![]() ![]() That way when you try to view the video, the player you are using, ANY PLAYER, will call the PROPER codecs. THEN, you can go and set that codecs priority higher, and the bad or wrong ones lower. For any of you using GSpot, the whole idea is not to just see if it can render the video, but rather to see WHICH CODEC is being used to render it properly. ![]() The problem with VLC choipping the video up is that it isn’t using the proper codec to view it. I prefer using XVID to decode the other 4cc’s, I think it’s sharper. Inother words, set DIVX todecode DIVX files,and XVID for XVID files, the rest of the formats is upto you. (ie hacked ver of win media player 6.4) With this player many codecs arebuilt in, or you can override and allow the system codecs to be used, or just pick the ones you want to use.ĭIVX and XVID will co-exist with no problems, you just need to set the filters to not compete with each other. A really good and configurable player is MPC, Media Player Classic. It tried the filters one after the other until it comes up with a combo that works. Windows 'builds' a 'filter graph' to play media files. It also allows you to set the priority for the filters, ie which one gets chosen/tried first, then next, etc. You can use it to Register the Filters, and unregister them, rather than installing and uninstalling over and over. For finer control over what the codecs are doing, you can use Radlight Filter Manager. ![]() The correct thing to do is simply dl GSpot, use it to find out which codec you need for the particular video, then dl the codec, install it. They have so much trash in them that you will never use. Excuse me for saying this,many novices disagree, but. ![]()
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