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Post by deadman67 on Nov 26, 2010 23:16:02 GMT -5
if i was to let's say download a movie that is a blue ray can it be played in windows media player i'm useing k-lite codec pack
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kim
New Member
Posts: 4
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Post by kim on Nov 27, 2010 7:56:16 GMT -5
In Windows7 you need to use a non-Microsoft program that supports Blu‑ray playback
Video file types supported by Windows Media Center in Windows 7
Windows Media files .wm, .wmv, and .asf
AVCHD files (including Dolby Digital audio) .m2ts and .m2t
Apple QuickTime files .mov and .qt
AVI files .avi
Windows Recorded TV Show files .wtv and .dvr-ms
MPEG-4 movie files .mp4, .mov, and .m4v
MPEG-2 movie files .mpeg, .mpg, .mpe, .m1v, .mp2, .mpv2, .mod, and .vob
MPEG-1 movie files .m1v
Motion JPEG files .avi and .mov
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Post by deadman67 on Nov 28, 2010 4:43:54 GMT -5
Thanks for the info but i should of said what o/s i was running i'm using windows xp pro
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kim
New Member
Posts: 4
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Post by kim on Nov 28, 2010 8:49:19 GMT -5
So am I But I'm also using XP Pro SP3 32Bit Your video card needs to be HDCP compliant (through the DVI video connector) in order for Blu-ray playback to work. In saying that SlySoft AnyDVD and PowerDVD allows you to watch movies over a digital display connection, without HDCP-compliant graphics card and without HDCP-compliant display. www.slysoft.com/en/anydvdhd.htmlwww.cyberlink.com/products/powerdvdPersonally I use free VLC Media Player for all my video watching For Blu-ray Videos GPU acceleration should be enabled in the settings www.videolan.org/vlc/Windows Media Player can play Blu-ray on Windows XP, but your system hardware should not be too old ie 3.0GHz or above and ideally 2Gig of Ram. Obviously with a reasonable (HDCP) 3D Video card (mine is 512Meg) Blu-ray test file (Blu-ray test\Blu-ray test\BDMV\STREAM\00000.m2ts) www.megaupload.com/?d=FO6XBKA8
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