Interviewed by CNN on 10/12/2009 17:41, DoctorBill told the world: > I use this to watch .flv files - plays most anything; > http://vlc-media-player.en.softonic.com/
You might wish to check the source for most up-to-the-minute versions: http://www.videolan.org Another approach is to install a GOOD codec pack. I have very good experiences with the Combined Community Codec Pack -- it's a playback-geared codec pack, very stable and well-behaved. After installing it, you may see .flv (and most any other video format, in fact) in almost any media player -- including Microsoft's Windows Media Player. It includes the Media Player Classic Homecinema, too, if you want a better-behaved media player. http://www.cccp-project.net/ If you intend to edit/create video, though, that's not CCCP's strong suite. The K-Lite Codec Pack might be better in that case -- it's not quite as stable, but still good, and includes encoding codecs. I have seen people recommending to avoid the largest versions of K-Lite (particularly the Mega Pack), because they install so many codecs that the chance of trouble increses a lot. In most cases, those extra codecs are unnecessary anyway. -- MCBastos This message has been protected with the 2ROT13 algorithm. Unauthorized use will be prosecuted under the DMCA. -=-=- ... BOFH excuse #389: /dev/clue was linked to /dev/null * TagZilla 0.0661 * http://tagzilla.mozdev.org on Seamonkey 2.0 _______________________________________________ support-seamonkey mailing list [email protected] https://lists.mozilla.org/listinfo/support-seamonkey

