Codec woes? Can’t find a codec required to play a video file? Try VLC Player

 

Video Playback IssuesWhile for many of us, Windows Media Player may serve as a good enough tool for video playback, but it’s certainly got it’s problems. Lets face it - for most part it’s perfectly capable of playing DVDs, but performs miserably when it comes to playing wmv or mpeg files which are a couple of generations old. Our hard-drives are littered with such video clips that come as attachments along with mails and it can get really frustrating when you’re faced with a message saying “A codec is required to play this file. To determine if this codec is available to download from the Web, click Web Help.” More often that not, the so-called “Web Help”, which takes you to the Microsoft Codec download page doesn’t prove to be of much Help :x !!

For a long time, I have been searching utmost lengths for a freeware third-party application that would dutifully play all these files without a single hiccup. Media Player Classic, which resembles the old Windows Media Player 6.4, proved to be one of the strongest contenders in this category. Unfortunately, some of the older files still refused to play. This led me off on another relentless search till I came upon this “too-good-to-be-true” media player named VLC. This terrific utility by VideoLAN happens to be one of those miracle applications which is capable of playing back virtually every type of audio and video files without requiring you to download any of those godforsaken codecs. And that includes DVD & VCD movies too.

VLC Player for WindowsVLC is a free & open-source cross-platform media player - which means it can be run on literally any OS ranging from Windows, Mac OS-X, BeOS, FreeBSD and numerous flavours of Linux. It is highly portable and can play almost any formats like MPEG-1, MPEG-2, MPEG-4, DivX, mp3, ogg etc. But it doesn’t end there. VLC can double up as a multimedia streaming server in unicast or multicast in IPv4 or IPv6 on a high-bandwidth network. A full list of features is available here.

If you ask for an honest, unbiased opinion, I can’t really claim that this is THE ultimate media player ever - but yeah, I certainly haven’t come across a codec that this cool-tool cannot handle on its own. You can always give it a shot and provide some feedback on your own experience…


Free eBook: Linux Kernel in a Nutshell

 

Linux Kernel in a Nutshell is yet another release in the Nutshell series by O’Rielly that teaches you how to build, configure, and install a custom Linux kernel on your machine.
The author, Greg Kroah-Hartman routinely does the same for a living. Good news is that for the average …

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How To: Setup a Local Domain Name Services (DNS) Server for your Intranet

 

This was another of my journeys into the deep dark dungeons of Linux. This time I managed to set-up a DNS server locally and got it resolving addresses over my intranet.
Experimentation Platform:
Intel P4 3.0Ghz (Intel MotherBoard)
1 GB RAM
2 x 80 GB HDD on RAID 1 (Disk Mirroring) - alloted entirely to Linux
Operating System:
Linux - Redhat Enterprise AS Server v3
Note:
I …

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How To: Setup a DHCP Server on Linux

 

This is one of the first of a series of tutorials I wrote on taming the Linux daemons. It was first published at Astahost Forums on February 5th, 2005.I’m sure all of you must have come across the term DHCP - anyone who’s connects to the internet has to come across it every now and then. You see the term …

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How To: Setup and emulate a Windows NT Domain on Linux and make Windows 2000/XP log onto it

 

This time we’re going to with an issue that is very common in everyday networking and is implemented almost everywhere in some form or the other. The primary issue here is to make two DIFFERENT Operating Systems talk to each other over the network and synchronise and share files without letting off any hint about the complex protocols involved in …

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