I’ve long run Windows Media Center on my HTPCs in combination with DVBLink and MediaBrowser. However, recently we have been watching more physical disks than in the past, and I have found various issues with Media Center. Usually I have MPC-HC configured as an external player, but doing this for physical disks proved less than simple. Eventually however, I have managed to get it working flawlessly.
Search Results for: label/mpc-hc
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How to set remote control jump keys for MPC-HC
As I’ve documented in the past, I have several HTPC’s running Windows Media Center. I also use MediaBrowser for TV series and movies ripped from disk. I’ve found that MediaBrowser works much better with an external player than the internal player — performance seems to be superior — so I use Media Player Classic Home Cinema. I also have several Media Center remote controls for use with the various HTPCs, and one of the most frequently used pairs of buttons are the “jump” or “skip” buttons which in media center jump the current playback forward by 30 seconds or back by 30 seconds. This is really handy for skipping adverts in recorded TV. However, under default installation settings these keys don’t work when playing videos in MPC-HC. After much trial and error I finally figured out the correct configuration
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New release of MPC-HC
After almost a year without any new official releases the MPC-HC developers have released 1.4.2499.0. As usual there is a x86 player, x64 player, x86 standalone filters and x64 standalone filters.
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MPC-HC 1.5.1
It’s been a little while since I checked, and since then the MPC-HC developers have released 3 new final releases. The current release is 1.5.1.2903. As usual there is an x86 player, x64 player, x86 standalone filters and x64 standalone filters.
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MPC-HC
Just a very quick note — The latest version of media player classic home cinema and the standalone codecs seem rather elusive. The place to go for alpha and beta releases is XvidVideo.ru
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The Ultimate Codec Guide
How data is stored in a multimedia file
Files on a computer (or on an optical disk like DVD or BluRay) need to contain more than 1 type of data. A typical movie will include at least 1 video “stream” and one audio “stream”. Most movies include multiple languages and subtitles, each of which requires an additional stream. Each of these streams is effectively a file in its own right, but they are all stored together within a “container” which also starts each of them at the right time (subtitles don’t start immediately at the start of a movie for example) and keeps them in sync as well as storing meta-data about each of them – i.e. what language they are, what framerate and resolution the video is, and what compression standards have been used.
Video streams
Video streams contain only the video part of the movie. They are compressed using a particular system and there should be meta-data about their resolution, framerate, if they are interlaced or progressive and details of the encoding system used.
Audio streams
Audio streams contain only the audio part of the movie. There are usually multiple audio streams included with the movie and each has its own stream. They can be compressed in a range of ways or in some cases they are uncompressed raw audio. There should be meta-data about their bitrate, resolution, language, number of channels and details of the encoding system used.
Other streams (e.g. Closed Captions)
Many movies contain other streams, most commonly closed captions (also known as subtitles). These come in several formats, but are typically just text with time stamps. They are so small relatively that no compression is used. There should be meta-data about their language.
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Containers which bundle all the streams together
All of the streams that comprise the movie are bundled together and kept in sync by a container. The container should contain (and provide) all the meta-data about each stream. The container also enables the collection of streams to be stored as a single file. The most common container formats are VOB (used by DVD) and M2TS (used by BluRay). Other common container formats on PC are TS, MPEG, AVI, MKV, WMV, WTV, DVR-MS and MP4. The obsolete HD-DVD format used EVO containers.
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Full 7MC codec setup
I’ve previously posted several times about codec issues on 7mc, but I’ve now got a solution that is comprehensive, fairly simple and works consistently. With a few free codecs and utilities you can have full decoding support, DXVA, subtitles and fantastic flexibility working in 64bit (or 32bit) Media Center. The following instructions are specific to the x64 edition, but should work just as well on the 32bit edition.
… Read Full Article
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Connect SmartThings to Windows PC’s and Kodi
I have several windows PCs in my house that run Kodi. I wanted to connect them to SmartThings for a range of purposes. There are various things that can be done depending on the functionality you want.
… Read Full Article
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Decoding Interlaced VC‑1 with DXVA
A couple of days ago version 1.6 of Media Player Classic — Home Cinema was released. Although I don’t use MPC-HC, I do keep an eye on the releases as it can be a useful back-up when a file wont play. It’s been quite a long time since the last official release so I had a quick scan of the changelog and one thing immediately leaped at me: “VC‑1 DXVA Decoder now decodes VC‑1 interlaced material”. Until now there has been no open source x64 codec that will decode interlaced VC‑1. Finally having this available completes coverage for all the media files I have ever tried to play. Hopefully this will also get added to ffdshow tryouts and LAV Video in the near future.
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Haali Media Splitter: Official Site Down
HTPC related sites and resources seem to be dropping like flies at the moment. First[intlink id=“1918” type=“post”]Media Center Studio disappeared[/intlink], then [intlink id=“2141” type=“post”]TheHTPC.net developed problems[/intlink], and now the official site for Haali Media Splitter is down. Fortunately the media splitter can still be downloaded from lots of other sites, and we will keep a mirror here in case other sites drop it. There are also alternatives, including the MPC-HC standalone codecs and LAV. Links to these are available on our[intlink id=“741” type=“page”]downloads[/intlink] page. Lets hope that this is the last in the recent series of HTPC related losses.

“Hi James I realise it has been a long while, but I just checked this on windows 11 (build 23H2)…”