|  | Posted by JimK on 04/11/06 03:30 
On Mon, 10 Apr 2006 18:30:50 -0700, "Bill's News"<BillsNews@pcmagic.net> wrote:
 
 >Glassman wrote:
 >>   I've been banging my head against the wall the last few years
 >> trying to get my downloaded .avi's to play on my stand alone DVD
 >> recorder, (Lite-On 5005), so I can watch them on my living room TV.
 >> All that aside, my friend just bought a new cheapie DVD player, and
 >> to my astonishment it plays alot of my burned .avi's.  Seems like
 >> the
 >> newer players will now play DIVX encoded .avi's, but not the other
 >> .avi's. Can someone please explain the different types of .avi's,
 >> and
 >>   why some will play and others won't? Is it possible that there
 >> will
 >> ever be a firmware upgrade that will
 >> enable my liteon 5005 to play all?
 >>   Last question.... can someone recommend an inexpensive stand alone
 >> DVD recorder that will play all?  Thanks!
 >>
 >> *sorry for the crosspost, but not sure where to best get my answer.
 >>
 >>
 >> JK Sinrod
 >> www.sinrodstudios.com
 >> www.MyConeyIslandMemories.com
 
 TY02 DVD-R go for $0.30 each, convert avi's to dvd format
 
 
 
 >
 >I don't know if this will help or not, but I'm in the mood to be
 >verbose
 >
 >MPEG4 was/is a compression improvement over MPEG2 in some, if not all,
 >videos.  I've read, at some time in the past, that it had been
 >"hacked" and out of that effort grew two new camps (Divx & Xvid).
 >Divx having evolved into a commercial effort (good in its own way) and
 >Xvid being a GNU effort (equally good or  better).
 >
 >Since the introduction of these WIDELY available and FREQUENTLY
 >CHANGED encoding methods, the video "trading" community members have
 >each adopted their own pet version, and parameters for its use; thus
 >there have been few software suites capable of playing all iterations
 >available to downloaders.  In the case of PC based players, the task
 >has been easier because one can add codecs (or versions thereof)
 >whimsically.  In the case of hardware players the ability to play
 >everything and anything is limited by the manufacturer's willingness
 >to invest time and money in the project - taking the "plays most"
 >stance has worked well for many.
 >
 >So, one answer (perhaps the only answer) to your "recommend an
 >inexpensive stand alone DVD recorder that will play all" is a PC -
 >preferably with proper connections to your TV monitor.  On another
 >hand, "plays most" can be accomplished by several SA players.
 >Probably the most comprehensive, user configurable search is here
 >http://www.videohelp.com/dvdplayers.
 >
 >Having been the owner of a LiteOn 2001, a Philips (DVP?)642, and
 >currently a Buffalo LinkTheater, I can state unequivocally that one
 >gets what one pays for;-)  While I'm whelmed at the BLT's video
 >presentation, it is only tasked with playing my own encodings - so I
 >can't address its performance with whimsical encodings.
 >
 >I might add that, having acquired the BLT (hold the mayo), I am now
 >underwhelmed with the other players.
 >
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