


Now when I run TMPGEnc, it gets shut down my Kerio firewall with the message I uninstalled TMPGEnc, rebooted, re-installed, rebooted.
#COLE2K MEDIA ADVANCED CODEC PACK WINDOWS#
It plays in Windows Media PLayer and loads and runs in VirtualDub. So the Video file plays properly thru a proper media player such as the old windows player (load by pressing windows key + r and putting "%programfiles%\Windows Media Player\mplayer2.exe" then pressing ok) but wont work in TMPGEnc ? What the hell else can I try? I am running out of ideas. Searching on google for answers to this problem keep coming back to making DirectShow the highest priority item in my VFAPI plugin menu but in my setup, it is the highest item. I dl'd the King Kong trailer in xvid to see if the installed codec works and the file played with no problem. I thought it was the Xvid codecs, but it's not. I went into the Environ settings -> VFAPI plugin and moving the "AVI VFW compatibility reader" to priority #2 (right below DirectShow, which is #6.) I installed Defiler Pak 1.20, Cole2k.Media.-.6.0.2.-Advanced, Koepi's XviD video codec 1.02, Divx Create bundle 6.03, ASF Codec / MPEG-4 V1/2/3, and AC3 ACM Decompressor 1.2. The video codec is XVID Mpeg-4 and the audio codec is AC3 DVM. This same file openned and worked fine yesterday morning when I tried to convert the avi.
#COLE2K MEDIA ADVANCED CODEC PACK PLUS#
In the meantime, all the installing and deleting of the various codec packages, I somehow managed to kill support for avi files in TMPGEnc Plus recognizing my avi file (which worked in TMPGEnc Plus previously.) When I try and browse/add an avi file for my video I get the message "File 'blahblahblah.avi' can not open, or unsupported. So after some hunting and pecking/trail and error, I finally found one that successfully decompressed the audio stream. Since I didn't have an AC3 codecs/decompressor, I needed to find one Using VirtualDub (and google) I discovered that the avi was using AC3 for audio. This time, I had forgotten to rip out the audio prior to encoding, so I had to go back and rip the audio and re-encode. I recently attempted to convert an avi to an mpg file in TMPGenc Plus, something I have done successfully many times before.
