the New OS version removed MKV support in playbook and it is not good since I have all my favorite HD movies in MKV format loaded in my playbook, and now it prompted me that the format is not supported.
OMG! my playbook have problem playing my mkv files, anyways I'll try to restart my playbook. I just realized that I've never restart my playbook since the New OS version arrived.
I bought Pavtube Blu-Ray Ripper a few weeks ago and spent some time researching container formats for the playbook 64GB I got last month. I was in the process of ripping to .mkv which is no longer an option since I too have upgraded. I suppose it is back to .mp4. Maybe I can use .wmv anyone recall whether there is native support on the Playbook for .wmv? I know the documentation clarifies this but I don't have it handy and previously only considered .mkv or .mp4. I think I read where .wmv has sufficient video quality and smaller file size. I have a Dell Studio XPS laptop and don't use iTunes so my music is .wma already. Can anyone tell me about their experience with .wmv on the Playbook?
Oh, and Thank You all for the heads up on the .mkv problem.
I hope this isn't true It was one of the reasons I bought the PlayBook. Many reviews mentioned the PB excellent video capabilities. Apple is notoriously rigid as it's MP4 only, synched by iTunes. Apple incapacitates everything else because they want you to buy from the iTunes Store. I saw the PlayBook as away out of jail. Hopefully MKV will work in some sideloaded android players such as Mobo Player. Definitely complain to RIM if this is the case. Native support is still the best. I suspect they may have pulled MKV as a lot of torrent sites used MKV. MKV however is no longer the format of choice for them. MKV is great for copying dvds. RIM seems paranoid of being associated with piracy.
I bought Pavtube Blu-Ray Ripper a few weeks ago and spent some time researching container formats for the playbook 64GB I got last month. I was in the process of ripping to .mkv which is no longer an option since I too have upgraded. I suppose it is back to .mp4. Maybe I can use .wmv anyone recall whether there is native support on the Playbook for .wmv? I know the documentation clarifies this but I don't have it handy and previously only considered .mkv or .mp4. I think I read where .wmv has sufficient video quality and smaller file size. I have a Dell Studio XPS laptop and don't use iTunes so my music is .wma already. Can anyone tell me about their experience with .wmv on the Playbook?
Oh, and Thank You all for the heads up on the .mkv problem.
Try sideloading Mobo player, Rockplayer or Meridian player for mkv. Apparently VLC may come out with an android player, when available this would be the best.
I do wonder at the inconsistencies people find on this issue and some similar issues people have had with pdf files. I wonder if some indexing did not get properly cleaned up on some units when the new OS was installed or something else in the "housekeeping" process.
MKV is just a container. Saying one MKV file works while another doesn't means very little. You have to determine what is causing the MKV to be rejected. It's probably either the video ans/or audio codec used to encode the file.
MKV's do work, you just need the correct video and audio codec. I use AVC (h.264 mpeg4) for video and mp3 or aac for audio in my mkvs. Works perfectly even for 60fps videos.
Okay, but the person is reporting that the SAME videos did play under the prior OS. At least, that's how I read it. Maybe they mean new mkv files are not working and that could be the contents of the mkv container.
MKV's do work, you just need the correct video and audio codec. I use AVC (h.264 mpeg4) for video and mp3 or aac for audio in my mkvs. Works perfectly even for 60fps videos.
No way, ive been avoiding mkv's because i thought there was no support, so as long as the Audio isnt AC3 and DTS i should be good to go ?
or are you saying i need a Codec for the playbook ?
No way, ive been avoiding mkv's because i thought there was no support, so as long as the Audio isnt AC3 and DTS i should be good to go ?
or are you saying i need a Codec for the playbook ?
It was not openly announced or stated by RIM that they support, but my mkvs do work.
Yes, you just need the correct video (mpeg4/avc/h.264 should be fine) and audio (mp3 or aac; as long as not AC3) then you are good to go. You don't need to install any other 'codecs' and nothing third party is necessary. All native.
Okay, but the person is reporting that the SAME videos did play under the prior OS. At least, that's how I read it. Maybe they mean new mkv files are not working and that could be the contents of the mkv container..
Yes, it does look like they are the same files. Strange.
Another thing that is odd, the Playbook is displaying a message saying the file is unsupported. If it's an unsupported audio codec (AC3) you just don't have audio.
I'm thinking the files got corrupted during the update somehow.
Actually, I just noticed that the 4 mkv HD movies that I had on my Playbook just disappeared and they had been sitting there for a couple weeks. Have no idea where they went to?
Actually, I just noticed that the 4 mkv HD movies that I had on my Playbook just disappeared and they had been sitting there for a couple weeks. Have no idea where they went to?
it disappeared only in your video player because the file is not recognized anymore, but if you'll use file browser then you will see your MKV file, thats what happened in my MKV files on my playbook after upgrade, I tried restarting my playbook but nothing happen, Its seems that my MKV videos are corrupted already that's why the native video player cannot see it, so deleting the MKV file from playbook and loading my original MKV file from my laptop to playbook works for me. Now My favorite HD videos are working again in my playbook.
Oh one thing I have grudge against certain mkv files in playbook is that when you pinch and zoom the mkv while playing, you can't seek (fast forward?) anymore, have to stop the video playback, load again and seek. Does not happen to other file types.
.iso files are not media files and thus cannot be played. An iso file is an image file of a cd or dvd and can be used to create a cd or dvd. It is analogous to a zip file, and as such, while it might contain media files, these need to be extracted in order to be played.