A directory named mplayer will be created in the current directory. You can later update your sources by typing. Another alternative is downloading a Subversion snapshot. We offer Debian packages of a compact and up-to-date MPlayer for some architectures with minimal dependencies and including the GUI variant.
First of all, a big warning: These packages are useless for normal Windows players and will only work with MPlayer. Our binary codec packages add support for codecs that are not yet implemented natively, like newer RealVideo variants and a lot of uncommon formats. See the codec status table for the daily-generated list of currently supported codecs. Choose the package that matches your processor and operating system. If your system cannot manage Linux libraries, choose the Windows package instead.
On Windows MPlayer will try to use the codecs installed on your system. Our packages can save you the hassle of installing every known codec and using untested codec versions. If you want to verify the integrity of the codec packages, compare the MD5 sums. If you want to know what's new in a codec package, check the ChangeLog. Click on skin names for screenshots.
We offer Debian packages of actively maintained skins. Please donate. New: WizFile Dec 21, Since they are additional I would like to keep them separate from the main MPP package, the codecs folder seems like the best place. Is there something that needs to be done to make MPP look in the codec folder. My thought is that that should be the default, or am I missing something? Nothing is altered within MPlayer, so you should install it to the same place as usual I don't use the extra codecs myself nor can I make an installer for them they're closed source and redistribution of them at all is legally questionable.
For answering, I tried to read about MPlayer but I just got confused. The readmes seem to imply that the codecs should be put in the "codecs folder" under the "MPlayer folder" in the non-portable version.
But it does not seem to work. I don't have the non-portable version to see what happens there. It seems they oddly chose another directory for it. And the documentation is pretty poor in explaining it. I finally got it playing a DVD and it did an awful job of it.
VLC seems to simply be the better player. And, they're still doing real releases of it real releases, not 'get it from SVN'.
Perhaps I jumped the gun in packaging MPlayer. I don't think you jumped the gun. I like it for playing music files because it opens faster than VLC, which can sometimes take a while. How about Media Player Classic instead then? For everything else, it uses the codecs within Windows.
So, it's simply not portable. Alright, did not realize that. How did you get it to play a DVD, please tell. And will it work for CDs too. I just selected the drive and waited.
After about 2 minutes, it started playing a random bit of video from the DVD not the actual movie and it was choppy and out of sync.
The regular RC1 release of mplayer and gmplayer do this as well. Installing the software One of the great features of MPlayer, is that you don't actually install the software, you just extract the contents of the zip file into a folder, and thats pretty much it. This means that uninstalling is just a matter of deleting the folder. There are no registry entries to delete. So you need to grab the files from the MPlayer Website.
You'll need the MPlayer windows binaries and the windows essential codec pack. Then extract the contents of the codec zip into the codec sub-folder of the mplayer folder i. On windows, MPlayer uses Microsoft's DirectX to display the video, so you may need to make sure you have a recent version if there any problems.
Creating the shortcut I've found the easiest way to play a video with mplayer is to create a send to shortcut.
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