to reduce noise in idle mode
Steam and Origin. Origin might not be the best but they give free games.
Emulation stuff for all your emulation needs: just google 'emulator <insert name of console here>' and youll be fine. You can emulate everything up to and including the PS2/Xbox pretty decently.
OBS for all your streaming needsa, it directly works with Twitch.
Raptr/AMD Gaming Evolved: same programming but one is obviously skinned by AMD. They have some rewards and their 'optimization' is actually handy sometimes.
Community Codec Pack: http://www.cccp-project.net/ this will provide you with ALL useful codecs to play whatever the hell you want regarding video or audio. Also includes VLC and MPC
CCleaner, run it one a month and clear up dat mess!
If you're getting 2 screens I suggest this http://sourceforge.net/projects/dualmonitortb/ so you can keep your taskbar on your 2nd screen.
Popcorn time for whatever Netflix doesnt have
Yes to both points. I use Taiga and I love it. I also use CCCP which is a pack that includes MPC. You can serch old threads for why VLC is not as great, but to give you a short explanation, I'm just going to quickly upload a screenshot from both VLC and MPC (the one included in CCCP) to show the display difference. Screenshots
cccp, kcp both work fairly well with janus, as they should because they are both based on lavfilter just like k-lite standard/basic
also anything using ffdshow (some configurations of klite mega/full for example or older versions of cccp) will work as well, even better since it can handle 2+ stream containers like MKV's with multiple audio tracks and subtitles. I haven't tried 10-bit videos on this machine, will have to try them along with h264 stuff later.
Edit: 10 hours later: So i tested some h264 and 10bit (and some h264 10bit just for good measure) videos and they all work fine using my current ffdshow based cccp. don't have a lavfilter based pack installed so i'll do that testing when i get back to my desktop a few days from now.
If you want to be more specific, at least be realistic: this will be transmitted over torrents either way, so nowadays it would probably be ICPCP/μTP or perhaps ICPCP/UDP. Using ICPCP/TCP just isn't practical for this type of data transfer.
But then, for viewing, you'd want ICPCPCCCP to make sure you had the codecs to play the downloaded (HD)MKVICPCP.
Do you have an MKV splitter and corresponding video codecs installed? VLC doesn't count since it does the splitting/decoding with built-in libraries.
If yes, uninstall and re-install.
If no, get haali media splitter and whatever video codec to cover what you are using. If you are not sure which video codec to get maybe try CCCP although I usually don't like installing a bunch of unnecessary codecs.
I always downloaded the cccp codec pack thing. It will play just about anything that exists. It doesn't sound like this is the problem but give it a shot
edit: it is a bunch of media players that should play all format of video files
I had this issue with MPC on my laptop not too long ago. I think I was running an older version. I downloaded the latest CCCP and that fixed it.
As for why this happened, I have no idea. I'm not sure how codecs work.
The easiest to use is VLC. On windows a lot of people like the CCCP Codec Pack with Media Player Classic. And on OSX there's MplayerX (Apple Store link).
So a codec is a "COmpressor / DECompressor", it's a computer program that takes video and audio and it compresses them, making them take up less space on your hard drive. There are a number of different ways of doing this, so there are a number of different codecs that can be used to compress video/audio. If you don't have the right codec installed, you don't see or hear the movie.
CCCP is generally considered the best codec pack for anime. It has pretty much every codec you can think of, that's ever used for anime movies.
The problem here is you're saying you see the video and hear the audio. If you are getting any picture at all, and any audio at all, you do have a codec capable of decompressing the video.
Chances are, when the movie was being downloaded, it became corrupted. If it was downloaded by a torrent, maybe you never waited for it to finish downloading, and you only have some 90% of the bits.
Sorry I haven't used WinAmp in years so i don't know if there is or isn't a plugin available for it.
You could try installing CCCP. It's a codec pack with every codec you could ever need in it. Link here: http://www.cccp-project.net/
Or you could try using another video player, such as VLC or GOM Player. I know this isn't convenient, but it might be your only good choice. VLC link: http://www.videolan.org/vlc/
Good luck! Let me know how you get on.
Sounds like you're watching a dvdrip from an anamorphic source, and your media player isn't "stretching out" the video properly. Go download CCCP and use Media Player Classic, the media player that's packaged with CCCP, to play the video files, and your problem should be solved.
This will probably do the opposite. MadVR makes use of your GPU's shaders, but it's more resource intensive than alternatives.
For GPU accelerated playback, install CCCP, if you don't already have it, and enable DXVA for H.264. If I recall correctly, CCCP has its own menu for enabling features like DXVA. If not, look for "DXVA Video Decoder configuration" in your start menu and enable this.
CCCP Combined Community Codec Pack If you prefer to use windows mediaplayer over vlc this is a must have.
ABP Ad block plus Possibly the greatest addon ever made. works in both firefox and googlechrome.
No, it's definitely not a must have. If you don't need the feature "play videos while downloading" aka torrentz, you are fine with CCCP codec. Or what else do you need VLC for?
Why do you downvote me without any discussion?
I use Media Player Classic (which you fill find packaged with many codecs in the wonderful CCCP codec pack). It works quite well, but since your processor is a bit weak I don't know if it will change anything :/ Good luck !
VLC is rather infamous for having... issues in certain circumstances. Have you tried an alternative, like SMPlayer or CCCP w/ a DirectShow player like MPC, just to see if that might be the case here?
I'm curious to know why you need this information? Are you having issues watching something maybe?
If you are having issues playing Fansubs try downloading. http://www.cccp-project.net/
It'll let you watch almost anything the requires a video/audio codec.
Or get this which has the best codecs combined with MPC HC.
The reason everyone uses VLC is because it is easy but that doesnt mean it has the best codecs with it.
Also if you want the latest version of MPCHC, Krabboss reply has it.
What I would try is downloading community codec pack http://www.cccp-project.net/. Sorry on mobile. Then reinstall your copy of morrowind.
I would then try to install the Unofficial Morrowind patch.
If that doesn’t work I would try downloading openmw for free. It’s a free version from when they released the source code.
Probably a video codec problem.
Media Foundation is getting worked on Wine right now, so unless you want to try installing various codec packs (like the CCCP suggested by /u/CecilXIII), you could wait until MF support is finished.
You could also try a custom version of Wine or Proton, like Proton-GE.
Also, try Lutris, it's pretty much the current standard games manager on Linux and you can download several updated versions of Wine.
i use http://www.cccp-project.net/
it contains pretty much everything needed to play just about anything. comes with media player classic.
give it a try. cannot say either way if it does or does not.
Due to licencing costs, Movies & TV doesn't have many built in codecs. VLC has a boatload more so videos tend to be more compatible. You can also try MPC-HC, I've seen times where VLC failed but MPC-HC worked great.
Another option is to install a codec pack, years ago I would use the CCCP codec pack with Windows Media Player. I don't know if this works with Movies and TV, as Windows 10 normally has whatever codecs I need built in. - http://www.cccp-project.net/
In theory, you should be able to watch it from media player, but in the case that you get a black screen or it refuses to open, you can get the codec pack from http://www.cccp-project.net/ that will allow you to watch it along with Media Player Classic, which is a good alternative that gives you more control over the video than the regular player.
Just install the combined community codec pack (but not the bundled Media Player Classic) and get Media Player Classic Black Edition
Ako piratuješ, obrazuj se.
Znači koji trackeri za koje stvari (rarbg.to za sveže stvari)
Koji klijent (qbittorrent, ili više nikad uTorrent)
Kako puštati na računaru (http://www.cccp-project.net/)
Kako puštati na SmartTv-u (PLEX)
VLC has the decoders built in (including hardware decoding)
If you want to add it to the native windows media player you'd need to add codec's to your system. I'd recommend http://www.cccp-project.net/
Keep in mind that h265 can require significant resources to playback, especially on larger formats like 4k. If the player doesn't support hardware decoding, or your video card is too old to be able to do so. It can be very choppy.
>most people use vlc, but my personal favorite is media player classic. it comes with the combined comunity codec pack
copied from another comment. there is an option called something like "do after playback" and one of the options it to play the next file in a folder.
I recommend downloading combined community codec pack. http://www.cccp-project.net/
The project isn't supported anymore, that I'm aware of. But it still works wonders for me. Every fresh install of windows gets this bad boy installed
Which OS are you on? This seems like a codec issue so you could try installing CCCP and see if it's any help.
I had a somewhat similar issue a few years ago where the movies played at half the framerate due to me having some ridiculously old version of xvid or divx installed. Once I uninstalled it everything was fine.
GenmCorp is a great alternative! My guess is that you're using a video player that may not be supporting subtitles, i.e .mkv files. I suggest using CCCP: http://www.cccp-project.net/ If you want to view episodes even earlier, you can also download the raws, and then add the scripts later once the subs are out.