by Bob Dore » 26 Mar 2010, 08:59
Bill's suggestion should work ok. Failing that pm me and I'll get you to run some checks to find out exactly what you've got. I have just about every codec ever invented on my desktop so will be able to sort it out in time.
Technical explanation:
There are lots of different ways of encoding video files. From the DVD standard, Blu-Ray standard, Windows Media, a host of AVIs and more. Some create very small files with reduced quality, some create larger files at better quality. More recent ones can create a small file with a high quality. To watch the video, the video program checks to see how it was encoded and looks for a second program on disk called the codec. This program translates the contents of the file into video before displaying it.
If it can't find the codec that was used to create the video, you get an error message.
Bob.