Open %appdata%\vlc in Windows Explorerwhere exactly am I going to find this file?
In most cases debug logs are completely useless. The better thing is to report us a way that can be used to replicate the crash.and when I find it, just chuck it? Don't submit it to anyone at Videolan?
VLC is not interested in seeing it?
Is it not potentially useful?
This is not the problem for me, I'm sorry to say. When video is playing, there is no problem. As I said above, vlc just goes down...derhasefee: different video and/or audio output modules work any better?
http://wiki.videolan.org/WindowsFAQ-1.0 ... _output.3F
http://wiki.videolan.org/WindowsFAQ-1.0 ... _anomalies
Will give that a try and report back. Thank you.derhasefee: different video and/or audio output modules work any better?
http://wiki.videolan.org/WindowsFAQ-1.0 ... _output.3F
http://wiki.videolan.org/WindowsFAQ-1.0 ... _anomalies
Wrong. All codecs VLC use are on VLC directory (plugins folder). VLC cannot use DirectShow or VfW codecs.I'm guessing that vlc looks for its codecs only in c:\windows\system32 (which is actually the 64-bit system) and not c:\windows\sysWOW64.
OK fine - what's more I learned something. Something I read already but somehow ignored (vlc gets all its codecs from its own installation).Wrong. All codecs VLC use are on VLC directory (plugins folder). VLC cannot use DirectShow or VfW codecs.I'm guessing that vlc looks for its codecs only in c:\windows\system32 (which is actually the 64-bit system) and not c:\windows\sysWOW64.
Your WMP and VLC issues aren't related.
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