Which codec for win7 64 bit?

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  1. Posts : 211
    Acer Aspire 7738G Win 7 X64 bit Home Premium
    Thread Starter
       #11

    Dinesh said:
    whs said:
    Do yourself a favor and do NOT use K.Lite. That is a bunch of garbage thrown together that will most likely give you problems. Read this and you will understand. Regarding your question: VLC has it's own codecs and AVI (to my knowledge) is a filetype not a player. Don't worry about x86 and x64. Get Sharks pack with the x64 add-ons and you will be fine.
    Could not agree more. Very well stated. DO NOT USE CODECS.
    Hi

    You say dont use codecs, but isnt this CODECS >>Shark007.net - Windows 7 x64 Codecs - WMP12 Codecs << the same as K-Lite ??
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  2. Posts : 8,476
    Windows® 8 Pro (64-bit)
       #12

    I see no reason to use "codecs". I use VLC media player and the inbuilt WMP and they can play everything, almost everything.
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  3. Posts : 211
    Acer Aspire 7738G Win 7 X64 bit Home Premium
    Thread Starter
       #13

    Um??

    I am now confused about codecs??

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  4. Posts : 2,737
    Windows 7 Enterprise (x64); Windows Server 2008 R2 (x64)
       #14

    Dinesh said:
    I see no reason to use "codecs". I use VLC media player and the inbuilt WMP and they can play everything, almost everything.
    I respectfully disagree, no hate here, just friendly disagreement. I have been using K-Lite for 4 years now without any problems. Now for the average user they may be no need for them but unfortunately we need to play so many non-standard videos that VLC or WMP cannot play them. I have tried every video player out there and they simply cannot play the files. Even Windows 7 native Codecs cannot play .mkv files which are becoming so popular that it should be. Vendors are now using them as their standard.

    The OP already has K-Lite on their system so upgrading will most likely fix their codec issues.

    Thanks for the articles on codecs but if you read the replies many of the posters disagree with the article itself
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  5. Posts : 8,476
    Windows® 8 Pro (64-bit)
       #15

    WindowsStar said:
    Dinesh said:
    I see no reason to use "codecs". I use VLC media player and the inbuilt WMP and they can play everything, almost everything.
    I respectfully disagree, no hate here, just friendly disagreement. I have been using K-Lite for 4 years now without any problems. Now for the average user they may be no need for them but unfortunately we need to play so many non-standard videos that VLC or WMP cannot play them. I have tried every video player out there and they simply cannot play the files. Even Windows 7 native Codecs cannot play .mkv files which are becoming so popular that it should be. Vendors are now using them as their standard.

    The OP already has K-Lite on their system so upgrading will most likely fix their codec issues.

    Thanks for the articles on codecs but if you read the replies many of the posters disagree with the article itself
    I hope you read this article. If codecs are working for you, nothing like it. :)
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  6. whs
    Posts : 26,210
    Vista, Windows7, Mint Mate, Zorin, Windows 8
       #16

    The rule about codecs is easy - don't use some package that is washed together like e.g. K-Lite. Shark seems to have made an effort to come up with a consistent package and even provides a real uninstaller. So that is more trustworthy. After all, codecs add/modify many files and registry keys and I don't think you want that to be done by any unknown source.
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  7. Posts : 8,476
    Windows® 8 Pro (64-bit)
       #17

    And if you guys still dont understand, read what's written in whs's sig. LOL.
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  8. Posts : 1,519
    El Capitan / Windows 10
       #18

    Agree as well. Do not use "packs" in Windows 7 as ALL of these "packs" are designed for DirectShow which was introduced in Windows 98. Windows Vista and 7 use Media Foundation which add hardware acceleration features and CANNOT use these codec packs. What you are seeing when you used these codec packs is the crusty old Windows 98-XP DirectShow junk trying to run right under a modern OS that's designed to use it's OWN NATIVE Media Foundation. It's a band-aid and it will not be supported in the next Windows so get used to Media Foundation now. 7 plays most everything out of the box except MKVs and AC3 audio.

    Address your problem directly. You want multi-channel down-mix with matrix or gain control. Those movies that you are having a hard time hearing are have multi-channel audio. Some may not play at all and both almost always boils down to an AC3/DTS issue. To solve that in a completely Windows 7 native fashion get this: http://ac3filter.googlecode.com/file...lter_1_63b.exe

    You will probably also run into wanting to play *.MKV or Matroska container files. Do that natively in Windows 7 using just the free part of DivX available here http://www.divx.com/downloads/divx. Choose just the DivX codec pack during installation. As little as I like DivX, they are the ONLY decent Windows 7 native Media Foundation MKV splitter available.

    Both packages support 32- asd 64-bit Windows Media Player. More importantly they support 64-bit Windows Media CENTER. Whereas the default version of Windows Media PLAYER in 64-bit versions of Windows 7 is 32-bit, the default version of the Windows Media CENTER in 64-bit versions of Windows 7 is 64-bit. This disparity has caused all kinds of confusion. Since most of these "packs" rely on opacity -- you get the "pack" because you really don't care which codecs you're using -- files may play fine under Windows Media Player but fail under Media Center. It's not apparent that Media Player is 32-bit and the "pack" is 32-bit but Media Center is 64-bit.

    Even if things do play in Media Center, many folks are disappointed to find that they can't stream file to their XBOX360 or extender. That again is the fault of the "pack". They're just NOT DESIGNED for Windows 7 and as such lack integration with many of the better features in the new OS. Extender integration is one of those features. Unless your media is rendered using Media Foundation, it's not going to work with extenders.

    Try this. Uninstall all "packs". Test playing media files from your library. I think you'll be surprised how many play WITHOUT any of these "packs" (and maybe how much BETTER!). For those that don't play sound or the sound is muffled install AC3Filter and boost the levels and try playing again. For MKVs install DivX (just the codec part) and try those again. Report back with any files that you really need that don't play. I'll bet I can get those to play natively without any "packs" as well.
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  9. Posts : 2,737
    Windows 7 Enterprise (x64); Windows Server 2008 R2 (x64)
       #19

    @baarod, I completely agree, less is more and adding just the Codecs you need is much better than a Package. - Thanks - WS
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  10. Posts : 2,737
    Windows 7 Enterprise (x64); Windows Server 2008 R2 (x64)
       #20

    whs said:
    The rule about codecs is easy - don't use some package that is washed together like e.g. K-Lite. Shark seems to have made an effort to come up with a consistent package and even provides a real uninstaller. So that is more trustworthy. After all, codecs add/modify many files and registry keys and I don't think you want that to be done by any unknown source.
    Respectfully, again I have to disagree here. I have had so many problems with Shark Codes and I know I am steping on some toes because he posts here. But Shark Codecs so far has been one of the worst. With that said I guess now I will be obligated to test it again and post the issues I have had with it in the Shark Codec area, so he as every chance to fix them. :)
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