
Transcode videos for sending on Discord, Pinterest, Twitter, and other social media without quality loss. Convert videos recorded by GoPro, DJI, iPhone, DSLR cameras, or screen captures to editing-friendly format. Change videos into different formats for playing on iPhone, 4K TVs, PS5, Xbox, Mac…. It was a fair while ago and I can't remember the exact details but I kind of remember one of the plugins ffdshow installs in the AVISynth folder as being the culprit (ffavisynth.avsi or ffavisynth.dll), but it could be anything, or it might be none of them, but it can't hurt to check.Looking for the best video converter software? We may need a free or paid video converter for Windows 10, Windows 11, Mac, and more platforms for various reasons. I had a problem with MPC-HC not opening AVS scripts at one stage. I've made a shortcuts to each and put them in the Windows SendTo folder.ĭo you have many plugins auto-loading in the AviSynth plugins folder? If so it might pay to clear it out to see if a basic script will open with WMP or MPC-HC. The current version of MPC-HC has an issue with opening MKVs while they're being written during encoding, so I also have the previous version. SmoothD2 requires masktools2 which requires v2.6Ĭan you copy MPC-HC to a second location and configure it differently (use the save settings to ini file option in preferences)? But I cannot use it to display the result while also having it configured for SVP. I have AviSynth 2.6 installed, which only comes 32-bit.Īs for MPC-HC, if I remove the avisynth.dll I've put in its folder so that SVP can use AviSynth 2.5.8, then the AVS file can play fine. No idea if it exists under W7 but suspect that it may have been removed also, I assume that W7 now has MPEG2 decoder as well as WMP 12.0. I showed the DvdPlay.exe working once to a bunch of SysAdmins, they were blown away with disbelief (of course needed an open source MPEG2 decoder). Or NT or Millenium or W2K or XP, would play DVD's so long as there was also an MPEG2 decoder on the system, was rubbish very basic player, but it worked.
On my machine, it does nothing as both WMP 11.0 and PowerDVD play DVD's (plus about a half dozen other players). Interesting fact: Windows has had a DVD player built-in since Windows 98, its a special type of program (name of which I cant remember) which onlyĭoes anything under specific circumstances, circumstances for DvdPlay.exe (in system32 on XP) are that it only does anything if there is no other DVD I'm on 32bit XP duel core Core Duo, and so dont really care too much about MT type stuff, seems more problematic than its worth.įor rendering I whack em onto one of several Pentium 4 machines and leave them to get on with it, takes quite some time but I've got plenty. Pretty sure mplayer2 still worked fine on Vista. Arh gone, such a shame, I always preferred that to WMP (which I really dislike and almost never use).